
- 192 pages
- English
- ePUB (mobile friendly)
- Available on iOS & Android
eBook - ePub
The Little Book of Lincolnshire
About this book
The Little Book of Lincolnshire is a compendium of fascinating information about this historic county, past and present. Contained within is a plethora of entertaining facts about Lincolnshire's famous and occasionally infamous men and women, its towns and countryside, history, natural history, literary, artistic and sporting achievements, loony laws, customs ancient and modern, transport, battles and ghostly inhabitants. A reliable reference book and a quirky guide, this can be dipped in to time and time again to reveal something new about the people, the heritage, the secrets and the enduring fascination of the county. A remarkably engaging little book, this is essential reading for visitors and locals alike.
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Yes, you can access The Little Book of Lincolnshire by Lucy Wood in PDF and/or ePUB format, as well as other popular books in History & British History. We have over one million books available in our catalogue for you to explore.
Information
1
LINCOLNSHIRE LIFE
RELIGIOUS POISONING! OR WAS IT INDIGESTION?
In August 1887, Louth hosted the United Methodist Free Church conference, where about 120 ministers and lay representatives began to suffer the symptoms of poisoning.
The police and doctors were immediately summoned and poisoning was presumed, but the cause was tracked down to their meal, which had contained fermented green peas.
Meanwhile, dodgy tummies galore tainted harvest time in Brigg in August 1859.
There was a widespread bout of chronic diarrhoea among all of the labourers. Men and women, crippled by the urge to go, had to relieve themselves in hedgerows!
A MYSTERIOUS RAILWAY DISASTER
One of the worst railway disasters ever to occur in the county ā and one of the greatest mysteries in railway history ā happened in Grantham.
On 19 September 1906, the 8.45 p.m. train from London Kings Cross to Edinburgh Waverley departed, made up of coaches, sleepers, mail and parcel vans.
It stopped at Peterborough as scheduled, with a crew and engine change, and left on time towards Grantham, where it was due at 11 p.m.
The points north of Grantham were set onto the sharply curved Nottingham line to accommodate a goods train, while the signals south were set at caution, and the signalman at Grantham North had his lights at danger. All was as it should have been.
That was, until passengers, postmen and railway staff waiting on the platform noticed the train was heading towards them at 50mph ā apparently with no intention of stopping.
It whizzed through the station towards the Nottingham line, hit the points and lurched. The locomotiveās tender came off the track, dragging the carriages with it. Some carriages slid down an embankment while the rest were tangled on the line.
Fourteen people, including the fireman and driver, were killed. An inquiry was unable to establish whether the brakes had been applied, never mind a cause.
To this day, the tragedy remains an unsolved mystery.
WHO WAS SPRING-HEELED JACK?
Spring-Heeled Jack, the terrifying sensation of Victorian London, made an appearance in Lincolnshire.
Rumours began circulating in the south of the county that a creature, wearing animal skin and springs on his shoes, was seen jumping out of the darkness ā petrifying passers-by ā and leaping over small buildings and rooftops.

On 3 November 1877, the Illustrated Police News quoted a stringer (a rope, twine or cord-maker) from Lincoln, who said the creature could jump up to 20ft. āJackā even launched himself through a college window and terrified the ladies inside.
Groups formed to carry out night-time patrols. Two men shot at him as he leapt up Newport Arch, but the skin he was wearing somehow deflected the bullets.
Sightings of Jack were reported around the entire country for sixty-seven years. Was he an alien, an insane acrobat, an eccentric marquis, an escaped kangaroo, or a demon? These are just some of the theories put forward. Itās a mystery which causes intrigue to this day.
RESTING FAR FROM HOME
The death of a teenager from Lincolnshire is marked on a headstone far away in Lindisfarne Priory.
The boy, 13-year-old Field Flowers, was on board the steamship Pegasus on the night of 19 July 1843, which was undertaking its regular voyage from Leith to Hull.
He was with his sister, 11-year-old Fanny Maria, children of the Reverend Field Flowers, vicar of Tealby in Lincolnshire, and were among fifty-five people on board, including a crew of fourteen.
Six hours after embarking on its voyage, the Pegasus struck the Goldstone Rock and sank close to the Farne Islands. The steamer took just forty minutes to sink, and only two passengers and four crew members could be saved.
Field and his sister perished in the tragedy. The siblings had been attending Miss Banksā Boarding School in Edinburgh and were coming home for the holidays in the charge of Miss Maria Barton, the daughter of medical practitioner Zephaniah Barton, from Market Rasen. She too lost her life, as did 27-year-old Robinson Torry, also from Rasen, who had been ātaking a trip for the benefit of his healthā.
Miss Bartonās body was recovered and received into the family vault the following month. Master Fieldās body was found by French fishermen, who brought it to Lindisfarne about four weeks after the sinking. His sisterās body was never recovered.
THE COUNTY VILLAGE AND THE MATTERHORN
Adorning the church at Skillington are two windows commemorating the Matterhorn disaster of 1865.
Skilled oarsman Charles Hudson was ordained deacon in 1853 and priest the following year, becoming vicar of Skillington in 1860. He was a founder member and secretary of The Alpine Club. By the 1860s, the Matterhorn was the only major unconquered mountain.
Hudson ā by now regarded as one of the worldās most accomplished mountaineers, who once walked 86 miles in twenty-four hours ā was planning to make an attempt on the Matterhorn with 19-year-old Douglas Hadow and Swiss guide Michel Croz, and joined forces in 1865 with another group planning to do the same.
The party began their ascent on 14 July 1865, reaching the summit shortly after midday. While descending, Hadow slipped and fell onto Croz. The climbers were roped together and the impact knocked Hadow and Croz 4,000ft over a ridge, together with Hudson and another climber, Lord Francis Douglas.
