Hambleton District
Hambleton was a local government district in North Yorkshire, England. The administrative centre was Northallerton, and the district included the outlying towns and villages of Bedale, Thirsk, Great Ayton, Stokesley, and Easingwold.
The district was formed by the Local [Government Act 1972] on 1 April 1974, as a merger of Northallerton Urban District, Bedale Rural District, Easingwold Rural District, Northallerton Rural District, and parts of Thirsk Rural District, Stokesley Rural District and Croft Rural District, all in the North Riding of Yorkshire. It was subsumed into the new unitary authority of North Yorkshire Council on 1 April 2023.
Geography
Hambleton covered an area of 1,311.17 km² most of which, 1,254.90 km2, was green space. The district was named after the Hambleton Hills, part of the York Moors National Park">Vale of York">York Moors National Park, on the eastern edge of the district. This area was the subject of a national habitat protection scheme as articulated in the United Kingdom's Biodiversity Action Plan.About 75% of the district was in the Vales of Mowbray and of York. These two vales consist largely of low lying and intensively worked arable land which is mostly used for farming. 16% of the former district was within the North York Moors National Park and just over 1% was in the York green belt zone.