Seamer Moor

Downs, Moorland in Yorkshire Hambleton

England

Seamer Moor

“Who is the Murderer? Was there a Murder!” A view from Tanton Lane across the undulating farmland between Stokesley and the village of Seamer towards the distant Cleveland Hills. It is basically the watershed of the River Tame, a tributary of the River Leven, although drainage has been improved over the centuries by the digging of ditches or stells. But I’ll return to one of these stells later.

In 1830, there lived in Eaglescliffe on the north bank of the Tees, a man by the name of William Huntley. He was one of the sons of a respectable farmer who had died about ten years before, leaving behind a widow and several children. His will stated his considerable property was to be divided between them but the wording was so obscure that the case ended up in court. Huntley was about 34, married, but lived apart from his wife, and in order to support himself he had become a weaver. One feature of Huntley, the relevance of this will become apparent later, was that he had a projecting molar or dog tooth giving him a distinctive appearance, a sort of “twist of the mouth”.

Now Huntley was pals with a Robert Goldsborough who lived at Hutton Rudby and was about the same age as Huntley. He was a widower, with a couple of children and was fairly destitute having recently been on parish relief.

Huntley’s mother also lived in Hutton Rudby so he frequently made the journey often staying at Goldsborough’s house.

On Thursday, 22nd July 1830, Huntley finally received the money due under his father’s will. He was paid the sum of £85. 16s. 4d. in seventeen £5 banknotes with the remainder in silver and copper. He told many people he had “come into his fortune” that day yet there was suggestion that he wanted to avoid some creditors from finding out and was thinking of emigrating to America to escape their attentions. Nevertheless the following evening, Huntley and Goldsborough, together with a third man named Garbutt, were seen walking together towards Foxton Bridge, Goldsborough with a gun in his hand, apparently off on a poaching adventure in Crathorne Wood. An adventure from which Huntley never returned.

Later it was reported that two gunshots were heard from the direction of Crathorne Wood between eleven and twelve o’clock on the Friday night. Goldsborough’s gun, incidentally, was single-barrelled.

A few days later the stain of a pool of blood was seen on the road near to the bridge. Goldsborough was seen to be flush with money, and found to be in possession of a silver watch and six new shirts, all bearing the initials “W. H.” It was all highly suspicious but as no body had been found, there was no proof that Huntley had been murdered, or that he was even dead, the corpus delicti, the fact that a crime has been actually perpetrated, had failed, Goldsborough was not arrested and subsequently, within a month or two, moved to Barnsley.

Huntley’s disappearance was noticed as soon as six o’clock on the Saturday and suspicions soon fell on Goldsborough who appeared nonchalant and unconcerned. He said to one of Huntley’s creditors that Huntley had gone to Whitby, where he was going to take a ship to America. But it turned there were not any sailings to America from Whitby and had not been for some time. Later to another enquirer, Goldsborough said that Huntley had gone to Bilsdale to see some friends. The constables searched his house, and found in it the watch, and shirts bearing the initials ‘W.H.’ none of which he attempted to conceal and gave various inconsistent explanations for having them. Huntley had given them to him. He had left them as security for the repayment of a debt. When challenged Goldsborough replied “You’ll all see, by and by, whether he’s been murdered!”

About a week or ten days after Huntley’s disappearance, Goldsborough was seen sitting beside a large fire in his house, with a strong smell of burning wool permeating the room.  He appeared disconsolate, and agitated, and reserved and was noted to be in possession of a considerable sum of money, in bank-notes, gold and silver,  which he made no attempt to conceal. He was seen to have made various purchases and made offers to lend money.

Towards the end of autumn, Goldsborough left Hutton Rudby and moved to Barnsley. There he hired a loom off the man, at whose house he stayed. When asked what his name was, he replied “Robert Towers” from Darlington. Some weeks later he married a woman who he said “brought him a sum of £80 for her fortune“.

Eleven years later, some workmen were clearing one of the stells between Seamer and Stokesley, about a hundred yards from the road, and discovered a human skeleton in a hollow under one of its banks. It had been thrust in “backside first, and doubled up“. The bones were carefully extracted and laid on the side of the stell. As soon as the farmer arrived at the end of the day and looked at them, he noticed a long projecting tooth on the left side of the lower jaw and remembering William Huntley’s disappearance,  was aware of its significance and the constable called.

The skull was packaged up but as it began to dry, the all-important tooth fell out but not before being seen and confirmed by others.

The stell was some five miles distant from the stale pool of blood at Foxton Bridge.

The constable went to Barnsley to arrest Goldsborough who said “I am innocent! They may swear my life away if they please, but I never had any clothes, or a watch, or anything belonging to Huntley ! The last time I ever saw him was on Thursday!” The constable however, released him the next morning after considering he had not enough evidence to warrant his detention.

