Lillington Local History Society

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Lillington Local History Society NOVEMBER 2016 NOVEMBER 2016 Contents John Reeve Manor Farm barns Weddings in 1899 Farm names Campion School Siege of Kenilworth Programme of meetings Regular monthly meeting Free Church Hall, Cubbington Road, 4.30 pm on the first Friday of each month. Contact us by -Coming to one of the Society s monthly meetings, -or by referring any queries about the society, contributions, photographs or reminiscences to Graham Cooper telephone 01926 426942 The Sheldon Tapestry Map of Warwickshire was woven around 1590 and is one of the highlights of the displays at the Market Hall Museum in Warwick. It shows the Elizabethan county of Warwickshire, which would have been familiar to William Shakespeare. The section above shows Lillington and its immediate area. Note that north is NOT at the top! Image: Peter Coulls and Warwickshire County Council Our own website!!! See page 5 1

JOHN RADFORD REEVE 1855-1914 Village Farm Lillington, although owned by the Wise family, had been tenanted by the Radford family for several generations, passing from father to son or brother to brother until the last unmarried brother, Joseph Radford, died in February 1875. A nephew, John Radford Reeve, who hailed from Leicestershire but who until then had been working as a draper at Messrs Marshall & Snelgrove in London, promptly left the capital to come and manage Village Farm, for his two middle-aged aunts, Mary and Susannah Radford. Notwithstanding his years in trade, once settled in Lillington, John Radford Reeve quickly adapted to his new role. He was soon recognised not only as one of the most capable farmers in the district but as one of the best judges of stock, especially of milking cattle. John Reeve was highly respected throughout the county as a skilled judge of a horse, and so became a valued member of the horse purchase subcommittee of the Leamington Corporation. From 1890 to 1906 he served as a member of the Corporation, and at Council meetings was known for his droll humour, enlivening proceedings by occasional quotations from Shakespeare. John Reeve was also a good sportsman and an excellent shot. He provided facilities for the Leamington Rifle Club by granting ground on his farm for the Club s new range. John Reeve was a staunch churchgoer. For many years he was Warden at the parish church of St Mary Magdalene, where in 1892 he married Laura, daughter of Mr W E Linnell, a Lillington farming neighbour and grocer of Regent Street. The Reeves had four sons and two daughters. Sadly, one daughter, Olive Mary, died in infancy and Lawrence, their third son died at sea in the early days of WW1. Lawrence is commemorated on the War Memorial in Lillington churchyard, and the Roll of Honour in the church itself. During the last three or four years of his life, as his health began to fail, John Reeve s eldest son (also named John) took over the running of the farm, inheriting it on his father s comparatively early death in June 1914. Mrs Reeve lived on to the age of 77. She died at 9 South Bank, Cubbington Road, in March 1940, and is buried beside her husband in the churchyard. Together with Red House Farm, Manor Farm, The Grange, some cottages, allotment gardens, accommodation land and the Brickyard, Village Farm was put up for sale in 1920, but John Reeve continued to farm there for a few more years. Margaret Rushton Sources: Familysearch.org; Leamington Spa Courier online archive; William Cooper: The History of Lillington, Leamington Spa.. Images Gary Timlin, Warwick Record Office 2 Tesco, built on the site of the former Village Farm.

MANOR FARM BARNS AND OUTBUILDINGS History tells us, or at least Willaim Cooper in his The History of Lillington tells us, that in 1769 there were at least five farms in the Mannor of Lillington. Namely Red House Farm, Manor Farm (called North Farm in 1854), Village Farm (apparently called Middle Farm in 1854), Grange Farm (also called Home Hall) and Forge Farm. Others are described in the Vicarial Tythes of Lillington. In recent times Forge Farm house has been significantly altered.no physical no evidence of Grange or Village Farms survives. Red House Farm appears on current maps, a project for further investigation? Manor House Farm, or what is known as Manor Farm Cottages, remains. Some outbuildings have lasted with the other structures being used for commercial purposes. In the days when Farm Lane (sic) met the north end of Lime Avenue you would have encountered Manor Farm and its many barns and outbuildings. The farm was at one time occupied by the Beamish family, who farmed some 220 acres. Included in the associated buildings were a diary, smithy and a variety of barns. Photographic evidence from the 20 th century, shows some very large Dutch barns, overshadowing brick and stone buildings with slate or tiled roofs. The single storey building previously occupied by Lime Garages was examined and photographed in June 2011. The other barns on site were not accessible. In July 2016 the remaining barns were viewed and photographed. The roofs were covered with tiles made at the Napton Brickworks, the tiles being impressed with either the word Napton or a symbol of the Napton windmill. The bricks on the wall plate came from the Leamington Brick Co.. I would suggest that the remainder of the walls were from the same source. There is evidence that one of the barns on the south of the site has a substantial stone base, the material looking very similar to that of the present Manor Farm Cottage. Latterly these buildings have disappeared; consequently more of Lillington s history has been lost but has been saved by the camera. Peter Coulls A building lost to the past. Peter Coulls Napton Brickworks Windows on Warks img: 8012 (3/7272) 3

