Newsletter September 2024

Henry Tickner of Ewhurst, c.1890
Guildford Museum, ,.
Photo Guildford Heritage

Our first autumn meeting will be this Friday 20th September at the
village hall, doors open 7.00pm for teas, coffees and the allimportant raffle. The talk starting 7.30 will be by Maggie Wood, entitled Mr Gaydon of Brailes and Other Stories Told Through a Collection of Smocks. Smocking was a form of stitching to gather the usually linen fabric of a smock to make it stronger, more flexible and more waterproof. Styles of stitching, embroidery and even the shapes of smocks vary across the country, so the style of the smock worn by Mr Tickner from Ewhurst may be different to those worn by Warwickshire labourers. Maggie Wood was formerly Keeper of Social History for the Warwickshire Museum. Service, and her talk will be based on a collection of local 19th century smocks held at the museum, tracing the stories of the individuals who once wore them. She promises some surprises on the way. We have hosted talks by Maggie in the past and we can expect an entertaining and informative evening about the people and conditions in our area more than a century ago.


Report on August 16th visit to Stratford Guild Chapel
Our expert guides Pamela Devine and Janet Hall introduced our group to the history and original function of the 15th century chapel before describing the internationally important series of wall paintings. First the “Doom” above the chancel arch, showing the Last Judgement, with the saved on the right hand of God and the sinners on the left. Unusually for Doom paintings there are no popes, princes or the rich among the damned, but they are conspicuous among the saved. But then, it was commissioned by the elite of the town!
The painting has suffered some deterioration since its discovery in the early 19th century, but copies made at the time by Thomas Fisher can supply some of the missing elements. A frieze of images and texts running along the north wall of the nave show people from all stations of life being led off by Death in a dance of death, while corresponding images on the south wall show scenes from the life of Adam. . These friezes are now hidden by panelling, but two section were exposed for us to see.

The wall paintings were covered with limewash less
than a century after they were created. This event was recorded by John Shakespeare, the playwright’s father, in his role as Chamberlain of Stratford Corporation.
Since 2022 the chapel has benefitted from Heritage Lottery Funding to conserve and interpret the surviving 15th century paintings, which constitute a rare scheme created at a single period as one programme. Although some parts have been destroyed or overlaid. work continues to enhance and interpret this internationally significant series of images.
Our thanks to our Chapel guides Pamela and Janet, and to Rosemary for arranging this and our other summer outings to Lighthorne village and Stanway House. The trips have been enjoyed by all who joined us.

Forthcoming K&DLHG events

DateSpeakerTitle
20 SeptemberMaggie WoodMr Gaydon of Brailes, stories told through a collection of smocks
18 OctoberDavid MorseA Dive into Leamington’s Photographic Archive
15 NovemberRoger ButlerWilliam James – Stratford’s Pioneering Railway Engineer
13 DecemberPaul ThompsonIo Saturnalia
17 Jan. 2025Alex HarveyImmersive Tech to Explore Medieval Tunnels in Warwick and Elsewhere
21 Feb. 2025William DeakinHistory of the Hunt in Kineton
21 Mar. 2025AGM & Martin Sinot-Smith37th AGM followed by Daily Life in Tudor Times


Other Organisations’ Events

Warmington Heritage Group begin their series of evening talks Thursday September 19 at 7.30pm in the
Village Hall
when Sealed Knot members Verna and Stephen Wass will be discussing the impact of the
English Civil War on the town and people of Banbury and punctuating the talk with live music played on
instruments of the period. It promises to be a hugely entertaining evening.
Then on Thursday, 17th October at 7.30 in the village hall John Bishop will talk on the history of the
Gaydon RAF base.

RAF Gaydon opened in 1942 and is known for its role during the Cold War, when it was under the control
of RAF Bomber Command as it was the first Royal Air Force (RAF) station to receive the Vickers Valiant
when No. 138 Squadron RAF re-formed here in 1955.
In 1978, the site passed into civilian ownership and today contains the British Motor Museum, the
headquarters of automobile manufacturer Aston Martin, and the Jaguar Land Rover Gaydon Centre.

Please look up the Warwickshire Local History Society’s Other Societies’ Events page for a list of
other meetings of local history interest. You can access it here: Other Events (warwickshirehistory.org.uk)

British Association for Local History. The Kineton Group is a Member of BALH and they run lectures and talks which are open to our members. www.balh.org.uk for upcoming talks available virtually.


Membership.
Membership for 2025 is £15. Visitor entrance is £3.00 per meeting.
If you would like to become a Member of the group, our 2025 membership year starts in January. If you attend 5 or more of the 9 meetings we hold every year then Membership is the best option!
With our bank now charging for payments by cheque or cash, we would urge those who can to please pay by BACS to our bank business account:
name: Kineton and District Local History Group,
sort code: 40-43-19;
acc. no. 71281992. Please include your full name so we can correctly attribute your payment.
Members note that if you pay by cheque make it payable to:

Kineton and District Local History Group, and send or delivered to:
Alec Hitchman,
The Hills Farm,
Pillerton Hersey,
WARKS,
CV35 0QQ

Cash payments can be made at any meeting. For queries contact Alec on alec.hitchman@btinternet.com

KDLHG Committee

President:  Dr Robert Bearman MBE   
Chairman Rosemary Collier 
Vice-Chairman  Roger Gaunt  
Secretary Gill Stewart   
TreasurerAlec Hitchman  
Outings SecretaryDavid Freke
Programme Secretary Claire Roberts
Membership & PRPamela Redgrave
Archive Data ManagerCarol Clarke
ArchivistColin Such
Ilona Sekacz

The committee last met on 11th June in the Community Archive Room, and the June Newsletter summarised its discussions. The next committee meeting will be on 18th September in the Community Archive Room at 7.00pm

Newsletter July & August 2024

Our last summer outing of 2024 will be this FRIDAY, AUGUST 16th. Afternoon guided visit to STRATFORD GUILD CHAPEL meeting at 2.00pm in the chapel (CV37 6EP)
There are still places available on this trip, pay at the door, cost £5.00.

Stratford’s Guild of the Holy Cross was an essential element in the
medieval economic and social life of the town. In the 15th century
the increasingly rich and influential Guild built the almshouses,
the Guild Hall, the grammar school and the Guild Chapel.
The chapel we now see was built in the 15th century, and has
undergone many changes of use in the last half century.


It contains internationally important wall paintings, which were covered with whitewash less than a century after they were created. This event was recorded by John Shakespeare, the playwright’s father, in his role as Chamberlain of Stratford Corporation. Since 2022 the chapel has benefitted from Heritage Lottery Funding to conserve and interpret the surviving 15th century paintings, which constitute a rare scheme created at a single period as one programme. Although some parts have been destroyed or overlaid by later painting, and some are hidden behind wooden panelling, work continues to enhance and interpret this internationally significant series of images.


Report on the evening tour of LIGHTHORNE VILLAGE on 21st June

We had an enjoyable evening in benign weather, led by our member Colin Such, who until recently resided in Lighthorne and who has amassed a wealth of information about its history and characters. He gave us a brief illustrated introductory history of the village in the Village Hall, noting the prehistoric beginnings of the settlement and the nearby Roman activity.

We then went out to view the Old Post Office and the historic buildings at the adjacent cross roads, including the Old Forge and the (well-attended) Antelope Hotel pub. We then walked up Old School Lane, noting in passing a fine farmhouse, and a notorious establishment, before arriving at the Old School, now converted to domestic use.

When we returned to the crossroads your reporter reluctantly fell by the wayside suffering from a painful foot problem. Undaunted, Colin led the group up Church Lane to St Laurence’s church to view the church and its notable stained glass.