It is now that a fourth person emerges claiming to be on that poaching adventure. The magistrates had offered a reward of £100 for evidence that would lead to the conviction of the murderer of William Huntley. A Thomas Groundy was heard as boasting some intimate knowledge. He was taken into custody, and charged as an accessory after the fact. He turned king’s evidence, and in his sworn statement he said:

“On the Wednesday after William Huntley was missing, Robert Goldsborough came to me, and asked me if I would help him with a bag to Stokesley — he was going to America; and I told him I would go, and we went by Neville’s hind-house, and then we kept no road, and we went down to yon wood beside the stone bridge. He took me to a bag which was laid upon the ground in the wood, and I laid hold of it, and I found like a man’s head, and I asked him what it was — and he stopped about five minutes before he spoke, and he then said — ‘It is a bad job, it is Huntley — as he was waiving (qu. walking) by me, I shot him.’ Then I fell frightened, and wanted to go home, and Goldsborough said — ‘If you mention it, I’ll give you as much.’ And I said I would not mention it, and I wanted to make off, and I made off. That the body was in the wood, within two or three hundred yards from the bridge. It is quite a lonely place. It was a rough place in the wood. Goldsborough never said anything more to me about it, and I was frightened, and durst not mention it to him. It was about hay-time. I knew William Huntley. He had a long tooth, and used to twist his mouth.”

Groundy was placed alone in a room in York Castle, to await the arrival of his sureties. Two or three hours afterwards, he was found to have hanged himself.

Goldsborough was re-arrested, and, having heard Groundy’s statement, made his own:

“On Thursday the 22d July 1830, William Huntley came to my house, and stopped and talked awhile, and asked me to take a walk with him. We took a walk down over the bridge, and through Sir William Foulis’ plantation. We sat down on the side of the footpath, in the plantation; and he says, ‘I want you to look at some papers I have;’ and so he pulled them out of his inside coat pocket, one a largish paper, which he had got from Mr Garbutt [his solicitor], and he says — ‘ I have been drawing my money,’ and said he had drawn £85, 16s., and he said, ‘What is the reason of all this money kept back?’ I looked at the paper, and told him what the sums were for. He said he did not want it mentioned to every person, for Dalkin, Robert Moon, and some others, who wanted money of him, would be at him. I told him I had nothing to do with it — I should say nothing about it — so we came home together, and he was backwards and forwards out of our house, and other houses in the town, all the day. He laid with me all night, as he generally used to do when he came to the town. He was backwards and forwards all the next day, and he hired a cart and brought a loom down from Robert Moon’s, and sold it to George Farnabay that day, and he stopped all night again, and slept with me, and then he came to Stokesley on the Saturday, and tried me several times to go to America with him. I went with him to Stokesley. We were together awhile at Stokesley on that day, and then we parted, and I never saw him any more until the Thursday following, and he came down to me at Farnabay’s shop, at Hutton, and called of me out, and pushed me sadly to go to America with him, and I told him I had two children, and I should not leave them, as I was both father and mother to them. So he stopped awhile, and he said if I would not go, he could not force me; but if I would go, I should share with him as long as he had a half-penny. I refused, and he stopped on a while, and we went out, and I set him down a few yards from the door, and left him. We shaked hands and parted; and he said, if Mr Garbutt did not put it out about his money, he would stop a few days longer, if people did not get to know about it. I have no more to say about it. That was the very last time I clapped my eyes upon him. If it was the last words I had to speak, I never was in Crathorne Woods, nor Weary Bank Woods, with Thomas Groundy. You may think it’s a lie; but if it were the last words I had to speak, I never was with him.”

Goldsborough was then committed to York Castle, for trial at the next assizes.

The judge, in his summing up, told the jury they had to be satisfied, beyond all reasonable doubt, that the bones produced were those of Huntley (but he had strongly expressed that his own opinion was that the evidence was not satisfactory). If they were not satisfied then it was not proved that Huntley was dead and the case must fail. Then, if the bones were Huntley’s, had he been murdered? And had he been murdered by Goldsborough? He advised that little or no reliance should be placed on the evidence contained in Groundy’s statement. They were to remember, that it was for the prosecution to satisfy them of the guilt of the prisoner beyond all reasonable doubt and if they had doubts, then it was their duty to consider the case as not proved, or “to give the prisoner the benefit of the doubt.”

Goldsborough was found not guilty.

The case generated a lot of legal discourse. The title of this post, “Who is the Murderer? Was there a Murder!” was a quote made in a legal monologue of the case.

Might Goldsborough’s account, that Huntley had gone to America, and that Goldsborough was purposely giving contradictory accounts to Huntley’s creditors, to enable him to elude discovery, might have been the true one? He may have left his clothes and watch, and a great portion of his money, in Goldsborough’s hands, to be forwarded to him at the first convenient opportunity, but Goldsborough had reneged on this agreement.

Alternatively, Huntley could have been murdered by Garbutt, in whose company he had been left by Goldsborough. A warrant had been issued against Garbutt at the time of Huntley’s disappearance in 1830, but he is another one who was never heard of again.

