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Goole

Goole is a port town and civil parish on the River Ouse in the East Riding of Yorkshire, England. The town's historic county is the West Riding of Yorkshire.

Goole

Goole Port and the skyline of the town with the spire of St John's church
Goole
Location within the East Riding of Yorkshire
Population21,952 (2021 census)[1]
OS grid referenceSE746231
Civil parish
Unitary authority
Ceremonial county
Region
CountryEngland
Sovereign stateUnited Kingdom
Post townGOOLE
Postcode districtDN14
Dialling code01405
PoliceHumberside
FireHumberside
AmbulanceYorkshire
UK Parliament
List of places
UK
England
Yorkshire
53°41′57″N 0°52′09″W / 53.699217°N 0.869171°W / 53.699217; -0.869171Coordinates: 53°41′57″N 0°52′09″W / 53.699217°N 0.869171°W / 53.699217; -0.869171

According to the 2021 UK census, Goole parish had a population of 21,952,[1] It is 16 miles (26 km) north-east of Doncaster, 19 miles (31 km) south of York and 29 miles (47 km) west of Hull.

The town has the United Kingdom's furthest inland port, being about 50 miles (80 km) from the North Sea.[3] It is capable of handling nearly 2 million tonnes of cargo per year, making it one of the most important ports on England's east coast.[4]

Goole is twinned with Złotów in Poland. Goole was informally twinned with Gibraltar in the 1960s; at that time, Gibraltar Court was named in Goole and Goole Court was named in Gibraltar.

History

Etymology

Goole is first attested in 1306, as Gull Lewth (where lewth means 'barn', from Old Norse hlaða), and then 1362 as Gulle in Houke' (referring to the nearby, and then more significant, village of Hook). The name is first attested in its shorter, modern form, from the 1530s. It comes from the Middle English word goule (or an Old English ancestor), meaning 'a channel made by a stream'.[5][6] The word has sometimes been taken to imply that Goole is named after an open sewer, but there is no strong basis for this.[7]

Background

The Dutch civil engineer Cornelius Vermuyden diverted the River Don northwards to the River Ouse in 1626–1629 in order to drain the marshland of Hatfield Chase at the behest of King Charles I.[8] It made the new lower Don – known as the Dutch River – navigable for barges so that coal from the South Yorkshire Coalfield could be transported to the new confluence for transfer to seagoing vessels. There the engineers built a new wooden bridge – rebuilt in iron in the 1890s and now known as the Dutch River Bridge – to the east of which a new village called 'Goole' formed.[8]

Development

 
The Lowther Hotel, reputedly the first building constructed in New Goole in 1824, opened as the Banks Arms Hotel, named after Sir Edward Banks a contractor for the Aire and Calder Navigation company.

In the 1820s the Aire and Calder Navigation company proposed development of a new canal to transport coal from the existing broad canal from Knottingley in the northern sector of the coalfield in 1826. Once it reached Goole the company proposed development of a new floating dock capable of handling larger sea-going vessels. Chief engineer Thomas Hamond Bartholomew was instructed to build the canal, docks and an associated company town to house both the dock workers and visiting seamen.[8] Bartholomew commissioned civil engineer and builder Sir Edward Banks company to construct part of the canal and the eight transshipment docks and to lay out the associated new town to the west of the existing wooden bridge. The Banks Arms Hotel on Aire Street – today known as the Lowther Hotel - was in 1824 the first building constructed in what was known as New Goole; The Macintosh Arms public house on the same street took its name from engineer Hugh Macintosh.[8]

When Goole port opened on 20 July 1826 it was a new community of about 450 people.[8] Now it is a town with about 18,000 inhabitants.[9]

 
A Tom Pudding hoist in Goole docks

William Hamond Bartholomew succeeded his father T. H. Bartholomew in 1853 and in 1863 introduced the Tom Pudding system of compartment boats, which could carry around 40 long tons (41,000 kg) of coal. On reaching the docks the barges were lifted by large hoists, from which they could be discharged direct into seagoing ships, a system so successful that it competed against rail until 1985.[10]

Education

 
Goole High School, formerly Goole Grammar School

Goole has several primary schools as well as Goole High School, with a sixth-form college attached to it, and a special needs school, Riverside School, that caters for 2-19 year olds. Goole College is affiliated with Hull College. There are further education colleges in Selby, York, Scunthorpe, and Bishop Burton. Goole College runs a scheme for showing the older students at the High School (in year 10 and above) what opportunities the college offers them.

