Horsington is a village and civil parish in the East Lindsey district of Lincolnshire, England. It lies on the B1190, north from Woodhall Spa and west from Horncastle. The parish includes the hamlet of Poolham. In 1860 the Grade II listedparish church of All Saints was completely rebuilt in red brick, the previous structure being thatched. At that time the Horsington Anglicanrectory and living was in the gift of Magdelen College, Oxford, as principal landowner and provider of the villageLords of the Manor. Magdelen possibly provided the church organ. The same year the College founded the village National School, and subscribed to its support. Kelly also notes the existence of a Wesleyan Chapel. In 1872 White's Directoryreported that Horsington had a population of 397 within a parish of that extends to Hare Booth south on the River Witham and includes farms and a wood. Stixwould railway station was to the east. The 1860 brick built All Saints Church was a replacement for the earlier thatched church. A significant area of parish land was part of the manorial rights held by Magdalen College, Oxford, who held the patronage for the benefice of the ecclesiastical parish. The incumbency was a rectory that included a residence which was built in 1857. A 1760 enclosure of parish land provided of glebe land—an area of land used to support a parish priest—in lieu of tithes , with a further 14 acres in South Somercotes. Over 5 acres of land had been allotted to the ecclesiastical parish to service church upkeep "from time immemorial". About from the church was recorded a burial ground of about one acre, which was purchased by parishioners 100 years previously. The Wesleyans and Independent churches had each a chapel at Horsington. A National School attended by 60 children was built in 1861. Professions and trades listed in 1872 included the rector, a parish clerk, a schoolmaster, a farm bailiff, a blacksmith, a dressmaker, a shoemaker, two shopkeepers, a coal dealer, a bricklayer, a carpenter, a wheelwright, a miller, a beer retailer, the licensed victualler of the Baronet Inn, and thirteen farmers, one of whom was also a miller. Apart from the All Saints' Church, other Grade II listed buildings are three cottages on the village’s Main Street, and a ruined 13th-century chapel at Poolham Hall.