Owthorpe

St Margaret's Church, Owthorpe
Interior of St Margaret's

Owthorpe is a small village and civil parish in the wolds of the English county of Nottinghamshire. The population of about 90 was included in the civil parish of Cotgrave in the 2011 Census.

Location and governance

Owthorpe is adjacent to the parishes of Cropwell Bishop, Stanton on the Wolds, Cotgrave, Kinoulton and Colston Bassett, two miles south-east of Cotgrave and nine miles south-east of Nottingham. It forms part of the borough of Rushcliffe. The Grantham Canal lies to its east, as does the Fosse Way, whose line is followed by the A46 trunk road between Leicester and Lincoln. In 2006 the borough council recorded a population of 90 for Owthorpe,[1] so that the parish is too small to have a parish council and has a parish meeting instead.

Amenities

There are low-frequency weekday bus services to Cotgrave and Keyworth and term-time school buses to Bingham.[2] The nearest shops and medical and sports services are in Cotgrave. There is self-catering accommodation at Woodview Cottages, Newfields Farm.[3] The Little Retreat, Colston Bassett Lane, provides spa treatments.[4]

Heritage

A large manor house, Owthorpe Hall, was located here until it burned to the ground in a fire. It was the seat of the Hutchinson family, one famous member of which was John Hutchinson, the Parliamentarian army officer and regicide.[5] The family vault under the nave of the church is now sealed off, but when the floor gave way in 1859 it was found to contain 17 coffins.[6]

The wife of John Hutchinson was Lucy Hutchinson, née Apsley (1620–1681), a biographer and poet, and the first person to translate the complete text of Lucretius's De rerum natura (On the Nature of Things) into English.[7] She also wrote the epic poem Order and Disorder, which is a version of the Book of Genesis.[8] Her biography of her husband was reprinted in 2010.[9]

The lordship, then consisting of 1300 acres of enclosed land, was sold in 1773 to Sir George Bromley, Bt.[10] It was occupied in 1797 as a tenant by a Mr Renshaw and described as "a square with handsome, lofty, and convenient apartments."[11] Members of the Renshaw family remained there until 1825. The date of the subsequent fatal fire is uncertain, but the demolition was carried out by Sir Robert Howe Bromley, Bt, son of Sir George.[12] This was recorded in 1832 as having occurred.[13] None of the buildings survive,[14] but the series of fishponds off Swab's Lane, dug by Col. Hutchinson, remain and are being developed as a wildlife resource.[15]

The population of Owthorpe was 107 in 1801, 138 in 1821, and 144 in 1831.[16] The population was put at 143 in 1853,[12] 131 in 1887[17] and 110 in 1911.)[18] Historically Owthorpe parish was in the wapentake of Bingham, and from 1894 to 1974 in Bingham Rural District.

Church

Owthorpe has an unusual Grade I listed Anglican church, dedicated to St Margaret of Antioch, once considered a patron saint of pregnancy.[19] It stands away from the village in farmland, surrounded by a low wall, next to the site where the manor stood. Access is only along a public footpath – a narrow grass track, often muddy in the winter months – and through a timber gate.

Some features of St Margaret's date from the 12th century, although the structure underwent many changes over the centuries. It was rebuilt about 1650,[12] and has recently undergone further repairs. The north wall is a surviving part of the original, larger church. Inside it has an oak-panelled, three-decker pulpit-cum-lectern with a Jacobean canopy, which is still in use.[20] The octagonal castellated font[21] is thought to be from the 15th century. A wooden screen dividing the nave from the chancel is said to have come from Owthorpe Hall.[22]

Literary link

The children's historical novel Uncivil War: Twin Tales of Nottinghamshire by Noel Harrower[23] features Owthorpe and the Hutchinsons.

References

  1. Parish Councils: names and addresses - Rushcliffe Borough Council
  2. Travel Search. Retrieved 24 May 2015.
  3. Woodview Cottages. Retrieved 22 June 2015.
  4. The Little Retreat. Retrieved 22 June 2015.
  5. ODNB entry: Retrieved 4 April 2011.
  6. Rev. J. Pickworth-Hutchinson, ed.: A Short Guide to the Parish Churches of the Bingham Rural Deanery (Bingham: Bingham Deanery Chapter, 1963).
  7. Watts, Ruth (2007). Women in science : a social and cultural history. Abingdon, Oxon: Routledge. p. 51. ISBN 0415253071.
  8. The full text: Retrieved 21 June 2015.
  9. Lucy Hutchinson: Memoirs of the Life of Colonel Hutchinson (Cambridge, United Kingdom: Cambridge UP, 2010) ISBN 9781108019095 Retrieved 22 June 2015.
  10. British History Online Retrieved 25 May 2015.
  11. Nottinghamshire History. Retrieved 25 May 2015.
  12. 1 2 3 White's Directory of Nottinghamshire, 1853. Retrieved 22 June 2015.
  13. William White: History, Gazetteer, and Directory of Nottinghamshire... (Sheffield, 1832), p. 506.
  14. Keyworth & District Local History Society. Retrieved 25 May 2015. This lecture includes quotations from a description by Rev. Julius Hutchinson, written after a visit he made to the Hall in 1775.
  15. Friends of Owthorpe Fishponds. Retrieved 22 June 2015
  16. William White: History, Gazetteer and Directory of Nottinghamshire... (Sheffield, 1832), p. 479. Retrieved 3 April 2016.
  17. John Bartholomew: Gazetteer of the British Isles, 1887. Retrieved 22 June 2015.
  18. CBOC Great War Project. Retrieved 25 May 2015.
  19. David Hugh Farmer: The Oxford Dictionary of Saints 2nd ed. (Oxford: OUP, 1987), pp. 281–82.
  20. A Church Near You. Retrieved 25 May 2015.
  21. Pictured here: Retrieved 22 June 2015.
  22. Southwell & Nottingham Church History Project. Retrieved 22 June 2015.
  23. Leicester, United Kingdom: Matador, 2014. ISBN 9781784620400 Retrieved 25 May 2015.

External resources

Wikimedia Commons has media related to Owthorpe.

Coordinates: 52°53′38″N 1°00′20″W / 52.89388°N 1.00555°W / 52.89388; -1.00555

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