Gainsborough, Lincolnshire


Gainsborough is a town in the West Lindsey district of Lincolnshire, England. The population of the town was 20,842 at the 2011 census. It is situated on the River Trent, north-west from the city and county town of Lincoln, south-west of Scunthorpe, and east of Sheffield. At one time it served as an important port with trade downstream to Hull, and was the most inland port in England, being more than 55 miles from the North Sea. Gainsborough briefly served as the capital city of both England and Denmark in 1013.

History

King Alfred, Sweyn Forkbeard and Cnut the Great

The place-name 'Gainsborough' is first attested in the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle of 1013, where it appears as Gegnesburh and Gæignesburh. In the Domesday Book of 1086 it appears as Gainesburg. The name means 'Gegn's fortified place'.
Gainsborough was one of the capital cities of Mercia during the Anglo-Saxon period, which had preceded Danish rule. It is understandable that the Vikings would have been drawn to it as an administrative centre, being close to the Danish stronghold at Torksey.
In 868 King Alfred married Ealhswith, daughter of Æthelred Mucel, chief of the Gaini, whence the town gets its name.
Historically, Gainsborough is the "capital that never was". Towards the end of July 1013, the Dane Sweyn Forkbeard, together with his son and heir Cnut, arrived in Gainsborough with an army of conquest. Sweyn defeated the Anglo-Saxon opposition and King Ethelred fled the country. Sweyn was declared King of England, and he returned to Gainsborough. Sweyn and Cnut took up high office at the Gainsborough Castle, while his army occupied the camp at Thonock. But King Sweyn died five weeks later in Gainsborough. His son Cnut established a base elsewhere.
Cnut may have performed his unsuccessful attempt to turn the tide back in the River Trent at Gainsborough. Historians believe he may have been demonstrating on the aegir, a tidal bore. He and his supporters may have known Gainsborough was the furthest reach of the aegir, and ideal for his demonstration. However the story was only written down a century later by Henry of Huntingdon, who gives no location, and may have been a myth or a fable.

Medieval Gainsborough

The Domesday Book records that Gainsborough was exclusively a community of farmers, villeins and sokemen, tenants of Geoffrey de Guerche. The population was only about 80 people, of whom about 70% were of Scandinavian descent.
The Lindsey Survey of 1115-18 records that Gainsborough was then held by Nele d’Aubigny. He was the forebear of the Mowbray family, and the Mowbray interest in Gainsborough continued until at least the end of the 14th century.
A weekly market was granted by King John in 1204.

Gainsborough Old Hall

acquired the manor of Gainsborough in 1455. He built Gainsborough Old Hall between 1460 and 1480, a large, 15th-century, timber-framed medieval strong house, and one of the best-preserved manor houses in Britain. It boasts a magnificent Great Hall and strong brick tower. King Richard III in 1483 and King Henry VIII in 1541 both stayed at the Old Hall. The manor was sold to the Hickman family in 1596.

English Civil War

The town was garrisoned for the King in January 1643 and began co-operating with the garrison at Newark in raiding the surrounding countryside and harassing the Parliamentarians there. With the Great North Road blocked to Parliamentarian traffic, Gainsborough became significant as part of a route around Newark by way of Lincoln and the line of the modern A15 road. It was in the Royalists' interests to obstruct this, which gave rise to the battles of Gainsborough and Winceby. Parliament captured Gainsborough in the battle on 20 July but was immediately besieged by a large Royalist army and forced to surrender after three days.
Parliament captured Gainsborough again on 18 December 1643, but was forced to withdraw in March 1644, razing the town's defences to prevent their use by the enemy. The Earl of Manchester's army passed through Gainsborough in May 1644 on its way to York and the Battle of Marston Moor.
After the Civil War ended in 1645, several people in Gainsborough were fined for their Royalist sympathies, including Sir Willoughby Hickman, 1st Baronet at the Old Hall, who had been created the first Baronet of Gainsborough by Charles I in 1643.

