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The BURTON JOYCE STORY - Part 1, 2, 3 & 4
Part 1
Situated in the valley alongside the River Trent ( to the east of Nottingham ) Burton Joyce and the area is steeped in history and character. BJ village itself is situated on the Old Grimsby to Nottingham Road, the route of the famous annual Goose Walk to the Nottingham Market - the Nottingham Goose Fayre. There are tradition market towns within easy reach - Southwell and Newark  with a multitude of National Trust properties all within an hour or so drive
Todays  village has some 2000 properties and a population in the region of 4000. It boasts a thriving Primary School, 2 Medical Practices/Surgeries, several shops and a wide range of services and interests
There is a variety of local employment with excellent road, rail and water connections with Nottingham to the west, road access to the MI and A1 (north and south) in addition to the long standing well established routes to the East Coast and A1.
Our Trentside area is a unique habitat for numerous forms of wildlife and flora, whilst our village communities offer many social and leisure interests. The annual 3 Villages Gala being just one or our traditional events
The Poplars Sports Ground is one of the finest in the area with a multitude of Junior, Senior, Ladies football team pitches,  plus superb Cricket Playing area and Nets, we have a modern sports Pavilion (available for private hire), there are excellent Flat  Green Bowling facilities,  plus a special “set aside” Archery area (for safety) etc., etc.
We have many local interest groups and societies for the most diverse of tastes, incl dramatics, arts & crafts, choral, scouts, guides, local history, learning groups, seniors, WI, coffee mornings, runners and much more – or you can simply enjoy the extensive variety of riverside walks, boating, fishing, sailing, horse riding and even Gliding and Flying facilities which are close by in this beautiful, picturesque area, with many interesting adjoining villages and surrounding areas. It is a fact that our village of Burton Joyce was originally included within and designated as the SE extremity of the world famous SHERWOOD FOREST.
Our community is quite diverse in age and occupation, yet without exception every visitor is offered the hand of friendship
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Very little remains of “burh-tun”, the fortified farmhouse high on the hill above the present day village.
 The village names of BURTON JOYCE and BULCOTE are said to be derived from “BURTUNE JORZ” and “BOUCOT”.. .. “BURTUNE” could either mean “the farm on the hill” or “the farm in a fortified place” , “JORZ” was added later because around 1160 <1380 the chief owners were the de Jorz family
A Richard de Jorse appears in the early Sherwood Forest Records. He was one of the family who were Lords of the Manor of Burton for about two hundred years. The name has many variants - Jorse, Jors, Jorz, Jort, Jortz, Jorce and Joice, until it eventually became Joyce.
In the time of King John (around 1200) Geoffrey de Jorz was the keeper of Sherwood Forest and in 1331 a Jorz family member was the Sheriff of Nottingham ( possibly Sir Robert ?)
Is it possible that this was the Sheriff who actually locked horns with the legendary Robin Hood ?
One fact not disputed is that BJ village must always have been the attractive Trent side village it is today, with the high ground overlooking the Trent to the South. This location would have been an ideal spot for an encampment, with excellent defensive qualities with a clear vision all around the area, coupled with the superb transit possibilities provided by the River Trent. The area originally was also the most south eastern extremity of Sherwood Forest the village sitting on the north bank side of the River Trent - just a 2 hours walk (as the crow flies) from Nottingham Castle.
Today BJ sprawls out and up into the side of a chain of low hills which run due eastward from Nottingham Castle to a point some 3 miles beyond Burton Joyce. Situated on the ridge is the Parish boundary, where Romano-British pottery has been found - the pottery of the first half of the 4th century AD and a coin found on the “Rabbit Bank” ( a popular name for the hillside on the north side of Nottingham Road) - indicates Roman occupation
PART 2
We are located not far from the old Bridleway access from BJ, over the top of the ridge and onto the next village-Lambley, ( 45 minute walk) and further on to Woodboro ( 90 minutes walk) and yet still further on to Calverton ( another walk of 30 minutes or so ) - We can look due south from Hillcrest, down the hill towards the River Trent, which meanders from the west towards BJ via Stoke Bardolph ( 30 minutes walk). It carves out a huge “water highway” with a long slow bend, in the valley, as it meanders on its journey east, down river - towards Gunthorpe, Caythorpe, Bleasby and beyond ( The Trent has always been main waterway from the East Midlands to the east coast - via Newark and Gainsborough to the North Sea at Grimsby.Is it that all these facts contribute to why there has been an influx of greater numbers of the family from the surrounding villages into BJ rather than the other way around outwards ?
