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Bracebridge Heath

Bracebridge Heath is a village and civil parish located approximately 2 miles (3 km) south of the city of Lincoln, in Lincolnshire, England. It lies at the junction of two major roads the A15 to Sleaford and the A607 to Grantham, and was (until modern systems of local government were introduced in the 19th century) part of the Boothby Graffoe Wapentake. The village sits on top of Lincoln Cliff, overlooking Lincoln and the valley of the River Witham. The population of the civil parish at the 2001 census was 4,530,[citation needed] increasing to 5,656 at the 2011 census.[1]

Bracebridge Heath

Bracebridge Heath Reservoir
Bracebridge Heath
Location within Lincolnshire
Population5,656 (2011)
OS grid referenceSK978670
• London115 mi (185 km) S
Shire county
Region
CountryEngland
Sovereign stateUnited Kingdom
Post townLincoln
Postcode districtLN4
Dialling code01522
PoliceLincolnshire
FireLincolnshire
AmbulanceEast Midlands
UK Parliament
List of places
UK
England
Lincolnshire
53°11′29″N 0°32′11″W / 53.191395°N 0.536475°W / 53.191395; -0.536475Coordinates: 53°11′29″N 0°32′11″W / 53.191395°N 0.536475°W / 53.191395; -0.536475

History

Until 1898 Bracebridge Heath was part of the parish of Bracebridge. Bracebridge may have had its origins in the Old English braesc + brycg, meaning 'bridge or causeway made of branches'. The River Witham runs 1 mile (1.6 km) to the west, lending some credibility to this theory.[citation needed]

The village is mentioned in the Domesday Book as "Brachebrige".[2] Before the Norman Conquest lordship was held by Ulf Fenman, and after by Bishop Geoffrey of Coutances, who also became Tenant-in-chief.[3]

Bracebridge Heath lies on the route of the Roman Ermine Street that runs approximately 200 miles (320 km) from London to York. The central road junction in Bracebridge Heath is the junction of three Roman roads, now the A15 (the Sleaford Road), the A607 (the Grantham Road), and Cross O'Cliffe Hill into Lincoln. The line of Ermine Street, when extended from its last traceable part at Harmston, south of Bracebridge Heath, runs north through Waddington to Heath Road in Bracebridge Heath. Heath Road continues the line of Ermine Street.

According to White's 1876 Lincolnshire, the parish of 1,482 acres (6.00 km2) was part of Boothby Graffoe Wapentake, and consisted of the Lincoln County Lunatic Asylum[4] on Sleaford Road, All Saints' church, and a vicarage. In 1876, 340 persons were recorded as living in the parish, the most notable of which included:

  • Thomas Allen, MD (at the Asylum)
  • William Andrew, Solicitor
  • Rev. William Bromehead BA, Vicar
  • William Coupland, Blacksmith and Beerhouse
  • William Green, Blacksmith
  • George Kirkup, Asylum Steward
  • William Mills, Wards Brickyard
  • Edward Palmer, MD, Asylum Superintendent
  • George Wheatley, Carpenter
  • Charles White, Pattern and Clog Maker
  • John Wollfit, Licensed Victualler, at The John Bull
  • Thomas Butler, Farmer
  • Charles Clarke, Farmer
  • Edwin Scrivener, Farmer
  • William Toulson, Farmer
  • Mrs Mary Winn, Post and Carrier from Lincoln
  • Harry Webber, Hall Farm hand

Modern Bracebridge Heath

Bracebridge Heath has changed considerably since White's description of 1876. The village boundary is now much extended northwards in the direction of Lincoln and south towards the nearby village of Waddington.

The parish of Bracebridge Heath was created out of the complete parish of Bracebridge by a Local Government Order (Kesteven) on 1 April 1898. To date, it has remained basically as it was created apart from one minor boundary adjustment.

A local landmark is the finely worked stone water pumping station and reservoir located on Grantham Road, known locally as 'The Water Tower', as opposed to the white 'Hospital water tower', a header tank for the hospital laundry boilers another prominent landmark, now demolished in 2014.

