Kirby Muxloe
Kirby Muxloe photos (6 available)
Kirby Muxloe maps (2 available)
Map of Leicestershire
Beautifully hand-drawn and coloured, dating from around 1840
See this old map of Leicestershire
Personalised maps
Create an historic map centred directly on any postcode!
Kirby Muxloe books (13 available)
Market Harborough Town Walk Guide
Paperback
Melton Mowbray Town and City Memories
Paperback
Uppingham Photographic Memories
Hardback
- 6 photos on Kirby Muxloe appear in 4 Frith books - View photos of Kirby Muxloe
- Read extracts and see photos from these books on Kirby Muxloe and Leicestershire
Kirby Muxloe memories
Family Recollections of Kirby Muxloe - 1913 to 1969.
My memories of Kirby Muxloe date back to 1949, when I was a bridesmaid at my father’s cousin Anne’s wedding at St Bartholomew’s Church. However it is the castle that I remember most, since we had to drive past it to visit her parents, my Great Aunt Nell and Great Uncle Stan in Desford Lane. In 1969 I photographed the Castle when I took my own sons to visit Anne’s sister, Eva, who lived on at the same house after their parents’ deaths.
My father was born in 1913 and he and his parents lived next door to Stan and Nell for the first twenty or so years of his life. He had vivid recollections of the castle. He wrote in ...read more here
Contributed by Jane Sealy
Leicestershire memories
Family Recollections of Kirby Muxloe - 1913 to 1969.
My memories of Kirby Muxloe date back to 1949, when I was a bridesmaid at my father’s cousin Anne’s wedding at St Bartholomew’s Church. However it is the castle that I remember most, since we had to drive past it to visit her parents, my Great Aunt Nell and Great Uncle Stan in Desford Lane. In 1969 I photographed the Castle when I took my own sons to visit Anne’s sister, Eva, who lived on at the same house after their parents’ deaths.
My father was born in 1913 and he and his parents lived next door to Stan and Nell for the first twenty or so years of his life. He had vivid recollections of the castle. He wrote in ...read more here
A memory of Kirby Muxloe contributed by Jane Sealy
My Great grandfather was born in Newtown Linford 1879
Daniel Gretton : Born: abt 1854
Newtown Linford, Leicestershire, England
Died: 1913
Resided in Village Street, Newtown Linford, Leicestershire, England
Daniel was dis - owned by his family, and his very name expunged from the family records, for either or both sins. Of having no ambition or having married a Jewess.
Eliza Cook
Born: 1854
Leire, Leicestershire, England
Died: 1931
Having blotted the heretofore pristine family escutcheon, he sank lower and lower, and took most of his family with him.
His marriage certificate had his profession as a 'Highway worker', and his death certificate read 'Treefeller'.
His sole claim to immortality was that he felled the largest oak at ...read more here
A memory of Newtown Linford contributed by leigh gretton
De Montfort Rocked
Good to see DeMontfort Hall as it used to be. It was a great venue to see bands there. Once the small blues clubs had ran their course bands needed larger venues to ply their trade, De Montfort was one of the first, I saw Rory Gallagher, John Hiseman's Collesseum,Yes, Sutherland Brothers/Quiver and never to be forgotten Free (when they reformed briefly) the last band I ever saw before the modernisation of the hall was Uriah Heep with a rather drunk David Byron fronting the band. Other major bands to visit DeMontfort were Genesis, Supertramp and the most under rated bunch of musicians to ever grace these shores The Sensational Alex Harvey Band (God rest his soul)
Today Demontfort is an ...read more here
A memory of Leicester contributed by Mick Austin
Extracts From Kirby Muxloe & Leicestershire books
A pleasant enough small church, set as a church should be in grassy, tombed surroundings, well populated by
recumbent villagers. The body of the church is 14th century, but any patina of age was effectively neutralised by
the over-restorations of 1849 and 1857. The added tower enhances the overall composition, but should the church
be locked, an extended search for the key is not justified.
An extract from from"Leicester Photographic Memories".
This is a pleasant enough small church, set as
a church should be in grassy surroundings,
well-populated by recumbent villagers. The
body of the church is early 14th-century, but
any patina of age was effectively neutralised
by the restorations of 1849 and 1857. The
added tower enhances the overall
composition, but should the church be
locked, do not embark on an extensive search
for the key.
An extract from from"Leicestershire Villages Photographic Memories".
Begun by William, Lord Hastings in 1489, and never finished, Kirby Muxloe is an early example of the use of brick in castle building. Though equipped with loops for handguns (they are the openings that look like inverted keyholes), Kirby was intended to be more a country house than a fortress. Jane Shore, mistress of Edward IV, lived here after his death.
An extract from from"50 Classics - Castles".
Begun by William Lord Hastings in 1480, and never finished, Kirby Muxloe is an early example of the use of brick in castle building. Though equipped with loops for handguns (they are the openings that look like inverted keyholes), Kirby was intended to be more a country house than a fortress. The surviving west tower is where Jane Shore, mistress of Edward IV, came after his death.
An extract from from"English Castles".
If one has time to glance westward, the castle is just visible from
the M1 motorway as it heads northward into the Charnwood
Forest. In fact, the castle is a fortified manor house, carefully set
out within a rectangular moat, and the beauty of the remains,
which are in the guardianship of English Heritage, resides not so
much in the architecture but in the glowing colour of the brick-
work, which was produced probably close to the site under the
supervision of John Eles. Built by Lord Hastings of Ashby-de-la-
Zouch around 1480, the castle matches in quality the brickwork
of the better preserved Tattershall Castle in Lincolnshire. Poor
Lord Hastings really had no time to enjoy his new house, as he
carelessly managed to lose his head in 1483.
An extract from from"Leicester Photographic Memories".






