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Hanks Bank, Heeley.


boginspro

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It could be Hang Bank Wood.  Comparing the OS 1830s-1880s 6" map the wood has encroached on pasture which was continuous with Heeley common.  The area is now occupied by Callow Road, round about SK 365 844

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On 12/02/2024 at 08:35, SteveHB said:

Hang Bank and Hang Bank Wood, circa 1903

HgBnkC.1903.jpg

Picture Sheffield link: https://www.picturesheffield.com/frontend.php?action=printdetails&keywords=Ref_No_increment;EQUALS;arc03980&prevUrl=

Fairbanks 1846 plan and survey of an estate at Newfield Green, indicates that Hang Bank Wood had been in the ownership of past Master Cutler Peter Brownhill (1807) and his widow Marianne.

Peters father Luke Brownhill a scythsmith at Newfield Green, reputedly paid the highest premium ever received by the Cutler's Company of Sheffield to put Peter through an apprenticeship.

John Williams in his 1637 survey of Sheffield Manor with other lands mentions a "pasture abutteth upon Newfield greene North and a common called Hanbanke south"

 

 

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A couple of Picture Sheffield photographs showing the row of cottages in the ownership of the Brownells,  (No 5 on the plan!)

Screenshot_2024-02-13-14-05-07-378.jpeg

Screenshot_2024-02-13-14-06-37-504.jpeg

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8 hours ago, southside said:

Picture Sheffield link: https://www.picturesheffield.com/frontend.php?action=printdetails&keywords=Ref_No_increment;EQUALS;arc03980&prevUrl=

Fairbanks 1846 plan and survey of an estate at Newfield Green, indicates that Hang Bank Wood had been in the ownership of past Master Cutler Peter Brownhill (1807) and his widow Marianne.

Peters father Luke Brownhill a scythsmith at Newfield Green, reputedly paid the highest premium ever received by the Cutler's Company of Sheffield to put Peter through an apprenticeship.

John Williams in his 1637 survey of Sheffield Manor with other lands mentions a "pasture abutteth upon Newfield greene North and a common called Hanbanke south"

So back in the 18th Century it's not Hang Bank but Hand Bank or even Hanbanke. 

https://picturesheffield.com/frontend.php?action=printdetails&keywords=Ref_No_increment;EQUALS;arc03978&prevUrl=

hand_bank.png

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15 minutes ago, boginspro said:

So back in the 18th Century it's not Hang Bank but Hand Bank or even Hanbanke. 

https://picturesheffield.com/frontend.php?action=printdetails&keywords=Ref_No_increment;EQUALS;arc03978&prevUrl=

hand_bank.png

Could be Locals had there own interpretation of it, or more than likely the photographer missheard it and as they do give us the incorrect info. 

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9 minutes ago, Ponytail said:

Could be Locals had there own interpretation of it, or more than likely the photographer missheard it and as they do give us the incorrect info. 

I agree, many names have actually changed by miss-understood  pronunciations or even by written word when people spelt words often just as they sounded to themselves.

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The surveyors often had southern accents.  Asking someone with a strong Sheffield accent might well result in transcription errors; it certainly has in other areas of the country.

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39 minutes ago, MartinR said:

The surveyors often had southern accents.  Asking someone with a strong Sheffield accent might well result in transcription errors; it certainly has in other areas of the country.

 

Plus literacy not everyone's strong point. 

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