Woodford, Northamptonshire

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Woodford
Northamptonshire
St. Mary the Virgin Church at Woodford, Northamptonshire.jpg
St Mary the Virgin, Woodford
Location
Grid reference: SP967769
Location: 52°22’55"N, 0°34’48"W
Data
Population: 1,461  (2011)
Post town: Kettering
Postcode: NN14
Dialling code: 01832
Local Government
Council: North Northamptonshire
Parliamentary
constituency:
Corby

Woodford is a large village in Northamptonshire, on the west side of the River Nene, upstream of Thrapston and east of Kettering.

The 2011 census the parish's population (including Woodwell) was 1,461.

The village's name means just what it says, namely 'wooded ford',[1] referring to woodland near a shallow fording place on the River Nene.

Parish church

The parish church in the village, St Mary the Virgin, has the nickname "the Cathedral of the Nene".

The church was begun in the 12th century and has 13th,14th and 19th century features. The tower was complete by 1400.[2]

Inside the church can be found a number of curiosities. Within a niche cut into a pillar, there is a mummified human heart wrapped in coarse cloth. This was discovered during restoration work in 1867. A framed newspaper cutting depicts a photograph of an alleged ghost taken in the church in 1964.[3] A further display shows reproductions of photographs and newspapers from a time capsule concealed in the roof by the Reverend Smythe during the 1867 repair works, and rediscovered during further repairs in 1995. An unusual carving (particularly for places of Christian worship) can be found at the top of one of the pillars to the rear of the nave, depicting a Green Man, with vines growing out of the mouth. Finally, the combination of rounded and pointed arches in the nave indicate different periods of reconstruction in the Norman and Gothic styles respectively.

History

Woodford House, an early 19th-century mansion, was the home of the Arbuthnot family and scene of the death of the diarist Harriet Arbuthnot in 1833. The property was purchased in 1880 by Charles Henry Plevins from Arthur Arbuthnot, son of General Charles Arbuthnot. The house was altered between 1899 and 1910 and had a new garden created in 1909.[4]

The Arbuthnots owned iron ore quarries on the estate which were dug from circa 1851, an early date for what was later to become a large industry in Northamptonshire.[5] The Arbuthnot's quarry appears to have been short-lived but a sample of the ore was exhibited at the Great Exhibition in Hyde Park, London, in 1851. There was a further experiment in commercial quarrying from about 1860 and again in 1866. The early attempts suffered from a lack of transport facilities and the ore must have been taken away by horse and cart but in 1866 the Kettering to Thrapston railway opened and a connecting tramway was constructed from close to Woodford House to the railway at Twywell. The quarrying (and some adit mining) lasted from 1866 to 1886, starting near Woodford Lodge and extending north of the road later on. There were also quarries south west of Twywell Station on the north side of the road between 1881 and 1883. There was also a brickworks near there. The main tramway (standard gauge) had steam locomotives from the start but some of the quarries were connected to it by narrow gauge lines and these were worked by hand or by horse until 1883. There were some visible remains of the quarries and buildings at least until 1986.[6]

Part of the ground north of the road near Woodford Lodge was reworked between 1914 and 1926 when quarries in Twywell Parish were extended. The ground here was landscaped and returned to cultivation in 1965.[7]

These quarries were to the west of Woodford village. Another quarry to the north of the village operated from 1867 but was closed by 1892. This quarry was connected to a tipping dock on the railway east of Twywell Station by a horse operated 4 foot gauge tramway. No landscaping was undertaken until 1970 and there were still some traces of the quarry as at 1986[8]

About the village

The Manor House, although a 16th-century house has buttresses and a doorway of the 13th or early 14th century.

The Round House is dated 1815 and commemorates the Battle of Waterloo

Woodford House was enlarged between 1813 and 1826 and in 1902.[9]

Outside links

Commons-logo.svg
("Wikimedia Commons" has material
about Woodford, Northamptonshire)
  • Sargents FC Est 1994, a football team who play their home games in Woodford and are currently in Division One of the Rushden & District Sunday League.
  • Woodford Village

References

  1. "Key to English Place-names". http://kepn.nottingham.ac.uk/map/place/Northamptonshire/Woodford. 
  2. Nikolaus Pevsner: The Buildings of England: Northamptonshire, 1961; 1973 Penguin Books ISBN 978-0-300-09632-3
  3. Codd, Daniel. Mysterious Northamptonshire. Breedon Books (2009). p.131-132. ISBN 9781859836811
  4. NCC, Record Office
  5. The History of Ironstone Mining around Burton Latimer
  6. Tonks, Eric (1991). The ironstone Quarries of the Midlands Part V the Kettering Railway. Cheltenham: Runpast. pp. 79–85. ISBN 1-870754-05-0. 
  7. Tonks, Eric work cited pages 124 and 125
  8. Tonks,Eric Pages 86-90
  9. Pevsner :Buildings of England page 467