Transport

The Lancashire and Yorkshire Railway built a line from Pontefract and Wakefield in 1848 and the North Eastern Railway connected the port with Doncaster and Hull in 1870.[11] The prosperity from the coal and general cargo trade with the West Riding industrial area continued for 150 years after the opening of the canal.

Today Goole railway station is at the junction of the Hull and Doncaster Branch and the Pontefract Line. Services are provided to Hull Paragon Interchange, Doncaster, Sheffield, Leeds and the commuter stations in between.

Goole is south of the M62 linking it with Kingston upon Hull in the east and Leeds and the West Yorkshire urban belt in the west. To the north the A63 road via Howden provides local access to the A19 road to Selby and York. The M18 runs west of the town, connecting it with South Yorkshire, the South and the Midlands. Bus services to surrounding towns and villages are provided by East Yorkshire Motor Services, Stagecoach in Hull and Arriva Yorkshire.[12]

Governance

Before the reform of local government in 1974, brought about by the Local Government Act 1972, Goole was in the West Riding of Yorkshire. It was then placed in the Boothferry district of the county of Humberside until that was abolished in 1996. Since 1996 Goole has been in the East Riding of Yorkshire. It is represented by four councillors on the East Riding of Yorkshire Council.[13]

Goole is in the parliamentary constituency of Brigg and Goole, which has been represented in the House of Commons since 2010 by Andrew Percy, a Conservative.

Landmarks

 
'salt' and 'pepper', the twin water towers
 
St John's Church, Gothic Revival style and built between 1843 and 1848.
 
Goole Docks
 
Goole's Clock Tower

Goole's most prominent landmarks are its twin water towers, nicknamed 'salt' and 'pepper'. The new white water-tower was the largest in Europe at the time of construction. In the winter months Goole's gas holder on Anderson Road is visible across the north of the town. Many of the hoists and cranes on the dockside can be seen across the town. The steeple of Goole Parish Church is tall enough to be seen across the town. The townscape is made up mostly of utility and industrial structures. There is a clock tower in the main shopping district of the town on a roundabout on the site of the former open-air marketplace. West Park is an Edwardian park in the town.

Economy

Goole has a modestly sized town centre with many high street shops, independent retailers and public houses. The main shopping area is Wesley Square, off Boothferry Road (which has been pedestrianised around the main shopping area). There is a modern retail development in the town centre, a leisure centre next to the docks and the Goole and District Hospital, to the north of the town. A theatre and cinema, 'Junction', opened in 2009.[14]

Industry

 
The port from a distance

Glass is produced in Goole, which is also the centre of an agricultural district. The town's former large employer was a clothing manufacture for the big multiples but it closed in the late 2000s. Goole's industrial park, Capitol Park / Goole36,[15] has attracted two large employers: Guardian Industries, which built a glass-manufacturing plant, and Tesco, which built a distribution centre. The arrival of these employers resulted in the creation of hundreds of new jobs.[16] A new Morrisons store opened in Goole on 2 August 2010, on land previously occupied by Timms Mill on Boothferry Road. A new railway rolling stock factory was built at the same location during 2018/2019. The plant, owned and operated by Siemens, builds the new tube trains for the Piccadilly line in London.[17]

Docks

Three locks keep the water in 37 acres (150,000 m2) of floating docks at a constant depth of 6 metres (20 ft) by preventing the level from rising and falling with the tides in the River Ouse. Once ships are within the complex, eight docks provide a total quayside of 3 miles (4.8 km). Beside the docks are transit sheds where cargo is stored, many of them equipped with overhead cranes.[8] Unlike many ports every one of the eight docks has been in full commercial operation since its construction in the period from 1826 to 1912.

