A Neolithic stone axe and Roman pottery fragment have been found around the village.[2]
The first historical reference to the village is from the Saxon Charters of 806 AD, in which it is referred to as Bokenhale. In the Domesday Book of 1086 the name is spelt Buchehale.[3] It seems likely that the village name means remote/hidden place where the goats are. 'Boken-'/'Buche-'/'Buckn-' could stem from 'bucca' an old English word for goat.[4] 'Hale' is an old English word meaning a recess, nook, or remote valley.[5] Other theories are that the village is named after a man with the old English name Bucca, that it's a reference to deer (buc in old English), or that it refers to beech trees (bok in old Norse).[6]
It is claimed that the historical figure Lady Godiva was born in Bucknall around 995 AD; however several historians have declared the charter document used as evidence for this to be spurious.[7]
Four miles west of the village there is a ruined medieval abbey called Tupholme Abbey, which was built at a similar time to St. Margaret's Church.
Bucknall also has an 18th-century Grade II listed rectory,[11] A post office previously existed adjacent to Nightingales Nursing Home. In the 1960s a farm in the village overwintered donkeys from Skegness beach. Since the 1990s two cattle farms within the village have been developed for housing. There was previously a farm shop opposite the church and a petrol station at the east end of the village.[citation needed]
A road in the village bears two names. Signs at the mouth of the road say 'Chestnut Avenue' and 'Poplar Road', but on Ordnance Survey maps it is referred to only as 'Poplar Road'.[13]
Amenities
In the village there are a small primary school, a nursing home, post boxes, a village hall, a small park and public footpaths.
^Cox, J. Charles (1916) Lincolnshire p. 85; Methuen & Co. Ltd
^Pevsner, Nikolaus; Harris, John; The Buildings of England: Lincolnshire pp. 204, 205; Penguin, (1964); revised by Nicholas Antram (1989), Yale University Press. ISBN0300096208