ROUTE DESCRIPTION

Leave Monkbar Hotel, cross road at traffic lights with care towards the walled city.  Enter the city via Monk Bar.

Continue forward along Goodramgate to reach Kings Square.  Bear left then right across King’s Square to go down the Shambles.  At the end of the Shambles, cross the road and go down Lady Pecketts Yard (to the right of Jones the bootmakers – black & white timbered building).  At the bottom of the Yard, Turn left and on reaching road turn left again and then turn right into Stonebow passing ‘The Terrace’ bar/restaurant.  At 2nd bus stop sign, turn sharp right into Black Horse Passage

Continue down Black Horse Passage and at end of buildings, bear right to go down narrow steps to the River Foss. Turn left and follow river. Climb the steps to the footbridge and cross to the former Navigation Warehouse.

Turn left along cantilevered walkway above river to end of building.  Descend steps to river level and at end of multi-storey car park turn right and then turn left to reach main road.  At main road turn right and in 50m turn right again at the Red Tower.   Go round tower and climb steps onto City Walls.  Go along walls and descend again at Walmgate Bar, cross Walmgate with care, then exit the walled city and cross Barbican Road at the traffic lights.  Turn right along Barbican Road, pass Royal Dragon Cantonese Restaurant then turn left into Barbican Mews.  Follow pathway bearing left and then sharp right immediately before bungalows, to reach Heslington Road

Cross Heslington Road and turn left.  After No 103, to go through a little green gate.

Q.1      What is the name of the large building belonging to the University of York immediately before reaching No.103?

Keep forward to go through another larger gate and follow the path downhill to an asphalted cycle track.  Bear right on this track, keeping to left hand main track, through a gate/grid, then turn sharp right.  You are now enclosed in barbed wire as the path goes through Imphal Barracks.  Keep forward to reach Fulford RoadTurn left and cross the road at the Pedestrian crossing, turn left and then turn right down Maple Grove

Q.2      What is the name of the Guest House on the corner of Maple Grove?

Go down Maple Grove and at end keep forward to reach the Millennium Bridge.  Cross the bridge over the River Ouse, descend the steps to right, then straight on to the Rowntree Park entrance. 

Enter Rowntree Park and turn right to keep parallel with the river.  Pass toilets and at end of path exit the park back onto the riverside path.  Continue along side of river to reach Skeldergate Bridge.  Go under the bridge and turn sharp left up steps to road above. At road turn left and cross over the river.  At end of bridge turn left and descend steps to return to the riverside, with river now on your left.  Follow river to next bridge.  Climb steps to road level, cross road with care and then cross bridge.  At end of bridge turn right to return to riverside, with river now on your right.  Follow river to reach next bridge.  Go under bridge and before next archway, take steps on left to climb to road level and end of the City Walls. 

Turn left and cross Lendal Bridge, then continue forward to reach entrance to Museum Gardens.  Turn left into gardens.

Q.3      What is the number on the first lamppost on the left?

At V-junction bear right and at next V-junction bear left. Keep forward to exit gardens at gated archway. Turn right along Marygate and at end turn right into Bootham.

Go along Bootham to reach pedestrian crossing and cross to re-enter the walled city at Bootham Bar.  Keep forward and then at cross roads bear left to keep York Minster on your left.  At statue of Constantine bear left and at end turn right into College Street to reach junction with Goodramgate.  Turn left along Goodramgate to return to Monk Bar and the end of the walk.

 

Points of Interest about York

CITY WALLS - The first wall was a simple earth and wood stockade built by the Romans to surround their early fort. The Ninth Legion added stone walls in the 2nd Century, The present wall dates from the 13th Century and stands on an earth rampart built by the Anglo-Danish Kings of York and later enlarged by the Normans. The walls have been extensively restored in the last two centuries.

MONK BAR - The loftiest and strongest of York's medieval gateways, Monk Bar was erected in about 1330 to replace a previous city entrance on the site of an original Roman Gate

THE SHAMBLES - One of the best preserved medieval streets in Europe. Formerly 'Fleshammels' - the street of butchers

RIVER FOSS - William the Conqueror dammed the River Foss in 1069 just south of York Castle close to its confluence with the Ouse in order to create a moat around the castle complex. The damming also caused the river to flood further upstream forming a large lake that would become an integral part of the city's inner defences during the Middle Ages, which explains the absence of a defensive wall in the area today.

WALMGATE BAR - A little out of the main centre of York, Walmgate Bar is the only city gate to retain its outer defensive barbican. It is basically a 12th century structure

WALMGATE STRAY - The Strays of York is a collective name for four areas of open land, comprising in all over 800 acres within the City of York.

MILLENNIUM BRIDGE - The Millennium Bridge was opened on 10 April 2001, having cost £4.2m to build. It spans the River Ouse to the south of York, linking Hospital Fields Road and Maple Grove in Fulford with Butcher Terrace on the South Bank. The bridge carries a footpath and cycle path and is not open to vehicular traffic.

YORKSHIRE MUSEUM - The museum houses some of the most important collections in the country. The famous 'York Mystery Plays' are performed in the museum gardens against the dramatic backdrop of St. Mary's Abbey ruins.

BOOTHAM BAR - This is the oldest entrance to York being one of the gates to the Roman Fort.  There has been an entrance here for over 2000 years.  

YORK MINSTER - York Minster is the mother church of the Northern Province of the Church of England. It is the largest Gothic Church in England. Although the site of a much earlier church, parts of the present Minster date from the late 11th Century. Nowhere else in England can so much Medieval glass be seen in one church.

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This Trail is registered until 31 December 2010

PAGE UPDATED Wednesday, 28 April 2010