SCARBOROUGH FOR THE STUDENT
Many students call at or write to the Tourist Information Centre each year requesting information on the history and development of Scarborough for theses, projects and other academic studies.These notes have been prepared to assist them and contain the information most frequently requested.The Scarborough Room in the Central Public Library in Vernon Road contains a wealth of information on the growth of the town, and the Reference Librarian, to whom all enquires should be made, will be happy to help students with their research.
1. GENERAL INFORMATION
The town of Scarborough is situated around two magnificent bays, divided by a headland on which stand the remains of a 12th century castle. Within the town some 383 acres of land have been laid out as parks and public gardens. The local authority owns considerable estates, including the Foreshore, and provides numerous facilities for the entertainment of visitors to the town. The Spa complex, Futurist Theatre, The Corner, one indoor bathing pool, Atlantis outdoor swimming complex, miniature railway, tennis courts, Alexandra indoor bowls centre, bowling greens, putting greens and cliff lifts, together with cafes and shops all produce revenue towards the relief of the Council Tax. In addition, the Art Gallery, Wood End Natural History Museum, Rotunda Archaeological Museum and 2 Sports Centres have been provided for the benefit of the town.
Scarborough is an ancient Borough with records of Royal Charters from 1181 AD. For more than ten centuries the name of Scarborough has applied to the town which, from a Viking Settlement, then a North Sea port and later a fashionable Spa, developed into one of Britain's most beautiful and popular holiday resorts. From 1 April 1974, with the reorganisation of local government, the town of Scarborough became part of a vast new district including 45 miles of coastline stretching from Speeton, near Flamborough, in the south, to Staithes in the north, half of the North York Moors National Park, and the neighbouring resorts of Whitby and Filey. This district is administered by the Scarborough Borough Council and the North Yorkshire County Council which have replaced all other local authorities in the area, except parish and successor town councils. Formerly a Quarter Sessions Borough, Scarborough now forms part of the Petty Sessional Division of the Scarborough District for Magisterial Court purposes. One Court does sit at the Law Courts in Northway, Scarborough. For Parliamentary purposes the town is in the Scarborough Constituency of the County of North Yorkshire.
POSITION - On the Yorkshire coast between the Moors and the Wolds.
ALTITUDE - Up to 300 feet.
FOUNDATION - Dry, glacial deposit of sand, gravel and boulder clay resting on lower oolite sandstone and shale. Ideal for those subject to rheumatism and similar complaints.
CLIMATE - The summer coolness and winter warmth give a character to the climate of Scarborough which has earned for it so much of its reputation. The average maximum temperature is 16.50oC in summer and 8.68oC in winter. The average annual rainfall is only 619mm and the total sunshine for 1995 was 1689 hours. Westerly winds prevail in the winter, summer and autumn.
WATER SUPPLY - Pure and plentiful, moderately hard, excellent drinking water.
RESIDENT POPULATION - The 1991 Census figures are as follows: Scarborough - 53,646 (comprising Scarborough town, Scalby and Newby) Scarborough Borough Council District - 106,221
2. ORIGIN OF THE NAME 'SCARBOROUGH'
A medieval Icelandic saga tells how two Icelandic Viking brothers called Kormak and Thorgils were the first men to "establish the fort called Skardaborg'. The fort was named after one of its founder's nickname, for Thorgils was called Skardi, meaning hare-lipped, by his brother. It is now generally accepted that the name Skardaborg, which has come down to us as Scarborough, means "the fort belonging to Skardi".Kormakssaga tells more about these brothers. Kormak was a talented poet, described as a wild man with black curly hair while Thorgils on the other hand was taciturn and easy going. Both men had a taste for adventure and plundering around the coasts of Britain and Ireland. About the year 966 they decided to make the sheltered waters of the south bay their base and built the fort. They may even have reused the ruins of the Roman Signal Station. Kormak was killed while raiding in Scotland.
3. ORIGIN AS A SEASIDE SPA RESORT
Scarborough's claim to be the first seaside spa resort rests on the discovery made c.1626 by Mrs "Tomyzin Farrer" of the Medicinal properties of Scarborough's spring waters. "Taking the water" quickly became Scarborough's accepted medicine and their fame spread. It was Dr Robert Wittie who published "Scarborough Spaw" in 1660 which advocated the waters as a cure for all ills. He inadvertently initiated the summer season, recommending that the waters were best drunk mid-May to mid-September. Dr William Simpson, a contemporary rival of York, refuted the claims made for the mineral spring waters and the medical debate spread beyond local boundaries to the Royal Society in London. Despite the debate, or because of it, the gentry and well-to-do who were accustomed to making regular visits to health spas like Bath, Tunbridge Wells and Buxton were soon flocking to Scarborough.
