Sunday, 29 April 2012

Past Times - Potterhanworth Rd

As you walk past the Ripon Row on your left, you will see the gates to Nocton Hall straight ahead. The Avenue is on your right. Follow the road around to your left and behind the trees, you will see the rather grand Manor Farm.

Manor Farm

You will then look down the road towards No's 1 and 2 Potterhanworth Rd.

Potterhanworth Rd, with Manor Farm yard on the left hand side,
Nocton Hall pleasure grounds on the right

Walk down to the next 90 degree bend and you should be able to see the old cottages on your right, before the old road to Nocton Park.


Turn round to retrace your steps and this is another photo of the same cottage above.


Now on your right, there is the Manor Farm development, whereas what existed before was a farmyard and buildings.

Manor Farmyard
Manor Farmyard

The next Past Times will take us to The Avenue, before visiting Nocton Hall and its pleasure grounds.

Saturday, 28 April 2012

Past Times - Wellhead Lane

From The Green turn right onto Main Street, walk down past the Village Hall and you will see The Old Post Office on the corner of the 90 degree bend, the junction of Wellhead Lane..

The Old Post Office
Turn left onto Wellhead Lane and immediately on the left hand side is The Ten Row.

Ten Row
Retrace your steps to Main Street and then turn left into Potterhanworth Rd.


You will see in the on the left hand side, just after The Old Post Office, a delightful row of cottages known as The Ripon Row or Old Four Row.

Ripon Row
Ripon Row
The next Past Times will progress along Potterhanworth Rd, before returning ready to visit Nocton Hall and its pleasure grounds.

Friday, 27 April 2012

Forthcoming Events

The fourth Nocton 200 Club draw takes place tonight Friday 27th April at Nocton Club, Main Street from 8.00pm.

We look forward to seeing as many of you there as possible.

Good luck everyone!






Thursday, 26 April 2012

Past Times - All Saints Church

The yew passage through the tree nursery to the gates of the church looked so well kept - such a shame that it has now been left to go wild. A very similar image (but taken in the winter) was published in the Echo dated 23 January 1963 with the following description:

"The slender and beautifully decorated spire of All Saint's Church, Nocton, stands loftily behind a curtain of bare branches on trees lining the path from Nocton Hall to the church."

Yew path in tree nursery

One view from the gardens of Nocton Hall is quite interesting.

View of All Saints from Nocton Hall pleasure grounds

All Saints Church

The next Past Times will rejoin Main Street and continue down towards Wellhead Lane.
_______________________________________

Wednesday, 25 April 2012

Planning Issues

You may like to be aware of the following:

Lincolnshire County Council

If you click on the link below, this should take you to the revised Anaerobic Digester application for Nocton Fen.  The supplementary document to study is titled: 'Additional Supporting Information'.

N42/0221/12 - Anaerobic Digester - Application to vary/remove Condition 3 of planning application N42/0206/10

The applicant is seeking to amend the Condition to allow processing of  "... cattle/pig/chicken manure and other farmyard manures...", amongst other wastes.

It is envisaged there will be about "1,000 deliveries per annum with no more than 6 deliveries in any one day".

No doubt many of these deliveries will be through our village and then along Nocton Fen Road to the anaerobic digester, with the return journeys taking a similar route. However I urge you to look at the document to study the detail and then you can make up your own mind on the potential impacts.

North Kesteven District Council

You can search for these applications using this link and the planning references provided

12/0417/PRIOR & 12/0418/PRIOR - Proposed works to railway bridge (B1202 & Wellhead Lane)

12/0410/HOUS - Conversion of barn to two dwellings - insertion of additional rooflights (23 & 26 Parklands Avenue).
_________________________________________

Tuesday, 24 April 2012

Past Times - The Green

As we continue down Main Street we reach the 90 degree bend at the Post Office and take a detour to The Green.

