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Gainsborough, Lincolnshire

Gainsborough is a market town, inland port and civil parish in the West Lindsey district of Lincolnshire, England. The population was 20,842 at the 2011 census,[1] and estimated at 23,243 in 2019.[2] It lies on the east bank of the River Trent, 18 miles (29 km) north-west of Lincoln, 16 miles (26 km) south-west of Scunthorpe, 20 miles south-east of Doncaster and 39 miles (63 km) east of Sheffield. It is England's furthest inland port at over 55 miles (89 km) from the North Sea.[3][4][5]

Gainsborough
Town and inland port
Gainsborough waterfront and the River Trent
Gainsborough
Location within Lincolnshire
Population22,841 (2017 estimate)
OS grid referenceSK815901
• London135 mi (217 km) S
District
Shire county
Region
CountryEngland
Sovereign stateUnited Kingdom
Post townGAINSBOROUGH
Postcode districtDN21
Dialling code01427
PoliceLincolnshire
FireLincolnshire
AmbulanceEast Midlands
UK Parliament
List of places
UK
England
Lincolnshire
53°24′06″N 0°46′24″W / 53.4016°N 0.7732°W / 53.4016; -0.7732
All Saints Church, Gainsborough
Gainsborough Old Hall
Gladstone Street, Gainsborough

History edit

 
Gainsborough Old Hall
 
The Aegir (tidal bore) on the Trent
 
The Market Place, with Gainsborough Town Hall in the background

King Alfred, Sweyn Forkbeard and Cnut the Great edit

The place-name Gainsborough first appears in the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle of 1013 as Gegnesburh and Gæignesburh. In the Domesday Book of 1086, it appears as Gainesburg: Gegn's fortified place.[6] It was one of the capital cities of Mercia in the Anglo-Saxon period that preceded Danish rule. Its choice by the Vikings as an administrative centre was influenced by its proximity to the Danish stronghold at Torksey.[7]

In 868 King Alfred married Ealhswith (Ealswitha), daughter of Æthelred Mucel, chief of the Gaini, whence the town gets its name.[8][9]

Historically, Gainsborough is the "capital that never was". Towards the end of July 1013, the Dane Sweyn Forkbeard and his son and heir Cnut (Canute) arrived in Gainsborough with an army of conquest. Sweyn defeated the English opposition, and King Ethelred fled the country. Sweyn was declared King of England and returned to Gainsborough. Sweyn and Cnut took up high office at the Gainsborough Castle on the site of the present-day Old Hall, while his army occupied the camp at Thonock (now known as Castle Hills).[9] However, Sweyn died, or perhaps was killed five weeks later in Gainsborough. His son Cnut established a base elsewhere. So Gainsborough was named as capital of England and of Denmark for five weeks in the year 1013.[10]

Cnut may have performed his unsuccessful attempt to turn the tide back in the River Trent at Gainsborough.[11] Historians[who?] believe he may have been demonstrating on the Trent Aegir, a tidal bore. He and his supporters may have known Gainsborough was the furthest reach of the aegir, and ideal for his demonstration. However, the story was only written down a century later by Henry of Huntingdon, who gives no location, and it may have been a myth or a fable.

Medieval Gainsborough edit

The Domesday Book (1086) records that Gainsborough was a community of farmers, villeins and sokemen, tenants of Geoffrey de Guerche.

The Lindsey Survey of 1115–1118 records that Gainsborough was held by Nigel d'Aubigny, the forebear of the Mowbray family, whose interest in Gainsborough continued until at least the end of the 14th century.

A weekly market was granted by King John in 1204.

Gainsborough Old Hall edit

Thomas Burgh acquired the manor of Gainsborough in 1455. He built Gainsborough Old Hall between 1460 and 1480, a large, 15th-century, timber-framed medieval strong house, and one of the best-preserved manor houses in Britain. It boasts a magnificent Great Hall and strong brick tower. King Richard III in 1483 and King Henry VIII in 1541 both stayed at the Old Hall. The manor was sold to the Hickman family in 1596.

English Civil War edit

The town was garrisoned for the King in January 1643 and began cooperating with the garrison at Newark in raiding the surrounding countryside and harassing Parliamentarians there. With the Great North Road blocked to Parliamentarian traffic, Gainsborough became significant as part of a route around Newark by way of Lincoln and the line of the modern A15 road. It was in Royalist interests to obstruct this, which gave rise to battles at Gainsborough and Winceby. Parliament captured Gainsborough in the battle on 20 July, but it was immediately besieged by a large Royalist army and forced to surrender after three days.

Parliament captured Gainsborough again on 18 December 1643, but had to withdraw in March 1644, razing the town's defences to prevent their use by the enemy. The Earl of Manchester's army passed through Gainsborough in May 1644 on its way to York and the Battle of Marston Moor.

After the Civil War ended in 1645, several people in Gainsborough were fined for Royalist sympathies, including Sir Willoughby Hickman, 1st Baronet at the Old Hall, who had been created the first Baronet of Gainsborough by Charles I in 1643.[12]

Churches edit

 
All Saints Church, Gainsborough

The first record of a church at Gainsborough is in 1180, when the rectory there was granted by Roger de Talebu to the great Preceptory of the Knights Templar in Lindsey, at Willoughton. In 1547, following the English Reformation, the parish of Gainsborough came under the jurisdiction of the Bishop of Lincoln for the first time.

The medieval Church of All Saints fell into disrepair after the Civil War. In 1736 it was demolished to make way for a new parish church completed in 1748 in a mix of perpendicular Gothic and Classical Revival styles. All that remains of the medieval church is the west tower, 90 feet high with a ring of eight bells. A monument to Richard Rollett, master sailmaker on Captain James Cook's second voyage, is located in the porch.[13] All Saints' remains the main parish church of the town.

The town's rising 19th-century population called for a second church in the south of the town; Holy Trinity Church opened in 1843. This was followed by St John the Divine Church in Ashcroft Road in 1882, and St George's Church in Heapham Road in the 1950s. Holy Trinity closed in 1971 and is now the Trinity Arts Centre. St John the Divine church was closed in 2002 and it is now used for a cafe and community centre.

Non-conformism flourished in Gainsborough. It has often been claimed that some of the Mayflower Pilgrims worshipped in secret at the Old Hall before sailing for Holland to find religious freedom in 1609; no historical evidence for this has been found, whereas the congregation of John Smyth that met in the town developed into the Baptists and some returned to England. The John Robinson Memorial Church in Church Street was dedicated in 1897; the cornerstone was laid by Thomas F. Bayard, US Ambassador.[14] Now the United Reformed Church, it was named in honour of John Robinson (1576–1625), pastor of the "Pilgrim Fathers" before they left on the Mayflower.

