Farnsfield

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Farnsfield
Nottinghamshire
The parish church of St Michael, at Farnsfield, in Nottinghamshire.jpg
St Michael, Farnsfield
Location
Grid reference: SK647566
Location: 53°6’10"N, 1°2’10"W
Data
Population: 2,731  (2011)
Post town: Newark
Postcode: NG22
Dialling code: 01623
Local Government
Council: Newark and Sherwood
Parliamentary
constituency:
Sherwood

Farnsfield is a large village in Nottinghamshire in Sherwood Forest. It is in the middle of the county, 14 miles north-east of Nottingham, nine miles east of Mansfield and four miles north-west of Southwell. It is approximately a mile to the east of the main A614 road linking Nottingham to Doncaster.

The population of the civil parish as at the 2011 Census was 2,731.

The village lies in a predominantly farming area. There is no major industry or employer within Farnsfield. The majority of residents of working age commute to work, mostly to Nottingham, Mansfield or Newark.

Farnsfield's facilities include a small Co-op supermarket and Post Office, a village bakery, butcher, greengrocer, and other small shops. The village has two churches, a large primary school, and two public houses (The Plough Inn and The Lion).

Churches

St Michael's Church

The village has two churches:

  • Church of England: St Michael
  • Methodist

St Michael's dates from the 15th century, before the Reformation. Following a fire in the mid-19th century, it was rebuilt by Thomas Chambers Hine and Robert Evans in 1859 to 1860. Only a fragment of the tower from the 15th-century building survives. The parish is in the Diocese of Southwell and Nottingham.

Farnsfield

History

The area has evidence at several sites of ancient Roman and earlier occupation. To the south of the village, along the footpath to Oxton, are the remains of a small Roman marching camp, marked by a small Roman fort. There are no standing remains in the fields, but outlines of the buildings are clearly visible on aerial photos. A mile south-west of the village is a small oval earthwork. The remains of a hillfort at Combs Farm is encircled by a bank and ditch. From excavated material, this fort appears to have been Romano-British in origin.

Two ditches in a wood at Camp Hill, a mile and a half north-east of Farnsfield, are the remaining traces of an Iron Age earthwork, a hillfort. In the 18th century, researchers estimated it to have been 40 acres in area.[1] The Roman camp and the ancient hillfort at Combs Farm are both protected Scheduled Monuments.[2][3]

There stood a tower windmill on Siding Lane (SK644572) shown on a map of 1898 as 'old windmill'. It was recorded as a shell in August 1935, with the cap and fantail gone. The mill was owned at some time by a miller named Whitehead, who also milled at Edingley Watermill. When in use, it was powered by a gas engine.

The Good Intent Windmill (SK639571) was a tower mill, built c. 1820 for Holliday, a resident of Farnsfield. Material for building the mill was carted from Fiskerton. The tower was 6 storeys, brick-built and untarred, with 4 sweeps driving 3 pairs of stones (1 French and 2 grey). The mill was worked by William Shaw, who was succeeded by his son Alec c. 1893. The mill was sold to George Hutchinson, who worked it for short periods until the machinery was dismantled and the tower demolished about 1915.

A post windmill was recorded near the Junction Inn, owned by Bower.[4]

Halifax Bomber Memorial

On 6 July 1944, an RAF Halifax bomber MZ519-LKU crashed on the south side of the village on its return to RAF Burn near York. The Halifax had been on a mission to destroy a V1 flying bomb site in Nazi-occupied France. All of the Canadian and British crewmen on board were killed. A large memorial was erected at the crash site. A copse of British oaks and Canadian maples was planted and dedicated to the crewmen.

A History of Farnsfield was published in 2000 by the Farnsfield Millennium Trust. They also compiled an oral history based on recordings of local people and related transcripts.

About the village

The Southwell Trail, a former railway line dating to 1842 and now adapted as a multi-user route for foot, cycle and horseback use, passes immediately to the north of the village. A free car park for the trail is located off Station Lane.

The Lady Goodwin Play Park on Station Lane is named after Lady Florence Goodwin, the wife of philanthropist Sir Stuart Goodwin: he was High Sheriff of Nottinghamshire in 1955.

Outside links

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("Wikimedia Commons" has material
about Farnsfield)

References

  1. Nikolaus Pevsner: The Buildings of England: Nottinghamshire, 1951; 1979 Penguin Books ISBN 978-0-300-09636-1
  2. National Heritage List 1018121: Roman camp south of Carr Banks Farm, Farnsfield (Scheduled ancient monument entry)
  3. National Heritage List 1003483: Slight univallate hillfort, 169m west of Combs Farm, Farnsfield (Scheduled ancient monument entry)
  4. Nottinghamshire Archive ref. DDM 98/59 Sale of windmill 13 XII 1847.