The place-name 'Cresswell' is first attested in the
Close Roll for 1234, where it appears as
Kereswell. It appears as
Cressewell in 1242 in the
Book of Fees. The name means 'stream where
water cress grew'. The
Royal National Lifeboat Institution operated
Cresswell Lifeboat Station between 1875 and 1944. The lifeboat was launched 58 times, and 91 lives were saved. The former lifeboat house is now Cresswell Village Hall. During the
Second World War, the
Royal Air Force operated two
radar sites south of the village on the road to
Lynemouth. Both sites have since been cleared and have no above ground evidence of previous activity. Cresswell is a popular bird watching area with Cresswell pond and bird hide nearby and the
Druridge Bay Country Park less than away. The village has one ice cream shop which closes out of season, and a café on the beach just to the north of the village, open year-round. The village also has two caravan holiday home parks – Cresswell Towers and Golden Sands. Cresswell Towers takes its name from the old
pele tower nearby,
Cresswell Tower, and is owned by
Parkdean Resorts. At the
2001 Census, the village had a population of 237, which by the
2011 Census, had dropped to 206. == Landmarks ==