East Carlton

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East Carlton
Northamptonshire

East Carlton Hall
Location
Grid reference: SP8289
Location: 52°29’50"N, -0°47’10"W
Data
Population: 270
Post town: Market Harborough
Postcode: LE16
Dialling code: 01536
Local Government
Council: North Northamptonshire
Parliamentary
constituency:
Corby

East Carlton is a village in Northamptonshire, on the southern ridge overlooking the Welland valley to the north. The parish covers 1,645 acres on a long strip of land.

East Carlton is 2 miles west of the town of Corby. At the time of the 2001, the parish's population was 270.

East Carlton is one of the "Thankful Villages"; those that suffered no fatalities during the First World War.

History

In the Domesday Book of 1087, the village of Carlton is referred to as Carlintone. A number of families owned land and estates throughout the centuries, including the Hotots, De Kirkeby and the Palmers. Until 1660, the settlement of Carlton was divided into two manors, East Hall and West Hall. East Hall is thought to have stood where the present hall stands. There is no trace of the West Hall, its stone may have been used as building material for later structures.

East Carlton Hall and grounds

In 1776/1778 Sir John Palmer, 5th Baronet, commissioned John Johnson, a Leicester architect to design a new hall. It was built on the foundations of the previous hall and was enlarged by Sir John Henry Palmer, 7th Baronet, in 1817, after which it was leased to a variety of notable tenants. It was further rebuilt in 1870 by the architect Edmund Francis Law, with red brick and ironstone in the style of a French château and replaced a Palladian house of 1778.[1] It is said that the stone wall which surrounds the south and east of the parkland was the re-used stone of the old Hall.

The hall is now referred to as East Carlton Hall, and is a Grade II listed building with extensive grounds overlooking the Welland Valley.

Iron and steel

In the early 20th century large deposits of iron ore were found in the area. Stewarts and Lloyds Ltd, a steel manufacturers from Glasgow set up a steel works in Corby, at the time just a small village, and purchased the Hall and the park of 102 acres from Sir Geoffrey Palmer for £5,000. By 1936 the hall was converted into a hostel for unmarried bachelor staff. As the steel works expanded the directors a house building programme to accommodate future employees. Part of the grounds of the hall were used to build housing for senior staff and built 59 houses during 1934 and 1935, making up a large part of East Carlton as it is known today. The original village is situated west of the hall grounds.

Stewarts and Lloyds, together with other steel manufacturers were nationalised in the 1960s becoming British Steel. The steel industry was later rationalised leading to the end of steel manufacturing in Corby in 1979. The house and grounds were later acquired by Corby Borough Council. The house is now let as private accommodation and is not open to the public. The grounds have now become a country park open to the public.

Church and other buildings

The church dedicated to St Peter dates from 1788. There is a monument to Sir Geoffrey Palmer (d.1673) and his wife.[1]

There is a terrace of Almshouses north of the church rebuilt in the Tudor style in 1866. Both this and the Rectory (1873) are by architect Edmund Francis Law who also rebuilt the Hall in 1870.[1]

East Carlton Country Park

East Carlton Country Park attracts over 400,000 visitors each year, according to Corby Borough Council, from the local area of Corby, Kettering, Market Harborough and further afield. The Country Park has a heritage centre which contains models and historical information about the Corby Steelworks. It has extensive parking, a play park and café.

Outside links

("Wikimedia Commons" has material
about East Carlton)

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 Pevsner, Nikolaus; Cherry, Bridget (revision) (1961). The Buildings of England – Northamptonshire. London and New Haven: Yale University Press. pp. 196–7. ISBN 978-0-300-09632-3.