For most of its life the port was most associated with the shipment of coal and associated cargoes, including the importation of pit props. With the demise of mining the former Timber Pond became a marina, trading under the name Goole Boathouse. It has berths for 150 boats.

After a period of decline commodities were replaced by containers, the export of steel and the import of timber from north-eastern Europe. Today the Port of Goole has regular cargo liner services to Norway, Sweden, Finland, Germany, the Netherlands, Belgium, France, Spain, Morocco and South Africa and a transshipment route to Europort, Rotterdam.

Sport

 
Victoria Pleasure Ground

Goole Town Cricket Club supports local cricket teams. Of its three teams, the first team plays in the club cricket York & District Senior League. A new clubhouse was constructed in 1996 providing facilities and a bar.[18]

Rugby Union is played close to the cricket club at Westfield Banks, sharing facilities with Goole Tennis Club and Goole Viking Striders running club. Goole RUFC currently fields two teams, the first team playing in Yorkshire Division Two.

Goole Tennis Centre is a nine-court tennis club on the Westfield Banks site.[19]

Goole has two football teams - Goole A.F.C. and Goole United A.F.C. They currently play in the Northern Premier League Division One South and the Humber Premier League Division One respectively. They both play at the Victoria Pleasure Grounds on Marcus Street. The nearest professional teams are Rotherham United, Doncaster Rovers, Grimsby Town, Hull City, Leeds United, Barnsley, Scunthorpe United, Sheffield Wednesday, Sheffield United and York City.

Goole used to have two golf clubs. The early course, founded in 1900, was at Rawcliffe Park. The later course was at Airmyn Park from 1911 to the Second World War.[20] Currently Goole's nearest golf clubs are the Boothferry Golf Club in Spaldington and Drax Golf Club in Drax.

Media

Radio Medica is a not-for-profit radio station broadcast from the Goole And District Hospital.[21]

The town is served by a weekly tabloid newspaper, The Goole Times, published since 1853 and sold in Goole and neighbouring parts of the East Riding of Yorkshire.[22]

The town is referenced by the play An Inspector Calls, where the main character is named after the town of Goole

Notable people

Gallery

References

  1. ^ a b "Goole (East Riding of Yorkshire, Yorkshire and the Humber, United Kingdom) - Population Statistics, Charts, Map, Location, Weather and Web Information". www.citypopulation.de. Retrieved 24 January 2023.
  2. ^ "Goole Parish". Retrieved 19 January 2023.
  3. ^ "Goole ABP Humber". Associated British Ports Humber. Retrieved 2 January 2021.
  4. ^ "Goole". Associated British Ports. Retrieved 2 January 2018.
  5. ^ The Cambridge Dictionary of English Place-Names Based on the Collections of the English Place-Name Society, ed. by Victor Watts (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2004).
  6. ^ [Yorkshire Historical Dictionary, s.v. gull.
  7. ^ "Goole historian debunks town's open sewer name origin". BBC News. 16 March 2022. Retrieved 26 March 2022.
  8. ^ a b c d e f Porteous, J.D. (1969). The Company Town of Goole: An Essay in Urban Genesis. Hull University Press. pp. 5–6.
  9. ^ Tolley, H.; Orrell, K. (1978). Yorkshire (third ed.). ISBN 0-521-21918-3.
  10. ^ "Tom Puddings". Goole on the Web. Retrieved 23 January 2013.
  11. ^ Body, Geoffrey (1986). Railways of the Eastern Region. Vol. 1, Southern operating area. Wellingborough: Stephens. p. 74. ISBN 0850597129.
  12. ^ "Goole – bustimes.org". bustimes.org. Retrieved 14 August 2022.
  13. ^ "History of Goole, in East Riding of Yorkshire and West Riding | Map and description". www.visionofbritain.org.uk. Retrieved 25 November 2020.
  14. ^ "Junction". Junctiongoole.co.uk. Retrieved 27 February 2017.
  15. ^ . Archived from the original on 20 May 2013. Retrieved 23 January 2013.
  16. ^ "Jobs boost as warehouses get the go-ahead". The Yorkshire Post. 19 February 2009. Retrieved 24 July 2018.
  17. ^ Lea, Robert (16 June 2018). "Siemens will build factory in UK after winning Tube train contract". The Times. No. 72563. p. 55. ISSN 0140-0460.
  18. ^ Franks, Simon. "Goole Town Cricket Club". Gooletowncc.co.uk. Retrieved 31 January 2014.
  19. ^ "Welcome to Goole Tennis Centre". Gooletennis.co.uk. Retrieved 31 January 2014.
  20. ^ "Airmyn Park Golf Club, Goole". Golf's Missing Links. Retrieved 23 July 2014.
  21. ^ "Registered Charities in England and Wales: Radio Medica Goole Hospitals Internal Broadcasting Service". Charity Commission for England and Wales.
  22. ^ "British Newspapers Online". Britishpapers.co.uk.
  23. ^ "Adams, Nigel". Who's Who 2018. Oxford University Press. Retrieved 18 February 2018.
  24. ^ Feeney, Anne. "Gavin Bryars: Biography". AllMusic. Retrieved 2 July 2022.
  25. ^ . Heyday-mo.com. Archived from the original on 1 February 2014. Retrieved 29 January 2014.
  26. ^ "10 - Dale Sisters | Flickr". Flickr. 21 March 2011. Retrieved 30 January 2014.
  27. ^ "Anna Greaves Blue Plaque event | Women's Engineering Society". www.wes.org.uk. Retrieved 2 July 2022.
  28. ^ "9: Anne Greaves". Magnificent Women. Retrieved 2 June 2020.