The church tower was built in the 1770s by Kineton mason Samuel
Eglington, who had been employed on the new house at Compton Verney. The main body of the church is 19th century, but there is some early glass incorporated in the windows. Although I missed this part of the tour Colin has written a detailed article about the stained glass based on the research of the late Peter Hinman and Aiden McRae Thomson (in the Lighthorne History Society Archive and available online here:
http://www.lighthornehistory.org.uk/wp-content/uploads/LH1342014.pdf).
Well worth a read.
Our thanks to Colin for giving us the benefit of just some of his encyclopaedic knowledge of Lighthorne’s past in such a calm and engaging fashion.

Report on Friday July19th afternoon guided tour of STANWAY HOUSE
Stanway House dates from the late 16th – early 17th century, and the gardens have been continually enhanced by successive generations of the Tracys. The family is still in residence. The day was the hottest of the year to date, and the golden coloured Cotswold stone buildings looked their best, but we were glad to be mainly indoors. Our guide Marie-Therese led us through the apartments open to the public, while the family, and the dogs, passed through us en route to the pool, judging by the evidence of their attire. A massive 17th century shove ha’penny table with a single huge oak top was a feature of the Hall – it might have been constructed in situ it was so enormous. The long winter evenings before the internet seem to have been occupied by sitting in chairs covered in original Morris fabrics, and flicking stamps attached to coins at the high ceiling, where a few stamps are still to be seen. Ilona admitted to having played this game too, although not at Stanway House. Possibly to counteract the effect of too many dinners we saw a rare Chippendale exercise chair, looking uncomfortably like an instrument of torture.

Up some steps, giving a glimpse of a servants’ passage, we came to the sitting room, containing two Chippendale settees, with elaborate canopies embellished with chinoiserie accessories,
including a pagoda and little bells. Here Marie-Therese pointed out the portraits of several 18th and 19th century ancestors who fatally drank or duelled themselves into contention for Darwin awards.

The next room was a smaller book-lined intimate room, with Edwardian photos of three beautiful sisters, one whose private life seemed to be intent on making up for the gene pool deficit racked up by her forebears.
Making our way into the sunshine through a servants’ back door we saw the remnants of the elegant landscape garden depicted in one of the 18th century paintings in the Hall. A little steepled building stood at the head of what had been a long cascade emptying into a raised canal. This is now the site of the spectacular 91-metre high fountain – the highest gravity-fed spout in the world. The fountain was turned on for us, and was truly remarkable.
Our thanks to Rosemary for arranging both these stimulating outings, enjoyed by all who joined us.
The Community Archive Colin and Carol have continued cataloguing the material in the archive. We
have taken delivery of 10 archive quality archive storage boxes donated by the Warwickshire County Record Office through the good offices of Colin.
The shelving is now installed, and Colin has catalogued and indexed all the paper archive, while Carol is organising the digital material.

David Beaumont has kindly donated a WWII child’s gas mask, from a
Kineton source. I never knew such objects existed and it looks fearsome if
necessary thing, but it brings home the reality of a war only a few can now
bear witness. It looks horribly like that Caravaggio painting of David With the Head of Goliath.

Forthcoming K&DLHG events

DateSpeakerTitle
16 AugustGuided Outing 2pmGuided tour of Guild Chapel, Stratford
20 SeptemberMaggie WoodMr Gaydon of Brailes, stories told through a collection of smocks
18 OctoberDavid MorseA Dive into Leamington’s Photographic Archive
15 NovemberRoger ButlerWilliam James – Stratford’s Pioneering Railway Engineer
13 DecemberPaul ThompsonIo Saturnalia
17 Jan. 2025Alex HarveyImmersive Tech to Explore Medieval Tunnels in Warwick and Elsewhere
21 Feb. 2025William DeakinHistory of the Hunt in Kineton
21 Mar. 2025AGM & Martin Sinot-Smith37th AGM followed by Daily Life in Tudor Times


Other Organisations’ Events
Please look up the Warwickshire Local History Society’s Other Societies’ Events page for a list of
other meetings of local history interest. You can access it here: Other Events (warwickshirehistory.org.uk)


Membership.
Membership for 2024 is £15. Visitor entrance is £3.00 per meeting.
If you would like to become a Member of the group, our 2024 membership year starts in January. If you attend 5 or more of the 9 meetings we hold every year then Membership is the best option!
With our bank now charging for payments by cheque or cash, we would urge those who can to please pay by BACS to our bank business account:
name: Kineton and District Local History Group,
sort code: 40-43-19;
acc. no. 71281992. Please include your full name so we can correctly attribute your payment.
Members note that if you pay by cheque make it payable to:

Kineton and District Local History Group, and send or delivered to:
Alec Hitchman,
The Hills Farm,
Pillerton Hersey,
WARKS,
CV35 0QQ

Cash payments can be made at any meeting. For queries contact Alec on alec.hitchman@btinternet.com

KDLHG Committee

President:  Dr Robert Bearman MBE   
Chairman Rosemary Collier 
Vice-Chairman  Roger Gaunt  
Secretary Gill Stewart   
TreasurerAlec Hitchman  
Outings SecretaryDavid Freke
Programme Secretary Claire Roberts
Membership & PRPamela Redgrave
Archive Data ManagerCarol Clarke
ArchivistColin Such
Ilona Sekacz

The committee last met on 11th June in the Community Archive Room, and the June Newsletter summarised its discussions. The next committee meeting will be on 18th September in the Community Archive Room at 7.00pm

Newsletter June 2024

On Friday evening June 21st we take a short trip to Lighthorne for our first summer outing of 2024.
Meet at 6.00pm, Lighthorne Village Hall, CV350AY. Cost £5.00 (can be collected on the day)
The forecast is for a fine day and we look forward to an enjoyable evening led by our member Colin Such, who until recently resided in Lighthorne and has amassed a mine of information about its history and characters.
Evening tour of LIGHTHORNE VILLAGE

Village view

Lighthorne is mentioned in the Domesday survey of 1086 as “Listecorne”. An interpretation of this as “the light/ bright thorn bush”, has been challenged by Peter Hinman who proposed “hidden valley” or “stream valley” as more likely.
Once owned by the Earls of Warwick the village later became part of the Compton Verney estate owned by the Lord Willoughby de Broke.

The church tower was built
in the 1770s by Kineton
mason Samuel Eglington,
who had been employed on
the new house at Compton
Verney. The main body of
the church is 19th century,
but there is some early glass
incorporated into the windows.
The earliest of the 4 bells is 15th century, one is 17th century and two are 19th century.
The village has many attractive historic features, and we will be guided expertly around these historic sites by Colin Such, the Lighthorne History Society archivist and K&DLHG committee member and archivist.

FRIDAY JULY 19th Afternoon guided tour of STANWAY HOUSE

Cost £20.00 (book in advance, numbers limited)
Stanway House and gardens in Gloucestershire are about 30 miles from Kineton. The house dates from the late 16th – early 17th century, and
the gardens have been continually enhanced by successive generations of the Tracy family and their descendants.

The spectacular 91 metre high fountain – the highest gravity fed spout in the world – being one of the latest additions opened in 2004.
The house has stairs and level changes etc which make it unsuitable for people with mobility issues. The fountain and garden are fully accessible, Meet 2.00 pm Stanway House entrance. GL54 5PQ

NB this is not a coach trip, to avoid unnecessary car trips please consider car sharing

FRIDAY AUGUST 16th Afternoon guided visit to STRATFORD GUILD CHAPEL Cost £5.00

Stratford’s Guild of the Holy Cross was an essential element in the medieval life of the town. The Guild built the almshouses, the Guild Hall, the grammar school and the Guild Chapel.

