CHAPTER XXV
THE BOLLES FAMILY
The byway which runs west from the Spilsby and Alford
road, at the foot of Milescross hill near Alford station, after
passing Rigsby, comes to a farm with an old manor-house
and tiny church in a green hollow to the left. A deep sort
of cutting on this side of the church has, along its steep grassy
brow, a line of very old yew trees, not now leading to anything.
This is all there is of the hamlet from which an ancient and
notable family derived its title, the Bolles of Haugh.
Haugh church is a small barn-like building of chalk; the nave twenty-four feet, and the chancel twenty-one feet long, with an enormously thick, small, round-headed arch between them. The chancel is floored with old sepulchral slabs and stone coffin tops, several with Lombardic lettering, and all apparently of the Bolle or Bolles family who lived partly at Haugh in the old manor close to the church, and partly at Thorpe Hall, Louth.
The family of Bolle seemed to have lived at Bolle Hall, Swineshead, from the thirteenth century till the close of the reign of Edward IV., 1483, when, by an intermarriage with the heiress of the Hough family, the elder branch became settled at Hough or Haugh, near Alford, and one of the younger branches settled at Gosberkirke (Gosberton) and spelt their name Bolles. The men of both branches were active both in civil and military positions. Sir George of Gosberton succeeded to the manor of Scampton, near Lincoln, from his father-in-law, Sir John Hart, Lord Mayor of London, 1590. He too became Lord Mayor in 1617, both men being members of the Grocers' Com-