Sywell

From Wikishire
Revision as of 14:55, 7 June 2022 by Owain (talk | contribs) (Created page with "{{infobox town |county=Northampton |picture=SywellChurch.JPG |picture cpation=The church at Sywell |latitude=52.2994 |longitude=-0.7893 |population=792 |census year=2011 |LG d...")
(diff) ← Older revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)
Jump to navigation Jump to search
Sywell
Northamptonshire
Location
Grid reference: SP825675
Location: 52°17’58"N, -0°47’21"W
Data
Population: 792  (2011)
Post town: Northampton
Postcode: NN6
Dialling code: 01604
Local Government
Council: North Northamptonshire
Parliamentary
constituency:
Wellingborough
The village sign - Sywell

Sywell is a village and parish in the Hamfordshoe hundred of Northamptonshire. At the time of the 2011 census, the population was 792.[1]

The name Sywell is thought to mean seven wells.[2]

Facilities

The facilities found in the village include:

  • The church (St Peter & St Paul)
  • Sywell Aerodrome, opened in 1928 and active during World War II
  • Aviation Museum
  • The Horseshoe pub
  • Overstone Squash Club
  • Overstone Solarium (caravan park)
  • The Overstone Manor (family pub)
  • Sywell Reservoir (redundant as a working reservoir and now a country park)
  • Overstone Park Cricket Club
  • Sywell CEVA Primary School
  • Drome Park home of Sywell F.C.

Other

The Ecton Lane part of the village is built just inside the walls of Overstone Hall; the estate wall is of fine quality and in village folklore is said to be seven feet high, be seven miles long and took seven men seven years to build.

Pevsner on Sywell

Church - this has a short tower dating to the 13th century. The pretty stair projection found in the west side of the church is not mediæval as it appears. Renovations dating from the 1870s have left the church with an odd feel. There is a stained-glass window by Thomas Willement dating from 1839, which is very fine. It uses heraldic glass dating from 1580.

Sywell Hall - the hall has a long straight front with two small and one larger gable ends. The house appears to originally date from Elizabethan times.

Village - many local houses were rebuilt by Lady Overstone in the 1860s - with the (old) school dating to 1861 and the rectory's rebuilding to 1862.

The church's plate dates from 1816 and is the work of Patten.

The airfield hosts an annual concert called "Music in the Air"[1]. A combination of classical music and aviation.

Links with the village from the Dictionary of National Biography

Aviation Museum at Sywell
  • Anthony Jenkinson, merchant, sea-captain, and traveller married Judith Mersh of Sywell in 1567. In 1578 he bought the village from his father in law and moved to the village.
  • Lewis Atterbury was appointed rector of the village in 1684.
  • William Lancaster (died 1717) - scholar; was married to a daughter of a Mr Wilmer from Sywell.
  • Admiral Sir Watkin Owen was the son of Samuel Pell of Sywell Hall.
  • Bishop Archibald Robertson (Bishop of Exeter) was born at Sywell in 1853.
  • William Tresham, Speaker of the House of Commons (died 1450) was the eldest son of Thomas Tresham of Sywell. He was also the father of another speaker Thomas Tresham (died 1471).

References

  • The Buildings of England - Northamptonshire. N Pevsner (Second edition). ISBN 0-300-09632-1
  • Dictionary of National Biography

Outside links

("Wikimedia Commons" has material
about Sywell)