Halls Yard


You will see two delightful cottages ahead (notice the maypole)

Wilderness Cottage

On your left hand side is the old Manor House

The Manor House
Look across The Green and you will see the school in the background (notice the diagonal path which has since ceased to exist)

Nocton School
Before arriving at the superb All Saints Church, in years past you would have come across a lovely old vicarage (which is no longer there unfortunately)

The Old Vicarage

Monday, 23 April 2012

Past Times - Main Street

As we continue down Main Street, on the left hand side behind the trees is the rather grand Embsay House.
Embsay House
There are more properties on the left hand side as you pass the old bus shelter with Shooters Lodge in the background.

Bus shelter

A much older photograph of Shooters Lodge follows:

Shooters Lodge
The Old Ten Row is opposite to Shooters Lodge, just before the Post Office (and it looks like the same photographer may have taken both these images).


A much later image of the same view down Main Street:

The Old Ten Row - photo by R Reding (1981)
____________________________________

Saturday, 21 April 2012

The Doodle and bits

Nocton Doodle

The following email was received from Chris on 20th April:

"Hi Everyone.

Sorry this is a little late, a couple of unforeseen issues cropped up. The paper copy should be out over the week end. Please read the editorial, your feedback would be most welcome.

Kindest regards
Chris"

http://www.cpveg.com/thedoodle/April2012.pdf

Faster Broadband

More than 12,600 homes and business in Fulbeck, Coningsby, Ruskington and Sudbrooke Park now have access to faster broadband.

http://onlincolnshire.org/news/broadband-news/185

Journey through Past Times

I plan to dedicate the next few blogs to showing old photographs of Nocton.  An idea is to try and display them as if one was to walk through the village.  Whether this will be successful is anyone's guess, but we'll see how it goes.

The first is an image as if you are walking down Main Street:


photo by R Reding - 1985


Saturday, 14 April 2012

Cllr Marianne Overton

The following is taken from Marianne's latest email update:

Dear Friends and Colleagues,

April News

I hope you had a reasonable Easter and perhaps a chance to catch up with some family and friends.

 April news is attached and to make life easier I have this time included a link below so you can just click on it to see all the newsletters with more pictures.


Previous newsletters are also on the web under the heading “news”. I hope you find the information useful.  I hope you find the information useful and it does make it easy for you to contact me by reply.
If you know anyone else who would like to be included, please do let me know. Private contact details are kept confidential, as usual. The newsletter goes to the Parish Councils in my area as my monthly report and to anyone else who asks for it.
I hope it is useful!

Kind Regards,
Marianne
Cllr Marianne Overton
Independent County and District Councillor for Navenby and Branston District and the Cliff Villages
Leader of the Lincolnshire Independents
_________________________________________

Tuesday, 10 April 2012

St George's Weekend


Nocton 'Doodle'

Chris Hewitt has requested that any articles for this month's Doodle be submitted no later than Friday 13th April.  The village community has been busy of late with the Easter Fayre, an Easter Egg Hunt, Litter Pick, Reopening of All Saints Church to mention just a few, so if you have something to report please send your articles to cwhewitt@btinternet.com
__________________________________

Sunday, 8 April 2012

A Prime Minister's Home

After attending All Saints Church this morning on Easter Sunday, I later came across an article when cataloguing Sheila Redshaw's collection of memorabilia.  I thought it would be nice to share this with you:

"Nocton.  A green and pleasant place a few miles south-east of Lincoln, it has a Hall which was the home of a Prime Minister, and a church which is his memorial and his last resting place.  About a mile away, on the edge of Nocton Fen and close to Nocton Wood, where lilies of the valley grow in great profusion, is the site of a priory founded in the time of King Stephen.

This priory, for Austin canons, was founded by Robert D'Arcy, whose father, Norman D'Arcy, a companion of the Conqueror, was first of a family which held this manor for 600 years.  In Charles the Second's time the estate was sold to Lord Stanhope, and then passed to Sir William Ellys, whose monument is in the church.  Later it passed to George Hobart, afterwards third Earl of Buckinghamshire, and the marriage of the fourth Earl's daughter brought it to the rising young politician who as Chancellor of the Exchequer was nicknamed Prosperity Robinson, and as Viscount Goderich succeeded George Canning as Premier.  He died as the Earl of Ripon in 1859, and three years later his widow built Nocton church in his memory.  It took the place of a poor church built by George Hobart, who had pulled down the old one because it was too near the Hall for his liking.

