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Alnham

Alnham is a hamlet and civil parish in Northumberland, England. It is about 14 miles (23 km) west of Alnwick, about 6 miles (9.7 km) from Scotland and is located on the south of a small tributary of the River Aln. The village stands on uneven ground, sloping from south to north, at the foot of the southern outliers of the Cheviot Hills. The River Aln flows eastward through the village from its source in the Cheviot Hills down to the coast. The layout of the village appears to have been dictated by the river. The estimated population taken at the 2011 Census was around 245.[1]

Alnham
Church of St. Michael, Alnham
Alnham
Location within Northumberland
Population245 
OS grid referenceNT995108
Unitary authority
Ceremonial county
Region
CountryEngland
Sovereign stateUnited Kingdom
Post townALNWICK
Postcode districtNE66
Dialling code01665
PoliceNorthumbria
FireNorthumberland
AmbulanceNorth East
UK Parliament
List of places
UK
England
Northumberland
55°23′29″N 2°00′29″W / 55.3915°N 2.0081°W / 55.3915; -2.0081Coordinates: 55°23′29″N 2°00′29″W / 55.3915°N 2.0081°W / 55.3915; -2.0081

There is evidence of human occupation in Alnham and the surrounding areas dating from prehistoric times. The remains of a Medieval settlement, hillforts, and other historic buildings can still be found in the village today. Located near the border between England and Scotland, Alnham often suffered at the hands of Anglo-Scottish border conflict during its history. The economy of Alnham has been focussed on agriculture throughout its existence as a settlement.

Etymology

The name "Alnham" derives from the Old English hām (homestead) and the Celtic river-name Aln or Alaunos, meaning "homestead on the River Aln".[2] Variations of the name have been recorded over time, including: Alneham (1331), Elnam (1509), Ayneham (1557), and Ailnham (1663). Alnham has also historically been called "Yeldom", and in the Magna Brittannia of 1724 it is mentioned as being usually called "Yarwell".[3]

History

 
A cairn on Hogdon Law, to the north-west of Alnham.

There is no direct evidence of Paleolithic or Mesolithic human occupation within Alnham, although it is possible that the Cheviot slopes to the west of Alnham provided a wooded area perfect for seasonal foraging parties. The only evidence of Neolithic habitation is a cup-marked stone found at Alnham Northfield.[4] Bronze Age occupation of Alnham is more evident. A rare bronze spearhead has been found at High Bleakhope to the north-west of Alnham, possibly indicating occupation by an elite social class. The remote and elevated location of High Bleakhope suggests that the spearhead was placed there as an offering to a deity. A number of cairns have been discovered in the surrounding area which may have been constructed in the Bronze Age. Unenclosed settlements, common in the Cheviots through the Iron Age and Bronze Age, have also been found in the surrounding area.[5] Two Iron Age palisaded enclosures have been discovered on High Knowes to the north-west of Alnham. Castle Hill in Alnham is an example of a Cheviot multivallate hillfort and is likely to have existed by the Iron Age. Remains of hut circles within the inner closure suggest that Castle Hill was a settlement with a small population.[6] Evidence of the Romans in the Cheviots, which is situated beyond the Roman frontier, is difficult to detect and distinguish from the Iron Age due to their limited cultural influence. The closest settlement to Alnham which is considered to be Roman can be found on Castle Hill.[7]

During the Middle Ages Alnham was an important location, as indicated by its ancient buildings, castle mound, and pele tower.[8] There is evidence that it was a populous village and reached its peak of prosperity in the late 13th century. The Church of St Michaels was first recorded in an 1184 charter in which William de Vesci granted Alnham and its tithes to Alnwick Abbey.[8] During the reigns of Henry III and Edward I, Alnham was part of the lordship and estate of William de Vesci (in 1242) and John de Vesci (in 1289). In 1293 William de Vesci claimed free Chase in Alnham, but with no male heirs, his property was passed to Antony Bek (Bishop of Durham) after his death. Bishop Bek sold the Barony of Alnwick, which included Alnham, to Henry de Percy, 1st Baron Percy. From that point onwards, Alnham remained in the same descent as the rest of the Percy estates.[9][10]

The history of Alnham was often troubled, including by climatic deterioration and harvest failure in the early 14th century, and the Black Death.[11] These events caused the population to reduce significantly. In 1352, after the Black Death, there were 34 holdings, half of which were unoccupied.[12] The surviving residents of Alnham, however, may have benefitted somewhat from this reduction in population and secured better rights: the Inquisition for Henry de Percy in 1368 reveals that the bondages and cottages were held by "tenants-at-will", in comparison to earlier non-contractual tenancies which owed labour services to a lord.[13] Being situated in a precarious position between the English and Scottish borders, Anglo-Scottish combat also caused disruption in Alnham. Alnham suffered at the hand of Scottish raids during the reign of Henry VIII. Two letters from the Earl of Northumberland to the King, dating from October and November 1532, describe how the Scots came across the borders and rampaged Alnham and surrounding towns.[14] The tower at Alnham appears to have suffered damage from the Scottish raids as it was reported to have been in a bad condition by 1541.[15] The dangerous position of Alnham between the English and Scottish borders is again revealed in a survey of the manor from 1615, which reads:

the toune and manor of Alneham is parcell of the Barony of Alnewicke. The soyle thereof is good and fertile but the tenants have been greatly impoverished and disabled by the Scots and often English thieves by reason that the said toune lieth open to the great wastes between the two realmes.[16]