About the same time doctors began promoting sea-bathing as a healthy pastime. The medics gave plenty of advice on the best way to bathe: briefly, healthy males for five minutes before breakfast daily; the 'weaker sex', invalids and children for three dips of two minutes duration three hours after breakfast three times a week! To facilitate sea bathing a horse-drawn box on wheels could be hired to take the bather out into the sea, enabling the occupier to undress modestly inside before 'dipping' in the sea. In the Public Library there is a view of the town as it was in 1735 by John Setterington which shows people bathing and the first recorded evidence for the use of bathing machines. It was quite acceptable for men to bathe naked until the later 19th century. A visitor writing a letter in 1733 describes the bathing at Scarborough saying: 'It is the custom for not only gentlemen, but the ladies also, to bathe in the seas; the gentlemen go out a little way to sea in boats (called here 'cobbles') and jump in naked directly: 'tis usual for gentlemen to hire one of these boats and put out a little way to sea a-fishing. The ladies have the conveniency of gowns and guides. There are two little houses on the shore, to retire for dressing in. What virtues our physicians ascribe to cold baths in general and are much more effectual by the additional weight of salt in sea-water: an advantage which no Spaw in England can boast of but Scarborough.'
Scarborough responded to the influx of visitors by providing every fashionable amenity. A Long Room in St Nicholas Street provided nightly dancing, music, gaming tables and billiards; in the afternoon plays were acted under the management of Mr Kerregan in 1733 and from 1776 evening performances were given in the Theatre, there were coffee shops and bookshops with circulating libraries and horse-racing on the sands. A whole range of accommodation was offered to suit every pocket-board and lodgings, a room at inns and hostelries, renting a Georgian house or later top-quality hotels.
4. THE SPA
The town's business and trading activities were in decline during the earlier 17th century and having experienced two sieges during the Civil War was showing little sign of recovery. Scarborough's birth as a seaside spa resort, which brought renewed prosperity, developed from the almost accidental discovery of the mineral spring waters earlier that century. About 1626 Mrs 'Tomyzin' or 'Thomasin' Farrer, a woman of substance and wife of one of Scarborough's leading. citizens, John Farrer, several times Bailiff of the town, discovered natural springs bubbling out beneath the cliff to the south of the town. These waters, which stained the rocks a russet colour, tasted slightly bitter and cured minor ailments. She told her neighbours and friends about the beneficial effects and soon drinking the waters became the accepted medicine for Scarborough's townspeople. If further proof were needed, they were said to have cured scurvy suffered by the weakened garrison of the besieged Castle in the Civil War. The medical profession analysed the mineral waters and found a high content of magnesium sulphate, its healing properties certainly as effective as Andrew's Liver Salts. Dr Robert Wittie, the principal advocate of the mineral waters, published several books proclaiming the waters as a cure for all ills. Other doctors refuted these claims. Possibly on the basis that all publicity is good publicity, Scarborough developed as a fashionable spa town patronised by the gentry and aristocracy.
The age of tourism began with Dicky Dickinson, a man of little charm but far-sighted enterprise. Self-styled governor of the Spa, Dicky rented the site from the Corporation and about 1700 built the first spaw house and two conveniences, one for the ladies and 'another house for the Gent'. He was responsible for preserving order and collecting subscriptions from its patrons, some of which went to pay the poor widows who dispensed the waters from the newly-built cistern. These simple buildings and the mineral springs were buried by a massive landslide in 1737 but fortunately the springs were quickly located and new, better buildings were constructed. Throughout the following century the reputation and popularity of the resort continued to grow. Such was its appeal that in 1826 the Cliff Bridge Company was formed to erect an ornate iron bridge across the valley, giving easier access from the cliff and the town where elegant hotels and Georgian lodging houses were being more and more heavily patronised. The Corporation granted the company a lease of the Spa grounds for the term of 200 years and although the taking of the waters tended to decline in popularity during the 19th century the Spa's reputation grew as a fashionable place of entertainment and relaxation.
