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Notice of Uncontested Elections
NOTICE OF UNCONTESTED ELECTION West Northamptonshire Council Election of Parish Councillors for Arthingworth on Thursday 6 May 2021 I, Anna Earnshaw, being the Returning Officer at the above election, report that the persons whose names appear below were duly elected Parish Councillors for Arthingworth. Name of Candidate Home Address Description (if any) HANDY 5 Sunnybank, Kelmarsh Road, Susan Jill Arthingworth, LE16 8JX HARRIS 8 Kelmarsh Road, Arthingworth, John Market Harborough, Leics, LE16 8JZ KENNEDY Middle Cottage, Oxendon Road, Bernadette Arthingworth, LE16 8LA KENNEDY (address in West Michael Peter Northamptonshire) MORSE Lodge Farm, Desborough Rd, Kate Louise Braybrooke, Market Harborough, Leicestershire, LE16 8LF SANDERSON 2 Hall Close, Arthingworth, Market Lesley Ann Harborough, Leics, LE16 8JS Dated Thursday 8 April 2021 Anna Earnshaw Returning Officer Printed and published by the Returning Officer, Civic Offices, Lodge Road, Daventry, Northants, NN11 4FP NOTICE OF UNCONTESTED ELECTION West Northamptonshire Council Election of Parish Councillors for Badby on Thursday 6 May 2021 I, Anna Earnshaw, being the Returning Officer at the above election, report that the persons whose names appear below were duly elected Parish Councillors for Badby. Name of Candidate Home Address Description (if any) BERRY (address in West Sue Northamptonshire) CHANDLER (address in West Steve Northamptonshire) COLLINS (address in West Peter Frederick Northamptonshire) GRIFFITHS (address in West Katie Jane Northamptonshire) HIND Rosewood Cottage, Church -
Premises, Sites Etc Within 30 Miles of Harrington Museum Used for Military Purposes in the 20Th Century
Premises, Sites etc within 30 miles of Harrington Museum used for Military Purposes in the 20th Century The following listing attempts to identify those premises and sites that were used for military purposes during the 20th Century. The listing is very much a works in progress document so if you are aware of any other sites or premises within 30 miles of Harrington, Northamptonshire, then we would very much appreciate receiving details of them. Similarly if you spot any errors, or have further information on those premises/sites that are listed then we would be pleased to hear from you. Please use the reporting sheets at the end of this document and send or email to the Carpetbagger Aviation Museum, Sunnyvale Farm, Harrington, Northampton, NN6 9PF, [email protected] We hope that you find this document of interest. Village/ Town Name of Location / Address Distance to Period used Use Premises Museum Abthorpe SP 646 464 34.8 km World War 2 ANTI AIRCRAFT SEARCHLIGHT BATTERY Northamptonshire The site of a World War II searchlight battery. The site is known to have had a generator and Nissen huts. It was probably constructed between 1939 and 1945 but the site had been destroyed by the time of the Defence of Britain survey. Ailsworth Manor House Cambridgeshire World War 2 HOME GUARD STORE A Company of the 2nd (Peterborough) Battalion Northamptonshire Home Guard used two rooms and a cellar for a company store at the Manor House at Ailsworth Alconbury RAF Alconbury TL 211 767 44.3 km 1938 - 1995 AIRFIELD Huntingdonshire It was previously named 'RAF Abbots Ripton' from 1938 to 9 September 1942 while under RAF Bomber Command control. -
Brixworth Parish Council AGENDA
Brixworth Parish Council Councillors are hereby summoned to attend the Parish Council meeting to be held on Thursday 27th February 2020 at 715pm in the Community Centre & Library, Spratton Road, Brixworth, Northampton NN6 9DS The press and public are also invited to attend AGENDA Supporting Papers 1. Welcome 2. Apologies for absence and acceptance of any apologies for absence 2.1 Consider any received apologies. 3. Declarations of Interest 3.1 Members’ declarations of interests on agenda items only 4. Agree and sign the minutes of the previous meeting 4.1 Parish Council meeting of 30th January 2020 A 5. Public Open Forum Session 5.1 This is an opportunity for Parish Residents and members of other Councils, once recognised by the Chairman, to make brief representations or ask questions of the Parish Council. Each will be allowed three (3) minutes to address the Parish Council via the Chairman. • 5.1.1 St David’s -- Football Club 5.2 Although the Parish Council will endeavour to answer all questions put to it, persons asking questions should not expect immediate answers, but rather a formal written response in due course. 5.3 Those who wish to comment on an agenda item are encouraged to do so at this time or they may ask the Chairman to be allowed to speak when the subject is raised. 6. Parish Council Surgery 6.1 Receive a report from the Parish Council Surgery held on Saturday 1st February 2020 B 6.2 Agree those Parish Councillors attending the next planned Parish Council Surgery to be held on Saturday 7th March 2020 7. -
GUNPOWDER, GARDENS and GHOST by MICHAEL HANSON
