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Heckington Genealogy
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Lincs FreeREG

The Church is dedicated to the St Michael

Parish Registers available(Lincs PRO)

 

Baptisms

1681-1907

Marriages

1681-1966

Burials

1681-1812

Bishops Transcripts

 

 

1561-1836

Swaton Marriages 1681-1966

Lay Subsidy 1332 of  Swaton

  1. Abbot of barlings                          19s-0d
  2. William de la Launde                     8s-8d
  3. John Sletyh                                    9s-3d
  4. Alexander fucher capellanus        2s-0d
  5. Alan durant                                      8s-1.1/4d
  6. Walter le Pynder                             3s-4d
  7. Alan filius hugonis                          7s-10.3/4d
  8. Alice de Osberneby                         2s-0d
  9. Thomas Justis                                1s-4d
  10. Alan Sletth                                        6s-2d
  11. John filius Alani Hobekyn              1s-4d
  12. Henery faber                                   1s-4d
  13. Alan Estrild                                       5s-6d
  14. John faber                                         1s-4d
  15. William HelleCoke                          1s-2d
  16. Alan Lambert                                   4s-8d
  17. Robert Wyot                                    3s-4d
  18. William filius Johannis                    4s-8d
  19. John Cate                                          4s-4d
  20. Thomas de Luda                               4s-5d
  21. Gilbert HelleCoke                            6s-4d
  22. Robert cate                                        4s-1d
  23. Ralph atte persones                          4s-0d
  24. Agnes que fuit uxor Roberti              3s-0d
  25. Agnes Notekyn                                  6s-0d
  26. Alice le Hyrde                                   3s-0d
  27. Alan Toli                                            4s-8d
  28. Juliana Bate                                       4s-4d
  29. Agnes Toli                                         6s-0d
  30. John filius Alani                                  4s-1d
  31. Thomas Notekyn                               2s-8d
  32. Stephen west                                       6s-4d
  33. William atte anehend                         3s-3d
  34. Thomas Lambard                               3s-8d
  35. Juliana filia Matildis                             4s-0d
  36. John Gilemyne                                    4s-2d
  37. John Maysoun                                     3s-4d
  38. John pack                                              4s-0d
  39. Robert de Helpringham                      3s-8d
  40. Alan de Osberneby                              4s-8d
  41. Alice que fuit uxor Johannis Skarlet   4s-8d
  42. Gilbert Lomb                                         2s-5d
  43. John in Venella                                      1s-0d
  44. John filius prepositi                                1s-0d

Whites's Directory 1856 for  Swaton

Swaton is along scattered village on a gentle elevation near the Romas Car-Dyke, 5 miles N.E. of Folkinghamand has in its parish 301 souls and 3150 acres of land, including about 940 acres of low fen extending near 3 miles East of the village, and enclosed under an act passed in 1805.   The western part of the parish has a strong clayey soil; but the fen has generally a sandy and silty loam, and partly a thin moory soil resting on a substratum of clay.  The Rev Henry le Warner of walsingham, Norfolk is the lord of the manor and owner of nearly all the soil.  A small stock fair is held here on October 11th.   The church is a large cruciform structure with a handsome tower rising from the centre, on arches of an early period.  The nave and aisles are fine specimens of the architecture of Edward 111, and the western window is very large;  but the chancel appears to be of the age of Henry 111, with afine east window.m the north aisle is the effigy of a female, which was removed some years ago from the north transept, which is partly destroyed.   Mrs Eleanor Knapp is impropriator of the rectory and patroness of the vicarage, which, with the rectory of Spanby annexed to it is valued in K.B. at £12-7s, and now at £514, in the incumbency of the Rev Henery Knapp M.A.   At the enclosure in 1805 161 acres of land was allotted to the impropriator, and 220 acres to the vicar in lieu of tithes.  The vicar has also a neat residence and 26 acres of the old glebe.   A small school was built by subscription in 1849.

RESIDENTS   Henry ABBOTT-blacksmith.       Alfred ANDREWS- grocer and draper.      Wm COOPER- shoemaker & vict. White Hart.       Wm and Mrs DUNGATE- school.       Wm HOWITT- carpenter.       Rev Henry KNAPP- vicar of Swaton & rector of Spanby.      

FARMERS       James ALLEN.        Jsp ANDREWS.      Wm BARBER [fen].       John COOPER- and butcher.       Johnson COPELAND.       Eliz CROPLEY.      Crosby CROPLEY.      Samuel DEAN.       Joseph DENNIS.      Wm FIELDING.       George HERCOCK.       Jonth MACHIN.     MANN Ts. Stirling & Widdowson W.       Wm Thompson MANSFIELD.      John MODD.       Wm MORRIS.      Robt PEPPER.       John STENNETT [fen].      Thomas WIDDOWSON.