John Wesley, the founder of Methodism, preached in Gainsborough several times between 1759 and 1790. The town's first Methodist chapel opened in Church Lane in 1788, moving to a new site in North Street in 1804, and rebuilt there as St Stephen's in 1966. The Primitive Methodists set up in the town in 1819, with chapels in Spring Gardens (1838), Trinity Street (1877) and Ropery Road (1910). St Thomas's Church in Cross Street caters for the town's Roman Catholics.[7]

Second World War edit

Gainsborough suffered its only large-scale air raid of the war on the night of 10 May 1941. High-explosive bombs and incendiaries were dropped, but many fell harmlessly on the surrounding countryside. There was only minor damage in the town and no casualties.

On the night of 28–29 April 1942 a single Dornier 217 dropped a stick of bombs on the town centre, causing extensive damage and the loss of seven lives. On 31 December 1942, a RCAF Bristol Beaufighter aircraft on a training exercise crashed on Noel Street, killing both airmen and a three-year-old girl. On 22 May 1944 a RAF Spitfire fighter, in a training exercise, collided with a Wellington bomber and crashed into a Sheffield-bound goods train as it was passing over the railway bridge on Lea Road. The pilot was the only casualty.

In the early hours of 5 March 1945 a single Junkers Ju 88 fighter/bomber made a low-level attack over the town, dropping anti-personnel bombs on Church Street and the surrounding residential area. Three people died and 50 houses were damaged.[15]

New town edit

There was a proposal to develop Gainsborough as a new town linked to Sheffield, but the plan was not pursued. New housing was instead built to the south-east of Sheffield.[16]

Governance edit

 
The Guildhall, former offices of the West Lindsey District Council

The town was before 1974 in the Gainsborough Urban District in the county of Lindsey. West Lindsey District Council was formed from five former councils. Gainsborough Town Council was established in 1992, and in the same year Gainsborough's first mayor was appointed.

Sir Edward Leigh has been Gainsborough's Member of Parliament (MP) since 1983.

Oil edit

In July 1958, BP discovered oil at Corringham, then at Gainsborough in January 1959.[17]

Geography edit

 
A631 bridge over the Trent

The town is at the meeting point of the east–west A631, which crosses the Trent on Trent Bridge at the only point between the M180 and the A57), the A156 from the south to Torksey and A159 from Scunthorpe). The dual-carriageway Thorndike Way intended to link with the A15 at Caenby Corner, only reaches eastward to the town boundary. It is named after the locally born actress Dame Sybil Thorndike. The former A631 through the town is now the B1433.

The civil parish extends south across rural land to Lea. The boundary passes to the south of Warren Wood, north of Lea Wood Farm, and along the northern edge of Lea Wood northwards through Bass Wood, where it meets Corringham, the main settlement to the east of Gainsborough. The boundary crosses Thorndike Way (A631) and briefly follows the B1433. At Belt Farm it meets Thonock, then follows The Belt Road, to the south of Gainsborough Golf Club, then down Thonock Hill to the edge of the Trent Valley.

George Eliot and The Mill on the Floss edit

In order to see Mr and Mrs Glegg at home, we must enter the town of St Ogg's, — that venerable town with the red fluted roofs and the broad warehouse gables, where the black ships unlade themselves of their burthens from the far north, and carry away, in exchange, the precious inland products, the well-crushed cheese and the soft fleeces which my refined readers have doubtless become acquainted with through the medium of the best classic pastorals. It is one of those old, old towns which impress one as a continuation and outgrowth of nature, as much as the nests of the bower-birds or the winding galleries of the white ants; a town which carries the traces of its long growth and history like a millennial tree, and has sprung up and developed in the same spot between the river and the low hill from the time when the Roman legions turned their backs on it from the camp on the hillside, and the long-haired sea-kings came up the river and looked with fierce, eager eyes at the fatness of the land. It is a town "familiar with forgotten years". The shadow of the Saxon hero-king still walks there fitfully, reviewing the scenes of his youth and love-time, and is met by the gloomier shadow of the dreadful heathen Dane, who was stabbed in the midst of his warriors by the sword of an invisible avenger, and who rises on autumn evenings like a white mist from his tumulus on the hill, and hovers in the court of the old hall by the river-side, the spot where he was thus miraculously slain in the days before the old hall was built. It was the Normans who began to build that fine old hall, which is, like the town, telling of the thoughts and hands of widely sundered generations; but it is all so old that we look with loving pardon at its inconsistencies, and are well content that they who built the stone oriel, and they who built the Gothic façade and towers of finest small brickwork with the trefoil ornament, and the windows and battlements defined with stone, did not sacriligiously pull down the ancient half-timbered body with its oak-roofed banqueting-hall.

George Eliot, The Mill on the Floss, Book Sixth, Chapter XII.

Many scholars believe Gainsborough to be the basis for the fictional town of St Ogg's in George Eliot's The Mill on the Floss (1860). The novelist visited Gainsborough in 1859, staying in the house of a shipbuilder in Bridge Street, which survives today as the United Services Club. The stone bridge and the nearby willow tree are mentioned and the Old Hall is described in detail. Thomas Miller's Our Old Town published two years before, included the true story of a miller who loses a lawsuit after assaulting his adversary, and George Eliot used a similar story plot in The Mill on the Floss as the basis of the Tulliver/Wakem feud. It is also possible that she witnessed the Trent Aegir, which inspired the flood in her story's climax.[7][page needed]

Economy edit

Boiler-maker and ironworks edit

Gainsborough has a long history of industry. It was the manufacturing base of Marshall, Sons & Co., a boiler-maker founded by William Marshall in 1848, who died in 1861 and was buried in the cemetery in Ropery Road. His business became one of the joint-stock companies run by his sons James and Henry. It occupied the 16-acre Britannia Ironworks, the biggest in Europe when built. Marshall's Works' steam engines were sold worldwide until it closed in the 1980s.[7] The site is now split among various companies. Tesco in Beaumont Street and Dransfield's occupy about nine acres; the remainder is held by local companies.

Supermarkets edit

 
Entrance to Marshall's Yard, 2008

Tesco, on the corner of Trinity Street and Colville Terrace, demolished much of the works to create its store about twenty years ago. It had intended to replace their current store with a 100,000 sq ft (9,300 m2) Tesco Extra store on stilts, with parking beneath, but these plans were scrapped. Dransfield remodelled about 9 acres (3.6 ha) of the site to include a shopping area and a new heritage museum. The site Marshall's Yard opened during Easter 2007, with additional shops opening after that.

There is a Marks & Spencer foodhall in Marshall's Yard on Beaumont Street and a Lidl opposite, on the site of the multi-storey car park, and an Aldi on the site of the workhouse on Lea Road. There is a Morrisons branch in Heapham Road South. There are branches of the Co-op by the Ship Inn pub in Morton by Gainsborough, one on the site of the Jack and Jill pub by St Georges Community Hall on Heapham Road, and another on the site of the Peacock pub by the Gainsborough Town Tennis Club on Corringham Road.

Packaging edit

Another area of Gainsborough industry is Rose Brothers,[18] named after William German Rose and Walter Rose, the co-founders. In 1893 William Rose invented the world's first packaging machine. Two years later it bought the Trentside Works site and started to expand into many other areas, producing items such as starch, razor blades and sweets such as Cadbury's chocolates, its name appearing on the Roses selection. The firm produced seaside rock-making machines, cigarette-making machines and bread-slicing and wrapping machines. When it closed, A. M. P. Rose bought the confectionery packaging side.[7] The Rose Brothers Ground hosted cricket matches.

