The Featherstones of Thurgarton

Historians have traditionally concentrated on the ‘top’ families of society, the movers and shakers of their times, but it was the ordinary householders who wove the real fabric of village life. In the case of Thurgarton it was those families who for  generations had toiled as farm labourers; one could choose many examples but here is one family – the Featherstones.

Arthur Featherstone and horse team in a ploughing match 1950s

arthur featherstone on thorntons farm 1950s

Arthur and his wife Elsie lived at Bramley Cottage on Bleasby Road; they had no children and were the last of several generations of  Featherstones who lived in Thurgarton. The Featherston(e) name first appears in the Thurgarton parish records in 1711.

18th century

1711  marriage   6 May  George Brunt and Jane Featherston

1721  marriage  20 August   Henry Featherston and Eliz Bettison

Gravestone of Elizabeth wife of Henry Featherston 1777 Thurgarton churchyard.

1777 gravestone Thurgarton Eliz Featherstone

The next entry for a Featherstone in the parish records is that of 9 July 1727 – the  baptism of  Henry base son of Mary Featherston.

Illegitimacy was not uncommon and most cases were recorded in the stark words ‘ base born’.   Besides questions of morality the main concern for the parish authorities was financial – who would support the single mother and child?  In 1727 the responsibility rested on the parish and each villager paid into a local parish fund for the support of needy parishioners – the parish Poor Rate. The identity of the child’s father would have been  vigorously pursued by the parish officers especially the Overseer of the Poor. If single the man was often ‘persuaded’ to marry and provide for the new family – to the relief of both the village’s moral majority but more importantly to the parish rates.

The church wardens’ records of 1727 mention one Joseph Hall as the child’s father but no  marriage took place . Three years later Mary married Richard Stubbins – 1730, 2nd March  marriage between  Richard Stubbins and Mary Fetherstone. Richard and Mary lived on Beck Street in the cottage that is now called Appletree Cottage; he paid £3-18-10 per year in rent for his house and two acres of land.

House and orchard of Richard Stubbins -1730

Stubbins 1731 map

They had six children of which only three survived. In 1733, 1734 and 1737 Mary gave birth to a daughter; each one was baptised with the name Elizabeth but none survived beyond infancy. Estimates of infant mortality in the 18th century for England vary somewhat – about 1 in 3 children died before reaching the age of 1 year. The repeated use of the same Christian name, as seen with Elizabeth in the Featherstone family above, was quite a common practice. At the same period the Hart family of Old Farm, Thurgarton had three daughters each christened Anne of  which only one survived- the Harts were yeoman farmers but wealth evidently did not protect against the loss of a newborn child.

Richard Stubbins died in 1760 and Mary in 1770.

19th century

Edward Featherstone was a farm labourer and married to Hannah.

1825 baptism 13 Nov Anne and Mary to Edward and Hannah Featherstone –labourer Anne died at 2 days and Mary at 8 days

1827 baptism 18 July Edward son of Edward and Hannah Featherstone – labourer

1829 baptism 23 Nov John son of Edward and Hannah Featherstone – labourer

1832 baptism 22 Jan  Mary dau of Edward and Hannah Featherstone  -labourer

In 1825 Hannah gave birth to twin girls, Anne and Mary, but sadly both died within a few days. Infant mortality remained high through the early 1800s and twin births especially in winter were very vulnerable. Within a few years Edward and Hannah were the parents of three sons, William, Edward and John, and a daughter, Mary, who was born in January 1832.

Edward Featherstone earned 12 shillings per week as a farm labourer with an extra 2 shilling in the longer working days of the summer harvest.  He paid an annual rent of £3 for a cottage and garden. Remarkably the Featherstones had £ 25-19-1 in a savings bank in Southwell. This was a considerable sum for a labourer’s family and  implies a hardworking and thrifty household with some hope of betterment.

Tragically Hannah died in June 1832 at the age of 36 years leaving Edward to raise four young children the youngest only 6 months old. A mere three months later in September 1832 the burial of Edward Featherstone is recorded in the parish register –he was 31 years old. We have no details of the cause of death for Hannah or Edward but in Edward’s case one can speculate on his state of mind after the loss of his wife.

Once again the parish was faced with the question – who would care for the children , William aged 9, Edward 6, John 4 and the baby Mary ?

In 1832 the poor of the parish were the responsibility of the Poor Law Guardians. The fate of these newly orphaned children lay with such men as Thurgarton’s  vicar, Thomas Becher of Southwell, a vigorous proponent of the  parish workhouse system and Richard Milward the squire of Thurgarton . What happened to the £25 in the bank is not known.

Southwell Workhouse

southwellworkhouse

The register of Southwell Workhouse for 1833-6 records the fate of Edward and John.

Edward Featherstone aged 7 and John Featherstone aged 5  orphans, both inmates of Southwell Workhouse.

William the oldest boy was evidently old enough to work as a farm boy (see below) but we have no further information on the baby Mary – she may have been adopted.

The life of an orphan in 19th century workhouses varied from the awful extremes of a Dickensian novel to more enlightened regimes of care and usually depended on the attitudes of the Board of Guardians and the personalities of the Master and Matron. The workhouse at Southwell was based on a harsh regime which discouraged the ‘feckless poor’ from seeking admission. The Featherstone boys were orphans and would have been regarded as the ‘blameless poor’ ; nevertheless they would have been subjected to strict discipline and an education designed to make them fit for work suitable to their class. 

We next pick up the three Featherstone boys in the 1841 census.

John Featherstone aged 11 farm servant at Bankwood Farm Thurgarton William Featherstone aged 15 andEdward Featherstone aged 14 farm servants at Hill Farm, Thurgarton.

Bankwood and Hill Farms are about 1 mile apart and in 1841 were owned by Richard Milward ( Chairman of the Board of Guardians at the workhouse) and were occupied by tenant farmers. The census records several farm servants aged 15 or less at both farms.  There is overwhelming evidence of the cruel exploitation of workhouse children as cheap labour in the factories and mills of England and it would be easy to portray the fate of these three Featherstones boys as yet another example of such practices but one cannot be certain of their circumstances. They at least were returned to their home parish and lived close together and whilst wages would have been low they were provided with board and lodging and a form of apprenticeship as farm workers.

Only John the youngest boy can be traced further through the parish records. In the 1860s he and his family received 2s twice a year from the church charity fund. He continued to work as a farm labourer and appears in the census returns of 1871 and 1881 – he lived at Hill Top Cottage above the Red Lion Pub.

1871 census John Featherstone aged 42 Agricultural labourer and wifeMary 38, sons John 8 and William 6 and daughter Harriet 2

1881 census John Featherstone aged 52 Labourer, wife Mary 47, Harriet 12

20th century

The younger son William continued to work as a farm labourer and remained at Hill Top Cottage where he and wife Mary raised a large family seen in the following census records.

1901 census  William Featherstone aged 36 Labourer, Mary wife 28, Jessie 8, Annie 4, William 2, Arthur 9 months

1911 census  William Featherstone aged 46 Stockman, wife Mary 38, Jessie 18, Arthur 10, Edith 8, Mary 6

1906 school photo Thurgarton includes 1 Arthur, 2 Jessie, 3 Annie and 4 ? William Featherstone

Featherstones at Thurgarton school 1905 1, Arthur  2 Jessie, 3 Annie, 4 Harry

Two Featherstone boys served in the forces in World War 1. One of the boys was tragically killed at Bankwood Farm in the 1930s when he was caught by the drive belt of a threshing machine.

Arthur and Elsie Featherstone

Arthur had started working life as a chauffeur at Thurgarton Priory but then worked for many years for farmer John Thornton who owned Old Farm in Thurgarton. One of his main duties was ploughing with a team of shire horses. He and Arthur Crowder of Beck St would rise at 5am; after feeding, watering and harnessing, the horses were led out to till the arable fields with a single blade plough. It was a long day of backbreaking work in all weathers. Not surprisingly he left farming in later life and took up a less physically demanding job at the nearby Hoveringham Gravel Company as a loco driver; his friend Arthur Crowder followed him a few years later.

Arthur Crowder at Hoveringham Gravel Works

arthur crowder pointsman at gravelpits

Elsie Featherstone, known as ‘Feathers’ to her neighbours, had worked as a maidservant at Thurgarton Priory. She was a formidable woman. A keen gardener she was much annoyed by her neighbour planting a stand of poplar trees which shaded her vegetable plot, and she took to a nightly covert ritual of shaking the trees vigorously which eventually succeeded in killing them off.

Arthur was a quiet man, sober and careful with his money – one wonders whether the family stories of hardship and poverty moulded his attitudes. If one inspects the photograph of Arthur and his horse team in the ploughing match one can see from the immaculate preparation of the horses and his concentration that here was a man who took pride in his work and no doubt some pleasure in a job well done.

The Featherstones were not unusual, their story and similar ones can be found throughout the countryside but it was such households who formed the backbone of rural communities in England.

Sources

1 Thurgarton Parish Register of Baptisms, Burials and Marriages.

2 Trinity College Cambridge Archives Box 37 on Thurgarton Map and Survey of 1731

3 1832 Report of Poor Law Commissioners including J Cowell’s visit to Thurgarton

http://books.google.co.uk/books?id=qqbeAAAAMAAJ&printsec=frontcover&dq=cowell+poor+law+commissioner+report+thurgarton&source=bl&ots=frtH6m4eXZ&sig=pGwpDROwrpEfXNRdgJJsN9rPEeQ&hl=en&ei=AXEbTZKWBcaahQfLnPi4Dg&sa=X&oi=book_result&ct=result&resnum=6&ved=0CCwQ6AEwBQ#v=onepage&q&f=false

4  Records of Southwell Workhouse at Nottinghamshire Archives

NAO DDX71 Edward Featherstone aged 7 an orphan in Southwell Workhouse

NAO DX 71 John Featherstone aged 5  an orphan in Southwell Workhouse

5 S. Fowler, Workhouse The People. The Places. The Life behind Doors, National Archives, Kew ( 2007)

6 Personal communication Sid Crowder

Beating The Bounds of Thurgarton Parish

It is 12 miles long. Part of it lies only a few hundred yards from our back doors. We cross it if we walk to Hoveringham and we motor along a half mile of its length if we journey to Southwell. We can step along a large stretch of it if we walk the bridleway from Castle Hill to the Sheepwash Bridge. It is the parish boundary of Thurgarton.

Many years ago, before accurate maps, villagers would have ‘beaten the bounds’ of their parish at Rogationtide, 5 weeks after Easter. Led by the vicar and church vestry the parishioners paraded around the fields and lanes noting the landmarks which had for centuries delineated the parish limits. In some parishes the markers were beaten with willow wands but in some districts a more robust approach was adopted when the village boys were beaten or bumped at each major boundary marker ‘ to fix these matters in their minds’.

A perambulation of Thurgarton parish

(click on images to enlarge )

Thurgarton Parish  by Des Holden 

parish map copy.jpg numbered

The boundaries to the parish of Thurgarton are a mixture of natural and man made features – streams, dykes, hedges, banks, tracks and carved stone markers. Our perambulation starts on the A612 at point 1 on the map and follows the boundary in a clockwise direction.

Points 1 to 4 – close up Points 1 to 4 close up

 

 Point 1 – Here in a small dip the main road leaves Thurgarton parish as it crosses the Halloughton Dumble. The bridge was known as Bougie Bridge – an intriguing name which conjours up bogeys and troublesome spirits. There is a long tradition of a boggart living on the nearby Thurgarton Dumble; this mischievous imp terrified villagers with its loud screams, so much so that one vicar of Thurgarton attempted to reassure his worried flock by the rather unlikely explanation that the noise was that of a bittern.  Bogeys, boggarts and bitterns – who knows?

Point 2 – Following the A612 southwards one climbs a short hill on the crest of which is a sideroad to Bleasby marked by a large stone with the carving of a Green Man. This impressive monument was placed there by Bleasby Historical Society at the millennium; the location is close to a ‘High Cross’ which is recorded in 10th century documents.  Such crosses were often used a boundary markers especially in prominent positions in the landscape, as  here on the top of the hill looking down over the Trent valley, and where large landed estates met – the land to the south and west of this cross belonged to Southwell Minster whereas that to the north and west was held by Thurgarton Priory.

Stone marker at High Cross

green man

Point 3 – A few paces further on we come to a track on the right called Magadales Drive . The name can be traced back to 1250 AD when it was known as Maggot’s Cross. It has been suggested that Maggot was a variation on Margaret but an alternative is the possibility that this lonely spot was a place of execution and burials of criminals.

Point 4 – We follow the A612 south down a shallow dip at the bottom of which the parish boundary leaves the road and deviates to the left along a small stream, (called Helbeck on old maps) alongside the hedgerow which descends in a shallow valley to meet the Bleasby Road at Scar Gap Bridge. This is the closest point on the parish boundary from the village.

Points 4 to 6 close upPoints 4 to 6 close up

Point 5 – The stream and hedgerow  continues southeastwards to the railway line , this route was called Scargap Lane on old maps.

Point 6 – South of the railway the boundary runs between two flooded gravel pits (that on the west now a fishing club lake) and continues in a straight line for a mile to meet the southern parish limit near to Glebe Farm (now called Horsepool Grange). The boundary between Thurgarton and Bleasby was marked by a raised wide bank alongside a deep dyke.

Long bank today

long bank

This major landscape feature was noted in 1897 by the Rev. Henry Williams, vicar of Bleasby,  who described it as ‘ a curious raised bank, which must have been constructed at considerable labour, which may be seen from the railway , separating Bleasby from Thurgarton , no doubt made by the authority of the canons of Thurgarton Priory as their boundary’. The vicar was not wrong for the bank and ditch are mentioned in the mediaeval records of Thurgarton Priory as Long Bank and Long Ditch or Sewer and later in Manorial Court records when digging out of the main ditch was a recurring task for the parishioners. Gravel extraction has drastically altered the landscape but one section of the old bank still survives but sadly is not a public path.

