fbpx
Wikipedia

Little Wolford

Little Wolford is a hamlet and civil parish in the Stratford-on-Avon district of Warwickshire, England. With the neighbouring parish of Great Wolford it is part of 'The Wolfords'. Little Wolford is significant for its Grade II* listed 15th- to 16th-century Little Wolford Manor.

Little Wolford
Broadmoor Lodge, Little Wolford
Little Wolford
Location within Warwickshire
OS grid referenceSP263354
• London74 mi (119 km) SE
Civil parish
  • Little Wolford
District
Shire county
Region
CountryEngland
Sovereign stateUnited Kingdom
Post townShipston-on-Stour
Postcode districtCV36
Dialling code01608
PoliceWarwickshire
FireWarwickshire
AmbulanceWest Midlands
UK Parliament
List of places
UK
England
Warwickshire
52°00′55″N 1°37′06″W / 52.01528°N 1.61833°W / 52.01528; -1.61833

History edit

According to A Dictionary of British Place Names, Wolford derives from the Old English 'wulf' with 'weard', meaning a "place protected against wolves". The Concise Oxfordshire Dictionary of English Place-names adds that 'weard' might mean "guard", and as such might here be unique usage, as an "arrangement for protection, [or] fence", the whole name perhaps "enclosure to protect flocks from wolves".[1][2]

In the Domesday Book, the settlement is variously listed as 'Ulware', 'Ulwarda' and 'Wolwarde', and in 1242 as 'Parva Wulleward'.[2] In 1086, after the Norman Conquest, Little Wolford was in the Hundred of Barcheston and county of Warwickshire. There were three Tenants-in-chief to king William I: Bishop Odo of Bayeux, Robert de Beaumont, 1st Earl of Leicester (Count of Meulan), and Robert de Stafford. Bishop Odo retained Gerald as his lord, who had acquired the title from the 1066 lord Aelfric (uncle of Thorkil) – the manor contained three villagers, one ploughland with 0.5 men's plough team, and 6 acres (2.4 ha) of meadow. The land of the Count of Meluan had Ralf as lord, again acquiring the title from the 1066 lord Aelfric - the manor contained three villagers, five smallholders, two slaves, and four ploughlands with one lord's plough team and one men's plough team. De Stafford had three manorial lands. Firstly, one where he was also Lord, this acquired from the 1066 lord Vagn (of Wootton), which contained eight villagers, eight smallholders, four slaves and a priest, with ten ploughlands, six men's plough teams and a mill. Secondly, one with Ordwy as lord, acquired from the 1066 lord Alwy, which contained four villagers, four smallholders, six ploughlands, and two lord's and one men's plough teams. Thirdly, where Alwin was the lord in 1066 and 1086, which contained four villagers, three smallholders, a slave, and two ploughlands with one lord's and one men's plough teams.[3][4]

By the 13th century there were four fields, each two cultivated under a two-field system of crop rotation, and as virgates. A corn mill and fulling mill existed. There were further smaller virgates, one at Pepperwell (then Yperwelle), signified by Pepperwell Lane today at the south-east of the parish.[4] By the beginning of the 17th century there were two watermills, one perhaps on Nethercote Brook which divides today's parishes of Little and Great Wolford. The fields were evident as late as 1940 through aerial photography which indicated a ridge and furrow system of ploughing. This medieval or post-medieval system of cultivation was shown by earthworks which continued beyond the parish.[5]

After Robert de Stafford died (c.1100), his manor at Wolford passed through his sister Milicent de Stafford (who married Hervey Bagot), to her son Hervey de Stafford, who had adopted his mother's name. The manor was divided in 1242 at the time of the later Robert de Stafford, becoming Great and Little Wolford. Ownership stayed with the Stafford family, including the 15th-century Humphrey Stafford, 1st Duke of Buckingham. In 1521 Edward Stafford, 3rd Duke of Buckingham was executed by Henry VIII for treason. The year before he had, through trustees, sold the manors to Henry's courtier, Sir William Compton. The manors of Great and Little Wolford stayed in the Compton family until 1819, however, at about 1600 they were bought by Robert Catesby, the leader of the group of English Catholics who planned the failed 1605 Gunpowder Plot. They were then, in 1605, transferred to a Thomas Spencer and an Edward Sheldon, by Catesby, Sir Thomas Leigh, and Lord Ellesmere whose wife was sister to the second wife of Henry, Lord Compton. Because of transaction inconsistency, the manors reverted to the Compton family. In 1819 they were sold, by Charles Compton, Marquess of Northampton, to Lord Redesdale, they subsequently passing to his son John Freeman-Mitford, 1st Earl of Redesdale. The unmarried earl then left the manors to Algernon Bertram Mitford, created Baron Redesdale in 1902. After his death in 1916, the manors passed to David Freeman-Mitford, 2nd Baron Redesdale, the father of the Mitford sisters.[4]

