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As a former resident of Hatfield I find this thread fascinating. On the link between the church and the Abbey, I was a pupil at Travis and I remember the vicar telling us that St. Lawrence's was built in the Norman era, so a connection to the abbey is quite possible. It would only have become an Anglican church after the Reformation. Presumably the original Abbey was a victim of Thomas Cromwell!And the pub was definitely the Chace. I hardly ever went in there though because I went to the High School and it was always full of teachers! Whenever I hear Madness' Baggy Trousers I always think of the Chace.
Just tried to put a link in this thread but on test will not open but if you go onto Hatfield Town Council website and go into History section, there are some probable answers. I always wondered why we called Stainforth just Stainy, thought it was slang but did not know it dated back to Stainy Ford. well well you never are too old to learn.
Actually you are both wrong - if you go to Filo's link above the author has copied out the piece on Stainforth from the Domesday Book which says:"In Stenforde there are seven sokemen with four carucates. Wood, pasture one quarenten long and the same broad"So in 1086 it was Stenforde. It was 250 years after that, when the village was chartered in 1348, that it was Stonyford.
Lets get the spelling right first lads.It was the Hatfield Chace, not Chase.The name on the pub on the corner says Chase and it surprises me that whoever came up with the name didn't research properly before naming it.The Chace was a Royal Hunting ground in days gone by and in recent years the name has been corrupted to the current "Chase."Also, supposedly linked to the battle is a burial pit in Hatfield Woodhouse on the now named Slaypit Lane.
Quote from: drfchound on January 05, 2016, 08:37:19 pmLets get the spelling right first lads.It was the Hatfield Chace, not Chase.The name on the pub on the corner says Chase and it surprises me that whoever came up with the name didn't research properly before naming it.The Chace was a Royal Hunting ground in days gone by and in recent years the name has been corrupted to the current "Chase."Also, supposedly linked to the battle is a burial pit in Hatfield Woodhouse on the now named Slaypit Lane.Hi really interested in the post who said the pub is Chace not Chase - I'm trying to establish its real name! Can anyone help
It is also said that Robin Hood used to hang about at Barnsdale Bar.