Saxby All Saints Explained

Static Image Name:Saxby All Saints church.jpg
Static Image Alt:A bright spring day on a country churchyard, surrounded by mature trees. The church nave is on the extreme left, and at the far end is tall, square, tower capped by a pointed wooden roof, not quite a spire, and with pinacles on all 4 corners. A bold white clockface is on the tower. The church has an ope porch, with pillars of wood. Dark, old, gravestones are scattered in the green grass.
Static Image Caption:All Saints' Church
Static Image 2 Name:Main Street, Saxby All Saints - geograph.org.uk - 795007.jpg
Static Image 2 Alt:A pair of whitewashed cottages, with pantiled roofs, widely spaced along a road. the nearer one has a red gate and a small pantiled outhouse. A huge oak, in full leaf, stands behind the further one.
Static Image 2 Caption:Main street
Country:England
Official Name:Saxby All Saints
Coordinates:53.636°N -0.5023°W
Population:385
Population Ref:(2011)
Shire District:North Lincolnshire
Shire County:Lincolnshire
Region:East Midlands
Constituency Westminster:Gainsborough
Post Town:Brigg
Postcode District:DN20
Postcode Area:DN
Os Grid Reference:SE991165
London Distance Mi:150
London Direction:s

Saxby All Saints is a village and civil parish in North Lincolnshire, England.[1] The population of the civil parish at the 2011 census was 385.[2] It is 6miles north of Brigg and 4miles south-west of Barton upon Humber.

Saxby All Saints is a conservation area,[3] and one of the five Low VillagesWorlaby, Bonby, Saxby All Saints, Horkstow and South Ferriby, between Brigg and the Humber estuary – so-called because of their position below the northern edge of the Lincolnshire Wolds, an Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty.[4] [5]

History

According to Mills', Saxby probably either derives its name from a "farmstead or village of a man called Saksi", an Old Scandinavian person name, or from "Saksar" (Saxons).[6]

The village appears in the Domesday Book of 1086 as Saxebi, in the Yarborough Hundred of the North Riding of Lindsey. It comprised 10 households, with 8 villagers, 2 freemen, 3 fisheries, and 7½ ploughlands. The lords in 1066 were Siward and Thorgisl. By 1086 the land had passed to Roger as Lord of the Manor, with Ivo Taillebois as Tenant-in-chief.[7] [8]

In 1885 Kelly's Directory noted Saxby as a "small but very pleasant village", 4miles north-west of Elsham railway station and near the Ancholme navigation. Parish population in 1881 was 337. It describes the 2322acres parish land as producing chiefly wheat, oats and barley, with "good" pasture, and being half of "fine chalk subsoil and highly fertile" and half, at Saxby Carrs, consisting of "clay subsoil, of rather black nature". The village contained a post office, six farmers, a blacksmith, wheelwright, bricklayer, miller – at Saxby Mill – and a Co-operative society. Carriers from Worlaby to Barton and Brigg passed through the village daily. Noted was a National School for 90 pupils, with an average attendance of 60, which was supported by the trustees of the late John Hope Barton.[9]

By 1905 a joiner, builder, shoemaker and a carrier were further trades in the village, and a reading room, opened in 1882, was noted, with Henry John Hope Barton esq. J.P. of Saxby Hall, son of John Hope Barton, as lord of the manor and landowner. The National School had become a Public Elementary School. A drinking fountain had been erected at the centre of the village in 1897 to commemorate the Diamond Jubilee of Queen Victoria, and in memory of a Frederick Horsley. Parish area had risen to 2389acres which included 17acres of water. Population by 1901 had dropped to 291.[10] In 1913 Saxby's Henry John Hope Barton became High Sheriff of Lincolnshire. By 1921 village population had dropped to 278, and in 1933 there were six farmers, one of whom was at Saxby Mill, a joiner, grocer, boot repairer, carrier and blacksmith. From Karl Wood's 1932 sketch of Saxby Mill,[11] its known at this time Saxby Mill no longer had sails. Parish area was 2386acres, with 20acres of water.[12]

In July 1906 folk song collectors Percy Grainger and Lucy Broadwood collected the song "Died of Love", or "A brisk young Lad he courted me", from a Saxby bailiff, Joseph Taylor. The song was noted in Broadwood's English Traditional Carols and Songs, published in 1908, although the first verse was altered to suit perceived public taste. Grainger later supplied a piano accompaniment to the song, using Taylor's melody, which was published in 1912. "Died of Love" was the base for Grainger's "Rufford Park Poachers" in his Lincolnshire Posy suite.[13] [14] [15]

