Condé Nast Traveler is a luxury and lifestyle travel magazine published by Condé Nast . The magazine has won 25 National Magazine Awards.
16-565: Ryedale Folk Museum is an open-air museum in the village of Hutton-le-Hole in the North York Moors National Park . This museum tells the stories of local people from pre-history to the present day. About twenty of the museum's buildings have been saved from nearby villages and reconstructed at the museum. The museum covers an area of six acres - with the buildings, agricultural machinery and farm animals (sheep, chickens and pigs). The museum officially opened in 1964 to
32-459: A Look North TV crew, but its origins go back much further, and Wilfred Crosland originally established the museum collection. After Wilfred died, his sisters, Helen and Hannah (known as Minnie), pushed the museum forward, and they appointed its first curator - Bertram (Bert) Frank. Bert Frank was supported by his wife, Evelyn, alongside countless volunteers. The Crosland family arranged for William's collection to be first exhibited in 1935. In 2023,
48-625: A Quaker Meeting House in 1690; it was much modified in 1790 and extended about 1810. It remains a Grade II listed building . John Richardson was buried at the Meeting's burial site. There was a Meeting House in Hutton-le-Hole as well, built in 1698 but turned into a residence in 1859. Interments there continued until 1868. By 1831, Hutton-le-Hole was part of the Anglican Lastingham parish. The "Township of Hutton-le-Hole"
64-512: A magazine for Diners Club members, for $ 25 million in 1986. The company used it as the basis for Condé Nast Traveler , led by Sir Harold Evans (1928–2020) in 1987, with a focus on literary journalism and hard news reporting. As editor in chief, Evans coined the motto "Truth in Travel", which declared that travel industry freebies would not be accepted. Condé Nast Traveler is currently led by Global Editorial Director, Divia Thani. The magazine
80-532: Is a small village and civil parish in North Yorkshire , England, about 7 miles (11 km) north-west of Pickering . It is a popular scenic village within the North York Moors National Park . Sheep roam the streets at will. The village appears in the Domesday Book of 1086 as Hoton. Since then it has been known as Hege-Hoton, Hoton under Heg and Hewton. The name Hutton-le-Hole means place of
96-1010: Is produced at Condé Nast 's US headquarters at One World Trade Center in New York City. A separate UK edition, Condé Nast Traveller , is produced from Condé Nast's offices at The Adelphi in London. Condé Nast Traveler 's main competitor is Travel + Leisure . Condé Nast Traveler , with the aid of social networking websites Facebook and YouTube , produced a series of videos officially titled Many People, Many Places , consisting of 13 videos. Each video lasts between three and four minutes long where over 70 people from 70 countries (including English-speaking countries) reveal how to say everyday phrases in their country of birth. The Filipino representative, an unidentified woman, counted numbers and money, sang Happy Birthday , and said "Cheers!" in English rather than Tagalog before stating that
112-633: The North York Moors National Park Authority when pedestrian traffic across increased dramatically, after the village green was designated as a right of way. The stream splits the village green, whose grass is kept short by sheep. Hutton Beck flows into the River Rye via Catter Beck and the River Seven . Cond%C3%A9 Nast Traveler The Condé Nast unit of Advance Publications purchased Signature ,
128-562: The Benefice of Lastingham. In earlier years, services had been held in the schoolhouse. Altogether the village has 29 properties historically listed as Grade II, many of them from the 18th century. One is a K6 telephone kiosk designed in 1935, another a sundial installed in 1833. The world championships in the board game Nine men's morris took place annually at the Ryedale Folk Museum in Hutton-le-Hole until 1997. In
144-524: The Tagalog language lacked tongue twisters . Despite being able to sing the national anthem of the Philippines in Tagalog, the videos went viral on social media, with users complaining the woman was not properly portraying Filipino culture in comparison to the other representatives from the 70 other countries did. In response, Condé Nast Traveler admitted in a Facebook post that "[o]ne of our subjects,
160-506: The Victorian period, gentry saw the village as "ill-planned and untidy" and "overcrowded [with] homes of weavers, smallholders and labourers.... Manure was piled everywhere and the beck was the common sewer." Hutton-le-Hole now features among the "20 most beautiful villages in the UK and Ireland" according to Condé Nast Traveler and is much visited. It has a large pay-and-display car park at
176-493: The burial ground near the hollow , but the full name appears only in the 19th century. Near the end of the 13th century, the village was granted to St Mary's Abbey, York . In the 1600s the village was mainly inhabited by Quakers working as weavers or in agriculture. The Quaker evangelist John Richardson died there in 1753 at the age of 87. About four miles away in Kirbymoorside stands an old building that began as
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#1732798734675192-576: The lives of ordinary people up to the present day. There is a cafe, a shop, a gift shop, and in season craft workshops. The folk museum also has the photographic studio of William Hayes, believed to be the oldest daylight photographic studio in England, set up in the early 20th century. The studio was built in 1902 in Monkgate, York, and donated to the museum in 1991. Hutton-le-Hole lies in Ryedale on
208-528: The museum hosted an exhibition of traditional rag rugs made by a local couple focused on preserving the craft. In 2024, an exhibition titled Believe it or Not explored folk belief and magical thinking , with exhibited items including witch posts and everyday domestic items believed to have protective powers, such as knitting sheaths, apple scoops, and butter moulds. 54°18′00″N 0°55′12″W / 54.300°N 0.920°W / 54.300; -0.920 Hutton-le-Hole Hutton-le-Hole
224-454: The north end. The National Park Authority recommends visits to the Hutton le Hole Craft Workshops and Ryedale Folk Museum, followed by a two-mile walk to Lastingham and its ancient church, St Mary's. The museum covers 13 rescued and reconstructed historic buildings, including an Iron Age round house, period shops, thatched cottages, an Elizabethan manor house, barns and workshops, to display
240-607: The southern edge of the North York Moors, just 2.5 miles (4 km) north of Kirkbymoorside and the A170 road . The hamlet of Lastingham is 1.5 miles (2.4 km) north-east of the village, with the Tabular Hills Walk passing through both places. The stream Hutton Beck wends its way through the middle of the village, criss-crossed by footpaths and wooden bridges. One of the bridges was replaced in 2002 by
256-476: Was receiving education funding from a charity owned by John Stockton in 1914. The first schoolhouse was built in 1845 and replaced in 1875 by a Grade II listed building, but this is now a holiday let. In 1901, the old building of the Zion Chapel still stood, but was no longer in use. The village bought it and pulled it down in 1934 when a new church, St Chad's, was built; this still stands and forms part of
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