Brockhall, Northamptonshire

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Brockhall
Northamptonshire
Brockhall Hall - geograph.org.uk - 1734053.jpg
Brockhall Hall
Location
Grid reference: SP635627
Location: 52°15’25"N, 1°4’16"W
Data
Post town: Northampton
Postcode: NN7
Dialling code: 01327
Local Government
Council: West Northamptonshire
Parliamentary
constituency:
Daventry

Brockhall is a tiny village in Northamptonshire. Brockhall, like many estate villages, is a small settlement that has developed around its eponymous hall.

The village is recorded in the Domesday Book,[1] as Brocole, which means "Badger hole", fromt he Old English,[2] from broc ("badger") and hol ("hollow").

The Manor House is dated 1617.[3]

Church

The parish church, St Peter and St Paul, was built around 1200. The chancel was rebuilt in 1874 by Edmund Francis Law.

The church has several monuments to the Thorntons.[3]

The church is part of the Benefice of Heyford with Stowe IX Churches and Flore with Brockhall.[4]

Brockhall Hall

Brockhall Hall was originally built by Edward Eyton. In 1625, Eyton sold the house to Thomas Thornton of Newnham.[5] Thornton was a lawyer and also the Recorder of Daventry. In 1634 Thomas Thornton bought Newnham manor from the Knightleys of Fawsley who had held it jointly with Badby manor since 1542. Mr Thornton supported Oliver Cromwell and was later pardoned by King Charles II.

Since the Civil War, five Thorntons have held the position of High Sheriff of Northamptonshire. The first was John Thornton who assumed the post in 1672; the last was Colonel Thornton who held the position in 1946.

During Second World War, the hall and its grounds were used by the American Office of Strategic Studies, an early predecessor of the CIA. Saboteurs were airlifted to Europe from nearby Harrington airfield where the Carpetbagger Museum commemorates their contributions to the war effort.

The Thornton family lived at Brockhall Hall until 1969 when it was sold to Peter Lee after the death of the last male heir. Brockhall Hall is now divided up into a number of residential flats.

A descendant of the original owner, Thomas Reeve Thornton (d. 1862), married Susannah Fremeaux, the heiress of her grandfather James Fremeaux of Kingsthorpe (d. 1799). Fremeaux was a Huguenot merchant who had been naturalised as a British citizen in 1752 and had through marriage acquired the Cooke estate at Kingsthorpe in 1762. The Thorntons remained at Brockhall until 1969. In 1978, upon the death of Col. Thomas Anson Thornton, the male line became extinct.

Outside links

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References