This 'new'(1912) subterranean reservoir, of which only the 'pumping machinery tower' can be seen, was an overflow for the main reservoir in Westgate Water Tower, and replaced an 'old' open reservoir on Bracebridge Heath on London Road, built in 1871 and closed in 1925. It had been left water-filled from 1912 as an emergency supply in case of fire at the Asylum until the new 'Hospital' water tower was erected and connected to the mains in 1925, from whence it lay empty, and decaying until 1972 when it was filled in and built on, today it is known as Stanley Crescent. The 'new' water reservoir was expanded in the early 1970s

The Lincoln Typhoid outbreak of 1904/5, was caused mainly by surface water run-off into the River Witham from the Asylum Farm fields on the hill slope behind Bracebridge, where untreated effluent was run from the Asylum down a tunnel behind houses on Canwick Avenue into a brick channel at the top of the fields, which just overflowed to fertilise them by irrigation.

In 1912 the 30 houses of the village, and the Asylum, which had been served by deep wells were connected to the mains, and all the wells in use on the Heath were condemned and closed.

Buildings

Other than the old mental hospital chapel (now private accommodation), there is St John's Church (Church of England) on Grantham Road and the Methodist Church, on almost the opposite side of the road. St John's primary school, (now an Academy School) formerly Bracebridge Heath County Primary School,(1880) is situated on the same road along with a small row of shops, and opposite, a new shopping centre.

Just off Sleaford Road (A15) in the direction of Lincoln is the village hall almost behind 'The Bull' Public House (formerly the 'John Bull' public house). Earlier the church hall, situated behind St John's Church, served in that capacity, until the current village hall was built in the 1970s. The Church Hall was taken over by the local Scout group (21st Lincoln) in the early 1980s. They had used it as their headquarters. A local benefactor purchased the hall and donated it to the group.

There was a police station on Whitehall Crescent, which was (in June 2012) enlarged and refurbished, it later underwent further work and is now a Nursery. Next to the Nursery is a public library. Also on London Road is a Medical Centre and GP's Surgery.

A 1921 war memorial and Remembrance garden is situated on the eastern side of the junction of the Sleaford, London, and Grantham Roads.

St John's Hospital

 
St John's Hospital

St John's Hospital[5] closed in December 1989 and the site has been sold to a property developer who has built 183 luxury homes and apartments there.[6] The original hospital buildings are classified as Grade II listed buildings.[7]

Further enlargement

Building work has continued with the construction of a housing development on Grantham Road on the site of the old 'Texaco' petrol station. Almost opposite is the old Pegasus service station (now derelict for some years), which is now used as a car wash, houses have also been constructed within this area.

Public houses

Modern Bracebridge Heath has three public houses. 'The Blacksmiths Arms' now shortened to 'The Blacksmiths', on the site of the Victorian blacksmith's shop and beerhouse built, opened and run by the family of William Green, a Harmston farmer, in 1852. It stands at the point where London Road divides into the Sleaford Road (A15) and the Grantham Road (A607). It has recently been refurbished and re-opened after standing derelict for some years. Directly opposite this on the western side of Grantham Road is the 'John Bull' since 2007 renamed 'The Bull'. Its first spirit license was granted to Thomas Spain, 16 October 1849. 'The Homestead' public house is a late-1990s building conversion of one of the former hospital buildings, which served originally as the hospital Superintendent's residence. (Built in 1906 for Dr. Thomas Leonard Johnston).[citation needed]

There was one other, now long closed, opened to serve the large Irish labour force building the Lincolnshire County Pauper Lunatic Asylum. The old pub still stands, its face basically unaltered, but divided into two houses, in a row of stone cottages, south of the junction with the A607 on the A15 Sleaford Road. Bought out of the Red Hall Estate, on 3 December 1849 from the Chartist land agent Thomas Allsop, it was built and opened in early 1850 by Andrew Binns, a builder turned publican, and was named the 'Mason's Arms'. With the opening of the 'John Bull' in 1849, it may be assumed trade had always been somewhat speculative. The 'Mason's Arms' was put up for sale on 3 August 1850, with its 2 acres of land, finally closing as public house in 1859, it became thereafter fully residential.