The chapel we now see was built in the 15th century, and has undergone many changes of use in the last half century. It contains internationally important wall paintings, which were covered with whitewash less than a century after they were created. The event was recorded by John Shakespeare, the playwright’s father, in his role as Alderman of the Corporation.
Meet 2.00pm in the chapel.

The Community Archive
Colin and Carol have continued cataloguing the material in the archive. We have taken delivery of 10 archive quality archive storage boxes donated by the Warwickshire County Record Office through the good offices of Colin. Here is a find from a collection of unlabelled photographs:
Tales from the Archive from Carol
I was looking through a small suitcase of someone’s old family photos in the Archive recently. Amongst the mostly loose photos was a small, slightly battered album, and on one of the pages I spotted a photo of ….. my father!
It was one of four snaps on a page labelled “Weston Park Nr Shipston on Stour”, featuring a Girl Guide camp in perhaps the early 1920s. To be fair, I already had an analogue copy of the same photo, but this one, although only a 2″ x 3″ snapshot, turned out to be of better quality once I’d scanned and enhanced it.
At the time Dad was a young gardener at Weston Park (between Cherington and Long Compton), and features in the photo in the back row, on the right. The other two older men were also gardeners, and the girls at the front were Girl Guides. I was told by my aunt in the 1980s that the Guides were from Birmingham, and the other gardeners used to tease Dad by sending him on spurious errands into the depths of the Guides’ camping area.
The name “Baldwin” is written on the back of some of the loose photos. Now I wonder whose album it was, and how they were connected with the Girl Guide camp?

Carol Clark

Forthcoming K&DLHG events

DateSpeakerTitle
21 June (eve)Colin Such 6pm Guided tour of Lighthorne village
19 July (afternoon)Guided Outing 2pmVisit to Stanway House
16 AugustGuided Outing 2pmGuided tour of Guild Chapel, Stratford
20 SeptemberMaggie WoodMr Gaydon of Brailes, stories told through a collection of smocks
18 OctoberDavid MorseA Dive into Leamington’s Photographic Archive
15 NovemberRoger ButlerWilliam James – Stratford’s Pioneering Railway Engineer
13 DecemberPaul ThompsonIo Saturnalia
17 Jan. 2025Alex HarveyImmersive Tech to Explore Medieval Tunnels in Warwick and Elsewhere
21 Feb. 2025William DeakinHistory of the Hunt in Kineton
21 Mar. 2025AGM & Martin Sinot-Smith37th AGM followed by Daily Life in Tudor Times

Other Organisations’ Events

Warwickshire Local History Society Summer outings.


Membership.
Membership for 2024 is £15. Visitor entrance is £3.00 per meeting.
If you would like to become a Member of the group, our 2024 membership year starts in January. If you attend 5 or more of the 9 meetings we hold every year then Membership is the best option!
With our bank now charging for payments by cheque or cash, we would urge those who can to please pay by BACS to our bank business account:
name: Kineton and District Local History Group,
sort code: 40-43-19;
acc. no. 71281992. Please include your full name so we can correctly attribute your payment.
Members note that if you pay by cheque make it payable to:
Kineton and District Local History Group, and send or delivered to:
Alec Hitchman,
The Hills Farm,
Pillerton Hersey,
WARKS, CV35 0QQ
Cash payments can be made at any meeting.
For queries contact Alec on alec.hitchman@btinternet.com

KDLHG Committee

President:  Dr Robert Bearman MBE   
Chairman Rosemary Collier 
Vice-Chairman  Roger Gaunt  
Secretary Gill Stewart   
TreasurerAlec Hitchman  
Outings SecretaryDavid Freke
Programme Secretary Claire Roberts
Membership & PRPamela Redgrave
Carol Clarke
Colin Such
Ilona Sekacz
Archive Data ManagerCarol Clarke
ArchivistColin Such
Ilona Sekacz


The committee met on 11th June in the Community Archive Room. The Village hall has been booked for the 2025-6 programme. The possibility of obtaining a grant from Council Infrastructure Levy was discussed and an approach to the Parish Council agreed. The Treasurer reported that our current financial situation is satisfactory, and that the raffle has raised useful funds, the wine less so. It was agreed to discontinue offering wine but when we recommence evening talks in September to continue starting at 7.00pm with tea and coffee before the talks. Good progress was being made in the archive, with the shelving and filing cabinets installed. Suggestions for talks and outing venues in 2025-6 were invited. Efforts to get our message to the wider community continue. The next committee meeting will be on 18th September in the Community Archive Room at 7.00pm

Newsletter May 2024

DateSpeakerTitle
17 MayAnthony HitchcoxRadford Semele: a History in Photos
21 June (eve)Colin Such 6pm Guided tour of Lighthorne village
19 July (afternoon)Outing 2pmVisit to Stanway House
16 AugustOuting 2pmGuided tour of Guild Chapel, Stratford
20 SeptemberMaggie WoodMr Gaydon of Brailes, stories told through a collection of smocks
18 OctoberDavid MorseA Dive into Leamington’s Photographic Archive
15 NovemberRoger ButlerWilliam James – Stratford’s Pioneering Railway Engineer
13 DecemberPaul ThompsonIo Saturnalia
17 Jan. 2025Alex HarveyImmersive Tech to Explore Medieval Tunnels in Warwick and Elsewhere
21 Feb. 2025William DeakinHistory of the Hunt in Kineton
21 Mar. 2025AGM & Martin Sinot-Smith37th AGM followed by Daily Life in Tudor Times
President:  Dr Robert Bearman MBE   
Chairman Rosemary Collier 
Vice-Chairman  Roger Gaunt  
Secretary Gill Stewart   
TreasurerAlec Hitchman  
Outings SecretaryDavid Freke
Programme Secretary Claire Roberts
Membership & PRPamela Redgrave
Carol Clarke
Colin Such
Ilona Sekacz

Newsletter April 2024

For our next 2 meetings, on April 19th and May17th, we are trialling a new format. In order to enhance the important social aspect our meetings we will open the evening at 7.00pm when members and visitors can enjoy a glass of wine (£3.00) or tea/coffee (£1.00) and obtain raffle tickets before the talk begins at the usual time of 7.30pm. We hope you will come early and enjoy a relaxed and chatty prelude to the evening. The raffle has raised £100.00 so far, please continue to support it.

Our talk this Friday will be delivered by Emma Bromley who will be discussing The Black Book of Warwick: a Tudor Town Clerk’s Diary. The minute book of the Corporation of Warwick was compiled by the Town Clerk John Fisher from 1563 to 1590. It became his personal diary.

The Black Book of Warwick. Photo Warwick County Record Office

I have a certain sympathy with his description of the Corporation’s predicament in trying to elect a new bailiff in September 1572. Their first choice, William Hall, was elected in his absence but refused the office, pleading his lack of ability, the problems of looking after his house as he had no wife(!) and the heavy responsibilities of a large family.

Three other burgesses, John Dicke, Thomas Barrett, and John Nason were approached in turn, and each refused in turn and were promptly sacked from the Corporation. Finally following the appointment of new members Richard Fisher was elected as the new bailiff, and the new corporation was sworn in on October 6 th after a delay of nearly a month. ‘Twas ever thus!

