DATA BASE REF: A/F 1010
JARVIS FAMILY FARMING OF BELSIZE FARM, MARHOLM nr PETERBOROUGH
Although Belsize Farm is considered to be
in Marholm, it is in fact both in Castor Ecclesiastical Parish and Castor Civil
Parish. Trevor Jarvis and his wife Jane now farm it, Trevor’s father
Dick(Cyril) having retired.
George Jarvis who died in 1957, came to Belsize after the Great War.
Before that he had been a carrier based in Helpston, transporting, gravel,
wood, timber etc. Vic Winterton claims that when George Jarvis came back from
the 14-18 War, Helpston village helped him buy his first horse and cart.
George m Edith
Jarvis
Arthur Jack m Rose Watts George Ernie
Jarvis Jarvis Jarvis Jarvis
(Home d.1957 (these 2 brothers came out of
farming 1947)
Farm) (Belsize Farm)
Toby Stan Peter Gordon Cyril
m Jean Colin m Lily Brian Graham
(Dick) Ayres (Jagger) Dytham
Trevor m Jane Sandra
Melissa Isabel Gavin Stephanie
Jarvis Jarvis Cooper Cooper
Notes: Cyril Jarvis, son of Jack(John) is always known as Dick. He
married at Marholm Church in 1954 to Jean, daughter of Sid and Liz Ayres who
lived at Pellat Hall (where Jean was born in 1931) as tenants of Milton Estate.
Farms Associated with the
Jarvis Family :
In 1947 George Jarvis sold up to retire, but his son Arthur took on the
tenancy of Home Farm and his son Jack took on Belsize Farm. George built a
bungalow in Woodcroft Road (where Selma Roth lived latterly) and he and Ethel
lived there until they died. The bungalow is owned by Milton Estate now. Jack
died 12th December 1979
In 1962 Dick took on Belsize from his father and retired in 1996, and
his son Trevor now farms Belsize on his own. His parents Dick and Jean still
live on the farm in Belsize Cottage.
Farming at Belsize Farm:
At Belsize they had beef cattle and a dairy as well as a dairy at Home Farm. There were ten working horses(mixture of Percherons and Blues, 6 in one stable, 4 in another) and a hacking pony.
They last ploughed behind a horse in 1946, in Eight Acre Field, just
below Marholm Lodges. It was a single furrow plough and Jim Coles was the
horse-keeper living at Home Farm. Jim Coles was a real character, also being
the gravedigger, the “layer-out” and the haircutter. On one occasion he was
digging drainage to stop water running through Marholm Churchyard, and the
parson, the Revd White came across him and said “Have you tried damming it?”.
Jim said he had cursed it and called it everything to no effect.
In 1947 George sold his horses, but Jack had horses thereafter. He used
three at Belsize, called Dolly, Punch and Sabre. They were used for hoeing,
sugar beet drilling and carting. The last horse was sold in 1961. It had been
used to take feed to the cattle.
The dairy at Belsize stopped in 1962, when father Jack was ill, and the
dairy herd was sold.
The first tractor was bought in 1947, a grey petrol-driven Ford
Ferguson. The first Combine came in 1948; it was a 12ft red Massey-Harris and
cost about £800 second-hand.
Jack Jarvis used to employ seven men at Belsize over and above family.
From 1962, Dick employed four men there, His son Trevor now employs none.
Notes made by W Burke on 14 May 2002 (Feast of St Matthias) with Dick
Jarvis, Trevor Jarvis and Trevor’s wife Jane