Overview
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| Bentinck Memorial: Erected to the memory of
Lord George Bentinck, brother of the Fifth Duke of Portland. Stands
in the middle of the Market Place (photo: Denis Hill). |
Mansfield is an ancient Nottinghamshire market town, which, by mid-Victorian
times, became the county's second largest township. Archaeological finds
indicate that settlements have been here since Neolithic times, while
numerous finds, including the remains of a villa, show that there was
a Roman settlement in the area. Several local names indicate both Danish
and Saxon influence.
Although the town lies on the western edge of Sherwood Forest it is
located at about the halfway point of its north-south boundaries and
occupies a similar prominence within the county, leaving the town in
a strong strategic position. Consequently a network of roads evolved
that radiated from the town offering direct routes to Nottingham, Worksop,
Chesterfield and Newark; with the latter route providing easy access
to the Great North Road. The town also lay on the eastern side of the
king’s highway that joined Nottingham and Bolsover Castles. A further
network of minor roads emanated from the major routes, which consequently
gave easy access for countless villages and small towns to Mansfield.
Having become the hub of a network of roads the town obtained a market
charter in 1227 and still holds regular markets on most days of the week.
Being a trading centre for a much wider community it was able to expand
its industry base during the medieval period into textiles, milling,
quarrying and founding amongst other necessary support industries.
With Mansfield being relatively central to Sherwood Forest it became
a medieval lodging place for royalty. As early as 1130 the Pipe Roll
indicate that the King had a Chamber at Mansfield. Both King John and
Edward II stayed at their palace in Clipstone, on the outskirts of Mansfield.
Above the town, on Berry Hill, is a site known as ‘King’s Stand’, indicating
a location from which royal parties would watch a hunt.
The medieval manor of Mansfield extended much further than the parochial
boundaries to become one of the largest crown manors within the country,
swallowing up many north Notts villages. However there was little concentration
of dwellings, within the manor, prior to the establishment of Mansfield
market.
From this early medieval base local industry became more established,
with a mix of agriculture, manufacturing and commerce. Locally grown
hops along with nearby coal enabled a large and thriving malt industry
to develop along with the establishment of water powered corn mills to
compliment numerous windmills. The leather and wool industry flourished
thanks to the rich grazing grounds to be found in and around Sherwood
Forest. While commerce also went from strength to strength, revolving
around the market.
By the eighteenth century the Framework Knitting industry arrived in
Mansfield introducing a new occupation amongst an already established
industry, supplying work for hundreds of people and consequently enabling
the growth of a mechanised spinning and doubling industry. Ten new mills
were built along the river Maun and the Lady Brook. By the nineteenth
century even the old water powered corn mills converted to the textile
trade. These mills not only supplied the local industry but turned local
manufacturers into exporters.
By 1824 the majority of this expanding town’s 8,300 residents lived
within a 300metre radius of the market place, thus making the town a
tightly packed community with substantial expanses of open spaces surrounding
it. This concentrated area of Mansfield consisted of over 60 yards and
courts most of which were overcrowded and falling into disrepair.
The year 1823 saw the establishment of an Improvement Commission, which
started with great gusto to revive the heart of the town by pulling down
dilapidated buildings to create a new market place, relieve congestion,
clear slums and build a town hall. New houses on the outskirts of the
town were constructed and various building regulations were imposed throughout
the whole town. However this only became a temporary fix to a wider spread
problem. Unfortunately after this initial outburst the Commission relaxed
its pace and as a result of the town experiencing a population expansion,
greater than the national average, the many remaining yards and alleys
became more overcrowded and dilapidated, resulting in a lower mortality
rate.
During the era of canal building much thought was given to the isolation
of Mansfield from this network. After years of deliberation it was decided
that it would be more economical to construct a tramline from the Pinxton
canal wharf, into Mansfield rather than constructing a canal. Consequently
in 1819 Mansfield had been connected to the canal network by a tramline
with horse drawn trucks. Although this small tramline never exported
as much as it imported into the town (in terms of weight) it greatly
aided the export of both malt and stone hence bolstering their industry.
It also proved to be an enormous asset to the local industry in that
it increased the supply of both coal and iron, therefore enabling rapid
expansion.
