Which preposition to use with yorkshire

to Occurrences 6%

I know, throughout northern Europe, no such charming scenery, for quiet beauty and solid wealth, as that of the New Red marls; and if I wished to show a foreigner what England was, I should take him along them, from Yorkshire to South Devon, and sayThere. Is not that a country worth living for,and worth dying for if need be?

in Occurrences 6%

By a remarkably rapid march he reached Yorkshire in four days, and took the Norse King and his confederates by surprise.

with Occurrences 4%

Fullaway," he went on, rising from his chair, "I'll have to leave youyon man o' mine'll be arriving from Yorkshire with my things before long, and I must go down to the hotel office and make arrangements about him.

of Occurrences 2%

We will therefore take a turning out of the Guisborough road, and go down the hill to Egton village, where there is a church with some Norman pillars and arches preserved from the rebuilding craze that despoiled Yorkshire of half its ecclesiastical antiquities.

from Occurrences 2%

We ventured to stay all day at this town and the next night, and got guides to lead us to Blackstone Edge, a ridge of mountains which part this side of Yorkshire from Lancashire.

for Occurrences 2%

And, as he had no desire to go back to his mother and hear about Anne and Colin all over again, he went down to the Durhams' in Yorkshire for the rest of his leave.

like Occurrences 1%

"What's Yorkshire like?" "Not a patch on this place.

during Occurrences 1%

" In Yorkshire during the latter half of the nineteenth century a parish clergyman was told a circumstantial story of an old witch named Nanny, who was hunted in the form of a hare for several miles over the Westerdale moors and kept well away from the dogs, till a black one joined the pack and succeeded in taking a bit out of one of the hare's legs.

as Occurrences 1%

The Welsh Terrier is quite a new introduction that a dozen or so years ago was seldom seen outside the Principality; and so recently as 1881 the Airedale was merely a local dog known in Yorkshire as the Waterside or the Bingley Terrier.

through Occurrences 1%

They returned to Yorkshire through Warwick and Leicester, and on reviewing the journey John Yeardley has the following reflections: 2 mo. 22.Almost

Which preposition to use with  yorkshire