St Andrews Church Slaidburn
Where Did That Name Come From?
Haythornthwaite is a place name. Before surnames came into common use,
around 1200 - 1400, a man would be called Richard of Hathornthwaite.
The spelling is not very important. The poor clerk trying to record a name
like this, for a peasant who could not write, should be pitied not condemned,
and Ian Haythornthwaite found upwards of 110 different versions in the church
registers he searched. It seems that those members who spread east to Slaidburn
seem to start Hayth: and those to the west of the hill Hath:. In the older
Slaidburn Church register the spelling varies, but in the fair copy made
by William the verger they mostly seem to be Hayth:
The current descendants of the Blackburn-Burnley tribe all use the 'y' and
the current non-immigrant stock round Caton and Quernmore omit it. The pronunciation
all over the fell today is Hathunut.
Hagthorn is the old Norse for Hawthorn, and Thwaite means a clearing. We
didn't come over with the Normans, we were here before those uncivilised
barbarians landed. The stock was probably Norse, mixed with Angle. Lancaster
was a civilised place in Roman days, and there are relics of a Christian
Church there before they left in 410 A.D. The road from Lancaster to Dunsop
Bridge through the Trough of Bowland is so direct that it is believed to
have been Roman. It is a known packhorse route of considerable age, and
it passes within a mile of the hamlet of Hathornthwaite, near Abbeystead.
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Haythornthwaite Farm