Hudson, Hadow and Croz were buried at Zermatt. Lord Douglasās body was never found.
BRITAINāS WORST INDUSTRIAL EXPLOSION
Flixborough is a small village north of Scunthorpe. On 1 June 1974, it was the location of Britainās worst ever industrial explosion. It had been home to chemical works since 1937, and in 1964, Nypro UK built a plant. Nypro UK was the countryās only producer of caprolactam, the main ingredient in the manufacture of nylon. There was a leak in a temporary pipe carrying cyclohexane and the air was filled with a vapour that ignited. The explosion was heard up to 30 miles away, spreading a chemical cloud over Lincolnshire. Twenty-eight people on the site died and more than 100 people ā employees and local residents ā were injured by flying glass. Every house in the nearby village was damaged and residents were evacuated due to the threat from poisonous fumes. Fire burned on the site for sixteen days following the explosion. Today the site houses an industrial estate.
RAILWAY TRAGEDIES
In 1922, Lincolnās Boultham Chapel was the location of one of the cityās largest ever funerals.
On 11 May that year, four local young men ā Thomas Pyrah (25), Fred Wheatley (23), Leonard Abell (19) and Arthur Briggs (17) ā went out on a ratting trip. On the way home to Boultham, they approached the unmanned pedestrian railway crossing at Coulson Road. A noisy goods train passed, and none of them heard the approach of a passenger train from Nottingham. Their bodies were found a short time later by a passer-by.
Thousands of people lined the streets for their funeral, on 15 May, and the four friends were buried side by side.
Great Northern opened Utterby Halt on the line between Louth and Grimsby on 11 December 1905. It had a small waiting room, two short platforms and a crossing keeperās house, and closed on 11 September 1961. Railway worker John Lancaster set off on a foggy January morning in 1953 to Ludborough Station, walking on the line due to the weather. Near Utterby Halt, he heard a train approaching from behind so stepped onto the adjacent track. The noise drowned out the sound of the approaching Cleethorpes to London train, and he was killed.
In December 1932 a shocking discovery was made on the LNER railway line near the Welholme Road crossing in Grimsby.
The decapitated body of a man was found by the guard of a goods train. He was later identified as a retired builder.
It was customary for such trains to stop at the crossing, and it was during this halt that the guard, Mr Flint, came upon the manās severed head in a nearby six-foot. Other parts of his body were found elsewhere.
It was discovered that the deceased had tragically been struck by the onward-bound mail train, which arrived in Grimsby at 5.22 a.m. each day.
Tragedy struck at Melton Ross railway bridge in 1879. The structure had been unstable for some time and work began on its demolition and reconstruction.
Scaffolding was put in place in seventeen spots along the bridge to support explosives, but some failed to detonate and the workmen began taking down the bridge manually, despite the obvious danger.
At 3.30 a.m. on 3 February, an arch where more than a dozen men were working by oil lamp collapsed.
The rescue operation took seven hours. Ellis Hornsby, Edward Ambler and Thomas Robinson lost their lives, twelve of their colleagues were badly hurt and others suffered minor injuries.
A MOST DARING SEA RESCUE
An incident of endurance played out in complete darkness ā and in the middle of a snow blizzard ā on 12 February 1940.
Grimsby trawler Gurth found herself in trouble, and called on RNLI coxswain Robert Cross for help.
Two of the lifeboat crew were ill when they were called out to the Gurth, so it was manned by only six in total, and Cross couldnāt spare anyone to operate the searchlight. The rescuers were repeatedly knocked down by the sea and were only saved from being washed overboard by hanging on to the handrails. A rope which had washed overboard became tangled around the propeller and for some time only one engine on the lifeboat functioned.
Three-and-half hours later, the entire crew of the Gurth were safe on shore, albeit bruised and battered, and eternally thankful to Cross and his shattered men.
Cross won the RNLI gold medal for gallantry and the George Medal for the Gurthās rescue, and his five-man crew each won the silver medal. He held the post of coxswain for thirty-one years, retiring in 1943 aged 67, and lived to the age of 88, having taken part in the rescue of 453 lives.
THE MURDEROUS MONKEY
In 1730 Sir Michael Newton, the owner of Culverthorpe Hall near Sleaford, married Margaret and they had a son. The familyās pet monkey climbed into the newbornās cot while at their London home and carried the child to a balcony, throwing him onto the flagstones below and bringing to an end the male line of the Newton family. Lady Margaret hid her distress by being outwardly sociable, attending gatherings in expensive trademark blue clothes. Culverthorpe Hall is said to be haunted by a Blue Lady.
THE MAN WHO OFFICIALLY DIDNāT EXIST
In April 1932, Tom Lapidge, a mate on the Capricornus, vanished⦠or did he?
The Capricornus was heading home and the crew had turned in for the night. Lapidge was alone with the compass and at 4 a.m. he called for a cup of tea.
A deckhand went to the bridge ā but there was no one there. Only Lapidgeās belt, souāwester, oilfrock and his pipe remained. The deckhand roused the skipper and crew, and the ship was searched. They re-traced their path for 4 miles but nothing was found, so they headed for Grimsby.
An inquiry concluded Lapidge, from Healing, had been...
Table of contents
- Cover
- Title
- Dedication
- Acknowledgements
- Contents
- Foreword by Peter Chapman
- 1 Lincolnshire Life
- 2 Places and Landmarks
- 3 Lincolnshire People
- 4 Crime and Punishment
- 5 Lincolnshire in Particular
- 6 Curious Lincolnshire
- 7 Customs, Folklore and More
- 8 Lincolnshire at War
- 9 Royalty, Religion and Politics
- 10 The Supernatural County
- 11 Sport
- 12 The Weather
- 13 On This Day in Lincolnshire
- Bibliography
- About the Author
- Copyright