Designed by Sir Gilbert Scott in 14th-century style, and built of Ancaster stone, it is one of the most sumptious modern churches in all Lincolnshire, with a tower and spire 130 feet high, and a porch with niched figures of the Madonna and Child, St Peter, and St Paul, John the Baptist, and John the Evangelist.  The interior is dignified by an arcade on rich clustered columns, but is chiefly notable for the richness of decoration in carving, painting, and windows.  The heads of Peter, Paul, and of Our Lord are in niches on the lovely pulpit of stone and marble, and the alabaster reredos (by Italian craftsmen) shows under three gilded arches Christ carrying the Cross, with an angry man about to strike Him and a Roman sildier on a rearing horse behind; the Crucifixion, with the three women and the disciples; and the Entombment, with Mary Magdelene kneeling.  On each side of the reredos the wall is arcaded, the arches being filled with engraved figures of Apostles, Evangelists, Martyrs and Saints.

Elsewhere the walls are adorned with sacred subjects.  In the chancel are canopied paintings of Apostles and Evangelists, each with his symbol, and over the chancel arch Christ appears in Glory, with a great company of kneeling angels and saints.  More unusual are the paintings on the west wall of the nave - graphic illustrations of the Israelites entering the Promised Land, the Egyptians drowning in the Red Sea, and Noah with his family and the animals going into the Ark two by two, goats, asses, rabbits and snakes among them.

The windows form another fine gallery of pictures.  The east window has a central figure of St Michael with angels and a great multitude of men, women, and children round him; and 24 Elders below, casting their crowns before the Throne.  One of the side windows of the nave has figures of St Hugh of Lincoln and St Theodore, and a second has Oswald and Etheldreda.  A third window, showing St Aidan with the stag and the Venerable Bede writing, is a memorial to a descendent of William Brewster, one of the Pilgrim Fathers, and has smaller scenes depicting sunrise and sunset at sea and the Mayflower sailing the ocean.

The fine west window of the nave, with four scenes showing the gift of Isaac to Sarah, and four more of the gift of Samuel to Hannah, was the work of Clayton and Bell and is a memorial to the Countess of Ripon the builder of this church who died in 1867.

Among the monuments set up in memory of members of her family three are specially notable.  The first is of white marble with an urn to her father, Robert Hobart, the fourth Earl of Buckingham, Secretary of State for the Colonies in the first years of the 19th century and the man after whom the capital of Tasmania is named.  The second is to her uncle, Henry Lewis Hobart, vicar of this church for 33 years and Dean of Windsor as well - a white marble memorial with two kneeling women and cherubs above.  The third is the monument she raised to her husband, the first Earl of Ripon; it is under an arch between chancel and chapel, a stately altar tomb of Carrara marble bearing a figure of the Prime Minister in a long robe, his hands folded, his fine features in repose - a beautiful sculpture by Matthew Noble, the Yorkshireman who gave Liverpool, Manchester and London many fine statues.

The oldest memorial, and the only relic of the old church, is a pompous 17th-century array of marble columns, sculptured urn, helmet, shield, and Latin inscription; it is to Sir William Ellys, who built anew the Hall that Thomas Wymbish had erected in 1530, and which was visited by Hentry VIII and his fifth Queen, Katherine Howard.  Here she came with the ruthless king on a journey which was to end in charges which sent her, still a girl, to join her cousin Anne Boleyn in the chapel of death at the Tower.

Fire destroyed the old Hall in 1834, and the foundation stone of the new (handsome with mullioned windows, tall gables and chimneys, and terrace leading down to a lawn) was laid by Viscount Goderich's 14-year-old son, who was born in the most famous house in England (10 Downing Street) during his father's premiership.  He was to be for forty years associated with Gladstone.  Later in life, when he had become first Marquis of Ripon, and a Roman Catholic, he sold the Nocton estate.  He died in 1909 at his Yorkshire home, Studley Royal, and was buried there in a modern church even more sumptious than the one raised in his father's memory here.

Many fine trees surround the Hall, a veteran among them being a chestnut with a girth of about 35 feet and its great branches borne by a company of props."

