Wyberton

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Wyberton
Lincolnshire
St Leodegar's Church, Wyberton - geograph.org.uk - 102124.jpg
St Leodegar's Church, Wyberton
Location
Grid reference: TF316414
Location: 52°57’15"N, 0°2’28"W
Data
Population: 3,747  (2011)
Post town: Boston
Postcode: PE21
Dialling code: 01205
Local Government
Council: Boston
Parliamentary
constituency:
Boston and Skegness

Wyberton is a village and parish in the Holland part of Lincolnshire. It lies just south-west of Boston, on the B1397 – the former A16 London Road – between Boston and Kirton. The A16 along the former East Lincolnshire railway line bisects the village. The population of the civil parish at the 2011 census was 3,747.[1]

History

Wyberton is listed in the 1086 Domesday Book with 36 households and a church.[2]

The lost hamlet of Tytton was mentioned in 1316 and is now represented by Tytton Hall, a modern farm-house, near which is the moated site of the earlier mansion. Margart Tytton of Wyberton married John Coppeldyke, who was Sheriff of the county in 1488. The Tytton name does not appear in the Register Book of 1538, and the family had probably become extinct by that time.[3] Wyberton Woad mill operated by steam was owned by Mr J Short until 1901/2.[4]

Landmarks

Site of Wyberts Castle

The parish church is a Grade-I listed building dedicated to Saint Leodegar and dating from the late 12th century, although it was rebuilt around 1420. The chancel was rebuilt in 1760 and the church was restored by George Gilbert Scott Junior about 1880. The original church had a crossing tower which collapsed in 1419. The font is 15th-century and there is a charity board in the north aisle dated 1794. In the north aisle there is a 14th-century black marble slab to Adam of Frampton and his wife. Records in the Chancery Court refer to proceedings between 1426 and 1432 where Roger Derrys, a London mason, was suing for payment following the rebuilding of Church tower and nave. The chancel rebuilding was carried out at the same time as the refronting of the Rectory, now Wyberton Park, by the Rector Dr John Shaw.[5]

Wyberton Park, the tiled-roof red brick Grade-II* listed former rectory 100 yds to the south of the church, was built in 1689 by the incumbent, to replace a mud and stud rectory with one containing a "kitchen, parlour, large staircase rising from the entrance door, two chambers, a large study and small closets on the second storey and garrets, and a large porch with steps ascending to it at the entrance." This improved rectory is seen by historian T. W. Beastall as indicating growing prosperity through increased acreage for crops and husbandry precipitated by fen drainage during the Agricultural Revolution.[6] The present house is a further 1761 part rebuild.[7]

Wyberts Castle is a scheduled mediæval moated site located at the south end of Wybert Lane, about a mile east of Wyberton. Excavations undertaken in 1959-1960 revealed remains of stone structures on the eastern half of the island, associated with pottery which suggested that the moated site was occupied during the 12th and 13th centuries and possibly until the 15th century. In the 18th century it was known as 'Wells Slade', suggesting that it was held by the Wells family who had a manor in Wyberton in the 14th century. The name 'Wybert's Castle' is thought to be of late 19th-century origin.[8]

The village public house is the Pincushion Inn on London Road to the south of the village.

Notable former inhabitants

  • William Webster – Builder - associated with a number of Thames embankments.[9]

References

  1. "Civil Parish population 2011". Neighbourhood Statistics. Office for National Statistics. http://www.neighbourhood.statistics.gov.uk/dissemination/LeadKeyFigures.do?a=7&b=11131021&c=Wyberton&d=16&e=62&g=6445876&i=1001x1003x1032x1004&m=0&r=1&s=1465036982984&enc=1. Retrieved 4 June 2016. 
  2. Wyberton in the Domesday Book
  3. Historic England. "Tytton (353959)". PastScape. http://www.pastscape.org.uk/hob.aspx?hob_id=353959. Retrieved 30 August 2011 
  4. Norman T.Wills (1979). Woad in the Fens. N.T.Wills. 
  5. National Heritage List 1147881: St Leodegar
  6. Beastall T.W. (1978), The Agricultural Revolution in Lincolnshire, (History of Lincolnshire, volume 8), History of Lincolnshire Committee for the Society for Lincolnshire History and Archaeology, p.8. ISBN 0902668072
  7. National Heritage List 1062042: Wyberton Park, Church Lane, Wyberton
  8. National Heritage List 1018583: Wyberts Castle
  9. "OBITUARY. WILLIAM WEBSTER, 1819-1888.". Institution of Civil Engineers. http://www.icevirtuallibrary.com/doi/abs/10.1680/imotp.1888.20967. 

Outside links

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