Churches

The first recorded evidence of a church at Gainsborough is in 1180, when the rectory there was granted by Roger de Talebu to the great Preceptory of the Knights Templar in Lindsey, at Willoughton. In 1547, following the Protestant Reformation, the parish of Gainsborough came under the jurisdiction of the Bishop of Lincoln for the first time.
The medieval Church of All Saints fell into disrepair after the Civil War, and in 1736 it was demolished to make way for a new church. The new Parish Church was completed in 1748 with a mix of perpendicular Gothic and Classical Revival styles. All that remains of the medieval church is the west tower, 90 feet high, and housing eight bells. A monument to Richard Rollett, master sailmaker on Captain James Cook's second voyage, is located in the porch.
The town's increasing population in the 19th century required the building of a second church in the south of the town, and Holy Trinity Church opened in 1843. This was followed by St John the Divine Church on Ashcroft Road in 1882, and St George's Church on Heapham Road in the 1950s. Holy Trinity closed in 1971, and St John the Divine closed in 2002.
Non-conformism flourished in Gainsborough. It has often been claimed that some of the Mayflower Pilgrims worshipped in secret at the Old Hall before sailing for Holland to find religious freedom in 1609; no historical evidence for this has been found, whereas the congregation of John Smyth that did meet in the town developed into the Baptists and some returned to England. The John Robinson Memorial Church in Church Street was dedicated in 1897; the cornerstone had been laid by Thomas F. Bayard, U.S. Ambassador. Now the United Reformed Church, it was named in honour of John Robinson, the pastor of the "Pilgrim Fathers" before they left on the Mayflower.
John Wesley, the founder of Methodism, preached in Gainsborough several times between 1759 and 1790. The town's first Methodist chapel opened in Church Lane in 1788, moving to a new site in North Street in 1804. The Primitive Methodists became established in the town in 1819, with chapels in Spring Gardens, Trinity Street and Ropery Road. St Thomas's Church in Cross Street caters for the town's Roman Catholics.

Second World War

Gainsborough suffered its only large-scale air raid of the war on the night of 10 May 1941. High explosive bombs and incendiaries were dropped but many of them fell harmlessly on the surrounding countryside. There was only minor damage in the town, and no casualties.
On the night of 28–29 April 1942 a single Dornier 217 dropped a stick of bombs on the town centre, causing extensive damage and the loss of seven lives.
On 31 December 1942, a RCAF Bristol Beaufighter aircraft on a training exercise crashed on Noel Street, killing both airmen and a three-year-old girl.
On 22 May 1944 a RAF Spitfire fighter, in a training exercise, accidentally collided with a Wellington bomber and crashed into a Sheffield-bound goods train as it was passing over the railway bridge on Lea Road. The pilot was the only casualty.
In the early hours of 5 March 1945 a single Junkers 88 fighter/bomber made a low level attack over the town, dropping anti-personnel bombs on Church Street and the surrounding residential area. Three people lost their lives and 50 houses were damaged.

New town

There was a proposal to develop Gainsborough as a new town linked to Sheffield, but the plan was not pursued. New housing was instead built to the south east of Sheffield.

Governance

The town was before 1974 in the Gainsborough Urban District in the county of Lindsey. West Lindsey District Council was formed from five former councils.
Gainsborough Town Council was established in 1992, and in the same year Gainsborough's first mayor was appointed.
Sir Edward Leigh has been Gainsborough's MP since 1983.

Oil

In July 1958, BP discovered oil at Corringham, then at Gainsborough in January 1959. This is part of the East Midlands Oil Province.

Geography

The town is at the meeting point of the east-west A631, the A156 and A159. Thorndike Way, Gainsborough's dual carriageway, intended to connect with the A15 at Caenby Corner, only extends to the town boundary, and is named after the actress Dame Sybil Thorndike. The former A631 through the town is now the B1433.
The civil parish extends southwards across much rural land to Lea. The boundary passes to the south of Warren Wood, north of Lea Wood Farm, and passes along the northern edge of Lea Wood. Passing northwards through Bass Wood, it meets Corringham, the main settlement to the east of Gainsborough. The boundary crosses Thorndike Way and briefly follows the B1433. At Belt Farm it meets Thonock, then follows The Belt Road, to the south of Gainsborough Golf Club, then down Thonock Hill - the edge of the Trent Valley.

