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A
solitary country walk is not only a good way of keeping fit and
healthy but provides the opportunity to think. That is what I
was doing the day after I submitted
my, 'Is Anybody
There?', contribution about the two puzzling churchyards on the parish
boundary. Looking across to that location and the Cliffe above provided
me with
the clues to what I
believe to be the answer.
land' Church Yard is just a plot of land that belongs to the church'.
No
burials. The two 'Church Yard' plots of land on the parish
boundary, at the end
of Startlewood
Lane, make sense when one views the extensive quarrying that took place
on the Cliffe.Those plots, I suggest, could have been stone mason's
yards where
sandstone would have
been fashioned into blocks.
As
Elizabeth I had appropriated Ruyton's church lands in 1559 and sold
them to Sir Thomas Hanmer, the plots in question, and glebe
lands must have been
acquired by the
Church at a later date. While it is therefore not possible to link the
plots to the building of the church tower in the early1400s or
the construction of the
original north aisle in the
mid14c, stone masons` yards within the parish would have been very
useful when the
north aisle had to be rebuilt in 1845.
If
stone masons yards three quarters of a mile from the church seem
impractical consider this: Because of weight, it would have
been impractical to convey raw
sandstone from the
Cliffe to a stone mason's yard near the church. Blocks cut to size and
dressed at the 'Church Yard' locations, ready for building,
would have require far
fewer journeys, and
the journeys wouldn't have been that difficult.
within living memory, a spur with a gentle gradient ran down to to the
fields at Ivy Cottage. It would not therefore have been that
difficult to get a wagon
of sandstone up to
the level lane.
where
the sandstone blocks would have been required. Alternatively,
the
'Yards' might simply have been set aside for communal
use by the
parishioners who farmed the fields.