The name
Mills states that Barrow usually means 'the wood or
grove' so the full meaning of the village's name can be
translated as 'the wood or grove by the River Humber'.
More information can be found in:
- Cameron, Keith. The Place-Names of Lincolnshire.
- Mills, A.D. A Dictionary of English Place Names.
The place
Barrow upon Humber is located three miles east of Barton. The
town is an ancient Christian site as it was here in the seventh
century that St Chad founded a monastery on land given by Wilfhere,
King of Mercia.
The parish church of Holy Trinity has in its churchyard a
sundial made in 1731 by James Harrison, brother of the famous John
Harrison. The Harrison family moved to Barrow in 1697 where James
and John's father held the post of parish clerk for many years.
John Harrison's revolutionary chronometer changed the face of
marine navigation. His struggle to prove his invention worked and
win the 320,000 prize offered by the Board of Longitude is well
documented most recently in Dava Sobel's novel Longitude which
was adapted into a television series staring Michael Gambon and
Jeremy Irons.
Population history
| Year |
Population |
|
1801
|
926
|
|
1811
|
1129
|
|
1821
|
1307
|
|
1831
|
1334
|
|
1841
|
1662
|
|
1851
|
2283
|
|
1861
|
2443
|
|
1871
|
2517
|
|
1881
|
2711
|
|
1891
|
2695
|
|
1901
|
2808
|
|
1911
|
2734
|
|
1921
|
2959
|
|
1931
|
2905
|
|
1941
|
N/A
|
|
1951
|
2719
|
|
1961
|
2475
|
|
1971
|
2219
|
|
1981
|
2502
|
|
1991
|
2161
|
Entry from Kelly's Trade Directory for 1900
Barrow on Humber is a parish and large well-built village, 2
miles south from the Humber, 2 miles south-west from New Holland
station on that branch and 1¾ south from Barrow Haven
station on the Barton branch of the Great Central (late M.S. and
L.) railway, 2½ east from Barton and 5 south-south-west from
Hull, in the North Lindsey division of the county, parts of
Lindsey, north division of Yarborough wapentake, Glanford Brigg
union, Barton-upon-Humber petty sessional division and county court
district, rural deanery of Yarborough No.1, archdeaconry of Stow
and diocese of Lincoln. There is a ferry across the Humber to Hull.
The village is lighted with gas by the Barrow on Humber Gas Co.
Ltd, formed in 1877, who bought the works from the Provincial Gas
Light and Coke Co. The church of the Holy Trinity is an ancient
edifice of stone in the Norman and Early English styles, consisting
of chancel, nave, aisles, south porch, organ chamber and an
embattled western tower with pinnacles, containing a clock and 6
bells, which have been re-hung, at a cost of £130: a stained
triplet of lancets was inserted in 1856: the chancel retains a
piscina and aumbry: there are several stained windows and choir
stalls of oak, erected mainly at the cost of Mrs. Maw, of The
Grange: the church plate was presented by an ancestor of the late
Mr. Kirk, of Barrow: the church was partially restored in 1841 and
1856, and again in the year 1869, at a cost of £1,400, under
the direction of Messrs. Kirk and Parry architects, of Sleaford; in
1868 the church was reseated and further restored: there are
sittings for 397 persons. The register dates from the year 1561.
The Living is a vicarage, net yearly value £213, including 35
acres of glebe, with residence, in the gift of the Lord Chancellor,
and held since 1878 by the Rev. John Parker M.A. University College
of Durham. Sir John Nelthorpe bart. In 1669 bequeathed lands to
found a Sunday afternoon lectureship, the appointment to which is
in the hands of trustees; the Rev. John Parker MA is the present
lecturer. Here are Wesleyan, Primitive Methodist and Congregational
chapels. In 1856 a cemetery was formed, at a cost of £1,000,
with an area of 4 acres: it has two chapels, and is now under the
control of the Parish Council. The charities left in 1596 by Roger,
5th Earl of Rutland, amount to £14 2s. 6d. yearly, of which
£7 6s. 8d. is distributed among the poor by the vicar and
churchwardens. Barrow Fair is held on October 11th. About a mile to
the north - west of the village, on the marsh, is an earthwork
called "The Castle" in about 8 acres, and consists of a
large circular mound, surrounded by a fosse 40 feet wide, and
surmounted by a small tumulus: round this are grouped several
irregularly shaped outworks, also enfossed: the fortification was
well protected on the south by a stream which formerly created a
swamp or bog in that direction. A little to the north of the
village is the site of a convent, founded by St. Chad in the 7th
century and which Bede says remained in his time (673 -735): some
years ago stone coffins, a gold ring, an iron weapon and other
relics were found here. Barrow Hall, a well-built mansion of brick,
on the south side of the village, is now the residence of the Rev.
George Crowle Uppleby, and stands within a park of 150 acres. The
manorial rights, which belonged to the Crown, were sold in the year
1859. The lords of the manor are Henry Edwards Paine and Richard
Brettell esqrs. Both of Chertsey, Surrey. The principal landowners
are the Rev. G.C. Uppleby, the trustees of Mrs. Maw,
Tombleson's trustees and the Corbett trustees. The soil is
partly loam, chalk and clay; subsoil, principally chalk. The chief
crops are wheat, barley, oats and turnips. The area is 5,050 acres
of land, 15 of water, 5 of tidal water and 161 of foreshore;
rateable value, £15,485, including New Holland; the
population in 1891 was 2,687, including New Holland (1,176).
Holdings in North Lincolnshire Local Studies
Library
- Barley, M.W. (ed.) The Barrow on Humber town book.1938.
- Russell, Rex C (ed.) Aspects of the history of Barrow on Humber
1713-1851. 1988.
- Gray ,H & Wilkyn, N The manor of Barrow. 1994.
- Quill, Humphrey. John Harrison: the man who found longitude.
1966.
- Gould, Rupert T. John Harrison & his time keepers.
1978.
- Sobel, Dava. Longitude. 1996.
References in the Star Newspaper Index
- History of village & New Holland LS 13.10.1894 2f.
- Ladies V gents cricket match LLS 24.08.1895 2d.
- Skeletons found near the Priory LLS 18.10.1902 4d.
- Passive resistance meeting held here LLS 07.11.1903 4d.
- Brick & Tile Yards - 90,000 tiles exported in one cargo LS
19.02.1927 4d.
- Extent of damage - air raid SFS 26.04.1941 2b.