Alnham was a significant agricultural centre in the early 17th century. Robert Norton's map of the Duke of Northumberland's Alnham Estate from 1619 reveals Alnham's meadowland consisted of four large common fields, 70 acres of arable land, and 168 acres of "Alnham oxe pasture".[17] From the 18th century onwards, Alnham underwent a period of decay and transformation. In 1724, the Magna Brittannia described Alnham as being "pretty large". However, an undated map from pre-1750 shows a dwindling number of cottages, Seymour's Survey of c. 1756 records five cottages, and in the Enclosure Award of 1776 the village is recorded as having only two farms and three cottages. This decay can be attributed to the 17th and 18th century policy of leasing tenement lands to a single tenant, resulting in the amalgamation of land formerly owned by tenants-at-will into larger farmholdings.[18] Transformation came about later in the 18th century: Alnham Common was first recorded in a survey of 1702 and was divided and apportioned in 1776.[16][19] The grounds were divided up into holdings along the east and southeast sides of the township and a new road was built through the village.[20] The Duke of Northumberland secured the largest share of the land: 1,379 acres of infield ground and 6590 acres of common. Further divisions of the land were granted to Alexander Collingwood, Charles Byrne, Percival Clennel, and the Vicar of Alnham.[21]

 
The rear of the old schoolhouse in Alnham.

In the 19th century, the village of Alnham consisted of three farms, a church, a vicarage, a Church of England school (constructed in 1870), and six cottages. Farming continued to be the focus of economic activity.[22] By the late 19th century, Alnham Parish covered around 12,000 acres with the township of Alnham being by far the largest at 9535 acres.[23] The population of Alnham in 1801 was 233 and remained relatively stable throughout the century, dropping to 205 by 1891.[24] The 1831 census revealed that the majority of male residents aged over 20 in Alnham Parish was labourers or servants (45 men). A smaller proportion were employers and professionals (8 men), or "middling sorts" (15 men), which included small farmers and skilled workers.[25]

The village did not develop much during the 20th century. The only new building to be constructed in this period was the War Memorial Hall erected in 1921. The population gradually declined owing to mechanisation and reduction in farming incomes.[26]

Demography

Alnham falls within the North Core Strategy Delivery Area of Northumberland – one of the least populated areas of England with 26 residents per square km, compared to the county average of 63.[27] In 2001, the parish of Whittingham and Alnham had a total usual population of 505.[28] In 2011, Alnham Parish had an estimated population of 245. 20.4% of residents were aged 0-15 and 10.2% of residents were aged 65+. 100% of residents identified as white. The majority of residents (68.6%) were Christian with the remaining population either having an 'other' religion, no religion, or did not state religion. 81.3% of residents aged 16-74 were economically active with agriculture, forestry and fishing being the most common industry (25.7%).[1]

Governance

Throughout its history, Alnham has been incorporated in various territorial units. In the Medieval period, Alnham formed one of the manors of the Barony of Alnwick held by the Vesci lineage beginning in the early 12th century and ending in 1310. The Barony was then sold to Henry de Percy and remains in the hands of the Percy family today. The Parish of Alnham in the 19th century contained the townships of Alnham, Prendwick, Scrainwood and Unthank. These townships were recorded as separate localities in the feudal aid of 1242.[29]

In the UK Parliament, Alnham is part of the Berwick-upon-Tweed Parliament constituency which has been represented by Anne-Marie Trevelyan (Conservative) since May 2015. Prior to May 2015, the seat was represented by Alan Beith (Liberal Democrats).[30] In local government, Alnham is part of the Rothbury Ward and is represented by Steven Christopher Bridgett (Independent).[31] On the Parish council level, Alnham is part of Whittingham Parish Council which comprises the former three separate parishes of Alnham, Callaly and Whittingham.[32]

Landmarks

There are seven listed structures in Alnham, including old buildings, the Church, and a Medieval settlement.[33]

 
Map of key features in Alnham

Church of St Michael and All Angels

 
St Michael and All Angels Church, located to the west of Alnham village centre.

The Church of St Michael and All Angels is a Grade I listed building and part of the Diocese of Newcastle. It is a Parish Church of Saxon foundation located to the west of the village centre.[34] The Church was first recorded in an 1184 charter.[8] After William de Vesci gave the Church to Alnwick Abbey, a new west front, south chapel, north aisle, and chancel arch were constructed. It is likely that the Church was damaged in the Anglo-Scottish border wars in the 13th century. By the mid-13th century, the north arcade was replaced by pointed arches and the north aisle was widened. There is evidence that the Church was in a state of ruin at least once by the later Medieval period. It was restored with a rebuilt chancel and a new transept arch. A further restoration was recorded in 1664.[35]

By the mid-19th century, the Church had again fallen into a poor state. The Builder described the state of Alnham Church in 1862:

Open the rickety church-door. The eye is met by a green flash from the damp, mildewed walls, and by streaks of sky seen through the unceiled slates. The western end, with its Early Traditional single light, has not been much disturbed; but the rest of the window opening have been modernized and filled with common sashes, which are rotten, and let in wind and rain. The east end has a small square sash, such as is ordinarily provided for a scullery or any inferior office. Three of the worm-eaten, mousy pews are square, with a table fixed in the centre of each: a fourth forms three sides of a quadrangle that is occupied by a stove. Fungi abound, and the pavement is sodden with damp. Ruin is imminent, unless precautions are taken to avert it.

