BoAr:White’s1882:BourneText
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R.J.PENHEY
The Description of Bourne from
History, Gazetteer and Directory of Lincoln etc.
by William White
1882
Bourn or Bourne, is a well-built and pleasant
market town, situated on the west side of the Car Dyke and the Fens, 10 miles
N.E. by N. of Stamford, and 9 miles S. of Falkingham. It is in the Parts of
Kesteven, Bourn union, county court district, and petty sessional division, Aveland wapentake, Bourn polling district of South
Lincolnshire, and Aveland (No.2) rural deanery of Lincoln archdeaconry. Its rateable value is
£20,581. Its population increased from 1664 in 1801, to 3717 in 1851, to 3850
in 1871 and to 3760 in 1881. It comprises 9352 acres of land, including the
hamlets of Dyke and Cawthorpe, from 1 to 2 miles N.; and Bourn North and South
Fens and Dyke Fen, extending 5 miles E. of the town, and containing more than
5000 acres of land, formerly a low swampy morass, but now enclosed, drained and
cultivated. Cawthorpe has 98, and Dyke and Dyke Fen 269 inhabitants. Bourn has
its name from a rivulet, or bourn, which rises from a copious spring on the
west side of the parish and turns three mills in the short course to the Bourn
Eau. The Car Dyke, which passes the east side of the town, is of Roman
construction and was formerly navigable, but has not been used for more than100
years, and is now little more than a ditch. This canal was navigable until
1860, when the section between Spalding, Bourne and Essendine of the Stamford, Sutton
Bridge, and Lynn Railway,
was completed, since which the navigation has been entirely neglected. Bourne
is now connected with Sleaford by a branch line, opened in January 1872. The
parish was enclosed under an Act of the 6th of George III. The largest
proprietors of the soil are the Marquis of Exeter, lord of the manor of Bourn
with its members; and W.A. Pochin, Esq., lord of the manor of Bourn Abbots; but
a great part belongs to Lord Aveland, Sir P.D.P.Duncombe, Bart, and the Ostler,
Hopkinson, Bettinson, Freeman, and other families. One of the old farm houses
in Austerby hamlet was the manor house of Bourn Abbots. The Court Leet and the
Great Court Baron of Bourn with its members are held annually, at the Town
Hall, in May; Joseph Phillips, Esq., solicitor, Stamford, is the steward. The customary court
of the manor of Bourn Abbots with its members is held annually in May, at the
Angel hotel; J.L. Bell, Esq., is the steward. In 1841, an Act of Parliament was
obtained for the better drainage of Bourn North Pen and Dyke Fen, consisting of
about 4000 acres, and the commission erected a steam engine of 30-horse power
at Guthramcote, to pump the drain water from the lower to the higher levels, so
as to run off into the Forty-foot drain. The Bourn South Pen, containing about
900 acres, has been formed into a drainage district by a Provisional Order of
the Enclosure Commissioners, and confirmed by a Local Drainage Supplementary
Act in 1871. J.L. Bell, Esq., is clerk to both trusts. In
October, 1880, a portion of the bank of the river Glen gave way, and over 3000
acres of South Fen were under water for several weeks, causing many thousand
pounds' damage. The market, held every Thursday, is well supplied with corn,
provisions, and stock; and here are four animal fairs, held on the Thursday
nearest April 7, May 6, September 30, and October 29. The Christmas Fat Stock
Show was established in 1823. The town of Bourn
is mostly in four streets, branching east, south, west, and north from the
Market Place, and its appearance has been much improved of late years by the
erection of villa residences on the North
Road. The Gas Works were erected in 1840, at the
cost of £2000, by a company of proprietors in £10 shares, and enlarged in 1868
at a further outlay of £100, the amount of the shares being increased to £12.
There are 56 public lamps. John Leonard Bell, Esq., is secretary. A Water Works
Company was established here in 1856, for the purpose of supplying the town
with water by means of artesian wells. Mr.S.W.Andrews is
secretary. A handsome fountain was erected in the Market Place by public
subscription in 1860, in memory of John Lely Ostler, Esq.
The
Corn Exchange and Public Hall, standing close to the Market Place, built in
1870, by a company of shareholders, at a cost of about £1200, is a commodious
brick building, with Ancaster stone dressings, containing a large room used as
a corn exchange, and as a public hall for assemblies, entertainments, &C.,
and also a club, billiard, and card room. John L.Bell, Esq., is secretary.
