Ancroft

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Ancroft
County Durham, Northumberland
Ancroft Manor. Ancroft. - geograph.org.uk - 284687.jpg
Ancroft Manor
Location
Grid reference: NU0045
Location: 55°41’24"N, 2°0’0"W
Data
Population: 895  (2011)
Post town: Berwick-upon-Tweed
Postcode: TD15
Dialling code: 01289
Local Government
Council: Northumberland
Parliamentary
constituency:
Berwick-upon-Tweed

Ancroft is a village in Northumberland, within the Islandshire detached exclave attributed to County Durham but locally situate in Northumberland.

Ancroft is to be found a little south of Berwick-upon-Tweed, and had a population of 895 at the 2011 census. The Parish of Ancroft includes the village of Scremerston.

There are several suggestions as to how Ancroft got its name. It might be an abridged version of "Aidan's-croft" - the croft of St Aidan who was the first Bishop of Lindisfarne (Holy Island). Alternatively, it might be that as the church is dedicated to Saint Anne, the village took its name from the church - "St Anne's croft". A third suggestion is simply that it means one croft or solitary croft - "ane croft".

History

St Anne's Church, Ancroft

There was surely more than one croft here when the church was built, probably towards the end of the 11th century; but in common with most of this region, the community declined in the latter part of the 13th century because of the continual border raids by the Scots. This turbulent history is reflected in the number of castles and peel towers in the vicinity, besides the fortified tower that was added to the church in the thirteenth century.

The inclusion of the parish in Islandshire, part of North Durham, may be to do with the attribution to St Aidan and a connection with Holy Island.

After the accession of James VI of Scotland to the throne of England in 1603 there seems to have been a return of people to the village. In 1667 though the plague struck Ancroft, the same year it scythed through London, The victims were carried out into the fields where they were covered with shelters made from branches of broom. After death both bodies and shelters were burned in a rudimentary and fruitless attempt to control the spread of the disease. To this day a field to the south of the village is called "Broomie Huts". In desperation the authorities of the day ordered that the plague-affected cottages should be burned to the ground. The mounds where the cottages stood, and the former village street, can still be seen in the field between the main road and the burn.

By the time of Queen Anne (1702–1714) the village was flourishing once more, with a population of over one thousand. The main industry, other than farming, was shoe and clog making. Sailors of the Royal Navy wore shoes or slippers from Ancroft. The naval specification required footwear with no metal parts - an obvious precaution to avoid sparks in a wooden ship loaded with gunpowder and tarred rope! Boots were also made for the army - the Duke of Marlborough's troops marched to victory shod in Ancroft boots. A village tradition claims that each of the one hundred trees on the southern skyline represents a cobbler.

Several of the local settlements originated around coal mines, an industry which is being redeveloped in today's open cast sites.

Roman presence

The Devil's Causeway passes the village less than a mile to the east. The causeway is a Roman road which starts at Port Gate on Hadrian's Wall, north of Corbridge, and runs north of the frontier, extending 55 miles northwards across Northumberland to the mouth of the River Tweed at Berwick-upon-Tweed.

Outside links

Commons-logo.svg
("Wikimedia Commons" has material
about Ancroft)

References