George Eliot and ''The Mill on the Floss''

Many scholars believe Gainsborough to be the basis for the fictional town of St Ogg's in George Eliot's The Mill on the Floss. The novelist visited Gainsborough in 1859, staying in the house of a shipbuilder on Bridge Street. The stone bridge and the nearby willow tree are mentioned, and the Old Hall is described in detail. Thomas Miller's Our Old Town published two years before, included the true story of a miller who loses a lawsuit after assaulting his adversary, and George Eliot used a similar story plot in The Mill on the Floss as the basis of the Tulliver/Wakem feud. It's also possible that she witnessed the Trent Aegir, which inspired the flood in her story's climax.

Economy

Marshall's

Gainsborough has a long-standing history of industry. The town was the manufacturing base of Marshall, Sons & Co., a major boiler manufacturer founded by William Marshall in 1848. William Marshall died in 1861. His business became one of the new joint stock companies run by his sons James and Henry. The company occupied Britannia Ironworks, a 16-acre site and the biggest in Europe when built. From Marshall's Works steam engines went all over the world until it closed in the 1980s.
The site has now been split among many different companies, Tesco on Beaumont Street and Dransfield's remodelling about nine acres. The remainder of the site is occupied by local companies.
Tesco, on the corner of Trinity Street and Colville Terrace, demolished a large section of the works to create its large store around twenty years ago. Tesco had intended to replace their current store with a Tesco Extra store, on stilts with parking underneath however these plans have been scrapped. Dransfield is remodelling about nine acres of the site to include a shopping area and a new heritage museum. The site Marshall's Yard opened during Easter 2007, with additional shops opening after that.
A Morrisons is located on Heapham Road South. A Co-op is located in the Lindsey Centre, at Morton by Gainsborough and on the old site of the Jack and Jill Pub by St Georges Community Hall.

Rose's

Another area of Gainsborough's industry is Rose Brothers, after William German Rose and Walter Rose, the co-founders. In 1893 William Rose invented the world's first packaging machine, and two years later bought the Trentside Works site and started to rapidly expand his packaging machine business. Rose's diversified into many other areas, and for many years they were associated with many household brands which produced the demand items of the day, including starch, razor blades and sweets, including Cadbury's chocolates after which the Roses selection is named. They produced seaside rock-making machines, cigarette-making machines and bread-slicing and wrapping machines. When the company closed, A.M.P Rose bought the confectionery packaging side of the business.

Manufacturing

By the side of the east bank of the Trent near the railway bridge is a large mill owned by Kerry Ingredients.
Gainsborough is the home of two of the largest jokes and novelties importers in the UK: Smiffy's, and Pam's of Gainsborough, a smaller company founded in 1986. Smiffy's were the only wigmaker left in the UK until December 2008, when bulk production was outsourced to the Far East and over 35 staff were made redundant. The company has set its future goals on a more mature fancy dress and party market.
Another local business is the firm of Eminox, founded in 1978. They started by building replacement exhausts for the local bus company. They have expanded into a manufacturing company that specialises in the large stainless steel exhaust systems fitted to buses and commercial vehicles. They are also building low-emission catalytic systems for the London low emission zone.

Landmarks

Beside Riverside Walk are the Whitton's Mill flats, which won the Royal Town Planning Institute award for the East Midlands. Marshall's Yard also received an award for regeneration.
West Lindsey District Council used to have their main offices at the Guildhall on Lord Street, but in January 2008, they moved to a new £4.3m building in Marshall's Yard.
Silver Street is home to many of Gainsborough's shops. Elswitha Hall is the birthplace of Halford John Mackinder, founder of the Geographical Association.
A large water tower stands on Heapham Road, built in 1897 to commemorate the Diamond Jubilee of Queen Victoria.