By the east bank of the Trent near the railway bridge is a large mill owned by Kerry Ingredients (headquartered in Tralee).

Wigs, jokes and exhausts edit

Gainsborough is the home of two of the largest importers of jokes and novelties into the UK: Smiffy's (formerly known as RH Smith & Sons, founded in 1894),[19] and Pam's of Gainsborough, a smaller firm founded in 1986. Smiffy's were the only wigmaker left in the UK until December 2008, when bulk production moved to the Far East and over 35 jobs were lost. The firm has set its future goals on a more mature fancy dress and party market.

Another local business is Eminox, founded in 1978. It started by building replacement exhausts for the local bus company, then expanded into manufacturing large stainless steel exhaust systems for buses and commercial vehicles. It also builds low-emission catalytic systems for the London low emission zone.

Landmarks edit

Beside Riverside Walk are Whitton's Mill flats, which won a Royal Town Planning Institute award for the East Midlands. Marshall's Yard also received an award, for regeneration.[20]

West Lindsey District Council had its offices at the Guildhall, Lord Street, but moved in January 2008 to a £4.3 million new-build in Marshall's Yard.[21]

 
View of the Water Tower on Heapham Road
 
A631 bypass – Thorndike Way looking west

Silver Street is home to many Gainsborough shops. Elswitha Hall is the birthplace of Halford John Mackinder, founder of the Geographical Association.

A water tower in Heapham Road was built in 1897 to mark the Diamond Jubilee of Queen Victoria.[22]

Transport edit

Railway edit

The town has two railway stations on different routes. The main station is Gainsborough Lea Road in Lea Road (A156) in the south of the town, serving the Sheffield-Lincoln and Doncaster-Lincoln lines with mainly hourly services to Lincoln, Sheffield and Doncaster. Sheffield services generally call at Retford, Worksop and Sheffield only, then continue towards Leeds. The other station is Gainsborough Central near the town centre. It serves the Brigg branch line and is the terminus of an hourly service to and from Sheffield on Mondays to Saturdays, calling at all stations. On Saturdays there are three services to Cleethorpes via Brigg and Grimsby Town.

Where the railway crosses the Trent, the four lines come together at two junctions on either side of the river. The lines from Lincoln and Cleethorpes meet at East Trent Junction, east of the river.[23] Those from Sheffield and Doncaster meet at West Trent Junction on the opposite side in Nottinghamshire.

West Burton Power Station is three miles (4.8 km) to the south-west of the town, next to the Sheffield-Lincoln Line.

Buses edit

The town bus station in Hickmen Street has frequent services on Monday to Saturday, but no Sunday services. Most town routes are served by Stagecoach. Two local services connect the uphill area of the town and Morton to the town centre, one running clockwise, the other anti-clockwise. The town has a connection hub with hourly services to Lincoln, Scunthorpe and Retford and a service to Doncaster every two hours. These serve several villages along the route. Other bus services run during school terms.

Rivers edit

 
River Trent in Gainsborough, 2009

Gainsborough is claimed as the British port furthest inland.[24][25] It has had a long history of river shipping trade.

There is still one wharf, but ships no longer navigate this far up river. Commercial shipping remains further down the river at Gunness Wharf, Grove Wharf and Flixborough Wharf, which has direct rail links. This leads to some to argue that Goole, 23.7 miles (38.1 km) to the north of the town, is now the most inland port in the UK.[26][27]

At the A631 Trent Bridge, there was a ferry before 1787, a distance of 235 feet. The bridge was completed for £12,000 in the spring of 1791, but it meant that taller river traffic of the day could no longer go further upstream. Originally a toll bridge, it was bought by the Ministry of Transport, Lindsey County Council, Gainsborough Urban District and Nottinghamshire County Council for £130,000 in 1927 and declared toll-free on 31 March 1932.[7][page needed]

In the 1970s, the town council planned to build another bridge adjacent to the existing one on the North side and extend the Thorndike Way dual-carriageway across the river and join The Flood Road dual-carriageway. However, all of the funding for the project was given for the completion of the Humber Bridge.

Sport edit

The town is home to the semi-professional football club Gainsborough Trinity F.C., which plays in the Northern Premier League, the seventh level of English football. For a brief spell in the early 20th century, the club was professional and a member of the Football League. The Gainsborough United F.C. was active in 1980.[28]

Gainsborough Rugby Club (the All Blacks) has played Rugby Union in the town since 1924.

The town is home to the Gainsborough & Morton Striders Athletic Club, who in 2013 were awarded England Athletics' Run England National Group of the Year.[29] The club was founded in July 1983.[30]

There are several cycling clubs, including Trent Valley Road Club, Viking Velo and Gainsborough Aegir Cycling Club.

Media edit

Television signals are received from either the Belmont or Emley Moor TV transmitters.[31][32] Local radio stations are BBC Radio Lincolnshire, Greatest Hits Radio Lincolnshire, Lincs FM and Trentside Radio, a community based radio station.[33] The town's local newspapers are the Gainsborough Standard and Lincolnshire Echo.

Attractions edit

The house and grounds of Richmond Park, in the north of the town, opened as a public park in 1947; attractions include greenhouses, an aviary and a 600-year-old oak tree. Whitton Gardens on the Riverside opened in 1973.

Gainsborough Town Hall, which was built in 1892, is now an entertainment venue with seating for up to 150 people.[34]

Renovation of the town's river banks was completed in 2002, providing riverside access. On the second weekend in June in that year, the town hosted the Gainsborough Riverside Festival, an annual arts/heritage event that ran until 2013, when it fell to financial constraints.

Trinity Art Centre hosts live music, plays, comedy, and also screens films. There is a volunteer-run charity called Gainsborough Heritage Centre, with displays of a range of object from the town's past.

Education edit

Unlike most of the UK, Lincolnshire retains a tripartite system, with secondary education for many pupils decided by voluntary examination at eleven. The town has one of the top state schools in the country, Queen Elizabeth's High School (selective state grammar school from 11 to 18 featuring a sixth form) on Morton Terrace (A159).[35]

QEHS students earn outstanding GCSE and A-Level results and the school is over-subscribed.[36][37] The town has several primary schools.

There are links beyond the town to the John Leggott Sixth Form College in Scunthorpe, North Lindsey College, and Lincoln College, which has a branch at Gainsborough College in Acland Street, focusing on vocational education.

