Our ever popular Quiz Night returns to the SAS Club.
Just £16 for a table of four.
Call or text Liz on 07954 171890 to get a ticket
Higham Ferrers Tourism, Business and Community Partnership fundraising to renew the Christmas tree lights around the town
Venue: Chichele College
Cost: £5 per child - cash only
Part of the town’s ever popular Christmas Sparkle.
Working in partnership with Higham Ferrers Town Council
The mystery of the ancient flint axe donated to Higham Ferrers Tourism and thought to date back to between 3 450 – 2 000 BC, has been solved.
And questions about whether the axe is a fascinating find – dating from the Neolithic period – and real, or a fabulous fake, have now been laid to rest.
The mystery began when a visitor to Higham Ferrers’s monthly Saturday market gifted a range of treasures to Higham Ferrers Tourism that used to belong to a family who lived and farmed at Chichele College during the days when it was a farm and a farmhouse.
John (Jack) and Rose Thorpe and their children Maud and Ray, lived and farmed at the college with Ray amassing a collection of games and toys, Meccano sets, wooden jigsaw puzzles, letters bearing the original stamps and a variety of other artefacts.
There was one item in the collection that was particularly interesting to Higham Tourism and members of the Higham Ferrers Archaeological Research Society (HiFARS) who meet at Chichele College: and that was the ancient-looking flint axe which was uncovered by Jack Thorpe while ploughing in a local field.
"HiFARS members were jumping up and down with glee about the flint axe,” Carol Fitzgerald, a member of Higham Ferrers Tourism, Chair of the Chichele College Management Committee – a tourism sub-committee – and Secretary of The Friends of St Mary’s, told Northamptonshire Heritage Forum’s recent History Day held in Higham Ferrers’s Hope Methodist Church.
HiFARS member, Professor Sarah Scott, a professor of archaeology at the University of Leicester and Director the University’s Heritage Hub, told the packed History Day audience that she was keen to help research the axe’s origins.
“I wrapped it up in a sock and took it to Chester House (the Archaeology Resource Centre) on the same day that there were two visiting independent scholars who were looking at axes there,” she recalled.
“The question became, was it real or was it a fake as there had been a growing market in forgeries,” she said.
“I thought it would be fantastic to take the axe to the University of Leicester’s state-of-the-art laboratory with its incredible equipment,” she recounted.
Shortly afterwards, a busload of members of Higham Tourism, the Chichele College Management Committee and HiFARS, visited the University’s School of Archaeology and Ancient History where they were told that the “beautifully made” axe was created using good quality material and that it had been made by someone with skill and a knowledge of different materials.
And no modern tools had been used in its manufacture.
Comparative data from different flint stones would still have to be made, the university visitors were told.
While results at that stage were inconclusive – partly because the axe had been well handled – there was still a high chance it dated to the Neolithic Period (from 4000 to 2200 BC).
The still-curious Higham Ferrers party later visited Chester House where every single axe that had ever been found in Northamptonshire was spread out before them.
“And ours was the biggest and the best,” Carol Fitzgerald bragged.
Professor Scott said later that there was not much more research that the experts could do.
So, is it a real Neolithic flint axe?
“There is a very real chance it is: it is not beyond the realms of possibility,” she said.
The flint axe, which is normally held at Chester House, is currently on show at the Northampton Museum & Art Gallery’s “History of Northamptonshire in 100 Objects” exhibition which runs until 22 February 2026.
(A replica was made for History Day).
An illustrated companion book, featuring all 100 objects, has also been produced.
Meanwhile, back in Higham Ferrers, Tourism Committee member Pam Webbley curated a special exhibition at Chichele College profiling the story of the Thorpe family and showcasing the many objects donated to the committee.
October 2025
TALENTED EX-TEACHER AND TEAM CREATE THEIR OWN LANDMARK
Higham Ferrers’s magnificent and unique mapestry has got a new home and the mastermind behind its design could not be happier.
The mapestry, which captures the town’s medieval market square and other ancient landmarks in fabric and thread, was created from applique and various embroidery techniques and took several years to make.
Often referred to as the town’s own Bayeux Tapestry (which depicts the Norman conquest of England in 1066), the 1,5m mapestry was designed by creative genius, retired former art teacher Fay Caddick, who worked on the special project with several friends, all known as the Material Girls.
Initially displayed in the town’s library, it was moved to the local Henry Chichele Primary School when the library closed.
Somewhere along the way, the special protective Perspex cover vanished and as the unprotected mapestry had been placed in a busy corridor, the Town Council received messages from people who were worried that it was being damaged by pupils rushing along with their bags.
The mapestry was collected from the school and Fay was called in, and with help from a former local French teacher, Therese Easter, they carried out repairs.
Carol Fitzgerald, a member of Higham Ferrers Tourism, told guests at the recent Northamptonshire Heritage Forum History Day hosted by the Tourism Committee, The Friends of St Mary’s and the Higham Ferrers Archaeology and Research Society (HiFARS), what happened next.
“The tourism committee successfully applied to Higham Town Council to pay for a new protective cover. We had also noticed that the local Hope Methodist Church had an empty wall and fortunately, the Church authorities backed the plan to hang the mapestry on the wall,” she recalled.
The tourism committee then invited Professor Peregrine Horden, the Fellow Librarian at All Souls College, Oxford – which was built by Higham Ferrer’s most famous son, Archbishop Henry Chichele - across to the town to unveil the mapestry on History Day.
With Fay and Susan Allen, one of the Material Girls, standing by, the Professor said that the mapestry was a “celebration of the wonderful history of Higham Ferrers.”
And Fay said later that she thought the mapestry looked wonderful in its new home. “It could not be in a better place,” she said.
Now, the work that captured local landmarks for posterity, has itself become a landmark.
October 2025