Revesby, Lincolnshire
Revesby photos
Displaying 3 of 4 old photos of Revesby. View all Revesby photos
Revesby maps
Historic maps of Revesby and the local area, hand-drawn by Ordnance Survey and Samuel Lewis. View all Revesby maps
Revesby books
Displaying 2 of 3 books about Revesby and the local area. View all Revesby books
You can read extracts and browse photos from these books.
Memories of Revesby
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Lincolnshire memories
www.bbcholidays.co.uk
Hi...We are just about to move into The Old Post Office in Fen Road, East Kirkby, Lincs and am trying to find out anything about it. If you've got ANY info - I'd love to hear about it. Please contact me on janet.humphrey1@virgin.net
Thank You
Shared on 18 January 2008
I've been researching my family history and have found that an ancestor of mine known as James Faunt used to live at a place called Packet Beerhouse, in fact he is in the 1891 census as being the "beerhouse keeper". He lived there with his wife Sarah. Is the building still in existence today? Are there any Faunts still living in the Coningsby area? I've been trying to find out more, but so far no success. I am a regular visitor to Grimsby so may nip over to Coningsby and try at the roots...so to speak.
Shared on 26 September 2006
Holmeleigh Horncastle Childrens Homesa nd School //Years
By Michael Savage
A reunion of the Horncastle Homes children and the staff was held at the Town Hall (Drill Hall) July 20 1989. Almost 400 people attended the event. “The atmosphere was really great - everyone was talking about the good old days, although some had painful memories to share.”
Generations of children were brought up in a group of houses, known as Holmeleigh, off Foundry Street. According to the reports from former residents, “It was a very Victorian set up. You were hardly allowed to talk to boys and you made your own entertainment as a group of children together.”
The site consisted of several semi-detached house. Each house, known as a cottage, was numbered 1 to 11. Each cottage accommodated approximately 14 to 16 children; there were 3 mixed sex cottages, 2 all girls and 6 all boys cottages, and each cottage was run by a house mother and house auntie. We the children slept in dormitories, and midnight feasts were inevitable. Once a group of them took a picnic out onto a field in the middle of the night. However, the house mother found out and put a stop to their nocturnal festivities. Daily routine in the House Cottages was extremely regimental, you always knew what the meal would be according to the day of the week. At the back of each cottage was a fence and small yard, no one really used the front, it wasn’t on the road side like at the back.
The home was run by a Superintendent and his wife, Mr and Mrs Vardy. The home in some ways was very strict, but there was nowhere else to go. The Home was not all bad, at Christmas time pantomimes were held in the assembly rooms which had a proper stage and dance floor, and black and white films which were screened there every Monday night and were enjoyed by the children.
The Holmeleigh children also looked after each other like any family, and if they were picked on there were plenty of older ‘brothers and sisters’ to help out. “At times we felt very much like outsiders. Even in the 1950s we had to wear a uniform, we did not have fashion clothes like the other children.”
The uniform requirement was later abolished in the 1960s. The youngsters all had their chores to complete before going to work, including scrubbing the floors and mending.
There was a hospital on site with just one nurse, Mrs Ashton; I was in Home One Cottage from 1954 to 1956 and then Home Nine Cottage, from 1956 to 1958. In the summer, a school on the coast would be hired for a month and we would have a month’s holiday at Cleethorpes or Skegness. We would all sleep on camp beds in the classrooms.
Frequent after school fights, between the children of the home and the ‘other children’ (who were labelled as ‘townies’) would take place on The Wong. The children of the Homes always remained loyal to each other, through thick and thin. Some of the children at the home tried to run away. The story goes that two of the children actually reached London in the 1940s in an attempt to speak to King George VI to complain about the way some of the staff treated them.
