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There is plenty of evidence that Old Sulehay is indeed ancient. The name may come from the old
English Seofan-leage, meaning a lea (or piece of land) of a person called Seofa. The ‘hay’
could mean an enclosure in marshy ground. There are springs in the area where sandy layers meet clay.
However,
the site has been forest since at least the 13th century, and was held by members of the Yarwell
(or de Jarewell) family who resided at Old Sulehay Lodge. The Yarwells were head foresters of the
Bailiwick of Clive or Cliffe (now Kings Cliffe). The Lodge and surroundings were part of Rockingham
Forest, the royal hunting forest which extended from Wansford to Kettering.
The land and office of
forester passed to Sir Guy Wolston in the fifteenth century, and thereafter Sulehay was long held
by the owners of Apethorpe.
The main rides through the wood may have been made in the 17th Century
with perhaps some realignment at later dates. Straight rides were commonly made in woodlands when
firearms became widely used for game shooting. The Earl of Westmoreland, a 19th century MP, used
the east-west ride to travel to Wansford station from Apethorpe to get to London. The ride has
narrowed, but the old ditches and wood banks can still be clearly seen, with a circular bank at
the crossroads made by the two main rides. Management by the Trust will clear the rides back to
the wood banks. Different sections of the rides will be widened in turn starting in 2002.
There
are signs of more ancient tracks in the northwest and easterly parts of the wood. There is also
evidence of Stone Age, Roman, Danish and Civil War activity in or near Sulehay.
In the late 19th century about one third of the northerly part of Sulehay seems to have been
cleared, probably by Joseph Lock of Manor Farm, Yarwell, to make way for crops and pasture. The
timber was dragged down to a Yarwell saw pit by teams of horses. Some of the pastures created
were available to Yarwell cottagers who took their beasts up the ride to Cow Wood. The south-western
sector of Sulehay is called Kings Oaks, where the trees were formerly reserved for the Royal Navy.
The timber was taken via the Nene to Wisbech and on to Chatham shipbuilding yards. Large trees were again
removed during the First World War.
During the Second World War, servicemen and women were
stationed in huts in and around the northern part of Sulehay. Afterwards, some of the buildings
were used as housing by local people, and there was even a school in the forest. Since that time
stone quarrying has encroached right up to the northern boundary of the forest leaving a steep
cliff on the forest edge. The forest itself was saved at a late stage as a result of local protest
in the 1970s. |