— The Builder, 1862.[36]

F. R. Wilson, an architect from Alnwick, was responsible for the restoration of the building in 1870. All of the extant windows of the Church, other than those in the west end, are Wilson's. Further restoration work was carried out on the Church in 1953 by Gustav Adolph Renwick.[37]

Around 20 yards (18 m) to the south of the Church is a Medieval cross base which is a Grade II listed structure. It is a large stone, 2 feet (61 cm) high, with a socket cut into it to hold the shaft of a cross.[38]

Tower House

 
Tower House, also known as the vicar's pele.

Tower House, located near to the Church, is a Grade II listed building.[39] It is also known as the vicar's pele and served as the vicarage of the Church for much of its existence. It was first recorded in Bowes and Ellerker's survey of 1541 and is listed as a "lytle toure". It was most likely constructed in the 15th or early 16th century. By the time of the 1541 survey, the Tower was in need of repairs, but there is no evidence to suggest it received the reparations required. The Tower collapsed in 1651 and a record of the building in 1715 reveals that its condition had still not improved. In 1828, Archdeacon Singleton noted that the Tower was uninhabited and uninhabitable. However, by 1844 the building was in use again. New battlements, corner turrets, window openings and a residential wing were constructed.[40] Tower House was later used as a youth hostel and is now a private residence.[39]

Medieval settlement

The Medieval settlement at Alnham is a scheduled monument and is located to the south of St Michaels Church. The remains of this village exist as a series of earthworks between 0.3 metres (12 in) and 0.5 metres (20 in) high, a toft with an enclosure and two houses, a small hill, and a group of three houses and an enclosure. The settlement lies on two artificially-levelled sites. It is likely that the original Medieval settlement was larger and more focussed on the Church.[41]

Alnham Castle

 
The site of Alnham Castle.

Alnham Castle is a scheduled monument that includes the remains of a Medieval tower house. It is located to the south of site of the Medieval village. The tower has a rectangular plan, measuring 22 metres (72 ft) by 18 metres (59 ft) and standing up to 2 metres (6.6 ft) high.[42] The tower was first mentioned in 1405 when it is recorded as one of Harry Hotspur's strongholds which was surrendered to Henry IV. It is in a good defensive position on the summit of a low ridge. The remains of a small, triangular annex can be found to the east and south. An outer enclosure which surrounded the tower is represented by a well-defined lynchet bank to the north. This enclosure most likely consisted of a garden and meadow associated with the manor as recorded in the Inquisition of Henry de Percy in 1368.[43]

Farm buildings

 
The exterior of Pennywells Cottage.

The former farmhouses of Alnham castle, previously known as Castle Farm, can be found in the village today as the Pennywells – two Grade II listed cottages. Dating from around the early 18th century, they are built out of roughly-dressed stone.[44] The garden wall attached to the front of the Pennywells, also built out of roughly-dressed stone, is another Grade II listed structure.[45] There are adjacent farm buildings, around 9 metres (10 yd) from the Pennywells, consisting of byres, a stable and shelter sheds which were built around a courtyard between around 1830 and 1840. The farm buildings have a separate Grade II listing.[22][46]

Castle Hill

 
Farm in Old Hazeltonrig with Castle Hill pictured to the right.

Castle Hill is a rare example of an Iron Age multivallate hillfort. The hillfort has been designated as a scheduled monument and is located to the west of Alnham. It stands at a height of 289 metres (948 ft) above Ordnance Datum.[47] It consists of a sub-circular enclosure within concentric ditches with ramparts which are built from earth and stone excavated from the site of the hillfort. The site also contains the remains of a Romano-British settlement. There are at least five hut circles within the interior of the hillfort.[48] Three unenclosed huts on the north-west flanks of the hillfort, defined by a curving out bank, constitute the earliest of the remains, possibly dating from the Bronze Age.[49] There were four possible phases of development of earthwork defences of the hillfort during the Iron Age.[50] The first phase consisted of a univallate stone-walled enclosure, followed by the construction of the ramparts and ditches resulting in a bivallate hillfort (phase 2). Phases 3 and 4 saw Castle Hill become a multivallate hillfort.[51]

Several trackways near Castle Hill potentially date from the prehistoric or Romano-British eras.[52] There is also evidence of Bronze Age, Iron Age and Romano-British agricultural activity on the hill. Prehistoric cord rig was discovered on the north-west of the hilltop, and prehistoric or Romano-British ploughing has resulted in lynchets on the north-east side. There is evidence that Medieval cultivation stretched from Alnham village and stopped at a boundary bank to the south-east face of the hill.[53]

War Memorial Hall

 
Alnham War Memorial Hall.

The most significant structure to be built in Alnham in the 20th century is the War Memorial Hall, erected in 1920 as a testament to the impact of World War I on small rural communities like Alnham.[26] It is a stone-built village hall with a stone incision above the porch door. There are no names inscribed on the memorial as there were no deaths in the village during the war.[54]

Transport

 
Road junction in the centre of Alnham.

