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Austrey, Warwickshire

Austrey is a village and civil parish in the North Warwickshire District of Warwickshire, England.[2]

Austrey
Saint Nicholas parish church, Austrey
Austrey
Location within Warwickshire
Population1,527 (2011 census)[1]
OS grid referenceSK294065
• London104 miles
Civil parish
  • Austrey
District
Shire county
Region
CountryEngland
Sovereign stateUnited Kingdom
Post townAtherstone
Postcode districtCV9
Dialling code01827
PoliceWarwickshire
FireWarwickshire
AmbulanceWest Midlands
UK Parliament
WebsiteWelcome to Austrey
List of places
UK
England
Warwickshire
52°39′21″N 1°33′55″W / 52.655751°N 1.565414°W / 52.655751; -1.565414

Location edit

With a population of over 1,500 inhabitants, Austrey lies in a central location at the far northeastern extremity of North Warwickshire and is also uniquely close to three County Boundaries of Leicestershire (less than a mile to the East), Staffordshire (less than two miles to the North) and Derbyshire (less than four miles to the North East). North Warwickshire Villages of Newton Regis (1 mile), Polesworth (3 miles), Dordon (4 miles), Warton (1.5 miles), No Man's Heath (1.5 miles) and Leicestershire villages of Appleby Parva (1.5 miles), Appleby Magna (2 miles), Twycross (2.5 miles), Norton-juxta-Twycross (1.5 miles), Orton on the Hill (1.5 miles) are the local neighbouring villages. Austrey is two miles by road from Junction 11 of the M42 motorway/A42 and this Motorway corridor provides access to many transport links.

Amenities and facilities edit

Austrey has a Village Shop, Post Office, Primary School, Pre-School and a Playgroup. The village has two Churches, St Nicholas Church of England that dates back to the 13th century and an early-19th-century Baptist Church. The Bird in Hand is a 15th Century thatched Pub and Village Hall (former Parochial School, which was erected in 1850) are both well frequented. The area in and around Austrey has many equestrian livery yards and stables.

There are a number of Village Clubs and Societies including:- Allotment Society, Archery Group, Art Group, Austrey Rangers Football Club, Bridge Club, Cricket Club, Gardening Society, Golf Society, Neighbourhood Watch, Scout Group, Tennis Club, The WI and a Walking Group. There are a number of mobile businesses that regularly visit the village and these include a Butcher, Fruit and Vegetable van, Dairy Crest Milk, Mobile Library and Fish and Chip van. Most of the village properties have the benefit of all public utilities including gas, water, sewerage, telephone and electricity.

Origins of the parish edit

The village was sometimes spelt 'Alestry'.[3] In the Saxon era Austrey formed part of a great block of seventy or eighty Midlands vills belonging to Wulfric Spot, the Mercian nobleman who founded Burton Abbey. In Wulfric Spot's will of 1004 Wulfric left Austrey "as it now stands with meat and with men", to one of his thegns who later transferred this part of the vill to the abbey. After the Norman conquest the abbot was forced to share suzerainty with Nigel d'Aubigny, one of the Conqueror's trusted retinue, who was given lands in the parish as part of the spoils of the English defeat. Although he retained two and a half hides in Austrey, the abbot was no longer the principal landowner in the parish. The Domesday Book of 1086 records 42 inhabitants in the town.

The monks of Burton-upon-Trent took advantage of rising wool prices in the medieval period to sublet their estates for sheep walks. Aubigny lands reverted to Burton Abbey. In 1538 during the Dissolution of the Monasteries the Abbey surrendered its lands to the Crown.[4] In 1541 the abbey was refounded as a collegiate church and Austrey manor was restored to it.[4] However, in 1545 the collegiate church was dissolved and in 1546 the Crown granted Austrey manor to Sir William Paget.[4] His son Henry Paget inherited Austrey manor in 1563 and still owned it in 1587.[4] Thereafter the manor was divided into freehold farms that were sold to the wealthier tenants. One of the Austrey manors came into the possession of the Kendalls of Smithsby through marriage with one of Henry Alstre's co-heiresses in 1433.