Points 6 to 8 close upPOints 6 to 8 close up

 

 

Point 7 – The boundary crosses the public footpath from Gibsmere to Hoveringham and joins the large Causeway Dyke (Nether Meadow Dyke on some old maps) which forms the southern limit of the parish. The footpath was once a major route from Nottingham to Newark heading through Gibsmere to the Trent crossing at Hazelford. Along this first stretch one can still see the wide lane between ditched hedges.

 

Remnant of old Nottingham to Newark road

Remnant of Old Nottingham to Newark Road

The Causeway Dyke flows into the River Trent 50 yards south of this point but our way is to the west along the footpath which roughly follows the dyke and boundary through to the Hoveringham Road. Along this route we pass south of Coneygre Farm (the name is derived from rabbit warren) and through the site of the deserted mediaeval hamlet of Horsepool.

Point 8 – The boundary crosses the Hoveringham Road at Priest’s Bridge; the name is probably related to the canons of Thurgarton Priory who controlled the parish and the river crossings. The boundary encloses Four Winds and Rose Cottage within Thurgarton parish and then heads north to the big lake.

Point 8 to 10 close upPoint 8 to 10 close up

 

Point 9 – A straight line through the lake and over the railway line joins with an old hedge line that runs straight up to the east side of  Spittal Farm on the A 612. The origin of the name Spittal Farm is a mediaeval hospital dedicated to St Mary Magdalene founded by William de Heriz, Lord of the Manor of Gonalston in the 13th century. The hospital chapel and inmates were ministered to by the rectors of Gonalston until the dilapidated buildings were finally demolished in 1820 to make way for the present farmstead.

Gonalston Spittal on 1730 mapgonalston spittal

A settlement called Broadbusk predated the hospital; the name may be a corruption of Broadbush referring to a large thorn tree said to have marked the boundary here between Thurgarton and Gonalston. The boundary crosses the main road near to a culvert which drains water from a perpetual spring in the hillside above – this is Holy Well. Many holy wells and springs are known some with ancient pedigrees. The escarpment of the Trent Valley abounds with springs some of which had a reputation for healing and may explain the choice of this site for a hospital.

Point 10 – The boundary rises up the hillside by an old hedge line which runs east of Spittal Wood onto the top of a long ridge where it joins the bridle way that links Castle Hill and the Sheepwash bridge.

Points 10-13

points 10-13

 


 Point 11 – Walking along this path one follows the boundary hedge through five fields before the path turns sharply north through Souther Wood whereas the boundary passes around the far edge of the wood. The footpath continues down to the sheepwash bridge but the boundary line runs around Woodmeadow to reach the Thurgarton Beck

Point 12 – Woodmeadow contains a small Roman villa as does the small field immediately to its north-west over the boundary in Epperstone parish. Both villas were excavated in the 1950s.

Excavations in 1956 Woodmeadow villa

Excavations in 1956 Woodmeadow Villa

 

Point 13 – The boundary follows the course of the Thurgarton Beck which becomes an increasingly steep sided ravine as one follows it north –westwards.

Thurgarton dumble

Thurgar dumble

The old trackway from Epperstone to Halloughton crosses the beck at Ladywell bridge. The old threshing  barn at Ladywell has been converted into a modern dwelling. Ladywell was originally called Cresswell and appears as such in the early charters of Thurgarton Priory; the canons purchased the spring from the lordship of Epperstone probably to gain control of the major water sources that fed the beck which flowed past their priory.

Points 13 to 16 close upPoints 13 to 16 close up

 

Point 14 – A few yards north of the bridge the diligent searcher will find an old marker stone bearing a large T for Thurgarton. It lies half way down the slope of the dumble on the Thurgarton side; take care it can be very muddy here so avoid times when the beck is in spate. The boundary continues along the Thurgarton Beck until it turns sharply westwards.

T for Thurgarton

T for Thurgarton

 

Point 15 This is the short northern edge of the parish just below Hollybeck Nursery. There is a footpath immediately north of the boundary hedge which comes out onto the old trackway that runs up the spine of Thurgarton parish from Thurgarton village to the Oxton Road. The boundary hedge is banked and ditched along this short stretch and may be the remnants of a deer fence for the Norman park at Thurgarton.

Points 16 and 17 – The boundary crosses the trackway and turns south-eastwards to follow the Halloughton Dumble for over 2 miles before finally crossing the main A612 at Bougie Bridge – our starting point and so completing the circuit.

Points 16 to 17 close upPoints 16 to 17 close up

Aerial photographs (from the 1950s) of the final field by the main road show a raised bank or trackway paralleling the Dumble ; this is now completely ploughed out but may have been another boundary bank or deer fence.

Aerial photo point 17Aerial Photo point 17

The basic parish structure of England is very old; it was certainly established  by the 10th century and may date back to much older land boundaries. The parishes immediately to the east of Thurgarton are recorded in a land charter of 956 AD when King Edwy granted Southwell and the surrounding land to the Archbishop of York; as with Thurgarton, streams, dykes, hedges, trees and  trackways were used to delineate the boundaries.

Beating the bounds today

Unfortunately most of Thurgarton parish boundary is on private land and only a few stretches can be walked by the public. The map below shows those locations where the boundary is crossed by public roads or paths ( green stars) and those few sections where a path or road follows the parish boundary ( green line).parish map -public access

Sources

Rev A M Y Baylay, ‘Summer excursion 1903: Gonalston church’, Transactions of the Thoroton Society, 7 (1903)

Boots Archives,  Record of excavations of Roman building in 1950s at Woodmeadow, Thurgarton

Des Holden of Priory Park, Thurgarton – geography teacher, map maker and gentleman

P. Lyth, G. Davies, ‘The Southwell Charter of A.D. 956’, Trans. Thoroton Society (1992), pp. 126-9.

Rev. H.L.Williams, Bleasby and its History, The Newark Advertiser, (1897), p.5.

Trinity College Cambridge Archives , Box 37, Item 11,  Manorial Court records 1547-62

Lt Cecil Gilbert-Cooper’s visit to Thurgarton in 1869.

In 1820 Col. John Gilbert Cooper Gardiner sold the Thurgarton estate which had been in his family since the supression of the Priory in 1538. His great grandson, Lt. Cecil Gilbert Cooper R.N. visited Thurgarton in 1869. The young man described his visit in a letter to his father before leaving England to serve on HMS Glasgow the flagship of the British East Indies fleet in 1871/2. In 1873/4 he transferred to HMS Vulture which patrolled the east coast of Africa on anti- slavery duties. His sister, a Mrs Benson of Bray, Berks sent a copy of her brother’s letter to the Reddan family who lived at Thurgarton Priory in the 1930s :-

Here is a copy of my brother Cecil’s letter written to my father about his one and only visit to Thurgarton in 1869. It was my brother’s ambition,  if and when Thurgarton was in the market again,  to be able to buy it back, but alas he died 5 years after his visit to Thurgarton aged 22 yrs from an East African fever caught whilst pursuing slave dhows. He was a very brilliant young fellow who had won 3 first classes in the Navy examinations and was sent for to the Admiralty and congratulated.

Copy of portions of a letter written by Lt. Cecil Gilbert Cooper RN to his father, the Rev. William Wright Gilbert Cooper describing his visit to Thurgarton in August 1869.

Having heard my father speak of Thurgarton Priory with much interest as an estate which not very long ago belonged to our family, I was very desirous not to leave England again without seeing it and to gratify my curiosity. We arrived in Thurgarton station at 11.30 and were on the look out for the first glimpses of the village – we were pleased beyond our expectations. Lying between two hills, beautifully wooded with lofty and ancient trees with every here and there a cottage showing and glimpses of the old tower of Thurgarton church peeping out between the trees on the side of the hill – it was a most peaceful scene worthy and characteristic of dear old England.

Thurgarton church tower amongst the trees on a frosty morning 1996

As we stepped out of the train an elderly gentleman with a white beard and moustache got in. When the train started we enquired who he was and were told it was Mr Milward. We rather regretted not being able to make his acquaintance for we had heard  that he was a very good-natured sort of man. ( Note The Milwards had bought the Thurgarton estate from the Coopers in 1820).

By this time it was nearly 12 o’clock and we , not having had anything since 6.30 felt that a little luncheon would not be amiss. We left the station and walking some way down a road  and turned left through the village . There were cottages all along the road , clean looking and well kept, with a nice garden in front, here and there a stately tree; the fields being small with numerous hedges giving the country around a very wooded appearance. Opposite to the gate to the carriage road of the Priory stood a newly built school which one of the villagers told us had been built by Mr Milward. Thurgarton is , I think, in a very nice situation- it is less than 3 miles from Southwell, about 10 miles from Newark ; they get the papers from London every day at about 1 o’clock and can get there comfortably in four hours.

We found the village Inn to be the ‘White Hart’ ( a very common name in these parts) and made ourselves very comfortable in the little old parlour where we made a very good luncheon of cold lamb. ( Note The inn is now The Coach and Horses)

The woman who kept the Inn had only been there for a short time and could not give us much information but told me that the Parish consisted of about 4,000 acres, 1500 of which belonged to Trinity College Cambridge together with the presentation of the church, and the remaining 2000 acres originally part of the Priory estate was now owned by Mr Cane a gentleman of property in the neighbourhood. ‘’ However the parish clerk’ she said, ‘ lives next door and could tell you everything you could wish to know about the church and Priory’.We started from the Inn at 12.30 and went to the old clerk’s house and found him and his wife at dinner. We got from him the keys of the church and bade him follow as soon as he could.

We walked down through the churchyard and went into the church through the north entrance. The first thing that I saw were several tablets bearing the name Gilbet-Cooper over the church door. The largest central one was of white and grey marble to John Gilbert Cooper and Susannah his wife; the former died in 1803. On the left to John Gilbert Cooper Gardiner who died 18th August 1822, who I think was my great grandfather, and his wife Catherine who died 14th June 1806. The one beneath is to Dorothea their daughter. The upper tablet on the right is to Susanna Wright Gilbert Cooper erected by her niece Josephine Lysons. The one beneath is to Lt-Col Henry Gilbert Cooper erected by the Rev. Daniel Lysons.

The Cooper memorials Thurgarton church

cooper rmemorial

Whilst we were looking at the tablets the parish clerk came in and on my telling him my name , he became much interested and asked me if my name was Cecil? I answered in the affirmative. ‘Well Sir’ he said, ‘ that is very curious for my ancestors came into this parish with yours as servants of the family. Your ancestor’s name was Cecil and my father has often told me that all our family have been named after him; my name is Cecil , my father’s was and his father before him. We were all servants of the family and when the last Gilbert Cooper left Thurgarton I became Parish Clerk.

After this he evidently took great pleasure in showing us over the church.  I could not get much from him about the last of our family who lived at Thurgarton. He said the money seemed to go and nothing to show for it, that they were good easy people , very hospitable and much liked by rich and poor. The church is of the Early English style with pointed arches and carved pillars. The whole was restored about 1860 almost entirely at Mr Milward’s expense. It must have been about this time that the family vault was sealed and the family tablets removed from the chancel to their present position over the northern entrance. The clerk showed us the position of the family vaults which was on the left of the pulpit in front of the chancel steps.

The altar cloth and carpet for the chancel was entirely  worked by Mrs Milward and Mr Milward gave at the same time a nice little organ.The seats in the chancel are of very old date and move on hinges , having carved underneath curious representations  of friars, evil spirits,etc.

Misericordsseat up and down

One of the most remarkable things in the church was an ancient picture on the north side of the chancel of The Holy Family. The clerk told me it was a painting by Raphael. We asked him how long it had been there? ‘As long as he could remember’ he said and  ‘that his father had told him that it had been given by the Coopers many years ago’. My uncle and I were incredulous that this could be a genuine Raphael. ( Note  The painting is a mirror image copy of The Holy Family of Francis 1 by Raphael which now hangs in the Louvre).

The Holy Family of Francis 1 by Raphael

painting of holy family

We bade the old clerk, Cecil Richardson, good day – it was nice that the old man had such a warm recollection of the family. We walked to The Priory and knocked on the hall door, and giving our cards to the butler and said for what purpose we had come to Thurgarton and that we would be much obliged to Mrs Milward if she would kindly permit us to see the old parts of the Priory. She kindly told the butler to show us all over the house and offered us luncheon, which we declined. The butler led the way into the dining-room where to our astonishment we came upon a life sized painting of the same man as seen in a  miniature kept by my Grandmother  in her drawing-room in London ( left to her by my late great aunt Mrs Lysons). I immediately asked the butler who it represented? He said it was Colonel Cooper and the picture on the opposite side his wife.  Mr Milward had found them in a back room covered in dust and had them cleaned and put up. He heard they were much prized and had been handed down through many generations of the family.

John Gilbert-Cooper

The dining room has a good look out over the lawn and is very tastefully furnished including a beautiful old sideboard  having a date 1659 and the drawing room is a beautiful room with a bow out from the centre of the house. The next room on the left is the library where Mr Milward as Magistrate dispenses justice to delinquents doubtless in the same position occupied by the Coopers for several generations. Having seen the old servants hall ( Mr Milward has built a new one) and kitchen we descended to the cellars which are the remains of the Priory as before the Reformation.

The ceiling is curiously groined in arches rising from pillars like leaves from palm trees. The cellars were very capacious and certainly if the monks kept them anything like filled they must have lived in luxury. At the extreme end of the cellar was a small door very solid and strongly bound with iron which we were told was the entrance to a subterranean passage communicating with Horton Abbey – a distance of 3 miles.