General

  • Gazetteer – A–Z of Towns Villages and Hamlets. East Riding of Yorkshire Council. 2006. p. 6.
  • Ferriman, Earnest; Leach, Rev. Tim (1988). Glimpses of Goole. Goole: Rev. Tim Leach, The Vicarage, Goole.

External links

  • Goole Town Council
  • Goole Civic Society
  • Riverside School, Goole

goole, other, uses, disambiguation, port, town, civil, parish, river, ouse, east, riding, yorkshire, england, town, historic, county, west, riding, yorkshire, port, skyline, town, with, spire, john, churchlocation, within, east, riding, yorkshirepopulation21, . For other uses see Goole disambiguation Goole is a port town and civil parish on the River Ouse in the East Riding of Yorkshire England The town s historic county is the West Riding of Yorkshire GooleGoole Port and the skyline of the town with the spire of St John s churchGooleLocation within the East Riding of YorkshirePopulation21 952 2021 census 1 OS grid referenceSE746231Civil parishGoole 2 Unitary authorityEast Riding of YorkshireCeremonial countyEast Riding of YorkshireRegionYorkshire and the HumberCountryEnglandSovereign stateUnited KingdomPost townGOOLEPostcode districtDN14Dialling code01405PoliceHumbersideFireHumbersideAmbulanceYorkshireUK ParliamentBrigg and GooleList of places UK England Yorkshire 53 41 57 N 0 52 09 W 53 699217 N 0 869171 W 53 699217 0 869171 Coordinates 53 41 57 N 0 52 09 W 53 699217 N 0 869171 W 53 699217 0 869171According to the 2021 UK census Goole parish had a population of 21 952 1 It is 16 miles 26 km north east of Doncaster 19 miles 31 km south of York and 29 miles 47 km west of Hull The town has the United Kingdom s furthest inland port being about 50 miles 80 km from the North Sea 3 It is capable of handling nearly 2 million tonnes of cargo per year making it one of the most important ports on England s east coast 4 Goole is twinned with Zlotow in Poland Goole was informally twinned with Gibraltar in the 1960s at that time Gibraltar Court was named in Goole and Goole Court was named in Gibraltar Contents 1 History 1 1 Etymology 1 2 Background 1 3 Development 2 Education 3 Transport 4 Governance 5 Landmarks 6 Economy 7 Industry 7 1 Docks 8 Sport 9 Media 10 Notable people 11 Gallery 12 References 12 1 General 13 External linksHistory EditEtymology Edit Goole is first attested in 1306 as Gull Lewth where lewth means barn from Old Norse hlada and then 1362 as Gulle in Houke referring to the nearby and then more significant village of Hook The name is first attested in its shorter modern form from the 1530s It comes from the Middle English word goule or an Old English ancestor meaning a channel made by a stream 5 6 The word has sometimes been taken to imply that Goole is named after an open sewer but there is no strong basis for this 7 Background Edit The Dutch civil engineer Cornelius Vermuyden diverted the River Don northwards to the River Ouse in 1626 1629 in order to drain the marshland of Hatfield Chase at the behest of King Charles I 8 It made the new lower Don known as the Dutch River navigable for barges so that coal from the South Yorkshire Coalfield could be transported to the new confluence for transfer to seagoing vessels There the engineers built a new wooden bridge rebuilt in iron in the 1890s and now known as the Dutch River Bridge to the east of which a new village called Goole formed 8 Development Edit The Lowther Hotel reputedly the first building constructed in New Goole in 1824 opened as the Banks Arms Hotel named after Sir Edward Banks a contractor for the Aire and Calder Navigation company In the 1820s the Aire and Calder Navigation company proposed development of a new canal to transport coal from the existing broad canal from Knottingley in the northern sector of the coalfield in 1826 Once it reached Goole the company proposed development of a new floating dock capable of handling larger sea going vessels Chief engineer Thomas Hamond Bartholomew was