Swinstead
The grey stone cottages of Swinstead line the byways between the River Glen and the wooded slopes of Grimsthorpe Park, five miles west of Bourne. The village was known as
Suinham in the Domesday Book of 1086 but by 1150 this had changed to Swinsteda, from the Old English meaning "the homestead where swine or pigs are reared". An old stone market cross on high steps stands in the middle of the village and although the date is unknown, it bears a resemblance to one that can be found in the market place at nearby Corby Glen that was erected in the reign of Edward III (1312-1377), although Swinstead's is less elaborate. This was the focal point of the village in times past, where visiting monks and priests preached the word of God, where the annual fairs were held and where proclamations of important local and national events were made. It was also the spot where villagers gathered to meet and to talk and discuss the momentous events that affected their lives because they realised, as we do today, that there is a security in being with your neighbours in times if crisis and an unspoken fellowship when there is cause for celebration. St Mary's Church is memorable for the hideous gargoyles looking out from its low 600-year-old tower while neatly clipped yew trees adorn the churchyard. The north arcade of three bays dates from 1200 and under the tower is a 700-year-old stone figure of a cross-legged knight while in the chancel is a large marble monument from 1809 to the fifth and last Duke of Ancaster, depicted kneeling by the tomb of his two wives. The small single manual organ in the church dates back to the early 19th century and is in perfect condition. The maker's plate on the front announces that it was built by Henry Bryceson and Son, Organ Builders Est 1796, Brook Street, Buston Road, London NW. Another instrument of interest is the church clock, installed in 1897 to mark Queen Victoria's diamond jubilee at a cost of £79 13s. 5d and a framed list of those who contributed hangs nearby. More than a century later, sufficient money was raised to refurbish the timepiece and add an electrical movement to replace the winding mechanism that had tired out so many members of the parochial church council in years past. The work was carried out by the Scunthorpe horologist John Abbott at a cost of £5,500 to mark Queen Elizabeth's golden jubilee and was dedicated at a special ceremony on 28th July 2002 conducted by the vicar, the Rev Andrew Hawes. As in the previous ceremony more than a century ago, a plaque has been mounted on the wall giving the names of those who contributed towards the cost. Among the family memorials is a gothic monument on the wall of the chancel by J Forsyth in 1883 in memory of one of the distinguished female members and erected according to the directions contained in the will of Elizabeth, Countess of Clare, in loving memory of her mother. It is an ornate affair made of stone with elaborate canopies and small white marble statuettes on short red marble shafts and her coloured coat of arms in the centre. The inscription reads:
The village pub at Swinstead is the Windmill Inn, stone built with a tiled roof and an attractive front façade of bay and dormer windows, and dating back to the 17th century although there may have been an alehouse on this site for many years before that. During the 19th century, this was the venue for the audit dinner when tenants of the Grimsthorpe Estate were summoned to pay their rents and dine on winged game and venison from the park.
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