WEDDINGS IN THE PARISH CHURCH: 1899 Lillington s parish records of weddings can now be viewed on line. They hint at so many untold stories... Eight couples were married in Lillington during 1899 and 1900: Eliza Barns married George Dawson on April 4 th 1899. George, previously unmarried, was 47, and Eliza was 30. George was a coachman, as had been his father. Two years later, the census shows them living at 21 Paradise Street in Warwick. In 1911 his occupation was listed as a gentleman s servant (valet). They had no children. In contrast, and catching the essential two nations nature of Lillington, Benjamin Wayte married Lucy Hall two days later on April 6th. He was a hay and corn dealer. At the time of the 1901 census, they were living in a large house, 30 Lillington Road, had a son, a monthly nurse, a live-in cook and a housemaid. Edward Wyatt married Catherine Gibbs on 12 December. By 1911 Edward was a widower, and living with his widowed mother in her home in Cubbington Road, close to the Rugby Tavern. He was a wheelwright. Catherine had died in 1910, and they had no known children. She was 35. Henry Benet married Mary Ryland Flory, of 7 Lillington Avenue, in January 1900. He was an army officer, serving in the Lancashire Fusiliers. In 1911 he was in India, and was award a gallantry medal while serving on a special mission to Russia during World War 1. Images Fashion-Era.com; Warwick Record Office; Ancestry.com 4

New Website for Lillington Local History Society The Society has a Facebook page https://www.facebook.com/lillingtonhistorygroup/ Now we are planning to have a website of our own, to advertise our forthcoming events and to make all aspects of Lillington s history more widely available. The website address will be: www.lillingtonhistory.org We hope the site will be online by the end of October, with articles, images and information about aspects of Lillington history - buildings, people, places, reminiscences which will grow as we receive contributions. These Newsletters will also be available to download via the site. A committee of three, Margaret Rushton, Peter Coulls and Richard Taulbut, is putting the site together. Margaret Rushton is looking for contributions, which can be sent to her in any format. We hope it will grow into a resource for anyone interested in Lillington history. Richard Taulbut FARM NAMES: LILLINGTON We can work out quite quickly why two of the farms in Lillington are so named. Manor Farm lies only a few metres east from the Manor House, and Village Farm on the Tesco s site, was clearly close to the centre of the original village. Grange Farm, near the junction of Pound Lane and the Cubbington Road, might refer in its name to the original monastic landlords who held Lillington in Medieval times. A grange was a monastic farm, often accompanied by a tythe barn used to store village produce before it was transported to the landlord, in this case of Prior of the Augustinian Priory in Kenilworth. We know that there was a tythe barn in this area, but it may have been used to store the lesser tythe paid by Lillington s tenants to the Vicar. Image and text CDMR 5

THE FORMER CAMPION SCHOOL You may recall this time last year I wrote about the development of the old Campion School site on Leicester Street. It had previously been Leamington Municipal Technical School and later Leamington Central School. You may also recall the salvation project the Lillington Local History Society undertook to preserve some of the historic stonework from the original building. Quite literally the stonework was saved from being loaded into the massive crusher. We tried our best to salvage what we could. None of this would have been possible without the collaboration with Waterloo Housing s Jenny Crowther project lead, Lloyds Builders and Simon Shears, site manager. Readers of these pages I m sure have all too often learned of the destruction and removal of wonderful places of historic interest in the name of progress and financial gain. This time around, you can learn of quite a wonderful project that worked with developers to salvage some of our local history. Liaising with the site team, some pieces were picked out to be included into the new build as a lasting memory. 6

Months passed and finally the new development was completed. In September 2016 I arranged for a gathering of interested parties. The society had been given a photograph of the school pupils and staff, dated 1930, by Tom Lewin from the Leamington History Group. Pictured in the photo was William Lewin aged 12, future father of Bill Lewin, and Tom s cousin. Along with the photograph was the marble tablet, dated 1894-95, commemorating the original architect F. Foster and the builder G.F Smith & Sons. I felt there to be no more a fitting destination than that of the present Campion School site in Sydenham. On the left you can see the present headteacher, Jassa Panesar, attended by Bill and Tom Lewin who, along with Dave Tabor and Alan Smith, were old school boys of the original school. Dave and Alan had worked together to identify most of the staff who were pictured in the photo. The occasion was an outstanding experience for all those present. Campion School had real pieces of their history to keep, share and educate their present and future pupils. This is what history societies should be about, isn t it? The project also enabled local people to be involved and feel an intrinsic part of this unique local project, to record and share their memories for us all to enjoy. Financial gain? No, Cost? None, Memories? Priceless. Gary Timlin 7 Features from the original building, now incorporated imaginatively into the most recent structure. Images: Gary Timlin

THE SEIGE OF KENILWORTH 1267, AND LILLINGTON If you live three miles down the road from a major siege, and the King is staying with your landlord, the Prior of Kenilworth Abbey, you have got to expect getting involved. The Siege itself took place between June and December 1266 and is known to be the longest siege to have taken place in Mediaeval Britain. The Siege was fought between King Henry III and supporters of Simon de Montfort. King Henry occupied Kenilworth Abbey, from whence he could direct the siege in person. Contemporary accounts record that the Canons of Kenilworth Priory were impoverished to such an extent that in January 1267 King Henry issued Letters Patent requiring all tenants of the Priory to contribute money to relieve its immediate financial difficulties. This must have affected the people of Lillington who had probably already lost their seed corn for the spring sowing and the few animals they could afford to keep over winter. What precious coins might still be hidden away, were now demanded by the king. So, in addition to the whole of Warwickshire being ravaged and looted by the rebels before the siege began and then the King's army living off the land and making demands for supplies, the Priory's tenants were hit again after the siege ended. So, I think we can safely say that Lillington would definitely have been affected! CDMR Image: English Heritage. Detail from Bruegel: Hunters in the snow. 8 This Newsletter is published by the Lillington Local History Society, The Chain, Crown Way, Lillington. All references prefixed CR refer to documents held in the County Record Office, Warwick. For further information, contact The Chain, Crown Way, Lillington. The views expressed in the Newsletter are personal to the contributors and are not necessarily the views of the Society.