In 1823 Pickering was kept in touch with Whitby, York and Scarborough by coaches that ran three times a week. On Monday, Wednesday and Friday a coach (Royal Mail) left the “Black Swan” in the market place for Whitby at the painfully early hour of four o’clock in the morning; another Royal Mail left Pickering for York at half-past three in the afternoon on Sunday, Tuesday and Thursday. The stages were from
Whitby to Saltergate.
Saltergate to Pickering.
Pickering to Malton.
Malton to Spital Beck.
Spital Beck to York.
There was also what was called the “Boat Coach” that ran between Pickering and Scarborough.
One of the last drivers of these coaches became a guard on the North Eastern Railway, and he still lives in Pickering at the time of writing.
The parish chest in the vestry of Pickering Church contains among other papers a number of apprenticeship deeds of a hundred to a hundred and fifty years ago, in which the master promises that he will educate the boy and “bring him up in some honest and lawful calling and in the fear of God,” and in most cases to provide him with a suit of clothes at the completion of his term, generally at the age of twenty-one years.
The odd papers registering the arrival of new inhabitants in the district include one dated 1729, and in them we find a churchwarden possessing such a distinguished name as Hotham, signing that surname without a capital, and in 1809 we find an overseer of the poor only able to make his mark against the seal.
The largest bell in the church tower is dated 1755 and bears the inscription, “First I call you to God’s word, and at last unto the Lord.” It is said that this bell was cracked owing to the great strength of one of the ringers, and that the date 1755 is the year of the re-casting. The flagon is the only piece of the church plate belonging to this period. It was made in 1805 by Prince of York.
In the year 1837 the Rev. Joseph Kipling, grandfather of Mr Rudyard Kipling, was living at Pickering, and on the 6th of July of that year a son, John, was born. Mr Joseph Kipling was a Wesleyan minister, and his residence at Pickering was only a temporary one.
Another Wesleyan who was living at this time was John Castillo, the author of many quaint poems in the Yorkshire dialect, and an original local preacher as well. He died in 1845, and his grave is to be seen in the burial-ground of the Wesleyan Chapel. It bears a verse from “Awd Isaac,” the poem by which he is best known—
“Bud noo his eens geean dim i’ deeath,
Nera mare a pilgrim here on eeath,
His sowl flits fra’ her shell beneeath,
Te reealms o’ day,
Whoor carpin care an’ pain an’ deeath
Are deean away.”
In 1720 a new chapel was built at Pickering for Protestant Dissenters, but before that time—as early as 1702—Edward Brignall’s house was set apart for divine worship by Dissenters. An Independent Church was formed in 1715, the people probably meeting in private houses for several years. After this, little is known until 1788, when the Independent Church was again established, and in the following year a chapel was built, and it was enlarged in 1814.