instructed to build the canal docks and an associated company town to house both the dock workers and visiting seamen 8 Bartholomew commissioned civil engineer and builder Sir Edward Banks company to construct part of the canal and the eight transshipment docks and to lay out the associated new town to the west of the existing wooden bridge The Banks Arms Hotel on Aire Street today known as the Lowther Hotel was in 1824 the first building constructed in what was known as New Goole The Macintosh Arms public house on the same street took its name from engineer Hugh Macintosh 8 When Goole port opened on 20 July 1826 it was a new community of about 450 people 8 Now it is a town with about 18 000 inhabitants 9 A Tom Pudding hoist in Goole docks William Hamond Bartholomew succeeded his father T H Bartholomew in 1853 and in 1863 introduced the Tom Pudding system of compartment boats which could carry around 40 long tons 41 000 kg of coal On reaching the docks the barges were lifted by large hoists from which they could be discharged direct into seagoing ships a system so successful that it competed against rail until 1985 10 Education Edit Goole High School formerly Goole Grammar School Goole has several primary schools as well as Goole High School with a sixth form college attached to it and a special needs school Riverside School that caters for 2 19 year olds Goole College is affiliated with Hull College There are further education colleges in Selby York Scunthorpe and Bishop Burton Goole College runs a scheme for showing the older students at the High School in year 10 and above what opportunities the college offers them Transport Edit Goole railway station The Lancashire and Yorkshire Railway built a line from Pontefract and Wakefield in 1848 and the North Eastern Railway connected the port with Doncaster and Hull in 1870 11 The prosperity from the coal and general cargo trade with the West Riding industrial area continued for 150 years after the opening of the canal Today Goole railway station is at the junction of the Hull and Doncaster Branch and the Pontefract Line Services are provided to Hull Paragon Interchange Doncaster Sheffield Leeds and the commuter stations in between Goole is south of the M62 linking it with Kingston upon Hull in the east and Leeds and the West Yorkshire urban belt in the west To the north the A63 road via Howden provides local access to the A19 road to Selby and York The M18 runs west of the town connecting it with South Yorkshire the South and the Midlands Bus services to surrounding towns and villages are provided by East Yorkshire Motor Services Stagecoach in Hull and Arriva Yorkshire 12 Governance EditBefore the reform of local government in 1974 brought about by the Local Government Act 1972 Goole was in the West Riding of Yorkshire It was then placed in the Boothferry district of the county of Humberside until that was abolished in 1996 Since 1996 Goole has been in the East Riding of Yorkshire It is represented by four councillors on the East Riding of Yorkshire Council 13 Goole is in the parliamentary constituency of Brigg and Goole which has been represented in the House of Commons since 2010 by Andrew Percy a Conservative Landmarks Edit salt and pepper the twin water towers St John s Church Gothic Revival style and built between 1843 and 1848 Goole Docks Goole s Clock Tower Goole s most prominent landmarks are its twin water towers nicknamed salt and pepper The new white water tower was the largest in Europe at the time of construction In the winter months Goole s gas holder on Anderson Road is visible across the north of the town Many of the hoists and cranes on the dockside can be seen across the town The steeple of Goole Parish Church is tall enough to be seen across the town The townscape is made up mostly of utility and industrial structures There is a clock tower in the main shopping district of the town on a roundabout on