Huttoft

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Huttoft
Lincolnshire

St Margaret's Church, Huttoft
Location
Grid reference: TF513764
Location: 53°15’48"N, -0°16’3"E
Data
Population: 585  (2011)
Post town: Alford
Postcode: LN13
Local Government
Council: East Lindsey
Parliamentary
constituency:
Louth and Horncastle

Huttoft is a big village in Lindsey, the northern part of Lincolnshire. It is situated about four mils east of the market town of Alford, on the A52 road between Ingoldmells and Sutton-on-Sea.

Name

Huttoft is listed three times in the 1086 Domesday Book as Hotoft,[1] in the manors of both Huttoft and Greetham in the Calceworth Hundred of the South Riding of Lindsey. The combined listings record over 19 households, and 20 villeins, 23 smallholders, 69 freemen, 20 ploughlands, and meadows of 860 acres. Before the Norman Conquest Earl Harold was lord of Greetham; this in 1086 was held by Earl Hugh of Chester who also became tenant-in-chief to the King. The 1086 tenant-in-chief of Huttoft was Alfred of Lincoln.[2]

'Huttoft' is an Anglo-Norse place name derived from Old English hoh "decline", "slope" and Old Norse topt "site of a house", or the Dictionary of British Place Names defines Huttoft as a "homestead on a spur of land."[3]

Landmarks

St Margaret's Church is built of stone in the Decorated style,[4] and is a Grade I listed building. Built of greenstone, limestone, and with some brick patching, Restorations took place in 1869, 1882, and 1910. The west tower is 13th-century,although it was extended in the 14th century. The font is 15th-century, although the cover is 19th-century.[5]The churchyard cross, is a Grade II listed structure,[6] which was restored in 1896 with the addition of a crucifix.

The Poet Laureate John Betjeman (1906–1984) was fond of Lincolnshire: Wolds, Marsh and the Georgian town of Louth. He refers to St Margaret's, Huttoft, in the second of his Lincolnshire poems, A Lincolnshire Church.[7] This is one of his longer poems and also mentions the vicar of 1943–59, Theophilus Caleb, whom he met.

The Wesleyan Methodist chapel on Sutton Road, Huttoft, became part of the Alford, Skegness and Wainfleet Methodist Circuit in 1997.[8]

The Primitive Methodists also had a chapel, in Church Lane, which was on the Alford Methodist circuit until 1963, and has since been demolished, although the graveyard remains.[9]

Huttoft windmill, standing in the centre of the village, is a Grade II listed building.[10]It lost its sails in 1945 in a storm after a century of milling.[11]

Huttoft School was built as a National School in 1840 and enlarged in 1874. It was known as Huttoft CE School by 1914, and became Huttoft County Primary in 1947. It became a grant-maintained school and has been known as Huttoft Primary (GM) School since 1999.[12]

Huttoft Bank Pit, some two and a half miles east of the village, is a nature reserve protected by the Lincolnshire Wildlife Trust. It provided clay for repairs to the sea bank after the North Sea flood of 1953. It includes a large open water area and extensive reed beds.[13] Huttoft Bank leads to Huttoft Beach, also known as Moggs Eye.

Huttoft is the location of the Radcliffe Donkey Sanctuary.

Pictures

Outside links

("Wikimedia Commons" has material
about Huttoft)

References

  1. Albert Hugh Smith, English Place-names Elements, 2 volumes, Cambridge, 1972.
  2. Huttoft in the Domesday Book
  3. Mills, Anthony David: 'A Dictionary of British Place-Names' (Oxford University Press, 2003) ISBN 978-0-19-852758-9
  4. "Kellys Directory". Kellys Directories Ltd. 1919. p. 808. http://www.historicaldirectories.org/exe/wwt.dll/pdf?fn=e:\hdapps\0000b135.pdf. Retrieved 24 April 2011. 
  5. National Heritage List 1360009: St Margaret's Church (Grade I listing)
  6. National Heritage List 1147238: Cross in Churchyard, South Side (Grade II listing)
  7. Collected Poems (1958), p. 141 Retrieved 13 September 2018.
  8. Wesleyan Methodist Chapel, Huttoft: Lincs to the Past
  9. Huttoft Primitive Methodist Chapel: Lincs to the Past
  10. National Heritage List 1063008: Huttoft Mill, Huttoft
  11. "Time Travel Britain". http://www.timetravel-britain.com/articles/country/windmills.shtml. Retrieved 24 April 2011. 
  12. Huttoft School: Lincs to the Past
  13. Huttoft Bank Pit: Lincolnshire Wildlife Trust