Scrooby

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Scrooby
Nottinghamshire
St.Wilfrid's, Scrooby - geograph.org.uk - 173934.jpg
St Wilfrid's, Scrooby
Location
Grid reference: SK651908
Location: 53°24’36"N, 1°1’15"W
Data
Post town: Doncaster
Postcode: DN10
Dialling code: 01302
Local Government
Council: Bassetlaw
Parliamentary
constituency:
Bassetlaw

Scrooby is a small village on the River Ryton in the north of Nottinghamshire, near the border of the West Riding of Yorkshire: just to the north is Bawtry, a village overspilling the county border.

At the time of the 2001 census the village had a population of 329.

Until 1766, it was on the Great North Road so became a stopping-off point for numerous important figures including Queen Elizabeth I and Cardinal Wolsey on their journeys. The latter stayed at the Manor House briefly, after his fall from favour.

Places of Worship

The parish church, St Wilfrid's, stands in the heart of the village. It is a Grade II* listed building.[1][2] It is noted for its octagonal spire.

The church was built in the 15th century, and was restored by the Victorians in 1864 after many years of disrepair.

Scrooby harboured a separatist Puritan group between 1606–8, which fled to Holland in 1608 and then in 1620 sailed to America in the Mayflower. One of the Pilgrim Fathers' ruling elders, William Brewster, worshipped in Scrooby Church.

The church contains an organ dating from 1871 by Gray and Davison.

History

Scrooby village circa 1911

The Manor House belonged to the Archbishops of York and so was sometimes referred to as a palace. (A nearby former farmhouse is still called Palace Farm.) At the end of the sixteenth century, the house was occupied by William Brewster, the Archbishop's bailiff, who was also postmaster. His son, also named William, took that post in the 1590s after a job as an assistant to the Secretary of State under Queen Elizabeth I. The junior William became dissatisfied with the Anglican Church as it was developing at the time, acquired Brownist beliefs and attempted to leave for the Netherlands in 1607. After an unsuccessful first attempt, Brewster succeeded in 1608. He eventually went to New England in 1620 on the Mayflower, as one of the people later called Pilgrim Fathers.

The Manor House was demolished early in the 19th century, though the levelled area where it stood can still be made out, as can the twin sets of steps (now just grassy banks) that led down to the ornamental ponds. All that remain are a cottage (perhaps intended for a resident official and not open to the public, though it has commemorative plaques), a substantial brick dovecote and the fishponds. Notice boards direct visitors to the best places to view the historic sites which today are private property.

About the village

Interesting buildings in Scrooby include the mill, the old vicarage, the village's historic farmhouses, and the pinfold. The village stocks were sold to America, more than a hundred years ago.

Gibbet Hill Lane

Just north of Scrooby, the road that links the A638 and the A614 is called Gibbet Hill Lane. This lane is so named after a brutal crime that took place early in the morning of 3 July 1779 when John Spencer, who had been playing cards with Scrooby's toll-bar keeper, William Yeadon, and his mother (then on a visit), returned to the toll house and killed both of them. The crime was enacted for the purposes of robbery, and Spencer gained re-admittance under a pretence that a drove of cattle wished to pass that way. Spencer was interrupted by travellers in the act of dragging one body across the road towards the River Ryton, and arrested shortly thereafter by a search party.[3] He was executed following a trial at Nottingham Assizes, and his body afterwards hung in a gibbet cage on a slope south of the Ryton now denominated Gibbet Hill.[4]

Outside links

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("Wikimedia Commons" has material
about Scrooby)

References

  1. National Heritage List 1239733: Church of St Wilfrid (Grade II* listing)
  2. Nikolaus Pevsner: The Buildings of England: Nottinghamshire, 1951; 1979 Penguin Books ISBN 978-0-300-09636-1
  3. White Francis & Co (1864). History, Gazetteer, and Directory of the County, and of the Town and County of the Town of Nottingham.p.693
  4. Tales from the Gibbet Post (Scrooby's Toll-booth Murders)