THE VILLAGE OF PAULL was originally named Paghil, Latinised into Pagula, which means a stake marking a landing-place. (To this day, the name remains in use in Paull as Paghill). The exact date the settlement was founded is unknown, but the village is listed in the Domesday Book, drawn up under the orders of William the Conqueror in 1086, as part of the manor of Burstwick, and it was the duty of Low Paull to provide sufficient men to row the Lord and Lady of the Manor across the Humber from Holderness to Lindsay.
In
1377 the population of Paull was recorded as Paull: 28, Paull Fleet: 140, Paull
Home: 61, giving a total of 229, although as this census was for the purpose
of a poll tax this could well just be adult males. PAULL
SCHOOL was built in 1863, before schooling became compulsory, and enlarged
twice in the next thirty years. No further extensions were added until June
1979, when extra accommodation in the form of a mobile classroom was added.
A second mobile classroom (these being supposedly 'temporary structures') was
added soon after and it took the 21st century to bring further building
improvements, with work commencing
in the summer of 2005. BOREAS
HALL on Boreas Hill, north-west of the village, is on one of the few “high”
points around (a glacial moraine some 15 metres above sea level!) It was formerly
Boar House or Bower House, and the grounds once extended to 300 acres.
The whole
of the manor of Burstwick belonged to the Constable family until 1769 when a
wealthy Hull merchant, Benjamin Blaydes, bought High Paull and the manor of
Paghill for the sum of £6,700. This seems a remarkable amount to pay for a property
which at the time seldom made more than £100 a year, and often incurred major
outgoings in repairing the flood banks - one tide alone did damage recorded
at over £300. Since that time, extensive improvements have been made to the
river defences and the village has gained better protection from the sea, resulting
in the reclamation of thousands of acres of fertile farmland.
Until relatively recently Paull was a centre for fishing and particularly shrimping;
nowadays the many fishermen who still use Paull are there in a purely recreational
capacity, although eel traps are still set and sufficient eels caught to be
sold commercially to London to make the Cockney delicacy Jellied Eels. Paull
has built ships of all kinds for many years, and in 1812 HMS Anson, a 74-gun
warship of 1,741 tons was built at Paull - the stocks used can still be seen
at low tide on the beach by the old slipway, and the adjacent cottages are known
as Anson Villas. The modern shipyard on Main Street still makes and repairs
boats and ships of all sizes up to small coastal tankers and pleasure boats.
PAULL BATTERY was built on the orders of
Henry VIII, but played its first significant role when, in July 1642, during
the Civil War in England, King Charles I visited the newly-built Paull Battery
to review his forces (it was after this visit that he went to Hull, only to
be famously turned away by Sir John Hotham). Later in the same year the Battery
was partly demolished by gunfire from Parliamentarian ships sailing up the Humber
to relieve the siege of Hull, which at the same time damaged Paull Church with
shots meant for the Battery. It was not until the Crimean war of 1854 - 56 that
it was thought necessary to fully repair and rebuild the Battery and it is this
building complex which can be seen today. It was occupied by the Royal Artillery
and was armed with 19 guns for the protection of the river approaches.
During WW2 the battery continued to be part of Hull’s defences, and until the
1960s it was owned by the Crown before being finally sold off into private ownership.
The battery (re-named “Fort Paull”
) is now a historical military site with an award-winning museum featuring static
displays and re-enactments etc. at weekends during the summer. For more details,
click here.
PAULL LIGHTHOUSE was erected in 1836 but was already disused by the 1890s
and is now a private home; new lights were erected in the late nineteenth century,
two at Salt End which fell into disuse with the building of the jetties and
two more at Thorngumbald Clough which are still in existence. More information
on Paull's lighthouses can be found by clicking
here.
PAULL PARISH CHURCH, originally dedicated to St. Andrew and later to
Saint Mary and Saint Andrew, is now known once more as St. Andrew’s church.
It was built in the 14th century on higher ground a quarter of a mile outside
the village in order to avoid flood damage. It is in the Perpendicular style,
with very thick walls partly built of cobbles from the shore. A thorough restoration
was carried out in 1880 and many traces of fire were found, showing the extent
of the damage suffered from the the Parliamentary guns in 1642. The stone and
carved oak pulpit dates from 1879, as do the choir stalls, but the east window
is from an earlier 13th century building and there is also a simple oak chest
which dates from the 11th century. The vicarage was built in 1859: it was sold
as a private home when Paull became a joint parish and renamed Beech Rise. Until
recently it was a residential home for the elderly,renamed yet again as Paull
Manor, but is now back in private ownership as a family home.
Besides the church there have been two chapels in Paull : the Primitive Methodists
erected a chapel in 1871 (since converted into two cottages) at the junction
of Back Lane and Main Street, and the Wesleyan Methodist Chapel was built in
1805, restored in 1912 and is still in regular use.
In 1892 the number of children on roll was 62, although there were places for
100; in the latter part fo the 20th century numbers fluctuated around 45-65,
and now there are even fewer children on roll (<45), although of course nowadays
the children transfer to South Holderness School in Preston at 11 whereas in
the 19th century they would remain in the village for the whole of their school
careers. The school has its own website - click
here for more information and photos.
PIER HOUSE on Main Street once housed a “Museum of Curiosities,” the
collection of Mr. Battersby which was open to the general public. Amongst the
exhibits was a facsimile of Charles I’s death warrant (now on display at Fort
Paull,) a model of Hull Town Hall made out of cork, and the entire skeleton
of a Miss Jenkins, known in the locality as “Rabbit Nanny.” She hawked rabbits
in the streets of Hull and it was said that her voice could be heard across
the river at Barton. She sold her body prior to her death for the sum of £5,
for dissection and medical research in Hull, and her skeleton was subsequently
bought from a Dr. Hay and put on display; this skeleton is also now one of the
exhibits at Fort Paull.
PAULL HOLME was originally the home of the Holme/Hulme family, who took
their name from the place and not vice-versa. A brick tower
is the sole remaining portion of the Great Hall, built in the 15th century.
It stands 30 feet high with battlements and small loophole windows. It is reputedly
haunted by the ghost of a cow which, in 1840, somehow climbed up the narrow
staircase to the battlements and, unable to get back down, fell to its death.
The present farmhouse was built in 1837 out of materials from the Old Hall.
In 2005 the Paull Holme Preservation Society was formed, and plans to restore
or at least preserve the tower and its environs are now well in hand.
NEWTON GARTH lies between Paull and Hedon and is on the site of an ancient
leper hospital founded in the reign of Henry II (1133 - 1189). During the Reformation
of the 16th century the revenues of £40 per annum were seized on behalf of Henry
VIII and the inmates turned out.
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Old Paull