Jump to content

Aslockton: Difference between revisions

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Content deleted Content added
→‎Famous residents: disambigued Robertson
Rescuing 6 sources and tagging 1 as dead. #IABot (v1.2.5)
Line 29: Line 29:
All that remains of the 12th-century [[Aslockton Castle]] are some the earthworks: the motte, called Cranmer's Mound, stands about 16 feet (5 m) high.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.castleuk.net/castle_lists_midlands/129/aslocktoncastle.htm |title=Aslockton Castle |accessdate=2 December 2007 |publisher=CastleUK | archiveurl= https://web.archive.org/web/20071103153405/http://www.castleuk.net/castle_lists_midlands/129/aslocktoncastle.htm| archivedate= 3 November 2007 | deadurl= no}}</ref>
All that remains of the 12th-century [[Aslockton Castle]] are some the earthworks: the motte, called Cranmer's Mound, stands about 16 feet (5 m) high.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.castleuk.net/castle_lists_midlands/129/aslocktoncastle.htm |title=Aslockton Castle |accessdate=2 December 2007 |publisher=CastleUK | archiveurl= https://web.archive.org/web/20071103153405/http://www.castleuk.net/castle_lists_midlands/129/aslocktoncastle.htm| archivedate= 3 November 2007 | deadurl= no}}</ref>


[[Thomas Cranmer]], [[Archbishop of Canterbury]] 1533&ndash;1553, was born in Aslockton and lived until the age of 14 in his parents' cottage, which still stands in Abbey Lane. The Archbishop Cranmer Church of England Primary School (an academy since 2014, having opened in 1968), the Cranmer Pre-School, and the local social facility, the Thomas Cranmer Centre, are named in his honour. (For secondary education, [[Toot Hill School]] in Bingham has a [[sixth form]] and [[Academy (English school)|academy status]].)<ref>Toot Hill School [http://www.toothill.notts.sch.uk/ Retrieved 7 February 2016.]</ref> Aslockton originally had its own Holy Trinity Chapel, a [[Royal_Peculiar#Non-royal_peculiars|peculiar]] under the collegiate church of [[Southwell Minster]] rather than the diocesan bishop,<ref>A Vision of Britain. [http://www.visionofbritain.org.uk/place/7222 Retrieved 4 January 2014.]</ref> but this became ruined and was incorporated into a private house. Some remains of it can still be seen.<ref>Rushcliffe Conservation Area.[http://www.rushcliffe.gov.uk/conservation/conservationareasinrushcliffe/aslockton/ Retrieved 4 January 2014.]; Cranmer Local History Group. [http://cranmerlhg.org/articles/item.php?id=12 Retrieved 4 January 2014.] Whatton in 1792.</ref> Cranmer and his father worshiped at the [[Church of St. John of Beverley, Whatton]].<ref>''The Nottinghamshire Village Book''. Compiled from materials submitted by Women's Institutes in the County (Newbury/Newark: Countryside Books/NFWI), p. 11.</ref> He has also given his name to a local prospect mound.<ref>Cranmer Local History Group.. [http://cranmerlhg.org/downloads/Cranmers_Mound.pdf Retrieved 4 January 2014.]</ref>
[[Thomas Cranmer]], [[Archbishop of Canterbury]] 1533&ndash;1553, was born in Aslockton and lived until the age of 14 in his parents' cottage, which still stands in Abbey Lane. The Archbishop Cranmer Church of England Primary School (an academy since 2014, having opened in 1968), the Cranmer Pre-School, and the local social facility, the Thomas Cranmer Centre, are named in his honour. (For secondary education, [[Toot Hill School]] in Bingham has a [[sixth form]] and [[Academy (English school)|academy status]].)<ref>Toot Hill School [http://www.toothill.notts.sch.uk/ Retrieved 7 February 2016.]</ref> Aslockton originally had its own Holy Trinity Chapel, a [[Royal_Peculiar#Non-royal_peculiars|peculiar]] under the collegiate church of [[Southwell Minster]] rather than the diocesan bishop,<ref>A Vision of Britain. [http://www.visionofbritain.org.uk/place/7222 Retrieved 4 January 2014.]</ref> but this became ruined and was incorporated into a private house. Some remains of it can still be seen.<ref>Rushcliffe Conservation Area.[http://www.rushcliffe.gov.uk/conservation/conservationareasinrushcliffe/aslockton/ Retrieved 4 January 2014.]; Cranmer Local History Group. [http://cranmerlhg.org/articles/item.php?id=12 Retrieved 4 January 2014.] {{wayback|url=http://cranmerlhg.org/articles/item.php?id=12 |date=20140105010035 |df=y }} Whatton in 1792.</ref> Cranmer and his father worshiped at the [[Church of St. John of Beverley, Whatton]].<ref>''The Nottinghamshire Village Book''. Compiled from materials submitted by Women's Institutes in the County (Newbury/Newark: Countryside Books/NFWI), p. 11.</ref> He has also given his name to a local prospect mound.<ref>Cranmer Local History Group.. [http://cranmerlhg.org/downloads/Cranmers_Mound.pdf Retrieved 4 January 2014.]</ref>