Facilities

The village is home to the headquarters of the local Area Health Authority. It is based around the home of one of the Newsum family, (formerly Wood Merchants). Arthur Crookes Newsum J.P., built 'Cross O'Cliffe Court' in 1908/9.

A local cricket club, Bracebridge Heath Cricket Club, has its grounds within the spacious wooded grounds.

Bracebridge Heath is served with amenities which include a police station, a public library, a primary school, a doctor's practice, public houses, fish and chip shop, Tesco Express, a co-op with a post office, a pharmacy, a funeral director, Chinese, Indian, and Pizza take-aways, hairdressers, cafe, taxi, a sports and social club, a bed and breakfast, two churches with church halls, and a village hall. There is also a village sports field with a hall, skateboard facility, bowling, tennis, and football areas.

There is a bus service through the village and the other 'Cliff' villages with rail connections at each end, a 24-hour petrol station and shop on the A15 Sleaford Road, in the South of the village.

To the west of London road (A15), is an area of open land which was known locally as 'The Hillies'. Although privately owned (by the Church), it served for many years as unofficial common land, used for sheep grazing, dog walking and for a rough and ready village football pitch. A public footpath which forms part of The Viking Way runs through it. For several years it has been given over to crop growing.

Viking Way

The Viking Way, a 147 miles (237 km) long footpath from the Humber Bridge to Oakham, runs along the cliff top to the west of the village.

RAF Bracebridge Heath

A Royal Flying Corps (RFC) aerodrome at Bracebridge Heath originally opened in 1916 for use by the Robey-Peters aircraft factory, in the manufacture and flight testing of their own designs and licence-built Sopwith aircraft.[citation needed] . RAF Bracebridge Heath enlarged circa 1919–1920, housed No. 121 Squadron RAF and No. 4 Aircraft Acceptance Park RAF.

In the Second World War, an aircraft repair organisation at Bracebridge Heath, managed by A V Roe and Co Ltd, recovered 'battle damaged' Avro Lancaster bomber parts, which would otherwise have been scrapped, returning them to service and making a contribution to the bomber offensive against Nazi Germany.[citation needed] An MAP B.1 type aircraft hangar from this period survived in 2014.

There was a Grade II listed triple-bay Belfast truss aircraft hangar here (built c1917), but this was demolished on safety grounds in 2001.[8][better source needed] Two other modified and re-clad single-bay Belfast truss hangars survived.

References

  1. ^ UK Census (2011). "Local Area Report – Bracebridge Heath Parish (E04005787)". Nomis. Office for National Statistics.
  2. ^ "Documents Online: Bracebridge in Lincoln, Lincolnshire", Folio: 352v Great Domesday Book; The National Archives. Retrieved 24 December 2011
  3. ^ "Bracebridge [Heath]" 19 September 2012 at the Wayback Machine, Domesdaymap.co.uk. Retrieved 24 December 2011
  4. ^ Lincoln County Lunatic Asylum
  5. ^ Historic England. "St Johns Hospital (1074624)". Research records (formerly PastScape). Retrieved 30 June 2011.
  6. ^ "Former hospital site development well under way". Lincolnshire Life. 1 February 2015. Retrieved 5 October 2018.
  7. ^ Historic England. "Main building at St John's Hospital (1205000)". National Heritage List for England. Retrieved 17 September 2014.
  8. ^ Aircraft, made in Lincoln published 2000, Society for Lincolnshire History and Archaeology.

Walls, John & Parker, Charles (2000) ‘Aircraft Made in Lincoln’ (The Society for Lincolnshire History and Archaeology, ISBN 0-903582-16-3).