Or was Groundy the sole murderer, possibly instigated by Goldsborough, or blackmailed by him after learning of the fact. His suicide could have been a complex fusion of remorse for his lies and fear that his guilt would come out in court.

Finally, could some other permutation of the three, Groundy, Garbutt, and Goldsborough, be principals in the murder. The second gunshot could have been from an undiscovered gun owned by either Groundy or Garbutt.

So, who was the murderer? Was there a Murder?

From my blog: Out and about ... (2021). “Who is the Murderer? Was there a Murder!” [online] Available at: <span class="nowrap"><a title="http://www.fhithich.uk/?p=26457" rel="nofollow ugc noopener" href="http://www.fhithich.uk/?p=26457">Link</a><img style="margin-left:2px;" alt="External link" title="External link - shift click to open in new window" src="https://s1.geograph.org.uk/img/external.png" width="10" height="10"/></span> [Accessed 12 Dec. 2021].
“Who is the Murderer? Was there a Murder!” Credit: Mick Garratt

Seamer Moor is a prominent area of open grassland and moorland located in Yorkshire, England. Situated in the district of Scarborough, it spans an impressive 2,000 acres and is a significant natural landscape in the region. The moor is nestled between the towns of Scarborough and Filey, making it easily accessible for visitors and locals alike.

The terrain of Seamer Moor is characterized by undulating hills, heather-covered moorland, and scattered patches of woodland. The area is home to a diverse range of flora and fauna, including various species of birds, mammals, and insects. Visitors can often spot red grouse, curlews, and lapwings, as well as rabbits and hares. The moorland is also known for its vibrant displays of purple heather during the summer months, creating a breathtaking sight.

Seamer Moor is a popular destination for outdoor enthusiasts, offering ample opportunities for walking, hiking, and wildlife observation. There are well-maintained trails that crisscross the moor, providing stunning views of the surrounding countryside. The peaceful and tranquil atmosphere of the area, coupled with its natural beauty, makes it an ideal spot for those seeking solace in nature.

In addition to its natural attractions, Seamer Moor holds historical significance. The area has evidence of prehistoric settlements, with Bronze Age burial mounds and stone circles scattered throughout. These remnants of the past add an air of mystery and intrigue to the moor, enticing history enthusiasts and archaeology buffs.

Overall, Seamer Moor is a captivating landscape that showcases the stunning natural beauty and rich history of Yorkshire. It offers a serene escape from the hustle and bustle of everyday life, making it a must-visit destination for nature lovers and history enthusiasts alike.

If you have any feedback on the listing, please let us know in the comments section below.

Seamer Moor Images

Images are sourced within 2km of 54.469449/-1.2313177 or Grid Reference NZ4908. Thanks to Geograph Open Source API. All images are credited.

“Who is the Murderer? Was there a Murder!” A view from Tanton Lane across the undulating farmland between Stokesley and the village of Seamer towards the distant Cleveland Hills. It is basically the watershed of the River Tame, a tributary of the River Leven, although drainage has been improved over the centuries by the digging of ditches or stells. But I’ll return to one of these stells later.

In 1830, there lived in Eaglescliffe on the north bank of the Tees, a man by the name of William Huntley. He was one of the sons of a respectable farmer who had died about ten years before, leaving behind a widow and several children. His will stated his considerable property was to be divided between them but the wording was so obscure that the case ended up in court. Huntley was about 34, married, but lived apart from his wife, and in order to support himself he had become a weaver. One feature of Huntley, the relevance of this will become apparent later, was that he had a projecting molar or dog tooth giving him a distinctive appearance, a sort of “twist of the mouth”.

Now Huntley was pals with a Robert Goldsborough who lived at Hutton Rudby and was about the same age as Huntley. He was a widower, with a couple of children and was fairly destitute having recently been on parish relief.

Huntley’s mother also lived in Hutton Rudby so he frequently made the journey often staying at Goldsborough’s house.

On Thursday, 22nd July 1830, Huntley finally received the money due under his father’s will. He was paid the sum of £85. 16s. 4d. in seventeen £5 banknotes with the remainder in silver and copper. He told many people he had “come into his fortune” that day yet there was suggestion that he wanted to avoid some creditors from finding out and was thinking of emigrating to America to escape their attentions. Nevertheless the following evening, Huntley and Goldsborough, together with a third man named Garbutt, were seen walking together towards Foxton Bridge, Goldsborough with a gun in his hand, apparently off on a poaching adventure in Crathorne Wood. An adventure from which Huntley never returned.

Later it was reported that two gunshots were heard from the direction of Crathorne Wood between eleven and twelve o’clock on the Friday night. Goldsborough’s gun, incidentally, was single-barrelled.

