Nearby churches
"BASSINGBOURN (or Bassingbourne) is a parish and village, the latter being about 3 miles north-west from Royston station. A large portion of the township at Royston and the hamlet of Kneesworth is within this parish, which is in the hundred of Armingford, petty sessional division of Arrington and Melbourn, union and county court district of Royston, rural deanery of Shingay and archdeaconry and diocese of Ely. "
"George Daniel Finch-Hatton esq. is lord of the manors of Bassingbourn Richmond and Castles Seymoure and Rowses. There are several landowners. The soil is clayey and chalky, and the subsoil gault and clay. The chief crops are wheat, barley, oats, beans, peas and rye. The area of the entire civil parish is 3,204 acres; the population in 1921 was 2,052 in the civil and 2,236 in the ecclesiastical parish."
"KNEESWORTH, a hamlet on the Great North road, is in the parish of Bassingbourn, 2 miles north from Royston station on the Hitchin and Cambridge branch of the London and North Eastern railway. Kneesworth Hall, together with part of the estate, was purchased in 1900 by Viscount Knutsford, who has entirely rebuilt the old hall, which stands in well-timbered grounds of about 50 acres; the former mansion, supposed to have been erected about 1600, occupied the site of a still older house. The soil is chiefly chalk, red land and heavy land; the subsoil is clay and chalk, The chief crops are wheat and barley. The area is 879 acres; the population in 1922 was 84."
[Kelly's Directory - 1929]
"A Joint Burial Committee of seven members was formed in 1877 : the cemetery, at the east end of the village, is 2½ acres in extent, and has two mortuary chapels, and a lodge for the keeper; the total cost was £1,500."
[Kelly's Directory - 1929]
The ground of the parish cemetery, all two and half acres divides along its centre North to South with the East side being consecrated in 1879. Two chapels sit midway North to South and are joined to form a walk through arch straddling the divide line. The consecrated Chapel has its foundations on consecrated ground with the not consecrated Chapel on ground not consecrated to the West.
The cemetery keepers Lodge sits just inside and slightly West of the main gate that is midway along the South perimeter.
Standing out of the eastern boundary on land kindly donated by the adjacent land owner is the Cross of Sacrifice erected in remembrance of war victims.
Permission was granted for the land to be used as a Cemetery by the Secretary of State in December 1876. Following the approval of construction plans, authorisation of a loan and subsequent commencement of construction the first burial, a child of 17 months took place on the 5th. October 1878.
The Monumental Inscriptions of SS. Peter and Paul churchyard for the years 1690-1947 are recorded in the Cambridge Records Office. The transcriptions of the monumental inscriptions are available, on microfiche, from the Cambridgeshire Family History Society Bookstall.
The Census Records from 1841-1891 can be found in the Cambridge Record Office. In addition the 1851 Census for Bassingbourn and for Kneesworth are available in full transcript form, on microfiche, from the Cambridgeshire Family History Society Bookstall.
"The church of SS. Peter and Paul, erected in the 14th century, is a building of stone and flint, consisting of chancel, nave, aisles, south porch of the 15th century and an embattled western tower containing a clock and 5 bells, cast by Miles Graye in 1650: in the church are monuments to the Nightingale and Turpin families, including two to Jeffrey Nightingale, ob. 1664, and to Edw. Nightingale, ob. 1723 : the church was restored in 1865, at a cost of about £3,000, to which sum the Dean and Chapter of Westminster contributed £300: the tower arch has been opened, a vestry formed in the tower and fitted up for the reception of the library of rare theological works partly bequeathed to this parish in 1717 by Sir Edward Nightingale, a former owner of Kneesworth, to which additions have been made by different vicars: the east window is a memorial to the Rev. F. H. Bishop M.A. a former vicar, and his two daughters, and was presented by his widow and three sons: the window at the east end of the lady chapel was erected by Mrs. Nunn in memory of her husband, Dr Thomas Nunn, and his sister Mary and two brothers, John and Edmund Nunn: there are 600 sittings. The register dates from the year 1558, and the churchwardens' accounts from 1498."
"There is a Congregational chapel, founded in 1759, with 450 sittings."
[Kelly's Directory - 1929]A list of Rectors and Vicars is available separately.
Bassingbourn with Kneesworth, SS. Peter and Paul: Records of baptisms 1558-1987, marriages 1559-1989, burials 1559-1880, banns for 1754-1981 reside in the Cambridge Record Office.The Bishop's Transcripts for the years 1599-1685 and 1712-1859 can be found in the Cambridge University Library. Indexed transcripts exist in Cambridge Record Office for the years 1558-1851. The parish records 1558-1851 are available on microfiche from the Cambridgeshire Family History Society Bookstall.
Bassingbourn Independent Church: Records exist for baptisms 1826-1837 (original register on microfilm) which have also been indexed, baptisms 1837-1926, marriages 1837-53, 1872-1919 and burials 1850-1919.
There is a Genweb Cambridgeshire description of Bassingbourn Saints Peter and Paul and the monuments inside and out.
The "1839 Pigot's Directory of Cambridgeshire" for Bassingbourn index of Inns & Hotels, Taverns and Public Houses, Brewers & Maltsters + Wine & Spirit Merchants.
"In the village is a cross of Portland stone, erected as a memorial to the men of the parish who fell in the Great War, 1914-18."
[Kelly's Directory - 1929]The Bassingbourn War Memorial has been transcribed and and the men researched, it stands in the village centre, in addition there are Gravestones associated with the Bassingbourn Airfield that have been transcribed.
Royston Union Workhouse, which encompassed Bassingbourn-with-Kneesworth, births 1866-1929 and deaths 1866-1915 can be found at Hertfordshire Record Office.
Land Tax: records were compiled afresh each year and contain the names of owners and occupiers in each parish, but usually there is no address or place name. These records reside in the Cambridge Record Office for the years 1715-28, 1795, 1798 (on microfilm) and 1810-1948.
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[Last updated 22 October 2007 Martin Edwards]