Source: The Kings of England - Lincolnshire (1949) - P278/280
____________________________________

Thursday, 5 April 2012

Parish Council Report

Meeting - 3rd April 2012

A summary of issues considered at the April meeting is set out below:

Policing Matters:  It was reported that the perpetrators of a theft of metal from Nocton Hall had been caught and were being dealt with by the Police.  Sheds on the field at Nocton Park where horses are kept had also been broken into.  The Police are suggesting that owners of horses might wish to join the Horse Watch Scheme.

It was noted that there had been an increasing number of burglaries in the areas around Nocton (not in the village itself) with a key time for such activity being between 5.00 and 11.00 p.m.  Residents are, however, being asked to be particularly vigilant and to report anything suspicious to the Police.

Following a discussion of crime generally, the Parish Council agreed to publicise the “Lincs Alert” scheme which some residents might wish to take advantage of.  Further details on the scheme and the possibility of starting Neighbourhood Watch in the village are provided elsewhere in The Doodle.

Gas Supply: Some 28 households have registered their interest in the possibility of having a gas supply to their homes.  Although this is a rather lower response than had been hoped for, the Parish Council will see if there is any benefit in joining with Dunston residents (who are also exploring the possibility) but, in any event will now pursue the matter with the National Grid for Gas.

Best Kept Village: It was agreed to enter Nocton in this year’s Best Kept Village Competition, the judging for which begins in June.  Further details of how residents can help to prepare for the competition will be provided in due course but, in the meantime, everyone is asked to make an extra-special effort to keep their gardens and streets tidy – not only so that we can do well in the competition but also in preparation for the Queen’s Diamond Jubilee celebrations when our village will be on show!

Car Parking: A local councillor has witnessed a couple of “near misses” in the area by the junction of The Green and Main Street.  Part of the problem is, of course, the number of large lorries trying to negotiate the sharp bend by the Post Office and whilst we are trying to address this issue with Lincolnshire CC Highways Department, the Parish Council would like to remind all residents who have no alternative but to park their cars on the road in this area and also those parking to use the Post Office to take special care when doing so.  If possible, please try to avoid parking directly opposite another vehicle or near the apex of the bend itself.

Dates of Forthcoming Meetings:  1st May – Annual Parish Council Meeting; 8th May – Ordinary Parish Council Meeting and Annual Parish Meeting – 22nd May.

Councillor Ian Goldsworthy


REDUCING CRIME IN NOCTON

At the April meeting of the Parish Council, it was agreed to publicise the following initiatives to help reduce the incidence of crime in the village and surrounding areas.  Whilst we are so fortunate to have very low levels of crime in Nocton, there can be no room for complacency and so the Parish Council and local Police would like to draw residents’ attention to the following schemes:

“Lincs Alert”

“Lincs Alert” is a community messaging system run by Lincolnshire Police.  The benefits of the scheme include: 

  • 24 hour a day website
  • Receipt of alerts by email, phone and text
  • Access to an on-line virtual Neighbourhood Watch Scheme
  • Ability to report information to our Neighbourhood Policing Teams
  • Feedback and updates on reports you submit
  • All services are free of charge
  • Can unsubscribe at any time
Currently some 31,000 people are registered with the scheme.  Further details are available at www.lincsalert.co.uk; by emailing info@lincsalert.co.uk or by telephoning the Watchline Administrator on 01522 558399.

Neighbourhood Watch

For a number of years, Nocton benefitted from a Neighbourhood Watch Scheme and you can still see some of the now faded “warning” signs on our lamp posts!  The scheme was, however, abandoned when the former Co-ordinator resigned some considerable time ago.

The main aim of a Neighbourhood Watch scheme is to create a partnership between the local community, the police and the local authority.

Neighbourhood Watch started in the UK in 1982 and there are now some 150,000 schemes running throughout the UK covering nearly five million households.  This makes Neighbourhood Watch the largest voluntary movement in the country.