A few days later the stain of a pool of blood was seen on the road near to the bridge. Goldsborough was seen to be flush with money, and found to be in possession of a silver watch and six new shirts, all bearing the initials “W. H.” It was all highly suspicious but as no body had been found, there was no proof that Huntley had been murdered, or that he was even dead, the corpus delicti, the fact that a crime has been actually perpetrated, had failed, Goldsborough was not arrested and subsequently, within a month or two, moved to Barnsley.

Huntley’s disappearance was noticed as soon as six o’clock on the Saturday and suspicions soon fell on Goldsborough who appeared nonchalant and unconcerned. He said to one of Huntley’s creditors that Huntley had gone to Whitby, where he was going to take a ship to America. But it turned there were not any sailings to America from Whitby and had not been for some time. Later to another enquirer, Goldsborough said that Huntley had gone to Bilsdale to see some friends. The constables searched his house, and found in it the watch, and shirts bearing the initials ‘W.H.’ none of which he attempted to conceal and gave various inconsistent explanations for having them. Huntley had given them to him. He had left them as security for the repayment of a debt. When challenged Goldsborough replied “You’ll all see, by and by, whether he’s been murdered!”

About a week or ten days after Huntley’s disappearance, Goldsborough was seen sitting beside a large fire in his house, with a strong smell of burning wool permeating the room.  He appeared disconsolate, and agitated, and reserved and was noted to be in possession of a considerable sum of money, in bank-notes, gold and silver,  which he made no attempt to conceal. He was seen to have made various purchases and made offers to lend money.

Towards the end of autumn, Goldsborough left Hutton Rudby and moved to Barnsley. There he hired a loom off the man, at whose house he stayed. When asked what his name was, he replied “Robert Towers” from Darlington. Some weeks later he married a woman who he said “brought him a sum of £80 for her fortune“.

Eleven years later, some workmen were clearing one of the stells between Seamer and Stokesley, about a hundred yards from the road, and discovered a human skeleton in a hollow under one of its banks. It had been thrust in “backside first, and doubled up“. The bones were carefully extracted and laid on the side of the stell. As soon as the farmer arrived at the end of the day and looked at them, he noticed a long projecting tooth on the left side of the lower jaw and remembering William Huntley’s disappearance,  was aware of its significance and the constable called.

The skull was packaged up but as it began to dry, the all-important tooth fell out but not before being seen and confirmed by others.

The stell was some five miles distant from the stale pool of blood at Foxton Bridge.

The constable went to Barnsley to arrest Goldsborough who said “I am innocent! They may swear my life away if they please, but I never had any clothes, or a watch, or anything belonging to Huntley ! The last time I ever saw him was on Thursday!” The constable however, released him the next morning after considering he had not enough evidence to warrant his detention.

It is now that a fourth person emerges claiming to be on that poaching adventure. The magistrates had offered a reward of £100 for evidence that would lead to the conviction of the murderer of William Huntley. A Thomas Groundy was heard as boasting some intimate knowledge. He was taken into custody, and charged as an accessory after the fact. He turned king’s evidence, and in his sworn statement he said:

“On the Wednesday after William Huntley was missing, Robert Goldsborough came to me, and asked me if I would help him with a bag to Stokesley — he was going to America; and I told him I would go, and we went by Neville’s hind-house, and then we kept no road, and we went down to yon wood beside the stone bridge. He took me to a bag which was laid upon the ground in the wood, and I laid hold of it, and I found like a man’s head, and I asked him what it was — and he stopped about five minutes before he spoke, and he then said — ‘It is a bad job, it is Huntley — as he was waiving (qu. walking) by me, I shot him.’ Then I fell frightened, and wanted to go home, and Goldsborough said — ‘If you mention it, I’ll give you as much.’ And I said I would not mention it, and I wanted to make off, and I made off. That the body was in the wood, within two or three hundred yards from the bridge. It is quite a lonely place. It was a rough place in the wood. Goldsborough never said anything more to me about it, and I was frightened, and durst not mention it to him. It was about hay-time. I knew William Huntley. He had a long tooth, and used to twist his mouth.”

Groundy was placed alone in a room in York Castle, to await the arrival of his sureties. Two or three hours afterwards, he was found to have hanged himself.

Goldsborough was re-arrested, and, having heard Groundy’s statement, made his own:

