Tinwell

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Tinwell
Rutland

Tinwell Forge
Location
Grid reference: SK993081
Location: 52°39’43"N, -0°31’59"W
Data
Population: 209  (2001[1])
Post town: Stamford
Postcode: PE9
Dialling code: 01780
Local Government
Council: Rutland
Parliamentary
constituency:
Rutland and Melton

Tinwell is a village and parish in the county of Rutland. The civil parish additionally extends into Lincolnshire right up to the A1 Great North Road. The population of the civil parish at the 2001 census was 209, increasing to 234 at the 2011 census.[2]

Village

The village is just west of the A1 and within walking distance of the town of Stamford in Lincolnshire. The village has a well-used village hall which provides a venue for parties and community events as well as regular special interest classes. Next door to the village hall is a football pitch which as well as providing a sports area is the venue for village parties. A recent major event on the field was the Queen's Diamond Jubilee in 2012 where hundreds of villagers and friends turned out for a sports day, barbeque and concert and the lighting of the jubilee beacon made at Tinwell Forge. Also nearby on Crown Lane is the village pub "The Crown" which is currently closed but has plans for refurbishment.

Tinwell has a beautiful church - All Saints'. The church has a distinctive tower with an unusual saddleback roof; these are rare in England and was added in about 1350. Opposite the church is The Old Rectory, birthplace of Thomas Laxton (1830-1893) who conducted plant-breeding research for Charles Darwin and developed the Laxton Superb and Laxton Fortune apples and the Royal Sovereign strawberry.

Other buildings of interest are Tinwell Forge and Bakery which are located on Main Street and were built in 1848. At the front of the forge is a stone surround to the village spring, which was built for the Golden Jubilee of Queen Victoria; there is also a Victorian post box.The bakery closed in 1948 but the forge continues to be in operation. By the riverside is Tinwell Mill, although it is now a private house a mill stood at the same site during the Domesday period.

Walks can be taken from Tinwell south towards Easton on the Hill, with its Norman church and the Priest's House; west around the limestone quarry and along the rivers Chater and Welland towards Ketton, Aldgate and Geeston; and east following the Jurassic Way towards Stamford, and the Macmillan and Hereward Ways to Wothorpe and Burghley House. There is a footpath map showing these routes in the churchyard.

Ingthorpe

The village is associated with the site of the lost mediæval village of Ingthorpe,[3] in the north of the parish, close to the River Gwash.

References

("Wikimedia Commons" has material
about Tinwell)

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