This
enumeration of the parishes in Bourn Union shows their territorial extent and
population in 1881:-
[
C = chapelry: H = hamlet: P = parish: T = township. ]
|
Corby Sub-District . . . . . . . . . . . . .
|
.
. . . . . . . . . .
|
Aslackby
Sub-District. . . . . . . . .
|
|
Parish
. . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Careby, P
Little Bytham, P
Castle Bytham, P
.Castle Bytham, P
.Holywell, C
.Aunby, H
. Counthorpe, H
Creeton, P
Swayfield, P
Swinstead, P
Corby [Glen], P
Irnham, P
Total
|
Acres
1454
1010
}
}7760
}
}
1003
1300
1330
2726
3520
20,103
|
Pop.
168
305
654
63
63
73
51
253
349
783
284
3046
|
. . . . . . . . .
|
Parish
Kirkby Underwood, P
Aslackby, P
Falkingham [sic], P
Laughton, P
Horbling, P
Billingborough, P
Sempringham, P
.. Sempringham, T
.. Birthorpe, H
.. Pointon, H
Dowsby, P
Rippingale, P
Dunsby, P
Total
|
Acres
1340
3934
1861
1136
2620
2020
}
}3480
}
1809
2740
2965
23,905
|
Pop.
213
455
576
82
501
1189
85
57
438
163
551
223
4,533
|
|
Bourn Sub-District. .
|
.
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ...
|
…Deeping
Sub-District. . . . . . . . .
|
|
Hacconby,
P
Morton, P
Edenham, P
Bourn, P
Witham-on-the-Hill, P
.Witham-on-the-Hill, T.
.Manthorpe, H
.Toft & Lound, H
Carlby, P
Thurlby, P
Total
|
3220
3390
6844
9352
2150
}2060
}
1020
5070
33,106
|
412
950
563
3760
195
96
168
163
814
7121
|
. . . .. . . .
|
Baston,
P
Langtoft, P
Market Deeping, P
Deeping St. James, P.
Total
Grand Total
|
3520
2520
1290
6470
13,800
90,800
|
774
584
1212
1648
4218
18,918
|
The
Union comprises 30 parishes, extending over
90,914 acres of land, and having 19,979 inhabitants in 1871. The total average
annual expenditure of the 30 parishes, &c., for the support of the poor,
during the three years preceding the formation of the Union,
in 1836, was £8506. In 1838, their total expenditure was only £4256; but
in the year ended Lady-day, 1870, it amounted to £11,193. The Union Workhouse
was built in 1836, at the cost of about £7000, and has room for 300 inmates.
The Board of Guardians meet every Thursday: Thomas
Lawrence, Esq., is chairman, and Major Parker and
Mr. Stephen Smith, vice-chairmen: John Leonard
Bell, Esq., union clerk and superintendent registrar; Mr.
Hugh Hobson registrar of marriages; and Mr.Edgar
and Mrs Fanny S. Jenner are master and matron of the Workhouse. James Burwood-Watson, Esq., is medical officer of
health for the Bourn Union, and Mr. Frederick
Vintner is sanitary inspector. The relieving officers are Mr. W.R Hodgkin, for Bourn and Aslackby district, and Mr.W.Conington,
for Deeping district. The registrars of birth and deaths are Messrs. Thomas Ball, for Bourn; H.Willerton, for Corby; Mark Mansfield, for Aslackby; and William Connington,
for Deeping district. The medical officers and their districts are James
Burwood-Watson, Esq., for Bourn; George Morris Adams, Esq., for Rippingale;
Thomas Blasson, Esq., for Billingborough; Joseph Edward Collingood, Esq., for
Corby and Castle Bytham; and William B. Deacon, Esq., for Market Deeping. The
Rev. Hugh McNeill Mansfield is chaplain.
Bourn County Court District
comprises all the parishes, &c., in Bourn Union, except Corby
and Swafleld [sic], which are in Grantham county court district. The court is
held monthly at the Town Hall. Francis Barrow, Esq.,
is the judge; John Leonard Bell,
Esq., registrar and high bailiff; and Mr. George
Henry Elvidge, assistant bailiff.
The
Quarter Sessions for the Parts of Kesteven are held here on Tuesdays, alternately
with Sleaford, at the Town Hall or Sessions House, a large and handsome
building, with an Ionic portico, erected in 1821-2, near the site of the old
one, at a cost of £2500. Petty Sessions are held here on alternate Thursdays.
Here is an Association for the Prosecution of Felons, and S.W. Andrews, Esq.,
is clerk.