Report on March meeting. On the Ides of March (the 15th) we held our 36th AGM, followed by Vanessa Morgan’s talk “Local Rogues and Vilains of the 19th Century”. The papers for the business part of the meeting had been circulated, so the AGM, conducted by our President Bob Bearman, was brief. Rosemary Collier was elected as our new chairperson, and while Isobel Gill and Catherine Petrie left the committee, with our appreciation for their long service, we welcomed Colin Such, Gill Stewart and Carol Clark onto the new committee. The remaining members of the 2023-4 committee were re-elected. Dr Robert Bearman agreed to continue as our President, and Peter Waters agreed to review our present year accounts.

Vanessa Morgan then regaled us with a catalogue of local 19th -century miscreants, many of whom came to sticky end. Our own Kineton constable (those were the days!) was involved in the detection and apprehension of one local criminal. The accounts read out by Vanessa, culled from contemporary newspapers and pamphlets, gave an insight into the assumptions and expectations of the period. In the time before photographs the descriptions of the accused were necessary to give an impression of the sort of people capable of doing the deeds they were accused of. The theories of the period held that character could be revealed in facial features, so a coarse and ugly appearance was a clue to criminality. Sometimes in the newspaper accounts there were hints of surprise that well dressed and civilized looking individuals were capable of the crimes they had committed. Public hangings or transportation to Australia were the harsh penalties for many crimes. We can find it hard to understand the brutality of the judicial system then, and the culture which led crowds of 10,000 to watch a public hanging. I wonder what part of our behaviour, which we accept as normal, if examined in a hundred years’ time, would be found to be as arbitrary and unacceptable. Our President led the vote of thanks to close the meeting.

The Community Archive Room. The Archive Room at The Mill in Mill Street, Kineton, has now received all the material previously stored at The Ark in Pillerton Hersey. Thank you to Alec and Ilona for help in the move. Carol Clark and Colin Such have started the job of cataloguing. The Newsletter will feature interesting items as they come to light. The completed catalogue and index will be uploaded onto our website, in order that the community can see what the collection holds and to encourage its use.

Our 2024 Summer Outings:

Rosemary has arranged a fine series of outings for this summer. We will be selling tickets for these at our April and May meetings or you can contact our Treasurer directly (see contact details below)

Forthcoming K&DLHG talks at the Village Hall and Summer Outings.

DateSpeakerTitle
19 AprilEmma BromleyThe Black Book of Warwick
17 MayAnthony HitchcoxRadford Semele: a History in Photos
21 June (eve)Colin Such 6pm Guided tour of Lighthorne village
19 July (afternoon)Outing 2pmVisit to Stanway House
16 AugustOuting 2pmGuided tour of Guild Chapel, Stratford
20 SeptemberMaggie WoodMr Gaydon of Brailes, stories told through a collection of smocks
18 OctoberDavid MorseA Dive into Leamington’s Photographic Archive
15 NovemberRoger ButlerWilliam James – Stratford’s Pioneering Railway Engineer
13 DecemberPaul ThompsonIo Saturnalia
17 Jan. 2025Alex HarveyImmersive Tech to Explore Medieval Tunnels in Warwick and Elsewhere
21 Feb. 2025William DeakinHistory of the Hunt in Kineton
21 Mar. 2025AGM & Martin Sinot-Smith37th AGM followed by Daily Life in Tudor Times

Other Organisations’ Events

30 April. The Sibford History Society is organising a coach trip to Hardwick Hall on 4 th September 2024, and they are looking for people to join them to make the trip viable. The coach booking needs to be confirmed and paid for by 30 April. The coach cost is £25 per person, Hardwick Hall is free to National Trust members and £18.05 for non-NT members. If you are interested please contact K&DLHG Treasurer Alec before 30th April, and he will collect the £25.00 coach cost (see below for his contact details)

Shipston History Society

The Museum in Shipston will be opening Saturdays ,Sundays, and Bank Holiday Mondays 12.00 – 4.00pm. Admission free. https://shipstonmuseum.co.uk/ They are also open to do town tours on weekdays by appointment. For more details about the Museum and History Society contact bekkyhillman@shipstonmuseum.co.uk. or rebeccajashley@googlemail.com.

24 April Wellesbourne Local History Group . Shops of Leamington Spa by Peter Coulls. Wellesbourne Village Hall. 7.30 guests £3.00.

18 April. Warmington Heritage Group. Writing Women Back into the Political History of Warwickshire by Professor Sarah Richardson. Village Hall, 7.30. Visitors £2.00

8 May Alcester & District Local History Society The Palaeolithic and Ice Age Environments of the West Midlands by Nick Daffern. 7.30pm, 6 th Form Centre, St Benedicts RC High School, Kinwarton Road, Alcester, B49 6PX

8 May Packington Hall Tour. Guided tour of the ground floor of the house and gardens by owner George Guernsey. £25.00 includes refreshments. Visit: www.historichouses.org to book

10 May Lighthorne History Group. From the Pillory to the Prison Cell by Ginny Davis, 7.30pm Village Hall

11 May. Berkswell Windmill Open Day. 12.00- 4.00

British Association for Local History. The Kineton Group is a Member of BALH and they run lectures and talks which are open to our members. www.balh.org.uk for upcoming talks available virtually. Don’t forget to check our own website at: Kineton and District Local History Group


Membership.
The committee has reluctantly raised the price of Membership for 2024 to £15pa. This is the first rise in 8
years, and is required to meet the rising costs of speaker fees, hall hire, and speakers’ travel expenses, which
has become a significant amount. Visitor entrance remains at £3.00 per meeting.

If you would like to become a Member of the group, our 2024 membership year starts in January. If you attend
5 or more of the 9 meetings we hold every year then Membership is the best option!

With our bank now charging for payments by cheque or cash, we would urge those who can to please pay by
BACS to our bank business account:
name: Kineton and District Local History Group,
sort code: 40-43-19;
acc. no. 71281992. Please include your full name so we can correctly attribute your payment.
Members note that if you pay by cheque make it payable to:
Kineton and District Local History Group, and send or delivered to:
Alec Hitchman,
The Hills Farm,
Pillerton Hersey,
WARKS, CV35 0QQ

Cash payments can be made at any meeting.
For queries contact Alec on alec.hitchman@btinternet.com


2023-24 KDLHG Committee

President:  Dr Robert Bearman MBE   
Chairman Rosemary Collier 
Vice-Chairman  Roger Gaunt  
Secretary Gill Stewart   
TreasurerAlec Hitchman  
Outings SecretaryDavid Freke
Programme Secretary Claire Roberts
Membership & PRPamela Redgrave
Carol Clarke
Colin Such
Ilona Sekacz

The new committee met on 2nd April in the Archive Room. We welcomed our new Chairperson and committee members, and Gill agreed to take on the role of Secretary. After receiving the Treasurer’s report, the main business was discussing the archive. Colin presented proposals for managing the archive and Carol undertook to establish the digital records. Carol and Colin agreed to start sorting and cataloguing. The committee discussed ways of raising funds to maintain the archive without draining the Group’s capital, while also fulfilling the Group’s constitution to involve the community. The next committee meeting will be on June 11th in the Archive Room at 7.00pm

Newsletter Contact: David Freke tel. 01295 670516 mob. 07876 290044 email: djfreke@gmail.com

Newsletter March 2024

RAFFLE: our first raffle at the February meeting was a great success, raising £60.91 for the group, the
first prize was a wonderful crochet throw made by Pam. Please come prepared with cash on Friday if
you want to take this opportunity to win a prize while supporting the group
.

Before out talk on Friday 15th we hold our 36th AGM. The
papers for the business part of the meeting have been
circulated, please have a look at them.

