Samlesbury
Samlesbury | |
Parish church of St Leonard the Less |
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Samlesbury Samlesbury shown within Lancashire | |
District | South Ribble |
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Shire county | Lancashire |
Region | North West |
Country | England |
Sovereign state | United Kingdom |
Police | Lancashire |
Fire | Lancashire |
Ambulance | North West |
EU Parliament | North West England |
UK Parliament | Ribble Valley |
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Samlesbury /ˈs[unsupported input]mzb(ə)ri/ is a small village and civil parish in the borough of South Ribble in Lancashire, England. Samlesbury Hall, a historic house, is located in the village as well as Samlesbury Aerodrome. The village is also home to a large modern brewery belonging to InBev.
History
The village's name is derived from the Old English sceamol, meaning ledge and burh meaning fortification, hence literally "ledge fortification".[1] It may also be that the name at least partly derives from the Roman name for the River Ribble and its eponymous Celtic deity, Belisama.[2]
Samlesbury Hall
Samlesbury Hall is a Manor house built in 1325 which has been many things since then including a public house and girls boarding school, but since 1925, when it was saved from being demolished for its timber, it has been administered by a registered charitable trust, the Samlesbury Hall Trust. This Grade I listed medieval manor house attracts over 50,000 visitors each year.
Religious buildings
Samlesbury parish church, like the one at nearby Walton-le-Dale, is dedicated to St. Leonard the Less and was founded in 1096. The church contains a Norman tub font, a medieval bell and Sir Thomas Southworth's funerary armour dating from 1546. It also has a church chest, a two-decker pulpit and a complete set of box pews dating from the 17th and 18th centuries.
The Roman Catholic church is St Mary and St John Southworth. There was previously also a Wesleyan Methodist chapel.
Samlesbury witches
The Samlesbury witches—Jane Southworth, Jennet Brierley, and Ellen Brierley—were accused of child murder and cannibalism and tried at Lancaster Assizes on 19 August 1612, in the same series of trials as the Pendle witches. All three were found not guilty in a trial which one historian has described as "largely a piece of anti-Catholic propaganda".[3]
Samlesbury brewery
Samlesbury brewery is a large modern brewery belonging to InBev. It was completed in 1972 to brew Heineken lager for Whitbread. It produces Boddingtons Bitter, and bottled and keg Bass Pale Ale for export.[4]
Samlesbury Engineering
Samlesbury Engineering was a subsidiary of the Lancashire Aircraft Corporation at Warton which was chaired by Sir Wavell Wakefield, later Lord Wakefield of Kendal. The company specialised in bus manufacturing but was capable of high quality engineering.
Their workshop, where the ill-fated Bluebird K7 was designed and built, was on the car park behind Samlesbury Hall. Bluebird K7 was the turbo jet-engined hydroplane in which Donald Campbell set seven world water speed records during the 1950s and in which he was killed on Coniston Water in 1967.[5]
The Lancashire Aircraft Corporation, together with Samlesbury Engineering, eventually became part of what is now BAE Systems, which today has a facility at BAE Samlesbury.
References
- Notes
- ↑ Samlesbury, University of Nottingham's Institute for Name-Studies, retrieved 2009-08-18
- ↑ Hutton 1993, p. 218
- ↑ Hasted 1993, pp. 32–33
- ↑ "Samlesbury (InBev UK - InBev)". ratebeer.com. Retrieved 2009-09-02.
- ↑ "Made in Preston". Retrieved 2013-02-13.
- Bibliography
- Hasted, Rachel A. C. (1993), The Pendle Witch Trial 1612, Preston: Lancashire County Books, ISBN 978-1-871236-23-1
- Hutton, Ronald (1993), The Pagan Religions of the Ancient British Isles, Oxford: Wiley-Blackwell, ISBN 978-0-631-18946-6
External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Samlesbury. |
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