Maggie/915 Posted March 13, 2013 Report Posted March 13, 2013 The book reprinted by Rev Osgathorp in 1949,gives slightly more information to later editions.The books are of Bedlington Church by the Rev A Campbell Fraser, MASketches by Mrs A E MacLeodI grew up in the knowledge that the monks fled from Lindisfarne and the Vikings first and then again from the Normans.The date Saturday the 12th Dec 1069 is mentioned.I am attempting to reproduce the page but it is only a hand held.
Maggie/915 Posted March 13, 2013 Author Report Posted March 13, 2013 Then there was a vicar who buried his horse in part of the Graveyard.Also the poet who asked the Vicar to be quicker because he was keeping folks from there dinners.Both items are history.Which is important?
Malcolm Robinson Posted March 13, 2013 Report Posted March 13, 2013 I just wrote up that one about the horse and the vicar! Wonder if the headstone is still there?
Maggie/915 Posted March 14, 2013 Author Report Posted March 14, 2013 Henry Coates vicar at St Cuthbert's from 1788 it seems erected the tombstone to his horse Wheatley.Weddell who was said to be the Plessey Poet wrote a poem accusing him of having shot the horse to save it's keep. Corn and hay was expensive, at the time it seems.Life in Bedlington has never been dull.Sorry cannot send the picture because I am in exile from home and wi-fi.How would we survive without our Internet access!I feel a new topic coming on!
Maggie/915 Posted March 14, 2013 Author Report Posted March 14, 2013 The Tombstone appears to say:- A. D. 1801Steady the Path ordain'd by nature's GodAnd free from human vices, Wheatley trodYet hop'd no future life- his all he liv'dThe turf he grazed his parting breath receivedAnd now protect his bones:disturb them notBut let one faithful horse respected rot.Maybe the bones are now under someone'shouse.
Maggie/915 Posted March 14, 2013 Author Report Posted March 14, 2013 The sermons of this vicar were long.Bob Charlton wroteI pray Mr Vicar. Do try to be quickerIn teaching us miserable sinnersOur bellies are croaking, and its truly provokingTo be kept so long from our dinners!Wonder if it worked!
Malcolm Robinson Posted March 14, 2013 Report Posted March 14, 2013 The book I read said the horse was buried next door to the graveyard.Vicar Coates also seems to have played a part in awarding apprenticeships to paupers in Ashington? Now where did I file that bit?
Maggie/915 Posted March 14, 2013 Author Report Posted March 14, 2013 I have lost a post.Guess now I will double post!I understood the stone was moved because the housing estate was being built.
Keith Scantlebury Posted March 16, 2013 Report Posted March 16, 2013 If its next door to the graveyard it could have been in what became the school field. So chances are, the new Vicarage will be built over it.
HIGH PIT WILMA Posted March 23, 2013 Report Posted March 23, 2013 I learned that St Cuthbert's Church was originally laid,probably a wood building,and consecrated,in the year 611 ad.[yes...not 1611....but 611ad.!]The Saxon's built the stone church,and the original Chancel Arch still stands with typical Saxon zig-zag pattern.The Norman's came and destroyed most of the Church,rebuilding it with their own designs.Apparently,with the Norman's,religion didn't play a part in their building work,it was more to be of a grand scale to show enemies and people of the lands they concquered,how superior they were with their building skills.Symbols of power,so to speak...if it's true what you read!!..Then what about the recent vicar who had the ridulously horrific idea,of burying the historic font in the Church grounds....so future Archeologistscould make a sensational find in their day.......[he happened to be an Archeologist!]
Malcolm Robinson Posted March 24, 2013 Report Posted March 24, 2013 HPW,I am working on a heritage project, can you tell me where the 611AD date comes from and can it be substantiated? Also who was the recent vicar?
mickypotts Posted March 24, 2013 Report Posted March 24, 2013 I can clearly remember when I was at the infants school next to the church we would have play time in the field past the graveyard on church road, about 3/4 of the way down the wall on the back of the field was a small stone marker close up to the wall and we were always told by the teachers that it was the vicars horse buried there, anyone else recall this?
Malcolm Robinson Posted March 24, 2013 Report Posted March 24, 2013 Is that where the new vicarage is now micky?