External links

  •   Media related to Bracebridge Heath at Wikimedia Commons
  • "Bracebridge Heath", Official Website of Bracebridge Heath Parish Council. Retrieved 3 February 2017
  • "Bracebridge", Genuki.org.uk. Retrieved 24 December 2011
  • "Bracebridge Asylum", Genuki.org.uk. Retrieved 24 December 2011
  • Bracebridge [Heath] in the Domesday Book

bracebridge, heath, this, article, multiple, issues, please, help, improve, discuss, these, issues, talk, page, learn, when, remove, these, template, messages, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, add. This article has multiple issues Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page Learn how and when to remove these template messages This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Bracebridge Heath news newspapers books scholar JSTOR June 2011 Learn how and when to remove this template message This article possibly contains original research Please improve it by verifying the claims made and adding inline citations Statements consisting only of original research should be removed June 2011 Learn how and when to remove this template message Learn how and when to remove this template message Bracebridge Heath is a village and civil parish located approximately 2 miles 3 km south of the city of Lincoln in Lincolnshire England It lies at the junction of two major roads the A15 to Sleaford and the A607 to Grantham and was until modern systems of local government were introduced in the 19th century part of the Boothby Graffoe Wapentake The village sits on top of Lincoln Cliff overlooking Lincoln and the valley of the River Witham The population of the civil parish at the 2001 census was 4 530 citation needed increasing to 5 656 at the 2011 census 1 Bracebridge HeathBracebridge Heath ReservoirBracebridge HeathLocation within LincolnshirePopulation5 656 2011 OS grid referenceSK978670 London115 mi 185 km SShire countyLincolnshireRegionEast MidlandsCountryEnglandSovereign stateUnited KingdomPost townLincolnPostcode districtLN4Dialling code01522PoliceLincolnshireFireLincolnshireAmbulanceEast MidlandsUK ParliamentLincolnList of places UK England Lincolnshire 53 11 29 N 0 32 11 W 53 191395 N 0 536475 W 53 191395 0 536475 Coordinates 53 11 29 N 0 32 11 W 53 191395 N 0 536475 W 53 191395 0 536475 Contents 1 History 2 Modern Bracebridge Heath 2 1 Buildings 2 2 St John s Hospital 2 3 Further enlargement 2 4 Public houses 2 5 Facilities 2 6 Viking Way 3 RAF Bracebridge Heath 4 References 5 External linksHistory EditUntil 1898 Bracebridge Heath was part of the parish of Bracebridge Bracebridge may have had its origins in the Old English braesc brycg meaning bridge or causeway made of branches The River Witham runs 1 mile 1 6 km to the west lending some credibility to this theory citation needed The village is mentioned in the Domesday Book as Brachebrige 2 Before the Norman Conquest lordship was held by Ulf Fenman and after by Bishop Geoffrey of Coutances who also became Tenant in chief 3 Bracebridge Heath lies on the route of the Roman Ermine Street that runs approximately 200 miles 320 km from London to York The central road junction in Bracebridge Heath is the junction of three Roman roads now the A15 the Sleaford Road the A607 the Grantham Road and Cross O Cliffe Hill into Lincoln The line of Ermine Street when extended from its last traceable part at Harmston south of Bracebridge Heath runs north through Waddington to Heath Road in Bracebridge Heath Heath Road continues the line of Ermine Street According to White s 1876 Lincolnshire the parish of 1 482 acres 6 00 km2 was part of Boothby Graffoe Wapentake and consisted of the Lincoln County Lunatic Asylum 4 on Sleaford Road All Saints church and a vicarage In 1876 340 persons were recorded as living in the parish the most notable of which included Thomas Allen MD at the Asylum William Andrew Solicitor Rev William Bromehead BA Vicar William Coupland Blacksmith and Beerhouse William Green Blacksmith George Kirkup Asylum Steward William Mills Wards Brickyard Edward Palmer MD Asylum Superintendent George Wheatley Carpenter Charles White Pattern and Clog Maker John Wollfit Licensed Victualler at The John Bull Thomas Butler Farmer Charles Clarke Farmer Edwin Scrivener Farmer William Toulson Farmer Mrs Mary Winn Post and Carrier from Lincoln Harry Webber Hall Farm handModern Bracebridge Heath EditBracebridge Heath has changed considerably since White s description of 1876 The village boundary is now much extended northwards in the direction of Lincoln and south towards the nearby village of Waddington