Neither did it take long to realise the potential of this rail link
for passenger transport, primarily to carry people to the Mansfield market
each Thursday. Consequently not only did the rail company and passengers
benefit but the market traders increased business.
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| Stanton Mill: Eighteenth century mill used
for a variety of businesses, Bath Lane (Photo: Denis Hill) |
Whilst the mills retained their economic strength throughout the Victorian
era the remainder of Mansfield’s industry saw vast changes. After several
centuries the malting industry diminished to just one malt kiln by the
end of the Victorian era but had become complimented by a major brewer
in 1855. Framework Knitting was hit by a series of depressions and consequently
totally disappeared and was replaced by factory production of garments.
Founding and precision engineering rose to prominence within the town,
powered by coal and iron from nearby mines. Moulding sand was excavated
locally and proved to be of such good quality that it became an export
industry. Towards the end of this era coal mining also became prominent
within the area, with Mansfield becoming the local focal point for the
industry. This latter industry enabled further expansion of engineering
business, enabling the population to grow at a phenomenal rate.
The quarrying of limestone was a strong, although small, business primarily
located on the west side of the town, along Chesterfield Road with some
works in Rock Valley and along what is now known as Quarry Lane. The
tramline enabled the town to export stone as far a-field as London where
it was used in the lower levels of the Houses of Parliament.
Although Mansfield was now building upon its industrial base it still
remained the strong service centre of an agricultural community stretching
upwards of ten miles or more in most directions. This expanding economy
enabled both the road and rail transport network to be improved. Road
transport provided more services and better maintained roads, which reached
out to all the major towns within the region, as well as offering services
to London and other distant places. By 1848 steam locomotion had arrived
in Mansfield and over the next 60 years a whole web of tracks surrounded
the town, directly servicing local industry and connecting to the main
lines that stretched throughout the country.
The town had supported a workhouse since at least the middle of the
eighteenth century. Prior to the new workhouse, on Stockwellgate, being
opened in 1837, a smaller one was located on Nottingham Road, which ‘as
a rule the permanent inmates numbered about twenty-four, forming a self
contained community, doing their own weaving for sheets, etc., growing
their own fruit and vegetables, brewing their own beer’.
Religion was a prominent feature of the town with its multitude of different
denominations. There were firmly established congregations of Presbyterians,
Quakers (both from the 1660s), Methodists, Wesleyans, Congregational,
Baptists, Methodist New Connexion and Primitive Methodists.
Victorian education was offered by several private academies, Church
of England elementary and grammar schools, established in 1567, a national
infants school and Sunday schools. By 1834 the town possessed 15 schools
as well as several dame schools. One of these schools being the newly
formed British Infant school, established in 1829, which not only attracted
Mansfield children but also those from the neighbouring villages.
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| The railway viaduct, constructed in 1872, consists
of 15 arches and is a distinctive feature of the townscape (photo:
Denis Hill). |
The tired Improvement Commission was replaced by a Borough Council in
1891. They set about taking the required measures to combat these problems,
such as better sanitation as well as running water into the hundreds
of new homes being constructed.
By the commencement of the twentieth century the population had reached
21,000, an increase from 6,000 just a hundred years earlier. However
the expansion had not diminished, for over the next 50 years the population
increased to over 51,000 primarily due to the establishment of local
coalmines. These mines attracted families from many different parts of
the United Kingdom and in turn stimulated the construction of many new
systematically built housing estates and streets. While other industries
such as the Metal Box Company and the Mansfield Shoe Company also rose
to national prominence.
While the first 70 years of the twentieth century saw constant increase
in prosperity including a steady influx of coal miners from other parts
of the country, whose mines were closing, the final decades saw depression
and struggles for survival. The coal industry began its decline from
the early 1970s, followed by the decline of engineering and founding.
Finally the textile industry virtually collapsed. Regeneration partnerships
were established; which successfully managed to attract both manufacturing
and service industries into newly developed commercial and industrial
estates. The 1980s saw the worst of the depression, with unemployment
constantly the highest in the East midlands. However the turn around
came during the 1990s where the prosperity of the town once again took
an upward turn. This time there was no prominent trade but the town consisted
of a diversity of industries including a rapidly expanding retail sector;
regaining trade previously lost to neighbouring cities. |