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Grassthorpe

Coordinates: 53°12′00″N 0°48′32″W / 53.200°N 0.809°W / 53.200; -0.809
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Grassthorpe
Town Street, Grassthorpe
Grassthorpe is located in Nottinghamshire
Grassthorpe
Grassthorpe
Location within Nottinghamshire
Civil parish
District
Shire county
Region
CountryEngland
Sovereign stateUnited Kingdom
Post townNEWARK
Postcode districtNG23
PoliceNottinghamshire
FireNottinghamshire
AmbulanceEast Midlands
UK Parliament
List of places
UK
England
Nottinghamshire
53°12′00″N 0°48′32″W / 53.200°N 0.809°W / 53.200; -0.809

Grassthorpe is a small village and civil parish in the Newark and Sherwood district of Nottinghamshire, England. Population details are included in the civil parish of Weston.

A former chapel of St James was in the village. It was converted into a cottage and barn during the reign of Elizabeth I.[1] There is also a disused watermill.[citation needed]

In the 1660s Gresthorpe Hall (ie Grassthorpe) was rented to Robert Shawe who supported the Quaker William Smith of Besthorpe (d. 1672) in speaking to 150 people of the ‘lowest and meanest’ sort there. Smith was allowed to attend by his Nottingham gaoler Robert White causing a sharp complaint in August 1669 from Rev John Hewes, the vicar of Normanton.

There are three windmills recorded at Grassthorpe.

  1. A post mill was moved to Tuxford in 1814.
  2. A composite post mill was moved in 1870, again to Tuxford.
  3. A tower windmill in an orchard belonged to the Seels family. The miller in 1844 was Thomas Seels; the mill passed to Samuel Seels, who was 82 in 1935. The windmill was 3 storeys high, 14-foot (4.3 m) wide at the base, having 2 pairs of stones and dressing machinery. The top of the mill was pulled down by engine in 1934. At some time previously the sails had been blown down, supposedly being "too heavy".[citation needed]

References

  1. ^ Brown, Cornelius. 1896.A History of Nottinghamshire. Chapter 12.

Media related to Grassthorpe at Wikimedia Commons 53°12′00″N 0°48′32″W / 53.200°N 0.809°W / 53.200; -0.809