Church Walk A charming and pleasant pedestrian way known as Church Walk can be found between Abbey Road and South Street, running past the Abbey Church and the back of Bourne Eau House. This short thoroughfare is full of charming features from the town's historic past and it is such a secluded place that it is difficult to imagine that it was once the original Lincoln to London highway. The Bourne Eau runs alongside, after crossing South Street under the road, and this quiet stretch of the waterway has become home to a pair of swans that regularly raise cygnets on their nest against the brick wall of an old grain warehouse while passers-by regularly feed them with bread and other tasty morsels. There have been many changes here in past years, notably the disappearance of the commercial buildings, a pea factory and corn warehouse, but there is still great visual interest. Along Church Walk you will also find the vicarage, built in 1986, the church hall dating from the early 1960s and of course, the Abbey Church dominating the view as it has done for the past thousand years, a monument to the faith of this town in grey mellowed stone that looks its best in the late afternoon sunlight of a hot summer's day.
At the far end, there is also a path that leads past the churchyard to South Street itself, once lined with attractive iron railings that were cut down for the manufacture of munitions during the Second World War of 1939-45 and never replaced. There is also an ancient stone wall at the Abbey Road end, built and repaired over the centuries and therefore containing stones from many periods, often salvaged from old buildings elsewhere in the town, that can be distinctly seen by anyone with an eye for the unusual.
This is Church Walk with Abbey Road at the far end (above). The interesting stone wall has been here for centuries but the end section was demolished in 1999 (below left) and restored the following year (right). The church hall can be seen on the right. This wall was accidentally demolished during the summer of 1999 when it was hit by a tipper truck working on an extension to the Cedars retirement home nearby. Contractors accepted responsibility and the wall was rebuilt to its original condition by the following year.
The wall on the other side of Church Walk has less character but is equally interesting, having been maintained and repaired over the years with materials from many other quarters. One block of well-cut stone is dated 1770 in the distinctive script of the 18th century and most probably came from the old Abbey House nearby when it was demolished in 1879 to make way for the vicarage, now the Cedars rest and retirement home, and was used to repair the wall. It is now begun to erode and unless repairs are carried out soon, the inscription will disappear.
The property below, once known as The Cedars and now Bourne Eau House, is probably the most photographed in the town. The view of the rear from Church Walk attracts many people with cameras and the cast iron bridge over the Bourne Eau gives the view added charm. The bridge was built by the Mawby family when they were in residence in the early 19th century and a small white plaque contains the initial M and gives the date of construction as 1832.
REVISED DECEMBER 2004
See also Bourne Eau House The vicarage
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