Online Encyclopedia

SPALDING

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V25, Page 592 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
Spread the word: del.icio.us del.icio.us it!

SPALDING  , a

market
See also:
town in the Holland or Spalding
See also:
parliamentary division of
See also:
Lincolnshire, England, on the
See also:
river Welland, and on the
See also:
Great
See also:
Northern and Great Eastern
See also:
railways, 93 M . N. from
See also:
London . Pop. of urban
See also:
district (1901), 9385 . The town is the centre of a rich agricultural district . The parish church of St Mary and St Nicholas was built in 1284 and is of
See also:
peculiar construction, having four aisles to the
See also:
nave . It is mainly Decorated in style . The adjoining lady
See also:
chapel (St Mary and St Thomas a Becket) was built in 1315; in 1588 it was appropriated for the grammar school endowed in 1568 by John Blanke and again in 1588 by John Gamlyn . A new grammar school was erected in 1881 . There are several
See also:
modern churches and chapels, a corn
See also:
exchange, a Christian association and
See also:
literary institute, and the Johnson hospital (1881, endowed) . The existing high
See also:
bridge over the Welland, constructed in 1838, took the place of a wooden erection dating from the end of the 17th century; this last was built on the site of a
See also:
Roman bridge of two arches, the
See also:
foundations of the centre pier of which were disclosed when the wooden bridge was constructed . Trade is principally agricultural, and there is considerable
See also:
water-
See also:
traffic on the Welland . Although there are no traces of settlement at Spalding (Spaltnige) before
See also:
late Saxon times there was probably a
See also:
village here before Thorold the
See also:
sheriff founded his cell of Crowland Abbey in 1051 .

In Domesday

See also:
Book the
See also:
manor is said to belong to No de Taillebois, who possessed a market there worth 4os., six
See also:
fisheries and
See also:
rent from salt-pans . The manor was afterwards granted to
See also:
Angers, and later belonged to Spalding Priory, which retained it until at the suppression it passed to the
See also:
Crown . Stephen made Spalding Priory
See also:
free of toll, while John gave the monks
See also:
forest rights . The town was governed by the prior's manorial court, and never became a parliamentary or municipal borough . The prior obtained the grant of the Friday market in 1242, and in the reign of
See also:
Edward I. claimed from of old fairs on the feast of St Nicholas and fifteen days following, and on the vigil and octave of St
See also:
Cross . In more modern times Spalding was well known for the club known as the " Gentleman's Society," founded in 1710 by Maurice Johnson, which met once a week at a coffee-house in the town for the discussion of literary and antiquarian subjects, and numbered among its members Newton, Bentley, Addison, Pope and Gay .

End of Article: SPALDING
[back]
SPALATO, or SPALATRO (Serbo-Croatian Spljet or Spli...
[next]
WILLIAM SPALDING (1809-1859)

Additional information and Comments

There are no comments yet for this article.
» Add information or comments to this article.
Please link directly to this article:
Highlight the code below, right click and select "copy." Paste it into a website, email, or other HTML document.