The Kendalls were well-established in Austrey by 1550 and they continued to consolidate their position after this date. The other Austrey manor held by Sir Walter Aston was broken up and divided among his tenants in the early 17th century. By the Tudor period the village was divided into two separate parts: the original settlement cluster around the church and market cross at Over End and a later extension at Nether End. The Kendalls, hereditary lords of the manor, declared support for Parliament at the outbreak of the English Civil War and became involved with conventicles and dissent in the latter half of the 17th century. Henry Kendall was governor of the parliamentary garrison at Maxstoke from March 1644 to October 1645. The parish provided free quartering for a considerable force of parliamentarians commanded by Colonel Drummond and Sir Thomas Fairfax in 1646. It is the namesake of Austrey School, Karachi, Pakistan.[5]

Parish church edit

Austrey had a parish church by 1155.[4] The oldest part of the present Church of England parish church of Saint Nicholas is the Early English Gothic tower,[6] which was built in the middle of the 13th century. The remainder of the church was rebuilt early in the 14th century in the Decorated Gothic style.[6] The nave has a clerestory and is flanked by north and south aisles, each of four bays.[6] The Gothic Revival architect Ewan Christian restored the chancel with new windows in 1844–45.[6] The original church had a leaded roof with a castellated wall; drawings of the church in the pre-Victorian format are held by Birmingham Central Library. In the Victorian era the current pitched roof replaced the original and the porch was added.

The tower has a ring of five bells.[7] Three including the tenor were cast by Hugh Watts II[7] of Leicester[8] in 1632.[7] Another was cast by Thomas Rudhall of Gloucester in 1770.[8][7] The treble was recast by James Barwell of Birmingham in 1911[8][7] from another 1632 bell by Hugh Watts.[4]

St. Nicholas' parish is now part of the Parish of All Souls, North Warwickshire along with the villages of Newton Regis, Seckington, Shuttington and Warton.[9]

Settlement edit

The line of earthworks below the church in the area known as the Bishop's Field are part of a complex of water management ducts and ponds with this area used as water meadows. A quote from George Barwell of Shuttington in 1790 :- "in the parish of Austrey where he was born it has been the custom ever since he can remember (sixty years) to throw the rich waters which are collected in rainy seasons on the common fields lying on the side of the hill above the village, over the meadows which are below it, by means of floodgates and floating trenches." Also in the Bishops Field is a natural spring known as the holy well. The new settlement at the Nether End probably originated with Earl Leofric's original grant to Burton Abbey, which would account for the siting of the monks' farmstead at nearby Bishop's Farm. The medieval pattern of settlement was scythe-shaped with tenements lining the main street running roughly parallel to the ridgeway from Orton to No Man's Heath.

The earliest record of the customary tenants on Sir William Paget's demesne in Tudor times is a partial list of the Austrey copyholders with the number of virgates held by each from a surviving manor court roll. All but two of the twelve tenants listed on the demesne in 1546 held a single virgate; one (Richard Cryspe) had a quarter and the other (Elizabeth Clerke) two virgates. Most of these family names are listed in the 17th century attached to Austrey farmers or craftsmen paying for a single hearth in the hearth tax returns. The two ends of the village had separate water treatment reed beds on the streams just outside the village – the area behind the current sewage pumping system at the South West corner of the village is still owned by Severn Trent Water. The parish has a Church of England primary school[10] and a bus link to the local secondary school in Polesworth.

References edit

  1. ^ "Area: Austrey CP (Parish): 2011 Census". Neighbourhood Statistics. Office for National Statistics. Retrieved 11 June 2013.
  2. ^ OS Explorer Map 232 : Nuneaton & Tamworth: (1:25 000) :ISBN 0 319 46404 0
  3. ^ The Birmingham and Midland Society for Genealogy and Heraldry: Austrey 6 September 2005 at the Wayback Machine
  4. ^ a b c d e f Salzman, 1947, pages 9–13
  5. ^ . Archived from the original on 2 July 2017. Retrieved 24 June 2014.
  6. ^ a b c d Pevsner & Wedgwood, 1966, page 79
  7. ^ a b c d e "Place: Austrey S Nicholas". Dove's Guide for Church Bell Ringers. Retrieved 21 April 2010.
  8. ^ a b c . Dove's Guide for Church Bell Ringers. Archived from the original on 4 September 2015. Retrieved 21 April 2010.
  9. ^ All Souls – North Warwickshire Parish Web site
  10. ^ . Archived from the original on 24 April 2013. Retrieved 11 June 2013.
  • "Austrey Village Website".

Sources edit

  • Bridgeman, C.G.O. (1916). The Burton Abbey Twelfth Century Surveys. Staffordshire Historical Commission. pp. 244–247.
  • Calendar of Patent Rolls (Philip and Mary). Vol. II. p. 135.
  • Jeayes, Isaac Herbert (1937). Burton Abbey Charters. Staffordshire Historical Commission. p. 187.
  • Pevsner, Nikolaus; Wedgwood, Alexandra (1966). The Buildings of England: Warwickshire. Harmondsworth: Penguin Books. pp. 79–80. ISBN 0-14-0710-31-0.
  • Salzman, L.F., ed. (1947). Victoria County History: A History of the County of Warwick, Volume 4. pp. 9–13.
  • Warwick County Records: Hearth Tax Returns. Vol. II. pp. 2–10.
  • Roberts, A. The Farming Inhabitants of Appleby and Austrey, Adelaide University PhD thesis, 1984