“On Thursday the 22d July 1830, William Huntley came to my house, and stopped and talked awhile, and asked me to take a walk with him. We took a walk down over the bridge, and through Sir William Foulis’ plantation. We sat down on the side of the footpath, in the plantation; and he says, ‘I want you to look at some papers I have;’ and so he pulled them out of his inside coat pocket, one a largish paper, which he had got from Mr Garbutt [his solicitor], and he says — ‘ I have been drawing my money,’ and said he had drawn £85, 16s., and he said, ‘What is the reason of all this money kept back?’ I looked at the paper, and told him what the sums were for. He said he did not want it mentioned to every person, for Dalkin, Robert Moon, and some others, who wanted money of him, would be at him. I told him I had nothing to do with it — I should say nothing about it — so we came home together, and he was backwards and forwards out of our house, and other houses in the town, all the day. He laid with me all night, as he generally used to do when he came to the town. He was backwards and forwards all the next day, and he hired a cart and brought a loom down from Robert Moon’s, and sold it to George Farnabay that day, and he stopped all night again, and slept with me, and then he came to Stokesley on the Saturday, and tried me several times to go to America with him. I went with him to Stokesley. We were together awhile at Stokesley on that day, and then we parted, and I never saw him any more until the Thursday following, and he came down to me at Farnabay’s shop, at Hutton, and called of me out, and pushed me sadly to go to America with him, and I told him I had two children, and I should not leave them, as I was both father and mother to them. So he stopped awhile, and he said if I would not go, he could not force me; but if I would go, I should share with him as long as he had a half-penny. I refused, and he stopped on a while, and we went out, and I set him down a few yards from the door, and left him. We shaked hands and parted; and he said, if Mr Garbutt did not put it out about his money, he would stop a few days longer, if people did not get to know about it. I have no more to say about it. That was the very last time I clapped my eyes upon him. If it was the last words I had to speak, I never was in Crathorne Woods, nor Weary Bank Woods, with Thomas Groundy. You may think it’s a lie; but if it were the last words I had to speak, I never was with him.”

Goldsborough was then committed to York Castle, for trial at the next assizes.

The judge, in his summing up, told the jury they had to be satisfied, beyond all reasonable doubt, that the bones produced were those of Huntley (but he had strongly expressed that his own opinion was that the evidence was not satisfactory). If they were not satisfied then it was not proved that Huntley was dead and the case must fail. Then, if the bones were Huntley’s, had he been murdered? And had he been murdered by Goldsborough? He advised that little or no reliance should be placed on the evidence contained in Groundy’s statement. They were to remember, that it was for the prosecution to satisfy them of the guilt of the prisoner beyond all reasonable doubt and if they had doubts, then it was their duty to consider the case as not proved, or “to give the prisoner the benefit of the doubt.”

Goldsborough was found not guilty.

The case generated a lot of legal discourse. The title of this post, “Who is the Murderer? Was there a Murder!” was a quote made in a legal monologue of the case.

Might Goldsborough’s account, that Huntley had gone to America, and that Goldsborough was purposely giving contradictory accounts to Huntley’s creditors, to enable him to elude discovery, might have been the true one? He may have left his clothes and watch, and a great portion of his money, in Goldsborough’s hands, to be forwarded to him at the first convenient opportunity, but Goldsborough had reneged on this agreement.

Alternatively, Huntley could have been murdered by Garbutt, in whose company he had been left by Goldsborough. A warrant had been issued against Garbutt at the time of Huntley’s disappearance in 1830, but he is another one who was never heard of again.

Or was Groundy the sole murderer, possibly instigated by Goldsborough, or blackmailed by him after learning of the fact. His suicide could have been a complex fusion of remorse for his lies and fear that his guilt would come out in court.

Finally, could some other permutation of the three, Groundy, Garbutt, and Goldsborough, be principals in the murder. The second gunshot could have been from an undiscovered gun owned by either Groundy or Garbutt.

So, who was the murderer? Was there a Murder?