Sir Nathaniel Brent (c.1573 – 1652) was the son of Anchor Brent of Little Wolford. He was in 1616 the ambassador at the Hague, in 1622 the warden of Merton College, Oxford, and afterwards commissary of the diocese of Canterbury.[6]

 
Wolford, including Great and Little Wolford, in 1903

During the 19th century Little Wolford was part of the Brailes division of the Kington Hundred, and described as a hamlet of Great wolford. In 1801 parish population was 229. By 1841 Little Wolford contained 274 inhabitants in 53 houses, in a parish area of 1,324 acres (536 ha), in which were 339 acres (137 ha) of common land or waste. The industrialist, politician and lord of the manor Sir George Philips in 1844 purchased Little Wolford Manor, formerly in the possession of the Ingram family. Directory listed trades and occupations in 1850 included five farmers, two in the same family, a brickmaker, shoemaker, blacksmith, a corn miller, and two carpenters.[7][8] By 1896 Little Wolford Manor House was the property of Juliana, Countess of Camperdown, née Juliana Cavendish Philips (1812-1898), the sole landowner and wife to Adam Haldane-Duncan, 2nd Earl of Camperdown. Land area was 1,312 acres (531 ha) in which lived, in 1891, 178 people. There was a post box but no post office. The nearest money order office was at Long Compton, the nearest telegraph offices at Moreton-in-Marsh and Shipston-on-Stour. A National School for 70 children was erected in 1874 by Lord Redesdale; its average 1896 attendance was 61. Trades and occupations listed in 1896 included six farmers, a shoemaker, two graziers and a blacksmith & farrier.[9] Population in 1901 was 181. In 1912 Little Wolford Manor House was the property of the Earl of Camperdown, who was the parish sole landowner. The National School was now a Public Elementary School (Education Act 1902), with an average attendance of 57. Trades and occupations listed were eight farmers, two graziers and a shoemaker.[10]

Although described as a hamlet of Great Wolford (under 'Wolford') in 19th and 20th-century trade directories,[10] Little Wolford and Great Wolford had attained separate parish status under the Poor Law Amendment Act of 1866, which established new civil parishes for the purposes of the New Poor Law of 1834, and collection of poor rate.[11]

Governance edit

Lowest tier of local government is direct democracy through Little Wolford Parish Meeting, whose remit is more limited than a parish council.[12] The next higher tier of government is Stratford-on-Avon District Council, to which Little Wolford sends one councillor under the Brailes and Compton ward,[13] above this, Warwickshire County Council, where Little Wolford is represented by the seat for the Shipston division of the Stratford-on-Avon area.[14]

Little Wolford is represented in the UK Parliament House of Commons as part of the Stratford-on-Avon constituency, its 2019 sitting MP being Nadhim Zahawi of the Conservative Party.

Prior to Brexit in 2020, it was part of the West Midlands constituency of the European Parliament.

Geography and community edit

Little Wolford civil parish has no amenities, and is entirely rural, of farms, fields, and dispersed businesses and residential properties, the only nucleated settlement being the hamlet of Little Wolford. It approximates an oval in shape, 2.5 miles (4 km) north to south, and 1.5 miles (2 km) east to west at its widest. It is at the south of Warwickshire, and borders the Todenham parish of Gloucestershire at the north-west. Adjacent Warwickshire parishes are Burmington at the north, Long Compton at the east, Barton-on-the-Heath at the south, and Great Wolford at the west with the boundary defined by the course of Nethercote Brook, a tributary of the River Stour. Most of the southern part of the parish is part of the Cotswolds Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty (AONB).[15][16][17]

The A3400 road runs north to south through the parish, locally from Shipston-on-Stour at the north to Chipping Norton at the south. The only other parish roads, apart from farm and residential tracks and cul-de-sacs, is the minor road running east from the A3400 to the village of Cherington, and the minor Little Wolford Road running from the A3400, south through Little Wolford hamlet, then west along the boundary of the AONB to the village of Great Wolford. Running south off Little Wolford Road is Pepperwell Lane which dog-legs east to the A3400. The county town and city of Gloucester is 28 miles (45 km) to the south-west. Closest towns to the hamlet are Moreton-in-Marsh, 4 miles (6 km) to the south-west, and Shipston-on-Stour, 3 miles (5 km) to the north. The neighbouring village of Great Wolford is 1 mile (1.6 km) to the south-west. The nearest railway station is at Moreton-in-Marsh on the Cotswold Line of the Great Western Railway. Bus services operate within Little Wolford. A stop in the hamlet includes connections to Shipston-on-Stour and Burmington on a circuitous village Shipston Link service. The only other stop, on the A3400, includes connections to Shipston-on-Stour, Stratford upon Avon, Chipping Norton, Whichford, Long Compton, and Lower Brailes.[15][16][17][18]

