The village is mentioned twice in the
Domesday Book as
Claxtorp in the
Bulford hundred. The
manor was split between
Ligulf and
Arnger and Gospatric, son of Arnketil before the Norman invasion. Afterwards the parts of the manor were passed to the Crown and
Count Robert of Mortain who made
Nigel Fossard lord of the manor. The Crown gifted some of the manor to
St Mary's Abbey until the
dissolution when it was granted to
Thomas Bamburgh of
Foston. It was held by the family until 1857 when it became the property of the lord of Sand Hutton manor. The origin of the name of the village is uncertain. It could be from an Old Norse name of
Clacc or
Klakk. It could also be from the
Old English word
Clacc meaning
hill or peak with the
-tun suffix for settlement. A Wesleyan Chapel was built in the village in 1842 and the Primitive Methodists built a chapel in 1850. ==Governance==