Willoughby
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Willoughby books (8 available)
Willoughby memories
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Warwickshire memories
Douglas Scott
I wonder if someone can let me know the name of the man featured on the statue at the crossroads outside the hotel. I do remember that one of his names was repeated and seem to remember that it was .... Montague-Douglas-Scott. Who was he?
I used to pass that way on my way to and from Rugby High School on the 589 in the 1950s.
A memory of Dunchurch contributed by diana hagan
Almshouses
Wonder if any one can help.
I've family roots in Dunchurch - Mary Shaw 1855 - 1933 and Jane Shaw 1853 - 1943 both died in the Almshouses.
It has always been said that Jane died in mysterious circumstances in a fire.
Does anyone have any info that relates to this?
A memory of Dunchurch contributed by sue thorp
st peters church gates
Hi
hope someone can help, there is great debate going on in dunchurch at the moment. There is no record of when the church gates were put up and we need to find out because English Heritage are trying to stop them from being removed, but the church wants to replace them for security reasons. The oldest member of the congregation (92 years) cant remeber as she was away for most of the war. I have looked at some pictures from the 1950's and they are in place at the time but cant find anything older.
Hope someone can help us resolve this
Thanks
Louise
A memory of Dunchurch contributed by Louise Faill
Markham's of Bascote
My husbands family were from Bascote. His ancestor Edwin Markham moved there as an ag labourer in the 1870s. His wife Maria died shortly after, and he married again. He had very many children, and used to drink at the Fox and Hen pub - the landlords were witnesses at his wedding! Sadly his cottage, by the pub, has been demolished, but his children all stayed local to Bascote when they grew up; one of his sons died in the Great War, and is named on the Bascote Heath memorial.
A memory of Bascote contributed by rebekah markham
Extracts From Willoughby & Warwickshire books
Another recreation ground
available to Rugbeians was the
Whitehall Recreation Ground on
Hillmorton Road, which housed a
28-ton, armoured First World War
tank presented to the town in 1919,
in recognition of contributions to
National War Savings. In 1940 the
tank was sold for scrap as part of a
new war effort.
Queen Victoria’s Golden Jubilee
was celebrated not only with the
Clock Tower, but also with an
extensive tree-planting project along
selected roads leading into Rugby
(see Clifton Road overleaf).
Dunchurch, 4 miles to the south-
west of Rugby, is a small village of
thatched cottages and popular public
houses and restaurants. The village
green boasts a two-seater set of stocks
(last used in 1866) and a thatched bus
shelter. At the cross-roads stands the
market cross on a stepped, medieval
base, the cross itself replaced in 1813
by a milestone.
An extract from from"Rugby Town and City Memories".
In 1862 the church was enlarged, with
a spacious nave replacing the original
aisle and Lady Chapel, leaving the nave
and chancel to form the south aisle.
Unfortunately the tiny saddleback tower
of the old church was now seriously out
of proportion to the new, larger church.
Captain Hibbert, now a Catholic convert,
paid for a new spire and tower, both of
which were constructed of Ancaster stone
with ashlar dressings of the same material;
the sculpture was mainly of Portland
stone. The interior work was carried out
by Parnell & Son.
John Hardman of Birmingham
made many of St Marie’s stained glass
windows, though two splendid windows
in the south aisle were made by Mayor of
Munich. In the south aisle chapel are the
archangel windows, installed in 1997 by
Aidan McRae Thomson. These depict the
vision of St Hubert, a hunter converted
to Christianity after seeing a vision of the
Holy Cross between a stag’s antlers. There
is a superb sculpture of St Hubert and the
stag outside the west door.
Other features of interest include the
wooden-beamed mediaeval style roof, the
fine organ loft overhanging the west end
of the church, the huge crucifix hanging
above the ornate marble altar and the
floor of the south aisle chapel, tiled in the
Arts and Crafts style of William Morris.
An extract from from"Rugby Town and City Memories".
This separation of St Andrew’s Church from
the Abbey of Leicester was to save its assets from
seizure at the dissolution of the monasteries
during the reign of Henry VIII — a fate
suffered by both the church at Clifton and its
remaining chapel at Brownsover. Henry de
Rokeby pulled down the old Norman chancel
and rebuilt it in 13th-century style, adding
an unusual tower (72131, opposite): early
commentators believed that it was intended as
a place of defence, and that its construction was
an attempt to circumvent the law forbidding
the unlicensed building of fortifications.
Until 1652 the church was much neglected,
but after complaints about its dangerous
state it underwent extensive alteration and
enlargement. However, it still failed to keep
up with the rapid rise in the town’s population
throughout the 19th century, and the decision
was made to rebuild the church entirely. The
builders Parnell & Son and the architect
William Butterfield were commissioned, and
in 1877 the foundation stone was laid by
Dr Temple, Bishop of Exeter and former
headmaster of Rugby School. Costing over
£20,000, the work was completed in 1880.
The font seen at the front of photograph
72137, opposite, dates from 1743. The
medieval font, in which Lawrence Sheriff
had been baptised, was relegated to the
courtyard of the Eagle Hotel. It served
as a trough for the pump until it was
rescued by the Rugby historian Matthew
Bloxham. It was left in the Percival
Guildhouse garden behind St Matthew’s
Church until it was finally returned to
St Andrew’s in the 1950s.
An extract from from"Rugby Town and City Memories".
ST ANDREW’S Parish Church is situated in Church
Street, opposite the site of the original School House.
There has probably been a place of worship here since
Saxon times, but it was not until the 13th century that
St Andrew’s became Rugby’s parish church.
By 1711 the church possessed five bells and a set of
chimes. Until about the middle of the 19th century, the
third (curfew) bell was rung daily at five in the morning
and eight in the evening, warning householders to
extinguish their fires until morning; this custom
dates back to the time of William the Conqueror.
St Andrew’s is unique in having a peal of 5 bells in the
mediaeval west tower and a second peal of 8 bells in the
Victorian east tower.
Clifton Road, a quiet road in the 1950s, and now a
busy thoroughfare, leads to the village of Clifton-on-
Dunsmore. Both Rugby and Brownsover were once
hamlets in the parish of Clifton, their churches merely
chapels-of-ease under the mother church at Clifton-on-
Dunsmore, itself attached to the Abbey of Leicester.
In 1221 the Lord of the Manor, Henry de Rokeby,
reached a financial arrangement with the Abbot of
Leicester that effectively converted the chapel in Rugby
into a parish church.
An extract from from"Rugby Town and City Memories".
In 1997 a statue of William Webb
Ellis was unveiled by the rugby player
Jeremy Guscott in front of the New
Quad building. On St Matthew Street
opposite once lay Gilbert’s Rugby
Football Museum, where rugby balls
had been made by hand since the
first half of the 19th century. Sadly,
Gilbert’s has now been moved, but the
connection continues since the shop,
with its original 35-paned window, now
houses the Rugby Museum.
Lawrence Sheriff would be amazed
at his legacy today, and even more
astonished to learn that in 1975 Rugby
School admitted girls for the first time,
and is now fully co-educational.
An extract from from"Rugby Town and City Memories".