The population of Aslockton was 171 in 1801, 273 in 1821, and 289 in 1831.<ref>William White: ''History, Gazetteer and Directory of Nottinghamshire...'' (Sheffield, 1832), p. 479. [https://books.google.hu/books?id=Q3cHAAAAQAAJ&printsec=frontcover#v=onepage&q&f=false </ref> The village had a population of 363 in 1936.<ref>Cranmer Local History Group. [http://cranmerlhg.org/articles/item.php?id=14. Retrieved 4 January 2014.] The page gives details of the 1936 entry in ''Kelly's Directory''.</ref>
The population of Aslockton was 171 in 1801, 273 in 1821, and 289 in 1831.<ref>William White: ''History, Gazetteer and Directory of Nottinghamshire...'' (Sheffield, 1832), p. 479. [https://books.google.hu/books?id=Q3cHAAAAQAAJ&printsec=frontcover#v=onepage&q&f=false </ref> The village had a population of 363 in 1936.<ref>Cranmer Local History Group. [http://cranmerlhg.org/articles/item.php?id=14. Retrieved 4 January 2014.]{{dead link|date=October 2016 |bot=InternetArchiveBot |fix-attempted=yes }} The page gives details of the 1936 entry in ''Kelly's Directory''.</ref>


The land for Aslockton Cemetery was purchased in 1869, at which time the only place of worship in the village was a [[Methodist]] chapel, which has since been converted into flats.<ref>Cranmer Local History Group. [http://cranmerlhg.org/articles/item.php?id=1 Retrieved 4 January 2014.] Aslockton Cemetery.</ref>
The land for Aslockton Cemetery was purchased in 1869, at which time the only place of worship in the village was a [[Methodist]] chapel, which has since been converted into flats.<ref>Cranmer Local History Group. [http://cranmerlhg.org/articles/item.php?id=1 Retrieved 4 January 2014.] {{wayback|url=http://cranmerlhg.org/articles/item.php?id=1 |date=20140105002915 |df=y }} Aslockton Cemetery.</ref>