Alnham is an isolated rural community. The nearest main road is the A697, around 7.5 miles (12 km) away. The village is situated on a local road running north-south from Prendwick to Scrainwood; from a junction near the village centre another road heads northwest from Alnham, past Castle Hill, for about 5 kilometres (3.1 mi) to Ewartly Shank, where it ends.

There were plans in the mid-late 19th century for a Northumberland Central Railway line to run through Alnham. The proposed railway would have been located to the east of Pennylaws Cottage, but it was never built.[55]

References

Citations

  1. ^ a b "Northumberland Knowledge 2011 Census Fact Sheet" (PDF). Northumberland County Council. 2013. Retrieved 1 January 2022.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  2. ^ Mills, A. D. (2011). A Dictionary of British Place Names. Oxford University Press. ISBN 9780199609086. Retrieved 29 December 2021.
  3. ^ Dixon, 1895: 26, 34
  4. ^ AN, 2004: 26
  5. ^ AN, 2004: 27
  6. ^ AN, 2004: 28
  7. ^ AN, 2004: 28-29
  8. ^ a b c Dodds, ed., 1935: 560
  9. ^ Dixon, 1895: 27
  10. ^ Dodds, ed., 1935: 574-575
  11. ^ AN, 2004: 33
  12. ^ "Alnham medieval settlement". Historic England. Retrieved 29 December 2021.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  13. ^ AN, 2004: 34
  14. ^ Dixon, 1895: 28-29
  15. ^ Dodds, ed., 1935: 574
  16. ^ a b Dodds, ed., 1935: 576
  17. ^ AN, 2004: 40
  18. ^ AN, 2004: 43-44
  19. ^ Dixon, 1895: 33-34
  20. ^ AN, 2004: 44
  21. ^ "Alnham : Selected Sources and Surveys". Northumberland National Park. from the original on 20 October 2007. Retrieved 1 January 2022.
  22. ^ a b AN, 2004: 46-47
  23. ^ AN, 2004: 31
  24. ^ Dixon, 1895: 31-32
  25. ^ "GB Historical GIS / University of Portsmouth, Alnham CP/AP through time | Social Structure Statistics | Social Status, based on 1831 occupational statistics". A Vision of Britain through Time. Retrieved 29 December 2021.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  26. ^ a b AN, 2004: 48
  27. ^ The Church of St Michael and All Angels, Alnham. Inspired Futures Project: Way Forward Report (PDF) (Report). Inspired North East. 2015. p. 7. Retrieved 29 December 2021.
  28. ^ "Dataset Selection". Nomis. Retrieved 30 December 2021.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  29. ^ AN, 2004: 30-31
  30. ^ "MPs and Lords. Berwick-upon-Tweed". UK Parliament. Retrieved 29 December 2021.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  31. ^ "Councillor Steven Christopher Bridgett". Northumberland County Council. Retrieved 30 December 2021.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  32. ^ "Whittingham Callaly & Alnham Parish Council". Northumberland Parishes. Retrieved 30 December 2021.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  33. ^ "Listed Buildings in Alnham, Northumberland". British Listed Buildings. Retrieved 31 December 2021.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  34. ^ "Church of St Michael". Historic England. Retrieved 30 December 2021.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  35. ^ Ryder, 2018: 16-18
  36. ^ Ryder, 2018: 2
  37. ^ Ryder, 2018: 2
  38. ^ "Cross base circa 20 yards south of Church of St Michael". Historic England. Retrieved 31 December 2021.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  39. ^ a b "Tower House". Historic England. Retrieved 31 December 2021.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  40. ^ AN, 2004: 39
  41. ^ "Alnham medieval settlement". Historic England. Retrieved 31 December 2021.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  42. ^ "Alnham Castle: a medieval tower house". Historic England. Retrieved 31 December 2021.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  43. ^ AN, 2004: 38-39
  44. ^ "Pennywells (east cottage and west cottage)". Historic England. Retrieved 31 December 2021.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  45. ^ "Garden wall attached to front of Pennywells". Historic England. Retrieved 31 December 2021.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  46. ^ "Farmbuildings circa 10 yards east of Pennywells". Retrieved 31 December 2021.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  47. ^ Pearson et al., 2001: 2
  48. ^ "Castle Hill camp". Historic England. Retrieved 31 December 2021.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  49. ^ Pearson et al., 2001: 9
  50. ^ Pearson et al., 2001: 42
  51. ^ Pearson et al., 2001: 12-17
  52. ^ Pearson et al., 2001: 34
  53. ^ Pearson et al., 2001: 37
  54. ^ "Alnham WW1 Memorial Hall". Imperial War Museums. Retrieved 31 December 2021.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  55. ^ AN, 2004: 46

Bibliography

Where an abbreviation is used in the references this is indicated below in (brackets) at the end of the source name. When a source is available online, a link has been included.