During its Victorian heyday, it was considered the most popular music hall venue outside London. The first orchestra appeared in the 1830s. Henry Wyatt's 'Gothic Saloon' of 1839 was enlarged to seat 500 in 1847. Sir Joseph Paxton, designer of the Crystal Palace, added a Concert Hall in 1858. This was gutted by fire in 1876 and the existing Grand Hall, Theatre and Buffet came into use in 1879. The Ballroom was built in 1925 and enlarged in the early 1960s. The pump room finally closed in 1939. Escalating costs of repair and maintenance to the rambling buildings and the eleven acres of grounds forced the Spa Company into liquidation in 1957; the Corporation took back the lease and began the long task of rehabilitation and development. After two seasons of Eugene Pini and his Orchestra, Max Jaffa arrived in 1960 and stayed until 1986, steadily increasing his own and the Spa's reputation and decrying those who said that good music was dead. The delightful Victorian theatre, on whose stage many famous thespians have trod, was completely renovated in 1972.
A massive programme of building renovation in the 1980s successfully combined the restoration of the buildings to their former glory with the development of the Conference and Entertainment Complex of today.
5. SOME DATES IN THE HISTORY OF THE SPA
| Circa | |
1626 | Mrs Farrer claimed that the water had medicinal properties. |
1698 | First cisterns for water built by the Corporation. |
1700 | First Spaw House built by Dickie Dickinson, the first Governor. |
1735 | The staith (protective wharf) of Spaw washed away. |
1736 | Spaw rebuilt and enlarged. |
1737 | Staith damaged by subsidence and springs lost. |
1738 | 2 February, springs rediscovered and staith repaired. |
1739 | Spaw House rebuilt. |
1808 | Spaw House damaged by storm. Rebuilding of Spaw. |
1825 | Spaw severely damaged by very high tide and nearly washed away. |
1826 | The Cliff Bridge Company was formed by 26 pioneers who met at the ‘George’ in York, and at the same time appointed Mr Outhett as Engineer at a salary of £200 for the erection of the bridge. Meeting was held 1 November 1826. Until now the waters were retained and sold by the Corporation but this year the Spaw was taken over by the Cliff Bridge Company. ‘W’ omitted from ‘Spaw’ for the first time. |
1827 | Cliff Bridge opened on 19 July. |
1836 | House and Spa again destroyed by violent storm. |
1837 | Building commenced on Gothic Saloon (plans prepared by Henry Wyatt). First lease of Spa superseded by one dated 1 January 1837, in term of 200 years. |
1839 | Gothic Saloon opened 16 August. |
1845 | Saloon improved and enlarged. |
1856 | Sir Joseph Paxton consulted, and survey of Spa carried out by him. |
1857 | Work started on transformation and additions, according to his plans. |
1858 | New Spa Hall opened on 20 July with a festival and a grand concert. |
1857/58 | Prospect Tower added. |
1861 | Improvements made to Spa Gardens. |
1871 | Freehold of eight acres of land south of Spa purchased. |
1875 | South Cliff Tramway, the first cliff railway in England, opened to link Spa with Esplanade. Wells sheltered by erection of Band Rotunda, and rehabilitation of wells carried out. |
1876 | Grand Hall gutted by fire on 8 September. |
1877 | Present Spa building commenced October 1877, inside the original shell. Designer Thomas Verity & Hunt, London. |
1880 | Official opening of New Grand Hall (present) on 2 August 1880 by Sir Francis Wyatt Truscott, Lord Mayor of London, In State. |
1881 | First experimental lighting of Spa grounds with ‘Brush’ system electric light. |
1886 | New Spa restaurant opened. |
1887 | Sunday Concerts Began. |
1894 | Electric Light first used in theatre. |
1904 | Trams started running on Spa carriage road to town and back by Vernon Road. |
1911 | Extensions south of Spa, land purchased November - £7140. |
1913 | Building of new band stand — marble forecourt — colonnade and Grand Hall Café. |
1914 | Grand Hall Café opened. |
1915 | South Bay swimming pool completed at cost of £5000. |
1920 | Roof Garden added — Prospect Tower removed. |
1924/25 | Ballroom added. |
1940/45 | Last concert held 6 July 1940; reopened 21 May 1945. |
1951 | Cliff Bridge purchased by Council for £22,500. Freed of toll l19 July. |
1953 | Pay boxes town end of Spa Bridge removed in February. |
1954 | Glass screen erected around band stand (for ice show originally). |