The present Grade II listed [[St. Thomas' Church, Aslockton|St Thomas's Church]] was designed by the architect Sir [[Reginald Blomfield]] and erected in 1890–92<ref>Nikolaus Pevsner: ''The Buildings of England:Nottinghamshire'' (Harmondsworth, Middx: Penguin, 1979), p. 59.</ref> in memory of a former vicar of Whatton, Thomas K. Hall, who drowned in February 1890 as ''RMS Quetta'' was wrecked off [[Queensland]] on her way to [[Thursday Island]]. His mother, Mrs Sophia E. Hall, paid for the church. The Quetta window on the north wall depicting the shipwreck was designed by Michael Stokes in 2002, as was the east window, dedicated to Cranmer, which has Jesus showing his hands to Doubting Thomas.<ref>Southwell & Nottingham Church History Project. [http://southwellchurches.nottingham.ac.uk/aslockton/hintro.php Retrieved 4 January 2014.]</ref> The church has a single bell in a [[bell-cot|bell cote]] at the west end.<ref>''A Short Guide to the Parish Churches of the Bingham Rural Deanery'', ed. J. Pickworth-Hutchinson. (Bingham: Deanery Chapter, 1963).</ref>
The present Grade II listed [[St. Thomas' Church, Aslockton|St Thomas's Church]] was designed by the architect Sir [[Reginald Blomfield]] and erected in 1890–92<ref>Nikolaus Pevsner: ''The Buildings of England:Nottinghamshire'' (Harmondsworth, Middx: Penguin, 1979), p. 59.</ref> in memory of a former vicar of Whatton, Thomas K. Hall, who drowned in February 1890 as ''RMS Quetta'' was wrecked off [[Queensland]] on her way to [[Thursday Island]]. His mother, Mrs Sophia E. Hall, paid for the church. The Quetta window on the north wall depicting the shipwreck was designed by Michael Stokes in 2002, as was the east window, dedicated to Cranmer, which has Jesus showing his hands to Doubting Thomas.<ref>Southwell & Nottingham Church History Project. [http://southwellchurches.nottingham.ac.uk/aslockton/hintro.php Retrieved 4 January 2014.]</ref> The church has a single bell in a [[bell-cot|bell cote]] at the west end.<ref>''A Short Guide to the Parish Churches of the Bingham Rural Deanery'', ed. J. Pickworth-Hutchinson. (Bingham: Deanery Chapter, 1963).</ref>
Line 40: Line 40:


==Amenities==
==Amenities==
Despite the village's small size, it had two pubs until recently: the ''Old Greyhound'' and the ''Cranmer Arms''. The ''Old Greyhound'' closed in May 2007, and the new owners have submitted a planning application [http://www.oldgreyhoundaslockton.com/newsItem.php?id=122] to turn the building into a restaurant. The village also has a small shop, which includes a post office and a dry-cleaning service. Aslockton Hall contains a nursing and residential home for the elderly.<ref>Care Quality Commission site. [http://www.cqc.org.uk/registration/1-113716801/278126 Retrieved 5 January 2014.]</ref>
Despite the village's small size, it had two pubs until recently: the ''Old Greyhound'' and the ''Cranmer Arms''. The ''Old Greyhound'' closed in May 2007, and the new owners have submitted a planning application [http://www.oldgreyhoundaslockton.com/newsItem.php?id=122] to turn the building into a restaurant. The village also has a small shop, which includes a post office and a dry-cleaning service. Aslockton Hall contains a nursing and residential home for the elderly.<ref>Care Quality Commission site. [http://www.cqc.org.uk/registration/1-113716801/278126 Retrieved 5 January 2014.] {{wayback|url=http://www.cqc.org.uk/registration/1-113716801/278126 |date=20140106040806 |df=y }}</ref>


The Aslockton windmill and bakehouse were situated on Mill Lane ({{gbmapping|SK739408}}).<ref>Aslockton and Whatton Local History Group (N.D.), ''The Changing Village'', Nottingham, p. 47.</ref> The mill was a wooden postmill, weatherboarded, on a brick roundhouse, with four single patent sails. The miller and baker in 1864 was Job Heathcote.<ref>White's Nottinghamshire Directory (1864)</ref>
The Aslockton windmill and bakehouse were situated on Mill Lane ({{gbmapping|SK739408}}).<ref>Aslockton and Whatton Local History Group (N.D.), ''The Changing Village'', Nottingham, p. 47.</ref> The mill was a wooden postmill, weatherboarded, on a brick roundhouse, with four single patent sails. The miller and baker in 1864 was Job Heathcote.<ref>White's Nottinghamshire Directory (1864)</ref>
Line 46: Line 46:
The village [[Aslockton railway station|railway station]] has regular services to [[Nottingham]], [[Spalding, Lincolnshire|Spalding]] and [[Skegness]]. A bus service operates to Bingham and Bottesford for onward bus connections.
The village [[Aslockton railway station|railway station]] has regular services to [[Nottingham]], [[Spalding, Lincolnshire|Spalding]] and [[Skegness]]. A bus service operates to Bingham and Bottesford for onward bus connections.