  • Dixon, David Dippe (1895). Whittingham Vale, Northumberland: its history, traditions, and folk lore. Newcastle-upon-Tyne: Robert Redpath.
  • Dodds, Madeleine Hope, ed. (1935). A history of Northumberland. Vol. XIV. Newcastle upon Tyne: Andrew Reid & Company, Limited; Simpkin Marshall, Limited. Retrieved 29 December 2021 – via Google Books.
  • (PDF) (Report). The Archaeological Practice Ltd. 2004. Archived from the original (PDF) on 21 October 2007. Retrieved 30 December 2021. (AN)
  • Ryder, Peter F. (2018). St Michael the Archangel, Alnham. Archaeological Assessment, including report on 2018 works (PDF) (Report). Retrieved 31 December 2021.
  • Pearson, Trevor; Lax, Amy; Ainsworth, Stewart (2001). An Iron Age hillfort and its environs on Castle Hill, Alnham, Northumberland (PDF) (Report). English Heritage. ISSN 1478-7008. Retrieved 31 December 2021.

External links

alnham, hamlet, civil, parish, northumberland, england, about, miles, west, alnwick, about, miles, from, scotland, located, south, small, tributary, river, village, stands, uneven, ground, sloping, from, south, north, foot, southern, outliers, cheviot, hills, . Alnham is a hamlet and civil parish in Northumberland England It is about 14 miles 23 km west of Alnwick about 6 miles 9 7 km from Scotland and is located on the south of a small tributary of the River Aln The village stands on uneven ground sloping from south to north at the foot of the southern outliers of the Cheviot Hills The River Aln flows eastward through the village from its source in the Cheviot Hills down to the coast The layout of the village appears to have been dictated by the river The estimated population taken at the 2011 Census was around 245 1 AlnhamChurch of St Michael AlnhamAlnhamLocation within NorthumberlandPopulation245 OS grid referenceNT995108Unitary authorityNorthumberlandCeremonial countyNorthumberlandRegionNorth EastCountryEnglandSovereign stateUnited KingdomPost townALNWICKPostcode districtNE66Dialling code01665PoliceNorthumbriaFireNorthumberlandAmbulanceNorth EastUK ParliamentBerwick upon TweedList of places UK England Northumberland 55 23 29 N 2 00 29 W 55 3915 N 2 0081 W 55 3915 2 0081 Coordinates 55 23 29 N 2 00 29 W 55 3915 N 2 0081 W 55 3915 2 0081River AlnSettlementsAlnham Alnmouth Alnwick Lesbury WhittinghamThere is evidence of human occupation in Alnham and the surrounding areas dating from prehistoric times The remains of a Medieval settlement hillforts and other historic buildings can still be found in the village today Located near the border between England and Scotland Alnham often suffered at the hands of Anglo Scottish border conflict during its history The economy of Alnham has been focussed on agriculture throughout its existence as a settlement Contents 1 Etymology 2 History 3 Demography 4 Governance 5 Landmarks 5 1 Church of St Michael and All Angels 5 2 Tower House 5 3 Medieval settlement 5 4 Alnham Castle 5 5 Farm buildings 5 6 Castle Hill 5 7 War Memorial Hall 6 Transport 7 References 7 1 Citations 7 2 Bibliography 8 External linksEtymology EditThe name Alnham derives from the Old English ham homestead and the Celtic river name Aln or Alaunos meaning homestead on the River Aln 2 Variations of the name have been recorded over time including Alneham 1331 Elnam 1509 Ayneham 1557 and Ailnham 1663 Alnham has also historically been called Yeldom and in the Magna Brittannia of 1724 it is mentioned as being usually called Yarwell 3 History Edit A cairn on Hogdon Law to the north west of Alnham There is no direct evidence of Paleolithic or Mesolithic human occupation within Alnham although it is possible that the Cheviot slopes to the west of Alnham provided a wooded area perfect for seasonal foraging parties The only evidence of Neolithic habitation is a cup marked stone found at Alnham Northfield 4 Bronze Age occupation of Alnham is more evident A rare bronze spearhead has been found at High Bleakhope to the north west of Alnham possibly indicating occupation by an elite social class The remote and elevated location of High Bleakhope suggests that the spearhead was placed there as an offering to a deity A number of cairns have been discovered in the surrounding area which may have been constructed in the Bronze Age Unenclosed settlements common in the Cheviots through the Iron Age and Bronze Age have also been found in the surrounding area 5 Two Iron Age palisaded enclosures have been discovered on High Knowes to the north west of Alnham Castle Hill in Alnham is an example of a Cheviot multivallate hillfort and is likely to have existed by the Iron Age Remains of hut circles within the inner closure suggest that Castle Hill was a settlement with a small population 6 Evidence of the Romans in the Cheviots which is situated beyond the Roman frontier is difficult to detect and distinguish from the Iron Age due to their limited cultural influence The closest settlement to Alnham which is considered to be Roman can be found on Castle Hill 7 During the Middle Ages Alnham was an important location as indicated by its ancient buildings castle mound and pele tower 8 There is evidence that it was a populous village and reached its peak of prosperity in the late 13th century The Church of St Michaels was first recorded in an 1184 charter in which William de Vesci granted Alnham and its tithes to Alnwick Abbey 8 During the reigns of Henry III and Edward I Alnham was part of the lordship and estate of William de Vesci in 1242 and John de Vesci in 1289 In 1293 William de Vesci claimed free Chase in Alnham but with no male heirs his property was passed to Antony Bek Bishop of Durham after his death Bishop Bek sold the Barony of Alnwick which included Alnham to Henry de Percy 1st Baron Percy From that point onwards Alnham remained in the same descent as the rest of the Percy estates 9 10 The history of Alnham was often troubled including by climatic deterioration and harvest failure in the early 14th century and the Black Death 11 These events caused the population to reduce significantly In 1352 after the Black Death there were 34 holdings half of which were unoccupied 12 The surviving residents of Alnham however may have benefitted