Snowden Slights: The legendary grave in one of Yorkshire's most distinctive churches

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Snowden Slights: The legendary grave in one of Yorkshire's most distinctive churches
Danmark Seneste Nyt,Danmark Overskrifter
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One of the most distinctive churches in East Yorkshire, Grade II-listed St. Mary’s in East Cottingwith is of relatively new construction.

The red-brown brick building standing on the west side of the village dates from the mid-1780s, although the bells were cast in the 14th century and come from an old chapel which previously occupied the site. At one end of the church is a memorial to a parishioner, Anne Bray, who died before St. Mary’s was built. Providing pause for thought, it includes the lines: “All those that comes our graves to se, As we are now, so must you be.

Less than a year before his death was published a now highly sought-after biography of his life by Sydney H. Smith. The book turned Slights into a legend. It revealed that prior to the first Wild Bird Protection Act of 1880 he had shot bitterns, dippers, kingfishers, fieldfares, skylarks and even rare spotted crakes, and sold them on markets in York and Leeds. Many of his victims were bought by taxidermists, stuffed birds being popular with the Victorians.

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