Human settlement in England
Marsett is one of three settlements in around Semer Water in Raydale, a small side dale off Wensleydale in North Yorkshire, England. Marsett is only a hamlet and lies to the south-west of the lake, at a point where a smaller side dale, Bardale, joins Raydale.
The hamlet consists of two farms and ten permanent dwellings, together with a number of holiday cottages. There is also a Methodist chapel, built in 1897.
The name, first recorded in 1283 as Mouressate, is from the Old Norse Maures sætr, meaning 'the shieling of a man named Maurr' (a nickname meaning 'ant').
In 2016, Marsett's red telephone box was scheduled to be demolished, but following a successful campaign where local councillors pointed out that there is no mobile phone reception in the area, it was renovated instead. The phone box has also been earmarked as a possible location for a defibrillator unit.
References
- The Dales website:The Village of Marsett
- North Yorkshire Dales Methodist Circuit website Archived 13 January 2014 at the Wayback Machine
- Watts, Victor, ed. (2010), "Marsett", The Cambridge Dictionary of English Place-Names, Cambridge University Press, ISBN 978 0 521 16855 7
- Richardson, Andy, ed. (3 March 2017). "Bainbridge Parish Council". Darlington & Stockton Times. No. 9. p. 31. ISSN 2040-3933.
External links
Media related to Marsett at Wikimedia Commons
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