The local community quarterly newsletter, delivered free to every house, is called ''The Voice''.<ref>Aslockton Online. [http://aslockton.weebly.com/the-voice-newsletter.html Retrieved 5 January 2014.]</ref>
The local community quarterly newsletter, delivered free to every house, is called ''The Voice''.<ref>Aslockton Online. [http://aslockton.weebly.com/the-voice-newsletter.html Retrieved 5 January 2014.] {{wayback|url=http://aslockton.weebly.com/the-voice-newsletter.html |date=20140106032033 |df=y }}</ref>


==Sports==
==Sports==
Whatton and Aslockton have a joint cricket club said to date back before 1815.<ref>Cranmer Local History Digest, September 2005, p. 4. [http://cranmerlhg.org/downloads/LHD0103.pdf Retrieved 5 January 2014.]</ref> It has two senior teams playing in the South Nottinghamshire Cricket League and a colts team playing in the Newark Under 15s Premiership League.<ref>Aslockton Online. [http://aslockton.weebly.com/whatton--aslockton-cricket-club.html Retrieved 5 January 2014.]</ref> Aslockton Cranmer Football Club fields a variety of teams for adults and youngsters.<ref>Aslockton Online. [http://aslockton.weebly.com/aslockton-cranmer-fc-201314.html Retrieved 5 January 2014.]</ref> There is also a tennis club,<ref>Aslockton Online. [http://aslockton.weebly.com/aslockton-tennis-club.html Retrieved 5 January 2014.]</ref> and table tennis teams at the Thomas Cranmer Centre.<ref>Aslockton Online. [http://aslockton.weebly.com/uploads/1/4/8/6/14864718/voice_-_march_2013_1.pdf Retrieved 5 January 2014.]</ref>
Whatton and Aslockton have a joint cricket club said to date back before 1815.<ref>Cranmer Local History Digest, September 2005, p. 4. [http://cranmerlhg.org/downloads/LHD0103.pdf Retrieved 5 January 2014.]</ref> It has two senior teams playing in the South Nottinghamshire Cricket League and a colts team playing in the Newark Under 15s Premiership League.<ref>Aslockton Online. [http://aslockton.weebly.com/whatton--aslockton-cricket-club.html Retrieved 5 January 2014.]</ref> Aslockton Cranmer Football Club fields a variety of teams for adults and youngsters.<ref>Aslockton Online. [http://aslockton.weebly.com/aslockton-cranmer-fc-201314.html Retrieved 5 January 2014.] {{wayback|url=http://aslockton.weebly.com/aslockton-cranmer-fc-201314.html |date=20140106031903 |df=y }}</ref> There is also a tennis club,<ref>Aslockton Online. [http://aslockton.weebly.com/aslockton-tennis-club.html Retrieved 5 January 2014.]</ref> and table tennis teams at the Thomas Cranmer Centre.<ref>Aslockton Online. [http://aslockton.weebly.com/uploads/1/4/8/6/14864718/voice_-_march_2013_1.pdf Retrieved 5 January 2014.]</ref>


==Famous residents==
==Famous residents==

Revision as of 22:37, 19 October 2016

Aslockton
Population1,742 (2011)
OS grid referenceSK7440
Shire county
Region
CountryEngland
Sovereign stateUnited Kingdom
Post townNottingham
Postcode districtNG13
Dialling code01949
PoliceNottinghamshire
FireNottinghamshire
AmbulanceEast Midlands
List of places
UK
England
Nottinghamshire