Landmarks edit

Within Little Wolford is one Grade II* and nine Grade II listed buildings and structures.[19]

 
Little Wolford Manor House

Little Wolford Manor House (Grade II* listed in 1987), within the hamlet on Little Wolford Road, with its attached bakehouse and gateway, dates to the late 15th or early 16th-century, but with later additions and changes. Of limestone courses, with earlier parts of ashlar, it is of two storeys and L-plan, previously U-plan until the early 19th century. At the rear of the house is a 17th-century gabled range with a timber framed jetty with oriel windows. Attached is the 17th-century bakehouse, and a cottage.[20][21][22] On the opposite side of the road from the Manor House, and just north of Rosary Lane on a private road, is The Hollows (listed 1987), a late 18th century limestone farmhouse, 'L-plan' of two storeys. There are three bays, each with casement windows, and a gabled porch off centre to the right.[23] Between these two buildings, and at the west side of Little Wolford Road at its junction with Rosary Lane, is a wellhead (listed 1987) which probably dates to the 19th century. Set into the pavement wall, and recessed within a structure of coursed limestone which includes fragments of architectural elements, it comprises an iron trough fed by a "beast head". Inset within the structure face, and to the right of the trough is a Victorian post-box.[24][25]

On the A3400 there are four Grade II lodges. The northernmost, at the junction with the road to Cherington, is Broadmoor Lodge (listed 1987), possibly designed by Edward Blore as part of his scheme for the now demolished Weston House. It dates to c.1830 and is of coursed limestone in two storeys with a gabled and buttressed porch with Tudor-arch-style portal, and an upper sill course with gargoyle at each corner below a castellated parapet.[26][27] To the north of Broadmoor Lodge is a 2011 Grade II listed milepost.[28] Farther south is a house listed in 1987 as Double Lodges, divided into two residences. Dating to c.1830, of two storeys in coursed limestone and T-plan, it is in Tudor domestic style, with dutch gables with two-light mullion windows, and a porch on its front face at right angles to the road.[29][30] Farther south still is Bedlam Lodge (listed in 1987 with its attached buildings). This dates to the mid-19th century, and is built of coursed limestone in T-plan, and is of one storey and an attic in Tudor domestic style. There are mullioned windows and a gabled porch. The listed rear range outbuilding to the lodge contains a kitchen and a "small dog kennel with 4-centred arch."[31][32] Farthest south is Weston Lodge (listed 1987), dating to c.1830, and again possibly designed by Edward Blore as part of his scheme for Weston House. It is built in coursed limestone and in two storeys in Tudor domestic style, with a gabled and buttressed porch with Tudor-arch-style portal, and an upper sill course below a castellated parapet with "polygonal corner turrets". The windows are mullioned with hood moulds, the one on the ground floor facing the road, a bay. To the rear is a one-story gabled range.[33][34] At the head of the drive at Weston Lodge are two gate piers (listed 1987), both probably dating to the early to mid-19th century. Both of limestone, they are surmounted by poppy-head finials.[35][36]

Two levelled former earthworks of banks and ditches signifying enclosures, photographed by the Warwickshire National Mapping Project in 1947, are to the east from the hamlet and A3400 road (52°00′57″N 1°36′30″W / 52.0157°N 1.60843°W / 52.0157; -1.60843), and which, according to Pastscape, "are presumed to be the remains of copse enclosures" and "appear to be a ornamental Park land feature" at what was the south-east edge of the formal park of the now nonexistent Weston House, until the 18th century a 300 acres (121 ha) deer park which was established by Henry VIII.[37][38]