------- - ----------------------------------~-------------------------------------------- 104 COUNTRY LIFE--APRIL 2, 1987 THE ESTATE MARKET GUNPOWDER, GARDENS AND GHOST By MICHAEL HANSON (Left) 1-ASHBY ST LEDGERS, NEAR DAVENTRY, NOR THAMPTONSHIRE. The original stone hall added by Lutyens in 1909-10, seen here in a 1951 COUNTRY LIFE photograph, had a floor inserted in about 1968, and service rooms created at the lower level (Right) 2-THE UPPER LEVEL OF THE HALL TODAY. "The open timber roof now seems overwhelmingly heavy" and an upper dining room is superfluous N E of the most historic manor houses a brass to him and his wife in the chancel. In his fines imposed on him in 1601 for supporting in England, Ashby St Ledgers in will, made on the day he died, he instructed his the uprising of Robert, Earl of Essex, once O Northamptonshire, has just been wife to restore to its rightful owners all the land Elizabeth l's favourite, he was forced to sell placed on the market through the London he had wrongfully purchased, and divided the the Chastleton estate in Oxfordshire, which he office of Hampton and Sons. Not only does it rest of his property between their children. His had inherited from his grandmother in 1593. have links with the Gunpowder Plot, but it was estate was attainted by virtue of his treason, but Robert Catesby (whose wife had died at extensively altered and extended earlier this Henry VII reversed the attainder in favour of his Chastleton) moved to Ashby St Ledgers to live century by Sir Edwin Lutyens, who laid out the son George, and over the next century the with his widowed mother, whose husband had magnificent gardens (and once claimed that the family prospered. -
Launde Priory 1
21 MAY 2018 LAUNDE PRIORY 1 actswilliam2henry1.wordpress.com Release date Version notes Who Current version: H1-Launde-2018-1 21/5/2018 Original version DXC Previous versions: — — — — This text is made available through the Creative Commons Attribution- NonCommercial-NoDerivs License; additional terms may apply Authors for attribution statement: Charters of William II and Henry I Project David X Carpenter, Faculty of History, University of Oxford LAUNDE PRIORY Augustinian priory of St John the Baptist County of Leicestershire : Diocese of Lincoln Founded 1121 × c. 1125 Launde priory was one of the early Augustinian houses in England, established 1120 × c. 1125. According to a narrative concerning the early years of Holy Trinity priory in Aldgate, London, known only from fifteenth-century manuscripts, Bernard prior of Dunstaple, John prior of Launde (Landa), Geoffrey de Clinton, the (king’s) chamberlain (Gaufridus camerarius de Clinton), and others named, witnessed the gift of the Cnihtengild in London to Holy Trinity in that year. It is unsurprising that the priors of two recently founded Augustinian houses should witness a gift to Holy Trinity, thought to be the first Augustinian house in England. Their names were presumably taken from a contemporary deed or other record which has not been preserved (Hodgett, Cartulary of Holy Trinity, 168, no. 871; R. R. Sharpe, Calendar of Letter Books, C, 220). The king’s confirmation of the gift, 000, Regesta 1467, also witnessed by Geoffrey de Clinton, is apparently authentic and datable 1123 × 1127, so the narrative’s date of 1125 may well be accurate. Launde priory was founded at Loddington, ‘in cuius territorio abbatia fundata est’, according to Henry II’s general confirmation of 1155 × 1158 (H2/1456). -
Daventry District Council and Northamptonshire County Council
Barby and Onley Parish Council Welcome pack A helpful guide to the parish of Barby and Onley. A warm welcome to our village on the Northamptonshire/Warwickshire border from your Parish Council. We have produced this pack to introduce you to the local area. It provides pointers to local amenities and places of interest, and a few useful contact numbers. __________________________________________________ Barby and Onley Parish Council Page 1 Barby and Onley Barby and Onley is a split parish, with Barby sitting on a hilltop overlooking the Rainsbrook and Leam valleys and Onley 1½ miles distant, away to the West on the valley floor. We are part of Daventry District Council and Northamptonshire County Council. Barby and Onley Parish Council Page 2 A Tour of Barby Our tour begins at a prominent village landmark, The Water Tower crossroads. Roads lead South to Daventry (7 miles), East to Kilsby and the A5, West to the A45 (the main road to Coventry) and North to Rugby (5 miles). From this point, the highest in the Parish, you will see The Sports Field, the home of Barby Cricket Club and a popular skate ramp. Away to the North West, a farm track leads to Barby Mill Fisheries and Barby Mill, now a private residence. Heading north you soon pass Barby Village Primary School on the left and descending into the village the road is lined by a ribbon of private dwellings beyond which stretch extensive agricultural land. At the first junction to the right, Kilsby Road takes you to the main entrance of the Village Hall, whilst over the hedge there is an extensive children’s play area also used for summer occasions such as the Church Fete. -