 
Sweyn Forkbeard, king of Denmark and England, who died in Gainsborough in 1014

Notable people edit

In birth order:

International relations edit

Gainsborough is twinned with:

Arms edit

Coat of arms of Gainsborough, Lincolnshire
Notes
Originally granted to Gainsborough Urban District Council on 15 March 1950.[56]
Crest
On a wreath of the colours out of a mural coronet two anchors in saltire Or.
Escutcheon
Vert on a fesse wavy Argent in chief a cog-wheel between two garbs and in base an ancient crown Or a fesse wavy Azure.
Motto
Strive For The Gain Of All

References edit

  1. ^ UK Census (2011). "Local Area Report – Gainsborough Built-up area (E34004397)". Nomis. Office for National Statistics. Retrieved 25 April 2019.
  2. ^ City Population. Retrieved 12 January 2021.
  3. ^ "Ports.org.uk/ Gainsborough". ports.org.uk. Retrieved 8 January 2022.
  4. ^ "Gainsborough's Port and River Memories". G & D H A. 24 April 2020. Retrieved 8 January 2022.
  5. ^ "The Trent at Gainsborough". graville.com. Retrieved 8 January 2022.
  6. ^ Eilert Ekwall,The Concise Oxford Dictionary of English Place-names, p. 191.
  7. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k Ian S. Beckwith, The Book of Gainsborough (1988)ISBN 0860232697
  8. ^ Ian W. Walker (2000), Mercia and the Making of England Sutton ISBN 0-7509-2131-5
  9. ^ a b J. Charles Cox (1916), Lincolnshire p. 133; Methuen & Co. Ltd. Retrieved 23 April 2011.
  10. ^ BBC article. Retrieved 16 August 2020.
  11. ^ "Viking Gainsborough: Former capital promotes Sweyn Forkbeard links". BBC. 25 December 2014. Retrieved 23 May 2021.
  12. ^ John West, Oliver Cromwell and the Battle of Gainsborough (1992) ISBN 0-902662-43-0
  13. ^ Monument to Richard Rollett at All Saints' Church, Gainsborough.
  14. ^ "New York Times 30 May 1897" (PDF).
  15. ^ Gainsborough Heritage Society Gainsborough at War 1939–1945.
  16. ^ Clyde Binfield, The History of the City of Sheffield, 1843–1993 p. 27 (1993).
  17. ^ "Oli Fields". Trent Vale. Retrieved 23 May 2021.
  18. ^ [1] 5 February 2007 at the Wayback Machine
  19. ^ "About Us". Smiffys.com. Retrieved 29 May 2013.
  20. ^ "East Midlands". Royal Town Planning Institute.
  21. ^ . Tenbees.co.uk. Archived from the original on 21 November 2008. Retrieved 29 May 2013.
  22. ^ Commemoration plaque beside the water tower
  23. ^ Whyles, Dafydd (Summer 2022). "LIFE INSIDE A BRITISH SIGNAL BOX". Railroad Heritage. Center for Railroad Photography & Art. pp. 24–35. Retrieved 31 January 2024.
  24. ^ Thomson, William (2016). The Book of Tides. Hachette UK. p. 146. ISBN 978-1786480804.
  25. ^ "Gainsborough". The Logistics Institute Data Observatory. University of Hull. Retrieved 20 May 2020. Labelled as Britain's most inland port...Nowadays, very few vessels sails as far up the River Trent as Gainsborough...
  26. ^ "Goole, East Yorkshire – Britain's most inland port". Yorkshire Life. Archant Community Media Ltd. 2010. Retrieved 20 May 2020.
  27. ^ "Port of Goole". Invest Humber. Marketing Humber and Humber Local Enterprise Partnership. Retrieved 20 May 2020. As the UK's most inland port, Goole is ideally situated for access to the country's transport infrastructure.
  28. ^ "Football Club History Database – Gainsborough United".
  29. ^ "Run England volunteers recognised at England Athletics Awards". Run Together. England Athletics. 21 October 2013. Retrieved 8 January 2022. Gainsborough & Morton Striders won Group of the Year.
  30. ^ "About The Club". Gainsborough & Morton Striders. Retrieved 8 January 2022.
  31. ^ "Belmont (Lincolnshire, England) Full Freeview transmitter". May 2004.
  32. ^ "Emley Moor (Kirklees, England) Full Freeview transmitter". May 2004.
  33. ^ "Trentside Radio Community Radio Supporting Gainsborough and surrounding communities". from the original on 11 November 2023. Retrieved 25 April 2024.
  34. ^ "Room Hire". Th-exchange. Retrieved 23 May 2021.
  35. ^ Gurney-Read, Josie (26 August 2016). "GCSE results 2016: state school results". The Telegraph. Archived from the original on 12 January 2022. Retrieved 30 April 2018.
  36. ^ "Education | League Tables | Performance results for The Queen Elizabeth's High School, Gainsborough". BBC News. 13 January 2010. Retrieved 29 May 2013.
  37. ^ "The Queen Elizabeth's High School, Gainsborough". Gov.uk. Department for Education. Retrieved 30 April 2018.
  38. ^ a b c *  This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domainChisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Gainsborough". Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 11 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. pp. 389–390.
  39. ^ Derek McCulloch, "The Musical Œuvre of Willoughby Bertie, 4th Earl of Abingdon (1740–99)", Royal Musical Association Research Chronicle #33 (2000) [2].
  40. ^ Plaque near birthplace
  41. ^ a b c "Famous People from Gainsborough, Lincolnshire". www.visitoruk.com. Retrieved 20 October 2020.
  42. ^ plaque at birthplace
  43. ^ GH Cookson at the English National Football Archive (subscription required)
  44. ^ "CUCKSON, George Herbert". Lincs to the Past. Retrieved 21 July 2020.
  45. ^ "Who's Who in the Cinema", The Movie volume 13 p. 431. Orbis Publishing (1981)
  46. ^ Michael Joyce (October 2004). The Football League player's records 1888 to 1939. Tony Brown. ISBN 1899468676.
  47. ^ "Obituary: Bill Podmore". The Independent. 25 January 1994.
  48. ^ "Mervyn Winfield". Cricinfo.
  49. ^ Susan Mary Wakefield, Death Notice, New Zealand Herald, 23 November 2022 (Retrieved 30 December 2022)
  50. ^ "John Hargreaves". Cricinfo.
  51. ^ "Images for Kingdom Come Arthur Brown* – Galactic Zoo Dossier". www.discogs.com.
  52. ^ P. Buckley (2003), The Rough Guide to Rock, Rough Guides, London, pp. 1200–1201.
  53. ^ "Gainsborough born actress who starred in Hot Fuzz and Shaun of the Dead to open Heritage Centre". www.gainsboroughstandard.co.uk.
  54. ^ "Steven Housham | Football Stats". www.soccerbase.com.
  55. ^ The Newsroom (19 July 2018). "Gainsborough students show off town's potential to German visitors". Gainsborough Standard. JPIMedia Publishing Ltd.
  56. ^ "East Midlands Region". Civic Heraldry of England. Retrieved 8 March 2021.