( Note As in so many parishes stories of underground passages abound in Thurgarton. This version was said to have linked Thurgaton Priory with a nunnery at Halloughton 3 miles away. There was no such nunnery but a mediaeval prebendary house at Halloughton and a 3 mile passage under rolling hills  would have been an engineering feat on a par with today’s Channel Tunnel)

The butler told us that during the church restoration the men engaged with the drainage and heating of the church were continually coming upon foundations of the church and priory – ‘ they must have been of a very large dimensions, more than twice or three times the present size’. He showed us some coloured tiles which had been dug up and said by competent persons to be 3-400 tears old. We could make out the carving of a coat of arms with something like a fleur-de-lys in a shield which resembles the Cooper arms.

The house is of red brick and had it not been thickly covered with ivy would I think be ugly. The butler told us that it had been built about 100 yrs ago and old people in the village had recalled the building of the garden wall. He said the house was not a new one for it was built of the old stone of the Priory but it was modernised and faced with red brick. It is a great pity that it should have happened at that time when taste seemed to have left the world – for from its size and dimensions and the beauty of the adjoining church , it must have been a splendid building. The lawns and gardens are very beautifully laid out. We took our departure when I had taken a rough sketch of the Priory and Church and so we turned our backs on it – to a feeling of regret on my part. ( Note The Georgian house of brick was newly built in 1770s and replaced a stone Tudor house . Both house are built over the cellars or undercroft, the surviving ground floor of the west range of Thurgarton Priory).

Thurgarton Priory c 1930 clad in Ivy.

PS My grandmother Mrs Gilbert Cooper when I showed her the sketch of Thurgarton, told me it brought back to her the times she had stayed there when Col. Cooper Gardiner owned it. She told me that there were three (trees) that stood on the left of the house called the ‘Three Sisters’, that the dining room was the lower room of the bow, the drawing room was on the second floor of the bow and that the top room on the right was said to be haunted and was closed up and never used and that the servants were much afraid of going near it.

My grandmother described my late great uncle Col Cooper Gardiner as the most perfect gentleman. She always thought he kept company above his means  – that is ; William and his Queen were often there , that the Dukes of Newcastle and Beaufort and various other noblemen were constantly staying with him. She said that Col. Cooper Gardiner had taken my uncle Henry Gilbert Cooper under his care and had declared it his intention to leave the Thurgarton estate to him.

Col. Cooper Gardiner stood for the County of Nottingham , in the Radical interest, and was constantly going about at that time associating with working men and that through this suffered ill health and combined with the loss of Thurgarton, which he was obliged to sell –  the mortgages being foreclosed by Mr Milward , the son of his father’s coachman of whom he had borrowed money to stand for the county in which he failed – all brought on the illness from which he died, broken hearted by the thought of having, by his folly, lost the Thurgarton estate which had been for so many years in the family. He was buried at Rodmorton  in Gloucestershire in the Lyson’s vault.

My great aunt Mrs Lysons, was left sole executor by his will but she was in great distress owing to the death of her daughter –in-law and so did not go herself to Thurgarton  and so many family pictures and curiosities were lost to the family. PS The family portraits were most kindly returned to us by Mr Milward who would not even let us pay for their carriage.

 

Lest We Forget

On Remembrance Sunday 2010 the village War Memorial at Thurgarton was rededicated following restoration work. It was erected in 1919 in the old village pound next to the blacksmith’s forge at the central crossroads of the village. It is an impressive cross of white Portland Stone set on a stepped octagonal base on which are carved the names of ten village men who died in the 1914-8 War and two from the 1939-45 War. An additional victim of the first war has been added to the restored memorial – that of Thomas Paling who died from war wounds in 1920.

Rededication of Thurgarton war memorial 2010

war mem 2 reded

Thurgarton men in the 1914-8 war

The census of 1911 shows a parish population of 285 of which roughly 60 young men would have been eligible for active service in the 1914-8 war. The Parish Roll of Honour numbers over 40 names who served, about two in three of the village’s young men.

The eleven men who died were : –  Charles Baylay, William Bentley, Harry Fisher, Arthur Marson,  Thomas Paling, George Smith,  Richard Thornton, William Tyler,  Thomas Upton, Guy Usborne, Vincent Warriner

Charles Baylay baylayBorn in 1876 he was the oldest child of Alice and the Rev.Atwell Baylay, vicar of Thurgarton and grew up in the Old Rectory. He moved to Bromley Kent and joined the East Kent Regiment (The Buffs). He was killed in action during the Battle of Arras ( 9 April –16 May 1917) when British and Allied troops attacked the German trenches around the city of Arras and although succeeding in capturing strategically important gains, especially the Canadians at Vimy Ridge, did so at the cost of over 120,000 British casualties.

John William Bentley Bentley

John William Bentley was born in 1896, the fourth child of Robert and Alice Bentley of Manor Farm. He worked on the family farm until joining the army on 13th March 1915 aged 19 years; after basic training he was posted to the 3rd battalion Rifle Brigade. He was killed in action in the trenches at Hooge during the bitter battle for the Ypres salient on 13th February 1916.

Harry Fisherfisher

Harry Fisher was the third child of Rose and Job Fisher, Railway Station Master at Thurgarton for over 20 years.  He joined the 12th Battalion of the Sherwood Foresters which moved to France in August 1915 and was killed in action in the lines at Ypres on the 15th February 1916.

Arthur Marsonmarson

Arthur was born in 1889 the second of three sons to Mary and Charles Marson of Hill Farm cottages. He joined early and was posted to the 6th Battalion of the King’s Own Yorkshire Light Infantry. He was promoted to Corporal but was killed in action near Ypres on 15th August 1915.

Thomas PalingPaling

Thomas was born on 19/3/1887 the fourth child of Elizabeth and Henry Paling, joiner who lived on Bleasby Rd. We have little detail of his war service but we know that he joined the Durham Light Infantry and was severely wounded in France. He died on 20 July 1920.

George Smithsmith

We have no further details on Private G H Smith.

Richard ThorntonRichard L Thornton

thorntonRichard Lacey Thornton was born in 1888 the fifth child of Emma and Richard Thornton, farmer at Old Farm. He joined the 11th Battalion Sherwood Foresters and was killed in action on 7th June 1917. At 3.10 that morning the battalion went ‘over the top’ on the far left of the British  mass attack on the Messine Ridge

William Tylertyler

William Tyler born on 22/4/1896 was the second child of Sarah and David Tyler, farm worker who lived at Laurel Cottage, Thurgarton (demolished for Corner Croft bungalows).  He joined the 2nd Battalion Leicestershire Regiment at the outbreak of war. In August 1915 he was severely wounded (a gun shot to the abdomen) and was shipped home for convalescence. In 1916 he embarked for Basra as part of the ill-fated Kut campaign but came down with malaria. Having survived all this he sadly fell victim to the Spanish flu epidemic and died at home on 4th March 1919.

Thomas Uptonupton

Mrs Upton of Thurgarton Priory lost two grandsons in the war, both are commemorated on the village war memorial. Captain Thomas Upton and his parents would have been houseguests at The Priory. He joined the 1st Battalion King’s Own Yorkshire Light Infantry and was killed in action a mere 3 days before the armistice. The regimental diary states that he was killed in fierce fighting as the battalion attacked Douriers and the Avesnes Road. His grave is one of three war graves in the small churchyard at Semiouses.

Thomas Richard Guy Usborneusborne004

Sub-lieutenant Royal Navy   Born on 9/10/1900, Guy Usborne would have lived at Thurgarton Priory for some of his youth – his parents and grandmother (Mrs Upton) lived there before and during the war.  The Usborne family had a strong naval tradition and Guy served as a junior officer in the British Baltic Fleet fighting in 1919 alongside the Finns, Estonians and White Russians against the Bolsheviks.  On 18/8/1919 he joined a small squadron of fast Coastal Motor Boats which attacked the naval fortress at Kronstadt  – two battleships and a submarine were sunk but he was one of several casualties and was mentioned in dispatches.

John Vincent Warrinerwar mem008

John Vincent Warriner was born in 1897 the first child of Francis and John Warriner, postman who lived on Bleasby Road. On leaving school he became a farm worker and joined up early after the outbreak of war. He joined the 10th Battalion Sherwood Foresters which shipped out to France in July 1915.  In December 1915 the regiment was in the lines near Ypres on the Menin Road. Both sides suffered heavy bombardment during the first weeks of December with a steady stream of casualties. Vincent was one such casualty and died of his wounds.

Those who survived

Ainger   G, Sherwood Foresters, Ainger   A, Notts Hussars,   Baylay John, Royal field Artillery (Old Rectory), E   Francis, Royal Engineers , Bird Henry, Royal Garrison Artillery (Beck St),  Featherstone  William, Royal Field Artillery(Hill Top cottage), Featherstone  Arthur, Sherwood Foresters, Fisher  George, Coldstream Guards(Railway Stn ), Fisher  Alfred, Sherwood Foresters , Fletcher Leonard , Sherwood Foresters (Coach + Horses),  Francis John Ernest, Royal Marine Artillery, (Butt Lane), Francis  Sidney James, Sherwood Foresters –wounded, Francis Bernard Radford, Australia Contingent – wounded 4 times, awarded Military Medal,  B.A. Francis, West Africa Rifles, Heather Robert , Sherwood Foresters,   Hunt  George, Rifle Brigade (Beck St), Killick  Walter, Rifle Brigade –wounded (Priory Gatelodge), Marsden  C, 17th Lancers (First House),  Marson   John, Royal Field Artillery – wounded (Hill Farm), Massey   M, Sherwood Foresters,  Mott   Herbert, First Class Boy, Royal Navy (Bleasby Rd.), Paling  Fred, Army Service Corps M T,(Bleasby Rd), Richards  Edward, Canadian Division, Richardson Frank, Seaman, Royal Navy(cottages by Coach and Horses, now the kitchen), Scrivener   G, Royal Navy Volunteer Reserve,  Taylor   Edgar, Royal Garrison Artillery(Checkers cottage), Taylor  Harry, Royal Marine Light Infantry, Taylor  Arthur, First Class Boy, Royal Navy, Taylor  G, Leading Seaman, Royal Navy, Thornton Noel, Sherwood Foresters – wounded(Old Farm),  Tyler  Arthur, Army service Corps and Sherwood Foresters – wounded (Laurel Cott –now Corner Croft), Warriner  William, Royal West Kents – wounded (Warriner’s cottage)

Putting faces to names

This early school photograph of 1905-6 contains many of that generation of young men destined to fight in the 1914-8 war. Those who can be identified have been highlighted in the photo.1905 school WW! names

 Bernard Francis

Born and raised in a large family in Thurgarton where  his father was a railway signalman. Bernard emigrated to Australia c 1910 and joined the Australian forces at the outbreak of war. He was posted to France with the 4th Australian Brigade who were involved in heavy fighting during summer 1916 at Pozieres and Mouquet Farm ( called MooCow or MuckyFarm by the troops). He was awarded the Military Medalmil medal

The commendation reads :- “ Near Mouquet Farm.  For splendid work as a Company Runner between 13th-16th August 1916. During a night attack on 14/15th August he insisted on running in front of his Platoon Commander to shield him and act as a bullet stopper. Later with total disregard to danger he carried by himself several wounded men from the enemy trench back to our lines. He moved about continuously under all kinds of fire bandaging and carrying in wounded for 4-5 hours and finally brought in a message into Battalion headquarters through a heavy barrage”

Thurgarton men who died in the 1939-45 War

Sergeant Jack Allwood D.F.M.

jack allwoodSergeant 633511 160 Squadron RAF Gunner  Born in 1920 he lived at Holly Cottage on Priory Road.  Jack was shot down near Tobruk on 26/9/1942 aged 20 years.  A tree now stands in St Peter’s church graveyard in memory of Jack – it was grown from a seed of a pine tree that once stood in Ramleh War Cemetery near Jerusalem where he was buried.

Geoffrey FletcherGeoff Fletcher

Private 5052596 2nd Airborne Division South Staffordshire Regiment. Born in 1917 he lived in Wyer’s Cottage on Beck Street. He was killed in action in Sicily on 9th July 1943 aged 26 years and is commemorated on the Cassino memorial, Italy.

Roll of Honour World War 2

William ‘Bill’ Atkin joined up in 1939 A Company Sherwood Foresters Captured in Norway campaign and spent rest of war as POW. Came home in 1946

Kathleen Atkin  ATS

Ernest Bentley joined up 1939 A Company Sherwood  Foresters  Served in Norway campaign

John Bentley joined 1939 served with Tank Regiment in France

Hilda Bentley Sgt, WRAF served at RAF Cranwell

J Banton lived in The Park

D Banton

John Bowley joined 1939 A Company Sherwood Foresters

George Bowley joined 1939 A Company Sherwood Foresters

Grant Burgon son of licensee of Magna Carta Lowdham. Lived in Appletree Cottage Beck St.

Hilda Bowley ATS

Ernest Crowder joined 1939 A Company Sherwood Foresters but mumps prevented service in Norway.

Sid Crowder Home Guard where he learnt Morse Code and signalling so on call up in 1943 was posted to The Royal Signals. Served 1944 to 47 in India and Malaya

R Farrands Royal Medical Corps served in Indiadick farrands

Jack Holmes Territorial Army, oldest of six boys who lived on Beck St.

Bernard Holmes Royal Artillery served in India and Berwick Garrison

Wilfred Hornbuckle joined 1939 A Company Sherwood Forresters, served in Norway.

Les Lovett joined up at 17 into Sherwood Forresters served in Europe but legs badly injured by mortar shell, leaving him with a life long limp

H Massey family had threshing machine and lived in old cottage on Beck St

Edward Marsden  Sherwood Forresters but too young for Norway, lived in First House

Doug  Marsden long service in army in India in 1930s

Cyril Marsden oldest of Marsden boys became career soldier and obtained senior rank

Geoff McLean oldest of 6 children in Gate Lodge became Lieutenant in Army, served in Palestine.

