Sunday 21st February, 2016.

One of the main purposes of this website is for it to be a platform for my researches and articles. To this end I am going to list the articles already uploaded (as pdfs), completed articles soon to be uploaded and articles in progress and to then be uploaded.

Articles already uploaded (see Publications);

Landmarks and Beacons (Churches of the Humber Estuary, their history and function as medieval and early modern aids to navigation). 87 pages, 22014 words, 62 illustrations, appendix and bibliography.

Family Studies 1, Doris Clarke, a life. 13 pages, 3412 words and 10 illustrations.

Family Studies 2, The Old Post Office, Boughton, Norfolk. 6 pages, 1580 words and 3 illustrations.

Completed articles soon to be uploaded;

Family studies 3, Sidney Walter Clarke, 1899-1987. 24 pages, 3716 words, 9 illustrations and 13 Great War records reproduced with notes.

Family Studies 4, The family tree of Richard Sidney Clarke, 1948-. 14 pages, 4654 words and 4 illustrations in appendix.

A 20th century source of evidence on 19th century housing styles and provision. Case study of Barton on Humber. 26 pages, 5760 words and 21 illustrations.

Barton on Humber Bibliography.

A study of the historical context of burial, cremation and the development of civil cemeteries – with particular reference to Barton on Humber. 40 pages, 10671 words, 24 illustrations and a bibliography.

A simplified study of the geology of the Humberside region and some examples of its impact on the region’s social and economic history. 51 pages, 11258 words, 35 illustrations and a bibliography.

A history of Hessle Common (now south-west Hull). 34 pages, 10198 words and 17 illustrations. (Originally four separate articles).

Hull in the Beginning – the history of the lower alley prior to Hull becoming a royal borough. 36 pages, 10971 words, 15 illustrations and 2 bibliographies.

The south Humber coastal lowlands – A landscape interpretation. 12 pages,4210 words, 7 illustrations and a short bibliography.

Some elements of the landscape history of the five ‘Low Villages’, North Lincolnshire. 58 pages,10915 words and 45 illustrations. (Originally 12 separate articles).

A collection of articles produced for past issues of Barton Civic Society’s annual Newsletter – ‘Eagle House’, ‘The Corn Exchange’, Flooding 2013′ ‘Allotments’, ‘The Old Ferry-Boat House’, ‘Barton Vestry minutes’ and others.

Articles yet to be completed before being uploaded;

Steeples in a landscape – prominent church steeples in the medieval landscape of the north Lincolnshire ‘Marsh’.

History of Suffolk Palace, Hull.

History of Hull’s parks, cemeteries and open spaces.

History of Barton’s public buildings.

A general work on reclamation, embanking and erosion across the coastal lowlands of Humberside.

Barrow on Humber bibliography.