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Heydour

The church is dedicated to St Michael

Parish Registers available(Lincs PRO)

 

Baptisms

1559-1917

Marriages

1559-1837

Burials

1559-1909

Bishops Transcripts

 

 

1562-1835

See also CULVERTHORPE

See bottom of page for KELBY

1332 Lay Subsidy for Heydour, Aisby and Oasby

  1. Bartholomew de Burughwasce       10s-0d
  2. Robert Walour                                      2s-0d
  3. John Hamelyn                                       3s-4d
  4. Thomas Wylchir                                   5s-6d
  5. Agnes de Deryngton                           5s-0d
  6. Hugh de Lenn                                       6s-0d
  7. Hugh Reynwill                                      1s-0d
  8. William Fraunceys                                2s-0d
  9. John Bakester                                        4s-6d
  10. John banston                                         2s-6d
  11. Agnes Philyp                                         1s-6d
  12. Adam filius Alexandri                          2s-6d
  13. Walter Banston                                     4s-6d
  14. John Tayllour                                        1s-8d
  15. Alice uxor prepositi                               2s-6d
  16. William Pardryk                                      1s-0d
  17. Simon filius Henrici                               i1s-6d
  18. William de Kelleby                                   3s-0d
  19. Henry Lyon                                             4s-0d
  20. John ad fontem                                       2s-0d
  21. Richard le quarreor                                1s-0d
  22. Thomas de Kelleby                                9s-0d
  23. Beatrice Herwy                                         3s-6d
  24. Ralph Cressi                                             5s-0d
  25. William de Ingoldesby                            3s-0d
  26. Agnes de Hycham                                  2s-0d
  27. Simon Rond                                             3s-0d
  28. William Mod                                              2s-6d
  29. John de Lyndsey                                      3s-0d
  30. Robert Richard                                       3s-0d
  31. Richard ultra aquam                              2s-0d
  32. John Rud                                                 1s-0d
  33. Richard Faber                                          1s-0d
  34. John Lyon                                                2s-0d
  35. William Segodd                                       2s-0d
  36. John Tryk                                                2s-0d
  37. William de Skylyngton                              10d
  38. William de Horton                                      10d
  39. Richard pater noster                                 10d

History  and Gazeteer 1856 for Haydor

  1. ALLEN John -farmer`            CLOSE Wm- gardener at Oseby
  2. COLLISHAW John -farmer at Aisby
  3. DALE Wm -blacksmith  at Aisby
  4. DEEDES Rev Gordon Frederick - vicar
  5. HARDWICK George & Mrs -school
  6. HEDWORTH John -shopkeeper
  7. HEDWORTH Thomas -farmer at Oseby Manor House
  8. HOYED Wm -shopkeeper at Oseby
  9. ISAAC Mr Richard
  10. LANE Miles - farmer at Oseby
  11. LONGLANDS Richard -carpenter at Oseby
  12. QUININGBOROUGH Richard -shoemaker
  13. SARDESON Mrs Mary -farmer
  14. SELBY John - farmer at Aisby
  15. SELBY Matthew -farmer at Aisby
  16. SINGLETON Samuel - wheelwright at Aisby
  17. SMITH Thorpe -farmer at Oseby
  18. THOMPSON Wm -stone quarry owner
  19. WAKEFIELD Thos - vict Red Lion at Oseby
  20. WEIGHTMAN Mrs Eliz - miller at Oseby
  21. WILSON Thos - carpenter at Aisby

Whites's Directory 1872 for  Haydor (also Aisby & Oseby)