A Morris son of licensee of Coach and Horses pub.

Robert  Richardson

Jack Reeve Asthmatic but passed fit for Navy – two years at Portsmouth.

Arthur Sharp TAs and then joined Sherwood Forresters at 17 – too young for Norway. Lived in Beck St.

Harold Statham village shop

Robert Scrivener RAF served in Iceland.

Nelly Scrivener WRAF sergeantSave0035

 Eric Scrivener

Percy Warriner

The Home Guard

The Home Guard at Thurgarton, about 20 men, drilled at The Hut, an old World War 1 barracks hut  which stood on the present village hall site. Amongst many duties they mounted a 24 hours guard at the Railway Station. home guard

Rededication of the War Memorial, Thurgarton on Remembrance Sunday 2010

war mem 2 reded

Enclosure in Thurgarton

In the year 1505 the Prior of Thurgarton enclosed 6 acres of common land in Thurgarton parish for use as sheep pasture. The Prior urgently needed cash to meet the taxes imposed by Henry VII and  wool  was more lucrative than arable farming; the records state that the resulting loss of land to the plough team of six men caused considerable distress. This story is typical of the history of land enclosure in England, of centuries of dispute between landowners and local farming communities who struggled to preserve their ancient landholdings and common rights.

Land enclosure is reported in every century of the mediaeval and early modern era but it was in the 18th century that it came to a climax. This wave of enclosure was due to several causes but two major factors were the need for more efficient farming methods to feed a rising population and the rise of the free market in farming and speculation in land.

Thurgarton has no record of formal enclosure awards or maps but two parish surveys from 1745 and 1777 provide some insight into enclosure and changes in farming in the parish.

1745 survey of Thurgarton

In 1745 Trinity College Cambridge commissioned the land agent Teals of Leeds to survey their Thurgarton estate.

 Thurgarton parish c 1730 –45 Cooper land in blue, Trinity College estate white1720 Cooper land -blue

The surveyor, Mr Ransom, reported that the college fields  ‘are very good so as to bear not only Clover, Turnips, Wheat, Barley, Peas, Oats and Hay but also Flax and Hops’. In contrast most of the 1,744 acres owned by the Cooper family in the northern half of the parish was ‘ heavy clay, wooded and rough land’.

The Coopers had from Tudor times leased the College estate which in turn they sublet to the local farmers. In this 1745 survey the village farmers complained that’ Mr Cooper grants leases to the tenants for 7 years at back rent and at the end of that term every tenant pays 1 years rent over and above before Mr Cooper will grant him another new lease. The farmers declare that but for the college lands they would not rent Mr Cooper’s land which is inconvenient and of a bad nature and of little worth’.

The College owned nearly 800 acres in the southern half of the parish. By 1745 the pasture and meadows of the College’s land had already been enclosed and were rented to the village famers and smallholders at 18s per acre per year. Over 600 sheep grazed on the newly enclosed fields. However 111 acres of the old open field plough lands persisted and were still worked in common in elongated strips, called lands or selions in the village records; these were rented for 8s per acre plus 3s per acre tithes.

The College also owned all the village plots, cottages and farms. The 1745 survey notes that many of the cottages and outbuildings in the village were’ out of repair and some of the barns and outhouses were fallen down’. In 1745 the village contained five  farmers who rented over 50 acres, several who worked 10-50 acres and  many small holders renting under 10 acres.

Figure 1 Acreage rented by Thurgarton households 1745

1745 land rented

A third of households (yellow column in figure 1) rented less than 1 acre which consisted of a garden and orchard around their cottages; amongst this group were a few artisans, a school master and several elderly inhabitants of alms houses.

1777 Beighton’s survey of Thurgarton 

Beighton’s map of Thurgarton parish 17771777 thurgarton basic

By 1777 the whole of the parish was enclosed – the once large fields, meadows and woodland were now divided into multiple smaller fields and all were rented out to local farmers both great and small.

Changes in the Cooper  estate

In 1736  John Cooper of Thurgarton Priory died without children. The estate passed to his cousin John Gilbert of Locko Park, Derbyshire who adopted the Cooper name on inheriting the property. He sold his Derbyshire estate and began a programme of improvement in Thurgarton which was continued by his son and grandson (both also named John Gilbert Cooper). The old Tudor mansion and monastic kitchen were demolished and replaced by a brick built Georgian house with newly landscaped grounds, scenic lakes joined by waterfalls and weirs and a walled kitchen garden.

Georgian mansionThurgarton church and Priory 1990s

They also transformed the ‘rough and inconvenient lands’ of the Coopers into highly productive farms. Between 1745 and the 1770s the scrub and woodland were cleared, the heavy clay land was drained and ditched, and new fields were laid out separated by thorn hedges. Handsome new farmhouses were built along with outbuildings and threshing barns

Magadales and Hill farm houses

Magadales and Hill Farm House

This newly drained heavy soil was ideal for grain. Eight large threshing barns date from this period; built of local skerry stone they are dramatic reminders of this age of agricultural improvement.

Four of the eight new threshing barns in the north of Thurgarton parishFour of the eight new threshing barns in Thurgarton Parish

The large central archways allowed a fully laden wagon to pass straight through the barn emptying its load onto the central threshing floor paved with large flagstones. The massive doors were set on elevated door jambs which left a large gap under the closed doors for ventilation.

Old threshing barn doors on elevated footings – the 2 foot gap under the door has been filled in.Old threshing barn doors on elevated footings

Four new northern farms were rented to tenant farmers from outside the parish community– in 1777 John Newham of Magadales farmed 257 acres, William Wilkinson of Hill Farm 251acres, Samuel Flint of Thurgarton Quarters 209 acres and Thomas Dufty of Bankwood 130 acres.

Cooper estate 1730, 1777 and 1850 ( click on image to enlarge)

northern farms -

Typical of the many English post-enclosure farms, each farmhouse was sited centrally within its fields and geographically isolated from the village. Farm servants and domestics initially lived within the farmhouse and outbuildings. By the mid 19th century the northern half of the parish contained five compact farms (with the addition of Checkers Farm ), each with its adjacent tied cottages built for the farm labourers.

Changes in the College estate

 

 By 1777 all the college land including the old strip plough lands had been enclosed bringing to an end over eight centuries of the old village farming system.
Figure 2  1777 land rentals of Thurgarton villagers
1777 graph
 

According to many historians enclosure led to the division of rural parish communities into four groups – the landowners, large farmers , small farmers and lastly a mass of landless wage dependant labourers. How well does Thurgarton fit this picture ? 

 Gentlemen  John Gilbert Cooper of Thurgarton Priory was the local squire and main landowner and leaseholder of College land. By 1777 farmer John Brettle of The Manor House (now the Old Rectory) was described as a gentleman, he both owned and leased over 200 acres of Thurgarton land which he sublet to his neighbours.

Large farmers Six larger farms emerged each working 50 to 150 acres. John Hart senior (The Hollows) and J Hart junior (Old Farm) farmed over 200 acres between them. William and Thomas Farrand of Priory Farm rented 105 compact acres. Thomas Green of Manor Farm rented 140 acres and next door was Jeremiah Hinde who worked 106 acres. Henry Smith of Orchard Farm, Bleasby Rd rented 68 acres The fields of these village farms were scattered through the parish – a remnant of the pre-enclosure pattern of landholdings. Over the next century three of the farms come to dominate the village scene –Priory, Manor and Old Farm – but even into the 20th century their fields were far from compact and herds of cows, wagon teams and harvesters criss-crossed the village roads and tracks.

1777 large village farmers in Thurgarton1777  large farmers + roads -brettle pink

The 1777 survey omits a detailed description of the farms but a tour of the present day village provides several examples of  new building in this period – Manor Farmhouse, the barn at The Hollows enlarged by John Hart senior in 1775 and the 1790 threshing barn at Old Farm by J Hart junior. Throughout the village one sees older stone barns being enlarged with brick extensions – some are Victorian but several date from the 18th century.


Manor farmhouse


Manor Farmhouse

 

Small farmers Thirteen farmers held 10 to 30 acres and nine 5 to 10 acres.

Thurgarton 1777 23 small farmers1777 small holders and roads copy

Over 60% of the village households rented between 5 and 30 acres. Many households who rented less than 5 acres in 1745 had doubled their acreage in 1777, eg. the schoolmaster George Huddlestone who in 1745 rented a small garden and school house has 5 acres to his name in 1777.  Again we see a wide scattering of fields, arable and pasture, rented by the smaller farmers. The larger units would have kept the farmer and his family fully occupied but the very small scale tenant may have supplemented his income by working for his larger neighbours.

Landless wage earning agricultural labourers The survey lists only three households who rent a cottage and garden with no land. Where then are the landless poor in this survey?  The map of the village does not include the alms house shown on the 1730 and 1799 maps. The 1777 survey may be incomplete although it includes 39 households compared to 40 in 1745.

If this survey is truly representative there was no great mass of landless wage dependant farm labourers in Thurgarton village in 1777. The  situation may have been very different for the four new northern farms where large tenant farmers would have presided over an army of farm servants.

Conclusion

The increased landholdings of the vast majority of villagers in 18th century Thurgarton is contrary to a post-enclosure picture of dispossesed pauperised labourers.  In the process of enclosing its Thurgarton estate, Trinity College, whether from altruism or good business sense, appeared to have ensured that even their poorer tenants in the village had access to sufficient land to make a living (which of course also enabled them to pay their rents and tithes to the college).

The next article will look at Thurgarton surveys in 1799, 1813 and 1842 and the fate of the village farming community. How would the village farmers cope with the challenge of a free market – under the old system they were part of a close knit mutually supportive paternalistic community but now they had to adapt to a cold commercial capitalistic world.

Thurgarton – Paradise on earth?

John Byng, fifth Viscount Torrington, toured extensively on horseback through England and Wales in the 1770-90s and published several volumes of diaries of his travels. Old houses, churches, castles and ruins in general attracted him and on his visit to Thurgarton in 1789 he found the somewhat dilapidated church to his liking but he was highly critical of the adjoining mansion (built in 1777).

In his journals he deplored the laxity of the Anglican clergy which he contrasted with the enthusiasm and spirit of the early Methodists. He bemoaned the loss of the ‘old church music’, of the church bands and choirs, and in each village and town he made this a particular point of enquiry. Sadly Thurgarton church confirmed his worst fears but at Southwell Minster, later that day at Evensong, he was astonished by the fine quality of the organ music and the choir’s singing.

Below is an extract for Monday 8th June 1789 at the farthest point of the circular route he took from his lodgings at Newark on his horse Phoney.

—My Pleasant Road brought me to the Village of Rowleston , thence to Fiskerton on the Rivers Bank—where were many Anglers employ’d in Chubb catching; and so by Notown, to Thurgarton, where I hoped to have found some Remains of The Priory of Benedictines. Passing thro’ the Village, I came to The very old Church, and seated myself, in much contemplation, and Quiet, for half an hour, in the Church Yard; till the Clerk arrived.

Thurgarton church and church yard, sketch Builder Magazine 1903

Thurgarton Church and Priory Sketch Builder Magazine

About 15 years since Mr Cooper chose to build his new house upon the old Spot; taking infinite Trouble, as the Clerk told me, to overturn any remaining Ruins.—Now let me appeal to any man of Taste, if necessary, or to any Man of no Taste, by way of Remonstrance, and ask him whether these Ruins, being left, wou’d not have form’d great Beauties in his Grounds and Gardens? And whether a new House would not have look’d better in another Place than stuck close to the Church, without a Sight of the noble old Steeple?

I had neither Pencil or Paper about me (like a Blockhead) or might have attempted something like a sketch of The Church; and written down a good Inscription abt. Loving and beloved Ruth, and Truth, etc.—This fine old Steeple must soon fall, for it is full of Cracks; but ‘Such Flaws are found in the most perfect Nature.’ It was but lately that a Love of Antiquity was pursued; For myself I am glad, tho’ the Priory was gone, to have seen The Steeple in good time; Shortly, Little of this kind will be left to see. Most of the Church has been pull’d down;—at the Eastern End was found, what The Clerk call’d a desolate Pavement, which was thrown away with the Rubbish; The inside is dark and damp, as the Church Yard Ground has risen considerably.

In regard to the Decay of religious Duties, which every person can remark. The Clerk said (to my regular Enquiry) that Singing had been disused about Six years.—At Botesford, yesterday I made the same enquiry, and found that tho the Psalmody there was on the decline, yet was it tolerably supported by 2 Bassoons, a Clarinet, and a german Flute.—Nothing shou’d be more encouraged as drawing both Young and Old to Church, than Church Melody, tho’ the Profligacy and Refinement of the age has abandon’d and ridiculed it: But were I a Squire of a country Village I wou’d offer such Premiums and Encouragement, (of little cost to myself) as wou’d quickly rear an ambitious, and laudable desire of Psalm-Singing, and put forth a little Chorus of Children; than which nothing is more Elevating and Grateful and Sublime, hearing Innocence exert their little Voices in praise of their Creator. For let Fashion say what it can. Every Ear is more gratified by a chorus of youth, than by the most violent Exertions of Taste.

Leaving Thurgarton I came upon a higher Country, and in two miles to Hallaton, where I walk’d around their Chapel, and survey’d a very old Building opposite, adjoined to the new and neatly-built Farm House. Thence I soon came in sight of The pretty Town of Southwell, and of its superb Collegiate Church; and put up at the Saracens-Head Inn

St. James Church, Halloughton ( Hallaton in Torrington’s journal)

St James Church Halloughton

Unlike Viscount Torrington, the Reverend T D Powell remembered his sketchbook on his visit to Thurgarton in 1819, which is fortunate for his writing is difficult to decipher. The extract below is therefore heavily edited being limited to those passages that are both decipherable and make sense. His sketches vary from realistic architectural detail to imagined reconstructions (Southwell Minster) and to romanticised ruins in a landscape (Thurgarton church). Rev Powell’s sketches are the only 19th century depictions we have of Thurgarton church before its restoration in 1854 – they show a church essentially unchanged from that in Samuel Buck’s print of 1726.

