Bracebridge Heath

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Bracebridge Heath
Lincolnshire

Bracebridge Heath Reservoir
Location
Grid reference: SK978670
Location: 53°11’29"N, -0°32’11"W
Data
Population: 5,656  (2011)
Post town: Lincoln
Postcode: LN4
Dialling code: 01522
Local Government
Parliamentary
constituency:
Lincoln

Bracebridge Heath is a commuter village in Lincolnshire located approximately two miles south of the city and county town of Lincoln. It lies at the junction of two major roads the A15 to Sleaford and the A607 to Grantham, in the Boothby Graffoe Wapentake. The village sits on top of Lincoln Cliff, overlooking Lincoln and the valley of the River Witham. The Viking Way runs along the cliff top, a 147-mile-long footpath, which runs from the Humber Bridge to Oakham. Its population at the 2001 census was 4,530, increasing to 5,656 at the 2011 census.[1]

History

The village is mentioned in the Domesday Book as "Brachebrige".[2] Before the Norman Conquest, the lordship was held by Ulf Fenman, and after by Bishop Geoffrey of Coutances, who also became Tenant-in-chief.[3]

Bracebridge Heath lies on the route of the Roman Ermine Street that runs approximately 200 miles from London to York. The central road junction in Bracebridge Heath is the junction of three Roman roads, now the A15 (the Sleaford Road), the A607 (the Grantham Road), and Cross O'Cliffe Hill into Lincoln. The line of Ermine Street, when extended from its last traceable part at Harmston, south of Bracebridge Heath, runs north through Waddington to Heath Road in Bracebridge Heath. Heath Road continues the line of Ermine Street.

Modern Bracebridge Heath

A local landmark is the finely-worked stone water-pumping station and reservoir located on Grantham Road, known locally as 'The Water Tower', as opposed to the white 'Hospital water tower', a header tank for the hospital laundry boilers, another prominent landmark, now demolished in 2014.

This 'new' (1912) subterranean reservoir, of which only the 'pumping machinery tower' can be seen, was an overflow for the main reservoir in Westgate water tower, and replaced an 'old' open reservoir on Bracebridge Heath on London Road, built in 1871 and closed in 1925. It had been left water-filled from 1912 as an emergency supply in case of fire at the Asylum until the new 'Hospital' water tower was erected and connected to the mains in 1925, from whence it lay empty, and decaying until 1972 when it was filled in and built on, today it is known as Stanley Crescent. The 'new' water reservoir was expanded in the early 1970s

The Lincoln Typhoid outbreak of 1904/5, was caused mainly by surface water run-off into the River Witham from the Asylum Farm fields on the hill slope behind Bracebridge, where untreated effluent was run from the Asylum down a tunnel behind houses on Canwick Avenue into a brick channel at the top of the fields, which just overflowed to fertilise them by irrigation.

In 1912 the 30 houses of the village, and the Asylum, which had been served by deep wells were connected to the mains, and all the wells in use on the Heath were condemned and closed.

Buildings

Other than the old mental hospital chapel (now private accommodation), there is St John's Church (Church of England) on Grantham Road and the Methodist Church, on almost the opposite side of the road. St John's primary school, (now an Academy School) formerly Bracebridge Heath County Primary School, is situated on the same road along with a small row of shops, and opposite, a new shopping centre.

Just off Sleaford Road (A15) in the direction of Lincoln is the village hall almost behind 'The Bull' Public House (formerly the 'John Bull' public house). Earlier the church hall, situated behind St John's Church, served in that capacity, until the current village hall was built in the 1970s. The Church Hall was taken over by the local Scout group (21st Lincoln) in the early 1980s. They had used it as their headquarters. A local benefactor purchased the hall and donated it to the group.

There is a Police station on Whitehall Crescent, which has (since June 2012) been enlarged and refurbished. Next to the police station is a public library. Also on London Road is a Medical Centre and GP's Surgery.

A 1921 war memorial and Remembrance garden is situated on the eastern side of the junction of the Sleaford, London, and Grantham Roads.

St John's Hospital

The 'Asylum' (St John's Mental Hospital)[4] closed down in 1990 and was sold a few years later to a property developer, who constructed nearly 1,000 new houses in the village. The original hospital buildings are classified as Grade-II listed buildings[5] and are protected from demolition. During the redevelopment of the hospital site, a number of these protected buildings were refurbished and converted into flats and offices. Further development is planned on the site with the proposed demolition of the old white water tower (2014) which previously served the hospital. Although most of the old buildings are listed and therefore protected, the hospital water tower was not.