When we look south, two horizons are visible - the nearest being approx 30/45 minutes walk away and the second way beyond, possibly a full days walk away. On this second horizon running eastwards, it is possible to see the profile of the ramparts and towers of Belvoir Castle (pronounced “Beever” Castle) the ancestral home of the “Manning dynasty - the Marquis of Granby. A superb and natural location for a “look out” and defensive position.
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From time to time there are the most spectacular colourful visions to be seen from Burton Joyce, sunrise and sunsets in the summer month produce an ambience and kaleidoscope of rich colour shades which even in the 1600, 1700 and 1800 must have been as strikingly beautiful as they are today - a sight enhanced by the occasional rainbow created (provides by the light from of a setting sun). The vision is so close, that the ends of the rainbow always appear to be within ones grasp and is beyond belief and words of explanation - these time are truly breath-taking. However, in the summer of 2007 there was a scene which we guess will not be repeated our lifetime - It was a clear balmy summer evening, we knew that something spectacular was about to happen for the local TV Presenter had advised everyone to watch out for it, but we were not confident that we would be fortunate to see it - but we did. Bang-on schedule at 10.40pm and on a track across the sky - West of North West towards East of South East we spotted the brightly shining.. .. .. International Space Station.. .. . followed in its wake some 7 seconds later by the .. .. American Space Shuttle,.. .. equally as brightly lit. What an experience ! What a feeling ! boardering on the deep emotional feelings of mis-belief, wonderment and admiration for the fact that men and women of our generation, from down here on earth, were up there - flying thro the heavens - unbelievable, yet it was there happening for all to see here in BJ
In Autumn, when the earth/land is relatively warm and the early morning air is cold, the most erie of sights come into view - the morning awakes with the valley flooded with a low-lying mist, ( which gives the appearance of a wide reservoir of water, a water which sits quite still and comfortably between BJ and the first southern horizon, - 45 minutes walk away). Only the square Norman Tower of Shelford Church Tower - in the midst of the valley, remains in survival mode, peeking above the mist, which takes on a appearance of a “expansive reservoir” with a still and calm “water-line”.
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PART 3
LIFE GENERALLY - 1600 <Â
Life in these times must have been very hard. No running water , no transport, no NHS, no flushing toilets, unmade roads and paths (becoming quagmires for most of the year), lack of sewage treatment, no schools, no shops as such , just the basics in food and drink , having to fetch water from streams or rivers in all weathers ( winter and summer - we know there was some running water for a “beck“ has always run off the hillside parallel to Lambley Lane and there was also a small “spring” at the east end of Main street. This spring giving and was the “identifying name” to Abel Alvey’s Main St cottage in the late 1800’s),
No baths or showers, clothes worn day in and day out, very frequently a complete lack of shoes, no tea, coffee or soft drinks, access completely without lighting (gas lights came much later), the heating was probably one fire in the food area of a home, no duvets on the sleeping areas - probably just skins or straw, there was a complete lack of food choice- sometimes a complete lack of food? (“You have what you’ve got and that’s it.! “), possibly the occasional milk from a goat or a friends cow, berries, and fish caught in the river or rabbit ( when one was brave or desperate enough to ignore the consequences of being caught red-handed - “poaching?”), the odd rabbit or bird and eggs from the water fowl nests, etc. etc.. would have been luxury itself. When the winds blow either from the South West or the North East, it can be quite “hairy” in BJ. The wind will find the easiest route and it will “howl” up/down the large gulley with its bridal way which runs from BJ village up and over the escarpment to Lambley village. Tree damage is all too frequent an occurrence
These must have been just some of the downsides of life in the 1600’s , however there must have been one or two upsides also, otherwise the village would never have attracted migrants into the community and it would surely have degenerated and died completely
It is said that….
