The name
In 1086 the Doomsday Book refers to Horkstow as Horchetou and
the village goes through many spellings such as Orkestowe,
Horkystow and Horkestoo before becoming the Horkstow we know today.
It is thought that the first part of the word Horkstow relates to
hurk 'a temporary shelter for young lambs, made of hurdles
wattled with straw' or 'to crouch, to cower'. From this
it is suggested that the hork element of the villages name refers
to a shelter and that the full definition of the villages name
might be 'a shelter for animals or people'.
More information can be found in:
- Cameron, Keith The Place-Names of Lincolnshire.
- Mills, A.D. A Dictionary of English Place Names.
The place
One of a number of villages on the northwestern edge of the
Wolds with the Old and New River Ancholme close at hand. The parish
church of St Maurice is a mediaeval building with a 13th century
tower restored in the 19th century.
A Roman mosaic pavement found in Horkstow in the 1790's
portraying a chariot race and Orpheus taming the beast is held by
the British museum.
Horkstow Bridge is a fine example of an early suspension bridge
and one of a handful in Britain to have remained as originally
designed. Situated 1 mile upstream from Ferriby Sluice it was
completed in 1836 as part of the River Ancholme Drainage Scheme by
Sir John Rennie.
Population history
| Year |
Population |
|
1801
|
144
|
|
1811
|
157
|
|
1821
|
200
|
|
1831
|
240
|
|
1841
|
228
|
|
1851
|
251
|
|
1861
|
245
|
|
1871
|
250
|
|
1881
|
274
|
|
1891
|
243
|
|
1901
|
193
|
|
1911
|
207
|
|
1921
|
196
|
|
1931
|
198
|
|
1941
|
N/A
|
|
1951
|
192
|
|
1961
|
158
|
|
1971
|
117
|
|
1981
|
100
|
|
1991
|
90
|
Entry from Kelly's Trade Directory for 1900
Horkstow is a parish and pleasant village, extending to the
navigable river Ancholme, over which is a suspension bridge; it is
4 miles south-west from Barton station on the branch of the Great
Central (late M. S. and L.) railway and 9 north from Brigg, 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. The church of St Maurice is an ancient
edifice of brick and stone, partly in the Early English style, and
consists of chancel, nave, aisles, north porch and a small western
tower containing 3 bells: the interior was partially restored in
1868, at a cost of £450, and the exterior of the nave and the
tower in 1895, at a cost of £500: in the church is a handsome
tablet to the late Admiral Shirley, fifth son of the late Earl
Ferrers: there are 190 sittings. The register dates from the year
1556. The living is a vicarage, net yearly value £150, with
residence, in the gift of the Earl of Yarborough, and held since
1897 by the Rev. Robert Charles Warre Ekins. There are Wesleyan and
Primitive Methodist chapels. In 1796 fragments of the tessellated
pavement of a long narrow room, divided into three compartments,
were found in a field near, one of these having a most singular
representation of a Roman chariot race; other portions contained
mutilated figures of the "Fates", attended by genii,
Nerieids and tritons; Roman coins have also been found. The Earl of
Yarborough P.C. who is lord of the manor, and Calthrop Johnstone
Calthrop esq. of Horkstow Hall, are the principal landowners. The
soil is chalk and marl; subsoil, chalk and clay. The chief crops
are wheat, oats, barley and pasture. The area is 2,119 acres of
land and 19 of water; rateable value, £2,7111; the population
in 1891 was 243.
Post Office. - Mrs. Ann R. Hodlin, sub-postmistress. Letters from
Hull, which arrive 8.10am; dispatched 4.55pm. Postal orders are
issued here, but not paid. The nearest money order and telegraph
office is at South Ferriby, 1mile distant
National School (mixed), built in 1858, by the Earl of Yarborough,
at a cost of £150, for 60 children; average attendance, 43;
Mrs Emily Vine, mistress
Carriers. - Richard Hoodlass, to Brigg, Tues. Thurs. and Sat.;
William Green, to Barton, Mon. Wed. Fri. and Sat.; William Trippett
and others, to Hull, Tues. and Fri.
Holdings in North Lincolnshire Local Studies
Library
- Labrum, E.A. (ed.) Civil Engineering Heritage Eastern and
Central England. 1994.
- Fraser-Brunner, Pamela. Pictures in stone: some thoughts on
Roman mosaic pavements. [in] Appleby- Frodingham News, vol12, no1.
Spring 1959 pp61-66; illus. 1959.
- Morgan, Thomas. Romano-British mosaic pavements. 1886.
- Leahy, Kevin and Williams, David. North Lincolnshire: a
pictorial History. 1996.
- Wiley, Derek. Georgian Green. Poems written in Horkstow in
1992. 1992.
References in the Star Newspaper Index
- Horkstow : Village affairs A-G SFS 19.03.1976 page 12.
- Wesleyan Methodist Chapel re-opened after renovation LLS
12.08.1905 page4f.
- Roman pavement [found 1796] to be removed to British museum LS
30.04.1927 page6c.