Village and civil parish in South Yorkshire, England
This article is about the village in South Yorkshire. For the Roman site in North Yorkshire, see Cawthorne Camp. For people named Cawthorne or Cawthorn, see Cawthorne (surname). For the defunct South Australian music business, see Cawthorne and Co.
Cawthorne is a village and civil parish in the Metropolitan Borough of Barnsley, South Yorkshire, England. The village was once a centre of the iron and coal mining industry; today it is part of an affluent commuter belt west of Barnsley. At the 2001 census it had a population of 1,108,[3] increasing to 1,151 at the 2011 Census.[1]
The village pub, the Spencer Arms, is named after the Spencer-Stanhope family, who once owned large swathes of the local area. Their home was Cannon Hall, the park of which borders the village.[4]
Two earlier residences in Cawthorne were Barnby Hall, home of the Barnby family, and Banks Hall, the seat of the Misses Spencer-Stanhope and of a branch of the Greene family.[5]
Cawthorne is frequented by ramblers as many walking routes start from the village.[6]
The Victoria Jubilee Museum, built to commemorate Queen Victoria's Golden Jubilee, was opened in 1889 and contains numerous unusual exhibits including a stuffed cheetah and a two-headed lamb.[7]
All Saints' Church overlooks the village, and there is a Methodist church on Darton Road. All Saints contains memorials to the Barnby and Spencer families.[8][9]
In the heart of the village stands Malt Kiln Row, originally the malt kiln for Cannon Hall.[10]
Kate Rusby, English folk singer-songwriter, lives in the village with her husband and two children.
Freedom of the Parish
The following people and military units have received the Freedom of the Parish of Cawthorne.