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History information for Norwell and places above it in the hierarchy

Norwell

  • This village has Saxon roots and was mentioned in the 1086 Domesday Book.
     
  • For a well-researched history of the parish, see the Nottingham History pages for Norwell.
     
  • In 1256, Henry II granted the village the right to hold an annual three-day fair and a weekly market on Thursdays.
     
  • On 11 November 1360, John Le PARKER, a felon of Norwell appeared in the church before the king’s escheator and promised to leave the kingdom forthwith, while his worldly goods were publicly seized by the crown.
     
  • A few years later in 1369, another criminal, John STRYNGER of Mansfield, who had killed a man, took sanctuary in Norwell church, which he too was allowed to quit on condition that within 7 days he would leave the country via Dover.
     
  • Nearly two hundred years later, in 1526, on the eve of the Reformation, the two vicars of Norwell were called to adjudicate in a local quarrel in which the wives of John WILLA, Richard WALBANK and William BROWNBERDE had mutually slandered each other. Along with two parishioners, Richard SMYTH and John GREEN, probably the churchwardens, the vicars, Richard MARTEN and Richard AWBYE, brokered a settlement with the husbands agreeing to pay 40s to the Fabric of the church if their wives did not abide by it.
     
  • Richard CROFT captured a photograph of the Pinfold Plaque on Geo-graph, taken in June, 2015.
     
  • Neil THEASBY has a photograph of the Pinfold on Geo-graph, taken in October, 2020.
     
  • Alan MURRAY-RUST has a photograph of The Plough pub. on Geo-graph, taken in July, 2014. Reportedly a good place for catching up on local gossip.
     
  • Neil THEASBY also has a photograph of the Plough Inn on Geo-graph, taken in October, 2020.
     
  • These are the names associated with The Plough in various directories:
     
Year Person
1853Robert CAUDWELL, vict.
1869George CLARKE
1881Rowland WALSTOW, shopkeeper
1904William MARSTON, wheelwright
1912William MARSTON

Nottinghamshire

  • The Thoroton Society tells us that the county of Nottinghamshire was created around 1,000 years ago by the Anglo-Saxon monarchy as a means of stabilizing the kingdom after Viking invasions.
     
  • Some of Nottinghamshire's history lies underground. Fly through some caves just off Peel Street on Youtube.
     
  • Read about Nottinghamshire history.
     
  • The manpower shortages caused by World War One was a great boon to women who moved into factory and clerical jobs that had primarily been male-oriented in the past. The trend was noticed in the Newark Great War Bulletin of June 21st, 1915.
     
  • The Newark Great War Bulletin of August 23rd, 1915 notes that recent rainstorms have ruined crops. Coupled with depredations from U-Boats, the paper notes the scarcity of produce and the threat of inflation.
     

England

  • England - History - links and information.

UK and Ireland

  • UK & Ireland - History - links and information.