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Yorkshire,
maritime county of England; bounded N. by Durham and the Tees,
NE. and E. by the North Sea, S. by the Humber and Lincolnshire,
Notts, and Derbyshire, SW. by Cheshire, W. by Lancashire,
and N.W. by Westmorland; length, E. and W., 96 miles; breadth,
80 miles; area, 3,882,851 acres, population 2,886,564. Yorkshire
is the first county of England in point of size, and the third
in point of population. From the mouth of the Tees to Flamborough
Head the coast is bold and rocky; from Flamborough Head to
Spurn Head it lies low. The interior presents the appearance
of a great central valley stretching SE. to the Humber, and
flanked on either side by heights - on the E. by the Cleveland
Hills and the Wolds, and on the W. by the Pennine chain. .
. Yorkshire takes high rank as an agricultural, manufacturing,
and mining county. It is well supplied with every means of
communication. It has from an early period been divided into
3 Ridings - viz., East, North, and West, besides the Ainsty
or Liberty of the city of York. Each Riding has a lord-lieutenant
and a separate court of quarter sessions and a commission
of the peace, and statistically is treated as a distinct county.
It contains 26 wapentakes; 3 liberties; 1636 pars. with parts
of 2 others; the parliamentary and municipal boroughs of Bradford
(3 members), Dewsbury (1 member), Halifax (2 members), Huddersfield
(1 member), Kingston upon Hull (3 members), Leeds (5 members),
Middlesbrough (1 member), Pontefract (1 member), Scarborough
(1 member), Sheffield (5 members), Wakefield (1 member), and
York (2 members); and the municipal boroughs of Barnsley,
Batley, Beverley, Doncaster, Hedon, Morley, Richmond, Ripon,
and Rotherham. It is in the dioceses of York, Ripon, and Manchester."
(Transcribed from Bartholomew's Gazetteer of the British Isles,
1887. -C.H.)
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