For over a hundred years it has charmed visitors with beautiful views, a rugged coastline, charming cottages roofed with red slate, cobbled streets and sandy beaches.
But locals in a picturesque Yorkshire coastal village say they are being priced out of where they live – with tourism to blame.
Once a thriving fishing village – with the current population estimated at little over a thousand – Robin Hood’s Bay on the Yorkshire coast has been attracting visitors from the beginning of the 19th century.
Famed for the plethora of fossils to be found on its beach, and for its storied history as a haven for smuggling in the 1700s, there is much to attract the day-trippers.
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