The village is scattered around the "30 foot" contour road.[further explanation needed] which joins Fulstow to the neighbouring villages of
Covenham and
Alvingham to the south and
Tetney to the north. Fulstow is on the
Greenwich Meridian Line being the only village in England where this crosses the centre of the village. Fulstow has fresh water springs, and a population of approximately 550.[2][3]
Fulstow is listed in the 1086 Domesday survey as "Fuglestow".[2][4]
In 1885 Kelly's Directory recorded the existence of three village chapels:
Wesleyan,
Primitive Methodist and
Wesleyan Reformers. Agriculture centred on the growing of wheat, barley, oats and turnips.[6] The civil parish, with the same boundaries, is represented by a parish council.[7]
The Village hall was built in 1986 and is used for community functions. Unlike many other village halls this one is self funding and not Parish Council controlled.
There were once two
public houses in the village, the Lord Nelson and The Cross Keys, but the Lord Nelson closed in 1969.[2][8] The post office and general store was still operating until 2010,[2][9] but was described in 2011 as "closed and derelict". It is now a private house.[10][11][12]
The village
primary school was opened by H Allenby of Kenwick Hall in 1863 It was built by with local subscription.
Trivia
Fulstow was once referred to as "Britain's most lawless village" in the Times newspaper in the 1901 due to its history of drunken violence and self-policing in its secluded geographical location.
Due to its location in the marshes of Lincolnshire as well as the surrounding roads, there is no reason to pass through the village and Fulstow can be easily missed unless specifically intended.
Since the early 2000s there has been a growing independence movement within the village (and surrounding areas). Primarily stemming from ideas surrounding the historical isle and
Kingdom of Lindsey. Supported by a growing general disillusionment with the UK government at both a local and national level, and the idea that due to the land reclamation and drainage of the area beginning the Middle Ages onwards, the movement suggests that it is the land of the people and not that of a governmental state. The independent culture of the region's inhabitants has been around much longer however, and was even noted by E. H Rudkin, specifically in their book of Lincolnshire Folklore[13] when commenting on the local belief in the bog spirits called
Tiddy Mun.
People "born" or have resided within the village for a significant amount of time refer to themselves as "Fulstownians" - in a similar vain of the medieval tribes that previously inhabited the area, such as the
Corieltauvi and later, the
Lindisfaras. There are various groups on social media dedicated, restricted and strictly monitored to include only those who can trace heritage back to the village.
Lincolnshire Federation of Women's Institutes (19 March 1990). The Lincolnshire Village Book. Villages of Britain. Countryside Books.
ISBN978-1853060779.
"Inset Map 24"(PDF). District plan, Chapter 15, Northern parishes. East Lindsey district council. Archived from
the original(PDF) on 3 December 2013. Retrieved 23 May 2013.