| |
Barnsley, Huddersfield, Rotherham and Wakefield Around Town Online Village History
Welcome to Around Town Online Home and Garden Food and Drink Restaurant Reviews Barnsley, Hudderfield, Rotherham and Wakefield Village History Fashion Health and Beauty Local Celebrities Motoring Motoring Motoring Competitions
An Historical Look Around the Villages of Barnsley...
The Village of Cawthorne

A village coping with change
and looking to the future

By Barry Jackson

The village of Cawthorne has, over the years, answered to many descriptions and names starting with the Saxon ‘Caldern’, which in the Domesday Survey of 1086 became ‘Caltorne’ (the cold house), before acquiring its present spelling in Medieval times. It has also had a variety of leading citizens or landowners from the Saxon Ailric, through the Norman family of De Laci, to the Barnbys of Barnby Hall, on to the three main families inhabiting Cannon Hall, the Hartleys, the Spencers and the Spencer-Stanhopes. With the sale in the early 1950’s of Cannon Hall and its parkland to Barnsley Council, the village acquired a new role as a place of recreation, ‘the lungs of Barnsley’ as some local politicians described it. Since the sale of land by the Cannon Hall Estate for property development began in the 1960’s, the descriptions of the village have come mainly from the pens of estate agents seeking to sell houses in what they refer to as ‘this much sought-after award winning village’. This completely overlooks the fact that the Cawthorne now so beloved by those involved in the property market is a creation of the last fifty years, but, for those willing to look and use their imagination, there is sufficient evidence of the old Cawthorne going back over 1,000 years.

Featured Villages