Aslockton is a village and civil parish twelve miles (19 km) east of Nottingham, England and two miles east of Bingham on the north bank of the River Smite opposite Whatton in the Vale, and also adjacent to Bingham, Scarrington, Thoroton and Orston. It lies in the Rushcliffe borough of Nottinghamshire.[1] The population was recorded as 1,742 in the 2011 census.[2]

Toponomy

Appearing as Aslachetone in the Domesday survey of 1086;[3] the place name seems to contain an Old Norse personal name Aslakr + tūn (Old English) meaning an enclosure, a farmstead, a village, an estate, etc., so "Farm or settlement of a man called Aslakr".[4] There are 19 such place names (a Scandinavian personal name followed by tūn ) in Nottinghamshire, all of them in the Domesday survey, and all apparently ancient villages.[5]

Heritage

All that remains of the 12th-century Aslockton Castle are some the earthworks: the motte, called Cranmer's Mound, stands about 16 feet (5 m) high.[6]

Thomas Cranmer, Archbishop of Canterbury 1533–1553, was born in Aslockton and lived until the age of 14 in his parents' cottage, which still stands in Abbey Lane. The Archbishop Cranmer Church of England Primary School (an academy since 2014, having opened in 1968), the Cranmer Pre-School, and the local social facility, the Thomas Cranmer Centre, are named in his honour. (For secondary education, Toot Hill School in Bingham has a sixth form and academy status.)[7] Aslockton originally had its own Holy Trinity Chapel, a peculiar under the collegiate church of Southwell Minster rather than the diocesan bishop,[8] but this became ruined and was incorporated into a private house. Some remains of it can still be seen.[9] Cranmer and his father worshiped at the Church of St. John of Beverley, Whatton.[10] He has also given his name to a local prospect mound.[11]

The population of Aslockton was 171 in 1801, 273 in 1821, and 289 in 1831.[12] The village had a population of 363 in 1936.[13]

The land for Aslockton Cemetery was purchased in 1869, at which time the only place of worship in the village was a Methodist chapel, which has since been converted into flats.[14]

The present Grade II listed St Thomas's Church was designed by the architect Sir Reginald Blomfield and erected in 1890–92[15] in memory of a former vicar of Whatton, Thomas K. Hall, who drowned in February 1890 as RMS Quetta was wrecked off Queensland on her way to Thursday Island. His mother, Mrs Sophia E. Hall, paid for the church. The Quetta window on the north wall depicting the shipwreck was designed by Michael Stokes in 2002, as was the east window, dedicated to Cranmer, which has Jesus showing his hands to Doubting Thomas.[16] The church has a single bell in a bell cote at the west end.[17]

The parish forms part of the Cranmer group, with Hawksworth, Scarrington, Thoroton, Whatton and Orston. The incumbent is Rev. Bryony Wood. The vicarage is in Aslockton.[18]

Amenities

Despite the village's small size, it had two pubs until recently: the Old Greyhound and the Cranmer Arms. The Old Greyhound closed in May 2007, and the new owners have submitted a planning application [1] to turn the building into a restaurant. The village also has a small shop, which includes a post office and a dry-cleaning service. Aslockton Hall contains a nursing and residential home for the elderly.[19]

The Aslockton windmill and bakehouse were situated on Mill Lane (grid reference SK739408).[20] The mill was a wooden postmill, weatherboarded, on a brick roundhouse, with four single patent sails. The miller and baker in 1864 was Job Heathcote.[21]

The village railway station has regular services to Nottingham, Spalding and Skegness. A bus service operates to Bingham and Bottesford for onward bus connections.