1955 | New £2000 floor laid in ballroom and ballroom modernised and enlarged. |
1957 | The Spa purchased by the Council from the Cliff Bridge Company for £110,000. |
1957 | A concert on 26 October was the last event held under the old administration. |
1958 | New Spa restaurant opened at cost of £10,000. |
1960 | Spa Ballroom reopened on 16 April after extensive alterations at cost of £26,000. First season of Max Jaffa Concerts. |
1963 | Two domes on the sea side of the Spa were demolished and removed in November. Grand Hall modernised, balcony rebuilt and rest of hall reseated at cost of £27,550. |
1965 | February — Northern West Dome and stone surround demolished. |
1967 | Spa Ballroom altered with new intimate atmosphere. |
1968 | On the closing of the Olympia Ballroom, the Council decided to improve facilities at the Spa with the object of housing two separate conferences simultaneously. Work undertaken included additional secretariat facilities for conferences at the Grand Hall, provision of new toilets, improvements to the Green Lounge Café area, provision of conference secretariat and improvements to stage and catering facilities in the Ocean Room. |
1981 | The £3,000,000 scheme of improvement was completed, restoring the Spa Grand Hall to the full splendour of its Victorian heyday. Opening ceremony performed 23 May by Mr Michael Montague, CBE, Chairman of the English Tourist Board, in the presence of Sir Denis Truscott, former Lord Mayor of London and grandson of Sir Francis Wyatt Truscott who had performed the same ceremony just a century before. |
1984 | Completion of the second phase of the total scheme of refurbishment for the Spa, comprising an entirely new east façade and Promenade Lounge with mezzanine bar and enclosed foyer approach at a cost of approximately £2,000,000. |
1986 | A third and final phase costing £600,000 brought the Ocean Ballroom up to a much higher standard for multi-purpose use with additional catering facilities, passenger lift and new external staircase from roadway to terrace. |
The Spa was operated by the Council 1698 to 1826 By Cliff Bridge Company 1826 to 1957 By the Council 1957 to date (Research by Mr Cyril Prescott) |
6. THE CASTLE, ROMAN SIGNAL STATION, PARISH CHURCH
ROMAN SIGNAL STATION - The first occupants of the Castle headland formed a village settlement in the early Iron Age, although he earliest visible remains are those of the Roman Signal Station. It was late in the Roman occupation, soon after AD370 when the Signal Station on the Castle Hill was built. These signal stations were erected to cope with piratical raiders, but although manned by garrisons, their prime purpose was not defence; they were intended as look-out stations from which warning of enemy approach could be sent along the coast and to inland Roman garrisons. (Source: Sir Alfred Clapham)
THE CASTLE - The remains of the Castle dominate the town and well illustrate the great advance in the scale and skill of castle building effected during the latter half of the twelfth century. The first ward is entered through a barbican, the second across a bridge which was rebuilt in 1937-38; there was a third ward to the north, and in the innermost, or bailey, stands the square keep, still in part 80 feet high, with three storeys above a basement 55 feet square. South-each of it, excavation in 1888 revealed foundations of a hall with great chamber, kitchen, etc, and in 1921-25, Mr F G Simpson excavated the plan of the chapel and other buildings near the edge of the sea-cliff.
The Roman Signal Station was also excavated by him on this spot: it had consisted of a high square tower within a bastioned curtain-wall, berm, and ditch, and belongs to the well-known series of signal stations built on the Yorkshire coast later in the fourth century, to give protection against Saxon and other sea-raiders. The excavations here also revealed the pits of an Early Iron Age settlement, established by immigrants apparently from the Low Countries at the very beginning of the period probably within the fifth century BC. (Source: Mr P K Baillie Reynolds)
The following are some landmarks in the history of the Castle:- Some 70 or more years after Hardrada raided Scarborough, William le Gros, Earl of Albemarle, who led the army of the Yorkshire Barons at the Battle of the Standard, fought in 1138 near Northallerton, built the first Castle at Scarborough.
