NEOLITHIC & BRONZE AGE
IRON AGE, ROMAN & SAXON FARMSTEADS
THE DOMESDAY SURVEY
THE PRIORY
FAIRS & MARKETS
HARROLD BRIDGE
ST PETER'S CHURCH
NONCONFORMISM
MAJOR LANDOWNERS
HARROLD OLD MANOR
DR RICHARD MEAD
ANNE MEAD, THE ALSTONS AND HARROLD HALL  
ANNE JOLIFFE & THE JOLIFFE MEAD TRUST  
SUMMERLAND BROTHERS & TRAFALGAR
CLOCKMAKING
FREDDIE CROUCH: BLACKSMITH
CALEB LEFEVRE
TRAVEL, TRANSPORT AND MAIL
LEATHERMAKING
BRIDGMAN DOORS
PUBS AND INNS OF HARROLD
HARROLD AT WAR: THE GREAT WAR  
HARROLD AT WAR: WORLD WAR II  
HARROLD AND THE BEATLES 1968  
HARROLD AT THE MILLENNIUM  

 

Nonconformism
 

From about 1774 onwards, ministers preached in the village unconnected with the established church. Some of the Dissenters, as they were then known, worshipped at the chapels in Carlton and Sharnbrook.

In Harrold, meetings took place on The Green, sometimes in a barn, but most frequently in the homes of friends. John Mardlin and Knightly Smith pulled down a partition between rooms in their cottages to accommodate more people for services. Rising attendances lead to consideration of an enlarged place of worship.

William Ray provided ground from his garden on which to build a chapel, and Mr Clark, a farmer, provided the stone for the building: together with donations from others, the Congregational Church was built. It became a United Reformed Church in 1972.