HAYDOR [formerly spelt Heidure] is a small village on a picturesque acclivity 5 miles SW of Sleaford and 7 miles ENE of Grantham has in its township 346 souls and 2794 acres of land, including the hamlets of Aisby and Oseby [or Azeby and Ozeby] extending a mile S of the village.   The parish of Haydor comprises also the townships of Culverthorpe and Kelby.   John Archer HOUBLON Esq, owns nearly all the soil and is lord of the manor, impropriator of the rectory and patron of the vicarage, which is valued in K B at £12-6s-10d and now at £500, with the curacies of Kelby and Culverthorpe annexed to it, in the incumbency of the Rev G F DEEDES M A who has a good residence.   The parish was formerly under the peculiar jurisdiction of the prebendary of Haydor-cum-Walton.     The church is a large fabric with a lofty tower containing five bells, and crowned with a spire.    In the north aisle is some old glass of the reign of Richard11, containing figures of the then three favourite patron saints of England, St Edward and St Edmund, and also those of St Vincent, St Lawrance and St Stephen.     In a small chapel on the north side of the chancel is a number of marble monuments recording the deaths of the NEWTON family, and former propietors of Culverthorpe Hall.    At the enclosure in 1803 the tithes were commuted for allotments of about 400 acres in Haydor and Culverthorpe, and 100 acres in Kelby.   In this parish are quarries of Ancaster and excellent freestone, like that obtained at Ancaster and Wilsford.    This stone, though remarkable for great durability, is very easily worked.    The quarries here are leased to Mr william THOMPSON of Grantham.    In a field west of the church are traces of a large mansion or castle, supposed to have been built in the reign of Stephen by one of the BUSSEY family, whowere seated here till about 1609.     Near Aisby a tessalated pavement of a Romas villa was discovered some years ago.    The poor of Haydor and Culverthorpe have the interest of £20 left by John HILTON in 1756 and now vested in the vicar and churchwardens.   The ancient school was rebuilt in 1835.

  1. ADCOCK J - cottager & shopkeeper at Oseby
  2. BOOTH Rev J -curate
  3. CLOSE William -cottager at Oseby
  4. COLLISHAW Mrs -farmer at Aisby
  5. DALE James -cottager at Aisby
  6. DALE Joseph -cottager at Aisby
  7. DALE William -cottager at Aisby
  8. DEEDES Rev Gordon F -vicar
  9. DENNIS Henry -cottager at Oseby
  10. EXTON Edward -carrier & cottager at Oseby
  11. HEDWORTH Hardy -farmer at Oseby
  12. HEDWORTH John- grocer at Aisby
  13. HEDWORTH Mrs -farmer at Oseby
  14. HOYED William -farmer at Oseby
  15. LANE Edward -farmer, the Lodge
  16. LANE Miles -farmer at Oseby
  17. LANGLAND John -cottager at Oseby
  18. LONGLAND Richard -cottager at Oseby
  19. QUINNINGBOROUGH Richard -shoemaker at Oseby
  20. ROLLINSON John -cottager at Oseby
  21. SARDESON W & G -farmers
  22. SELBY Mrs -cottager at Oseby
  23. SELBY Mrs M -cottager at Aisby
  24. SELBY Phillip -farmer at Aisby
  25. SINGLETON John -wheelwright
  26. SMITH John -farmer at Aisby
  27. SMITH Miss R -schoolmistress
  28. TAFT Henry - tailor at Aisby
  29. WAKEFIELD T -vict Houblon Arms at Oseby
  30. WATERS Mrs -cottager at Oseby
  31. WEIGHTMAN Elizabeth -miller & maltster at Oseby
  32. WELBOURN Richard -cottager at Oseby
  33. WILSON Sarah -cottager at Aisby

HEYDOUR CASTLE

TF 007397

The earthwork known as Heydour Castle is situated on gently rising land on the western edge of the hamlet of Heydour (Fig 40) and marks the site of a substantial manorial curia. In 1086 the settlement, assessed at four carucates to the geld, was sokeland of Guy de Craon's manor of Osbournby, and it is therefore unlikely that that a lord's hall was situated there at the time (1). The manorial complex is clearly contemporary with, or post-dates, the enfeoffment of the land in the twelfth century. According to thirteenth-century sources there were three manors in Heydour belonging to the honours of Gant, de la Haye, and Craon (2). But the settlement was joined with Aisby and Oasby from before the Conquest to form a single vill, and the name Heydour was often indifferently used to identify all three (3). In reality, however, the manor houses of the Gant and de la Haye fees were situated in Oasby and Aisby, although their lands were probably intermixed for there was a single common field system, and thus the site of the castle can be firmly identified with the Craon fee (4). The earliest known tenant was Roger de Rudston who probably held the manor sometime before 1206 (5). His son Walter was in seisin of the fee with an estate in Haceby for the service of one knight in 1212, and it was not until sometime between that date and 1242 that Richard Tuschet was subenfeoffed in Heydour, with possibly a small amount of land in Haceby for the service of three tenths of a knight fee, and Robert de Thorpe in Haceby for one tenth (6). However, before subenfeoffment the mesne fee was known as Heydour, and it is therefore likely that the caput was established in that settlement by the early thirteenth century.

