Thomas William White devoted much of his long life to serving Armitage and Handsacre. Methodist preacher, parish councillor, school manager and community leader, he became one of the village’s most respected public figures during the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. This article explores his commitment to faith, education and local government, revealing how quiet service and civic responsibility helped shape the life of the parish for more than half a century.
Tag: Religion
Problems for a Rector
In 1662 the Rector of Armitage faced an impossible choice. To remain in office he had to publicly accept the restored Church of England, but to do so meant abandoning beliefs he held deeply. This article tells the story of Nathaniel Mansfield, the local minister who sacrificed his home, income and position rather than compromise his conscience.
Thomas Bond Part 1 – maltster, brickmaker, potter and gaolbird
Thomas Bond is generally credited with founding Armitage’s first pottery, but his story began long before pottery became his livelihood. Maltster, brickmaker, canal carrier and entrepreneur, he pursued a succession of ambitious ventures while navigating debt, failed partnerships and imprisonment. Drawing on newly available documentary evidence, this article explores the remarkable life of the man whose enterprise marked the beginning of Armitage’s pottery industry.
The first issue of the Parish Magazine
Published in January 1892 and costing just one penny, Armitage’s first parish magazine provides a fascinating snapshot of village life. Its pages reveal church services, school fundraising, temperance campaigns, local entertainment and everyday concerns at the close of the Victorian era. This article explores the magazine’s contents and shows how a modest four-page publication has become an invaluable record of the parish’s social and religious history.
The oldest item in the village
Standing just inside St. John the Baptist Church is probably the oldest surviving object in Armitage-with-Handsacre. Carved in the early twelfth century, the Norman font is covered with mysterious figures whose meaning has intrigued visitors for generations. This article explores its history, craftsmanship and symbolism, and asks whether it even preserves an early piece of Norman political propaganda.
Signing the pledge
A century-old Pledge Book from Handsacre Primitive Methodists preserves the signatures of dozens of local children who promised to abstain from alcohol. Their names open a fascinating window onto village life, the temperance movement and the ideals of the Band of Hope. Following many of those children into adulthood, this article reveals how the First World War transformed the lives of a generation that had begun with such youthful optimism.
Murder in the Church
A murder committed inside the manorial chapel at Handsacre in 1386 sparked one of the most remarkable legal battles in the parish’s history. At the centre lay a disputed inheritance, child heiresses, kidnappings, rival marriage claims and a succession of lawsuits stretching over twenty years. This article follows the evidence to reconstruct how ambition, violence and royal influence reshaped the medieval Manor of Handsacre.
Samuel Morecroft 1850-1934 – a life lived in Armitage
Samuel Morecroft was a man of many parts – basket maker, cycle manufacturer, inventor, undertaker, postmaster and local preacher. Written by one of his descendants, this richly illustrated article traces the life of a remarkable Victorian entrepreneur whose energy and public spirit left a lasting mark on Armitage. It explores not only his many businesses but also his family, community service and the changing life of the village he called home.
Assault and battery in the church
A peaceful Sunday service at St. John the Baptist Church erupted into violence when a dispute over a family pew ended with one worshipper being dragged from her seat in front of the entire congregation. The incident led to a remarkable court case that sheds light on church life, social status and the surprising value once attached to pew ownership.