 

Kelly's Directory 1876 for Swaton

  1. Swaton in 1872 has 336 souls and Henry James Lee-Warner of Walsingham is lord of the manor. The stock fair was discontinued about 1866. Mrs Campbell is improprator of the rectory and patron of the vicarage.. The school is attended by about 40 children
  2. ABBOTT Henry- blacksmith and shopkeeper
  3. ALLEN James -farmer
  4. ALLOT Henry -parish clerk
  5. ANDREWS Henry & Alfred -farmers & graziers
  6. BARBER William COOPER William -farmer & butcher
  7. COOPER Wiliam -boot & shoe maker. vict White Hart
  8. COPELAND Johnson -farmer & grazier
  9. CROPLEY Crosby- farmer & grazier
  10. CROPLEY Mrs Elizabeth -Car Dyke house
  11. CROPLEY William -farmer- Car Dyke house
  12. FADELING William -farmer
  13. DUNGATE William -master -Free school
  14. DUNGATE Mrs Margaret -mistress -free school
  15. HOLMES Matthew -butcher
  16. HOWITT William -joiner & builder
  17. KNAPP Rev Henry -vicar -the vicarage
  18. MACHIN Jonathan -farmer
  19. MANSFIELD William Thompson -farmer
  20. MICHELSON Charles -farmer
  21. MODD John -farmer
  22. MORRIS Mrs Mary -farmer
  23. PACEY Mrs Prudence
  24. STENNETT William -farmer [fen]
  25. WADSLEY Mrs -farmer
  26. WIDDOWSON George -farmer
  27. WIDDOWSON Mr Thomas
  28. WIDDOWSON Thomas Mann -farmer & grazier
  29. WIDDOWSON William -farmer & grazier -Manor House
  30. YARROD Thomas -farmer

SWATON                         TF 128375

In 1086 there were three estates in Swaton. Four bovates were sokeland belonging to Robert de Vescy, probably as parcel of his manor of Stenning in Holland, and these descended with the manor of Thorpe Latimer, to which its rents and dues were rendered throughout the Middle Ages, as a subsidiary element in the larger estate (1). A further carucate was constituted as a manor held by Guy de Craon, but it seems to have been subsequently absorbed into the major holding in the vill (2). Assessed at eight carucates, the fee held by Colsuain dominated Swaton. Before the Conquest seven of the carucates had evidently constituted an estate of some importance, for they belonged to Auti, a king's thane, with the liberties of sake and soke, toll and team (3). This prominence, along with the franchises which are probably reflected in the existence of a prescriptive market and fair, seems to have survived the Conquest, for in the twelfth and thirteenth centuries the manor was one of the main demesne fees of the de la Haye honour to which it passed in the reign of Henry I (4). In 1185 it constituted the dowage portion of Maud de la Haye, at which time there were three ploughs in demesne, 60 sheep, 10 pigs and a boar, worth the not inconsiderable sum of £30, and by 1275 the manor with all of its liberties of view of frankpledge, assizes, and gallows and tumbrell, was valued at £80 (5). It remained in the hands of the earls of Lincoln until Maud de Lacy granted the estate in her widowhood to the abbot of Barling for the service of one and an eighth knight's fees in 1322 (6). The abbey retained the manor until the Dissolution when it consisted of a capital messuage, lands, a common, a horsemill, and windmill (7). The estate was subsequently granted to Robert Tyrwhit and remained intact until the nineteenth century (8).

The importance of Swaton clearly indicates that there was a considerable manorial establishment in the vill from at least the late eleventh century. The earthwork surveyed, however, is unlikely to represent its site. Situated at the extreme west end of the village, it is remote from the centre of the settlement and the present manor house north of the church (Fig 80). Its somewhat angular form suggests that it is of no great antiquity, although this appearance may have been exaggerated by the positioning of the fences (Fig 81). The area enclosed is approximately 1400 square metres, and at the time of survey it was old orchard. Of the northern ditch only a slight depression remained and there had been some dumping at the north end of the western ditch. The central area was level with the surrounding fields, at about 7 metres OD. The surviving parts of the moat were recorded as between 8-12 metres wide at the top and two metres wide at the bottom, with an average depth of 1.8 metres, and although dry at the time of survey, and considerably overgrown, it was thought that it probably held water in the winter. Although on the 1903 6" Ordnance Survey Map the moat is complete except for the north-west corner, an 1808 map of Swaton indicates only the north, south and east sides, drawn as a dashed line (9). The site lies within enclosures apparently occupied by a farm, but unfortunately there is no more detail known about it, and its identity remains a mystery.

1. Lincs DB, 37/5; BF, 1028; FA iii, 158, 208; CI xv, 394.

2. Lincs DB, 57/19.

3. Lincs DB, p. 13; 26/44-5.

4. BF, 180, 1028; RH i,154; FA iii, 135.

5. Trollope, 445; RH i,154.

6. Trollope, 446; FA iii, 197.

7. Religious Houses, 120.

8. LPFD 17, 397-8; Trollope, 446.

9. LAO, Swaton Enclosure Award and Plan 1808.

Text courtesy of D.R.Roffe from his excellent  History site