Hornsea is a tiny seaside resort, town as well as civil church in the East Riding of Yorkshire, England. The negotiation days to at least the very early medieval period. The community was broadened in the Victorian age with the resulting the Hull and Hornsea Railway in 1864. The civil parish incorporates Hornsea community; the all-natural lake, Hornsea Mere; as well as the lost or deserted villages of Hornsea Beck, Northorpe as well as Southorpe. Structures of note with the church consist of the medieval parish church of St Nicholas, Bettison's Recklessness, Hornsea Mere as well as the sea front boardwalk. The Hull and Hornsea Railway opened up 1864, and was closed in 1964-- the primary railway station, Hornsea Community, is still extant, as well as the previous trackbed forms the section of the Trans Pennine Route to Hull. In the First World War the Mere was quickly the site of RNAS Hornsea, a seaplane base. During the Second World War the community as well as coastline was heavily fortified versus invasion. Hornsea Ceramic was developed in Hornsea c.? 1950 and enclosed 2000. Modern Hornsea still functions as a coastal hotel, and also has big caravan sites to the north and also southern.