The Project

windmill

 

 

Coleshill is a unique hilltop Buckinghamshire village in the Chiltern Hills for which many residents have strong affection and love. Also many have a curiosity about the history of the village and those who have lived here. The late John Chenevix Trench, who lived at Windmill Farm, prepared a number of papers covering the village’s history culminating in a paper published by the Buckinghamshire Archaeological Society in 1983. This was entitled ‘The Houses of Coleshill: The Social Anatomy of a Seventeenth Century Village’

This project moves on to more recent times and initially will concentrate on the houses standing in the village in the year 1910 and the history of the people living in them from the time when they were built to current times. The date of 1910 has been chosen because the Centre for Buckinghamshire Studies has an original of the property survey in that year taken for ‘Duties on Land Values Act’ It shows details of the owners and occupier of each property in the village and particularly helpfully a cross reference to a large scale map of the village.

 

 

 

Project Objectives

Village Resident Education Program

When invited in March 2007 about twenty-five Village residents volunteered to join the Project. To help coordinate and guide volunteer’s research we have enlisted the help of Julian Hunt, former Heritage Manager at Bucks County Council who has written and published several books including a history of Amersham. Julian is running a series of evening classes guiding the research and illustrating how available resources can be use to trace the history of Village residents and property. A dozen or more villagers meet regularly to report progress and benefit from Julian’s guidance.

Databases

We will build a genealogical database recording the individual people and families living in the village. This will incorporate the census data every ten years from 1841 to 1901. Software will link husbands to wives and children to parents so that it will be possible to trace each generation of each family and their cross-links with other families. A general database will link houses with the people and families who lived in them. The school log book has been digitised from 1871 and an index will be available to search to 1901.

 

History of Coleshill Book and Web Site

village pond

The fruits of the joint labours by Julian and Village volunteers will be published in a book by Christmas 2009 and this web site will be developed concurrently to form an ongoing electronic archive which can be updated and expanded as further information becomes available.

Support

The Coleshill Parish Council has given its unreserved support and encouragement to the project and has awarded a cash grant. In addition, the project has received a financial award from ‘Awards for All’, a part of the National Lottery.