Thurgarton church as a romantic ruin –Powell 1819

Thurgarton Church as a Romantic ruin Powell 1819

Southwell Minster with spire on its central tower by Powell 1819

Southwell Minster with spire by powell 1819

Reverend T D Powell’s visit to Thurgarton in August 1819.

From Southwell SW ascended and at more than a mile came to Horton  (Halloughton) a little church up a lane on the right of my road, did not go in, it has two lancet windows in the east front. On the gable at the west end is a modern cupola containing a bell. There seems some Gothic buildings nearby but had not time – from hence to Thurgarton whose noble tower painted with the fine tints of ages comes upon you with fine solemn, venerable and beautiful effect. This tower is the north –west tower and is at the west end of the nave of the abbey church with its front highly adorned with arches and windows in the lancet style of the first Gothic bordering on the Norman.

Detail of church tower, Thurgarton –Powell 1819

Detail of church tower Thurgarton Powell 1819

The lower part of the west end is a noble spacious west portal in the same style highly adorned with deep receeding pillars and moulding.

Thurgarton church Powell 1819

Thurgarton Powell 1819

The modern red brick house or mansion of Col. Cooper stands a small distance south  he says it was built by his father ( most probably on the site of the cloisters and habitation parts of the convent) who then pulled down the old buildings but that some of the vaults remain. He adds that from foundations lately dug there certainly were two towers at the west end as I and indeed everyone must think. What remains besides of the church is very small, the body of the nave running from the west entrance perhaps not a quarter of its length eastwards and the same portions of its side aisle divided with arches and pillars form the present church. What I have observed of the remains of these arches is sufficient to prove what a fine and spacious edifice this church must have been. Tis situated in a beautiful valley quite away and retired from the village – it must have been A Paradise On Earth.

Thurgarton Church in its valley setting

Thurgarton Church in its valley setting

On a fine sunny evening standing outside the west end of the church one can echo such thoughts.

Sources

1   http://www.visionofbritain.org.uk/text/chap_page.jsp?t_id=Byng&c_id=2

Online version of Torrington diaries

2   British Library BL 19915 .

Rev. David Thomas Powell’s 19th c sketches and comments on churches in  Nottinghamshire and    Derbyshire.

3   http://www.oxforddnb.com/view/article/37252?docPos=2

Biography of John Byng, Viscount Torrington, diarist

The coming of the railway to Thurgarton

The Nottingham to Lincoln line

The railway came to Thurgarton in 1846. The 1830-40s were the years of ‘railway madness’ when numerous railway companies vied to connect the major towns of Britain. George Hudson the ‘Railway King’ had formed the Midland Railway Company in 1844 and the Nottingham to Lincoln link was part of his ambitious scheme to dominate the railway network of the midlands and the north.

 Figure 1 George Hudson

georgehudson

 

The new line was surveyed by George Stephenson and his pupil Frederick Swannick and followed the Trent Valley from Nottingham to Newark and on to Lincoln. The planned route crossed the flat valley meadows skirting the villages and passing through the western outskirts of Newark.

Figure 2 Part of the initial survey map for the parishes of Gonalston, Thurgarton, Bleasby and Rolleston (click on image to enlarge)

 railway route route copy

Accompanying the map was a detailed list of the fields with the names of the landowners and tenant farmers. Figure 3 lists each field in Thurgarton with the landowner ( Richard Milward or Trinity College Cambridge), the lessees and  the ‘occupier’ ( the tenant farmer who actually worked the land); presumably each received some compensation from the railway company but we do not have the details.

Figure 3 (click on image to enlarge)list of fields owners and tenants Thurgarton railway plan

Most landowners such as Richard Milward of Thurgarton Priory, saw the new railway as a great opportunity and in addition to allowing the railway passage over his lands also invested in the company which rapidly raised the necessary capital of over £ 400,000 with a promised return of 4.5% on their investment.

Some local landowners objected to the route which on close inspection (see  figure 1) would have passed through the middle of Bleasby just north of the Waggon and Horses pub and then eastwards towards the centre of Morton village. J P Plumtree Esq. of Ashwell Hall, Morton was one such objector and insisted that the line be redirected northwards away from his estate.

Opening Day, 3rd August 1846

 First train from Nottingham to Lincoln —-

Station Street in Nottingham was festooned with flags and bunting, the band of the 4th Dragoon Guards played popular airs and a vast crowd cheered as with a shrill whistle the first train steamed out of Nottingham at 9.26a.m.on the newly built line to Lincoln. Despite heavy rain enormous crowds had gathered along the route out of Nottingham. Out in the country horses bolted, cows bellowed and sheep scampered away at the sight and sound of the engine; old men stared open mouthed and dumbfounded and young men climbed trees for a good view. The train paused at the new Castlegate Station at Newark before finally pulling into Lincoln at 10.15 am to the sounds of church bells and an enormous throng of cheering spectators. A second train followed 30 minutes later with more VIPs. Champagne and light refreshments were taken before returning to Nottingham for lunch.

— and back to Nottingham for lunch —

Both trains returned to Nottingham where the engine sheds had been laid out for a celebratory lunch.  Mr George Hudson MP and chairmen of the Midland Counties Railway drank to the health of the Queen, to other members of the royal family, to the ladies and lastly to the High Sheriff of Nottinghamshire who in turn proposed a toast to Mr Hudson before all promptly  boarded the train once again and returned to Lincoln for a public dinner.

— and back to Lincoln for dinner —

Their arrival at Lincoln was marred by the explosion of one of the cannons sounding a ceremonial gun salute – one old gunner suffered such severe leg wounds that amputation was necessary. Undaunted a huge crowd gathered for a banquet at the National School Rooms; the guest list included High Sheriffs, Archdeacons, Lord Mayors, Town Clerks, Coroners, Colonels, Reverends and Right Reverends and Esquires by the dozen.

Mr George Hudson was in fine form and proposed toasts to the Queen, the Dowager Queen, the Bishop and Clergy, the Army and Navy, the Mayor of Lincoln and finally the High Sheriff of Nottingham – Mr Hudson was thanked and toasted by one Archdeacon, two Lord Mayors, one Colonel and a High Sheriff. At this stage Mr Hudson sat down and his deputy took over and proposed and drank several more toasts but by this time who was toasting whom was not clear to the gentleman of the press charged with reporting these great events.

— and back to Nottingham to bed.

All boarded the trains for the return journey to Nottingham and the end of a heavy day.

The heavy rainstorms of the 3rd August had tragic consequences; part of the railway embankment at Gonalston Crossing had washed away and sadly, on the following day, a fireman was killed when a train derailed.

  Thurgarton Railway Station

Figure 4 Thurgarton  Station Houseearly plate of station.jpg copy

The railway station at Thurgarton lies about 400 m south of the village. The original handsome station house is essentially unchanged in external appearance;  it was designed by architects C E and T A Davies who employed the same style for most of the stations on the new line – a style described by Pevsner as neo-Tudor but by others as ‘Gingerbread’.

Initially four trains a day ran in either direction; the journey from Thurgarton to Nottingham took about 40 minutes and  to Newark  20 minutes.  Fares per mile were 3d first class, 2d second class and 11/2 d third class and livestock cost 5d per mile for horses, 2d per mile for cows and ½ d per mile for sheep.

Figure 5 Early timetable for trains through Thurgarton ( click on image to enlarge)

 timetable

  Station master and staff 

Even in a small village such as Thurgarton the railway station employed several men from station master to clerks and porters and a strong tradition of railway families developed with sons following their fathers in working on the railway. Mr James Hewitt was station master in the 1850-60s and lived in the station house with his wife Harriet and two children -his son  became a railway clerk. Mr John Kind was station master for 32 years, he and his wife Elizabeth raised six children in the station house one of whom worked as a porter. 

  Figure 6 Mr Kind, his wife and six children and several other staff on the platform of Thurgarton station, about 1881station  mr kind st master copy

 On their retirement in 1898 Mr and Mrs Kind were presented with a clock and a chair for 32 years of ‘ able and courteous service’  to the villagers of Thurgarton; sixty householders signed the vote of thanks headed by Bishop George Ridding who lived at Thurgarton Priory.

Figure 7 Mr and Mrs Kind on their retirement 1898mr and mrs kind station master copy

 

 Mr Job Frederick Fisher followed in the 1890s and served as station master until 1921. He and wife Hannah raised eight children, six of which worked on the railways. The impressive size of these railway families suggests that the popular romantic notions of steam engines and railway stations are well based.

  

Effect on village life

We know from contemporary accounts that people’s reaction to the coming of the railways varied from doom laden fears to wild enthusiasm.There can be no question that the new transport system was a significant factor in the increasing wealth and mobility of Victorian Britains. Thurgarton shared in this; for an agricultural community the mass movement of grain and livestock was vital for the larger farmers  but for the many smallholders of the village it was the sale of vegetables, eggs etc in the markets of Nottingham, now only 40 minutes away, that generated that extra bit of cash so important to their well being.

The opportunity of increased mobility over greater distances accelerated the preexisting pattern of movement of rural to urban communities but there is no evidence of a massive depopulation in Thurgarton  where census returns from 1841 to 1851  show a  modest growth in village inhabitants and for the rest of the century a modest decline from about 380 to 320. A study by O’Neil et al of mobility of Thurgarton inhabitants from 1841 to 1881 suggests that nearly half the village householders changed each decade; there was evidently much coming and going in this period and the railways must have been a factor in this mobility. Their study did not look at earlier pre-railway centuries and a brief study of village names from the 17th and 18th century suggests a much more stagnant population.

Railway outings to choral and flower festivals become a regular feature of the social calendar as did the annual Sunday School outing to Skegness or Mablethorpe – an occasion which continued upto the 1970s.

Figure 8 Thurgarton Methodist Sunday school outing 1930s

meth sunday school outing to seaside.jpg copy

 

The coming of the railways provided generations of boys with a new pastime and for trainspotters young and old here are two old steam engines at Thurgarton.

  Figure 9 and 10 Trains at Thurgarton 1920s train copy

 

 train 2 copy

Sources

R Lelleux (ed.) A regional history of the railways of Great Britain Vol 9 The East Midlands, David and Chambers (1976).

The Nottingham and Newark Mercury, 4th  August 1846.

Thurgarton village archives  – census, photographs , maps.

J. O’Neil et al, Nottinghamshire Family History Journal, Vol 6, no 8, pp17-20.

Personal communication on railway station  Mr David Yates, Thurgarton.

 

I’m grateful to Mr Glynn Waite  for details and photographs of Mr Job Fisher and his family and to Mr Fisher’s great-great grandson, Clive, for permission to publish the photograph .

The Foundation of Thurgarton Priory

This article explores the origins of the Augustinian Priory of St.Peter at Thurgarton.

Figure 1 Reconstruction of the Priory Church, Thurgarton

priory reconstruction 1

 There are two foundation charters for Thurgarton Priory but neither contains an exact date for the birth of the priory – sometime in the 1130s seems to be a reasonably safe estimate (1).  The first charter was issued in the presence of the Chapter of Southwell Minster by Thurstan, Archbishop of York and states that :-‘Ralph Dayncourt, on our advice and counsel, grants to God and the church of St Peter at Thurgarton and the regular canons who serve God there, all the churches of his lands’

The second charter was issued by Ralph Dayncourt, again before the Chapter of Southwell Minster, but after the death of Archbishop Thurstan and reads :-  ‘I, Ralph de Ayncurt, for the good of my soul, and the souls of my sons and daughters, my parents, my wife Basilia and all our ancestors, have founded a house of religion at Thurgarton, and grant to the regular canons who there serve God and St. Peter, on the counsel and entreaty of Thurstan, Archbishop of York, of blessed memory, all my land at Thurgarton and Fiskerton, the park next to Thurgarton and all the churches of my lands’.

Central to the founding of Thurgarton Priory therefore were both baron and  bishop – Ralph Dayncourt and Thurstan, Archbishop of York, but before examining those two key figures we need to briefly look at the Augustinians and at the church in early Norman England.

The church in early Norman England.

Within a few years of 1066, Norman clerics filled all the senior ecclesiastical offices of England (2).The Norman hierarchy of baron and bishop controlled Englishmen both in body and soul; they built new churches alongside their castles, highly visible statements of Norman lordship replacing the old order. The rapid rise of  new monastic houses in 11-12th century England can be viewed as part of the Norman ‘programme of conquest’ (3).

The church in England in 1066 was, according to the Pope, in a sorry state and in urgent need of reform (4). The vast majority of clergy in England were married parish priests, mostly uneducated, who had inherited their church living from their fathers; they were the target of 11th century church reformers led by Pope Gregory VII who aimed to replace them with a well educated and celibate priesthood to be ‘holy and separated for the work’ of celebrating the mass (5). The Norman invasion brought into the English church an army of Norman clerics in whose ranks were both ardent monkish reformers and conservative dynastic churchmen who resisted reform and defended the long tradition of a married hereditary clergy (6).

The Augustinian order of regular canons- the black canons.

 Figure 2  Detail from miserichord St Peter’s , Thurgarton.head copy

The Augustinian order was named after St. Augustine, Bishop of Hippo c. 396-430. Augustine had advocated basic rules for communal religious living but it was St. Benedict c. 480-543 who drew up the detailed set of rules which were to dominate Western monasticism for several centuries (7). These traditional monastic orders were of limited use to the Pope’s reform plan; their strictly enclosed life was a barrier to their effectiveness as agents of change in the wider world; and so was born the Augustinian order – the black canons, an 11th century papal innovation formed as a vanguard of church reform (8).   They observed the same offices and basic routines of Benedictine monasteries; they lived communally, shared property and took vows of poverty, chastity and obedience. In contrast however to the enclosed cloistered life of the monks, Augustinian canons were allowed out of their houses to work as parish priests

Most importantly Augustinians were very flexible and cheap to establish and maintain. They occupied a wide variety of sites from larger urban and baronial centres to small rural hermitages (9, 10).  This flexibility attracted many founding patrons from the Norman nobility, for the Augustinians could accommodate their varying aspirations and purses.