External links edit

  • Town Council
  • Official Gainsborough Old Hall Website Information on the hall, events and history
  • Town history
  • The churches
  • Gainsborough Live Local News
  • Gainsborough Standard newspaper 5 December 2008 at the Wayback Machine
  • Lincs FM – Local Commercial Radio Station

gainsborough, lincolnshire, gainsborough, market, town, inland, port, civil, parish, west, lindsey, district, lincolnshire, england, population, 2011, census, estimated, 2019, lies, east, bank, river, trent, miles, north, west, lincoln, miles, south, west, scu. Gainsborough is a market town inland port and civil parish in the West Lindsey district of Lincolnshire England The population was 20 842 at the 2011 census 1 and estimated at 23 243 in 2019 2 It lies on the east bank of the River Trent 18 miles 29 km north west of Lincoln 16 miles 26 km south west of Scunthorpe 20 miles south east of Doncaster and 39 miles 63 km east of Sheffield It is England s furthest inland port at over 55 miles 89 km from the North Sea 3 4 5 GainsboroughTown and inland portGainsborough waterfront and the River TrentGainsboroughLocation within LincolnshirePopulation22 841 2017 estimate OS grid referenceSK815901 London135 mi 217 km SDistrictWest LindseyShire countyLincolnshireRegionEast MidlandsCountryEnglandSovereign stateUnited KingdomPost townGAINSBOROUGHPostcode districtDN21Dialling code01427PoliceLincolnshireFireLincolnshireAmbulanceEast MidlandsUK ParliamentGainsboroughList of places UK England Lincolnshire 53 24 06 N 0 46 24 W 53 4016 N 0 7732 W 53 4016 0 7732 All Saints Church Gainsborough Gainsborough Old Hall Gladstone Street Gainsborough Contents 1 History 1 1 King Alfred Sweyn Forkbeard and Cnut the Great 1 2 Medieval Gainsborough 1 3 Gainsborough Old Hall 1 4 English Civil War 1 5 Churches 1 6 Second World War 1 7 New town 1 8 Governance 1 9 Oil 2 Geography 3 George Eliot and The Mill on the Floss 4 Economy 4 1 Boiler maker and ironworks 4 2 Supermarkets 4 3 Packaging 4 4 Wigs jokes and exhausts 5 Landmarks 6 Transport 6 1 Railway 6 2 Buses 6 3 Rivers 7 Sport 8 Media 9 Attractions 10 Education 11 Notable people 12 International relations 13 Arms 14 References 15 External linksHistory edit nbsp Gainsborough Old Hall nbsp The Aegir tidal bore on the Trent nbsp The Market Place with Gainsborough Town Hall in the background King Alfred Sweyn Forkbeard and Cnut the Great edit The place name Gainsborough first appears in the Anglo Saxon Chronicle of 1013 as Gegnesburh and Gaeignesburh In the Domesday Book of 1086 it appears as Gainesburg Gegn s fortified place 6 It was one of the capital cities of Mercia in the Anglo Saxon period that preceded Danish rule Its choice by the Vikings as an administrative centre was influenced by its proximity to the Danish stronghold at Torksey 7 In 868 King Alfred married Ealhswith Ealswitha daughter of AEthelred Mucel chief of the Gaini whence the town gets its name 8 9 Historically Gainsborough is the capital that never was Towards the end of July 1013 the Dane Sweyn Forkbeard and his son and heir Cnut Canute arrived in Gainsborough with an army of conquest Sweyn defeated the English opposition and King Ethelred fled the country Sweyn was declared King of England and returned to Gainsborough Sweyn and Cnut took up high office at the Gainsborough Castle on the site of the present day Old Hall while his army occupied the camp at Thonock now known as Castle Hills 9 However Sweyn died or perhaps was killed five weeks later in Gainsborough His son Cnut established a base elsewhere So Gainsborough was named as capital of England and of Denmark for five weeks in the year 1013 10 Cnut may have performed his unsuccessful attempt to turn the tide back in the River Trent at Gainsborough 11 Historians who believe he may have been demonstrating on the Trent Aegir a tidal bore He and his supporters may have known Gainsborough was the furthest reach of the aegir and ideal for his demonstration However the story was only written down a century later by Henry of Huntingdon who gives no location and it may have been a myth or a fable Medieval Gainsborough edit The Domesday Book 1086 records that Gainsborough was a community of farmers villeins and sokemen tenants of Geoffrey de Guerche The Lindsey Survey of 1115 1118 records that Gainsborough was held by Nigel d Aubigny the forebear of the Mowbray family whose interest in Gainsborough continued until at least the end of the 14th century A weekly market was granted by King John in 1204 Gainsborough Old Hall edit Thomas Burgh acquired the manor of Gainsborough in 1455 He built Gainsborough Old Hall between 1460 and 1480 a large 15th century timber framed medieval strong house and one of the best preserved manor houses in Britain It boasts a magnificent Great Hall and strong brick tower King Richard III in 1483 and King Henry VIII in 1541 both stayed at the Old Hall The manor was sold to the Hickman family in 1596 English Civil War edit The town was garrisoned for the King in January 1643 and began cooperating with the garrison at Newark in raiding the surrounding countryside and harassing Parliamentarians there With the Great North Road blocked to Parliamentarian traffic Gainsborough became significant as part of a route around Newark by way of Lincoln and the line of the modern A15 road It was in Royalist interests to obstruct this which gave rise to battles at Gainsborough and Winceby Parliament captured Gainsborough in the battle on 20 July but it was immediately besieged by a large Royalist army and forced to surrender after three days Parliament captured Gainsborough again on 18 December 1643 but had to withdraw in March 1644 razing the town s defences to prevent their use by the enemy The Earl of Manchester s army passed through Gainsborough in May 1644 on its way to York and the Battle of Marston Moor After the Civil War ended in 1645 several people in Gainsborough were fined for Royalist sympathies including Sir Willoughby Hickman 1st Baronet at the Old Hall who had been created the first Baronet of Gainsborough by Charles I in 1643 12 Churches edit nbsp All Saints Church Gainsborough The first record of a church at Gainsborough is in 1180 when the rectory there was granted by Roger de Talebu to the great Preceptory of the Knights Templar in Lindsey at Willoughton In 1547 following the English Reformation the parish of Gainsborough came under the jurisdiction of the Bishop of Lincoln for the first time The medieval Church of All Saints fell into disrepair after the Civil War In 1736 it was demolished to make way for a new parish church completed in 1748 in a mix of perpendicular Gothic and Classical Revival styles All that remains of the medieval church is the west tower 90 feet high with a ring of eight bells A monument to Richard Rollett master sailmaker on Captain James Cook s second voyage is located in the porch 13 All Saints remains the main parish church of the town The town s rising 19th century population called for a second church in the south of the town Holy Trinity Church opened in 1843 This was followed by St John the Divine Church in Ashcroft Road in 1882 and St George s Church in Heapham Road in the 1950s Holy Trinity closed in 1971 and is now the Trinity Arts Centre St John the Divine church was closed in 2002 and it is now used for a cafe and community centre Non conformism flourished in Gainsborough It has often been claimed that some of the Mayflower Pilgrims worshipped in secret at the Old Hall before sailing for Holland to find religious freedom in 1609 no historical evidence for this has been found whereas the congregation of John Smyth that met in the town developed into the Baptists