The famous red guidebook to the Yorkshire Dales compiled in the 1950s by Ward Lock & Company for motoring travellers says of Leyburn: “The most noticeable feature is The Shawl, a lofty terrace behind the town, commanding a grand view of Wensleydale.”

The Shawl today still has fabulous views across the wide-bottomed dale to the flat-topped Pen Hill, and its well trodden clifftop paths wend their ways through the trees past spots called “The Queen’s Gap” and “Lady Algitha’s Cave”.

“Tradition has it that Mary, Queen of Scots, dropped her shawl here when attempting to escape from Bolton Castle,” says the guidebook.

Mary was indeed kept at the nearby castle for about six months at the end of 1568, but she wasn’t really a prisoner as she lived in a degree of luxury, with a retinue of 50 and surrounded by all the best furniture and fittings borrowed from all of North Yorkshire’s finest properties to make her feel comfortable. It is said that one day she managed to escape the castle but only made it as far as the high piece of land near Leyburn, where, in the scuffle during her recapture, she dropped her head-wrap at The Queen’s Gap on The Shawl.

The guidebook dismisses the story in a single sentence.

“It is sad to have to question so romantic a derivation, but there is little doubt that the name is derived from the Scandinavian ‘skali’, for huts, later modified to ‘schalls’ and so to ‘shawl’,” it says.

The final nail in the story’s coffin is that the word “shawl” didn’t enter the English language until 1662, imported from Persian, so 100 years earlier, Mary cannot possibly have known what a shawl was.

It is more likely that the town of Leyburn originated from people living in huts huddled beneath The Shawl for protection from the elements but still with a good defensive view across the dale.

Lady Algitha’s Cave on The Shawl was discovered in the 1890s. It was named after Lady Algitha Orde-Powlett, who married the 4th Baron Bolton of Bolton Castle in 1895, and, 20ft deep, it contained animal and human bones plus Roman era pottery shards and shaped stones. It was surmised that this was where early man once lived.

The 1950s guidebook doesn’t mention the cave, probably because it had long since collapsed and disappeared, although it is still marked on today’s Ordnance Survey maps.

In fact, the guidebook doesn’t see anything else to merit a mention at The Shawl and rapidly moves on to Wensley – “one of the prettiest villages in Yorkshire”.

But if its compilers had tarried a while, they would have seen that in 1841, tradesmen of the town began laying out paths, placing seats and grottoes along the clifftop.

On July 31, 1841, they held their first Leyburn Shawl Tea Festival which quickly became such a popular annual event that it drew thousands of people from across the country.

“The tea was served in a spacious marquee, commanding the best view over the valley and decorated with flowers, evergreens and colours,” wrote visitor WGM Jones Barker in 1854. “Bands played and the festival usually ended with a moonlight dance upon the greensward.”

The last tea festival took place on June 30, 1858, but The Shawl was not long quiet as in the 1890s, golfers colonised the cliff edge. As recent Looking Backs have told, the huge natural drop into the dale on one side and the long tumble into the deep chasm of the quarries on the other added an element of danger to the strokeplay.

The nine-hole course was laid out in 1895, and somewhere on The Shawl the golfers had an attractive pavilion. In 1896, Joseph Shaw presented them with a silver Challenge Cup which a few years ago passed through the hands of local sports memorabilia collector David Copland.

W Tweddell’s name is inscribed twice on the splendid cup as he won it in 1912 and 1913.

William, born in 1897, had learned his golfing skills on the Leyburn course, and was in his mid-teens when he triumphed in the cup. During the First World War, he served with the Durham Light Infantry, winning the Military Cross at Passchendaele.

In peacetime, he went to study medicine at Aberdeen University, but in 1924, he was back home in Leyburn when the D&S Times’ special correspondent, who signed himself VAL, played a round on The Shawl.

After VAL had retrieved his expensive Dunlop Maxifli ball from a quarry, he watched Tweddell on the tee, admiring his “slashing quality” and noting how he used his driver as if it were a steamhammer.

“At Leyburn,” wrote VAL presciently, “they look forward confidently to the day when he will beat all comers.”

In 1927 at Hoylake, Tweddell did beat all comers to become the British amateur champion, and in 1935, he was runner-up at Royal Lytham and St Annes by a hole to the US amateur champion, William Lawson Little.

In 1928 and 1936, Tweddell was selected as the playing captain of the British Walker Cup team – the amateur equivalent of the professional Ryder Cup – and went to Chicago and New Jersey where the British were humbled on both occasions.

Golf was very much a hobby to “the Doctor”, who, when he qualified became a GP and settled near Birmingham. He was, though, very highly regarded in the world of amateur golf – he entered the national championship 24 times between 1921 and 1955, and was the ninth best amateur of his era – and it all began for him on The Shawl.

The club faded away after the Second World War, and now there are no signs of it up on The Shawl, where the old quarry is now full of solar panels and the views across the dale are still, as the 1950s guidebook said, beautifully commanding.