Castleton, North Yorkshire


Castleton is a village on the River Esk, part of the civil parish of Danby in the county of North Yorkshire in England. It can be found south-east of Guisborough, in the North York Moors. There was once a medieval castle sited on Castle Hill that is thought to have been abandoned when Danby Castle was constructed.
It is served by Castleton Moor railway station on the Esk Valley Line roughly halfway between Middlesbrough and Whitby. Castleton has a local school, church and a public house, The Downe Arms, as well as a small Co-op supermarket, a tea room and a public toilets. Castleton is a centre for walking, birdwatching, shooting and many other pursuits. It is said that Castleton was named after a castle built near the River Esk. The village has a Clapper bridge that spans Danby Beck; this bridge was listed as Grade II in 2016.
Castleton has a cricket team which plays next to the river and a primary school with secondary education available at Caedmon College or Eskdale School, which are both in Whitby.
In times past Castleton was actually the main market and industrial town serving Upper Eskdale. There were annual wool, cheese and cattle fairs, cheese market and a silk mill. There is a show held at Castleton every September on the second Saturday in the month.
Bus services through Castleton barely exist in the winter. However, on Sundays and Bank Holidays from spring to autumn, the village is served by the Moorsbus network.
The Esk Valley Walk runs through the village.
The severed hand, known popularly as the Danby Hand of Glory, was found hidden in a wall of a thatched cottage in Castleton in 1935. The hand is now on display at the Whitby Museum in Pannett Park, Whitby.