Roman
coins have been found here, and a tesselated [sic] pavement was discovered
about the year 1776, on the Park Farm. In Edward the
Confessor's time, the Castle
of Brunn or Bourn, was
the seat of Leofric. It was afterwards held by Hereward, on whose death,
without issue, it was given by William Rufus to Walter Fitz Gilbert, but from
the reign of Henry II. till that of Edward III., the manor was held by the
Lords Wake, of Wilsford, who are said to have occupied Bourn Castle,
of which no traces are now extant overground, though tradition says it was not
destroyed till the time of Oliver Cromwell. It stood on the site now occupied
by the workhouse, and of its foundations, and those of the drawbridge, were
discovered during excavations made in 1865. An Abbey was founded here by
Baldwin FitzGilbert or FitzGiselbert, about 1138, for Augustinian Monks. It was
dedicated to St. Peter and St. Paul,
and was valued at £167 14s. 6d. per annum at the Dissolution, when it was
granted to Richard Cotton, Esq. It stood near the
church, and the farm house in Bourn Park,
formerly occupied by the Pochins, stands on the site of some of its walls, and
appears to have been part of the original building. Sir Thomas Trollope, Bart.,
left his estate here to his nephew, the late George Pochin, Esq., by whom the
abbey house was erected in 1764. The town suffered severely from two fires, in
1605 and 1637, the whole of Manor
Street being burnt down in the former, and the greater
part of Eastgate in the latter year. The eminent statesman, William Cecil, Lord Burleigh and Marquis of Exeter, [sic] was born at Bourn in 1520, and was
buried at Stamford,
under a magnificent monument m 1598. He was owner of a great part of the
parish, now held by his descendant, the present Marquis
of Exeter, of Burleigh, in Northamptonshire. The Rev.
Dr. William Dodd was also a native of Bourn, where he was born in 1729. His
father was vicar of the parish, and brought him up to the church, which he lived
to honour by his erudition, and to disgrace by his dissipation. Having
committed forgery on Lord Chesterfield, for the sum of £4200, he was hanged at
Tyburn, June 27, 1777.
Bourn
Church, formerly in the appropriation of the Abbey, and having once the same
patron saints (St. Peter and St Paul), is a large and handsome fabric, having
once two square towers at the west end, but now only one, in which the six
bells are hung. The edifice was repaired and re-pewed in 1840 by subscription
and the profits of a bazaar. The chancel was restored and the nave much
improved in 1855. The north aisle was rebuilt on an enlarged plan, and the
tower restored in 1870, at a cost of £1200, raised by private efforts and the
Sunday offertory; and a new organ was at the same time purchased for £300, and
placed in the chancel. The fabric comprises the lofty chancel, a nave with
aisles, and a chapel on the south side. A new reredos of excellent design and
workmanship was erected in 1867 by the late vicar,
at whose expense a beautiful east window of stained glass, representing the
Crucifixion and the four evangelists was inserted in 1863, in memory of his two
sons. The church contains two other fine stained glass windows, illustrating
the Resurrection and Ascension, presented by Edward
Hardwicke and Henry Dove, Esqs. The western front
displays some fine specimens of architecture, as old as the reign of Edward
III. The vicarage, which was valued in K.B. at £8, and now at £600 per annum,
is in the gift of the Executors of J.L. Ostler, Esq.,
and incumbency of the Rev. George Eyre Massey,
B.A., surrogate, who resides at the Vicarage House, which was erected in 1878
out of the materials of the old Abbey House. The Wesleyans erected a large and
handsome chapel here in 1841, at a cost of £1000, in lieu of their old chapel,
now used as a Sunday school. The Baptist chapel is a spacious edifice, built in
1835, at the cost of £1700, in lieu of an old chapel now converted into a
school. Here is also an independent chapel, erected in 1847. Bourn Cemetery, on the Thurlby Road, comprises four
acres; and about half of it and one of its two chapels, were consecrated by the
Bishop, in March 1856, since which, all the other burial grounds in the parish
have been closed. The cost of the cemetery was about £2000. John L.Bell, Esq.,
is clerk to the Board. The Free Grammar School and Almshouses, adjoining the
churchyard, were founded in 1636 by William
Trollope, Esq., who bequeathed a yearly rent-charge of £70 out of the lands
called Saint Lombarde, in Weston, in trust to pay £30 yearly
to the schoolmaster, £30 to six poor and aged men occupying the almshouses, and
to expend the remainder in repairing the buildings, and in finding clothing or
fuel for the almspeople. Lord Kesteven and the Vicar of Bourn are the trustees.
The Rev. Henry Robert Canham, B.A., curate of Dowsby, is master of the school,
and teaches Latin gratuitously, but charges for all other branches of learning.
