Showing posts with label Woodyard. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Woodyard. Show all posts

Friday, 13 September 2024

Three Gables, The Woodyard, Thoresby Park.

 

Above: painting by Leslie A Miles (1943) depicts Three Gables, Thoresby Park, as it was when Clerk of Works Noel Whitworth lived there 1940 – 50. My thanks to James Whitworth for consenting to its use on this blog.

Above: Three Gables, Thoresby Park, 1964. The kitchen extension is on the left.

Three Gables, built in 1876, is situated by the road side at the Woodyard, and was the customary residence of the estates’ Clerk of Works, such as Noel Whitworth in the late 1940s / early 1950s. A three bedroom house, one to each gable, the original kitchen was situated beneath the left gable before an extension with corrugated roof and plastic skylight was added. The original stone framed outside window was retained inside the extension. The former kitchen then became the central living room, but kept its cast iron range for cooking. The range incorporated a small circular platform which would swing across over an open log fire to heat one's kettle. A drying wrack hung from the ceiling for the laundry, which could be boiled in the copper stove in the outhouse across the yard to the left of the building. This copper stove was fundamental in the making of family Christmas puddings in the 1950's / early 1960s. The house was joined onto the Woodyard complex. In the very narrow, dark and dusty store next door were kept the shiny brass fittings for coffins, whilst a hand operated fire bell hung on the wall outside.

Following the departure of Noel Whitworth the house was occupied for much of the 1950's and early 1960's by William "Jock" Craig, the Woodyard foreman.


Above: A corner of the lounge, schoolboy sketch, 1963. Note the portable record player of the time.

In the early 1960s the property still featured an extensive garden laid out according to Victorian tradition; decorative flowers and lawns in front of the house, with vegetable patches and fruit bushes all formally arranged to the right alongside the Woodyard buildings.


Above: c. 1960. The Victorian style garden. The near window is the lounge. The far window is the office of the Clerk of Works. Beyond is the Pleasure Grounds. Below: A family at home.


Above: 1985.


Above: 2019. The garden and its iron fencing have gone.

Thursday, 12 September 2024

The Woodyard, Thoresby Estate.

 

Above: The Woodyard, Thoresby Park, photographed in 1964 from a tree top near the start of Chestnut Avenue. (The remnants of the Duke's carriage way, leading from Thoresby Hall to Buck Gates, are still visible from mid left to the road.)

The Woodyard is situated at the other side of Thoresby Lake from Thoresby Hall, outside the region known as the Pleasure Grounds. It was built in 1876, during the time of Sydney William Herbert Pierrepont, 3rd Earl Manvers, at a cost of £64,000. This is where the timber grown by Thoresby Forestry Department became the Estate’s fences, telephone poles, window frames, doors, and much more.

Selected trees would be felled after the leaves had fallen, and the sap was no longer rising. These would be taken to the Woodyard where the 40 H.P. gas engine of the large central saw mill cut them into their desired formats. This saw mill, the large central building on the picture below, was run by Jack Williamson and his staff of about six men. It was also the location of the band saw, lathe, and various other powered woodworking machines, the floor to the saw mill concealing a maze of pulleys, shafts and drive belts. I well remember waking to the sound of Jack's early morning saw, and the smell of the fresh cut timber which would then be stacked in the central drying shed for two years before being used in the joiners' shop at the Woodyard’s entrance. At the rear of the yard, next to the “sand pits”, was the "shavings shed" in which younger, slimmer, timbers were manually stripped of their bark.

Beside the saw mill was a huge, black, metal creosote tank, 20 foot long and 5 foot diameter. This is where fence posts and poles would be left to soak as the tank was flooded with creosote, a banned substance today. It resembled a submarine, as a young child was able to stand upright inside.

As the nation's oil lamps gave way to gas, a gas works was installed behind the cottages on the northern side of the yard at a cost of £2,251. This supplied Thoresby Hall, Perlethorpe Church, the path to the Hall and its gates, Perlethorpe School, and Buck Gates. During the 1930's, Johnny Mellors lived in the Woodyard cottages and three times a week took a horse drawn cart to Ollerton Station to get coal for Thoresby Hall's boilers.

In August 1940 a number of incendiary bombs fell on Thoresby, and Walesby. During the night of 29th August the Woodyard caught fire as a result of this but no extensive damage was done.

On the right of the Woodyard entrance was the office of the Clerk of Works this being Johnny Mellors in the 1930's, Noel Whitworth from 1940 - 50, and Jack Bramley between 1950 - 1963. Opposite his office was the main joiner's shop in which worked such personnel as William “Jock” Craig, foreman of the Woodyard during the 1950's – early 1960s, and Gran Gilliver. Others in the workforce included Bill Nunn and Jack Kenyon, the latter of whom was also the church boiler stoker in 1959. All these men took great pride in their skills and versatility.

Above: The Woodyard in 1984. Three Gables can be seen on the distant right. The large central building was the saw mill, whilst the works van parked inside the building on the left.






Above: In 2019 I was permitted to take a last look around The Woodyard, Thoresby Park.