somewhat from this reduction in population and secured better rights the Inquisition for Henry de Percy in 1368 reveals that the bondages and cottages were held by tenants at will in comparison to earlier non contractual tenancies which owed labour services to a lord 13 Being situated in a precarious position between the English and Scottish borders Anglo Scottish combat also caused disruption in Alnham Alnham suffered at the hand of Scottish raids during the reign of Henry VIII Two letters from the Earl of Northumberland to the King dating from October and November 1532 describe how the Scots came across the borders and rampaged Alnham and surrounding towns 14 The tower at Alnham appears to have suffered damage from the Scottish raids as it was reported to have been in a bad condition by 1541 15 The dangerous position of Alnham between the English and Scottish borders is again revealed in a survey of the manor from 1615 which reads the toune and manor of Alneham is parcell of the Barony of Alnewicke The soyle thereof is good and fertile but the tenants have been greatly impoverished and disabled by the Scots and often English thieves by reason that the said toune lieth open to the great wastes between the two realmes 16 Alnham was a significant agricultural centre in the early 17th century Robert Norton s map of the Duke of Northumberland s Alnham Estate from 1619 reveals Alnham s meadowland consisted of four large common fields 70 acres of arable land and 168 acres of Alnham oxe pasture 17 From the 18th century onwards Alnham underwent a period of decay and transformation In 1724 the Magna Brittannia described Alnham as being pretty large However an undated map from pre 1750 shows a dwindling number of cottages Seymour s Survey of c 1756 records five cottages and in the Enclosure Award of 1776 the village is recorded as having only two farms and three cottages This decay can be attributed to the 17th and 18th century policy of leasing tenement lands to a single tenant resulting in the amalgamation of land formerly owned by tenants at will into larger farmholdings 18 Transformation came about later in the 18th century Alnham Common was first recorded in a survey of 1702 and was divided and apportioned in 1776 16 19 The grounds were divided up into holdings along the east and southeast sides of the township and a new road was built through the village 20 The Duke of Northumberland secured the largest share of the land 1 379 acres of infield ground and 6590 acres of common Further divisions of the land were granted to Alexander Collingwood Charles Byrne Percival Clennel and the Vicar of Alnham 21 The rear of the old schoolhouse in Alnham In the 19th century the village of Alnham consisted of three farms a church a vicarage a Church of England school constructed in 1870 and six cottages Farming continued to be the focus of economic activity 22 By the late 19th century Alnham Parish covered around 12 000 acres with the township of Alnham being by far the largest at 9535 acres 23 The population of Alnham in 1801 was 233 and remained relatively stable throughout the century dropping to 205 by 1891 24 The 1831 census revealed that the majority of male residents aged over 20 in Alnham Parish was labourers or servants 45 men A smaller proportion were employers and professionals 8 men or middling sorts 15 men which included small farmers and skilled workers 25 The village did not develop much during the 20th century The only new building to be constructed in this period was the War Memorial Hall erected in 1921 The population gradually declined owing to mechanisation and reduction in farming incomes 26 Demography EditAlnham falls within the North Core Strategy Delivery Area of Northumberland one of the least populated areas of England with 26 residents per square km compared to the county average of 63 27 In 2001 the parish of Whittingham and Alnham had a total usual population of 505 28 In 2011 Alnham Parish had an estimated population of 245 20 4 of residents were aged 0 15 and 10 2 of residents were aged 65 100 of residents identified as white The majority of residents 68 6 were Christian with the remaining population either having an other religion no religion or did not state religion 81 3 of residents aged 16 74 were economically active with agriculture forestry and fishing being the most common industry 25 7 1 Governance EditThroughout its history Alnham has been incorporated in various territorial units In the Medieval period Alnham formed one of the manors of the Barony of Alnwick held by the Vesci lineage beginning in the early 12th century and ending in 1310 The Barony was then sold to Henry de Percy and remains in the hands of the Percy family today The Parish of Alnham in the 19th century contained the townships of Alnham Prendwick Scrainwood and Unthank These townships were recorded as separate localities in the feudal aid of 1242 29 In the UK Parliament Alnham is part of the Berwick upon Tweed Parliament constituency which has been represented by Anne Marie Trevelyan Conservative since May 2015 Prior to May 2015 the seat was represented by Alan Beith Liberal Democrats 30 In local government Alnham is part of the Rothbury Ward and is represented by Steven Christopher Bridgett Independent 31 On the Parish council level Alnham is part of Whittingham Parish Council which comprises the former three separate parishes of Alnham Callaly and Whittingham 32 Landmarks EditThere are seven listed structures in Alnham including old buildings the Church and a Medieval settlement 33 Map of key features in Alnham Church of St Michael and All Angels Edit Main article Church of St Michael Alnham St Michael and All Angels Church located to the west of Alnham village centre The Church of St Michael and All Angels is a Grade I listed building and part of the Diocese of Newcastle It is a Parish Church of Saxon foundation located to the west of the village centre 34 The Church was first recorded in an 1184 charter 8 After William de Vesci gave the Church to Alnwick Abbey a new west front south chapel north aisle and chancel arch were constructed It is likely that the Church was damaged in the Anglo Scottish border