This field contains low earthworks and buried remains relating to All Hallows Church, Dadesley. Dadesley was one of only two areas in the West Riding of Yorkshire to be recorded in Domesday as having urban status. It is thought to be the precursor to the settlement at Tickhill which grew up around the castle in the late 11th century. The location is uncertain but the area by the church is a likely candidate. The church served the area prior to the Norman conquest. It was replaced by St Mary's in Tickhill, certainly by the 13th century. A 14th century document refers to its ruinous state. A geophysical survey showed a sub-rectangular building on an east-west alignment, measuring 15m x 7m, which was composed of two compartments. The church was situated within a D-shaped enclosure, the eastern edge of which is still marked by a field boundary. Legibility of the former character is partial- the enclosure boundary at the eastern edge has remained for 1000 years or more. Stone litters the site and there is anecdotal evidence of gravestones being found on site. The name is remembered in the name of the hill.