Ralph Dayncourt’s foundation endowment of Thurgarton Priory was typical of Augustinian houses consisting mainly of parish churches with their livings and only a modest grant of land, in contrast to the land hungry Cistercians. This acquisition of churches relieved the patron of the onerous duty of appointing and supporting a parish priest and achieved yet another aim of the reformers – that of returning parish livings to direct church control (11).

Given all these advantages the rapid spread of the black canons in the 12th century is not surprising but it was royal support which ensured their rise to become the most numerous religious order in England (over 260 houses)(12). The Augustinians first appeared in England about 1095 and by c1135 (Thurgarton Priory’s birth) over 45 new houses had been founded the majority of which owed their establishment to the patronage of Henry I and Queen Maude and a court entourage of barons and ecclesiastics (13).

Thurstan , Archbishop of York

Amongst the new wave of churchmen crossing the channel from Normandy were a married priest named Auger, who had been appointed as a prebend to St.Paul’s in London and his two sons, Audouen and Thurstan, who were both destined to follow as prebendaries of the same church. Audouen eventually became Bishop of Evreux and Thurstan gained advancement as a chaplain in the royal court and was eventually appointed Archbishop of York in 1114 (14).  Despite being the product of the old unreformed tradition of hereditary clergy Thurstan developed a ‘youthful admiration for the monastic life’ and took a vow to become a Cluniac monk – which he fulfilled a few weeks before his death in 1140 when he entered the Cluniac monastry at Pontefract (15).

When Thurstan first entered York in the winter of 1114 he encountered an impoverished province struggling to recover from decades of instability culminating in King William’s final suppression of the embers of northern resistance in 1070 (16) . Almost immediately Thurstan faced a challenge from Ralph, Archbishop of Canterbury, who, with the king’s support, pressed for a final settlement of Canterbury’s claim to primacy over the Archdiocese of York (17). One can imagine Henry’s surprise and anger when the man he had personally advanced to the See of York stubbornly resisted and upheld York’s ancient position as Canterbury’s equal. In March 1116 Thurstan offered his resignation and spent most of the next five years in France and estranged from Henry’s court (18). During these years in exile Thurstan developed a considerable network of allies amongst the nobility and the papal court and gained wide respect for his wise counsel and diplomacy (19). In 1120 he engineered a  reconciliation between Henry and the French King Louis and with the Pope. In 1121 he was reinstated by Henry and returned to York in Lent to be greeted by a great crowd and much rejoicing (20).

Thurstan – supporter of religious houses

Thurstan could now concentrate on the restoration of his impoverished archdiocese (21). In rebuilding the See of York Thurstan appears to have been successful in securing the support and patronage of Henry I and his northern barons; Thurstan was evidently an energetic and formidable persuader of men.

In 1066 the north of England was a monastic desert and by 1100 only five religious houses (Benedictine and Cluniac) had been established in the Archdiocese (22).   Thurstan built up the old secular minster colleges at York, Beverley, Ripon and Southwell and assisted the Benedictine houses at Selby, Whitby and York (23).  In 1114 when Thurstan first arrived at York three Augustinian houses had just been founded at Nostell, Bridlington and Hexham (Map1). Nostell attracted considerable royal and baronial support and with the appointment of Athelwold, the king’s chaplain, as Prior in 1120 it became the powerhouse of the Augustinian order in the north.

Map 1 Religious houses in Archdiocese of York and Lincolnshire c 1114 when Thurstan was appointed to York – click on image to enlarge

houses upto 1114copy copy

 In 1131 the routine of religious life in York was disrupted by the arrival of the Cistercians. Thurstan’s role in the establishment of the first Cistercian communities in Yorkshire has dominated historical accounts and eclipsed his involvement with the other religious orders especially the Augustinians (24). During Thurstan’s time as prelate only two Cistercian houses (Fountains and Reivaulx) were established compared with eleven Augustinian houses (25).

Map2 Religious houses in Archdiocese of York and Lincolnshire  c 1135 when Thurgarton Priory was founded – click on image to enlarge.

1135

Securing his territory- the archdiocese of York

Thurstan was a politically astute churchman whose territory was far flung and lacked cohesion(26). The Archdiocese of York in the 12th century had very fluid borders in the north where the emerging new kingdom of Scotland under the House of Canmore had ambitions over much of Northumbria and Cumbria (27,28).

The newly arrived Augustinian order, besides being an agent of church reform, provided one of a number of tools whereby Thurstan could secure his influence especially in the more distant or disputed parts of his diocese. A pattern of increasingly close links were forged firstly with the central Augustinian house at Nostell and with the remote and vulnerable house at Hexham in the far north –east of his territory. The greatest achievement of this policy came in Cumbria with the establishment of the only Augustinian cathedral community in England at Carlisle and the choice of Athelwold, Prior of Nostell, as its first bishop.

Thurstan and Athelowld were both present  in the Chapter House at Southwell to witness the foundation charter of Thurgarton Priory; the archbishop and the senior Augustinian must have discussed in detail the arrangements for the new Priory and how it should relate to the Minster only 3 miles away.  Unique in England was the arrangement whereby the Prior of Thurgarton was granted a permenant seat in the  Minster Chapter (31). The exact date and reason for this arrangement is not known but I suggest that may well have its origin with Thurstan and Athelowld’s policy of a close cooperation between the northern Augustinians and the archdiocese. (The Southwell chapter was unusual in not having a senior canon or dean at its head and appears to have functioned as a remarkably autonomous body –  maybe  the Prior of Thurgarton was there as both observer and adviser. )

Nottinghamshire and Southwell Minster were at the southern limit of Thurstan’s territory;. Bishops like barons vied for worldly power and for most of  Thurstan’s time at York the Bishopric of Lincoln was in the ambitious hands of the appropriately named Alexander the Magnificent (29).  Alexander held considerable land in the east of Nottinghamshire concentrated around Newark where he rebuilt a palatial new castle and developed the town as a thriving market – a direct threat to the wealth and influence of Southwell only six miles to the west (30). Did Thurstan deliberately set out to redress this balance and bolster his position in southern Nottinghamshire by the foundation of a new Augustinian house close to his Minster at Southwell ?

The  form of words used in Thurgarton’s second foundation charter  – consilio et prece Thurstinion the counsel and request of  Thurstan ( prece can also be translated as prayer, pleading or entreaty) suggests that Thurstan had indeed taken the initiative and  persuaded Ralph Dayncourt to found his priory. If Thurstan was actively seeking a patron in the south of the county then there was a limited choice of suitable candidates and the Dayncourt barony was an obvious target. Aside from any religious motive in founding Thurgarton Priory he would have anticipated tha the new Priory would attract resources and support in endowments  from local wealthy patrons  (and away from Newark).

Furthermore  if we look at the details of the foundation of Thurgarton we find that Ralph granted 11 churches (see map 3) to the priory; what is striking is the block of  all of the Dayncourt churches in Lincolnshire  ( seven churches) right under the nose of Bishop Alexander in Lincoln; was Thurstan making a statement to the ambitious Alexander of Lincoln?

Map 3 Churches granted to Thurgarton Priory by Ralph Dayncourt, Thurgarton (purple triangle) and eleven churches ( red triangles).

Churches and land deyncourt

Ralph Dayncourt and the Honour of Blankney.

The Dayncourt family originated from Aincourt in Normandy close to the River Seine north of Paris. Walter Dayncourt , a kinsman of Remigius the first Norman Bishop of Lincoln,  was granted lands by King William in Lincolnshire, Derbyshire and Nottinghamshire with outlying manors in South Yorkshire (Rawmarsh and Wombwell) and Northamptonshire (32). Walter was married to Matilda whose ancestry is uncertain but she may have been one of King William’s many illegitimate children. Their first son, William, was raised at the royal court of William Rufus but died young and was buried in Lincoln cathedral. The barony passed to Ralph, the second son, who founded Thurgarton Priory (33).

Map 4 Dayncourt estate in East Midlands -land in green and houses in red – click on image to enlarge.

deyncourt lands and houses copy

The total value of the 1086 Domesday assessments of Dayncourt lands in the East Midlands amounts to well over £100 which whilst not qualifying for the super elite still places them firmly in the top 100  richest  families in Norman England (34).

The most valuable Dayncourt lands lay in Lincolnshire, concentrated in Kesteven around their caput (headquarters) of Blankney within a few miles of Lincoln; next in value were the  fertile grain lands in the Vale of Belvoir around Granby. North of the Trent were several scattered landholdings on the southern edge of Sherwood Forest with Thurgarton, Hoveringham and Fiskerton lying close together in the rich valley of the Trent. Several holdings in north-east Derbyshire were based around a manor house at Elmton ; half of these Derbyshire lands were given by Ralph to his middle son Roger who fathered the cadet branch of the family (35).

Why found a house of religion ?

An overriding concern in the 12 th century mind was the fate of one’s eternal soul. No greater comfort could be gained than to be perpetually remembered in the intercessions of priests such as those at Thurgarton Priory who would have remembered their founder, Ralph, and his family in their prayers. Ralph Dayncourt’s decision to found a priory would have not only found favour with God but would have impressed his peers, pleased his bishop and increased his kudos at the court of Henry I and Queen Maude.

The founding patron of a religious house would expect a number of advantages:- accommodation and hospitality at the Priory, a secretariat  providing clerical assistance with charters and other family records , entry to the community for any male relation of a religious or fragile nature, care in infirmity or old age and finally preparation for death with  burial in a sacred and prominent location – a family mausoleum (36).

For Ralph Dayncourt the ceremony before the chapter of Southwell, surrounded by his peers and senior churchmen, would have been of immense importance; he must have thought of Thurgarton Priory as his lasting legacy and a focus for future generations of Dayncourts.

Which religious order?

Baronial families in the early decades of the 12th century were faced with an increasing variety of religious orders which they could choose to support. The first generation of Norman lords in England were limited to Benedictine and Cluniac foundations; the Augustinians arrived in England about 1100 followed by the Cistercian order in the 1130-40s, and by 1150 numerous  monastic and military orders vied for patronage (37). The early generations of Norman barons still held lands and loyalties in Normandy and many of the monasteries which they founded were offshoots of mother houses in France. From c. 1100 increasing numbers of nobles held land wholly or mainly in England and the pattern of monastic foundations changed to a preference for English based houses, especially independent communities such as the Augustinians whose loyalty would be towards their bishop, their founder and his family and his tenants (38).

Ralph Dayncourt’s choice of an Augustinian house may reflect his personal religious preference; many Norman lords admired the order’s combination of monastic ideals with a pastoral duty of service to the populace (39). The relative ease and cheapness of founding communities of regular canons would have been an obvious attraction especially for those patrons on the ‘B’ list of the Norman aristocracy. From 1110 to the 1130s the black canons were the new and popular order favoured by the king and his court and Ralph may have simply followed fashion.

Why Nottinghamshire and not Lincolnshire?

The Dayncourt’s richest lands and headquarters (caput) lay just south of Lincoln; why therefore did they not found a house of religion inside the Lincoln Diocese?   Ralph may  have taken a hard headed decision to preserve his most valuable lands for the family and  looked for a site outside his prime lands in Lincolnshire or the Vale of Belvoir.

If Thurstan’s role was critical then only Nottinghamshire lay within his diocese;  his enthusiasm for establishing religious houses was however not shared by all bishops especially those in Lincoln –Roger Bloet (Bishop from 1092 to 1123) and Alexander ( Bishop from 1123 to 1148 ). Roger Bloet was Chancellor to King William 11 and was the archetypal Norman courtier and unreformed secular churchman; he disliked monks and on his appointment banished the monks established at Stow by his predecessor back to their mother house at Eynsham and used the Stow lands for the bishopric. He concentrated on rebuilding the Bishopric of Lincoln diverting all donations and wealth to the building of the cathedral and the necessary officers and clerics. During his time as prelate from 1092 to 1123 no new monastic houses appeared in central Lincolshire despite it being one of the most densely populated and productive counties in England (40).

In 1123 Alexander the Magnificent became Bishop of Lincoln. He was part of a powerful dynasty of secular churchmen which numbered in its ranks the powerful Roger of Salisbury.  The ‘Gesta Stephani’ a contemporary account described Alexander as – ‘Neglecting the pure and simple way of life belonging to the Christian religion, he gave himself up to military affairs and secular pomp, taking, whenever he appeared at Court, so vast a band of followers that all men marvelled’  (41).  It was only in his later years that Alexander became a keen proponent of monastic houses but was very selective and favoured the Cistercian and Gilbertine orders; the 1140s saw a flourish of seven Gilbertine and five Cistercian foundations scattered throughout Lincolnshire (map 5 ) (42).

Map 5 Religious houses in Archdiocese of York and Lincolshire c 1148 at end of Bishop Alexander’s life – click on image to enlarge.

1150

Evidently the Augustinians were not popular in Lincolnshire at this period and it seems that even if Ralph Dayncourt had wished to found an Augustinian house on his Lincolnshire estates, Bishops Roger and Alexander would not have been well disposed to such a plan.

 Ralph’s choice of Thurgarton

Once the decision had been made to found a priory there were several very practical considerations in choosing the exact site for such a community. The ideal location included a sheltered valley with a stream and natural springs, a mixture of woodland, arable and pasture for food production and finally a ready supply of timber and stone for building.

