Haconby
Haconby | |
---|---|
St Andrew's church | |
Population | 448 [1] |
OS grid reference | TF1025 |
District | |
Shire county | |
Region | |
Country | England |
Sovereign state | United Kingdom |
Post town | BOURNE |
Postcode district | PE10 |
Dialling code | 01778 |
Police | Lincolnshire |
Fire | Lincolnshire |
Ambulance | East Midlands |
UK Parliament | |
Haconby is a small village located on the western edge of the Lincolnshire Fens, three miles north of Bourne in the district of South Kesteven.
Geography
It is situated just off the A15 road. Two miles to the west is Stainfield, which is part of the civil parish. To the south of the village is Hacconby Hall.
The civil parish extends northwards to just north of the A15/B1177 junction, skirting the southern edge of Dunsby Hall Farm. The parish boundary extends due east, along the Hacconby Lode drain over Hacconby Fen, following Hacconby Drove to the south. To the north is the parish of Dunsby and Dunsby Fen. It reaches the South Forty-Foot Drain. The parish boundary (also with Pinchbeck and South Holland follows this drain for just under a mile south. It then follows Lane Dike due west which crosses the Car Dyke just north of Cardyke Farm. The parish boundary crosses the A15 next to a transmitter and extends westwards to reach the north of Spring Wood, where it meets the large parish of Edenham. Just south of Thorny Wood it meets the parish of Dunsby. The parish boundary follows the southern edge of Dunsby Wood, crossing the Stainfield-Kirkby Underwood road just north of Stainfield spa, a chalybeate spring discovered in 1720 by Dr Edward Greathead of Lincoln.
History
The village has also been known as Hacconby (Haakon's village), the features of the village are its chapel which is the smallest gallery seated chapel in the country. The village church is dedicated to St Andrew. On 27 February 2008, the parish church spire was damaged by the 2008 Lincolnshire earthquake.
There are no amenities in the village other than the local pub: the Hare and Hounds on West Road. The nearest post office/shops are in the adjacent village of Morton to the south. A former railway line passed north-south close to the east of the village - the Sleaford branch of the Great Northern Railway, which closed to passengers in 1930 and to freight in 1964. A Roman road, King Street, (from Bourne to just south of Ancaster) passes through the western part of the parish, just west of Stainfield. There was a Roman town near Stainfield. The primary school closed in the 1970s.
References
External links
- Parish Council (shared with Stainfield)
- Village information
- Stainfield
- Folk music at the Hare and Hounds