External links edit

  • United Kingdom 2011 Local Census
  • Austrey Village Web-site
  • North Warwickshire Borough Council

austrey, warwickshire, austrey, village, civil, parish, north, warwickshire, district, warwickshire, england, austreysaint, nicholas, parish, church, austreyaustreylocation, within, warwickshirepopulation1, 2011, census, grid, referencesk294065, london104, mil. Austrey is a village and civil parish in the North Warwickshire District of Warwickshire England 2 AustreySaint Nicholas parish church AustreyAustreyLocation within WarwickshirePopulation1 527 2011 census 1 OS grid referenceSK294065 London104 milesCivil parishAustreyDistrictNorth WarwickshireShire countyWarwickshireRegionWest MidlandsCountryEnglandSovereign stateUnited KingdomPost townAtherstonePostcode districtCV9Dialling code01827PoliceWarwickshireFireWarwickshireAmbulanceWest MidlandsUK ParliamentNorth WarwickshireWebsiteWelcome to AustreyList of places UK England Warwickshire 52 39 21 N 1 33 55 W 52 655751 N 1 565414 W 52 655751 1 565414 Contents 1 Location 2 Amenities and facilities 3 Origins of the parish 4 Parish church 5 Settlement 6 References 7 Sources 8 External linksLocation editWith a population of over 1 500 inhabitants Austrey lies in a central location at the far northeastern extremity of North Warwickshire and is also uniquely close to three County Boundaries of Leicestershire less than a mile to the East Staffordshire less than two miles to the North and Derbyshire less than four miles to the North East North Warwickshire Villages of Newton Regis 1 mile Polesworth 3 miles Dordon 4 miles Warton 1 5 miles No Man s Heath 1 5 miles and Leicestershire villages of Appleby Parva 1 5 miles Appleby Magna 2 miles Twycross 2 5 miles Norton juxta Twycross 1 5 miles Orton on the Hill 1 5 miles are the local neighbouring villages Austrey is two miles by road from Junction 11 of the M42 motorway A42 and this Motorway corridor provides access to many transport links Amenities and facilities editThis section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed December 2023 Learn how and when to remove this template message Austrey has a Village Shop Post Office Primary School Pre School and a Playgroup The village has two Churches St Nicholas Church of England that dates back to the 13th century and an early 19th century Baptist Church The Bird in Hand is a 15th Century thatched Pub and Village Hall former Parochial School which was erected in 1850 are both well frequented The area in and around Austrey has many equestrian livery yards and stables There are a number of Village Clubs and Societies including Allotment Society Archery Group Art Group Austrey Rangers Football Club Bridge Club Cricket Club Gardening Society Golf Society Neighbourhood Watch Scout Group Tennis Club The WI and a Walking Group There are a number of mobile businesses that regularly visit the village and these include a Butcher Fruit and Vegetable van Dairy Crest Milk Mobile Library and Fish and Chip van Most of the village properties have the benefit of all public utilities including gas water sewerage telephone and electricity Origins of the parish editThe village was sometimes spelt Alestry 3 In the Saxon era Austrey formed part of a great block of seventy or eighty Midlands vills belonging to Wulfric Spot the Mercian nobleman who founded Burton Abbey In Wulfric Spot s will of 1004 Wulfric left Austrey as it now stands with meat and with men to one of his thegns who later transferred this part of the vill to the abbey After the Norman conquest the abbot was forced to share suzerainty with Nigel d Aubigny one of the Conqueror s trusted retinue who was given lands in the parish as part of the spoils of the English defeat Although he retained two and a half hides in Austrey the abbot was no longer the principal landowner in the parish The Domesday Book of 1086 records 42 inhabitants in the town The monks of Burton upon Trent took advantage of rising wool prices in the medieval period to sublet their estates for sheep walks Aubigny lands reverted to Burton Abbey In 1538 during the Dissolution of the Monasteries the Abbey surrendered its lands to the Crown 4 In 1541 the abbey was refounded as a collegiate church and Austrey manor was restored to it 4 However in 1545 the collegiate church was dissolved and in 1546 the Crown granted Austrey manor to Sir William Paget 4 His son Henry Paget inherited Austrey manor in 1563 and still owned it in 1587 4 Thereafter the manor was divided into freehold farms that were sold to the wealthier tenants One of the Austrey manors came into the possession of the Kendalls of Smithsby through marriage with one of Henry Alstre s co heiresses in 1433 The Kendalls were well established in Austrey by 1550 and they continued to consolidate their position after this date The other Austrey manor held by Sir Walter Aston was broken up and divided among his tenants in the early 17th century By the Tudor period the village was divided into two separate parts the original settlement cluster around the church and market cross at Over End and a later extension at Nether End The Kendalls hereditary lords of the manor declared support for Parliament at the outbreak of the English Civil War and became involved