Sunday, June 13, 2021

Lincolnshire magazine posts Dyer hometown connection

Copyright 2021 by Christy K Robinson 

In the spring of 2021, I was asked to write a 600-word magazine article on William Dyer and Kirkby LaThorpe, the village where he was born in 1609. The article was published in "Heckington Living," a 40-page lifestyle magazine for Lincolnshire. The magazine editor had discovered my article and photos about the Kirkby LaThorpe church, from this website.

The editor, Amy Lennox, wrote: "Thank you again for your article - the locals were very complimentary about this issue!" I took screenshots, so here you go:



See:

* William Dyer's boyhood and education in KLT and Sleaford, Carre Grammar School <William & Mary Dyer: William Dyer’s boyhood (marybarrettdyer.blogspot.com)>

** Church of St Denys in Kirkby La Thorpe <William & Mary Dyer: Kirkby La Thorpe’s Church of St. Denys (marybarrettdyer.blogspot.com)>

The bubonic and typhoid plagues of 1625, including in Lincolnshire: <William & Mary Dyer: William Dyer’s annus horribilis -- Plagues of 1625 (marybarrettdyer.blogspot.com)>

The Great Frost of 1608: <William & Mary Dyer: The Great Frost of 1608 (marybarrettdyer.blogspot.com)>


William Dyer's education in KLT and Sleaford, Carre Grammar School <William & Mary Dyer: William Dyer’s boyhood (marybarrettdyer.blogspot.com)>


** Church of St Denys in Kirkby La Thorpe
Denys in Kirkby La Thorpe <William & Mary Dyer: Kirkby La Thorpe’s Church of St. Denys (marybarrettdyer.blogspot.com)>


The bubonic and
typhoid plagues of 1625, including in Lincolnshire: <William & Mary Dyer: William Dyer’s annus horribilis -- Plagues of 1625 (marybarrettdyer.blogspot.com)>


The Great Frost of
1608: <William & Mary Dyer: The Great Frost of 1608 (marybarrettdyer.blogspot.com)>

Domesday Book of 1086 that mentions the Saxon Earl Morcar and the 
area of Kirkby LaThorpe. (You can make out "thorp"  in the second paragraph.)
The Domesday Book was a survey of who owned what and how much
could the king levy in rents and fighting men.