In 1500 an employed Nottingham man earned £20 per year - a house could be built for the princely sum of .. .. £6.! ! ! ! Yes…. Six Pounds Sterling
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It should be mentioned that during this early period of time the Nottingham was quite an unruly town to live in and to be caught in alone in after dark, as was much of the surrounding area. The punishment meted out to felons was barbarous, in many cases hanging was common so much so the gallows needed renewing from time to time. There was burning at the stake, branding with hot irons and the stocks. pillory and cock-stool were kept in constant repair. For felons there was the town gaol, a fearsome place with cells below ground level, there was also another lock-up ominously called “the cage”. In 1607 there was the Houses of Correction for the “sturdy beggars” who tried to live on their wits
In 1567 ”Thoroton” suggested.. Burton Joyce consisted of 15 messuages, 10 cottages, 20 tofts, 1 dovecote, 20 gardens, 500 acres of land, 100 acres of meadow, 100 acres of pasture, 40 acres of wood, 100 acres of furze and heath.
These figures suggest a population of approx 150 <200. A number which was probably still relevant at the beginning of the 1600’s
Attendance at the “new” Protestant Church of England ( St Helens) had been compulsory since 1570 as part of a campaign against the Catholics after the Pope had excommunicated the Queen..
STOCKINGERS/ FWK/ LACE
Flemish refugees introduced pillow and bobbin lace to England in the 1500s , founding a major cottage industry
Lace generated romance and almost religious fever. The Rev William Lee resolved to mechanise the hand practise of stocking making- The result in 1589 he invented the Stocking Frame - capable of producing and entire row in the time it took an experienced knitter to form a single loop
Lace had become the infant of the stocking trade
1641 there were less than 100 frames operating n the whole country, it was in this year that the Frame Work Knitting in Nottingham is recorded.
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Burton Joyce 1650 < 1700
 STOCKINGERS/ FWK/ LACE
The Rev William Lee resolved to mechanise the hand practice of stocking making- The result in 1589 he invented the Stocking Frame - capable of producing and entire row in the time it took an experienced knitter to form a single loop
Lace had become the infant of the stocking trade
1641 there were less than 100 frames operating n the whole country, it was in this year that the Frame Work Knitting in Nottingham is recorded.
TRANSPORT
The River Trent was most important,. Although it was shallow and impeded by many obstacles ( Bull Shoal in the bend at BJ), it flooded frequently creating devastation to the area.
There were small ferries at Gunthorpe and Stoke Bardolph, but only a ford at BJ. 10/12 men were required to haul heavy boats up the river ( towards Nottingham ) It was not until 1781 we saw Nottingham Corporation seeking an Act of Parliament to allow horses to tow the barges rather than men , but they were unsuccessful in this attempt. It was pointed out that if some of the restrictions were removed , one horse could haul nearly double the weight pulled by 10/12 men - in half the time and much more cheaply - Also the horses would cause much less wear to the “haling” than the feet of 10<12 men
The road from Nottingham to Grimsby passes thro BJ.On North side of the River Trent and on to the Bleasby Ferry over the river and then onto Newark. The road is described as
“no pleasant way, being in many places deep and clayey. Not affording altogether that conveniency of entertainment as you have in mind in the direct and more frequented roads”
TAXATION -Â Â
During the period 1660< 1670 a “Hearth Tax” was introduced. We are lead to believe that this was a means of raising revenue to pay forCromwell’s armyIn theory the head of every household in the village should be included, (the families exempt from the tax , were those in poverty but they should be listed - their hearths to be described as “uncharged“).
Two lists for BJ & B show that
In 1663 - 47 households were charged and 22 uncharged revealing a likely population of approx 300. In 1674 - 35 households were charges and 11 uncharged revealing a likely population of approx 200.This would show a major decrease in population, however, records are often incomplete - some 100 years later in 1796 Hearth Tax returns show a number of inhabited houses as only 35. The list would not include houses of very low rental.It is interesting to note that even later Returns Lists show the same number of “charged” houses as in1674.