The talk on Friday will be Local Rogues and Villains of the 19th
Century
by Vanessa Morgan, a professional genealogist and
local historian. She has been researching local history for thirty
years and has written many articles for family history journals.
While researching for a book on local family history she
inevitably came across contemporary accounts of historic crimes
and misdemeanours. These became a new line of investigation,
culminating in a book focussing on Warwick – Warwick Murder
and Crime – well as giving her an intimate knowledge of the
shadier side of Warwickshire’s past. We will hear true crime
stories about robberies and murders in the Victorian county from
an expert investigator.

Report on our talk on Friday 16th February: The Battle of Edgehill 1642, delivered by Stephen Barker. Stephen is
familiar with Kineton, and the Village Hall, as he was intimately involved in the Battlefield Trust research project on the
Battle of Edgehill, being its principal fund raiser. He greeted several members who had been involved with the battlefield survey. Gill Ashley-Smith recalled that at the time she had pleaded for “no more Civil War”, while allowing that a sufficient lapse of time, and new research, made this evening’s topic more than timely. David Beaumont also looked back to his contribution to the project in his vote of thanks.

As well as describing the new insights revealed by the Battlefield Trust project Stephen emphasised the effects which the battle and the subsequent civil wars had on the local population. This evidence was supported by another recent project to which group members have contributed – the Civil War Loss Accounts transcriptions project run by Maureen Harris.

Other local sources quoted by Stephen were: parish registers, the unique headstone to Captain Gourdain in Warmington cemetery, and the monument to Captain Kingsmill in Radway parish church. My own trawls through parish registers have turned up 38 records of burials related to the Civil War in the villages around Edgehill, 12 of which are connected to the Battle of Edgehill, and another 17 to the battle of Cropredy Bridge in 1644. Many more fatal casualties who were cared for locally were not recorded, because in the chaos of the war record-keeping broke down in many parishes, including Kineton. Stephen gave us the startling fact that a far higher proportion of the country’s population died in the 17th century Civil Wars than were killed in the 20th century World Wars.
The packed Hall was highly appreciative of Stephen’s wide ranging but clear and well-illustrated presentation, as David
Beaumont thanked him on behalf of the Group.
.
The Community Archive Room. The Archive Room at The Mill in Mill Street, Kineton, is now being furnished and
archives moved in. We are pleased that among the nominees for the new committee are individuals with experience of
archives and digital management, so we hope that in the coming months we can enable access to the documents,
photographs, and tapes that the group has accumulated throughout its 36 year history, and make The Mill a centre for the collection of further material and for research.

Forthcoming K&DLHG talks at the Village Hall and Summer Outings.

DateSpeakerTitle
15 March AGMVanessa MorganLocal Rogues & Villains of the 19th century
19 AprilEmma BromleyThe Black Book of Warwick
17 MayAnthony HitchcoxRadford Semele: a History in Photos
21 June (eve)Outing Walk round Lighthorne village
19 July (afternoon)OutingVisit to Stanway House
?? AugustOutingtbc
20 SeptemberMaggie WoodMr Gaydon of Brailes, stories told through a collection of smocks
18 OctoberDavid MorseA Dive into Leamington’s Photographic Archive
15 NovemberRoger ButlerWilliam James – Stratford’s Pioneering Railway Engineer
13 DecemberPaul ThompsonIo Saturnalia
17 Jan. 2025Alex HarveyImmersive Tech to Explore Medieval Tunnels in Warwick and Elsewhere
21 Feb. 2025William DeakinHistory of the Hunt in Kineton
21 Mar. 2025AGM & Martin Sinot-Smith37th AGM followed by Daily Life in Tudor Times


Other Organisations’ Events
19 March Warwickshire Local History Society. Members’ Evening: Harvey Bloom: antiquarian and
author
, by Robert Howe. Around 1910-12 the Rev Harvey Bloom made the first systematic surveys of village
churchyard memorials, including Kineton’s, and we owe much to his recording of inscriptions which are now
illegible. Lidar Surveys at Wappenbury fort by Colin Clay.
Primary School Hall, Aylesford School, Tapping Way, Warwick, CV34 6XR, at 7.30. As an Affiliated
Organisation entry is free for K&DLHG members.

19 March Harbury Society. AGM and talk on Harbury Windmill- Past, Present and Future by Bill
Timson. Tom Hauley Room, All Saints Parish Church, Harbury. 7.30 guests £2.00.

21 March. Warmington Heritage Jackie West, Group. Alice and the Adventurer: the life and times of Alice
and Robert Dudley
by Jackie West. Village Hall, 7.30. Visitors £2.00

British Association for Local History. The Kineton Group is a Member of BALH and they run lectures and
talks which are open to our members. www.balh.org.uk for upcoming talks available virtually.

Don’t forget to check our own website at: Kineton and District Local History Group


Membership.
The committee has reluctantly raised the price of Membership for 2024 to £15pa. This is the first rise in 8
years, and is required to meet the rising costs of speaker fees, hall hire, and speakers’ travel expenses, which
has become a significant amount. Visitor entrance remains at £3.00 per meeting.

If you would like to become a Member of the group, our 2024 membership year starts in January. If you attend
5 or more of the 9 meetings we hold every year then Membership is the best option!

With our bank now charging for payments by cheque or cash, we would urge those who can to please pay by
BACS to our bank business account:
name: Kineton and District Local History Group,
sort code: 40-43-19;
acc. no. 71281992. Please include your full name so we can correctly attribute your payment.
Members note that if you pay by cheque make it payable to:
Kineton and District Local History Group, and send or delivered to:
Alec Hitchman,
The Hills Farm,
Pillerton Hersey,
WARKS, CV35 0QQ

Cash payments can be made at any meeting.
For queries contact Alec on alec.hitchman@btinternet.com


2023-24 KDLHG Committee

President:                               Dr Robert Bearman MBE                  

Chairman                                David Freke                           

Vice-Chairman                       Roger Gaunt                           

Secretary                                Vacant                          

Treasurer                                Alec Hitchman                       

Outings Secretary                   Rosemary Collier                                    

Programme Secretary             Claire Roberts                            

Other committee members:

Isobel Gill

Ilona Sekacz 

Catherine Petrie (PR)

Pamela Redgrave (Membership)


Contact: David Freke tel. 01295 670516 mob. 07876 290044 email: djfreke@gmail.com

Newsletter February 2024

Announcement: as indicated at our previous meeting we need to enhance our income to meet the essential running costs of the Group. A relatively painless money raising method is a raffle, and our first pilot raffle will be held at this Friday’s meeting. In our present digital age raffles still rely upon cash, so could those who would like to participate in this please remember to bring some!

The subject of our next meeting on Friday 16th February is The Battle of Edgehill 1642, delivered by Stephen Barker, is about a local event which has national significance. The battle, known by contemporaries as “The Kineton Fight”, was the first set piece military action of the civil wars which engulfed England, Scotland and Ireland for almost a decade. History group members have long been involved in important local studies of the battle, including a detailed examination of the battlefield by the Battlefield Trust which has led to a radical reinterpretation of the topography of the battle. Most recently, our members have contributed to the transcription of the Civil War Loss Accounts for Kineton and local villages.

Stephen Barker is an author, researcher, museum consultant and military historian who has given many presentations on the 17th century English Civil Wars, as well as writing books on WWI. His work encompasses archaeology and documents, and he is keen to highlight local themes. We look forward to hearing his exposition of the events of Sunday October 23rd 1642, which took place on our doorstep.