The Impact of the Clandestine Marriages Act: Three Case-Studies in Conformity
University of Warwick institutional repository: http://go.warwick.ac.uk/wrap This paper is made available online in accordance with publisher policies. Please scroll down to view the document itself. Please refer to the repository record for this item and our policy information available from the repository home page for further information. To see the final version of this paper please visit the publisher’s website. Access to the published version may require a subscription. Author(s): REBECCA PROBERT and LIAM D'ARCY BROWN Article Title: The impact of the Clandestine Marriages Act: three case- studies in conformity Year of publication: 2008 Link to published version: http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/S0268416008006759 Publisher statement: None Continuity and Change 23 (2), 2008, 309–330. f 2008 Cambridge University Press doi:10.1017/S0268416008006759 Printed in the United Kingdom The impact of the Clandestine Marriages Act: three case-studies in conformity REBECCA PROBERT* AND LIAM D’ARCY BROWN# ABSTRACT. This article examines the extent of compliance with the Clandestine Marriages Act 1753 through three parish studies. It demonstrates that the vast majority of the sample cohort of parents whose children were baptized in church, and indeed of couples living together, had married in church as required by the 1753 Act, and shows how the proportion of marriages traced rises as more information about the parties becomes available. Through a study of settlement examinations, the article posits an explanation of why some marriages have not been traced, and argues that researchers should be cautious in inferring non-compliance from the absence of a record in a specific parish. -
Building Plot 38 Kilsby Road | Barby | Northamptonshire | CV23 8TU Step Inside Building Plot, 38 Kilsby Road
Building Plot 38 Kilsby Road | Barby | Northamptonshire | CV23 8TU Step inside Building Plot, 38 Kilsby Road A unique opportunity to acquire a highly desirable, serviced building plot in a quiet residential location in this popular Northamptonshire village. The plot measures just under an 1/4 acre and has full detailed planning permission for a single dwelling; a three storey, five bedroom detached house with double garage. At present the plot has a single storey dwelling on site which will require demolition but offers an outstanding opportunity for either a self-builder or a developer to create a wonderful family home in a desirable part of Barby village. There is full, detailed planning permission for a single dwelling; further information can be found on the Daventry District Council planning portal under the reference DA/2015/0982. We understand from our vendors that under permitted development rights that an orangery can also be added to the extensive accommodation which we understand to be in excess of 2,300 square feet. There is also planning permission for a detached double garage and the current owners have offered the opportunity for any self- builder to rent their existing property from them (subject to a separate rental agreement), providing the ideal situation to project manage the build. Location The village of Barby has a pre and primary school, “The Arnold Arms” public house, a garden centre and separate plant nursery, village store and post office and a village hall and church. There is a wide range of shopping available in nearby Rugby, situated approximately five miles away, with a regular bus service. -
Insert New Front Cover (Photo to Be Provided) Kilsby Neighbourhood
Kilsby NDP Review Draft Plan v2 Feb 2021 Insert new front cover (Photo to be provided) Kilsby Neighbourhood Development Plan Review Draft Plan V2 February 2021 Note for PC / Group Black text is original made NDP text Blue text is new, NDP Review text Strikethrough red text eg Census 2011 data and out of date supporting text now has been removed in v2 (refer to v1 to see this) Red text is notes for SG and DDC: outstanding actions / queries etc Kilsby Parish Council With the assistance of Kirkwells 1 Kilsby NDP Review Draft Plan v2 Feb 2021 Note - Unless otherwise stated, all maps have been prepared @Crown copyright and database rights [2019] Ordnance Survey Kilsby Parish Council (Licensee) License number OS PSMA number 0100056211. 2 Kilsby NDP Review Draft Plan v2 Feb 2021 Contents Executive Summary ................................................................................................................................. 4 Map 1: Designated Kilsby Neighbourhood Area ................................................................................ 5 Map 2: Kilsby NDP Review Policies Map ............................................................................................ 6 1.0 NDP Review ................................................................................................................................. 7 What is an NDP Review? ..................................................................................................................... 7 2.0 Introduction and Background .................................................................................................. -