wars in the 13th century By the mid 13th century the north arcade was replaced by pointed arches and the north aisle was widened There is evidence that the Church was in a state of ruin at least once by the later Medieval period It was restored with a rebuilt chancel and a new transept arch A further restoration was recorded in 1664 35 By the mid 19th century the Church had again fallen into a poor state The Builder described the state of Alnham Church in 1862 Open the rickety church door The eye is met by a green flash from the damp mildewed walls and by streaks of sky seen through the unceiled slates The western end with its Early Traditional single light has not been much disturbed but the rest of the window opening have been modernized and filled with common sashes which are rotten and let in wind and rain The east end has a small square sash such as is ordinarily provided for a scullery or any inferior office Three of the worm eaten mousy pews are square with a table fixed in the centre of each a fourth forms three sides of a quadrangle that is occupied by a stove Fungi abound and the pavement is sodden with damp Ruin is imminent unless precautions are taken to avert it The Builder 1862 36 F R Wilson an architect from Alnwick was responsible for the restoration of the building in 1870 All of the extant windows of the Church other than those in the west end are Wilson s Further restoration work was carried out on the Church in 1953 by Gustav Adolph Renwick 37 Around 20 yards 18 m to the south of the Church is a Medieval cross base which is a Grade II listed structure It is a large stone 2 feet 61 cm high with a socket cut into it to hold the shaft of a cross 38 Tower House Edit Tower House also known as the vicar s pele Tower House located near to the Church is a Grade II listed building 39 It is also known as the vicar s pele and served as the vicarage of the Church for much of its existence It was first recorded in Bowes and Ellerker s survey of 1541 and is listed as a lytle toure It was most likely constructed in the 15th or early 16th century By the time of the 1541 survey the Tower was in need of repairs but there is no evidence to suggest it received the reparations required The Tower collapsed in 1651 and a record of the building in 1715 reveals that its condition had still not improved In 1828 Archdeacon Singleton noted that the Tower was uninhabited and uninhabitable However by 1844 the building was in use again New battlements corner turrets window openings and a residential wing were constructed 40 Tower House was later used as a youth hostel and is now a private residence 39 Medieval settlement Edit The Medieval settlement at Alnham is a scheduled monument and is located to the south of St Michaels Church The remains of this village exist as a series of earthworks between 0 3 metres 12 in and 0 5 metres 20 in high a toft with an enclosure and two houses a small hill and a group of three houses and an enclosure The settlement lies on two artificially levelled sites It is likely that the original Medieval settlement was larger and more focussed on the Church 41 Alnham Castle Edit The site of Alnham Castle Alnham Castle is a scheduled monument that includes the remains of a Medieval tower house It is located to the south of site of the Medieval village The tower has a rectangular plan measuring 22 metres 72 ft by 18 metres 59 ft and standing up to 2 metres 6 6 ft high 42 The tower was first mentioned in 1405 when it is recorded as one of Harry Hotspur s strongholds which was surrendered to Henry IV It is in a good defensive position on the summit of a low ridge The remains of a small triangular annex can be found to the east and south An outer enclosure which surrounded the tower is represented by a well defined lynchet bank to the north This enclosure most likely consisted of a garden and meadow associated with the manor as recorded in the Inquisition of Henry de Percy in 1368 43 Farm buildings Edit The exterior of Pennywells Cottage The former farmhouses of Alnham castle previously known as Castle Farm can be found in the village today as the Pennywells two Grade II listed cottages Dating from around the early 18th century they are built out of roughly dressed stone 44 The garden wall attached to the front of the Pennywells also built out of roughly dressed stone is another Grade II listed structure 45 There are adjacent farm buildings around 9 metres 10 yd from the Pennywells consisting of byres a stable and shelter sheds which were built around a courtyard between around 1830 and 1840 The farm buildings have a separate Grade II listing 22 46 Castle Hill Edit Farm in Old Hazeltonrig with Castle Hill pictured to the right Castle Hill is a rare example of an Iron Age multivallate hillfort The hillfort has been designated as a scheduled monument and is located to the west of Alnham It stands at a height of 289 metres 948 ft above Ordnance Datum 47 It consists of a sub circular enclosure within concentric ditches with ramparts which are built from earth and stone excavated from the site of the hillfort The site also contains the remains of a Romano British settlement There are at least five hut circles within the interior of the hillfort 48 Three unenclosed huts on the north west flanks of the hillfort defined by a curving out bank constitute the earliest of the remains possibly dating from the Bronze Age 49 There were four possible phases of development of earthwork defences of the hillfort during the Iron Age 50 The first phase consisted of a univallate stone walled enclosure followed by the construction of the ramparts and ditches resulting in a bivallate hillfort phase 2 Phases 3 and 4 saw Castle Hill become a multivallate hillfort 51 Several trackways near Castle Hill potentially date from the prehistoric or Romano British eras 52 There is also evidence of Bronze Age Iron Age and Romano British agricultural activity on the hill Prehistoric cord rig was discovered on the north west of the hilltop and prehistoric or Romano British ploughing has resulted in lynchets on the north east side There is evidence that Medieval cultivation stretched from Alnham village and stopped at