the site of the former open air marketplace West Park is an Edwardian park in the town Economy EditGoole has a modestly sized town centre with many high street shops independent retailers and public houses The main shopping area is Wesley Square off Boothferry Road which has been pedestrianised around the main shopping area There is a modern retail development in the town centre a leisure centre next to the docks and the Goole and District Hospital to the north of the town A theatre and cinema Junction opened in 2009 14 Industry Edit The port from a distance Glass is produced in Goole which is also the centre of an agricultural district The town s former large employer was a clothing manufacture for the big multiples but it closed in the late 2000s Goole s industrial park Capitol Park Goole36 15 has attracted two large employers Guardian Industries which built a glass manufacturing plant and Tesco which built a distribution centre The arrival of these employers resulted in the creation of hundreds of new jobs 16 A new Morrisons store opened in Goole on 2 August 2010 on land previously occupied by Timms Mill on Boothferry Road A new railway rolling stock factory was built at the same location during 2018 2019 The plant owned and operated by Siemens builds the new tube trains for the Piccadilly line in London 17 Docks Edit Three locks keep the water in 37 acres 150 000 m2 of floating docks at a constant depth of 6 metres 20 ft by preventing the level from rising and falling with the tides in the River Ouse Once ships are within the complex eight docks provide a total quayside of 3 miles 4 8 km Beside the docks are transit sheds where cargo is stored many of them equipped with overhead cranes 8 Unlike many ports every one of the eight docks has been in full commercial operation since its construction in the period from 1826 to 1912 For most of its life the port was most associated with the shipment of coal and associated cargoes including the importation of pit props With the demise of mining the former Timber Pond became a marina trading under the name Goole Boathouse It has berths for 150 boats After a period of decline commodities were replaced by containers the export of steel and the import of timber from north eastern Europe Today the Port of Goole has regular cargo liner services to Norway Sweden Finland Germany the Netherlands Belgium France Spain Morocco and South Africa and a transshipment route to Europort Rotterdam Sport Edit Victoria Pleasure Ground Goole Town Cricket Club supports local cricket teams Of its three teams the first team plays in the club cricket York amp District Senior League A new clubhouse was constructed in 1996 providing facilities and a bar 18 Rugby Union is played close to the cricket club at Westfield Banks sharing facilities with Goole Tennis Club and Goole Viking Striders running club Goole RUFC currently fields two teams the first team playing in Yorkshire Division Two Goole Tennis Centre is a nine court tennis club on the Westfield Banks site 19 Goole has two football teams Goole A F C and Goole United A F C They currently play in the Northern Premier League Division One South and the Humber Premier League Division One respectively They both play at the Victoria Pleasure Grounds on Marcus Street The nearest professional teams are Rotherham United Doncaster Rovers Grimsby Town Hull City Leeds United Barnsley Scunthorpe United Sheffield Wednesday Sheffield United and York City Goole used to have two golf clubs The early course founded in 1900 was at Rawcliffe Park The later course was at Airmyn Park from 1911 to the Second World War 20 Currently Goole s nearest golf clubs are the Boothferry Golf Club in Spaldington and Drax Golf Club in Drax Media EditRadio Medica is a not for profit radio station broadcast from the Goole And District Hospital 21 The town is served by a weekly tabloid newspaper The Goole Times published since 1853 and