Landmarks

Saxby's parish church is dedicated to All Saints and is a Grade II listed building. It was built by George Gilbert Scott between 1845 and 1849, with its pyramid-roofed tower, described by Pevsner as "less correct" and looking "as if it was meant for a town hall", added by in 1873 by Neville. All Saints' style is late 13th-century and includes north aisle stained glass by Charles Eamer Kempe, added in 1876.[16] The limestone ashlar church has a Westmorland slate roof, a three-bell tower with crocketed pinnacles, and an embattled parapet. The interior comprises a chancel of three bays and a nave of five bays, with monuments to the Barton family. Kelly's Directory describes the church as "a beautiful edifice" with an 1871 "excellent organ" and church plate from the 16th century. A church clock was added to the tower by the parishioners in 1893, to commemorate the coming of age of Henry John Hope Barton, and the 1904 chancel screen was carved in the village. The church register dates from 1719. The living included a rectory and glebe lands, the gift of the Barton family and estate.[5] [9] [10]

The Queen Victoria limestone column monument and drinking trough, with its waterspout a carved lion's head, also commemorates Frederick Horsley "Having been for 42 years the faithful and respected steward of this Estate". The monument is Grade II listed.

Saxby Hall is a brick-built, Grade II listed, 18th-century building remodelled in the early 19th century, with its west wing remaining from the earlier structure.[16] It was the home of the Barton family.[9] [10]

Further listed landmarks are the mid- to late 18th-century brick-built Saxby Manor, the 1853 yellow-brick Old Rectory, and the 17th-century Lodge Cottage and Ivy House with barn, all on Main Street, and the mid-19th-century Saxby Bridge, on North Carr Lane, which spans the River Ancholme.

Community

Village population in 1991 was 220 and has changed little since (currently 237).

The ecclesiastical parish is also Saxby All Saints, part of the Saxby (Plurality) group of the Deanery of Yarborough. The 2013 incumbent is The Revd David Rowett.[17]

The village lies on the Brigg to Immingham and South Ferriby to Scunthorpe bus routes.

It is home to the SaxbyFlix cinema, a community cinema project set up to provide the Low Wold Villages with a real cinema experience.[18]

'The Saxby Carol', a Christmas carol, was composed specifically for the village in 2023 by resident musician Lucy Marshall.

Notable residents

External links

Northlincs.gov.uk. Retrieved 19 May 2012

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Parish councils. North Lincolnshire Council. 30 May 2013.
  2. Web site: Civil Parish population 2011. 19 April 2016. Office for National statistics. Neighbourhood Statistics.
  3. Web site: SAXBY ALL SAINTS CONSERVATION AREA APPRAISAL. North Lincolnshire Council. 5. 30 May 2013.
  4. Web site: Saxby All Saints. Northlincs.com. Hub computer services. 9 May 2013.
  5. Web site: Saxby All Saints Local History Pack. North Lincolnshire Council. 30 May 2013.
  6. Mills, Anthony David (2003); A Dictionary of British Place Names, p.  407, Oxford University Press, revised edition (2011).
  7. http://discovery.nationalarchives.gov.uk/SearchUI/Details?uri=D7314342 "Documents Online: Saxby All Saints, Lincolnshire"
  8. Web site: Saxebi. Domesday Map. 9 May 2013.
  9. Kelly's Directory of Lincolnshire with the port of Hull 1885, p. 611
  10. Kelly's Directory of Lincolnshire 1905, p. 486
  11. Web site: Mills Archive - Saxby All Saints - Images and documents. 2021-03-17. catalogue.millsarchive.org.
  12. Kelly's Directory of Lincolnshire 1933, p. 468
  13. Music and British Culture: 1785 – 1914 ; Essays in Honour of Cyril Ehrlich, (ed. Cyril Ehrlich; Christina Bashford; Leanne Langley), Oxford University Press (21 December 2000), p. 363.
  14. De Val, Dorothy: In Search of Song: The Life and Times of Lucy Broadwood, p. 170, Ashgate (1 July 2011).
  15. Wind Band Activity in and Around New York Ca. 1830–1950 (ed. Frank J. Cipolla; Donald Hunsberger), Alfred Publishing (12 January 2006), p. 83.
  16. Nikolaus Pevsner|Pevsner, Nikolaus; Harris, John; The Buildings of England: Lincolnshire p. 349; Penguin, (1964); revised by Nicholas Antram (1989), Yale University Press.
  17. Web site: Ecclesiastical parish details . Diocese of Lincoln . 9 May 2013.
  18. Web site: About Us . SaxbyFlix . 19 January 2019.
  19. Web site: Index entry. 24 September 2020. FreeBMD. ONS. Births Sep 1950 Fountain Cherryl A., mother Elmer Scunthorpe 3b 518