Robert Harrington, in 1655, bequeathed to the minister, churchwardens, and
parishioners of Bourn, a yearly rent-charge of £20 out of the Holme and Dobbin
Woods, in Witham-on-the Hill, for weekly
distributions of bread among the poor; and all his lands and tenements in
Leytonstone, in Essex; The yearly rents thereof to be distributed among the
poor of Bourn, at the discretion of the trustees, who for some years were
unable to obtain possession of the charity property, which comprises several
cottages, houses, and other buildings, and 31A. 1R. 6P. of land, the whole
producing a yearly income of about £530 per annum; but as there is a debt upon
the estate, the trustees only receive about £420 per annum. They distribute
yearly £126, in quarterly payments of £1. lOs. each to 21 poor persons not
receiving parochial relief; £84 among 12 widows and 6 poor men; £63 in
half-yearly payments of 5s. each to the deserving poor; and £105 in coals and
clothing at Christmas. They also pay a yearly salary of £42 to the master of
the National School, which was built by subscription
in 1829. Here is also an infant school, built in 1856, on land given by the
late J.L. Ostler, Esq., who built a school at Dyke in 1854.
The town has a Mechanics' Institution, with a good library. In 1853 Catherine
Digby bequeathed the dividends of £500 three per cent consoles, to be paid
yearly to the organist of the parish church. At the enclosure two allotments in
the North and South Fens, comprising 4A. 3R.
25P., were awarded to the poor of Bourn, and they are divided into 31 gardens,
let to poor men at low rents. pursuant to the enclosure award, any of the
parishioners, renting less than £8 a year, are allowed to graze cattle in the
parish lanes and roads, at the discretion of the vestry. By the award on the
enclosure of the North Fen, in 1770, 1A. IR. 19P. of land was allotted [sic] to
the poor householders and commoners of the Eastgate
Ward, in Bourn parish, in lieu of two pieces of land given to them by an
unknown donor. It is let for £7 per annum, which is mostly distributed in
bread. The Hereward Lodge of Freemasons (No.1232) is held at the Angel Hotel
on the third Thursday in every month. The Odd Fellows and Foresters have each a
lodge in the town; and there is a Savings Bank, with deposits amounting to
£15,265 13s. 4d.; and also a self- aiding Medical Club, established in 1840,
and now hang about 3000 members (men, women, and children) residing within ten
miles of Bourn, who for small annual payments are provided with medical and
surgical assistance when needed. Mr. Leslie F. Evans is the secretary. The
Charity for the Relief of married Lying-in Women was instituted in 1825, and
subscribers of 8s. per annum are entitled to recommend two poor women for its
benefits. Mrs. Benstead is the matron. Here is a Provident Association,
established in 1837, and registered in 1351. A Fire Brigade, organised in 1850,
is managed by a committee, consisting of the churchwardens and overseers for
the time being, together with the local insurance agents. Mr. Thomas Todd is
the engineer. The Bourn Agricultural Society was instituted for the encouragement
of industry, skill, and good conduct amongst farm labourers and servants. J.L.
Bell, Esq., hon. secretary.
The Bourn Temperance Café and Working Men's
Institute was formed in February 1880, and Mr. Geo. Hy. Elvidge is honorary
secretary. The foundation stone of a new building was laid on August 16, 1831,
in South Street
by the Hon. Miss H.D. Willoughby. The total expense will be about £900, raised
partly in shares and partly by loan. A Subscription Reading Room and Library is
held at Mr. J.F. Morris's, West
Street. The Savings Bank, established in 1340, has
deposits amounting to £17,000, belonging to about 600 depositors. Mr. J.L. Bell
is the actuary. The School Board was formed in 1374, and now consists of Mr.
S.W. Andrews (chairman), Mr.William R. Wherry, and Messrs. T.W. Mays, Chas.
Glover, and J.B. Roberts. A School with master's residence was erected in Star Lane in 1877,
at a cost of about £5000, and another, also with teacher's residence, was built
in North Fen, in 1877, at a cost of about £1000. The Bourn Bowling Green has
been formed near West Street
by a company with a capital of £100. Mr. John Jones is Honorary secretary. The Post, Money Order, and Telegraph Office
and Savings Bank, a handsome building, erected in 1880, is in Market Place, and
Mr. James Thomas Pearce is postmaster. Letters via Peterborough. There is a Wall Letter Box in
Eastgate, which is cleared at 7.15, week days only.
Letters
for Tongue End should be addressed via
Spalding.