and some returned to England The John Robinson Memorial Church in Church Street was dedicated in 1897 the cornerstone was laid by Thomas F Bayard US Ambassador 14 Now the United Reformed Church it was named in honour of John Robinson 1576 1625 pastor of the Pilgrim Fathers before they left on the Mayflower John Wesley the founder of Methodism preached in Gainsborough several times between 1759 and 1790 The town s first Methodist chapel opened in Church Lane in 1788 moving to a new site in North Street in 1804 and rebuilt there as St Stephen s in 1966 The Primitive Methodists set up in the town in 1819 with chapels in Spring Gardens 1838 Trinity Street 1877 and Ropery Road 1910 St Thomas s Church in Cross Street caters for the town s Roman Catholics 7 Second World War edit Gainsborough suffered its only large scale air raid of the war on the night of 10 May 1941 High explosive bombs and incendiaries were dropped but many fell harmlessly on the surrounding countryside There was only minor damage in the town and no casualties On the night of 28 29 April 1942 a single Dornier 217 dropped a stick of bombs on the town centre causing extensive damage and the loss of seven lives On 31 December 1942 a RCAF Bristol Beaufighter aircraft on a training exercise crashed on Noel Street killing both airmen and a three year old girl On 22 May 1944 a RAF Spitfire fighter in a training exercise collided with a Wellington bomber and crashed into a Sheffield bound goods train as it was passing over the railway bridge on Lea Road The pilot was the only casualty In the early hours of 5 March 1945 a single Junkers Ju 88 fighter bomber made a low level attack over the town dropping anti personnel bombs on Church Street and the surrounding residential area Three people died and 50 houses were damaged 15 New town edit There was a proposal to develop Gainsborough as a new town linked to Sheffield but the plan was not pursued New housing was instead built to the south east of Sheffield 16 Governance edit nbsp The Guildhall former offices of the West Lindsey District Council The town was before 1974 in the Gainsborough Urban District in the county of Lindsey West Lindsey District Council was formed from five former councils Gainsborough Town Council was established in 1992 and in the same year Gainsborough s first mayor was appointed Sir Edward Leigh has been Gainsborough s Member of Parliament MP since 1983 Oil edit In July 1958 BP discovered oil at Corringham then at Gainsborough in January 1959 17 Geography edit nbsp A631 bridge over the Trent The town is at the meeting point of the east west A631 which crosses the Trent on Trent Bridge at the only point between the M180 and the A57 the A156 from the south to Torksey and A159 from Scunthorpe The dual carriageway Thorndike Way intended to link with the A15 at Caenby Corner only reaches eastward to the town boundary It is named after the locally born actress Dame Sybil Thorndike The former A631 through the town is now the B1433 The civil parish extends south across rural land to Lea The boundary passes to the south of Warren Wood north of Lea Wood Farm and along the northern edge of Lea Wood northwards through Bass Wood where it meets Corringham the main settlement to the east of Gainsborough The boundary crosses Thorndike Way A631 and briefly follows the B1433 At Belt Farm it meets Thonock then follows The Belt Road to the south of Gainsborough Golf Club then down Thonock Hill to the edge of the Trent Valley George Eliot and The Mill on the Floss editIn order to see Mr and Mrs Glegg at home we must enter the town of St Ogg s that venerable town with the red fluted roofs and the broad warehouse gables where the black ships unlade themselves of their burthens from the far north and carry away in exchange the precious inland products the well crushed cheese and the soft fleeces which my refined readers have doubtless become acquainted with through the medium of the best classic pastorals It is one of those old old towns which impress one as a continuation and outgrowth of nature as much as the nests of the bower birds or the winding galleries of the white ants a town which carries the traces of its long growth and history like a millennial tree and has sprung up and developed in the same spot between the river and the low hill from the time when the Roman legions turned their backs on it from the camp on the hillside and the long haired sea kings came up the river and looked with fierce eager eyes at the fatness of the land It is a town familiar with forgotten years The shadow of the Saxon hero king still walks there fitfully reviewing the scenes of his youth and love time and is met by the gloomier shadow of the dreadful heathen Dane who was stabbed in the midst of his warriors by the sword of an invisible avenger and who rises on autumn evenings like a white mist from his tumulus on the hill and hovers in the court of the old hall by the river side the spot where he was thus miraculously slain in the days before the old hall was built It was the Normans who began to build that fine old hall which is like the town telling of the thoughts and hands of widely sundered generations but it is all so old that we look with loving pardon at its inconsistencies and are well content that they who built the stone oriel and they who built the Gothic facade and towers of finest small brickwork with the trefoil ornament and the windows and battlements defined with stone did not sacriligiously pull down the ancient half timbered body with its oak roofed banqueting hall George Eliot The Mill on the Floss Book Sixth Chapter XII Many scholars believe Gainsborough to be the basis for the fictional town of St Ogg s in George Eliot s The Mill on the Floss 1860 The novelist visited Gainsborough in 1859 staying in the house of a shipbuilder in Bridge Street which survives today as the United Services Club The stone bridge and the nearby willow tree are mentioned and the Old Hall is described in detail Thomas Miller s Our Old Town published two years before included the true story of a miller who loses a lawsuit after assaulting his adversary and George Eliot used a similar story plot in The Mill on the Floss as the basis of the Tulliver Wakem feud It is also possible that she witnessed the Trent Aegir which inspired the flood in her story s climax 7 page needed Economy editBoiler maker and ironworks edit Gainsborough has a long history of industry It was the manufacturing base of Marshall Sons amp Co a boiler maker founded by William Marshall in 1848 who died in 1861 and was buried in the cemetery in Ropery Road His business became one of the joint stock companies run by his sons James and Henry It occupied the 16 acre Britannia Ironworks the biggest in Europe when built Marshall s Works steam engines were sold worldwide until it closed in the 1980s 7 The site is now split among various companies Tesco in Beaumont Street and Dransfield s occupy about nine acres the remainder is held by local companies Supermarkets edit nbsp Entrance to Marshall s Yard 2008 Tesco on the corner of Trinity Street and Colville Terrace demolished much of the works to create its store about twenty years ago It had intended to replace their current store with a 100 000 sq ft 9 300 m2 Tesco Extra store on stilts with parking beneath but these plans were scrapped Dransfield remodelled about 9 acres 3 6 ha of the site to include a shopping area and a new heritage museum The site Marshall s Yard opened during Easter 2007 with additional shops opening after that There is a Marks amp Spencer foodhall in Marshall s Yard on Beaumont Street and a Lidl opposite on the site of the multi storey car park and