ROADS and TRANSPORT
Will not have developed or improved appreciably over this period
EMPLOYMENT
Still predominantly agriculturalÂ
1651
1660 Hearth Tax introduced was used to raise cash nationally for thefighting men’s pay
1663 Richard Broad Vicar
1680 -1686 Richard Broad , the Vicar had also been the schoolmaster
1694 Joseph Hawkins Vicar
1696 Industrial development in piped water to limited areas of Nottingham( privately owned)
1699 Thomas Tye Vicar
SOME FAMILIES LIVING IN B J IN THIS TIME SLICE
Joseph & Dorcas Alvey family
John Pecke - Churchwarden - could read and write
William Stampe - could not sign his own name
Robert Padley - could not sign his own name
John Blatherwick - yeoman of Bulcote
Mary Blatherwick
Elizabeth Blatherwick
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BurtonJoyce Tennis Club - Cragmoor Road, BJ, NG14 5AR
"Adult Group Tennis Coaching"
New courses start September 2011 - Ladies Wednesday 1pm<3pm
Ladies Improvers sessions Friday 1pm < 3pm
These sessions are run by fully licensed ( CRB checked) LTA Coach Ruth Rae tel 07968 537378
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Junior/Adult individual or group coaching is also available
Equipment provided, however suitable footwear must be worn
To join the Tennis Club -contact  Heather Ankers tel 0115 953 7173Â
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First Contact Signposting Scheme 22/07/2011 15:38:56
Information sent on behalf of Nottinghamshire Police (General)
Message sent by
John Lennard (Police, Volunteer & NHW Administrator, Rushcliffe, Gedling, Broxtowe, Newark & Sherwood)
(Please do not reply directly to this email, please use the button at the bottom of this message)
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First Contact Signposting Scheme
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If you’re 60 or over First Contact gets you help from lots of organisations to help you stay safe and independent in your home through one simple checklist. No need to make numerous telephone calls and give the same information to lots of different people. Complete the checklist and you’ll be contacted by people who can help. They may offer a home visit, but will always contact you first (always ask for their ID).
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The scheme is a partnership of key agencies and organisations, and operates across Nottinghamshire.
Call Nottinghamshire County Council on 08449 808080 or visit
http://www.nottinghamshire.gov.uk/firstcontact to complete a checklist.
First Contact in Rushcliffe, Broxtowe and Gedling is managed by Rushcliffe Community & Voluntary Service and administered by Nottinghamshire County Council.
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Mid-July and it seems that the drought has broken at last, and the temperatures suggests we have reached the middle of the year. This is the best time of year for the wild flowers, not just the small ones such as vetches, ground ivy and cinquefoil, which pass unnoticed by many people, but also the more showy ones such as red poppies, foxgloves as in Savernake Forest and meadow cranesbill, which is almost the same as the garden variety. In woods, honeysuckle can now be found in flower. It has paler flowers than many of the cultivated ones. I expect by the time you read this the wild clematis and rosebay willow herb will be flowering.
I expected, in June to see a variety of butterflies on the river banks, but most sightings were of the orange/brown small skippers, with one small white and a hedge brown. Some moths fly by day. One such is the six spot burnett moth which is black with red spots. While pulling a lettuce in the garden I disturbed a scarlet tiger, the first of the season. Whilst the crickets were singing in the long grass and we got a good view of a few as they jumped. At a higher level banded snails, that vary from dark to almost white, were numerous. A few ladybirds were about and much the same size was a garden chafer. This had brown elytra (wing cases) while the head and thorax were a metallic, dark green.
As the hay fever sufferers know, the grasses are now flowering. Cocks foot at its peak shows a purple bloom as the anthers shed their pollen and the tall, false oat grass is starting to show its full beauty. This month will see the Yorkshire fog showing rich, pinkish-purple flower heads. The grass looks rather different depending on its stage of development and may or not be liked by cattle. The type of grass found varies according to the soil and the moisture content, but barley grass is usually to be found on gravelly roadsides and there are some that are only to be found when on coastal holidays
Adapted from an article by Rosie Pauline
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