Difference between revisions of "Sedgebrook"

From Wikishire
Jump to: navigation, search
(Created page with "{{Infobox town |county=Lincoln |picture=St Lawrence's Church, Sedgebrook - geograph.org.uk - 180110.jpg |picture caption=St Lawrence's Church, Sedgebrook |population=355 |cens...")
 
(No difference)

Latest revision as of 10:51, 20 July 2018

Sedgebrook
Lincolnshire
St Lawrence's Church, Sedgebrook - geograph.org.uk - 180110.jpg
St Lawrence's Church, Sedgebrook
Location
Grid reference: SK856380
Location: 52°55’58"N, 0°43’41"W
Data
Population: 355  (2011)
Post town: Grantham
Postcode: NG32
Dialling code: 01949
Local Government
Council: South Kesteven
Parliamentary
constituency:
Sleaford and
North Hykeham

Sedgebrook is a village and parish in the Kesteven part of Lincolnshire, adjacent to the border with Leicestershire. It lies on the A52 road, six miles west of Grantham. Its population was about 375,[1] reducing at the 2011 census to 355.[2]

Heritage

Sedgebrook is mentioned in the Domesday Book as Sechebroc[3] in the wapentake of Winnibriggs.[4] Robert Malet and three mills were noted. Sechebroc means "Brook where sedge grows", from OE secg "sedge" and brôc "a brook"[5]

The parish church of St Lawrence is a largely 15th-century building, with an early 13th-century north arcade and a 14th-century chancel arch.[6] A pamphlet history of the church was published in 1980 and republished in 1990.[7] The church is the only Grade I listed building in the village. Sedgebrook Manor House is Grade II* listed. There are three other houses and two architectural features listed as Grade II.[8]

The church shares a priest with Foston, West Allington and Long Bennington.

The Grantham Canal passes a mile and a half south-west of the village. It opened in 1797 but closed in 1936. A voluntary society formed in 1969 has restored parts of the canal for recreational use.[9] The towpaths form a long-distance walk, as does the Viking Way, passing about half a mile to the west of the village, known here as Sewstern Lane.

Newbo Abbey was sited between Sedgebrook and Barrowby in the 12th century[10]

The wartime RAF Bottesford airfield lies three miles north-west of the village.

Sedgebrook Manor House

The Manor House is sometimes known as Sedgebrook Hall[11] The earliest known owners of the Hall were the Markhams in the 15th century.[11]

Geography

The village lies in the north of the Vale of Belvoir, beside Foston Beck, a tributary of the River Witham. Adjacent villages are Barrowby, two miles south-east; Muston, 1¾ miles west; Bottesford, 3¼ miles west-north-west; and Allington, a mile and a half north. The village is overlooked by Belvoir Castle, 3½ miles to the south-west.

Transport

The A52 trunk road between Grantham and Nottingham bypasses the village; the stretch of the A52 from Bottesford to Barrowby is an accident blackspot. The nearest junction on the A1(M) motorway between Grantham and Newark is at Foston, three miles to the north.

The Nottingham to Grantham railway line passes close to the village, and crosses Allington Road. Sedgebrook railway station closed in 1956. The nearest station today is at Bottesford, 3½ miles away, which has services to Nottingham, Grantham and Skegness.

Two bus routes, one between Grantham and Radcliffe on Trent, the other between Grantham and Bitchfield, service the village.[12][13]

Education

Sedgebrook had its own primary school up until 1981, when the building was closed and the school amalgamated with that of Allington.[14]

Sedgebrook also had at one time a grammar school.[15] This was erected in 1882, and in 1908 there were 75 boys attending. By 1913 it was a secondary school for the surrounding area. It was absorbed into The King's School, Grantham, probably in 1919.[16]

References

Outside links

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