- King John visited Scarborough Castle in 1201, 1210, 1213 and again in 1216. King Edward I held court at the Castle in 1275 and, when Richard III visited Scarborough in 1484, one of the towers on the curtain wall was occupied by the Queen.
- In all, the Castle underwent five sieges, in 1312, 1536, 1557, and in 1644-45 and again in 1648.
- In the Civil War, Scarborough was ultimately the only royalist port on the East Coast, and it was not until 1645, with the garrison worn out and stores exhausted, that the Castle surrendered to Parliament.
- For more than a year (1665-66), George Fox, the founder of the Society of friends, was imprisoned in the ruined Charles' Tower of the Castle. Here he suffered great hardships, before he was released by order of King Charles II.
- Construction of barrack in 1745-1746, following the alarm caused by the Jacobite Rebellion the previous year.
- In 1914, during the Great War, the German fleet bombarded the town and Castle. The keep was damaged and the 17th century barracks almost entirely destroyed.
PARISH CHURCH OF ST MARY - The church of St Mary belonged to the Abbey of Citeaux, but passed to Bridlington with the confiscation of the property of the Alien Houses. The twelfth century church was probably an aisle-less building and a much larger new church was begun around it c.1180. The W front, formerly with two towers, is the earliest art of this structure and was followed by the nave arcades of which the arches sit irregularly upon cylindrical piers. This may mean that the bays and piers were inserted individually in the walls of the earlier nave. The western part of the S arcade has a thinner wall and a different types of pier rather later date than the rest.
The surviving s. transept was built in the second quarter of the fourteenth century and late in the same century the barrel-vaulted chapels were added to the S aisle and a second aisle was added on the N. The aisled chancel was rebuilt about the middle of the fifteenth century. It was much damaged in the siege of the Castle in 1644-45, and ruined by the fall of the central tower in 1659; the N. transept also fell into ruin. The present tower was built in 1669 and the outer N. aisle in 1848-50. In a detached part of the burial ground is buried Anne Brontë, who died on 28 May 1849, aged 28.
(Source: Sir Alfred Clapham)
7. NORTHSTEAD MANOR
The ancient boundary of the Borough of Scarborough, on the northern side, was Peasholm Beck. Immediately beyond that was the Manor of Northstead, although modern boundary extensions have brought it entirely within the town boundary and the area has been built upon. The site of what may have been the manor house is now covered by the lake in Peasholm Park, one of Scarborough's most attractive gardens. The, manor was purchased by King Richard III and, although Scarborough Corporation purchased the land (known as the Northstead Estate) from the Crown in 1921, the lordship of the manor was retained by the Crown. That is how the Stewardship of the Manor became, and still is, a Crown office.
Northstead and Members of Parliament In theory a Member of Parliament cannot resign. However, a person who holds an office of profit under the Crown is disqualified from being an MP. In practice, if an MP wishes to resign, he or she applies to be appointed as Steward of the Chiltern Hundreds or of the Manor of Northstead. Although these offices are sinecures involving no actual duties, they are technically offices of profit under the Crown, so anyone appointed to either of those offices automatically ceases to be an MP and has, in effect, resigned. Appointments to these offices are normally made alternately.
David G Futty
8. THE PORT
The port is situated on the east coast of England at the foot of Scarborough Castle Hill. The harbour is owned by the Scarborough Borough Council and consists of three piers enclosing an outer and an inner basin. The outer basin is mainly used by pleasure boats and the inner basin by commercial fishing and cargo vessels. The harbour is tidal and almost dries out at low water. It is prone to silting and for this reason the Council charters a small back hoe dredger to remove mud, sand and stones from the bottom.
From the commercial part of the harbour approximately 25 keel boats and about 30 small cobles and other open boats engage in fishing. The keel boats mainly go trawling, which means dragging a large cone shaped net through the water and catching a variety of fish types, while the smaller boats fish with lines or trammel nets or set traps to catch crabs or lobsters especially during the summer time. Line fishing is rapidly disappearing mainly due to the high cost of baiting the 600 hooks which each line may carry. A trammel net is a curtain of net in which the fish become enmeshed in small pockets. The main fish types caught are cod, haddock, whiting and dog fish while bottom trawling produces skate, sole and Dover sole plaice and turbot. Until the early 1970s herring fishing was a major seasonal activity, but mainly due to overfishing is now restricted. Crabs and lobster are trapped in net covered 'pots' which are baited with scraps of fish and placed on the seabed near to the rocks which provide protection for the shellfish.