From my blog: Out and about ... (2021). “Who is the Murderer? Was there a Murder!” [online] Available at: <span class="nowrap"><a title="http://www.fhithich.uk/?p=26457" rel="nofollow ugc noopener" href="http://www.fhithich.uk/?p=26457">Link</a><img style="margin-left:2px;" alt="External link" title="External link - shift click to open in new window" src="https://s1.geograph.org.uk/img/external.png" width="10" height="10"/></span> [Accessed 12 Dec. 2021].
“Who is the Murderer? Was there a Murder!”
A view from Tanton Lane across the undulating farmland between Stokesley and the village of Seamer towards the distant Cleveland Hills. It is basically the watershed of the River Tame, a tributary of the River Leven, although drainage has been improved over the centuries by the digging of ditches or stells. But I’ll return to one of these stells later. In 1830, there lived in Eaglescliffe on the north bank of the Tees, a man by the name of William Huntley. He was one of the sons of a respectable farmer who had died about ten years before, leaving behind a widow and several children. His will stated his considerable property was to be divided between them but the wording was so obscure that the case ended up in court. Huntley was about 34, married, but lived apart from his wife, and in order to support himself he had become a weaver. One feature of Huntley, the relevance of this will become apparent later, was that he had a projecting molar or dog tooth giving him a distinctive appearance, a sort of “twist of the mouth”. Now Huntley was pals with a Robert Goldsborough who lived at Hutton Rudby and was about the same age as Huntley. He was a widower, with a couple of children and was fairly destitute having recently been on parish relief. Huntley’s mother also lived in Hutton Rudby so he frequently made the journey often staying at Goldsborough’s house. On Thursday, 22nd July 1830, Huntley finally received the money due under his father’s will. He was paid the sum of £85. 16s. 4d. in seventeen £5 banknotes with the remainder in silver and copper. He told many people he had “come into his fortune” that day yet there was suggestion that he wanted to avoid some creditors from finding out and was thinking of emigrating to America to escape their attentions. Nevertheless the following evening, Huntley and Goldsborough, together with a third man named Garbutt, were seen walking together towards Foxton Bridge, Goldsborough with a gun in his hand, apparently off on a poaching adventure in Crathorne Wood. An adventure from which Huntley never returned. Later it was reported that two gunshots were heard from the direction of Crathorne Wood between eleven and twelve o’clock on the Friday night. Goldsborough’s gun, incidentally, was single-barrelled. A few days later the stain of a pool of blood was seen on the road near to the bridge. Goldsborough was seen to be flush with money, and found to be in possession of a silver watch and six new shirts, all bearing the initials “W. H.” It was all highly suspicious but as no body had been found, there was no proof that Huntley had been murdered, or that he was even dead, the corpus delicti, the fact that a crime has been actually perpetrated, had failed, Goldsborough was not arrested and subsequently, within a month or two, moved to Barnsley. Huntley’s disappearance was noticed as soon as six o’clock on the Saturday and suspicions soon fell on Goldsborough who appeared nonchalant and unconcerned. He said to one of Huntley’s creditors that Huntley had gone to Whitby, where he was going to take a ship to America. But it turned there were not any sailings to America from Whitby and had not been for some time. Later to another enquirer, Goldsborough said that Huntley had gone to Bilsdale to see some friends. The constables searched his house, and found in it the watch, and shirts bearing the initials ‘W.H.’ none of which he attempted to conceal and gave various inconsistent explanations for having them. Huntley had given them to him. He had left them as security for the repayment of a debt. When challenged Goldsborough replied “You’ll all see, by and by, whether he’s been murdered!” About a week or ten days after Huntley’s disappearance, Goldsborough was seen sitting beside a large fire in his house, with a strong smell of burning wool permeating the room. He appeared disconsolate, and agitated, and reserved and was noted to be in possession of a considerable sum of money, in bank-notes, gold and silver, which he made no attempt to conceal. He was seen to have made various purchases and made offers to lend money. Towards the end of autumn, Goldsborough left Hutton Rudby and moved to Barnsley. There he hired a loom off the man, at whose house he stayed. When asked what his name was, he replied “Robert Towers” from Darlington. Some weeks later he married a woman who he said “brought him a sum of £80 for her fortune“. Eleven years later, some workmen were clearing one of the stells between Seamer and Stokesley, about a hundred yards from the road, and discovered a human skeleton in a hollow under one of its banks. It had been thrust in “backside first, and doubled up“. The bones were carefully extracted and laid on the side of the stell. As soon as the farmer arrived at the end of the day and looked at them, he noticed a long projecting tooth on the left side of the lower jaw and remembering William Huntley’s disappearance, was aware of its significance and the constable called. The skull was packaged up but as it began to dry, the all-important tooth fell out but not before being seen and confirmed by others. The stell was some five miles distant from the stale pool of blood at Foxton Bridge. The constable went to Barnsley to arrest Goldsborough who said “I am innocent! They may swear my life away if they please, but I never had any clothes, or a watch, or anything belonging to Huntley ! The last time I ever saw him was on Thursday!” The constable however, released him the next morning after considering he had not enough evidence to warrant his detention. It is now that a fourth person emerges claiming to be on that poaching adventure. The magistrates had offered a reward of £100 for evidence that would lead to the conviction of the murderer of William Huntley. A Thomas Groundy was heard as boasting some intimate knowledge. He was taken into custody, and charged as an accessory after the fact. He turned king’s evidence, and in his sworn statement he said: “On the Wednesday after William Huntley was missing, Robert Goldsborough came to me, and asked me if I would help him with a bag to Stokesley — he was going to America; and I told him I would go, and we went by Neville’s hind-house, and then we kept no road, and we went down to yon wood beside the stone bridge. He took me to a bag which was laid upon the ground in the wood, and I laid hold of it, and I found like a man’s head, and I asked him what it was — and he stopped about five minutes before he spoke, and he then said — ‘It is a bad job, it is Huntley — as he was waiving (qu. walking) by me, I shot him.’ Then I fell frightened, and wanted to go home, and Goldsborough said — ‘If you mention it, I’ll give you as much.’ And I said I would not mention it, and I wanted to make off, and I made off. That the body was in the wood, within two or three hundred yards from the bridge. It is quite a lonely place. It was a rough place in the wood. Goldsborough never said anything more to me about it, and I was frightened, and durst not mention it to him. It was about hay-time. I knew William Huntley. He had a long tooth, and used to twist his mouth.” Groundy was placed alone in a room in York Castle, to await the arrival of his sureties. Two or three hours afterwards, he was found to have hanged himself. Goldsborough was re-arrested, and, having heard Groundy’s statement, made his own: “On Thursday the 22d July 1830, William Huntley came to my house, and stopped and talked awhile, and asked me to take a walk with him. We took a walk down over the bridge, and through Sir William Foulis’ plantation. We sat down on the side of the footpath, in the plantation; and he says, ‘I want you to look at some papers I have;’ and so he pulled them out of his inside coat pocket, one a largish paper, which he had got from Mr Garbutt [his solicitor], and he says — ‘ I have been drawing my money,’ and said he had drawn £85, 16s., and he said, ‘What is the reason of all this money kept back?’ I looked at the paper, and told him what the sums were for. He said he did not want it mentioned to every person, for Dalkin, Robert Moon, and some others, who wanted money of him, would be at him. I told him I had nothing to do with it — I should say nothing about it — so we came home together, and he was backwards and forwards out of our house, and other houses in the town, all the day. He laid with me all night, as he generally used to do when he came to the town. He was backwards and forwards all the next day, and he hired a cart and brought a loom down from Robert Moon’s, and sold it to George Farnabay that day, and he stopped all night again, and slept with me, and then he came to Stokesley on the Saturday, and tried me several times to go to America with him. I went with him to Stokesley. We were together awhile at Stokesley on that day, and then we parted, and I never saw him any more until the Thursday following, and he came down to me at Farnabay’s shop, at Hutton, and called of me out, and pushed me sadly to go to America with him, and I told him I had two children, and I should not leave them, as I was both father and mother to them. So he stopped awhile, and he said if I would not go, he could not force me; but if I would go, I should share with him as long as he had a half-penny. I refused, and he stopped on a while, and we went out, and I set him down a few yards from the door, and left him. We shaked hands and parted; and he said, if Mr Garbutt did not put it out about his money, he would stop a few days longer, if people did not get to know about it. I have no more to say about it. That was the very last time I clapped my eyes upon him. If it was the last words I had to speak, I never was in Crathorne Woods, nor Weary Bank Woods, with Thomas Groundy. You may think it’s a lie; but if it were the last words I had to speak, I never was with him.” Goldsborough was then committed to York Castle, for trial at the next assizes. The judge, in his summing up, told the jury they had to be satisfied, beyond all reasonable doubt, that the bones produced were those of Huntley (but he had strongly expressed that his own opinion was that the evidence was not satisfactory). If they were not satisfied then it was not proved that Huntley was dead and the case must fail. Then, if the bones were Huntley’s, had he been murdered? And had he been murdered by Goldsborough? He advised that little or no reliance should be placed on the evidence contained in Groundy’s statement. They were to remember, that it was for the prosecution to satisfy them of the guilt of the prisoner beyond all reasonable doubt and if they had doubts, then it was their duty to consider the case as not proved, or “to give the prisoner the benefit of the doubt.” Goldsborough was found not guilty. The case generated a lot of legal discourse. The title of this post, “Who is the Murderer? Was there a Murder!” was a quote made in a legal monologue of the case. Might Goldsborough’s account, that Huntley had gone to America, and that Goldsborough was purposely giving contradictory accounts to Huntley’s creditors, to enable him to elude discovery, might have been the true one? He may have left his clothes and watch, and a great portion of his money, in Goldsborough’s hands, to be forwarded to him at the first convenient opportunity, but Goldsborough had reneged on this agreement. Alternatively, Huntley could have been murdered by Garbutt, in whose company he had been left by Goldsborough. A warrant had been issued against Garbutt at the time of Huntley’s disappearance in 1830, but he is another one who was never heard of again. Or was Groundy the sole murderer, possibly instigated by Goldsborough, or blackmailed by him after learning of the fact. His suicide could have been a complex fusion of remorse for his lies and fear that his guilt would come out in court. Finally, could some other permutation of the three, Groundy, Garbutt, and Goldsborough, be principals in the murder. The second gunshot could have been from an undiscovered gun owned by either Groundy or Garbutt. So, who was the murderer? Was there a Murder? From my blog: Out and about ... (2021). “Who is the Murderer? Was there a Murder!” [online] Available at: LinkExternal link [Accessed 12 Dec. 2021].
Ordnance Survey Benchmark This OS benchmark can be found on the south face of St Martin's Church. It marks a point 98.661m above mean sea level.
Ordnance Survey Benchmark
This OS benchmark can be found on the south face of St Martin's Church. It marks a point 98.661m above mean sea level.
Houses and a pub, Seamer Raised above the current route of Hilton Road. The pub is the King's Head.
Houses and a pub, Seamer
Raised above the current route of Hilton Road. The pub is the King's Head.
St Martin's Church, Seamer in Cleveland The church and churchyard are raised about a metre above the road. The photographer is standing on the pavement, not lying down in the churchyard.
St Martin's Church, Seamer in Cleveland
The church and churchyard are raised about a metre above the road. The photographer is standing on the pavement, not lying down in the churchyard.
'Beware of Gravestones. They can be dangerous.' Warning at the entrance to St Martin's churchyard, Seamer in Cleveland.
'Beware of Gravestones. They can be dangerous.'
Warning at the entrance to St Martin's churchyard, Seamer in Cleveland.
Seamer Memorial Hall Opened in 1925. Decorated with poppies for Armistice Day 2018.
Seamer Memorial Hall
Opened in 1925. Decorated with poppies for Armistice Day 2018.
The Green, Seamer The houses are on the west side.
The Green, Seamer
The houses are on the west side.
Holme Lane, heading west to Trentham Grange Seen from an 82 metre spot height.
Holme Lane, heading west to Trentham Grange
Seen from an 82 metre spot height.
Looking south from Holme Lane towards Holme Hill Farm The field is about 75 metres above sea level. The distant Cleveland hills more like 400 metre.
Looking south from Holme Lane towards Holme Hill Farm
The field is about 75 metres above sea level. The distant Cleveland hills more like 400 metre.
Farmland on the south side of Holme Lane Bisected by the road to Seamer Moor.
Farmland on the south side of Holme Lane
Bisected by the road to Seamer Moor.
The nameless road to Seamer Moor Heading south from an 82 metre spot height on Holme Lane.
The nameless road to Seamer Moor
Heading south from an 82 metre spot height on Holme Lane.
Holme Lane on an autumn afternoon Heading south-west from Seamer to Hutton Rudby.
Holme Lane on an autumn afternoon
Heading south-west from Seamer to Hutton Rudby.
Wide verge on Holme Lane, near Windy Hill The lane is heading south-west, between Seamer and Hutton Rudby.
Wide verge on Holme Lane, near Windy Hill
The lane is heading south-west, between Seamer and Hutton Rudby.
Hedged field, west of Hobshaddow Plantation About 70 metres above sea level, on the east side of Holme Lane.
Hedged field, west of Hobshaddow Plantation
About 70 metres above sea level, on the east side of Holme Lane.
Farmland at Hollow Leighs The distant trees are in the valley of Carr Stell.
Farmland at Hollow Leighs
The distant trees are in the valley of Carr Stell.
Holme Lane, heading north-east to Seamer With a 77 metre spot height at the distant minor summit.
Holme Lane, heading north-east to Seamer
With a 77 metre spot height at the distant minor summit.
Entrance to Windy Hill Farm, off Holme Lane The farm access track is also a public bridleway.
Entrance to Windy Hill Farm, off Holme Lane
The farm access track is also a public bridleway.
Public bridleway signpost, east of Windy Hill The bridleway runs west from Holme Lane, to Foxton and beyond.
Public bridleway signpost, east of Windy Hill
The bridleway runs west from Holme Lane, to Foxton and beyond.
Show me another place!

