ViewsWatchers |
Manthorpe is a small village in the South Kesteven district of Lincolnshire, England. It lies east from the A6121, south-west from Bourne and north-east from Stamford. The village is part of the Toft with Lound and Manthorpe civil parish. At the western side of the village runs the East Glen River.[1] At Bowthorpe Park Farm is the Bowthorpe Oak, with the largest girth in the UK, a circumference of . The distances omitted in the excerpt from Wikipedia are " 0.5 miles (0.8 km) east from the A6121, 3 miles (5 km) southwest from the town of Bourne and 6 miles (10 km) northeast from Stamford". A Vision of Britain through Time provides a few words on the earlier history of Manthorpe from John Marius Wilson's Imperial Gazetteer of England and Wales of 1870-72:
GENUKI has a page for the other Manthorpe (Manthorpe with Little Gonerby) which is situated closer to Grantham (known in Wikipedia as Manthorpe, Grantham). [edit] Research Tips
The south of Lincolnshire is very low-lying and land had to be drained for agriculture to be successful. The larger drainage channels, many of which are parallel to each other, became boundaries between parishes. Many parishes are long and thin for this reason. There is much fenland in Lincolnshire, particularly in the Boston and Horncastle areas. Fenlands tended to be extraparochial before the mid 1850s, and although many sections were identified with names and given the title "civil parish", little information has been found about them. Many appear to be abolished in 1906, but the parish which adopts them is not given in A Vision of Britain through Time. Note the WR category Lincolnshire Fenland Settlements which is an attempt to organize them into one list. From 1889 until 1974 Lincolnshire was divided into three administrative counties: Parts of Holland (in the southeast), Parts of Kesteven (in the southwest) and Parts of Lindsey (in the north of the county). These formal names do not fit with modern grammatical usage, but that is what they were, nonetheless. In 1974 the northern section of Lindsey, along with the East Riding of Yorkshire, became the short-lived county of Humberside. In 1996 Humberside was abolished and the area previously in Lincolnshire was made into the two "unitary authorities" of North Lincolnshire and North East Lincolnshire. The remainder of Lincolnshire was divided into "non-metropolitan districts" or "district municipalities" in 1974. Towns, villages and parishes are all listed under Lincolnshire, but the present-day districts are also given so that places in this large county can more easily be located and linked to their wider neighbourhoods. See the WR placepage Lincolnshire, England and the smaller divisions for further explanation.
|