References/Bbliography

  1. Thirsk, J. (1988). The Isle of Axholme before Vermuyden. Agricultural History Review, 36(2), 91–102. Retrieved from https://www.jstor.org/stable/pdf/40272714.pdf
  2. Townley, A. (2015). Drainage of the Isle of Axholme. Crowle.org. Retrieved from https://crowle.org/wp-content/uploads/2015/06/Drainage-of-the-Isle-of-Axholme-1.pdf
  3. Fleet, P. (1997). The Isle of Axholme, 1540–1640: Economy and Society (PhD thesis, University of Nottingham). Retrieved from https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/13621/
  4. English Heritage. (2009). Isle of Axholme Character Area – Seascapes: Withernsea to Skegness. Archaeology Data Service. Retrieved from https://archaeologydataservice.ac.uk/archives/view/ehswithern_eh_2009/isleofax.cfm
  5. Rodgers, C. P. (2010). Common Land in Britain: Turbary Allotments – Isle of Axholme, Lincolnshire. Cambridge University Press. Retrieved from https://www.cambridge.org/core/books/common-land-in-britain/isle-of-axholme-turbary-allotments-lincolnshire/3AF0B4212298472CB11CF172CABE935A
  6. Crowle Community Forum. (n.d.). Non-Farming Occupations Around Crowle & District. Crowle.org. Retrieved from https://crowle.org/?p=168
  7. Dunston, G. (1983). The Rivers of Axholme. British Agricultural History Society Journal, 31(1), 56–73.
  8. “Nathanael Reading and the Commissioners of Sewers for the Level of Hatfield Chace,” Yorkshire Archaeological Journal, vol. XVIII, pp. 183–196 (Reading’s own legal case/petition, reprinted from a pamphlet formerly held by Ralph Creyke of Rawcliffe)
  9. Keith Lindley, Fenland Riots and the English Revolution (1982), pp. 214–16, 233–5, 244–5, 250–1 James Boyce, Imperial Mud (2023), pp. 85–9
  10. Joy Lloyd, PhD thesis, “The Communities of the Manor of Epworth” (Sheffield, 1998), pp. 288–9
  11. van Cruyningen, “Dutch investors in the drainage of Hatfield Chase,” Agricultural History Review 64, I (2016), p. 31
  12. 1859 “Un Asile des Huguenots”