Glentham is a village and civil parish in the West Lindsey district of Lincolnshire, England. It is situated on the A631, west from Market Rasen, and east from Caenby Corner and the A15.
The civil parish includes the hamlet of Bishopbridge, on the A631 east of the village, and the eastern part of the hamlet of Spital-in-the-Street on the A15 (Ermine Street) west of the village.
Etymology
The
Oxford Dictionary of English Place Names gives the derivation of the name Glentham as
glente +
hām, meaning either ″homestead frequented by birds of prey″ or ″homestead at a lookout place″. Caenby is said to probably mean ″farmstead or village of a man called
Cāfna or
Kafni″.
[ Oxford Dictionary of English Place-Names, A. D. Mills.]
History
Domesday Book
Glentham was mentioned in the
Domesday Book of 1086, as being in the Aslacoe hundred in the West Riding of Lindsey. It had a total population of 64 households (very large for the time) with tax assessment of 8 geld units (again very large). Land in Glentham was held by four separate lords before the
Norman Conquest and three afterwards:
Lord in 1066: Lincoln St Mary, bishop of.
Lord in 1086: Lincoln St Mary, bishop of.
Tenant-in-chief in 1086: Lincoln St Mary, bishop of.
Lord in 1066: Thorgisl.
Lord in 1086: Rainfrid.
Tenant-in-chief in 1086: Ivo Taillebois.
Lords in 1066: Estan of Farningham; Wulfmer.
Lord in 1086: Wadard of Cogges.
Tenant-in-chief in 1086: Bishop Odo of Bayeux.[[1] Domesday Book. Retrieved 15 March 2015]
1961 air incident
A BAC Jet Provost crashed at 3.30pm on Thursday 23 March 1961. The pilot ejected, Pilot Off JB Fardell from
RAF Syerston. The fire engines were from Lincoln and Lindsey Fire Brigade at Market Rasen and Caistor.
[ Retford News Friday 24 March 1961, page 24][ Lincolnshire Echo Friday 24 March 1961, page 1][ 1961 air incident]
Religious Buildings
Glentham Grade I listed
Anglican church is dedicated to
St Peter and
St Paul.
Originating in the 13th century, it has had additions and changes up to the 20th. It is mainly Perpendicular in style.
[Cox, J. Charles (1916) Lincolnshire pp. 136, 137; Methuen & Co. Ltd] Nikolaus Pevsner dates the tower from 1756, and a
stained glass window by Christopher Whall from 1915.
[Nikolaus Pevsner; Harris, John; The Buildings of England: Lincolnshire p. 248; Penguin, (1964); revised by Nicholas Antram in 1989, Yale University Press. ] In the
chancel and the north aisle are monuments and
Monumental brass to the Tourney family of
Caenby. Set within a niche over the south porch is an image of
Pieta holding the dead Christ. At the west of the church is a mutilated 14th-century brass effigy of a female;
[ previously known as "Molly Grime", it was, up to 1832, washed every Good Friday by seven old maids.][ Gentleman's Magazine 1865; part 2, pp. 205-7]
In 1885 Kelly's Directory recorded both a Wesleyan and Primitive Methodist chapel, and a nearby Tumulus. At that time much land in the area was given over to pasture, while main crops grown were wheat, barley and beans.[ Kelly's Directory of Lincolnshire with the port of Hull 1885, p. 415]
The parish is part of the Owmby Group of parishes.
Amenities
Glentham has a public house, The Crown Inn, a shop, a garden centre (with associated business units) and a village hall.
Other
The village gave its name to a Ham class minesweeper, HMS Glentham.[ "HMS Glentham", Clydesite.co.uk. Retrieved 23 June 2013][[4] , Genuk site. Retrieved 15 March 2015]
External links
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"Glentham" , genuki.org.uk. Retrieved 7 August 2011