Tilsworth

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Tilsworth
Bedfordshire

The Anchor public house
Location
Grid reference: SP979244
Location: 51°54’35"N, -0°34’42"W
Data
Population: 331  (2011[1])
Post town: Leighton Buzzard
Postcode: LU7
Dialling code: 01525
Local Government
Council: Central Bedfordshire
Parliamentary
constituency:
South West Bedfordshire

Tilsworth is a small village and parish in the Manshead Hundred of Bedfordshire. It lies to the north-west of Dunstable, and the Roman Watling Street (A5) forms the north-east boundary of the parish of 1,200 acres. The village lies on the gault clay, where springs well up just south of a gentle gravelly ridge. A large proportion of the area is still farmland.

The Domesday Book calls the place "Pileworde" because of a misunderstanding of the thorn symbol for "th", and the name probably means "Thyfel's homestead".[2] A further alternative spelling is "Tyllesworth", in a legal record, dated 1470, mentioning Thomas Carter, a husbandman of the village.[3]

Stanbridge, a larger village, is a close neighbour to the west and some organisations, such as the Women's Institute, are combined.[4]

The mediæval All Saints' Church, built of Totternhoe stone, stands in a prominent position on the hillside, and can be seen from a distance when floodlit at night.[5] It has shared a vicar with Stanbridge since the 19th century, and the combined benefice now also includes Totternhoe.[6] The Church House acts as a centre for many local organisations and there is an active community life in the village.

The Methodist Church, faced with the need for expensive repairs, was closed in 1990 and demolished.[7]

Across the road from the church, on lower ground, is the ancient moated site of Tilsworth Manor (now a private house). The house itself has been much altered in modern times, but retains a picturesque 15th-century gate tower.[5] Tilsworth fête is held in the grounds each June. The manor was owned in the 16th century by the Fowler family. In 1600 a notorious trial followed a quarrel between Richard Fowler and his young wife. Richard was imprisoned in the Tower of London as the result of a forged letter implicating him in a plot to poison Queen Elizabeth I. His wife, her brother and her lover were convicted of the forgery.[8]

A gravestone in the churchyard, bearing a verse inscription about a "female unknown" found murdered in the nearby woods in 1821, arouses much interest.[9]

Several old farmhouses, two of them thatched, survive in Tilsworth. There are new houses and bungalows, but the village has not yet increased greatly in size. One farmhouse in the north corner of the parish was lost to Hockliffe, to which it was adjacent, in the 20th century. The "Little Chef" restaurant and Travelodge on the A5 are called "Hockliffe", though in fact they lie in Tilsworth.

A public house, the Anchor, with restaurant and garden, stands next to one of the small greens, and there is a golf and conference centre.

See also

References

  1. "Civil Parish population 2011". Neighbourhood Statistics. Office for National Statistics. http://www.neighbourhood.statistics.gov.uk/dissemination/LeadKeyFigures.do?a=7&b=11129661&c=Thurleigh&d=16&e=62&g=6402949&i=1001x1003x1032x1004&m=0&r=1&s=1478968020643&enc=1. 
  2. V. Watts, The Cambridge Dictionary of English Place-Names, Cambridge, 2004, ISBN 0-521-36209-1.
  3. Plea Rolls of the Court of Common Pleas; National Archives; CP 40/837; http://aalt.law.uh.edu/AALT2/E4/CP40no837/bCP40no837dorses/IMG_0577.htm; 4th entry with county margination Hertf, & plaintiff William Westby
  4. Tilsworth and Stanbridge Women's Institute.
  5. 5.0 5.1 B. B. West, "Bedfordshire sketch-book CLXXX – Tilsworth", Bedfordshire Magazine, volume 25, number 197, pages 202–203, 1996.
  6. C. Pickford, Bedfordshire Churches in the Nineteenth Century, Part III: Parishes Salford to Yelden, Bedfordshire Historical Record Society volume 79, 2000, ISBN 0-85155-063-0, page 680.
  7. J. Schneider (editor), "I Can Remember ...": Village Life Recollected in the Words of People from Tilsworth, Bedfordshire, Friends of Tilsworth Church, 2006, page 51.
  8. B. N. de Luna, The Mortal Shakespeare: Some New Light on His Political and Personal Relationships, 1580–1616, c.1993. At the British Library.
  9. Murder in Blackgrove Wood 1821, Bedfordshire Notes and Queries, volume 1, 1886.

Outside links

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