The main shellfish season is between March and September but some fishing takes place during the winter when the weather is settled. During the summer a small quantity of salmon is also netted as the fish migrate along the coast to the spawning rivers. As each vessel comes into port the fish is landed at the fish market pier. Different varieties and sizes of fish are laid out in boxes each with the weight marked on it and each with ice added to keep the fish in good condition. The fish is sold by auction with buyers coming from all over the county to bid against one another. The buyers then despatch the fish by road to as far away as London. Nowadays the cargo trade is in decline with only an occasional cargo boat calling, usually with malting barley. The outer harbour contains over 200 pleasure boats ranging from racing and cruising yachts to a variety of small pleasure fishing boats and 25 speedboats.
9. THE HARBOUR - IMPORTANT DATES
EARLY HISTORY
1225 Henry III made a grant of 40 oaks from his woods to the men of Scarborough to use in the harbour.
1251 Henry III granted Charter to 'His Bailiffs and Burgesses and other good men of Scardeburgh: it is for the benefit of the Town of Scardeburgh to make a certain new port with timber and stone towards the sea whereby all ships arriving thither may enter and sail out without danger as well at the beginning of Flood as at High water. Authority given to Scarborough fishermen to land fish in Normandy free of toll.
1564 Elizabeth I granted £500 in money. 100 tons of timber, 6 tons of iron in aid of rebuilding the harbour.
1732 George II. Act passed to enlarge harbour by building Vincents Pier and the present East Pier at cost of £12,000. At this time there were upwards of 300 sailing ships belonging to Scarborough.
THE PIERS
1752 Completion of Vincents Pier which was a continuation seawards from the old Locker House in the early pier and named after its engineer William Vincent. Revenue produced by a levy of 1/2d. per cauldron of coals landed from Newcastle and other duties.
1750s Work on construction of the East Pier began. Mr Smeaton, who built Eddystone Lighthouse, was consulting engineer. Blocks for this pier were taken from the foreshore at White Nab (Cornelian Bay) and conveyed in flat bottomed vessels called 'floats'. Some of the stone blocks weighed 20 to 30 tons. It took over half a century before the pier, measuring 1380 feet, was finally completed, some time after 1811. During the early years of the 19th century, the isolated inner Island Pier was demolished and the shore reused to build the West Pier from West Sandgate. It was completed shortly after 1825.
1901 Sandside and approach road constructed in conjunction with Marine Drive. Originally Quay Street was part of the Old Harbour. Mooring posts found in cellars of houses.
THE LIGHTHOUSE
The first reference to a lighthouse at the end of Vincent's Pier occurs in 1804. A signal flag was displayed by day and a light by night when depth of water was not less than 12 feet. Storry's Guide 1844 records that a cupola and additional storey were recently added.
In 1914, the lighthouse was seriously damaged during the bombardment of Scarborough by German cruisers and the tower had to be dismantled. It was rebuilt in 1931.
10. GEOLOGY
Scarborough is dominated by Castle Hill. This flat topped promontory is due to a Y-shaped fault along which the Corallian is thrown down to form the hard capping at the end of the headland, while the lower ground to the west is Oxford Clay. The Oxford Clay is well seen from the Marine Drive on the east side of the hill and the basal beds of the Lower Calcareous Grit form overhanging cliffs above the bare clay face.
Proceeding southwards along the foreshore of South Bay the Upper Estuarine Sandstones are seen just south of the bathing pool and further on the Grey Limestones form a low anticline visible at low tide, and also in the base of White Nab. A well-developed wave-cut platform has been cut across the Grey Limestone and the only irregularities are associated with the outcrop of the bedding planes.
Drift plays an important part in the cliff forms just south of Scarborough where very well developed rotational shear-slips have developed in Cornelian Bay and Cayton Bay, where the sheared blocks have marked reverse slopes. Many erratics of Scandinavian origin occur in both these bays.
11. OTHER SOURCES OF GEOLOGY
To the north of Scarborough is the North York Moors National Park, to the west are the Dales and to the south are the Wolds. Information on these areas may be obtained from the following sources:
The Moors Centre, Danby, Whitby.(For the North York Moors National Park)
The Tourist Information Centre25 Prince Street, Bridlington(For the Wolds)
