Online Encyclopedia

HIGHAM FERRERS

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V13, Page 455 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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HIGHAM

FERRERS  , a market
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town and municipal borough in the Eastern
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parliamentary division of Northamptonshire, England, 63 m . N.N.W. from
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London, on branches of the London & North-Western and Midland
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railways . Pop . (1901), 2540 . It is pleasantly situated on high ground above the south
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bank of the
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river Nene . The church of St
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Diary is among the most beautiful of the many
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fine churches in Northamptonshire . To the Early
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English chancel a very wide north aisle, resembling a second
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nave, was added in the Decorated period, and the general appearance of the chancel, with its north aisle and Lady-
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chapel, is Decorated . The tower with its fine
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spire and west front was partially but carefully rebuilt in the 17th century . Close to the church, but detached from it, stands a beautiful Perpendicular
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building, the school-house, founded by Archbishop Chichele in 1422 . The Bede House, a somewhat similar structure by the same founder, completes a striking
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group of buildings . In the town are remains of Chichele's college . Higham Ferrers sharesin the widespread
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local industry of shoemaking .

The town is governed by a

mayor, 4 aldermen and 12 councillors,
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Area, 1945 acres . Higham (Hecham, Heccam, Hegham Ferers) was evidently a large
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village before the Domesday Survey . It was then held by . William Peverel of the king, but on the forfeiture of the lordship by his son it was granted in 1199 to William Ferrers,
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earl of Derby . On the
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outlawry of Robert his grandson it passed to Edmund, earl of Lancaster, and, reverting to the
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crown in 1322, was granted to Aymer de
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Valence, earl of Pembroke, but escheated to the crown in 1327, and was granted to Henry, earl of Lancaster . The castle, which may have been built before Henry III. visited Higham in 1229, is mentioned in 1322, but had been destroyed by 1540 . It appears by the confirmation of Henry III. in 1251 that the borough originated in the previous
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year when William de Ferrers, earl of Derby, manumitted by charter ninety-two persons, granting they should have a
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free borough . A mayor was elected from the beginning of the reign of Richard II., while a town hall is mentioned in 1395 . The revenues of Chichele's college were given to the corporation by the charter of 1566, whereby the borough returned one representative to parliament, a
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privilege enjoyed until 1832 . James I. in 1604 gave the mayor the commission of the peace with other privileges which were confirmed by Charles II. in 1664 . The old charters were surrendered in 1684 and a new grant obtained; a further charter was granted in 1887 .

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