VISIT Easingwold- Yorkshire at its best

Easingwold Tourist Information Office
Chapel Lane
Easingwold
YO61 3AE

Tel: 01347 821530 (office hours)

Tel: (out of office hours) 0780 848 8881

Email: - info@visit-easingwold.com

 

Opening times:
Easter to October 10.00am to 16.00pm Mon to Sat.
October to Easter 10.00 am to 16.00pm Fri, Sat 10.00am - 1.00pm, & morning of 3rd Wed of the month (Farmers Market)


Easingwold Tourist Information can provide more information to help you plan and enjoy your stay in the Easingwold area. We are a team of more than 50 local volunteers who know and love our area - and want you to enjoy it as much as we do.

Our office is stocked with a full range of information leaflets of attractions in our own area, in North Yorkshire and beyond - more so we are told than the main office in York! We advise on all kinds of accomodation and will recommend which would be most suitable place to stay for for your particular requirements. As volunteers, we take no commision or charge you in any way.

 

Location

Click for more information on Burn Hall

Visit Burn Hall and discover a hotel offering something a little different. Fine food, comfortable accommodation and a very warm Yorkshire welcome will make your experience unforgettable, more.

Contact

Easingwold Tourist Information
Chapel Lane
Easingwold
York
YO61 3AE
Tel 01347 821530
Fax 01347 821530

Email us

It's a fact

Sqdn Ldr. Jack Currie was a famous WW2 bomber pilot who lived in our area. Some time after leaving the RAF he got a job as an instructor with the Home Office Defence School situated at Hawk Hills, Easingwold. During these post war years he decided to write his memoirs of his wartime experience as a pilot of a Lancaster Bomber. This book had the title of \"Lancaster Target\" which became very popular and sold in the thousands. He wrote this book whilst visiting the George Hotel in Easingwold in the evening whilst enjoying a pint. Sadly he died much too soon and is now at laid at rest in Easingwold church cemetery where one can view his unusual gravestone which mentions the fact that he was a famous wartime pilot and author. His funeral service was attended by hundreds of people, including the members of the BBC who produced a film of him being interviewed in respect of his wartime period when he was stationed at Wickenby in Lincolnshire.

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Supported by: Lottery Funding