Cattal is first mentioned in the
Domesday Book of 1086, as
Catale,
Catala. The name probably derives from
Old English catt 'wild cat' +
halh 'nook of land', referring to land in a bend of the River Nidd associated with wild cats. The total tax assessed was described as quite large with a taxable value of 5 geld units. At this time the head of the manor was Aldborough. There were 2 ploughlands in the village at the time of the Domesday Book, and Osbern of Arques was both Tenant in Chief and Lord in 1086. In the 1870s Cattal was described as: :"Cattal, a township in Hunsingore parish, W. R. Yorkshire; on the river Nidd, and on the York and High Harrogate railway, 6½ miles ESE of Knaresborough. It has a station on the railway. Acres, 950. Real property, £1,891. Pop., 189. Houses, 40" Cattal also has a
Roman road running through it. It provided a northward link between the road from
Castleford to
York via Tadcaster and the York to Aldborough road. The road approached the
River Nidd from the south through the 'd' of Bridge and on to the 'Ancient Ford'; this line was abandoned when the bridge was built a little upstream of the ford. The present road north from Cattal follows the Roman line, a little west of north to Providence Green and then a little east of north through Whixley, after which it meets the York-Aldborough road. The road known as Rudgate now has a brewery named after it in the nearby town on Tockwith.
Cattal Bridge is a grade two listed structure which carries Tadcaster road over the River Nidd. ==Population==