an Aldi on the site of the workhouse on Lea Road There is a Morrisons branch in Heapham Road South There are branches of the Co op by the Ship Inn pub in Morton by Gainsborough one on the site of the Jack and Jill pub by St Georges Community Hall on Heapham Road and another on the site of the Peacock pub by the Gainsborough Town Tennis Club on Corringham Road Packaging edit Another area of Gainsborough industry is Rose Brothers 18 named after William German Rose and Walter Rose the co founders In 1893 William Rose invented the world s first packaging machine Two years later it bought the Trentside Works site and started to expand into many other areas producing items such as starch razor blades and sweets such as Cadbury s chocolates its name appearing on the Roses selection The firm produced seaside rock making machines cigarette making machines and bread slicing and wrapping machines When it closed A M P Rose bought the confectionery packaging side 7 The Rose Brothers Ground hosted cricket matches By the east bank of the Trent near the railway bridge is a large mill owned by Kerry Ingredients headquartered in Tralee Wigs jokes and exhausts edit Gainsborough is the home of two of the largest importers of jokes and novelties into the UK Smiffy s formerly known as RH Smith amp Sons founded in 1894 19 and Pam s of Gainsborough a smaller firm founded in 1986 Smiffy s were the only wigmaker left in the UK until December 2008 when bulk production moved to the Far East and over 35 jobs were lost The firm has set its future goals on a more mature fancy dress and party market Another local business is Eminox founded in 1978 It started by building replacement exhausts for the local bus company then expanded into manufacturing large stainless steel exhaust systems for buses and commercial vehicles It also builds low emission catalytic systems for the London low emission zone Landmarks editBeside Riverside Walk are Whitton s Mill flats which won a Royal Town Planning Institute award for the East Midlands Marshall s Yard also received an award for regeneration 20 West Lindsey District Council had its offices at the Guildhall Lord Street but moved in January 2008 to a 4 3 million new build in Marshall s Yard 21 nbsp View of the Water Tower on Heapham Road nbsp A631 bypass Thorndike Way looking west Silver Street is home to many Gainsborough shops Elswitha Hall is the birthplace of Halford John Mackinder founder of the Geographical Association A water tower in Heapham Road was built in 1897 to mark the Diamond Jubilee of Queen Victoria 22 Transport editRailway edit Further information Gainsborough Lea Road railway station and Gainsborough Central railway station The town has two railway stations on different routes The main station is Gainsborough Lea Road in Lea Road A156 in the south of the town serving the Sheffield Lincoln and Doncaster Lincoln lines with mainly hourly services to Lincoln Sheffield and Doncaster Sheffield services generally call at Retford Worksop and Sheffield only then continue towards Leeds The other station is Gainsborough Central near the town centre It serves the Brigg branch line and is the terminus of an hourly service to and from Sheffield on Mondays to Saturdays calling at all stations On Saturdays there are three services to Cleethorpes via Brigg and Grimsby Town Where the railway crosses the Trent the four lines come together at two junctions on either side of the river The lines from Lincoln and Cleethorpes meet at East Trent Junction east of the river 23 Those from Sheffield and Doncaster meet at West Trent Junction on the opposite side in Nottinghamshire West Burton Power Station is three miles 4 8 km to the south west of the town next to the Sheffield Lincoln Line Buses edit The town bus station in Hickmen Street has frequent services on Monday to Saturday but no Sunday services Most town routes are served by Stagecoach Two local services connect the uphill area of the town and Morton to the town centre one running clockwise the other anti clockwise The town has a connection hub with hourly services to Lincoln Scunthorpe and Retford and a service to Doncaster every two hours These serve several villages along the route Other bus services run during school terms Rivers edit nbsp River Trent in Gainsborough 2009 Gainsborough is claimed as the British port furthest inland 24 25 It has had a long history of river shipping trade There is still one wharf but ships no longer navigate this far up river Commercial shipping remains further down the river at Gunness Wharf Grove Wharf and Flixborough Wharf which has direct rail links This leads to some to argue that Goole 23 7 miles 38 1 km to the north of the town is now the most inland port in the UK 26 27 At the A631 Trent Bridge there was a ferry before 1787 a distance of 235 feet The bridge was completed for 12 000 in the spring of 1791 but it meant that taller river traffic of the day could no longer go further upstream Originally a toll bridge it was bought by the Ministry of Transport Lindsey County Council Gainsborough Urban District and Nottinghamshire County Council for 130 000 in 1927 and declared toll free on 31 March 1932 7 page needed In the 1970s the town council planned to build another bridge adjacent to the existing one on the North side and extend the Thorndike Way dual carriageway across the river and join The Flood Road dual carriageway However all of the funding for the project was given for the completion of the Humber Bridge Sport editThe town is home to the semi professional football club Gainsborough Trinity F C which plays in the Northern Premier League the seventh level of English football For a brief spell in the early 20th century the club was professional and a member of the Football League The Gainsborough United F C was active in 1980 28 Gainsborough Rugby Club the All Blacks has played Rugby Union in the town since 1924 The town is home to the Gainsborough amp Morton Striders Athletic Club who in 2013 were awarded England Athletics Run England National Group of the Year 29 The club was founded in July 1983 30 There are several cycling clubs including Trent Valley Road Club Viking Velo and Gainsborough Aegir Cycling Club Media editTelevision signals are received from either the Belmont or Emley Moor TV transmitters 31 32 Local radio stations are BBC Radio Lincolnshire Greatest Hits Radio Lincolnshire Lincs FM and Trentside Radio a community based radio station 33 The town s local newspapers are the Gainsborough Standard and Lincolnshire Echo Attractions editThe house and grounds of Richmond Park in the north of the town opened as a public park in 1947 attractions include greenhouses an aviary and a 600 year old oak tree Whitton Gardens on the Riverside opened in 1973 Gainsborough Town Hall which was built in 1892 is now an entertainment venue with seating for up to 150 people 34 Renovation of the town s river banks was completed in 2002 providing riverside access On the second weekend in June in that year the town hosted the Gainsborough Riverside Festival an annual arts heritage event that ran until 2013 when it fell to financial constraints Trinity Art Centre hosts live music plays comedy and also screens films There is a volunteer run charity called Gainsborough Heritage Centre with displays of a range of object from the town s past Education editUnlike most of the UK Lincolnshire retains a tripartite system with secondary education for many pupils decided by voluntary examination at eleven The town has one of the top state schools in the country Queen Elizabeth s High School selective state grammar school from 11 to 18 featuring a sixth form on Morton Terrace A159 35 QEHS