Burton Leonard


Burton Leonard is a village and civil parish in the Harrogate district of North Yorkshire, England, and approximately south from Ripon. In the 2001 Census, the population of the village was 654, which had risen to 690 by the time of the 2011 Census. In 2015, North Yorkshire County Council estimated the population had dropped to 670.
The village is typical of the area, with at its centre a green, one public house, a church, a small primary school, a cricket field and a village shop. Buses run daily from the green to the nearby towns of Harrogate and Ripon.

History

Burton Leonard is mentioned in the Domesday Book as having 30 ploughlands and belonging to King William. The name of Burton derives from the Old English of Burh-Tūn and the name of Leonard, in this case, the dedication of the local church.
The Church of St Leonard, is a grade II listed structure that was built in 1878, replacing an earlier structure. Although the current dedication is for St Leonard, as was the dedication in the Late Middle Ages, the former church was dedicated to St Helen. The parish was formerly a peculiar, though now it is in the Diocese of Leeds. The primary school is the Burton Leonard Church of England Primary School, which was rated as outstanding by Ofsted in October 2019.
Burton Leonard has just one pub, the Royal Oak, after the Hare and Hounds closed in 2017 and it was demolished to make way for new housing.
Station lane in the village leads westwards to the hamlet of Wormald Green, where the nearest railway station was. This closed in 1962, and now the nearest railway station is in, to the south. The village has a limited bus service between Ripon and Knaresborough. The A61 road is to the north and the A1 motorway, is to the east at Boroughbridge.
The underlying geology of the area is magnesian limestone, which many of the older buildings in the village are constructed of. South of the village is Burton Leonard Lime Quarries SSSI, a site which supplied lime and building stone up until 1941.

Notable people