The local community quarterly newsletter, delivered free to every house, is called The Voice.[22]

Sports

Whatton and Aslockton have a joint cricket club said to date back before 1815.[23] It has two senior teams playing in the South Nottinghamshire Cricket League and a colts team playing in the Newark Under 15s Premiership League.[24] Aslockton Cranmer Football Club fields a variety of teams for adults and youngsters.[25] There is also a tennis club,[26] and table tennis teams at the Thomas Cranmer Centre.[27]

Famous residents

See also

References

  1. ^ Rushcliffe Retrieved 7 February 2016.
  2. ^ "Civil Parish population 2011". Neighbourhood Statistics. Office for National Statistics. Retrieved 3 April 2016.
  3. ^ J. Morris, (ed.) Domesday Book: Nottinghamshire (Chichester, 1977),1:57 inter alia
  4. ^ J. Gover, A. Mawer & F. M. Stenton (eds.), Place Names of Nottinghamshire (Cambridge, 1940), p. 219; A. D. Mills, Dictionary of English Place-Names (Oxford, 2002), p. 22; E. Ekwall, Concise Oxford Dictionary of English Place-names (Oxford, 1960), p. 16;V. Watts, Cambridge Dictionary of English Place-names (Cambridge, 2002), p. 23
  5. ^ J. Gover et al, p. xviii.
  6. ^ "Aslockton Castle". CastleUK. Archived from the original on 3 November 2007. Retrieved 2 December 2007. {{cite web}}: Unknown parameter |deadurl= ignored (|url-status= suggested) (help)
  7. ^ Toot Hill School Retrieved 7 February 2016.
  8. ^ A Vision of Britain. Retrieved 4 January 2014.
  9. ^ Rushcliffe Conservation Area.Retrieved 4 January 2014.; Cranmer Local History Group. Retrieved 4 January 2014. Template:Wayback Whatton in 1792.
  10. ^ The Nottinghamshire Village Book. Compiled from materials submitted by Women's Institutes in the County (Newbury/Newark: Countryside Books/NFWI), p. 11.
  11. ^ Cranmer Local History Group.. Retrieved 4 January 2014.
  12. ^ William White: History, Gazetteer and Directory of Nottinghamshire... (Sheffield, 1832), p. 479. [https://books.google.hu/books?id=Q3cHAAAAQAAJ&printsec=frontcover#v=onepage&q&f=false
  13. ^ Cranmer Local History Group. Retrieved 4 January 2014.[permanent dead link] The page gives details of the 1936 entry in Kelly's Directory.
  14. ^ Cranmer Local History Group. Retrieved 4 January 2014. Template:Wayback Aslockton Cemetery.
  15. ^ Nikolaus Pevsner: The Buildings of England:Nottinghamshire (Harmondsworth, Middx: Penguin, 1979), p. 59.
  16. ^ Southwell & Nottingham Church History Project. Retrieved 4 January 2014.
  17. ^ A Short Guide to the Parish Churches of the Bingham Rural Deanery, ed. J. Pickworth-Hutchinson. (Bingham: Deanery Chapter, 1963).
  18. ^ Aslockton Online. Retrieved 5 January 2014.
  19. ^ Care Quality Commission site. Retrieved 5 January 2014. Template:Wayback
  20. ^ Aslockton and Whatton Local History Group (N.D.), The Changing Village, Nottingham, p. 47.
  21. ^ White's Nottinghamshire Directory (1864)
  22. ^ Aslockton Online. Retrieved 5 January 2014. Template:Wayback
  23. ^ Cranmer Local History Digest, September 2005, p. 4. Retrieved 5 January 2014.
  24. ^ Aslockton Online. Retrieved 5 January 2014.
  25. ^ Aslockton Online. Retrieved 5 January 2014. Template:Wayback
  26. ^ Aslockton Online. Retrieved 5 January 2014.
  27. ^ Aslockton Online. Retrieved 5 January 2014.
  28. ^ Grantham Matters Retrieved 5 September 2016.