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Southwell is a small town situated north east of Nottingham on the A612.
It is dominated by the Minster which towers above the town and is the
focal point. Not only are the buildings very impressive but the status
they give to the town is quite beyond its size. The town is not situated
on any major road junctions, although it is reasonably close to both
the A614 Doncaster Road and A46 Newark Road. A branch of the L.M.S Railway’s
Newark to Nottingham line was extended to Southwell in 1847 and later
continued to Mansfield. The line was closed in 1964 and part of the route
is now used as a public footpath and bridleway, known as the “Southwell
Trail”.
The parish of Southwell covers 5,000 acres of land and includes the
hamlets of Normanton, Easthorpe and Westhorpe. Historically, Southwell
itself was divided into The Burgage (a separate manor within the parish)
to the north-east of the Minster and the Prebendage which was based around
the collegiate church and its associated properties and developed into
the town core.
The population of Southwell remained fairly static during the 19th century,
around 3,000. Today it is has doubled to about 6,000. Most people work
outside of Southwell and it has become a dormitory town. However, it
has been claimed that Southwell has more millionaires among its residents
than anywhere in the county!
Although there is some evidence of Neolithic people in the area the
first significant development in the town was the building of a large
Roman courtyard villa in about 400 A.D. It was one of the largest villas
in the Midlands, extending over an area 80 yards by 100 yards and including
at least four mosaic pavements and a piscine or cold bath measuring 24
by 15.5 feet.
The next important event of which we have evidence was the gift by King
Edwy in 956 to Oskytel, Archbishop of York, of the area known as Southwell
and a number of other parishes. It is believed that this was done as
a form of bribery to keep the Archbishop on the side of the King, as
nearby Scrooby was later given to Oskytel’s brother. It established
a link with the See of York which has endured for over a thousand years.
The importance of Southwell becomes clear with a detailed description
in the Domesday Book. The valuation of the Manor of Southwell was the
highest in the County. The Archbishop of York at that time was Thomas
of Bayeaux, a close friend of King William’s brother and he chose
Southwell in which to start the building of a church in 1108.
According to Nikolaus Pevsner, author of ‘The buildings of England’,
by the 12th century Southwell Minster had become one of the major churches
in the province of York. Building was carried out for the next two centuries
in the early English and Perpendicular styles, during which a large window
was inserted in the western front, the eastern end rebuilt and the highly
ornate Chapter House added to the northern side. The site had been in
use from much earlier times and a tessellated pavement dating from the
second century exists under the west side of the south transept.
It has been thought that even before the building of the Minster the
existing church had a school for the instruction of church official’s
children. The first written evidence for a school dates from 1238. The
town has always been noted for the excellence of the education it provides
and this reputation has been enhanced by the present Lowes Wong Junior
School and the Minster School, the latter is particularly noted for the
musical education it provides.
The Minster became one of the major churches in the province of York.
The provision of accommodation for the Archbishop was begun in 1360 with
the construction of a large ornamental palace on one and half acres on
the south side of the Minster. Several Archbishops who stayed there
on various occasions en route from York or Ripon to London are buried
in the churchyard. Cardinal Wolsey stayed there in 1530. The palace was
used by the Scottish Commissioners during the English Civil War and became
a ruin afterwards. The only part of the old building still in use is
the Great Hall, restored in the 1880s.
Southwell became a cathedral town when in 1884 the Minster was consecrated
as a cathedral and with the appointment of a bishop for the new
diocese. Originally it comprised almost all the counties of Derbyshire
and Nottinghamshire. It was later reduced to just Nottinghamshire in
1927. One hundred years later in 1984 the Queen distributed Maundy Money
at the Minster.
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| Gateway to the House of Correction. |
In 1611 a prison, ‘The House of Correction’, serving the
County of Nottinghamshire was built at Southwell which was later
enlarged in 1806 to house 150 prisoners. The designer was the Reverend
J T Becher. It was closed in 1880 and was later turned into a lace factory
which employed 230 people until its eventual closure in 1956. The site
was later developed by a local family, Rainbows, as a base for their
delivery firm which now employs 140 lorries serving a radius of 50 miles
around Southwell. Other short term industries which thrived in Southwell
for short periods were malting, basket making and a cheese factory.
From the late 17th century Southwell supported a substantial number
of framework knitters, which lasted until the general decline in the19th
century, due to the unprofitability of the village industry consequent
on the concentration of production in larger factories in places like
Nottingham. In 1785 a cotton mill was built at Maythorne which later
became a silk mill and operated until the middle of the 20th century.
There remains today the old flour mill, known as Caudwell’s mill,
on the road out towards Hockerton. The mill used the power of the river
Greet, which runs nearby, to grind corn for Southwell and Normanton.
In 1851 Charles Caudwell bought the mill and increased its capacity.
Local grain was brought to a wharf at Fiskerton and later foreign imports
from Australia and Canada were brought in on the L.M.S railway line.
Agriculture was once the dominant employer of labour but the number
of workers employed in 1900 was 60% of the number employed
earlier in the century. A further fall during the next century reduced
the numbers to less than a tenth of the 1900 figure. This reduction
was first caused by the depression in agriculture and the provision of
better paid jobs in the towns and the mines and later of course by the
growth of mechanisation. Today most farms employ very few workers
to farm the land. It is perhaps with the agricultural connection that
Brackenhurst College (now part of Nottingham Trent University), which
is a short ride out of the town, has become a renowned college
teaching agriculture, horticulture and other related topics.
Another landmark just outside of the town is the Southwell Workhouse.
The building has been brought back to life by the National Trust after
years of neglect and decay. It was originally earmarked for residential
housing but as it was the last of these type of workhouses and was in
a state capable of being renovated it was acquired by the NT. It was
built in 1824 to house the poor of 60 parishes known as the Southwell
Union. It was designed and created by the Reverend J T Becher, a local
magistrate and poor law reformer and Vicar-General of the Minster. It
was to be the blueprint for many such later workhouses throughout the
country. As well as the house becoming a working museum the gardens have
been brought back to life and now produce vegetables and fruit which
is sold on the premises.
Another notable name connected with Southwell was Lord Byron. Byron’s
mother rented the Burgage Manor between 1803 and 1808 and Byron spent
his holidays from Harrow School with her. His time here was extended
when as a 15 year old he fell in love with his older cousin at Chaworth
and he could not return to Harrow! The Eliza of his early poems lived
in the Burgage opposite. His signature is preserved on the wall.
The oldest Inn in the town is the Saracen’s Head where King Charles
I stayed prior to surrendering to Cromwell’s men in 1646. The earliest
surviving parts of the building date from the fifteenth century. Another
pub takes its name from the famed Bramley apple which was produced in
the town in 1856. It was the result of a pip planted by a local lady
and its qualities were recognised by Merryweather, the nurseryman, who
propagated it on a commercial scale and it retains its place as the premier
cooking apple a century and half later!
There has been a cricket club in the town for over two hundred years;
the first recorded match was in 1787. The Top Ground at Brackenhurst
was at that time the major venue for cricket after Trent Bridge in Nottingham.
In 1846 an England-11 played a benefit match at Brackenhurst for William
Clarke, the Nottinghamshire and England captain. One Southwell cricketer
toured Australia and New Zealand with George Parr’s undefeated
team.
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