The parish of Bracebridge Heath was created out of the complete parish of Bracebridge by a Local Government Order Kesteven on 1 April 1898 To date it has remained basically as it was created apart from one minor boundary adjustment A local landmark is the finely worked stone water pumping station and reservoir located on Grantham Road known locally as The Water Tower as opposed to the white Hospital water tower a header tank for the hospital laundry boilers another prominent landmark now demolished in 2014 This new 1912 subterranean reservoir of which only the pumping machinery tower can be seen was an overflow for the main reservoir in Westgate Water Tower and replaced an old open reservoir on Bracebridge Heath on London Road built in 1871 and closed in 1925 It had been left water filled from 1912 as an emergency supply in case of fire at the Asylum until the new Hospital water tower was erected and connected to the mains in 1925 from whence it lay empty and decaying until 1972 when it was filled in and built on today it is known as Stanley Crescent The new water reservoir was expanded in the early 1970sThe Lincoln Typhoid outbreak of 1904 5 was caused mainly by surface water run off into the River Witham from the Asylum Farm fields on the hill slope behind Bracebridge where untreated effluent was run from the Asylum down a tunnel behind houses on Canwick Avenue into a brick channel at the top of the fields which just overflowed to fertilise them by irrigation In 1912 the 30 houses of the village and the Asylum which had been served by deep wells were connected to the mains and all the wells in use on the Heath were condemned and closed Buildings Edit Other than the old mental hospital chapel now private accommodation there is St John s Church Church of England on Grantham Road and the Methodist Church on almost the opposite side of the road St John s primary school now an Academy School formerly Bracebridge Heath County Primary School 1880 is situated on the same road along with a small row of shops and opposite a new shopping centre Just off Sleaford Road A15 in the direction of Lincoln is the village hall almost behind The Bull Public House formerly the John Bull public house Earlier the church hall situated behind St John s Church served in that capacity until the current village hall was built in the 1970s The Church Hall was taken over by the local Scout group 21st Lincoln in the early 1980s They had used it as their headquarters A local benefactor purchased the hall and donated it to the group There was a police station on Whitehall Crescent which was in June 2012 enlarged and refurbished it later underwent further work and is now a Nursery Next to the Nursery is a public library Also on London Road is a Medical Centre and GP s Surgery A 1921 war memorial and Remembrance garden is situated on the eastern side of the junction of the Sleaford London and Grantham Roads St John s Hospital Edit St John s Hospital St John s Hospital 5 closed in December 1989 and the site has been sold to a property developer who has built 183 luxury homes and apartments there 6 The original hospital buildings are classified as Grade II listed buildings 7 Further enlargement Edit Building work has continued with the construction of a housing development on Grantham Road on the site of the old Texaco petrol station Almost opposite is the old Pegasus service station now derelict for some years which is now used as a car wash houses have also been constructed within this area Public houses Edit Modern Bracebridge Heath has three public houses The Blacksmiths Arms now shortened to The Blacksmiths on the site of the Victorian blacksmith s shop and beerhouse built opened and run by the family of William Green a Harmston farmer in 1852 It stands at the point where London Road divides into the Sleaford Road A15 and the Grantham Road A607 It has recently been refurbished and re opened after standing derelict for some years Directly opposite this on the western side of Grantham Road is the John Bull since 2007 renamed The Bull Its first spirit license was granted to Thomas Spain 16 October 1849 The Homestead public house is a late 1990s building conversion of one of the former hospital buildings which served originally as the hospital Superintendent s residence Built in 1906 for Dr Thomas Leonard Johnston citation needed There was one other now long closed opened to serve the large Irish labour force building the Lincolnshire County Pauper Lunatic Asylum The old pub still stands its face basically unaltered but divided into two houses in a