Amongst the Dayncourt lands in Nottinghamshire only Thurgarton possessed this combination and the addition of  Fiskerton with its river crossing, fishery and water mill provided an ideal balance of resources for supporting the new community. Thurgarton and Fiskerton however accounted for less than 5% of the total value of the barony and the potential value of these two parishes was limited by their location north of the Trent inside an area of royal forest making them subject to a plethora of forest laws, fines and restrictions on development. An inspection of the scattered Dayncourt estates on map 4 shows clearly that Thurgarton occupied a central position in relation to the major Dayncourt manors all of which lay within 22 miles of Thurgarton, a day’s journey for a mounted traveller.

Ralph’s choice of Thurgarton therefore had many advantages to him: its loss would not significantly affect the finances of the barony, it lay at the geographical centre of his dispersed estate with good transport links and it provided all the necessary practical resources for a successful house. Although Thurgarton’s  monetary value was eclipsed by other Dayncourt manors it was no back water having been a significant site of power in the district in the previous centuries(43). The establishment of the Augustinian Priory restored Thurgarton’s position of influence in the region.

Figure 3 Augustinian canonnewstead and augustinians0011

As for the villagers of Thurgarton the Augustinian Prior was in one sense just another Lord of the Manor who wielded the identical power over their lives as any other feudal lord; contrary to what one might expect there is no evidence that the Augustinians were in any way less demanding or more enlightened as landlords. The fact that monks were meticulous record keepers provided fewer opportunities for villagers to dodge their manorial duties and rentals; bad news for the villagers but good news for historians for such detailed records are a valuable source of information


References

(1) T. Foulds, The Thurgarton Cartulary (Stamford, 1994),, p.567 and pp.3-4.

(2) D.Knowles, R.N.Hadcock, Mediaeval Religious Houses England and Wales  (Longman, 1971), p.14.

(3) P.Dalton, Conquest, Anarchy and Lordship: Yorkshire 1066-1154 (Cambridge, 1994), p.2.

(4) J.Burton, Monastic and Religious Orders in Britain1000-1300 (Cambridge, 1994),  p. 21.

(5) C.N.L.Brooke, Mediaeval Church and Society (Sidgwick and Jackson, 1971), pp.72-3.

(6) Ibid pp. 88-99.

(7)  J.C.Dickinson, The Origins of the Austin Canons and their introduction into England   (SPCK Church Historical Society, 1950), pp. 26-58.

(8)  Brooke, Mediaeval Church, pp.69-99.

(9) Burton, Monastic and Religious Orders, pp.43-54.

(10) Brooke, Mediaeval Church, pp.143-50.

(11)  Burton, Monastic and Religious Orders, pp. 43-50.

(12)Dickinson, Origins of the Austin Canons, pp.125-31. 

(13) Burton, Monastic and Religious Orders, p.51.

(14) D.Nicholl, Thurstan Archbishop of York (1114-1140), The Stonegate Press, York (1964) pp.1-14.

(15) Ibid p.9.

(16) S.Speight, ‘Family, Faith and Fortification: Yorkshire 1066-1250’, Ph.D. Thesis, University of Nottingham (1993), pp.319-38.

(17) Nicholl, Thurstan, p.52.

(18)  Ibid pp.60-74.

(19) Ibid pp.72-3.

(20) Ibid p.74.

(21) http://www.oxforddnb.com/view/article/27411?docPos=1

(22) Ibid pp.130-36.

(23) Nicholl, Thurstan, pp.192-212.

(24) Ibid p.193.

(25)  J. Burton, The Monastic Orders in Yorkshire, 1069-1215 (Cambridge, 1999),  pp. xviii- xix.

(26)  Dalton, Conquest, Anarchy and Lordship, p.142. 

(27) Nicholl, Thurstan, pp. 16-21.

(28) P. Dalton, Conquest, Anarchy and Lordship Yorkshire 1066-1154 (Cambridge, 1994), pp. 196-230.

(29) http://www.oxforddnb.com/view/article/324

(30) J R Samuels and P Marshall, Guardian of the Trent. The story of Newark Castle, (Newark, 1997), pp.1- 46.

(31) Foulds, Thurgarton Cartulary, pp..xvii-xviii.

(32) Data from Knowles and Hadcock.

(33) T. Foulds, ‘The History of Thurgarton Priory before 1316’, Transactions of the  Thoroton Society (1980), p.21.

(34)  Foulds, Thurgarton Cartulary, pp.lv –lvii.

(35)  Ibid p. xcvi.

(36) E. Cownie, Religious Patronage in Anglo-Norman England 1066-1135, The Royal Historical Society, Boydell Press (1998),  pp.151-71.

(37) Knowles and Hadcock, Mediaeval Religious Houses, pp.45-7.

(38) Cownie, Religious Patronage, p.192.

(39) Dickinson, Origins of the Austin Canons,  p.138.

(40)  http://www.oxforddnb.com/view/article/2660?docPos=7

(41)  http://www.archive.org/details/gestastephanire01sewegoog.   Gesta Stephani,  A. Du Chesne, R.C. Sewell (eds.) (1846), pp. 46-7.

(42)  http://www.oxforddnb.com/view/article/324

(43)  http://www.thurgartonhistory.co.uk/2010/03/was-there-a-castle-in-thurgarton/

Jim Bentley’s memoirs Part 4 World War 2

 The outbreak of war caused quite an upheaval on the farm. On 1st September  1939  John and Ernest were called up into the regular army as they were both in the Territorial Army as were many lads in the village. They were greatly missed on the farm so it was all hands on deck for the duration of the war and we all had to help. German and Italian prisoners of war came to work on the farm as did the Borstal Boys from Lowdham. Dad always gave them five Woodbine cigarettes per day as well as eats and drink.

 The first night of war, on Sunday 3rd September 1939, the sirens sounded all over the country. Looking back that first night was funny really as no one seemed to know what to do. We had all been issued with gas masks and identity cards and some people put their gas masks on, some stayed in bed, a lot of people got up and sat under the table. We all thought the end had come and we wouldn’t survive the first night of war but eventually the all clear sounded and with a sigh of relief we went back to bed; later we found out that the alarm had been triggered by a single unidentified aircraft crossing the channel.

 The blackout began at the outbreak of war and lasted for six years – not a chink of light was allowed. The Air Raid Wardens ( dad was a warden) saw to that; you could be fined for showing any light and most people had blackout curtains, blinds or shutters fitted.  At Fiskerton some girls arriving home late left a light showing and a German bomber unloaded his bombs on the village destroying several houses but luckily with no loss of life.

In 1940, after the fall of France, the British stood alone and farmers were encouraged to plough up all the grass fields and meadows to grow more food. As most of the fields were undulating with humps and hollows they had to be levelled out and to do this Fowlers of Leeds designed a large Gyrotiller; it was a vicious looking monster on tracks like a tank with large contra-rotating tines which not only levelled the ground but took out hedges in one fell swoop and uprooted large trees. It ran on diesel and was certainly a mean machine the like of which we hadn’t seen before. Poles were placed over all the fields to prevent German aircraft and gliders landing in an invasion but they also prevented our own aircraft from landing in an emergency. The Air Ministry paid dad the princely sum of 1s per pole per year for the inconvenience of these poles

The majority of food was rationed during the war as were clothes.  ration books were needed for all fats, butter, margarine, bacon, cereals, milk, cheese, sugar, bread, meat and chocolate. Many foods were not available at all; these included imported fruit and vegetables, tinned fruit and jellies. The lack of oranges, raisins and sultanas meant that Christmas became a rather austere occasion and prunes were used in the Christmas cake in lieu of mixed fruit. For ten years we never tasted a banana, peach, apricot or pineapple and the only fruit we had were those from our own orchard and garden.

Ration book from World War 2

WW2 ration book0002

The wireless was the main source of information; the news was a must as were the speeches of Winston Churchill. Some nights we would tune into William Joyce , Lord Haw Haw, broadcasting from Germany with all his propaganda news; he was hanged after the war as a traitor. The most popular programme was ITMA with Tommy Handley and characters such as Colonel Chinstrap and Mrs Mopp; 90% of the population must have tuned in on a Thursday night. Often the BBC news would report ‘German bombers last night dropped bombs at random’ and old chap in the village, Matt Holmes, used to say ‘ I’m glad I don’t live there – they get bombed most nights’.

One evening a barrage balloon, which had broken from its moorings at Derby, drifted across to Thurgarton and settled in an oak tree in Station Road. Torn and partially deflated it looked in the moonlight like a large parachute. People thought the German invasion had started and called out the Home Guard.

Local Home Guard

home guard

There were two anti-aircraft /searchlight batteries stationed at Thurgarton , one at Bankwood  and one in Station Road. The soldiers were always invited for tea and also for baths. We used to visit the searchlight camps and take them newspapers, magazines, Picture Post, Tit Bits for them to read ; we would peel potatoes for them and generally be a nuisance but they didn’t seem to mind.

Thurgarton Priory became a Military Convalescent Home and servicemen from there wandered about the village in their hospital blue suits, red ties and white shirts. One of them used to come to the farm and spend all day watching the pigs – he said he got more sense out of them than from the servicemen at the Priory.

We had many evacuees at Thurgarton from Sheffield, Southend and Worthing. We had three at the farm from Southend – Jim Corder aged 3 ( who later became an Air Steward), Peter Povey aged 9 and Gordon Blanchflower aged 14. Walter and Lucy Rogers next door had a little boy from Sheffield and on his first night we asked him what he usually had for supper and he replied ‘ beer and chips’; needless to say he didn’t get  that.

The war in the air

School in war time included gas mask drills, time in air raid shelters, watching troop convoys and the odd German bomber being shot at by Ack-Ack guns.The most we saw of the war was in the air.

Early on many Fairy Battles, Wellingtons and Hampden bombers flew overhead on their way to Germany . On most nights in summer 1940 about 30 Armstrong Whitworth Whitely bombers would go chugging over with their noses in a downwards attitude flying from their bases in Yorkshire to targets in North Italy; the next morning you could see the survivors chugging back again. 

At the height of the bombing campaign in 1943 over 500 bombers would fly over Thurgarton on their way to Germany –Halifaxs, Lancasters and Stirling; you could count 50 bombers in the air at any one time. Every evening the peace of the village was shattered for half an hour by the roar of over 100 Merlin engines as 30 Lancasters took off from Syerston, one after another roared low over the village; we would stand in the farmyard and count them.

Lancaster bomber

LancasterBomber

Later in the war when the Americans joined in, large formations of B17 Flying Fortresses and Liberators flew everyday on their daylight raids on Germany. They flew at 30,000 ft with large vapour trails streaming after the formations. A sight never to be forgotten was just before D-day when large formations of Dakota transport towed Horsa, Waco and Hadrian gliders , some towing two at a time. Part of the training was to fly low at tree top height over the villages and fields at night – they were lit up with green orange and yellow lights making an unforgettable sight.  

Air crashes

Some of them didn’t make it and we had about 15 air crashes in the area :- at Bleasby one Wellington and two Lancasters, at Thurgarton one Wellington and two Lancasters, Hoveringham two Lancasters, Southwell one Spitfire, Fiskerton two Lancasters. Gonalston one Lancaster and several bombers crashed near Syerston airfield. In total over 100 airmen were killed and only two survived.

Memorial to Lancaster crew at GonalstonOLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA

Every time an aircraft crashed we would jump on our bikes rushing off to see what we could do – which was nothing for we would always be met by some gruesome gory sight. One night a Lancaster crashed into the Trent at Fiskerton and another at Hoveringham on the river bank. Two Lancasters crashed within a fortnight of each other in almost exactly the same spot which was our field called Bottom Meadows; a year later you could still pick up bits of debris.

On another night two Lancasters collided over Bleasby. One was night flying from Metheringham and the other had just returned from Germany and about to land at Syerston. They were flying without lights and the wreckage was scattered over 40 acres of corn fields between Rudsey Farm and Brickyard Farm -16 aircrew died.

On the receiving end

On the receiving end several bombs were dropped by the Germans at Thurgarton , Bleasby and Fiskerton, a land mine at Thurgarton and one at Kneeton not to mention several incendiary bombs. Eakring , where there were oil wells, had many bombs one night. There was a decoy airfield at Magadales Farm which attracted the German bomber;  that’s where the land mine and some bombs fell as they thought it was Syerston.

I shall always remember one night at five minutes to six I was just taking my boots off when a huge explosion shook the house. We learned later that an incendiary had fallen on a loaded Lancaster detonating the 2,000 lb. bomb. The C.O. at Syerston , Group Captain Gus Walker, happened to be close and his arm blew off; I met him later when I was in the RAF.

There was only one Blitz on Nottingham and that partially failed. After the Germans had ringed Nottingham with marker flares two RAF planes from Hucknall laid decoy flares over the Vale of Belvoir and so the main Luftwaffe force dropped a lot of their bombs in the fields. Some did get through to Nottingham hitting Trent Bridge , the Station, Woolworths and the Co-op. An elderly couple, Mr and Mrs Suter, had moved from Thurgarton to the city and were killed in that raid. He had been the choirmaster at the church and lived at Southacre – they were buried at Thurgarton.  

One Friday afternoon some German bombers flew low level over Lincolnshire to bomb the Ransome and Marles ball bearing works at Newark. They hit the factory killing over 80 people and machine gunned the streets. Mary was at school in Newark and had to shelter in shop doorways. The planes came and went before there was time to sound the sirens or man the anti-aircraft guns.

In Derby one Monday morning at a quarter to eight a lone German bomber attacked the Rolls Royce works in Nightingale Road and machine gunned the streets. One bomb fell on the main stores and 11 workers were killed. The Luftwaffe pilot was shot down a fortnight later; he knew Derby very well having worked at Rolls Royce before the war.

The family at war.

