Remains of a Roman villa were unearthed in 2015 north of Sand Hill. The building is thought to have been two storeys high with a
hypocaust on the ground floor. Animal remains were found extensively across the site. It is thought the site dated from the third to fourth century AD and would have been situated along
Dere Street. The site was covered as part of the construction of the Bedale, Aiskew and Leeming Bar bypass, which opened on 11 August 2016 as part of the upgrade to the
A1(M). The village was known as
Echescol in
Domesday Book in the
Hundred of
Count Alan of Brittany, the previous Lord having been
Gospatric. The village had 7 ploughlands. The Lordship of the Manor followed that of neighbouring Bedale. The name is derived from
Old Norse words
eik (oak) and
skógr (wood) and thus means
Oak wood. Robert Hird, Bedale poet and diarist, noted that in late 18th Century the village name was spelled
Ascough – he credits "Mr. Edward Strangeways, near Fencote" with the introduction of the modern spelling "by writing it Aiskew on his cartboard". In 2013
Masons Gin established its first distillery in the village. This was damaged by fire in April 2019, leading to the opening of a new distillery in Leeming Bar in March 2020. ==Governance==