row of stone cottages south of the junction with the A607 on the A15 Sleaford Road Bought out of the Red Hall Estate on 3 December 1849 from the Chartist land agent Thomas Allsop it was built and opened in early 1850 by Andrew Binns a builder turned publican and was named the Mason s Arms With the opening of the John Bull in 1849 it may be assumed trade had always been somewhat speculative The Mason s Arms was put up for sale on 3 August 1850 with its 2 acres of land finally closing as public house in 1859 it became thereafter fully residential Facilities Edit The village is home to the headquarters of the local Area Health Authority It is based around the home of one of the Newsum family formerly Wood Merchants Arthur Crookes Newsum J P built Cross O Cliffe Court in 1908 9 A local cricket club Bracebridge Heath Cricket Club has its grounds within the spacious wooded grounds Bracebridge Heath is served with amenities which include a police station a public library a primary school a doctor s practice public houses fish and chip shop Tesco Express a co op with a post office a pharmacy a funeral director Chinese Indian and Pizza take aways hairdressers cafe taxi a sports and social club a bed and breakfast two churches with church halls and a village hall There is also a village sports field with a hall skateboard facility bowling tennis and football areas There is a bus service through the village and the other Cliff villages with rail connections at each end a 24 hour petrol station and shop on the A15 Sleaford Road in the South of the village To the west of London road A15 is an area of open land which was known locally as The Hillies Although privately owned by the Church it served for many years as unofficial common land used for sheep grazing dog walking and for a rough and ready village football pitch A public footpath which forms part of The Viking Way runs through it For several years it has been given over to crop growing Viking Way Edit The Viking Way a 147 miles 237 km long footpath from the Humber Bridge to Oakham runs along the cliff top to the west of the village RAF Bracebridge Heath EditA Royal Flying Corps RFC aerodrome at Bracebridge Heath originally opened in 1916 for use by the Robey Peters aircraft factory in the manufacture and flight testing of their own designs and licence built Sopwith aircraft citation needed RAF Bracebridge Heath enlarged circa 1919 1920 housed No 121 Squadron RAF and No 4 Aircraft Acceptance Park RAF In the Second World War an aircraft repair organisation at Bracebridge Heath managed by A V Roe and Co Ltd recovered battle damaged Avro Lancaster bomber parts which would otherwise have been scrapped returning them to service and making a contribution to the bomber offensive against Nazi Germany citation needed An MAP B 1 type aircraft hangar from this period survived in 2014 There was a Grade II listed triple bay Belfast truss aircraft hangar here built c1917 but this was demolished on safety grounds in 2001 8 better source needed Two other modified and re clad single bay Belfast truss hangars survived References Edit UK Census 2011 Local Area Report Bracebridge Heath Parish E04005787 Nomis Office for National Statistics Documents Online Bracebridge in Lincoln Lincolnshire Folio 352v Great Domesday Book The National Archives Retrieved 24 December 2011 Bracebridge Heath Archived 19 September 2012 at the Wayback Machine Domesdaymap co uk Retrieved 24 December 2011 Lincoln County Lunatic Asylum Historic England St Johns Hospital 1074624 Research records formerly PastScape Retrieved 30 June 2011 Former hospital site development well under way Lincolnshire Life 1 February 2015 Retrieved 5 October 2018 Historic England Main building at St John s Hospital 1205000 National Heritage List for England Retrieved 17 September 2014 Aircraft made in Lincoln published 2000 Society for Lincolnshire History and Archaeology Walls John amp Parker Charles 2000 Aircraft Made in Lincoln The Society for Lincolnshire History and Archaeology ISBN 0 903582 16 3 External links Edit Media related to Bracebridge Heath at Wikimedia Commons Bracebridge Heath Official Website of Bracebridge Heath Parish Council Retrieved 3 February 2017 Bracebridge Genuki org uk Retrieved 24 December 2011 Bracebridge Asylum Genuki org uk Retrieved 24 December 2011 Bracebridge Heath in the Domesday BookPortals England United Kingdom Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Bracebridge Heath amp oldid 1104841161, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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