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Ibstock

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For the company, see Ibstock (company)
Ibstock is a village and civil parish in North West Leicestershire, England, with a population of around 5,000. It is on the A447, and nearby places are Heather, Ellistown, Ravenstone and Donington le Heath.

It is an ex-coal mining community, and was recorded in the Domesday Book as a hamlet, Ibestoche (literally Ibba's stoc or dairy farm). Domesday Book records six ploughlands here in 1086. The parish along with a grange belonging to the abbot of Garendon, has a long early association with the Burtons of Burton on Dunsmore in Warwickshire. In the early seventeenth century the manor of Ibstock was owned by Sir William Stafford of Blatherwick in Northamptonshire. Ibstock Church is dedicated to St Denys. The famous William Laud, had the living here from 1617-1626. Laud who later became archbishop of Canterbury and was executed for his political alignments in 1645, was the chief exponent of the 'thorough' policies in religion that characterised the reign of Charles I.

In 1642, at the start of the English Civil War, John Lufton then rector of Ibstock was accused in the House of Commons of interrupting the execution of the militia ordinance. His living was sequested by the County Committee in August, 1646. Ralph Josselin, the famous clerical diarist and incumbent of the Essex parish of Earls Colne briefly stayed in Ibstock during the Civil War. On 17th September, 1645 he marched from Leicester with the parliamentary army and quartered at Ibstock, noting that it had been "Laud's living, and now Dr Lovedyn a great Cavailier" and that although his diet was "very good" his lodgings were "indifferent". Josselin was alarmed to discover on his return the next day that a man had been slain just outside his lodgings near where he had stood closely a while before "not knowing of the pardue in the ditch".*[link]

The township was enclosed in 1774 and in 1792 a free school for fifty poor children of the parish was set up. The parliamentary census of 1801 gives a total population of 763, comprising 152 families, two thirds engaged in agriculture, the rest in trade and manufacturing. By 1811 the population had increased to 836.

References

The Diary of Ralph Josselin, ed. Alan Macfarlane (Oxford University Press, 1976) p. 46. John Nichols, History and Antiquities of Leicestershire Volume IV. pp 749-755, 808.

Famous People of Ibstock

Dorian West-Rugby World Cup Winner

External links

It has four pubs and two clubs - a working men's club and cricket club It also has a football club - Ibstock United

 


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