Seamer Moor is located at Grid Ref: NZ4908 (Lat: 54.469449, Lng: -1.2313177)

Division: North Riding

Administrative County: North Yorkshire

District: Hambleton

Police Authority: North Yorkshire

What 3 Words

///bespoke.before.piglets. Near Stokesley, North Yorkshire

Related Wikis

Seamer, Hambleton

Seamer is a village and civil parish in the Hambleton district of North Yorkshire, England, near the border with the Borough of Stockton-on-Tees and 2...

Skutterskelfe

Skutterskelfe is a civil parish in the Hambleton district of North Yorkshire, England and lies to the north of the River Leven. The population of the parish...

Rudby Hall

Rudby Hall, Hutton Rudby, Skutterskelfe, North Yorkshire is a country house dating from 1838. Its origins are older but the present building was built...

Stokesley Town Hall

Stokesley Town Hall is a municipal building in the Market Place in Stokesley, North Yorkshire, England. The structure, which accommodates the offices and...

Stokesley Rural District

Stokesley was a rural district in the North Riding of Yorkshire from 1894 to 1974. It was named after the town of Stokesley, which it contained.The district...

Stokesley

Stokesley is a market town and civil parish in North Yorkshire, England. It lies within the historic county boundaries of the North Riding of Yorkshire...

Stokesley School

Stokesley School is a coeducational secondary school and sixth form located in Stokesley, North Yorkshire, England.It was established in 1959 as secondary...

Rudby

Rudby is a village and civil parish, 4 miles (6.4 km) from the market town of Stokesley in the Hambleton District of North Yorkshire, England. == Geography... ==

Nearby Amenities

Located within 500m of 54.469449,-1.2313177
Power: pole
Lat/Long: 54.4656783/-1.231836
Power: pole
Lat/Long: 54.4660935/-1.2302612
Power: pole
Lat/Long: 54.466529/-1.2287017
Power: pole
Lat/Long: 54.4674569/-1.2264786
Power: pole
Lat/Long: 54.4679607/-1.225222
Power: pole
Lat/Long: 54.4684608/-1.224027
The data included in this document is from www.openstreetmap.org. The data is made available under ODbL.

Have you been to Seamer Moor?

Leave your review of Seamer Moor below (or comments, questions and feedback).