Guyzance

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Guyzance
Northumberland
The main street of Guyzance village.jpg
Guyzance
Location
Grid reference: NU210039
Location: 55°19’44"N, 1°40’8"W
Data
Post town: Morpeth
Postcode: NE65
Dialling code: 01245
Local Government
Council: Northumberland
Parliamentary
constituency:
Berwick-upon-Tweed

Guyzance, historically Guizance, is a hamlet in Northumberland, found to the south-east of Alnwick, on the River Coquet, several miles west of its mouth at Amble.

The village's unusual name is thought to be derived from a Norman family name "Guines", from an area of the same name near Calais. Other forms of the name recorded locally include "Gynis" (1242), "Gysnes" and "Gisyng".[1]. Guyzance is one of only two places in Great Britain with a -zance ending; the other is Penzance in Cornwall, but the similarity of the names is purely co-incidental.

History

The village of Guyzance has existed since at least since 1242. In 1147, a Premonstratensian Order priory was founded at nearby Brainshaugh.

The lands of the parish were inclosed in 1685.

In 1885, Guyzance was described thus in Whellan's History, Topography, and Directory of Northumberland:[2]

"GUYZANCE, or GUYSON, is a township and village in this Shilbottle parish, the property of the Duke of Northumberland; Robert Delisle, Esq. the heirs of the late Thomas Fenwick, Esq., and Thomas Tate, Esq. The rateable value is £l,671 10s., and the tithes, which are the properly of Thomas Tate, Esq., are valued at £130 per annum. The number of inhabitants in 1801, was 172; in 1811, 186; in 1821, 173; in 1831, 197; in 184l, 205; and in 1851, 213 souls. THE VILLAGE of Guyzance is situated seven miles south by east of Alnwick. There was formerly a priory here, which was annexed to Alnwick Abbey, by Eustace Fitz John. We find from Tanner's Monastica that it was endowed with a portion of the tithes, and two bovates of land, but as to any other portion of its history we possess no records. The remains of the old chapel are still here, with the burying ground, in which the Tate family are still interred. BANK HOUSE, the seat of Thomas Tate, Esq., is situated about a mile north of the village."

Present day

The weir: the site of the Guyzance Tragedy

Guyzance Hall is grade II listed.

The houses and chapel or priory mentioned in the above passage are still extant. Guyzance Mill, a ruined 19th century water powered corn and feed mill is visible from the road. The village itself consists of one small street of facing cottages, several of which have previously been used as a school and a joiners workshop, and a number of scattered cottages, farms and large houses.

Nearby, towards Acklington Park stands a building that was originally the Acklington Park Ironworks, and has since been used as a cloth mill, paint factory and private housing. The dam constructed to power the works is considered to be one of the finest 18th-century dams in England, and was unfortunately the site of the so-called Guyzance Tragedy.

The Guyzance Tragedy

Guyzance Tragedy Memorial

On 17 January 1945, ten soldiers drowned while taking part in a military exercise at Guyzance,[3] on the River Coquet. The river was in full flood and their boat was swept over the weir and capsized. The men, all aged 18, were weighed down by full combat gear. In 1995, a memorial service was held to mark the 50th anniversary of the tragedy and a plaque was erected.

Outside links

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("Wikimedia Commons" has material
about Guyzance)

References