Report on our first talk about Charlecote and the Lucys on Friday 19th. Our speaker, John Miles, is a guide at the National Trust property of Charlecote House and park, and he described the complicated Lucy genealogy with a relaxed presentation, backed by his encyclopaedic knowledge of the house and its family. The claim that Lucys have been living at Charlecote since the 13th century turns out to be only tenable because several “Lucys” were so named as a result of changing their original names to conform to the terms of a will requiring all inheritors of the estate to be called by the family name. John showed Kneller’s 1680 portrait of Captain Thomas Lucy which includes a black boy holding a horse in the background. A black boy, Philip Lucy, was baptised at Charlecote church in 1735, clearly too late to be the person in the portrait, but evidence that black servants were a consistent part of elite households. There are 17th century records of baptisms and burials of black individuals in several local parishes, including Myrtilla, buried in Oxhill churchyard.

The Great Hall photo National Trust

John showed how the house and the park owed their development to successive Lucys. The park was designed by “Capability” Brown, who finally moved the annoyance of the public Stratford Road away from the vicinity of the house. Its diversion accounts for the abrupt corner at West Lodge on the B4086 Stratford Road near the Huncote Farm Shop. The 19th century saw a major make-over at the house as George Lucy and his wife Mary Elizabeth transformed the old draughty house into a Tudor-styled country house. As with many estates the late 19th century agricultural depression, coupled with 20th century taxation, led to the decline of the family fortunes. In 1944 Montgomerie Lucy gifted the house and estate to the National Trust, with the proviso that the family would continue to live in the house, which they still do in the private apartments.

Other presentations. On Tuesday 16th January Kineton Camera Club hosted our member David Beaumont, who presented a fascinating selection of his old photographs of the surrounding villages. And the following week, on the 26th, the Primary School invited those who had missed his first presentation of early photographs devoted to Kineton to a repeat of the December show. David did not disappoint on either occasion, and the school hall was full. The tea and coffee served by Chris Cartwright, Elizabeth Beaumont and their helpers was much appreciated.
The Community Archive Room. As many will know it has been a long-term ambition to establish a permanent base for our own growing archive of photos, documents, oral history recording, research notes. As long ago as 2005 our then Chairman Brian Lewis circulated a detailed paper exploring ways of achieving this. It has taken nearly 20 years, but at the end of 2023, through the good offices of Gill Ashley-Smith and Mary Wheilden, your committee agreed terms with The Mill on Mill Street, Kineton, to set up an Archive Room there. We hope soon to transfer the material currently stored safely, but inaccessibly, in The Ark storage facility in Pillerton Hersey, to the Mill. At The Mill it will be accessible, under supervision, for research and consultation, and the collection of further material. Much still needs to be done but we have taken a massive step forward.

Forthcoming K&DLHG talks at the Village Hall.

DateSpeakerTitle
16 FebruaryStephen BarkerThe Battle of Edgehill 1642
15 March AGMVanessa MorganLocal Rogues & Villains of the 19th century
19 AprilEmma BromleyThe Black Book of Warwick
17 MayAnthony HitRadford Semele: a History in Photos
21 June (eve)OutingWalk round Lighthorne village
19 July (afternoon)OutingVisit to Stanway House
?? AugustOutingtbc
20 SeptemberMaggie WoodMr Gaydon of Brailes, stories told through a collection of smocks
18 OctoberDavid MorseA Dive into Leamington’s Photographic Archive
15 NovemberRoger ButlerWilliam James – Stratford’s Pioneering Railway Engineer
13 DecemberPaul ThompsonIo Saturnalia
17 Jan. 2025Alex HarveyImmersive Tech to Explore Medieval Tunnels in Warwick and Elsewhere
21 Feb. 2025William DeakinHistory of the Hunt in Kineton
21 Mar. 2025AGM & Martin Sinot-Smith37th AGM followed by Daily Life in Tudor Times


Other Organisations’ Events
15 Feb. Warmington Heritage Group. A History of Odd Islands and some Strange People: the Small Isles. by John Hunter. Village Hall, 7.30. Visitors £2.00
2 March. CBA West Midlands News from the Past day school. Priory Rooms Conference Centre, Bull Street, Birmingham. 10am to 4.00pm. Details at https://cbawestmidlands.org.uk
8 March. Lighthorne History Group. AGM followed by Why Look at Parish Churches? by Dr John Hall. Village Hall, 7.30
13 March. Long Compton History Society. Place Names, Landscape and Settlement in the Banbury Region by Deborah Hayter. Village hall 7.30. Visitors £3.00
British Association for Local History. The Kineton Group is a Member of BALH and they run lectures and talks which are open to our members. www.balh.org.uk for upcoming talks available virtually.
Don’t forget to check our own website at: Kineton and District Local History Group

Membership.
The committee has reluctantly raised the price of Membership for 2024 to £15pa. This is the first rise in 8 years, and is required to meet the rising costs of speaker fees, hall hire, and speakers’ travel expenses, which has become a significant amount. Visitor entrance remains at £3.00 per meeting.
If you would like to become a Member of the group, our 2024 membership year starts in January.
Members renewing note that you can pay by cheque made payable to Kineton and District Local History Group, sent or delivered to:
Alec Hitchman,
The Hills Farm,
Pillerton Hersey,
WARKS, CV35 0QQ,
With our bank now charging for payments by cheque or cash, we would urge those who can to please pay by BACS to our bank business account:
name: Kineton and District Local History Group,
sort code: 40-43-19;
acc. no. 71281992. Please include your full name so we can correctly attribute your payment.
For queries contact Alec on alec.hitchman@btinternet.com

2023-24 KDLHG Committee

President:                               Dr Robert Bearman MBE                  

Chairman                                David Freke                           

Vice-Chairman                       Roger Gaunt                           

Secretary                                Vacant                          

Treasurer                                Alec Hitchman                       

Outings Secretary                   Rosemary Collier                                    

Programme Secretary             Claire Roberts                            

Other committee members:

Isobel Gill

Ilona Sekacz 

Catherine Petrie (PR)

Pamela Redgrave (Membership)

Contact: David Freke tel. 01295 670516 mob. 07876 290044 email: djfreke@gmail.com

Newsletter January 2024

Our first talk of the New Year on Friday 19th is much anticipated since it was postponed from September last year. John Miles will discuss Charlecote and the Lucys. Many members enjoyed our visit to Hampton Lucy arranged by Rosemary last summer, when we clearly saw the influence of the Lucy family on the whole village. The hint is in its name.

The buildings and institutions still operating in Hampton Lucy can be traced to the actions of successive generations of the Lucy family, who shaped the community.

As a bonus on Tuesday 16th January Kineton Camera Club is hosting our member David Beaumont, who is reprising his popular presentation of old photographs of the village, with additional images of our surrounding villages.

Report on our Christmas meeting We enjoyed two contributions from members, the first delivered by Roger Butler entitled “Birmingham – More Canals Than Venice!”, which revealed the unsuspected magic of Birmingham’s waterways. His comparison of Birmingham’s canals with those of Venice was illustrated with the vivid photographs we have come to expect from Roger. We learnt some fascinating facts eg Birmingham’s own Bridge of Sighs, while not as picturesque as Venice’s had a similar function – they both led directly to jails! In the competition for which city had “more canals” it was a score draw, with Birmingham have more kilometres of canals, but Venice having more named canals. On the way to this conclusion Roger brought out the history and function of Birmingham’s canal network in his usual relaxed and informative fashion.

The Rialto bridge, Grand Canal, Venice. Photo Encyclopaedia Britannica
Gas Street Basin, Birmingham
Meeting audience 2009

Your Chairman presented the second item -Friday Evenings in 135 Introductions – an indulgent review of fifteen years of chairing our meetings. It was good to realise how diverse our topics have been, with a good mix of local history and historical events in the wider world. These have been brought to us thanks to the work of the committee and by our Programme Secretary, Claire, and our Outings Secretary, Isobel.