with conventicles and dissent in the latter half of the 17th century Henry Kendall was governor of the parliamentary garrison at Maxstoke from March 1644 to October 1645 The parish provided free quartering for a considerable force of parliamentarians commanded by Colonel Drummond and Sir Thomas Fairfax in 1646 It is the namesake of Austrey School Karachi Pakistan 5 Parish church editAustrey had a parish church by 1155 4 The oldest part of the present Church of England parish church of Saint Nicholas is the Early English Gothic tower 6 which was built in the middle of the 13th century The remainder of the church was rebuilt early in the 14th century in the Decorated Gothic style 6 The nave has a clerestory and is flanked by north and south aisles each of four bays 6 The Gothic Revival architect Ewan Christian restored the chancel with new windows in 1844 45 6 The original church had a leaded roof with a castellated wall drawings of the church in the pre Victorian format are held by Birmingham Central Library In the Victorian era the current pitched roof replaced the original and the porch was added The tower has a ring of five bells 7 Three including the tenor were cast by Hugh Watts II 7 of Leicester 8 in 1632 7 Another was cast by Thomas Rudhall of Gloucester in 1770 8 7 The treble was recast by James Barwell of Birmingham in 1911 8 7 from another 1632 bell by Hugh Watts 4 St Nicholas parish is now part of the Parish of All Souls North Warwickshire along with the villages of Newton Regis Seckington Shuttington and Warton 9 Settlement editThe line of earthworks below the church in the area known as the Bishop s Field are part of a complex of water management ducts and ponds with this area used as water meadows A quote from George Barwell of Shuttington in 1790 in the parish of Austrey where he was born it has been the custom ever since he can remember sixty years to throw the rich waters which are collected in rainy seasons on the common fields lying on the side of the hill above the village over the meadows which are below it by means of floodgates and floating trenches Also in the Bishops Field is a natural spring known as the holy well The new settlement at the Nether End probably originated with Earl Leofric s original grant to Burton Abbey which would account for the siting of the monks farmstead at nearby Bishop s Farm The medieval pattern of settlement was scythe shaped with tenements lining the main street running roughly parallel to the ridgeway from Orton to No Man s Heath The earliest record of the customary tenants on Sir William Paget s demesne in Tudor times is a partial list of the Austrey copyholders with the number of virgates held by each from a surviving manor court roll All but two of the twelve tenants listed on the demesne in 1546 held a single virgate one Richard Cryspe had a quarter and the other Elizabeth Clerke two virgates Most of these family names are listed in the 17th century attached to Austrey farmers or craftsmen paying for a single hearth in the hearth tax returns The two ends of the village had separate water treatment reed beds on the streams just outside the village the area behind the current sewage pumping system at the South West corner of the village is still owned by Severn Trent Water The parish has a Church of England primary school 10 and a bus link to the local secondary school in Polesworth References edit Area Austrey CP Parish 2011 Census Neighbourhood Statistics Office for National Statistics Retrieved 11 June 2013 OS Explorer Map 232 Nuneaton amp Tamworth 1 25 000 ISBN 0 319 46404 0 The Birmingham and Midland Society for Genealogy and Heraldry Austrey Archived 6 September 2005 at the Wayback Machine a b c d e f Salzman 1947 pages 9 13 Ermine Schools Ermine Archived from the original on 2 July 2017 Retrieved 24 June 2014 a b c d Pevsner amp Wedgwood 1966 page 79 a b c d e Place Austrey S Nicholas Dove s Guide for Church Bell Ringers Retrieved 21 April 2010 a b c Bell Founders Dove s Guide for Church Bell Ringers Archived from the original on 4 September 2015 Retrieved 21 April 2010 All Souls North Warwickshire Parish Web site Austrey C of E Primary School Archived from the original on 24 April 2013 Retrieved 11 June 2013 Austrey Village Website Sources editBridgeman C G O 1916 The Burton Abbey Twelfth Century Surveys Staffordshire Historical Commission pp 244 247 Calendar of Patent Rolls Philip and Mary Vol II p 135 Jeayes Isaac Herbert 1937 Burton Abbey Charters Staffordshire Historical Commission p 187 Pevsner Nikolaus Wedgwood Alexandra 1966 The Buildings of England Warwickshire Harmondsworth Penguin Books pp 79 80 ISBN 0 14 0710 31 0 Salzman L F ed 1947 Victoria County History A History of the County of Warwick Volume 4 pp 9 13 Warwick County Records Hearth Tax Returns Vol II pp 2 10 Roberts A The Farming Inhabitants of Appleby and Austrey Adelaide University PhD thesis 1984External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Austrey United Kingdom 2011 Local Census Austrey Village Web site North Warwickshire Borough Council Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Austrey Warwickshire amp oldid 1192779359, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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