The few modern references to Fairy Hole Cave list it as an alternative name for the Cove Hole Cave, located in the limestone scar, half a mile to the north of Grassington, in the Yorkshire Dales.
Older references however, indicate that the Fairy Hole was actually a
separate cave, with Bailey John Harker writing in the mid 1800's, noting that
....
"Close by Cove Hole there is a place called the Fairy Hole, the name of
which tells us the faith that Grassingtonians once had in these creatures of
the fancy. (Harker 1869).
Harker was born in Grassington, so his local knowledge should be reliable. A
few years later, Harry Speight visited the Fairy Hole, and provides some extra
details ....
"On the right of the lane and a field-length distant, is the ancient Fairy
Hole, a low opening in the limestone which can only properly be entered by
such tiny sprites as the fairies. Ordinary mortals must descend to an access
on all fours. Some yards away is the Cove Hole, a long wedge-shaped cave,
twelve feet high and forty feet through to the far side." (Speight 1900).