Transport

Railway

The town has two railway stations, served by different railway routes.
The town's main station is Gainsborough Lea Road on Lea Road to the south of the town. It is served by the Sheffield-Lincoln and Doncaster-Lincoln lines and receives mainly hourly services to, and. Services to Sheffield generally call at, and Sheffield only, and then continue towards.
The town's second station is Gainsborough Central on Spring Gardens near the town centre. It is on the Brigg branch line and is the terminus of an hourly service to/from Sheffield, calling at all stations. On Saturdays there are also three services to via and.
Where the railway crosses the Trent, the four lines come together at two junctions, on either side of the river. The railway lines from Lincoln and Cleethorpes meet at the East Trent Junction, while the lines from Sheffield and Doncaster meet at the equivalent West Trent Junction. This means the bridge over the Trent carries four possible routes.
West Burton Power Station is three miles to the south-west of the town, next to the Sheffield-Lincoln Line.

Buses

There is a frequent bus service running throughout the town Monday to Saturday. There are no Sunday services available. The large majority bus services which serve the town are operated by Stagecoach. The town has two local services connecting the uphills area of the town and Morton to the town centre, one running roughly clockwise, the other running roughly anti-clockwise. The town is a travel connection hub with services to Lincoln, Scunthorpe and Retford and a service to Doncaster; Services to these destinations also serve various villages along their route.
Various school bus services run through the town during term times. The town's bus station is located on Hickmen Street.

Rivers

Gainsborough is claimed as Britain's most inland port and has had a long history of river shipping trade.
There is still one wharf in the town, but ships no longer navigate this far up river. Commercial shipping only takes place further down the river at Gunness wharf, Grove wharf and Flixborough Wharf, which has direct rail links. This leads to some to argue Gainsborough is no longer the UK's most inland port, and Goole is the most inland working port in the UK.
At the A631 Trent Bridge, there used to be a ferry across the Trent before 1787, a distance of 235 feet across. The bridge, which cost £12,000, was completed in the spring of 1791. The building of the bridge meant taller river traffic of the day could no longer go any further upstream than Gainsborough, resulting in the town receiving its port status. Originally a toll bridge, it was bought by the Ministry of Transport, Lindsey County Council, Gainsborough Urban District and Nottinghamshire County Council for £130,000 in 1927, and declared free of tolls on 31 March 1932.

Sport

The town is home to semi-professional football club Gainsborough Trinity F.C. who play in the Northern Premier League, the seventh level of English football. During a brief spell at the start of the 20th century, the club was professional and a member of the Football League.
Gainsborough Rugby Club have been playing Rugby Union in the town since 1924.
There are several cycling clubs in the town including the Trent Valley Road Club, the Viking Velo and the Gainsborough Aegir Cycling Club.

Attractions

The house and grounds of Richmond Park, in the north of the town, were opened as a public park in 1947. Attractions include greenhouses, an aviary and a 600-year-old oak tree. Whitton Gardens, on the Riverside, opened in 1973.
The Town Hall, located in Gainsborough's 1908 town hall, is a restaurant and entertainment venue. It was rebranded from The Sands Venue after a change of ownership, and it reopened in 2016. It accommodates up to about 200 people.
In 2000 renovation of the town's river banks was completed, providing residents and tourists with access to the riverside. After the riverside renovations, the second weekend in June saw the town play host to the Gainsborough Riverside Festival, an annual arts/heritage event which ran between 2001 and 2013, but was scrapped in 2014 due to financial constraints.

Education

Unlike most of the UK, Lincolnshire still retains the Tripartite System, with secondary education for many pupils decided by voluntary examination at eleven. The town has one of the top state schools in the country, Queen Elizabeth's High School on Morton Terrace.
QEHS students consistently earn outstanding GCSE & A-Level results, and the school is over-subscribed. Alternative secondary education is provided by The Gainsborough Academy, a new school which opened in a £25 million new building on Corringham Road in September 2009 as Trent Valley Academy and changed its name in July 2014. From 2010, both secondaries in collaboration with Lincoln College and the Aegir School, a new local Special School, are delivering the new Diplomas at Level 2 and Level 3 through the 14-19 Gainsborough Partnership, an organisation designed to offer educational opportunities for young people in the Gainsborough area. There are many primary schools in the town.
The town has links with the John Leggott Sixth Form College in Scunthorpe, North Lindsey College, and Lincoln College which has a branch at Gainsborough College on Acland Street, focussing on vocational education.
, king of Denmark and England, who died in Gainsborough in 1014

Notable people

Gainsborough is twinned with: