Thornton Community Centre – Saturday 4th June

Thornton residents are invited to a day of celebration at the Community Centre.

The hall is open from 2pm until late – with cream teas, childrens activities, live entertainment and a bar.

Come when you wish, stay as long as you like, connect with friends and neighbours and be fed and entertained FOR FREE (apart from the bar of course – we’re not that generous!).

Yes, thanks to the generosity of the Parish Council and the Thornton Community Centre trustees – there is no charge.

However, please feel free to make a donation if you wish, to support local charities

Jubilee Trail at St Peter’s, Thornton

    Open Friday 3rd – Sunday 5th June

Two activities based around the churchyard – one for pre school and one for older children.

Paper provided – please bring pens.

Completed answers will be collected at the Church lychgate on Monday 6th June 3.30- 4.30.

Prizes to be awarded

Desford Heritage Festival – Sat 2nd July & Sun 3rd July 2022

Take a step back in time this summer when the streets of Desford come alive with its rich and fascinating history at Desford Heritage Festival 2022.

During the weekend of July 2nd and 3rd, Desford will be divided into time zones, from the medieval era to the world wars. A vast array of re-enactors, musicians, vehicles, actors and entertainers will bring each zone to life recreating what Desford might have been like in each era. Dozens of community groups, including the churches, schools, pubs, shops and other local businesses are involved with the staging of the festival. Residents and visitors will have incredible opportunities to experience everything from Medieval sword fighting to life in a Victorian school room and much, much more.  The village will be alive with the sights, smells and sounds of each unique time period in this fun-packed weekend. The festival will also officially launch a brand-new Heritage Trail around the village, which will be unveiled for the first time during the weekend’s festivities.  The trail of 16 heritage boards will showcase Desford’s history and provide a legacy for future generations. 

The English Civil War Society is very pleased to be providing re-enactors for one of the time zones.

The post code for the centre of the village is LE9 9GR. Car parking is at Caterpillar LE9 9JT. Access via Gate 1.

The event runs from 10.00 am to 7.00 pm on both days.

Programmes will be £5 each and will gain you access to all attractions.

Desford Heritage Festival 2022 | History Extravaganza | Leicestershire UK

desford.history@gmail.com

Do you know who Luke Jackson was?

I have lived in Thornton for the past 8 years, and every now and again I hear the name Luke Jackson mentioned, but have never been able to find out who he is, or was, until now.

Last week I spotted a poster in the village saying that the Luke Jackson Charity would be distributing money from its fund, at the Community Centre, to people of government retirement age and above, who reside in the village of Thornton.

At last an opportunity to find out who our benefactor Luke Jackson was ..

I popped into the hall and before I could speak a five pound note was thrust into my hand.

A conversation with one of the trustees (Trevor Roberts) of the Charity ensued, and he started talking about the Spanish Armada and the Gunpowder plot, I soon realised there was much more to the story than a brief conversation could tell me, and was promised some information that I could share on the website. This duly arrived in my letterbox on Sunday.

Who was Luke Jackson?

Luke was a Nottingham man, the son of Anker Jackson, a churchwarden of St Peter’s in Nottingham. Luke was apprenticed to a ‘girdler’ (a maker of girdles and belts) in London and he eventually became a very rich man.

During his young life, two major events took place in our country’s history, the defeat of the Spanish Armada in July 1588 and the Gunpowder plot of 1605.

Luke Jackson owned land around Horsepool Grange, near to Stanton under Bardon, which extended towards Thornton, where it meets with Whittington Grange. (‘Granges’ were medieval estates). There is still a farm named ‘Horsepool Grange’, situated between Stanton and South Charnwood School.

Luke made his last will and testament in October 1630 and died in January 1631. In his will he determined that the profits on his estate should be divided into three. Two thirds to St Peter’s in Nottingham where he worshipped as a boy and one third to St Peter’s in Thornton, Leicestershire. He particularly wanted to ensure that people remembered the two hugely historical events of his lifetime, a time of great fear followed by great relief, and he commemorated them by creating a charitable fund.

The following paragraph is taken from the Book, Ancient Curious and Famous Wills by Virgil McClure Harris (1911).

Charity Sermons to Celebrate National Mercies – Luke Jackson, citizen and girdler of London, by will dated 26th January 1630, reciting that he was seized in fee of certain tithes at or near Horsepool in the county of Leicester, being about £20 per annum, devised the same to certain persons on trust, yearly, to pay the clear rents and profits thereof in manner following: that is to say, two equal third parts as followeth, 40s thereof yearly to be given for two sermons to be preached in St Peter’s church in the town of Nottingham; on the 28th July and the 5th November, acknowledging God’s mercy and giving thanks for the deliverance of this land and people at two several times form the Invincible Armada, (as it was termed), in 1588, and form the Gunpowder Plot in 1605 : and the residue of the said two thirds to be distributed among the people in the parish of St Peter, at the discretion of his five feoffes, and the other third share of the clear profits of the said tithes as followeth, viz 40s, for two sermons to be preached in the church of St Thornton, near Horsepool, on the two above mentioned days; and the residue to be distributed among the poor people in the parish of Thornton, at the discretion of his feoffees (trustees).

It was the vicar of those parishes to whom the money was first directed. It is not known when the obligation to deliver sermons ended.

In 2018 another reference to the will was located. It states that Luke’s trustees were to entrust the distribution of the Charity monies in Thornton to ‘Four of the most honest and able persons dwelling in the said Parish of Thornton’.

It is believed that the Luke Jackson charity absorbed another Thornton Charity – the Grundy Bread Charity – which gave bread to the poor. A ‘Bread Service’ was held annually and was still happening in the 1950’s. No questions were asked about poverty – whoever turned up was given a loaf of bread!

A newspaper article (date and origin unknown) states ..

‘The united benefice of Thornton and Bagworth seems to have been more than usually well provided for by charities, in number if not in size, and the distribution of some of these, in kind, was preserved until a later period than has been the case with many similar charities elsewhere.

Recorded is the fact that: ‘In 1631, Mr Luke Jackson, citizen and girdler, of London, gave by will one-third of the great tithes of Stanton under Bardon, in the parish of Thornton, to the poor of the said parish forever; paying to the Vicar of Thornton out of it, yearly, two pounds for preaching two sermons in the parish, one on the 28th day of July , in remembrance of the defeat of the Spanish Armada in 1588: the other on the 5th November, in commemoration of the great deliverance from the Powder Plot (1605).

James Harrington of Thornton gave by will £26 to the poor of Thornton for ever; paying out of it 10s. yearly for preaching a sermon in this church on the 25th of November.

John Lea gave by will (1675) 4s. annually to be distributed amongst four of the poorest in Bagworth, 5s for preaching a sermon every Monday in Easter week; 5s. for the schoolmaster for teaching a poor child: and 6d. for bread and ale to be given away at the School House in Bagworth yearly, on Easter Monday.

The Luke Jackson Window – St Peter’s church, Nottingham

This window lies to the east of the north door. The glass was inserted in the existing tracery in 1969. The window commemorates Luke Jackson a seventeenth century benefactor of St Peter’s.

Glass from 1969 erected by John Bucknell, to a design of his uncle Sir Ninian Comper (1864-1960).

The dedication in the glass reads:

REMEMBER WITH THANKSGIVING THE EXAMPLE OF
LUKE JACKSON, GIRDLER IN THE CITY OF LONDON, FRIEND AND BENEFACTOR OF THIS
PARISH. BAPTISED 14TH OCTOBER 1582, DIED 30TH JANUARY 1631.
CALL TO MIND WITH HIM ALL FOR WHOM LOVE OF GOD
HAS INSPIRED COMPASSIONATE SERVICE OF OTHERS

Thank you to resident Trevor Roberts for providing the above information – so now we know!

Botcheston Film Nights

Botcheston film nights are back at the village hall – 7.30pm on the second Tuesday of the month. Cost, just £5 which includes refreshments.

These are their 1st three film showings …..

For more information contact Nick Garrett – nick.garrett94@live.com

No Time to Die: Tuesday 14th June

West Side Story: Tuesday 12th July

Belfast: Tuesday 9th August