, built between 1534-1699, was mentioned in ''
Pevsner's Buildings Of England'' The name Skeeby possibly derives from the
Old Norse Skithibȳ meaning 'Skithi's village'. Alternatively, it may derive from
skíðibȳ meaning '
billet of wood/
firewood village'. Skeeby was recorded as
Schirebi in the
Domesday Book – the description being:
"In Skeeby there are six carucates and there could be four ploughs there". In other early references to the village it is known as
Schireby in the 11th century,
Scythebi and
Scideby in the 12th century,
Schideby,
Skitteby and
Skytheby in the 13th and 14th centuries and finally
Skeitby or
Skeby in the 16th century. The origins of
Skeeby Bridge, over
Gilling Beck, date from the early 14th century, the existing structure being a 17th-century Grade II listed structure that was widened by John Carr in 1781/2. The earliest remaining buildings in the village date from the 17th and 18th centuries. In 1870-72,
John Marius Wilson's
Imperial Gazetteer of England and Wales described Skeeby:
SKEEBY, a township in Easby parish, N. R. Yorkshire; 2½ miles ENE of Richmond. Acres, 770. Real property, £1,234. Pop., 180. Houses, 42. ==Governance==