Ernest joined the 8th Battalion Sherwood Foresters Territorial Army early in 1939 as did many of the village lads. They were promised a fortnights training in August 1939 at Holyhead in North Wales; most of them had never been far from the village so they thought they were onto a good thing. When they had finished training the Sergeant-Major said that he would see them all again in two weeks because there was going to be a war. They were all called up on 1st September into the Regular Army.

Ernest served in Norway, Northern Ireland, North Africa from El Alamein to Tripoli then Italy and the Anzio landings. I remember the day Ernest arrived back from the Norwegian campaign in April1940; it was a Sunday morning and he sat at the kitchen table from 7 to 9 o’clock telling us all about it. Many men had been taken prisoner by the Germans and the lucky ones who had got out in time had reached Andalnes where they were evacuated by the Royal Navy. At Anzio they were held on a narrow strip of land being shelled and bombed from the sea, from land and from the air for three weeks – he didn’t expect to make it back.

When Ernest and John came home on leave we would Blanco their army equipment and polish the brasses. Sometimes John would bring his Thompson submachine gun home or a Sten gun or rifle. The reward for cleaning it with spit and polish was to go into the orchard and fire off a few rounds into the air.

John joined the Sherwood Foresters but was transferred to the Royal Armoured Corps just before his old battalion was wiped out at Tobruk (9th  Battalion). He joined the Royal Dragoon Guards and saw action in Belgium , Holland and was one of the first over the Rhine into Germany. They met up with the Russians at Lubeck but they weren’t very friendly. They then moved north and were some of the first Allied troops into Denmark where they stayed for 6 months.

 Hilda spent most of the war as a Sergeant WAAF at RAF Cranwell where she met her future husband Howard who was a wireless operator. He had served on Lysanders in France and had been evacuated at Dunkirk. He transferred to 517 squadron flying Halifaxes  out of Braudy, South Wales. On D-day his plane developed engine trouble and ditched in the Atlantic 300 miles off Portugal. The eight man crew got into the two dinghies and on sighting a Catalina Flying Boat they fired off some distress flares one of which sadly dropped into one of the dinghies and sank it – so all eight men now clung to one dinghy. After three more days they were sighted by an American destroyer who transferred them to an Aircraft Carrier out hunting German submarines. They were eventually dropped off in Bermuda and flown home via USA and Canada. They were given a new aircraft but on their first operation from Braudy on returning from an eight hour patrol over the Bay of Biscay on a foggy November nigh they crashed into a hillside whilst circling to land. They were lucky to survive.

Phil remained on the farm and joined the Home Guard; Rene also remained at home to work on the farm and  Mary went to work in a bank in Nottingham but later on went to work in a garage.  I joined the Air Training Corps and used to visit the RAF stations at Newton and Syerston and the American 9th Air force  bases at Bottesford and Langar; a few flights in Wellingtons, Lancasters or Dakotas made it all worthwhile. The Americans always gave us a good time with ice cream and tinned fruit and rides in their jeeps around the base. On leaving school I joined Rolls Royce as an engineering apprentice and worked on the first jet engines; later in 1946 I joined the RAF.

After the war Ernest and John returned to work on the farm with Phil. Hilda married Howard and moved to Burton Joyce and Mary moved to Daventry after marrying Philip Benton. At least everyone came through the war safely but life was never the same again – that pre-war life had gone forever and all was about to change. One thing that stands out from the war was the friendliness and comradeship of all the people – we were all in it together.

John , Philip and Ernest Bentley on Manor farm

bentley brothers

Jim Bentley’s memoirs Part 3 Village life

Weekly routine

Groceries were delivered fortnightly to the village; a man came round on a Tuesday to take your order and it was delivered ten days later on a Friday. If you had forgotten anything it was just too bad, you had to wait another fortnight or hope the village shop had it. The Baker’s van was horse drawn as was the Greengrocer’s dray pulled by a horse called Bob. Meat was delivered to all the houses twice a week and a fishmonger came once a week on a motorbike and sidecar.

We had to cycle to Lowdham or Southwell for a haircut; it cost 3d by hand clippers and 4d when electric clippers came in. We would also cycle to Lowdham to collect a recharged accumulator for the wireless. We used to get dog meat from Hoveringham; it was horse meat painted with a green dye to stop you using it to eke out the meat ration.

Special days

Sunday was always treated as Sunday with no work on the farm apart from the essential work like milking cows and feeding the animals. We all wore our Sunday best clothes and went to church on Sunday morning, Sunday school in the afternoon and evening service later. In the summertime families went for a long walk after church on Sunday evenings. In winter Sunday meant a fire in the front room, the piano was played, stories told and games played.

On Armistice Day every year the whole country came to a standstill for the two minute silence to remember the dead of the First World War. Everything stopped and everyone observed the silence, the majority gathering around the war memorials in every town and village. Before the war school holidays included Oak Apple Day on May 29th to celebrate King Charles hiding in an oak tree, Trafalgar Day on October 21st –the Battle of Trafalgar, Pancake Day and Empire Day.

The Silver Jubilee of George V in 1935 was celebrated in style with the villages dressing up with flags and bunting and holding sports and street parties; we even named one of our horses ‘ Jubilee’. Granddad Robert bought all the children in the village a Jubilee Mug; it was the last generous offer of his life as he died later that year. Two years later in 1937 the celebrations were all repeated at the coronation of George VI.

Coronation day 1937 Thurgarton

coronation 1937

Games and hobbies

In pre-war days we played the usual football with jackets for goal posts, cricket with a rubber ball and stumps chalked on a wall and rounders. We also played tracking, fox and hounds, bowling a hoop (an old bike wheel without spokes), marbles, whip and top, cap guns, wheel barrows made from old pram wheels, conkers, roller skating, scootering, and cycling as far a field as Newark, Nottingham and on one day Doncaster. The games seemed to go in seasons. In spring it was skipping for the girls, marbles and whip and top for boys. In winter there was sliding on frozen ponds, sledging on Booker’s field, roller skating and tracking. In summer it was cricket and rounders and cycling and in autumn of course it was conkers and fox and hounds –a great time was had by all.

Collecting cigarette cards was a good hobby and every subject you could think of was represented : fish, flowers, trains, footballers, cricketers, animals, film stars, flags, ships and aeroplanes, to name a few. We used to go to a building site in Thurgarton on Sundays when the builders were off and collect almost a full set of cards from all the empty cigarette packets – a few swaps completed the set.

Train spotting , taking steam locomotive names and numbers, was a popular pastime. Newark was the place to go, to the LNER (London and North Eastern Railway) to see such famous engines as; The Flying Scotsman, The Mallard, Silver Link, Silver Fox, Sir Nigel Gresley and Silver Jubilee. Not many ‘Names’ passed through Thurgarton on the Derby to Lincoln line but quite a few could be seen at Nottingham Midland Station( London, Midland and Scottish Railway), especially the ‘City Class’ locomotives. Some Sundays ‘Uncle’ Harry , a train driver on the LNER, would take us to Colwick marshalling yards and give us rides on the steam loco around the yards. The engines were always coaled up and serviced on Sundays with grease gun, oil can and oily rag.

School holidays

School holidays were not all work on the farm. Fishing in the Beck we would catch eels, Bully Heads, Sticklebacks, Red Breasts, Silver Breasts, and minnows. Collecting tadpoles or newts from the various ponds around the village was also popular. We would go to see Mr Foster , the cobbler, to listen to his stories from the Great War or go to the blacksmiths shop to see Jack Milner and pump the bellows for the furnace to heat the horseshoes. One day one of our horses, Blossom, went to be shod and while Jack Milner had gone across the road to his house the horse walked home on her own and was found standing on the bridge with her head over the farm gate waiting for someone to open it.

Sometimes we visited Ernie Paling the joiner and wheelwright and watched him make coffins or repair wagon wheels. The railway station was another port of call to watch the steam pick-up which came every morning at eleven o’clock to collect or drop off trucks. The porter and signalmen always needed assistance to pull the levers for the points and signals. Mrs Statham at the village shop was another popular place where we could spend our pocket money – we could buy half penny worth of aniseed balls, liquorice, a packet of sherbet or chocolate drops.

Mrs Statham outside the village shop and post office 1937

mrs statham

 Village entertainments

There were concerts, whist drives and dances at the ‘The Hut’ –the village hall which was an old WW1 army hut. The Harvest Supper was held every year as was the annual Parochial Tea at Christmas when all the villagers got together for a meal. Food was provided by all the village folk followed by a dance and entertainment. The village comedian was George Allwood who based his act on George Robey; then there was Aunt Alice who recited hilarious poems. The dance music was provided by local bands led by Jack Penson or Vic Cotton or Frank Whitehead – what a lot of talent there was around the area.

In 1935 Mr Ford who lived on the Park made a 16mm film all about Thurgarton and its inhabitants. Most of us were on that film which was always shown at the village dos in the Hut. He also invited all the village to his house on 5th November and put on a brilliant firework display and a large bonfire.

The Hut being painted by Fred Farrands.fred farrands painting institute roof

Entertainment outside the village

Other highlights of the year were Lowdham Flower Show in August, when the Borstal Boys from Lowdham Grange gave an excellent gymnastic display, Lowdham Feast in September, Newark May Fair and Nottingham Goose fair in October. The fair amusements ( supplied by Hibble and Mellors of Nottingham) included Gallopers, Dodgems, Noah’s Ark, Cake Walk and The Chair O’Planes. All were powered by electricity generated by those magnificent immaculate steam engines with their highly polished brasses. The noise , the smell of the steam and smoke, the fair organs pumping out their music, the brandy snaps, the coloured balls, swing boats, coconut shies – all these gave real character to the fairs of those days.

There were three cinemas in Newark ( Savoy, Palace and Kinema), the Ideal in Southwell and over forty in Nottingham. We regularly visited The Empire Theatre to see Variety Shows and Music hall including all the popular stars of the day such as George Formby, Gracie Fields, Rob Wilton, Stainless Stephen and Jack Warner. We saw such bands as Joe Loss, Geraldo, Billy Cotton, Troise and his Mandoliers, Big Bill Campbell and his Rocky Mountain Rhythm, Sid Millwall and his Nitwits . We went every year to the pantomime at Nottingham Theatre Royal which always had top stars like Arthur Askey and Max Wall.

A night out at the cinema would cost about 4 shillings – 1s for the train fare, and the cinema was from 9d to 1s 6d for a 3-4 hour programme of the main feature , a second B film , newsreels and cartoons as well as forthcoming attractions and trailers. Some also had a cinema organ which played for about 20 minutes and everyone joined in the sing song. Afterwards it was fish and chips, mushy peas, bread and butter and tea – all for 1s 6d  at  Newbolds Café. It wasn’t unusual in the war to see Italian POWs wandering around Newark on a Saturday night, walking or cycling.

Village school

Thurgarton school 1935 – Jim Bentley is in the centre of the front row

village school 1935

I spent 5 years at Thurgarton school which was a small school with two classrooms. Mrs Beech was the headmistress and taught the 10 to 14 year olds ( school leaving age), and Miss Ethel Fletcher ( Aunt Ethel, our Mum’s sister ) taught the 5 to 9 year olds so just two classes for all ages. As we lived next door to the school we went home every day for dinner. There was no gym or sports field so PT was done in the playground as was country dancing and the maypole. I remember Mrs Beech stepped back and fell over the Maypole stand and broke her arm so we had a temporary teacher from Nottingham who introduced us to Sir Julian Cahn – the great cricketer.

At Christmas we always had a party and a school play. Mr Nicholson , the school attendance officer, often visited the school and woe betide anyone who had been absent without good reason. The nit nurse was also a regular visitor complete with nit comb to check everyone’s hair. The worst week of the year was the arrival of the school dentist in his caravan and his foot powered treadle drill to do the fillings.

The Minster school

I took the 11plus at Barnby Road School in Newark but failed, so dad paid for me to go to Southwell Minster School for boys – the fee was £4-11s per term. Discipline was strict. The cane or walking stick or ruler was the order of the day depending on the master’s taste, as was the degree of punishment to be meted out – it was a powerful deterrent. I remember two boys being expelled for smoking in the toilets ; they were brought in front of the whole school and expelled on the spot. We heard later that one of them had been killed in action in the war.

Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays we had to stay late for rugby, cricket or cross country running depending on the season and we still had homework to do after returning home at seven. I wasn’t a boarder and cycled eight miles there and back each day in all weathers. We had to go to school on Saturday mornings until 1 o’clock  and one of the worst punishments was being kept in detention on Saturday afternoon. There were about 100 boys at the school in five forms and this doubled when the evacuees arrived from Worthing School began at 9.30 am with a walk to the Minster each morning for prayers and hymns. One of the boys, Roy Long, played the Minster organ; he was a brilliant pianist and organist from the age of twelve.

At lunchtime we were allowed to go into Southwell and all headed for Mosedales the Bakers for a penny currant bun and a penny bar of nestles chocolate. On Fridays as a treat we went to Jones the Bakers for a cream bun. One day I was walking back to school with cream bun in hand behind my back when a dog pinched it out of my hand.  School dinners were 9d and consisted of lots of baked potatoes, corned beef, prunes and rice, prunes and custard, or just prunes. During the war more school dinners ended up in the static water tank than were eaten and rice puddings were flicked onto the ceilings.

Every spring we had a  race from Southwell to Bleasby , Morton and back. The school masters rode on bikes and once John Carding and I were walking along this road when we were suppose to be running and the French Master came along on his bike and caught us; he took a pin out of his lapel and kept jabbing our backsides to keep us running – we ran off across a field and then went back to walking  – he kept shouting at us and we were disqualified.

School days were not the happiest days of my life as we were always being told off – they spoilt a wonderful childhood.

Jim Bentley, Margaret Allwood ( Reeves) and Mary Bentley

jim bentley, mgt allwood-reeves,mary bentley