Neighbourhood Watch schemes can target local crime problems and take action to prevent them.  In consultation with the local police they can find out from local people what crimes most concern and affect them and focus on those specific problems.  Further information is available at www.neighbourhoodwatch.net

At its last meeting, a resident suggested that it might be opportune to reinstate the scheme and so the Parish Council is asking if anyone in the village would be willing to act as a Neighbourhood Watch Scheme Co-ordinator.  If you are interested in establishing such a scheme in Nocton or would like to take on this role, then please contact our Parish Clerk, Doreen Green, on 01526 322323 or by email at: noctonparishcouncil@hotmail.co.uk


ANNUAL PARISH MEETING

The Parish Council is required to hold an Annual Parish Meeting at which all residents of Nocton are invited to attend and participate in the discussion of issues of particular concern to both them and the village.

This year’s meeting in to be held on Tuesday, 22nd May 2012 at 7.00 p.m. in the Village Hall and for the first time a whole evening is being devoted to this important occasion.

Parish Councillors would, therefore, welcome hearing from all residents about the issues they would like to discuss with them and so if you have something on your mind about life in our village, then please tell our Parish Clerk, Doreen Green, on 01526 322323, by email at:
noctonparishcouncil@hotmail.co.uk or by wiring to her at 1 Potterhanworth Road, Nocton LN4 2BP.

We can then make sure that your ideas or concerns are properly considered.  It is, of course, only by working with its residents that the Parish Council can be truly effective in making the improvements the majority of people want to see.  Please make sure you let Doreen know of the things you want to raise by Friday, 4th May.

Please do make a note of this date in your diary, come along and let us know what you think.  Refreshments will be provided!


ANNUAL VILLAGE LITTER PICK

The Parish Council would like to express its grateful appreciation to Ralph and Mary Timms for again organising the annual village litter pick and to thank those residents who gave up their time to collect over 10 bags of rubbish from our streets and verges!  I think everyone will agree what a fantastic difference their hard work has made to our village.

Councillor Ian Goldsworthy
___________________________________

Wednesday, 4 April 2012

RAF Waddington

RAF Waddington Heritage Centre Open Day

If you wish to have a tour around the Waddington Heritage Centre on 30th April 2012, you may wish to see the enclosed.

Please note application forms need to be received no later than 20 April.
_______________________________

Monday, 2 April 2012

Nocton Hall

Abandoned to the vandals, the Grade II-listed former military hospital that treated generations of servicemen

'At risk: Preservationists are worried about the desperate state of the Grade II-listed Nocton Hall, in Lincolnshire, which once was the site of a key military hospital.'

http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2123612/Abandoned-vandals-Grade-II-listed-military-hospital-treated-generations-servicemen.html

It is very interesting that the Daily Mail have chosen this day of all days to highlight the deterioration of Nocton Hall to the nation.

Only yesterday I was contacted by a lady who mentioned she had a family connection with Nocton Hall - her father had attended the Preparatory School in the 1930's.  This lady had carried out some research on the Hall and discovered from the web that I am interested in the history of this once fine property.  Locating my email address and learning that I was actively seeking any internal views, she decided to contact me.  I was extremely excited to learn that this lady had a number of items, one of which contained three pages torn from an old unidentified publication, showing various rooms inside the Hall.  I asked if her if she would mind scanning these images and sending them to me by email... and they arrived today.  Thank you so much Ann!

You can view these below, courtesy of Ann Sampson:


If you are interested in reading more, you can search this blog for other entries about Nocton Hall (see the 'Search' facility on the right hand side).

You may also like to see the summary of actions taken over the years to protect this heritage property.
__________________________________________

Sunday, 1 April 2012

200 Club

Elsie Horton - Winner

The following text was gratefully received for publication from Jilly Burr:

"The Nocton 200 Club's third draw took place at Nocton Club on Friday 30th March. Drawn by Jim Eagle, last month's 1st prize winner.

CLAN was joined by many 200 Club members this month, to make the draw evening a great success yet again! Thank you for coming along if you did.

The winners this time were ....
1st 125 Mrs E Horton £65
2nd 118 Dr and Mrs Travers £25
3rd 188 Mr D Browne £10


Picture is David Reay presenting Mrs Horton with her 1st prize of £65 in cash
______________________________________