The Victoria History of Leicestershire

Paperback Published on: 23/10/2020
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Synopsis

Ibstock is a large village 15 miles north-west of Leicester
and the subject of the third VCH Short from Leicestershire. Neighbouring
place-names indicate that the parish was once fringed by heathland to its north
and west, while Ibstock's own place-name references an early dairy farm on this
land. Garendon Abbey, near Loughborough, received gifts in the 12th century totalling
over 500 a. in Ibstock, and created a large sheep farm on their enclosed
estate.

Framework-knitting had become important by 1811, when trade
and manufacture employed almost as many families in the parish as agriculture.
Ibstock's character changed more dramatically in the later 19th century, when
the coal deposits which lay beneath Ibstock's soils began to be exploited. Two
collieries were sunk within the parish by different owners, in 1825 and 1873,
ushering in a period of rapid population growth. This was accompanied by the growth
of Nonconformity, and the establishment of numerous sports teams, clubs and
other societies, some encouraged by Ibstock's Anglican, Baptist, Primitive
Methodist, Wesleyan Methodist and Wesleyan Reform ministers, with others open
to all.

The former colliery brickworks continued, and Ibstock Brick,
based in the parish, was one of Britain's largest brickmakers in the early 21st
century. The mines have since closed, and much of the undermined farmland has
been planted with young trees from the 1990s, to become part of the National
Forest.

Publisher information

  • Publisher: Institute of Historical Research
  • ISBN: 9781912702466
  • Number of pages: 156
  • Dimensions: 254 x 175 x 13 mm
  • Weight: 295g
  • Languages: English