Stephen Wass with his Hobby Horse performance 2016

Your chair was able to announce that we have at last achieved our long-term ambition to establish a home in the village for our growing archive, where it will be accessible for consultation. Watch this space for details.

Following the presentations the committee revived members with the traditional mulled wine and mince pies to start our Christmas season.

Forthcoming K&DLHG talks at the Village Hall.

DateSpeakerTitle
19 January 2024John MilesCharlecote & the Lucy Family
16 FebruaryStephen BarkerThe Battle of Edgehill 1642
15 March AGMVanessa MorganLocal Rogues & Villains of the 19th century
19 AprilEmma BromleyThe Black Book of Warwick

Other Organisations’ Events

British Association for Local History. The Kineton Group is a Member of BALH and they run lectures and talks which are open to our members. www.balh.org.uk for upcoming talks available virtually.
Don’t forget to check our own website at: Kineton and District Local History Group


Membership.
The committee has reluctantly raised the price of Membership for 2024 to £15pa. This is the first rise in 8 years, and is required to meet the rising costs of speaker fees, hall hire, and speakers’ travel expenses, which has become a significant amount. Visitor entrance remains at £3.00 per meeting.


If you would like to become a Member of the group, our 2024 membership year starts in January.
Members renewing note that you can pay by cheque made payable to Kineton and District Local History Group, sent or delivered to:
Alec Hitchman,
The Hills Farm,
Pillerton Hersey,
WARKS, CV35 0QQ,


With our bank now charging for payments by cheque or cash, we would urge those who can to please pay by BACS to our bank business account:
name: Kineton and District Local History Group,
sort code: 40-43-19;
acc. no. 71281992. Please include your full name so we can correctly attribute your payment.
For queries contact Alec on alec.hitchman@btinternet.com

2023-24 KDLHG Committee

President:                               Dr Robert Bearman MBE                  

Chairman                                David Freke                           

Vice-Chairman                       Roger Gaunt                           

Secretary                                Vacant                          

Treasurer                                Alec Hitchman                       

Outings Secretary                   Rosemary Collier                                    

Programme Secretary             Claire Roberts                            

Other committee members:

Isobel Gill

Ilona Sekacz 

Catherine Petrie (PR)

Pamela Redgrave (Membership)

Contact: David Freke tel. 01295 670516 mob. 07876 290044 email: djfreke@gmail.com DF 14.01.24

Newsletter December 2023

PLEASE NOTE THAT OUR MEETING IS ON THE SECOND FRIDAY OF THE MONTH TO AVOID CHRISTMAS ACTIVITIES: SO IT’S THIS WEEK THE 8TH DECEMBER

M6
The M6 flying, more or less elegantly, over two historic canals in Birmingham. Photo DF.

Our meeting this Friday 8th December will be our biennial Christmas meeting when we enjoy contributions from our membership, before diving into the conviviality of mulled wine and mince pies.


This year we have two offerings. The first will be entitled “Birmingham – More Canals Than Venice!” delivered by Roger Butler, who will reveal the unsuspected magic of Birmingham’s waterways. Roger’s career has involved inland waterways and he has decades of experience of canals, from dereliction to rehabilitation.

Rialto bridge
The Rialto bridge, Grand Canal, Venice. Photo Encyclopaedia Britannica

He is well known for his superb photographs and he has previously spoken to us eloquently about the changing face of our local canal system.

We await with anticipation his comparison of Birmingham’s Gas Street Basin with Venice’s Grand Canal…

Richard Acton, with his famous monologues in 2010

The second item will be Friday Evenings in 135 Introductions by your chairman, who will muse indulgently, but briefly, about the job (sorry – joy!) of introducing nine meetings and three summer outings each year for fifteen years. That’s 135 preambles, and 45 visits. It’s a tale of technology, tact, transport, timing, thanks, diversity, entertainment, fun, facts and fees. I hope some longstanding members will be reminded of past triumphs and disasters, and recent joiners will see how we have got to the state we’re in now.


The committee will then revive members with the traditional mulled wine and mince pies to start our Christmas season.

Boudica, possibly

Report on Friday 17th November talk, given by Dr Paul
Grigsby,
about Roman Warwickshire. Dr Grigsby is a Research Fellow in the Classics and Ancient History Department of the University of Warwick, where he is part of the Warwick Classics Network. He also runs the Roman Coventry Project. Nonetheless, on Friday he began disarmingly by denying he had any specialist knowledge of Roman Warwickshire, a claim he then proceeded to demolish in a relaxed and informative discussion of Warwickshire’s place in the province of Britannia. The Fosse Way was probably a militarised zone in the first phase of the Roman conquest, with strategically placed forts like Chesterton straddling the military road. He made a strong case for Boudica’s last battle being in Warwickshire: somewhere along Watling Street? The specialist fort at The Lunt near Coventry may have been established to retrain the British tribes’ chariot horses as Roman cavalry mounts, conveniently close to the British rout.

The Edge Hill Coin Hoard II, in Warwick Museum. Photo DF

Paul introduced us to how the wider Roman world affected our locality through an analysis of the Second Edgehill Coin Hoard, a study being undertaken by one of his PhD students. The hoard has a particularly high proportion of coins from the Roman Civil War period, and Paul detailed the attempts of 4 aspirant emperors, all but the last of whom, Vespasian, came to a sticky end. The affluent later Roman period is represented locally by the Brookhampton villa, and the even larger villa recently discovered just over the border on the Broughton Castle estate.

Geophysics plot of Roman settlement near Sunrising Hill by local archaeologist David Sabin

Paul referenced the results of local archaeological research and field work to show that the rich agricultural resources of the Feldon were exploited to serve the needs of the Roman army, administrators and the populace. In answer to a question from the floor he made the important point that the population remained mainly British, although they adopted some aspects of the Roman lifestyle. The Roman army was recruited from conquered territories so military personnel in Britannia were foreigners, but local tribal leaders remained in nominal charge, albeit under Rome-appointed governors and administrators. Several in the audience recognised their own research activities in Dr Grigsby’s descriptions, and plans have been made with him to follow up aspects of local archaeology. His claim to know nothing about Roman Warwickshire looks increasingly thin!

Forthcoming K&DLHG talks at the Village Hall.

DateSpeakerTitle
8 DecemberRoger Butler,
David Freke
Birmingham – More Canals than Venice! Friday Evenings in 135 Introductions
19 January 2024John MilesCharlecote & the Lucy Family
16 FebruaryStephen BarkerThe Battle of Edgehill 1642
15 March AGMVanessa MorganLocal Rogues & Villains of the 19th century
19 AprilEmma BromleyThe Black Book of Warwick

Other Organisations’ Events
Tysoe Heritage Research Group. 13th December Tysoe Village Hall 7.00pm

Tysoe Heritage Research Group (THRG) presents
THE TYSOE 36
By Prof John Hunter

An illustrated presentation in Tysoe Village Hall

Wednesday December 13th at 7 pm

Exactly 150 years ago 36 villagers left Tysoe bound for New Zealand. Who were they? Why did they go? What happened on the voyage and how was their new home?

Open to all
Free admission (donations welcome)

Although this talk concentrates on emigrants from Tysoe, much of the context applies to Kineton and other
South Warwickshire villages, some of whose inhabitants emigrated to New Zealand, Canada and, Australia in the late 19th century

British Association for Local History. The Kineton Group is a Member of BALH and they run lectures

and talks which are open to our members. www.balh.org.uk for upcoming talks available virtually.

