Structural
 |
| St. Mary and All Saints' church. |
Standing Buildings
The area around the Market Place which is a medieval planned feature,
is a designated conservation area, the Buttercross of 1861 standing at
its centre.
The oldest building is the church of St. Mary and All Saints parts of
which can be stylistically dated to the 13th century. It is first mentioned
as having a rector in 1226 and it has always been considered a wealthy
benefice. Godfrey's Notes on the Churches of Nottinghamshire: Hundred
of Bingham published by Phillimore 1907, Nikolaus Pevsner's Buildings
of England: Nottinghamshire (2nd edition 1979 revised by Elizabeth
Williamson), Adrian Henstock's History and Guide to Bingham Parish
Church published by the Friends of Bingham Church 1994, and Tony Player's
unpublished assignment for his M.A. in Historic Buildings Conservation
for the University of Nottingham (December 1991) are useful sources.
The rest of the buildings differ from the church, being of local red brick
rather than stone. Most of them date from the 18th and 19th centuries.
These were originally roofed with thatch but this was replaced by slate
and pantiles with the coming of the railways. Three buildings which were
erected as non-conformist chapels still survive: the Wesleyan Methodist
of 1818 still serves as such but plans to replace it with a new church
are well advanced; the Primitive Methodist also of 1818 is now
a public house and the Independent Wesleyan Methodist of 1877 is a private
house.
Victorian church and chapel schools survive - the former on East Street
(1845) as a church centre and the latter on Kirk Hill (1850) as a private
house.
The severely truncated railway station buildings of the 1850s by T.C.Hine
are a shadow of their former selves but the courthouse and police cells
of a similar date serve as the town council offices on Church Street
Ruins, Earthworks and archaeological remains
 |
| A plan of the earthworks in Crow Close by Hadrian
Allcroft. |
Traces of a henge monument were found to the north of the town centre
and covered with a metre of clay in 1972 for protection. It had been deliberately
vandalised in the early part of the 20lh century on the instructions of
the rector.
A major Roman road - the Fosse Way - forms the western boundary of the
parish, meeting the settlement or fort of Margidunum at the N.W. apex of
the parish. The site of the wapentake meeting place is evident to the west
side of the Fosse Way on the Toot Hill ridge.
One of the earliest so-called "deserted medieval villages" was
identified at Crow Close a quarter of a mile to the east of the historic
core of the town. It is a scheduled ancient monument and until it is excavated
the reason for its abandonment will not be certain.
Remains of Roman habitation have been found adjacent to the site.
Landscape
The soil is Grade 1 agricultural land and for the most part heavy clay.
It was cleared early for crop production, having hardly any woodland remaining
today. For large building undertakings in medieval times the townspeople
were awarded an allotment in Sherwood Forest at Blidworth. There are no
major watercourses in the parish but before extensive drainage was carried
out in the medieval period the area of Parson's Hill was an island in a
swamp or lake, the Saxon settlement being sandwiched between the hill and
Toot Hill which forms a ridge to the south. The A52 and the railway from
Nottingham to Grantham run from west to east bisecting the parish and housing
forms a linear pattern within both these constrictions.
|