students earn outstanding GCSE and A Level results and the school is over subscribed 36 37 The town has several primary schools There are links beyond the town to the John Leggott Sixth Form College in Scunthorpe North Lindsey College and Lincoln College which has a branch at Gainsborough College in Acland Street focusing on vocational education nbsp Sweyn Forkbeard king of Denmark and England who died in Gainsborough in 1014Notable people editIn birth order Sweyn Forkbeard died 1014 King of Denmark and England died in Gainsborough Simon Patrick 1626 1707 theologian and Bishop of Chichester 38 Willoughby Bertie 4th Earl of Abingdon 1740 1799 peer and music patron 39 Thomas Mozley 1806 1893 clergyman and writer 38 Thomas Miller 1807 1874 author and poet 7 40 41 James Bowling Mozley 1813 1878 theologian 38 John Collingham Moore 1829 1880 portrait painter 7 Sir Halford Mackinder 1861 1947 geographer and explorer 7 42 George Cuckson 1878 1915 footballer 43 44 Dame Sybil Thorndike 1882 1976 actress 7 41 45 Frank Airey born 1887 footballer with Gainsborough Trinity 46 Kathleen E Carpenter 1891 1970 freshwater ecologist Rex Woods 1903 1987 artist and illustrator 7 Bill Podmore 1931 1994 TV producer Coronation Street 47 Mervyn Winfield 1933 2014 Nottinghamshire cricketer 48 John Alderton born 1940 actor Upstairs Downstairs Please Sir the original series of Fireman Sam 41 Susan Wakefield 1942 2022 New Zealand Tax expert philanthropist 49 John Hargreaves born 1944 England cricketer 50 Andy Dalby born 1948 guitarist with Kingdom Come and Camel 51 Chris Mosdell born 1949 lyricist with Yellow Magic Orchestra Eric Clapton and Michael Jackson 52 Julia Deakin born 1952 actress 53 Steve Housham born 1976 footballer and manager 54 International relations editGainsborough is twinned with Cham Germany nbsp 55 Arms editCoat of arms of Gainsborough Lincolnshire Notes Originally granted to Gainsborough Urban District Council on 15 March 1950 56 Crest On a wreath of the colours out of a mural coronet two anchors in saltire Or Escutcheon Vert on a fesse wavy Argent in chief a cog wheel between two garbs and in base an ancient crown Or a fesse wavy Azure Motto Strive For The Gain Of All Portals nbsp England nbsp United KingdomReferences edit UK Census 2011 Local Area Report Gainsborough Built up area E34004397 Nomis Office for National Statistics Retrieved 25 April 2019 City Population Retrieved 12 January 2021 Ports org uk Gainsborough ports org uk Retrieved 8 January 2022 Gainsborough s Port and River Memories G amp D H A 24 April 2020 Retrieved 8 January 2022 The Trent at Gainsborough graville com Retrieved 8 January 2022 Eilert Ekwall The Concise Oxford Dictionary of English Place names p 191 a b c d e f g h i j k Ian S Beckwith The Book of Gainsborough 1988 ISBN 0860232697 Ian W Walker 2000 Mercia and the Making of England Sutton ISBN 0 7509 2131 5 a b J Charles Cox 1916 Lincolnshire p 133 Methuen amp Co Ltd Retrieved 23 April 2011 BBC article Retrieved 16 August 2020 Viking Gainsborough Former capital promotes Sweyn Forkbeard links BBC 25 December 2014 Retrieved 23 May 2021 John West Oliver Cromwell and the Battle of Gainsborough 1992 ISBN 0 902662 43 0 Monument to Richard Rollett at All Saints Church Gainsborough New York Times 30 May 1897 PDF Gainsborough Heritage Society Gainsborough at War 1939 1945 Clyde Binfield The History of the City of Sheffield 1843 1993 p 27 1993 Oli Fields Trent Vale Retrieved 23 May 2021 1 Archived 5 February 2007 at the Wayback Machine About Us Smiffys com Retrieved 29 May 2013 East Midlands Royal Town Planning Institute West Lindsey Marks Green Building Completion Tenbees co uk Archived from the original on 21 November 2008 Retrieved 29 May 2013 Commemoration plaque beside the water tower Whyles Dafydd Summer 2022 LIFE INSIDE A BRITISH SIGNAL BOX Railroad Heritage Center for Railroad Photography amp Art pp 24 35 Retrieved 31 January 2024 Thomson William 2016 The Book of Tides Hachette UK p 146 ISBN 978 1786480804 Gainsborough The Logistics Institute Data Observatory University of Hull Retrieved 20 May 2020 Labelled as Britain s most inland port Nowadays very few vessels sails as far up the River Trent as Gainsborough Goole East Yorkshire Britain s most inland port Yorkshire Life Archant Community Media Ltd 2010 Retrieved 20 May 2020 Port of Goole Invest Humber Marketing Humber and Humber Local Enterprise Partnership Retrieved 20 May 2020 As the UK s most inland port Goole is ideally situated for access to the country s transport infrastructure Football Club History Database Gainsborough United Run England volunteers recognised at England Athletics Awards Run Together England Athletics 21 October 2013 Retrieved 8 January 2022 Gainsborough amp Morton Striders won Group of the Year About The Club Gainsborough amp Morton Striders Retrieved 8 January 2022 Belmont Lincolnshire England Full Freeview transmitter May 2004 Emley Moor Kirklees England Full Freeview transmitter May 2004 Trentside Radio Community Radio Supporting Gainsborough and surrounding communities Archived from the original on 11 November 2023 Retrieved 25 April 2024 Room Hire Th exchange Retrieved 23 May 2021 Gurney Read Josie 26 August 2016 GCSE results 2016 state school results The Telegraph Archived from the original on 12 January 2022 Retrieved 30 April 2018 Education League Tables Performance results for The Queen Elizabeth s High School Gainsborough BBC News 13 January 2010 Retrieved 29 May 2013 The Queen Elizabeth s High School Gainsborough Gov uk Department for Education Retrieved 30 April 2018 a b c nbsp This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain Chisholm Hugh ed 1911 Gainsborough Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 11 11th ed Cambridge University Press pp 389 390 Derek McCulloch The Musical Œuvre of Willoughby Bertie 4th Earl of Abingdon 1740 99 Royal Musical Association Research Chronicle 33 2000 2 Plaque near birthplace a b c Famous People from Gainsborough Lincolnshire www visitoruk com Retrieved 20 October 2020 plaque at birthplace GH Cookson at the English National Football Archive subscription required CUCKSON George Herbert Lincs to the Past Retrieved 21 July 2020 Who s Who in the Cinema The Movie volume 13 p 431 Orbis Publishing 1981 Michael Joyce October 2004 The Football League player s records 1888 to 1939 Tony Brown ISBN 1899468676 Obituary Bill Podmore The Independent 25 January 1994 Mervyn Winfield Cricinfo Susan Mary Wakefield Death Notice New Zealand Herald 23 November 2022 Retrieved 30 December 2022 John Hargreaves Cricinfo Images for Kingdom Come Arthur Brown Galactic Zoo Dossier www discogs com P Buckley 2003 The Rough Guide to Rock Rough Guides London pp 1200 1201 Gainsborough born actress who starred in Hot Fuzz and Shaun of the Dead to open Heritage Centre www gainsboroughstandard co uk Steven Housham Football Stats www soccerbase com The Newsroom 19 July 2018 Gainsborough students show off town s potential to German visitors Gainsborough Standard JPIMedia Publishing Ltd East Midlands Region Civic Heraldry of England Retrieved 8 March 2021 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Gainsborough Lincolnshire nbsp Wikivoyage has a travel guide for Gainsborough Town Council Official Gainsborough Old Hall Website Information on the hall events and history Town history The churches Gainsborough Live Local News Gainsborough Standard newspaper Archived 5 December 2008 at the Wayback Machine Lincs FM Local Commercial Radio Station Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Gainsborough Lincolnshire amp oldid 1220950591, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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