# Bishop Burton

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{{Short description|Village and civil parish in the East Riding of Yorkshire, England}}
{{about|the village in England|the Presiding Bishop of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints|H. David Burton}}
{{pp-protected|small=yes}}
{{Use dmy dates|date=November 2014}}
{{Use British English|date=November 2014}}
{{Infobox UK place
| country                  = England
| coordinates              = {{coord|53.845042|-0.498802|display=inline,title}}
| label_position           = left
| official_name            = Bishop Burton
| population               = 696
| population_ref           = ([2011 census](/source/United_Kingdom_Census_2011))<ref name="2011 census"/>
| civil_parish             = Bishop Burton
| unitary_england          = [East Riding of Yorkshire](/source/East_Riding_of_Yorkshire)
| region                   = Yorkshire and the Humber
| lieutenancy_england      = [East Riding of Yorkshire](/source/East_Riding_of_Yorkshire)
| constituency_westminster = [Beverley and Holderness](/source/Beverley_and_Holderness_(UK_Parliament_constituency))
| post_town                = BEVERLEY
| postcode_district        = HU17
| postcode_area            = HU
| dial_code                = 01964
| os_grid_reference        = SE988398
| london_distance_mi       = 160<!-- straight line per MOS – constant and comparable with other place distances -->
| london_direction         = S
}}
'''Bishop Burton''' is a village and [civil parish](/source/civil_parishes_in_England) in the [East Riding of Yorkshire](/source/East_Riding_of_Yorkshire), England. It lies on the [A1079 road](/source/A1079_road) approximately {{convert|3|mi|km|0|spell=in}} to the west of the [market town](/source/market_town) of [Beverley](/source/Beverley). Another "Burton" is [Cherry Burton](/source/Cherry_Burton), a mile or so to the north.
thumb|left|The Mere in Bishop Burton
==Name and residents==
According to the [2011 UK census](/source/United_Kingdom_Census_2011), Bishop Burton parish had a population of 696,<ref name="2011 census">{{NOMIS2011
 | id = 1170211145
 | title = Bishop Burton Parish
 | accessdate = 15 February 2018}}</ref> an increase on the [2001 UK census](/source/United_Kingdom_Census_2001) figure of 628.<ref name="2001 census">{{NOMIS2001
 | id = 1543504192
 | title = Bishop Burton Parish
 | accessdate = 25 November 2018
}}</ref>

There has been human activity in Bishop Burton for at least 10,000 years, with traces left from the Mesolithic, Neolithic, Bronze Age, Iron Age and Romano-British eras.

The village (whose name may derive from Burtone, meaning fortified farmstead) is mentioned in the Domesday Book as belonging to the Archbishop of York and the site of Archbishop's Manor House continued to be the site of Manor Houses up to the demolition of High Hall in 1952.
==Features==
The parish church of All Saints is a [Grade II* listed building](/source/Grade_II*_listed_building)<ref>{{NHLE|num=1103429|desc=Church of All Saints|accessdate=27 January 2013}}</ref> and its earliest parts date from the late 12th century. The only other surviving religious building is the Wesleyan Methodist Chapel, dating from 1840, which is now a house.
thumb|left|All Saints Church

There was a school in the village from 1743 to 1986.

In a field to the east of the village is one of the medieval stone boundary markers for the sanctuary of Saint [John of Beverley](/source/John_of_Beverley) that is now a [Scheduled Ancient Monument](/source/Scheduled_Ancient_Monument).<ref>{{NHLE|num=1012589|desc=Beverley sanctuary limit stone, Bishop Burton cross|accessdate=22 October 2013}}</ref>

The look and feel of the village - black and white colour scheme, rustic porches and clay pantiles -  are the result of improvements to estate housing carried out by ERB Hall-Watt and Richard Hall-Watt (see below) in the late 19th and early 20th century.  Subsequent development has often followed this architectural style to retain the unified feel of the village.  It is readily apparent when it has not.<ref>{{cite book|title=Yorkshire: York and the East Riding|first1= Nikolaus |last1=Pevsner|first2= David |last2=Neave|page=330|year= 2002|publisher=Yale University Press}}
</ref>

Bishop Burton is home to [Bishop Burton College](/source/Bishop_Burton_College), a [further education](/source/further_education) and [higher education](/source/higher_education) college specialising in [agriculture](/source/agriculture) and [equine](/source/equine) studies.

Bishop Burton is also the home to Bishop Burton United Football Club, formed in 2008 as Wilberforce & Larkin Football Club before moving to the village at the start of the 2009–10 season and changing the name to Bishop Burton United so as to emphasise their link with the village and their new home. Bishop Burton United play in the East Riding County Football League Division 3 with matches taking place on Saturdays with a 2&nbsp;pm kick off. United's home ground is the 4G artificial surface at Bishop Burton College. United's local rivals are nearby sides Molescroft Rangers and Market Weighton United. United have a reputation as a progressive and ambitious football club with the lofty aim of gaining semi-professional status within the next 7 years. The club is also known for its broad multicultural mix with Polish, Latvian, French, Indonesian and Nigerian players in their squad.

