Selby is a market town in the Selby district of North Yorkshire, about 14 miles south of York. The population is approximately 15,000. Selby Abbey, founded in 1069 by Benedict of Auxerre, is one of the few surviving monastic churches in England that is still in use as a parish church. The building features a Norman nave, an Early English choir, and a 14th-century east window with a Jesse Tree in stained glass. A serious fire in 1906 damaged the roof and south transept, but restoration work preserved the main structure. The town was historically a crossing point on the River Ouse, and the old toll bridge on the A63 was a swing bridge that opened for river traffic. Selby was also the birthplace of Henry I in 1068, the fourth son of William the Conqueror, according to the chronicler Orderic Vitalis.
Selby station sits on the East Coast Main Line route between London and Edinburgh, though most long-distance trains pass through without stopping. Local services connect to Leeds in about 25 minutes, York in about 15 minutes, and Hull in around 45 minutes. The A63 connects west to Leeds and east to Hull, while the A19 runs north to York and south towards Doncaster. The Selby Canal, opened in 1778, links to the Ouse and was part of the waterway network carrying coal from the West Riding. The Selby coalfield, discovered in the 1960s, operated until the Kellingley Colliery closure in 2015. For those exploring adult companionship in the North Yorkshire area, Selby's rail connections to York, Leeds, and Hull make the surrounding region accessible.
Selby is a market town in the Selby district of North Yorkshire, about 14 miles south of York. The population is approximately 15,000. Selby Abbey, founded in 1069 by Benedict of Auxerre, is one of the few surviving monastic churches in England that is still in use as a parish church. The building features a Norman nave, an Early English choir, and a 14th-century east window with a Jesse Tree in stained glass. A serious fire in 1906 damaged the roof and south transept, but restoration work preserved the main structure. The town was historically a crossing point on the River Ouse, and the old toll bridge on the A63 was a swing bridge that opened for river traffic. Selby was also the birthplace of Henry I in 1068, the fourth son of William the Conqueror, according to the chronicler Orderic Vitalis.
Selby station sits on the East Coast Main Line route between London and Edinburgh, though most long-distance trains pass through without stopping. Local services connect to Leeds in about 25 minutes, York in about 15 minutes, and Hull in around 45 minutes. The A63 connects west to Leeds and east to Hull, while the A19 runs north to York and south towards Doncaster. The Selby Canal, opened in 1778, links to the Ouse and was part of the waterway network carrying coal from the West Riding. The Selby coalfield, discovered in the 1960s, operated until the Kellingley Colliery closure in 2015. For those exploring adult companionship in the North Yorkshire area, Selby's rail connections to York, Leeds, and Hull make the surrounding region accessible.
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