We recently came across an 1806 lease of possession (conveyance). It’s from Grantham, so slightly outside the Loveden area, but it contains a rather unusual name. Posthumous Bullivant was born to Elizabeth in Oakham in August 1778. His father, Daniel Bullivant, a surgeon and apothecary, had died three months before the birth. Daniel and Elizabeth (nee Freer) had married in Oakham in 1769. In 1797, when Posthumous was 18 or 19 (so not of age) his guardians – John Freer of Oakham and James Bullivant of Wymondham – signed articles of clerkship, making him an articled clerk (effectively an apprentice) to Edmund Smith Godfrey of Newark, to train as an attorney, solicitor and conveyancer for 5 years. Posthumous qualified around 1802 and moved to Grantham. It was common for solicitors to take on official part-time roles and he was appointed clerk and treasurer of the Grantham to Nottingham Turnpike Trust. In April 1806 he bought the property he’d been renting in Grantham (see below) and in October that year he married Ann Hussey Coles at St Wulframs Church. The first part of the conveyance reads: This indenture made the fourth day of April in the forty sixth year of the […]
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We wrote some years ago about the branch of the Robinson family at Brandon Lodge and mentioned that William, the younger brother of Richard Robinson (1834-1870) had died aged 24. This newspaper story explains why….
In April 1938 the Hough on the Hill Annual Parish Meeting discussed air raid precautions and elected the following officials: Air Raid Warden: William Price First Aid Party: Harry Porter, Charles Bembridge, J Johnson and T Gilliatt First Aid Post Staff: Cecil Bellamy and William Hoyes Ambulance Driver: Rev C H D Moore After war broke out in 1939 more local people became involved. The 1939 national register was later annotated with war service details. Not all have beenreleased, but the following are available for Hough on the Hill parish: Harry Porter, a tractor driver, was living in Hough in 1939. He served with one of the National Defence Companies (NDC), who were ex-soldiers who had volunteered for home service as part of the Territorial Army. The NDC were called up in 1939 and joined Home Service Battalions, guarding key points and prisoner of war camps. Thomas Henry Gillat (1890-1972) a farmer who’d been born in Australia was an ARP warden in Gelston. George Henry Gibson (1900-) was brought up in Marston but later lived in Gelston where he was an ironstone worker and served in the ARP. Charles Henry Dodwell Moore (1872-1942) had been the vicar […]
Holy Cross House was between High Street and Old Lincoln Road in Caythorpe, with the back of the house opposite South Parade and the Spar shop. It was approached by a drive along at what is now Holy Cross Gardens. It was believed to have been built in the early 17th century, with a parapet and extra windows added later. Lt Col Edmund Royds and his wife Rachel (daughter of Col Fane of Fulbeck Hall) lived at Holy Cross from 1900 to 1920 after having had a larger Queen Anne style wing added to the building. In 1944 the 1st Airborne Signals Regiment was based in and around Caythorpe prior to the attack on Arnhem and used Holy Cross House as their Headquarters. After the war, Holy Cross was bought by John William Oxby, a district councillor. In 1949 he sold one of the outhouses to the village for £2,000 to use a war memorial hall (now village hall). Oxby seems to have rented the house out, until his death in 1959. In March 1961 the property was sold off (see newspaper extract). And around 1963 construction of the Holy Cross housing estate began in the grounds and the house […]
How did people in local villages get about in 1873? Roads Apart from the A1, the local road network in the 1870s wasn’t that different to today. Originally, they’d been maintained by each parish, but the 1862 Highways Act had transferred the responsibility for most roads to the County Surveyor. Roads would have been made using (to some degree) Macadam techniques, such as medium-sized stones at the bottom and smaller stones on top. They’d be dusty in dry weather as they wouldn’t have been sealed with tar (tar-macadam, i.e. ‘tarmac’) until the 20th century. People without their own horse would have relied on the railway (see below) or local carriers. The latter were men with horse-drawn wagons who provided a regular service, usually just on market days, from the villages to the towns, and then back later the same day. A better service than many villages enjoy today; and they always dropped off and collected at a pub! In 1873 the carriers to/from Grantham (and their drop off point) included: Barkston – Mr Shelbourn (Saturdays, Fox & Hounds) Brant Broughton– Mr Peck (Saturdays, Fox & Hounds) Caythorpe – Mr Codd (Saturdays, Blue Pig) / Mr Baker (Daily, Angel and Royal) […]
We had a look for what was happening in the area in January 1873, 150 years ago. This story appeared in the Grantham Journal on 1st Feb 1873. Richard Morley (1818-1897) was a farmer, living at the Old Hall in Leadenham. He was also the steward for Colonel Reeve of Leadenham House. Richard and his wife Anne had 9 children. Their 14-year-old daughter in the story was Mary Gertrude Morley, born in Bassingham in 1858. She did not marry, but became a self-employed midwife, qualifying with the London Obstetrical Society in 1899 and the Midwives Roll 5 years later. On the 1901 census she was looking after the wife of a Tynemouth shipowner. In 1911 she was caring for a vicar’s baby in London. She retired to Bede House, a block of 1930s apartments on Putney Hill, London. She died in Putney in 1948, aged 90.
On about 16th April 2019 the lead was stolen from the chancel roof at All Saints Church, Hough on the Hill. The PCC is assessing the damage and appealing to the local community to be vigilant about the lead remaining on the church. Any suspicious activity in the vicinity of the church should be reported to the Police on 999 or 101 as appropriate. Or alert the church wardens, Jill Lewis and John Lord.
A ‘beacon of light’ was lit on the Lincoln edge near Hough on the Hill at 7pm on 11th November as part of the Battle’s Over events marking the centenary of the end of the Great War.
A ceremony was held outside Belton Church on 11th November to re-dedicate the newly restored war memorial plaque and gates. A number of relatives of the Belton men who served in the Great War attended.