Don’t forget to check our own website at: Kineton and District Local History Group

Capturing Kineton's past

Still an attractive Christmas gift, Peter Ashley-Smith’s vignettes of Kineton characters, places and events. Only £10.00 available at meeting

Membership.

The committee has reluctantly raised the price of Membership for 2024 to £15pa. This is the first rise in 8 years, and is required to meet the rising costs of speaker fees, hall hire, and speakers’ travel expenses, which has become a significant amount since the fuel price hikes. Visitor entrance remains at £3.00 per meeting.

If you would like to become a Member of the group, our 2024 membership year starts in January. Members renewing note that you can pay by cheque made payable to Kineton and District Local History Group, sent or delivered to:
Alec Hitchman,
The Hills Farm,
Pillerton Hersey,
WARKS, CV35 0QQ,

With our bank now charging for payments by cheque or cash, we would urge those who can to please pay by BACS to our bank business account:
name: Kineton and District Local History Group, sort code: 40-43-19;
acc. no. 71281992. Please include your full name so we can correctly attribute your payment. For queries contact Alec on alec.hitchman@btinternet.com

2023-24 KDLHG Committee

President:                               Dr Robert Bearman MBE                  

Chairman                                David Freke                           

Vice-Chairman                        Roger Gaunt                           

Secretary                                Vacant                          

Treasurer                                Alec Hitchman                       

Outings Secretary                   Rosemary Collier                                    

Programme Secretary             Claire Roberts                            

Other committee members:

Isobel Gill

Ilona Sekacz 

Catherine Petrie (PR)

Pamela Redgrave (Membership)

Contact David Freke tel. 01295 670516 mob. 07876 290044 email: djfreke@gmail.com
DF 04.12.23

Newsletter October 2023

Our talk this Friday October 20th is a change from our Programme Card entry

Lady Godiva as she probably never looked

On Friday our topic is A Little History of Coventry by John Miles, who has kindly swapped places with our scheduled speaker Peter Walters who will now visit us in January. Coventry has a long, varied history and many famous personalities, some of whom have passed into legend, such as Lady Godiva. Evidence of settlement in the Roman period, is followed by Saxon occupation and the establishment of a first a nunnery then a priory. Earl Leofric gave part of his land to this monastery and kept part for himself (and his wife Godiva), thus dividing the administration of the city of Coventry for several hundred years.

Sir Frank Whittle,
Inventor of the jet engine

During this period Coventry became a major centre for the textile industry, and by the 14th century was the fourth largest city in England. It played a significant part in both the Wars of the Roses in the 15th century and the Civil Wars of the 17th. The medieval textile heritage was transformed in the 18th century by the rise of the silk ribbon weaving industry, which employed 25,000 people by the mid-19th century, only to collapse with the importation of cheaper versions. Revival came with clock and watch making, sewing machines, bicycles. motorbikes and, most recently, cars.


To condense this rich heritage into a little history sounds like a stimulating challenge, and we look forward to John Miles’ talk with keen anticipation.


Report on September 15th evening talk. Sir Lawrence Washington, the 16th century builder of Sulgrave Manor, made his entrance magnificently dressed, as befits the Lord of the Manor and Mayor of Northampton. He went on to describe the history of Sulgrave Manor and the Washington Family. His cod piece drew particular attention, but it was, as he explained, a justifiable the expression of the Washington family’s fecundity. At a time when rates of childhood mortality meant that only one in 10 children reached adulthood and death in childbirth was a common fate for women, the Washington genes proved remarkably resilient. He and his wife Elizabeth had 11 children and his son, Lawrence II and his wife Margaret, had 18 children.

The Washington Arms on the gable at Sulgrave Manor

Originally from Northumberland, in the 12th century the family name was de Hertburn, but they acquired the name of their home – Wessyngton – which became Washington in the 16th century. Coming south as a fixer for the aristocracy Lawrence Washington built up a thriving textile trading business, helped by his second wife’s fortune. He built the manor in 1540 soon after Queen Elizabeth ascended the throne, and her coat of arms, made in plaster, can still be seen on the gable over the porch. The Washington fortunes declined and in 1659 the family emigrated to the American colonies where they became prosperous land owners. A century later George Washington was in the military before the American Revolution propelled him into political activity. The Washington Arms show three spurs (for knighthood) above two stripes (fields) signifying that the title was granted on the field of battle. The arms were the inspiration for the American Union flag. The ancestral manor in Sulgrave also had its downs and ups.

Our speaker, channelling Lawrence Washington, was Martin Sinot-Smith, Managing Director of Sulgrave Manor Historical Lectures and Tours, whose enthusiasm for its heritage was infectious and much appreciated by the group.

DateSpeakerTitle
20 OctoberJohn MilesA Little History of Coventry
17 NovemberPaul GrigsbyRoman Warwickshire
8 DecemberVariousMembers’ Christmas Treats
19 January 2024Peter WaltersCharlecote & the Lucy Family
16 FebruaryStephen BarkerThe Battle of Edgehill 1642
15 March AGMVanessa MorganLocal Rogues & Villains of the 19th century

Other Organisations’ Events

Warwickshire Local History Society Primary School Hall, Aylesford School, Tapping Way, Warwick, CV34 6XR at 7.30.
Tuesday 17th October. Mr Gaydon of Brailes and other stories – adventures in local history by Maggie Wood,
Tuesday 21st November. Vulcan’s Temple – the story of Soho Foundry by Andrew Lou
Warmington Heritage Group Village Hall 7.30pm
Thursday 19th October Admiral Cowan- Sailor and Soldier by our own David Beaumont. If you missed this talk at Kineton last year you can catch it again in Warmington!
Lapworth Local History Society Village Hall 7.45pm
Tus 24th October The Gunpowder Plot and its Midland Connections by Allan Jennings
Marton Local History Group Village Hall 7.30pm
Monday 30th October Tales from the Churchyard
Kenilworth History and Archaeology Society Senior Citizens Club 7.30pm
Monday 13th November 60 Years of Change, Working Life at Baddesley Clinton 1923 – 1980
by Jill Kashi
British Association for Local History. The Kineton Group is a Member of BALH and they run lectures and talks which are open to our members. www.balh.org.uk for upcoming talks available virtually.
Don’t forget to check our own website at: Kineton and District Local History Group

Membership.
If you would like to become a Member of the group, it is worth considering waiting to join until our 2024 membership year starts in January. The entrance for non-members at our meetings is £3.00 so paying for the each of the three remaining 2023 meetings is a saving! Members renewing in January note that you can pay by cheque made payable to Kineton and District Local History Group, sent or delivered to:
Alec Hitchman,
The Hills Farm,
Pillerton Hersey,
WARKS, CV35 0QQ,
With our bank now charging for payments by cheque or cash, we would urge those who can to please pay by BACS to our bank business account:
name: Kineton and District Local History Group,
sort code: 40-43-19;
acc. no. 71281992. Please include your full name so we can correctly attribute your payment.
For queries contact Alec on alec.hitchman@btinternet.com

2023-24 KDLHG Committee

President:                               Dr Robert Bearman MBE                  

Chairman                                David Freke                           

Vice-Chairman                        Roger Gaunt                           

Secretary                                Vacant                          

Treasurer                                Alec Hitchman                       

Outings Secretary                   Rosemary Collier                                    

Programme Secretary             Claire Roberts                            

Other committee members:

Isobel Gill

Ilona Sekacz 

Catherine Petrie (PR)

Pamela Redgrave (Membership)

Contact David Freke tel. 01295 670516 mob. 07876 290044 email: djfreke@gmail.com
DF 15.10.23