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East Lound
East Lound is a hamlet in North Lincolnshire, England. It is situated approximately to the north-west from the city and county town of Lincoln, and on Brackenhill Road within the civil parish of Haxey, a village less than to the west. Owston Ferry on the River Trent is to the east. East Lound forms part of the Isle of Axholme. East Lound is recorded in the 1086 ''Domesday Book'' as "Lund", being a name for both the later East Lound and Graizelound, and under both the entry for Haxey and Owston Ferry in the hundred of Epworth. The lord of the manor following ''Domesday'' was Geoffrey of la Guerche, who was also Tenant-in-chief to King William I.〔( "Documents Online: East Lound, Lincolnshire" ), ''Great Domesday Book'', Folio: 369r. The National Archives. Retrieved 10 July 2014〕〔("Owston Ferry" ), ''Domesdaymap.co.uk''. Retrieved 10 July 2014〕〔("Haxey" ), ''Domesdaymap.co.uk''. Retrieved 10 July 2014〕〔Stonehouse, William Brocklehurst; ''The History and Topography of the Isle of Axholme: Being That Part of Lincolnshire Which Is West of Trent'', Reprint Nabu Press (2010), p.310. ISBN 1148102175〕 In 1855 East Lound occupations included fifteen farmers, two wheelwrights, and a shopkeeper who was also a shoemaker. By 1885 the number of farmers had reduced to twelve and there was only one wheelwright. In 1933 there were ten farmers and a smallholder, a seed grower, and one shop with two shopkeepers. A Primitive Methodist chapel was built at East Lound in 1862, and was closed in 1958.〔''Kelly's Directory of Lincolnshire'' 1855, pp. 114, 115〕〔''Kelly's Directory of Lincolnshire with the port of Hull'' 1885, p.471〕〔''Kelly's Directory of Lincolnshire'' 1933, pp.285, 286〕〔("East Lound Chapel (Primitive Methodist)" ), ''Lincs to the Past'', Lincolnshire Archives. Retrieved 10 July 2014〕 ==References==
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