Public houses

Modern Bracebridge Heath has three public houses: The Blacksmiths Arms now shortened to The Blacksmiths, on the site of the Victorian blacksmith's shop and beerhouse built, opened and run by the family of William Green, a Harmston farmer, in 1852. It stands at the point where London Road divides into the Sleaford Road (A15) and the Grantham Road (A607). It has recently been refurbished and re-opened after standing derelict for some years. Directly opposite this on the western side of Grantham Road is the John Bull since 2007 renamed The Bull. Its first spirit license was granted to Thomas Spain, 16 October 1849. The Homestead public house is a late-1990s building conversion of one the former hospital buildings, which served originally as the hospital Superintendent's residence.

There was one other, now long-closed, opened to serve the large Irish labour force building the Lincolnshire County Pauper Lunatic Asylum. The old pub still stands, its face basically unaltered, but divided into two houses, in a row of stone cottages, south of the junction with the A607 on the A15 Sleaford Road. Bought out of the Red Hall Estate, on 3 December 1849 from the Chartist land agent Thomas Allsop, it was built and opened in early 1850 by Andrew Binns, a builder turned publican, and was named the Mason's Arms. With the opening of the John Bull in 1849, it may be assumed trade had always been somewhat speculative. The 'Mason's Arms' was put up for sale on 3 August 1850, with its 2 acres of land, finally closing as public house in 1859, it became thereafter fully residential.

Facilities

The village is home to the headquarters of the local Area Health Authority. It is based around the home of one of the Newsum family, (formerly Wood Merchants). Arthur Crookes Newsum J.P., built 'Cross O'Cliffe Court' in 1908/9.

A local cricket club, Bracebridge Heath Cricket Club, has its grounds within the spacious wooded grounds.

Bracebridge Heath is served with amenities which include a Police station, a Public Library, a Primary School, a Doctor's Practice, Public Houses, Fish and Chip shop, Tesco Express, a Co-op with Post Office, Pharmacy, a Funeral Director,Chinese, Indian, and Pizza take-aways, Hairdressers, Cafe, Village Taxi, a Sports and Social Club, a B&B, two Churches with church halls, and a Village hall. There is also a village sports field with a hall, skateboard facility, bowling, tennis, and football areas.

There is a bus service through the village and the other 'Cliff' villages with rail connections at each end, a 24-hour petrol station and shop on the A15 Sleaford Road, in the South of the village.

To the west of London road (A15), is an area of open land which was known locally as 'The Hillies'. Although privately owned (by the Church), it served for many years as unofficial common land, used for sheep grazing, dog walking and for a rough and ready village football pitch. A public footpath which forms part of The Viking Way runs through it. For several years it has been given over to crop growing.

RAF Bracebridge Heath

A Royal Flying Corps aerodrome at Bracebridge Heath originally opened in 1916 for use by the Robey-Peters aircraft factory, in the manufacture and flight testing of their own designs and licence-built Sopwith aircraft. RAF Bracebridge Heath, enlarged circa 1919-1920, housed No. 121 Squadron RAF and No. 4 Aircraft Acceptance Park RAF.

In the Second World War, an aircraft repair organisation at Bracebridge Heath, managed by A V Roe and Co Ltd, recovered 'battle damaged' Avro Lancaster bomber parts, which would otherwise have been scrapped, returning them to service and making a contribution to the bomber offensive against Nazi Germany. An MAP B.1 type aircraft hangar from this period survived in 2014.

There was a Grade-II-listed triple-bay Belfast truss aircraft hangar here (built c.1917), but this was demolished on safety grounds in 2001.[6] Two other modified and re-clad single-bay Belfast truss hangars survived.

References

  1. "Civil parish population 2011". Neighbourhood Statistics. Office for National Statistics. http://www.neighbourhood.statistics.gov.uk/dissemination/LeadKeyFigures.do?a=7&b=11121003&c=Bracebridge+Heath&d=16&e=62&g=6446661&i=1001x1003x1032x1004&m=0&r=1&s=1461410766903&enc=1. Retrieved 23 April 2016. 
  2. "Documents Online: Bracebridge in Lincoln, Lincolnshire", Folio: 352v Great Domesday Book; The National Archives. Retrieved 24 December 2011
  3. "Bracebridge [Heath]", Domesdaymap.co.uk. Retrieved 24 December 2011
  4. Historic England. "St Johns Hospital (1074624)". PastScape. http://www.pastscape.org.uk/hob.aspx?hob_id=1074624. Retrieved 30 June 2011 
  5. National Heritage List 1205000: Main building at St John's Hospital
  6. Aircraft, made in Lincoln published 2000, Society for Lincolnshire History and Archaeology.

Walls, John & Parker, Charles (2000) ‘Aircraft Made in Lincoln’ (The Society for Lincolnshire History and Archaeology, ISBN 0-903582-16-3).

Outside links

("Wikimedia Commons" has material
about Bracebridge Heath)