Robin Hood's Well (Barnsdale)

From International Robin Hood Bibliography
Revision as of 03:07, 17 July 2018 by Henryfunk (talk | contribs) (Text replacement - "{{#ask:[[Category:Records ({{#ifeq:{{#pos:{{PAGENAME}}|(|}}||{{PAGENAME}}|{{#sub:{{PAGENAME}}|0| {{#expr:{{#pos:{{PAGENAME}}|(|}}-1}} }},{{#sub:{{PAGENAME}}|{{#expr:{{#pos:{{PAGENAME}}|(|}}-1}}|1}}{{#sub:{{PAGENAME}}|{{#expr:{{#pos:...)

Template:PnItemTop

Loading map...
Robin Hood's Well.
Robin Hood's Well – hamlet as well as well – with Robin Hood Inn across the Great North Road / 6" O.S, Map Sheet 264 (1854), at NLS.
Robin Hood's Well, hamlet and well, in 1891 / 25" O.S. map Yorkshire CCLXIV.11 (1893; surveyed 1891), at NLS.
John Vanbrugh's well-house, now on dry ground / Bill Henderson.
Robin Hood's Well / Roy Pledger, 2011, Google Earth / Panoramio.
Robin Hood's Well / Damon Stead, 2011, Google Earth / Panoramio.
Robin Hood's Well in its setting, from the AI, looking north / Google Earth Street View.

By Henrik Thiil Nielsen, 2013-06-13. Revised by Henrik Thiil Nielsen, 2018-07-17.

Robin Hood's Well is the name of a well in Barnsdale, at the northwest end of Skellow between the villages of Skelbrooke and Burghwallis, immediately east of the A1 between the Red House junction and Barnsdale Bar. The name now generally refers to the well-house, designed by John Vanbrugh (1664-1726)[1] and constructed over the natural well in the early 18th century but moved to a position near a lay-by a few meters south-east around 1960, when the dual carriageway was constructed. The well-spring is now submerged underneath the A1.[2] A.H. Smith[3] and Dobson & Taylor[4] seem to regard Robin Hood's Well and Robin Hood's Stone (see 1422 record below) as two names for one locality. It is unclear if this was in fact the case, but if distinct, the two localities cannot have been far apart. During the 17th and 18th centuries, the well was one of the "must-see" sites for tourists and travellers along the Great North Road.


While the name Robin Hood's Well can thus refer to both the natural well and the well-house now separated from it, it also, until the early 1930s if not later, referred to the now largely vanished hamlet that grew up around the site, complete with two good inns to serve the sightseeing travellers. One of the inns was named Robin Hood Inn. Of the six 6" O.S. maps of the area available on NLS's excellent maps and images sub-site only the oldest, published in 1854 but based on a survey done in 1849, has both the well and the hamlet indicated by name (see maps listed below). On the other hand, the three 25" maps of the area available there, the latest of which was published in 1932, do indicate both as 'Robin Hood's Well'. It is hard to tell from the maps, therefore, how long the name continued to be used of the hamlet. Perhaps it still is in local use?

Joseph Hunter writes in his discussion of the township of Skellow in his South Yorkshire that "the name is, no doubt, derived from the famous Skel in its neighbourhood, now called Robin Hood's Well"[5] The noun 'well' is sometimes found used with reference to a stream.[6] but I have found no other evidence that the name "Robin Hood's Well" was ever applied to the Skell. In a short part of its course the Skell formed the northern boundary of the hamlet of Robin Hood's Well, immediately before flowing under the Great North Road (now the A1) and past the Bishop's Tree, another Robin Hood-related site. Somewhere in the immediate vicinity was Robin Hood Close. Passing these localities so closely connected with the outlaw and running through southern parts of Barnsdale, the little river may well occasionally, as it were, have borrowed the name of the famous Well.

As just noted, Robin Hood's Well is close to the site of the Bishop's Tree, sometimes referred to as Robin Hood's Tree, a now vanished tree around which Robin Hood made the bishop of Hereford dance, according to the ballad that details their meeting.[7] John Cosin[8] (1594-1672), bishop of Durham (1660-72), distributed alms to the poor in the hamlet of Robin Hood's Well in 1667. We know this from a matter-of-fact entry in the accounts of his travel expenses (see allusion cited below), and there is no reason to think this was other than a routine dole-out, but one can appreciate the irony of the situation nonetheless.

As is clear from S.H. Grimm's 1737 drawing and that in Joseph Hunter's 1828 work on South Yorkshire, the well house was originally considerably taller than it is at present. According to S.R. Clarke (see 1828 Allusion below), the well house was nine feet high. Just why it had to have the lower part of its legs amputated (or buried in the ground) is not clear. Did this happen in 1960 when it was moved to its present location?

To appreciate the importance of Barnsdale to the Robin Hood tradition I recommend reading the entries on Barnsdale and the Robin Hood-related localitites in its vicinity. See the page on the Barnsdale place-name cluster for links.

Template:PnItemQry

Lists

Sources

Maps

Drawings

  • On September 20, 1725, William Stukeley made a drawing of the well, listed in a catalogue of his papers as "Robin Hood's well, and the Hermen [i.e. Ermine] street, 20 Sept., 1725".[11] The drawing is found in volume 16 of William Stukeley's MS Diary among his papers in the Bodleian Library.[12]

Discussion

Background

Brief mention

Template:PnItemAlsoSee

Notes

Template:ImgGalleryIntro



Template:PnItemNav