I attended Cagthorpe Secondr School from September 1954 to July 1958 and was the Junior and Senior Boys Athletics Captain wining the 100 and 220 yards 3 years on the trot and victor ludorum in 1956/1958, School friends in my form years being Peter Turner, Tim Bryant, Bernard Urry, Melvyn Meanwell, John (Tut) Burton, Zenith Stanley, Alan Roe, Keith (Chunky) Travers, John Edwards, Bas Blackburn, Doug Clarke, Peter Paige of the girls I remember Daphney Nundy, Maureen Thompson. Joyce Cashmore, Brenda McKee, Pauline Broddle, Mary Quincy. Mr Wainmouth then Mr Foster as Head Teacher - School Teachers Mr Cawthorpe, Mr Lyons, Mr Tayles, Mr Ashley, Mr Horrocks, Mr Christain, Mr Needham, Mr Whitaker, Mr Hargreaves, Mr Thorntin, Miss Skins, Miss Keys
In 1958 I left to attend Lincoln Engineering College full time for one year and lodge with a family in Lincoln under the supervision of the Mid Lindsey County Council. At 16½ I joined the Royal Air Force as a Boy Apprentice and left service life in December 1972.
The house mother from Home 9 who was much modernised in her approach to looking after children was 9 years older than me. She left to get married and offered all the children who came under her care a place to which they could call home, so during my time in the RAF I stayed many times and when I married, the house mother and John her husband acted as my parents at the wedding.
During the illness of my wife, Barbara, they supported me many times, and after losing Barbara they also looked after my daughter Helen on many occasions. John and my house mother (also called Barbara) fostered two brothers back in 1974, aged 5 and 4 at the time. Unfortunately time brings sorrow to us all and mother (as I always called her) passed away in November last year aged 73.
Holmeleigh ceased to be a children’s home in 1968 and the original Union Workhouse with its distinctive archway was demolished in the summer of 1986. The remainder of the buildings on the site were converted and became known as Horncastle College.
Shared on 06 January 2009
I was told by my mother that my grandparents moved to Tattershall in 1912 from Buckinghamshire so my grandfather could find work helping to restore the castle he was a carpenter. His name was William Bywater, known as Roger, they lived in the village for many years.
Shared on 01 February 2007
Extracts From Revesby & Lincolnshire books
Displaying a selection of extracts from Frith books about Revesby, inspired by Frith photos.
Boston - A History & Celebration
Boston was not only the largest town and the commercial capital of Lincolnshire in the early 19th century but was also the first town in the county to industrialise. There were brewers and tanners as well as shipbuilders, sailmakers, rope makers, coachbuilders and saddlers. One coachbuilder was John Mumford who had left the town but returned in 1834 and set up in business in West Street. He lapsed into drink and moved to Brixton in London in 1844, leaving his Boston business premises in the hands of his mortgagee. His daughter Catherine had seen at first hand the evils of drink in the streets of Boston and, after marrying William Booth in 1855, she and her husband became the founders of what is now the Salvation Army.
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Boston - A History & Celebration
The national government also developed local offices. A central post office had been built in High Street in 1882-85, but in 1907 it was replaced by the present building in Wide Bargate which was soon extended to include the sorting office and the telephone exchange, where the author’s mother worked for a while. Later public buildings included the employment exchange in West Street, built in 1939 in place of rented accommodation, and later the tax office in Norfolk Street, with hutments out in the back including the driver testing office. Boston did not have a public supply of electricity until 1926, about 40 years after it had been available in London and elsewhere. Until then Boston Dock and some large factories had to produce their own electricity. The gas ‘Five Lamps’ in the Market Place was replaced by an electronic lamp standard (with just two lamps!) and 50 years later that was moved to its present site in Liquorpond Street. In the period from 1851 to 1881 there had been no increase in the town’s population, and after the dock was opened many newcomers could move into the stock of existing houses. From the 1890s several new streets of middle-class houses were built on remaining greenfield sites within the town and some even further out. One site on the north side (Neil Wright) This was the headquarters of Holland County Council from 1927 to 1974. The building now houses Boston Library and the Registration Service of Lincolnshire County Council.
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Boston - A History & Celebration
Richard Fleming Richard Fleming (died 1431) was rector of Boston from 1408 to 1419, when he became Bishop of Lincoln. He became a leading member of the Catholic Church in England and was part of delegations to Church Councils in Europe. In 1414 he attended the Council of Constance and was appointed papal chamberlain, and returned to England as an envoy of the Pope. Fleming was in Italy again in 1419 when the Bishop of Lincoln died, and he was consecrated to the vacant post in the cathedral at Florence. He still played a part in local affairs, being Alderman of the Corpus Christi Guild in Boston in 1412-14 and in 1426. Fleming also founded Lincoln College at Oxford.
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