==The Gee and Watt families of Bishop Burton==
===History===
thumb|Bishop-Burton Hall, Beverley, Yorkshire, the seat of R. Watt Esq. in 1829
The Gee family were associated with [Arthur Pearson-Gee](/source/Arthur_Pearson-Gee), the brother of [Karl Pearson](/source/Karl_Pearson). The Gees came from Rothley in Leicestershire. 
*Henry Gee was the common ancestor of a senior branch of the family who remained in Rothley and the father of William Gee who first moved to Hull as a master mariner.
* William Gee (1561–1611)<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.historyofparliamentonline.org/volume/1558-1603/member/gee-william-1561-1611|title=GEE, William (1561-1611), of Bishop Burton, nr. Beverley, Yorks. |work= History of Parliament Online|accessdate=29 April 2020}}</ref>  became a Merchant of the Staple and acquired great wealth. He was sheriff of Hull in 1560 and mayor in 1562, 1573 and 1582. He was the benefactor of Hull Grammar School and founded a hospital for ten poor women.
*His eldest son, William Gee (b.1562), was secretary of the Council of the North and Keeper of the Signet from 1604. He purchased the Bishop Burton estate in 1603 and built a hall.
* The estate and hall both subsequently descended in the Gee family until being bought by Richard Watt (1751–1798) in 1783. Richard Watt had started life as a stable boy and coach driver at the village inn before joining a merchant ship bound for the West Indies. There he bought a plantation and exploited slave labour to produce rum and sugar. Some of his estate accounts for Jamaica are in the collection.
* When Richard Watt (d.1798) died his estates were inherited by his nephew, Richard Watt (d.1812) and then his grandnephew, also Richard Watt (1786–1855). The latter was a horse breeder who had four winners of the [St Leger](/source/St_Leger).
* When Richard Watt died in 1855, the  estates passed to two of his sons before lying unoccupied until 1886 when they passed to Ernest Richard Bradley Hall-Watt (1865–1908). He was an early motoring enthusiast and died in a car accident.
* He was succeeded by his son, Richard Hall-Watt (1898–1917), who was killed during the First World War.
*Richard Hall-Watt was succeeded by his brother, Alvery Digby Hall-Watt (1901–1961), who sold the estate in 1930. It is now [Bishop Burton Agricultural College](/source/Bishop_Burton_College).
===Monument and archives===
Monument to Rachel and Elizabeth Gee

This alabaster monument was found in an old vault under the floor of the chancel in 1865 and restored to its position in the church. It is to Rachel, wife of William Gee Esq. of the Bishop Burton Estate.

Rachel was the daughter of Thomas Parker of Ratton, and she died in 1649 aged 33. William Gee Esq. (d 1683) was the grandson of Sir William Gee of Bishop Burton (d.1611), secretary to James I (r.1603–25). Sir William, then of Beverley, bought the estate after it was surrendered to the crown in 1543, being part of the Archbishop of York's estate.

The memorial now consists of the shrouded figure of Rachel, full length with her face, one arm and hand exposed, and the small figure of a child which kneels at her head. These two items are thought to have been part of a larger monument, which has probably been destroyed.

The Gee family archives in the Brynmor Jones Library of the University  of Hull ([https://hull.summon.serialssolutions.com/#!/search?ho=f&include.ft.matches=t&fvf=ContentType,Newspaper%20Article,t%7CContentType,Book%20Review,t%7CContentType,Dissertation,t%7CContentType,Journal%20Article,t%7CContentType,Government%20Document,t%7CContentType,Magazine%20Article,t&l=en-UK&q=(Bishop%20Burton%20manor)] contain:
*estate papers dating from 1194 relating to land at Bishop Burton and the immediate surrounds of Cherry Burton and Walkington
* a few papers of the Watt family relating to their land at [Speke](/source/Speke) in Lancashire and [Georges Plain](/source/Georges_Plain) in Jamaica (1849–1861)
* [manorial records](/source/manorial_records) for the manor of Bishop Burton
*  a seventeenth-century volume of surveys and assessments for sewers at [Ottringham](/source/Ottringham)
* papers for [Walkington](/source/Walkington) of [John Lockwood](/source/John_Lockwood_(priest)) and family.

==See also==
*[Listed buildings in Bishop Burton](/source/Listed_buildings_in_Bishop_Burton)

==References==
{{Reflist}}
{{Refbegin}}
*{{cite book|title=Gazetteer — A–Z of Towns Villages and Hamlets|year=2006|publisher=East Riding of Yorkshire Council|page=3<!--|accessdate=29 January 2011-->}}
{{Refend}}

==External links==
*{{Commons category-inline|Bishop Burton}}
*{{OpenDomesday|OS=SE9939|name=bishop-burton|display=Bishop Burton}}
*[http://www.bishopburton.org.uk/ Bishop Burton Village Website]
*[http://www.bishopburton.ac.uk/ Bishop Burton College]
*[https://web.archive.org/web/20150528225534/http://bbufc.com// Bishop Burton United Football Club]
*[http://www.hull.ac.uk/arc/collection/landedfamilyandestatepapers/gee.html Family archives] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110606155942/http://www.hull.ac.uk/arc/collection/landedfamilyandestatepapers/gee.html |date=6 June 2011 }}

{{Portalbar|Yorkshire|England|United Kingdom}}
{{East Yorkshire|state=collapsed}}

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Category:Villages in the East Riding of Yorkshire
Category:Civil parishes in the East Riding of Yorkshire

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Adapted from the Wikipedia article [Bishop Burton](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bishop_Burton) by Wikipedia contributors ([contributor history](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bishop_Burton?action=history)). Available under [Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International](https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0/). Changes may have been made.