sold in Goole and neighbouring parts of the East Riding of Yorkshire 22 The town is referenced by the play An Inspector Calls where the main character is named after the town of GooleNotable people EditNigel Adams Member of Parliament for Selby and Ainsty born in Goole Hospital 23 Gavin Bryars composer and double bassist born in Goole 24 Roy Clarke comedy writer lives in Goole Betty Hazel and Julie Dunderdale who performed professionally as The Dale Sisters a vocal trio that had limited chart success in the early 1960s 25 26 Anne Greaves 1889 1971 was the first woman to become a member of the Institute of Quarrying and created artificial stone through her quarrying company 27 28 Adi Vines bassist for the band Swervedriver born in Goole Sandra s Wedding a four piece alternative rock band from GooleGallery Edit St Joseph s Catholic Church Market HallReferences Edit a b Goole East Riding of Yorkshire Yorkshire and the Humber United Kingdom Population Statistics Charts Map Location Weather and Web Information www citypopulation de Retrieved 24 January 2023 Goole Parish Retrieved 19 January 2023 Goole ABP Humber Associated British Ports Humber Retrieved 2 January 2021 Goole Associated British Ports Retrieved 2 January 2018 The Cambridge Dictionary of English Place Names Based on the Collections of the English Place Name Society ed by Victor Watts Cambridge Cambridge University Press 2004 Yorkshire Historical Dictionary s v gull Goole historian debunks town s open sewer name origin BBC News 16 March 2022 Retrieved 26 March 2022 a b c d e f Porteous J D 1969 The Company Town of Goole An Essay in Urban Genesis Hull University Press pp 5 6 Tolley H Orrell K 1978 Yorkshire third ed ISBN 0 521 21918 3 Tom Puddings Goole on the Web Retrieved 23 January 2013 Body Geoffrey 1986 Railways of the Eastern Region Vol 1 Southern operating area Wellingborough Stephens p 74 ISBN 0850597129 Goole bustimes org bustimes org Retrieved 14 August 2022 History of Goole in East Riding of Yorkshire and West Riding Map and description www visionofbritain org uk Retrieved 25 November 2020 Junction Junctiongoole co uk Retrieved 27 February 2017 Capitol Park Archived from the original on 20 May 2013 Retrieved 23 January 2013 Jobs boost as warehouses get the go ahead The Yorkshire Post 19 February 2009 Retrieved 24 July 2018 Lea Robert 16 June 2018 Siemens will build factory in UK after winning Tube train contract The Times No 72563 p 55 ISSN 0140 0460 Franks Simon Goole Town Cricket Club Gooletowncc co uk Retrieved 31 January 2014 Welcome to Goole Tennis Centre Gooletennis co uk Retrieved 31 January 2014 Airmyn Park Golf Club Goole Golf s Missing Links Retrieved 23 July 2014 Registered Charities in England and Wales Radio Medica Goole Hospitals Internal Broadcasting Service Charity Commission for England and Wales British Newspapers Online Britishpapers co uk Adams Nigel Who s Who 2018 Oxford University Press Retrieved 18 February 2018 Feeney Anne Gavin Bryars Biography AllMusic Retrieved 2 July 2022 VARIOUS ARTISTS SAY WHEN EMBER SIXTIES POP VOLUME 1 1960 1961 CD Heyday mo com Archived from the original on 1 February 2014 Retrieved 29 January 2014 10 Dale Sisters Flickr Flickr 21 March 2011 Retrieved 30 January 2014 Anna Greaves Blue Plaque event Women s Engineering Society www wes org uk Retrieved 2 July 2022 9 Anne Greaves Magnificent Women Retrieved 2 June 2020 General Edit Gazetteer A Z of Towns Villages and Hamlets East Riding of Yorkshire Council 2006 p 6 Ferriman Earnest Leach Rev Tim 1988 Glimpses of Goole Goole Rev Tim Leach The Vicarage Goole External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Goole Goole Town Council Goole Civic Society Riverside School GoolePortals Yorkshire England United Kingdom Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Goole amp oldid 1137049951, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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