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Kirklevington

 
Wikipedia: Kirklevington

Coordinates: 54°28′52″N 1°20′19″W / 54.4812°N 1.3386°W / 54.4812; -1.3386

Kirklevington
Kirklevington is located in North Yorkshire
Kirklevington

Red pog.svg Kirklevington shown within North Yorkshire
Population 1,295 
OS grid reference NZ429097
Unitary authority Stockton-on-Tees
Ceremonial county North Yorkshire
Region North East
Country England
Sovereign state United Kingdom
Post town YARM
Postcode district TS15
Dialling code 01642
Police Cleveland
Fire Cleveland
Ambulance North East
EU Parliament North East England
UK Parliament Stockton South
List of places: UK • England • Yorkshire

Kirklevington (also known as Kirk Leavington) is a village and civil parish in the borough of Stockton-on-Tees, and ceremonial county of North Yorkshire, England. It is situated just outside the town of Yarm.

The north edge of Kirklevington

As an ancient parish, it included the townships of Castlelevington, Picton and Low Worsall, which became established as separate parishes in 1866.[1] It formed part of the Stokesley Rural District from 1894 to 1974, when it became part of the borough of Stockton.The village was once home to the famous Kirklevington Country Club.

The village which covers a larger area than is typical for a village is mostly relatively modern. It includes a church, village hall, a small public park, a primary school, a riding centre at Town End Farm, Vidgen's engineering garage and The Crown Hotel which is a pub serving food. The village is also the location of HMP Kirklevington Grange, a men's resettlement prison for inmates intending to settle (on release) in the North East of England.

Kirklevington Country Club

The village was once home to the famous Kirklevington Country Club, 'The Kirk',[2] which saw many of the bands of the 1960s, 1970s and 1980s appearing on its small stage. These included Eric Clapton (Cream), Jimi Hendrix, Joe Cocker, Rod Stewart, Zoot Money, George Melly,[3] Terry Reid, Simple Minds, Yes, Mott the Hoople, Buddy Guy, Paul Young, The Alan Bown Set, Jimmy James and the Vagabonds, Geno Washington and the Ram Jam Band, Spooky Tooth,the Jeff Beck Group (feat. Rod Stewart and Ronnie Wood) Chris Rea, Paul Rodgers, David Coverdale, Marc Almond / Soft Cell etc. many of whom went on to superstardom.

The club premises were (pre World War II) a filling station/garage, situated on the old A19 York road leading north to Newcastle and Sunderland. During the 1950s a local dance band leader Tommy Reay converted a large 1st floor room, and built extensions to form an out-of-town (Stockton/Middlesbrough) dance hall, which often also catered as a pre-motorway service station for early car-borne travellers, and as a regular stop-off venue for revellers driving home northwards up the A.19. from race-meetings at York, Wetherby and Doncaster.

In the mid 1960s the Club was purchased by a young local musician and promoter John Benedict McCoy[2] (whose 8-piece R&B band The Crawdaddies already had a regular following there) and his partner Ken Crawford. John McCoy had already proved himself well enough in touch with bands on 'the rise up' as early as 1963 by booking the Rolling Stones for £65 ($90) and The Hollies at a his previous club-venue The Outlook in Middlesbrough. On Saturday 13 July 1963 both The Hollies and The Rolling Stones appeared on the same bill at The Outlook, In fact this was the Rolling Stones first booking outside of Greater London, and this one-off gig was actually 'brokered' as a favour through John McCoys friend, blues-singer Long John Baldry. In Bill Wyman's book "Rolling With The Stones" (a detailed journal of his time with the band) he is adamant that this booking was at a Middlesbrough club called the Alcove. However there was never a club in Middlesbrough with this name and an advertisement for this double booking at the The Outlook appeared in the Evening Gazette[4] the previous night. At another small 200 capacity venue, Mr McCoys in Bottomley St, Middlesbrough, John Benedict McCoy had also booked Stevie Wonder and The Who.

During the 1960s, before widespread car ownership amonst the young, Kirklevington Country Club proved incredibly popular, even though its North Yorkshire village location was quite remote from local towns. Weekend nights at the "Kirk" were extremely well attended, as these were the nights the live-bands appeared. Many clubgoers would board the latest early-evening bus service there, and then rely on hitch-hiking home in groups along the roadside in the early hours.

By the early 1970s John McCoy gave over part of the building ( a former vehicle workshop) to his brothers Peter, Tom & Eugene McCoy[5] in order for them to open a small, almost 'bijou' 30-seater restaurant. After quickly establishing a very appreciative and widespread reputation for fine-food, they then went onto open McCoys at The Tontine,[2] now a U.K. and internationally acclaimed gourmet dining venue, some 5-miles south, along the main A.19 road, near Osmotherley, North Yorkshire in a former 17thC. coaching-inn. (See also as of 2008 McCoy's Restaurant, Newcastle upon Tyne).

During the late 1970s, John McCoy became personal manager of Middlesbrough born singer/songwriter Chris Rea. By the early 1980s after extensive touring, he then handed over Rea's management to Jim Beach (manager of Queen) and came back Kirklevington in order to further develop his club premises. This was to include a unique New England influenced, Bar & Grill type 60-cover restaurant Martha's Vineyard - which proved so popular it soon required at least 14-day advance table reservations. However, a new venture in Darlington, Perry's, around 1991 proved unsuccessful and eventually led to that venue, and The Kirklevington Country Club, being sold in the mid 1990s.

The new purchasers massively expanded the Club on the site, which meant that it lost much of its previous 'intimate' atmosphere, and many longtime, dedicated 'core' patrons,(being prior to this redevelopment, a total 375 capacity). The new Club premises, by now at 800 capacity, eventually failed after only 3-years, and the building was inevitably sold and demolished, for the erection of a group of 'faux' cottage style homes.

References

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Kirklevington Grange (HM Prison)
Castlelevington
Stokesley Rural District

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