a boundary bank to the south east face of the hill 53 War Memorial Hall Edit Alnham War Memorial Hall The most significant structure to be built in Alnham in the 20th century is the War Memorial Hall erected in 1920 as a testament to the impact of World War I on small rural communities like Alnham 26 It is a stone built village hall with a stone incision above the porch door There are no names inscribed on the memorial as there were no deaths in the village during the war 54 Transport Edit Road junction in the centre of Alnham Alnham is an isolated rural community The nearest main road is the A697 around 7 5 miles 12 km away The village is situated on a local road running north south from Prendwick to Scrainwood from a junction near the village centre another road heads northwest from Alnham past Castle Hill for about 5 kilometres 3 1 mi to Ewartly Shank where it ends There were plans in the mid late 19th century for a Northumberland Central Railway line to run through Alnham The proposed railway would have been located to the east of Pennylaws Cottage but it was never built 55 References EditCitations Edit a b Northumberland Knowledge 2011 Census Fact Sheet PDF Northumberland County Council 2013 Retrieved 1 January 2022 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint url status link Mills A D 2011 A Dictionary of British Place Names Oxford University Press ISBN 9780199609086 Retrieved 29 December 2021 Dixon 1895 26 34 AN 2004 26 AN 2004 27 AN 2004 28 AN 2004 28 29 a b c Dodds ed 1935 560 Dixon 1895 27 Dodds ed 1935 574 575 AN 2004 33 Alnham medieval settlement Historic England Retrieved 29 December 2021 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint url status link AN 2004 34 Dixon 1895 28 29 Dodds ed 1935 574 a b Dodds ed 1935 576 AN 2004 40 AN 2004 43 44 Dixon 1895 33 34 AN 2004 44 Alnham Selected Sources and Surveys Northumberland National Park Archived from the original on 20 October 2007 Retrieved 1 January 2022 a b AN 2004 46 47 AN 2004 31 Dixon 1895 31 32 GB Historical GIS University of Portsmouth Alnham CP AP through time Social Structure Statistics Social Status based on 1831 occupational statistics A Vision of Britain through Time Retrieved 29 December 2021 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint url status link a b AN 2004 48 The Church of St Michael and All Angels Alnham Inspired Futures Project Way Forward Report PDF Report Inspired North East 2015 p 7 Retrieved 29 December 2021 Dataset Selection Nomis Retrieved 30 December 2021 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint url status link AN 2004 30 31 MPs and Lords Berwick upon Tweed UK Parliament Retrieved 29 December 2021 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint url status link Councillor Steven Christopher Bridgett Northumberland County Council Retrieved 30 December 2021 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint url status link Whittingham Callaly amp Alnham Parish Council Northumberland Parishes Retrieved 30 December 2021 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint url status link Listed Buildings in Alnham Northumberland British Listed Buildings Retrieved 31 December 2021 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint url status link Church of St Michael Historic England Retrieved 30 December 2021 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint url status link Ryder 2018 16 18 Ryder 2018 2 Ryder 2018 2 Cross base circa 20 yards south of Church of St Michael Historic England Retrieved 31 December 2021 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint url status link a b Tower House Historic England Retrieved 31 December 2021 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint url status link AN 2004 39 Alnham medieval settlement Historic England Retrieved 31 December 2021 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint url status link Alnham Castle a medieval tower house Historic England Retrieved 31 December 2021 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint url status link AN 2004 38 39 Pennywells east cottage and west cottage Historic England Retrieved 31 December 2021 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint url status link Garden wall attached to front of Pennywells Historic England Retrieved 31 December 2021 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint url status link Farmbuildings circa 10 yards east of Pennywells Retrieved 31 December 2021 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint url status link Pearson et al 2001 2 Castle Hill camp Historic England Retrieved 31 December 2021 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint url status link Pearson et al 2001 9 Pearson et al 2001 42 Pearson et al 2001 12 17 Pearson et al 2001 34 Pearson et al 2001 37 Alnham WW1 Memorial Hall Imperial War Museums Retrieved 31 December 2021 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint url status link AN 2004 46 Bibliography Edit Where an abbreviation is used in the references this is indicated below in brackets at the end of the source name When a source is available online a link has been included Dixon David Dippe 1895 Whittingham Vale Northumberland its history traditions and folk lore Newcastle upon Tyne Robert Redpath Dodds Madeleine Hope ed 1935 A history of Northumberland Vol XIV Newcastle upon Tyne Andrew Reid amp Company Limited Simpkin Marshall Limited Retrieved 29 December 2021 via Google Books Alnham Northumberland An archaeological and historical study of a border township PDF Report The Archaeological Practice Ltd 2004 Archived from the original PDF on 21 October 2007 Retrieved 30 December 2021 AN Ryder Peter F 2018 St Michael the Archangel Alnham Archaeological Assessment including report on 2018 works PDF Report Retrieved 31 December 2021 Pearson Trevor Lax Amy Ainsworth Stewart 2001 An Iron Age hillfort and its environs on Castle Hill Alnham Northumberland PDF Report English Heritage ISSN 1478 7008 Retrieved 31 December 2021 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Alnham Map sources for Alnham GENUKI accessed 22 November 2008 Retrieved from https en 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