East Halton
East Halton is a small village and civil parish in North Lincolnshire, England. It is situated close to the Humber estuary, approximately north-west from Immingham and north from the neighbouring village of North Killingholme.
The 2001 [United Kingdom census|2001 census] recorded a population of 604 people, increasing to 626 at the 2011 census.
East Halton Grade I listed Anglican church is dedicated to St Peter. It originated in the 13th century, and was restored by James Fowler of Louth in 1868, who raised the chancel and aisle. The village had Wesleyan [Methodist Church (Great Britain)|Wesleyan] and Primitive Methodism in [the United Kingdom|Primitive Methodist] chapels.
The village has a primary school, village shop and post office, and the Black Bull public house.
East Halton was previously served by East Halton railway station on the New Holland and Immingham Dock branch of the Great Central Railway.
East Halton is home to a rare Lincolnshire variant of the British brownie legend. According to a nineteenth-century account, a helpful supernatural folklore being aided a local farmer for years, asking only for a linen smock each New Year. When offered a coarse sack instead, the creature vanished forever, cursing the farmer’s thrift and foretelling misfortune.