MINUTES of MEETING of KILSBY PARISH COUNCIL Held on TUESDAY 2Nd July, 2019 at 7.30Pm in Kilsby Village Hall
MINUTES OF MEETING of KILSBY PARISH COUNCIL Held on TUESDAY 2nd July, 2019 at 7.30pm in Kilsby Village Hall. PRESENT: Chairman J Fisher, Councillors: B Gent, R Thompson, M Margetts, R Nicholls, R Page. District Councillor C Lomax. Clerk: Clare E Valentine. Page 231 1 APOLOGIES 1.1 Apologies (Personal) were received and accepted from Councillors S Stainton and C Thompson. 2 CO-OPTION to fill CASUAL VACANCIES 2.1 It was RESOLVED to Co-opt Ian David Massey as Councillor and the Declaration of Acceptance of Office and the relevant papers were signed. 3 PUBLIC OPEN FORUM SESSION limited to 20 mins. 3.1 Public Open Forum Session – no comments 3.2 District Councillor’s Report for Parish Council July 2019 Unitary Authority Progress. The Shadow Council is now working on budgets for the new authority, and considering how to amalgamate services and staff. Continuity of services will be a high priority. There will be opportunity for Parish and Town Councils to take on more responsibilities and services, particularly the new Town Councils such as Wellingborough. Roads and Transport. Some good news on the highways front. In the county, although the KSI (killed and seriously injured) figures for 2018 were up by 9 on 2017 (288/279), the number of fatalities in road accidents fell from 44 to 31. There is a new Northamptonshire Safer Roads Alliance working for the next six months to reduce these figures further. The Parliamentary Transport Committee has issued a report, ‘Filling the Gap’, which calls on the Treasury to fund a 5 year programme for local road maintenance, which may in itself help to reduce accidents. -
Monday 09 July 1781 2. Northampton Mercury
Newspaper Archive, reports relating to Kilsby, Northamptonshire 1. Northampton Mercury - Monday 09 July 1781 REWARD. WHEREAS the GAME and FISH in and upon the Manors of KILSBY, BARBY, and ONLEY, and other Parts, the Property of George Arnold, Esq., have of late been in a most unwarrantable Manner destroyed by Poachers and others; This is to discharge all such Persons from Trespassing on any Part of the said Property, as a strict Watch will be kept; and any Person or Persons found offending after this Notice, will be considered as willful Trespassers, and prosecuted with the utmost Rigour: And any Person, on Information of any Person or Persons destroying the Game and Fish on any Part of the said Property, either by Guns, Dogs, Nets, or otherwise, shall, on Proof and Conviction of the same before any Magistrate, receive ONE GUINEA Reward, on Application to George Arnold Esq; of Ashby-Lodge. 2. Northampton Mercury - Monday 04 August 1783 TO be SOLD by AUCTION, by B. Mason, on Tuesday the 5th Day of August inst. between the Hours of Three and Five of the Clock in the Afternoon, at the George Inn, in Kilsby, in the County of Northampton (unless sooner disposed of by Private Contract, of which Notice will be given in this Paper), A Copyhold ESTATE; consisting of several Closes of Arable and Pasture Ground, lying in the Inclosure of Kilsby aforesaid, containing 58A.3R.20P more or less; in the Occupation of Mr. John Marston. To treat for the same by Private Contract, and for Particulars, apply to Mr. -
Novel Success for Former Guilsborough Pupil
Local news from Cold Ashby, Cottesbrooke, Creaton, Guilsborough, Hollowell, Teeton & Thornby Issue 83—October/November 2017 www.villagelink.org.uk Inside this issue: NOVEL SUCCESS FOR Cold Ashby p3 FORMER GUILSBOROUGH PUPIL Cottesbrooke p4-5 Creaton p6-9 Being Miss Nobody is a story told through Guilsborough p10-13 the eyes of Rosalind Banks, an eleven-year- Hollowell p14-15 old girl who can’t speak. When she starts at Thornby p16 a new secondary school, she immediately Church p17-18 becomes known as the weird girl, and becomes the perfect target for bullies – someone who can’t fight back. So Rosalind What’s On starts an anonymous blog – Miss Nobody: a place where she can speak out about the bullying that’s happening to her and other October nobodies like her. The blog starts trending, but it isn’t long before things spiral out of 6th—Guilsborough WI Quiz control…is Miss Nobody becoming a bully herself? 11th—Creaton WI AGM 14th—Creaton Walking Group Tamsin Winter grew up in Creaton, and it was at Great Creaton Primary School where she 16th—Guilsborogh WI AGM developed a love of storytelling. Being Miss Nobody is Tamsin’s first book and is published by 18th-Guils WI—Warners Gin Usborne Publishing. It is aimed at 10+ readers and tackles themes of bullying, friendship, loss, 19th-Creaton FOSM meeting and the double-edged power of social media in a fresh, funny and moving voice. Tamsin’s 21st— RNLI Fish Brunch, second novel, also aimed at 10+ readers, will be released in 2018.