No references to the lord's hall have been found, and its form, and that of related structures, is unknown. In the documents consulted, the site is never described as a castle, but always appears as 'a capital messuage', the normal term for a manor house. The form of the earthworks, however, suggests that it was eminently defensible, and the site can therefore with justice be classified as a castle. The desertion and dereliction of the site is likewise unrecorded. Nevertheless, it is evident that it did not occur in the thirteenth century, for at that time the site was probably the principal residence of its lords. Rather it is more likely that it followed, and was a consequence of, the acquisition of the manor of Oasby by its lord sometime before 1311 (7). It is clear from an extent that the Heydour complex was still in use in 1343, for there were houses for crops, a dovecote, and a garden called 'le Vynyerd' there. But it may be significant that reference is only made to 'the site of the manor house'. By contrast, 'le Westhalle', held of the honour of Gant and presumably the manor house in Oasby, is specifically named, and is probably represented by the present Oasby Hall which still retains a fifteenth century west wing (8). The consolidation of the estate around this nucleus, then, would seem to have been under way by the mid fourteenth century. Some structure may, however, have remained on the Heydour site in the sixteenth century when Leland wrote that a member of the Bussey family, to whom the manor had descended, 'dwelleth in an old place at Haider, that he and his parents hath of a fee farm, of the church of Lincoln' (9). But it is probably more likely that 'the Castle' was already deserted, and the reference was to Oasby Hall. The present state of the site (schedule no. 120 ) is uninformative. In 1930 C. W. Phillips described ' an irregular ring motte large enough to have contained the main buildings'. He noted a high bank at the south-east corner, with a ditch, and trees in the outer bailey to the south. In 1979 the surveyor commented on the remains of stone buildings on the mound, which is the main feature (Fig 40). Surrounding it are ditches of varying lengths, outlining irregularly shaped platforms, which are difficult to interpret (Pl VIII). The largest is a T-shaped one on the south-eastern side, water-filled. This is 20 metres wide, 70 metres long and 1.5 metres deep. On the northern and eastern sides the moat varies in size and merges with a series of other ditches beyond. On the eastern side of the complex, some 90 metres away from the motte, are two rectangular fishponds. The northernmost one is 45 metres long by 15 metres wide and about 2 metres deep, the southern one, at right angles to it and 15 metres away, is 50 metres long but extends northward for about 35 metres in an L-shape as a shallower ditch, then turns slightly to the east (Pl VIII). It has probably been filled in at some relatively recent period.1. Lincs DB, 57/21.2. BF, 184. 1037.3. The three settlements apppear to have constituted a twelve-carucate hundred in 1066 (Lincs DB, 24/85; 26/47; 57,21), and were a vill in 1316 (FA ii, 191). 4. BF, 184, 1037; Documents Illustrative of Social and Economic History of the Danelaw, London 1920, xliv n. The assessments given are identical with those of the Domesday record. 5. RA no 2066.6. BF, 184, 1030, 1037. The interest in Haceby is not noted in 1212, but in 1242 Henry the Chamberlain was the mesne tenant of both fees and therefore was presumably Walter's successor in the fee of one knight. 7. CI v, 198.8. CIM ii, 462; Pevsner, Lincs, 616.9. Trollope, 377.

Text courtesy of D.R.Roffe from his excellent  History site

History  and Gazeteer 1856 for Kelby

Kelby is a pleasant village on a bold aclivity 5.1/2 miles S W by W of Sleaford and was anciently a seperate parish, but is now a chapelry in the parish of Haydor.    It contains 118 inhabitants and 990 acres of land, all the property of J A HOUBLON Esq, the lord of the manor and impropiator.   The church is an ancient structure with some fine Norman arches and a towwere surmounted by a spire.   It is a curacy annexed to the vicarage of Haydor.   Robt BAILEY is the parish clerk and the farmers are:-- Edw BARRAND.       Wm EVERITT.       John KING.      Thos MARRATT.      Wm MATKIN-heath.      Joseph PINDER

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