Boothby Pagnell is a village and civil parish in the South Kesteven district of Lincolnshire, England.
[1] Boothby Pagnell has a Grade I listed[2] surviving fragment of a medieval manor house, in the Norman style, dating from around 1200 AD.
It has archaeological remains at Cooks Close, a field west of the church, which is chiefly of medieval housing that seems to have fallen into disuse and dereliction by the 14th century, possibly as a result of the fall in the workforce in the aftermath of the Black Death.
She was a friend of Hannah Ayscough and the wife of William Clark, the owner of the house at which Newton lodged in Grantham while at school.
[8] Boothby Pagnell Grade I listed Anglican parish church is dedicated to St Andrew[9] Restored in 1896, it has a Norman tower, font and nave arcades.