Keith Scantlebury Posted March 24, 2013 Report Posted March 24, 2013 Is that where the new vicarage is now micky?It is Malcolm
Keith Scantlebury Posted March 24, 2013 Report Posted March 24, 2013 The book reprinted by Rev Osgathorp in 1949,gives slightly more information to later editions.The books are of Bedlington Church by the Rev A Campbell Fraser, MASketches by Mrs A E MacLeodI grew up in the knowledge that the monks fled from Lindisfarne and the Vikings first and then again from the Normans.The date Saturday the 12th Dec 1069 is mentioned.I am attempting to reproduce the page but it is only a hand held.An early memory of mine was the Vicar that caught fire. He used to be a regular visitor to our house when we lived in the Market Place, he married my parents and later christened me at St Cuthberts. It was the afore mentioned Osgathorpe. Cannon Osgathorpe as he was then, was warming his backside in front of our coal fire when he got a bit too close , he was in his work claes and they whent ahaad. My mother chucked the dish water over him to put it out.
Maggie/915 Posted March 24, 2013 Author Report Posted March 24, 2013 His grave is in the church yard.Near the vestry.Osgathorp claimed his bible saved him from death in a World War.He seemed very old so I assumed the first but I was young and he seemed ancient.I have a confirmation list that reads like a who's who of Bedlington.The days when you knew everyone, or the family did. For old pictures etc we need to write down people time and place.My mother and father were the font of all names.I just enjoyed the history of it all, still do
mickypotts Posted March 29, 2013 Report Posted March 29, 2013 Well with google street view I see that there are now 3 houses standing where the playing field was from the church down to Towers close, if you go between the 2 houses on Church road until you hit the tree line in the back yard that is where the gravestone was, there was a stone wall then a small field and then the vicarage, the ground was probably undisturbed when they built the houses since it was in the back
mickypotts Posted March 29, 2013 Report Posted March 29, 2013 I see they kept the original stone wall and rebuilt it with original stone to allow for the houses, that was a nice touch of preservation
Symptoms Posted March 29, 2013 Report Posted March 29, 2013 I remember that stone wall too. At one section it enclosed a grazing field (probably where streetview shows Tower Close) and the wall was about 5' tall. The field ran across to the back of Patterson's yard where they used to park their removal lorries - access to the yard was from Front St. Again, I've looked at streetview and the only opening looks to be through an arch lower down Front St than I remember (I had a recollection it was right next to the Vicarage). The field always had a few cows and a couple of horses in it and I'm sure they belonged to the Pattersons. We used to 'nick' across the field as a shortcut to get to the yard ... I knew the son but can't recall his given name as he, like most of our mates, were known by nicknames - his was Patterninny. He'd be 60ish now and I think he may have joined the Peelers.
Maggie/915 Posted April 7, 2013 Author Report Posted April 7, 2013 The old vicarage and the garden parties held by The Osgathorps are good to remember.Not quite like the version in The Leek Club.I remember everyone being friendly and kind.The house and garden must have their own history.Wonder when the house was built?
Keith Scantlebury Posted April 7, 2013 Report Posted April 7, 2013 The old vicarage and the garden parties held by The Osgathorps are good to remember.Not quite like the version in The Leek Club.I remember everyone being friendly and kind.The house and garden must have their own history.Wonder when the house was built?Brilliant those garden parties, weren't they
Andy Millne Posted April 8, 2013 Report Posted April 8, 2013 The house and garden must have their own history.Wonder when the house was built?The main part of The Old Vicarage was built in 1835 with the older wing built 18th century. I don't have an exact date for the older part but I'm digging.
Symptoms Posted April 8, 2013 Report Posted April 8, 2013 GGGG - "I don't have an exact date for the older part but I'm digging." They're not that old surely? 1
Andy Millne Posted April 8, 2013 Report Posted April 8, 2013 GGGG - "I don't have an exact date for the older part but I'm digging." They're not that old surely?haha, I'm told that's how people found out about old things before the Interwebs.
Maggie/915 Posted April 8, 2013 Author Report Posted April 8, 2013 The vicarage is a lovely old house.
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