References edit

  1. ^ Mills, Anthony David (2003); A Dictionary of British Place Names, Oxford University Press, revised edition (2011), p.506 ISBN 019960908X
  2. ^ a b Ekwall, Eilert (1936); The Concise Oxfordshire Dictionary of English Place-names, Oxford University Press, 4th ed. (1960), p.529 ISBN 0198691033
  3. ^ "Wolford and Little Wolford", Open Domesday, University of Hull. Retrieved 16 October 2019
  4. ^ a b c "Wolford", A History of the County of Warwick Volume 5, Kington Hundred, ed. L F Salzman (London, 1949), pp. 213-218. Retrieved 16 October 2019
  5. ^ Historic England. "Monument no. 1621328 (1621328)". Research records (formerly PastScape). Retrieved 17 October 2019.
  6. ^ Stephen, Leslie, ed. (1886). "Brent, Nathaniel" . Dictionary of National Biography. Vol. 6. London: Smith, Elder & Co.
  7. ^ "Little Wolford", A topographical dictionary of England, Samuel Lewis (London, 1848), vol. IV, p.643
  8. ^ "Wolford (Little)" in A History, Gazetteer & Directory of Warwickshire, Francis White (1850), pp.714, 715
  9. ^ Kelly's Directory of Warwickshire, 1896, p.274
  10. ^ a b Kelly's Directory of Warwickshire, 1912, p.323
  11. ^ Youngs, Frederic A., Guide to the Local Administrative Units of England, citing 29 & 30 Vict c.113
  12. ^ What is a Parish Meeting? Little Wolford Parish Meeting. Retrieved 16 October 2019
  13. ^ "Councillor Sarah Whalley-Hoggins", Stratford-on-Avon District Council. Retrieved 16 October 2019
  14. ^ "Warwickshire Map divisions", Warwickshire County Council. Retrieved 18 October 2019
  15. ^ a b Extracted from "Little Wolford", Grid Reference Finder. Retrieved 16 October 2019
  16. ^ a b Extracted from "Little Wolford", GetOutside, Ordnance Survey. Retrieved 16 October 2019
  17. ^ a b Extracted from "Little Wolford", civil parish boundary, Google Maps. Retrieved 16 October 2019
  18. ^ "Little Wolford", Bus Times. Retrieved 16 October 2019
  19. ^ "Listed Buildings in Little Wolford, Stratford-on-Avon, Warwickshire", British Listed Buildings. Retrieved 16 October 2019
  20. ^ Historic England. "Little Wolford Manor House and Attached Bakehouse and Gateway (1319952)". National Heritage List for England. Retrieved 16 October 2019.
  21. ^ Little Wolford Manor House, Little Wolford, Warwickshire, Google Street View (image date December 2009). Retrieved 16 October 2019
  22. ^ Historic England. "Little Wolford Manor House (332705)". Research records (formerly PastScape). Retrieved 17 October 2019.
  23. ^ Historic England. "The Hollows (1116405)". National Heritage List for England. Retrieved 16 October 2019.
  24. ^ Historic England. "Wellhead Approximately 80 Metres East of Little Wolford Manor House (1024296)". National Heritage List for England. Retrieved 16 October 2019.
  25. ^ Wellhead, Little Wolford, Warwickshire, Google Street View (image date December 2009). Retrieved 16 October 2019
  26. ^ Historic England. "Broadmoor Lodge (1319927)". National Heritage List for England. Retrieved 16 October 2019.
  27. ^ Broadmoor Lodge, A3400 road, Little Wolford, Warwickshire, Google Street View (image date July 2009). Retrieved 16 October 2019
  28. ^ Historic England. "Milepost on the west side of the A3400, c.285m north-north-west of Broadmoor Lodge (1402230)". National Heritage List for England. Retrieved 16 October 2019.
  29. ^ Historic England. "Double Lodges (1355525)". National Heritage List for England. Retrieved 16 October 2019.
  30. ^ Double Lodges, A3400 road, Little Wolford, Warwickshire, Google Street View (image date July 2009). Retrieved 16 October 2019
  31. ^ Historic England. "Bedlam Lodge and Attached Outbuildings (1024295)". National Heritage List for England. Retrieved 16 October 2019.
  32. ^ Bedlam Lodge, A3400 road, Little Wolford, Warwickshire, Google Street View (image date July 2009). Retrieved 16 October 2019
  33. ^ Historic England. "Weston Lodge (1355526)". National Heritage List for England. Retrieved 16 October 2019.
  34. ^ Weston Lodge, A3400 road, Little Wolford, Warwickshire, Google Street View (image date October 2009). Retrieved 16 October 2019
  35. ^ Historic England. "Gatepier Approximately 4 Metres South West of Weston Lodge (1024297)". National Heritage List for England. Retrieved 16 October 2019.
  36. ^ Historic England. "Gatepier Approximately 7 Metres South of Weston Lodge (1116413)". National Heritage List for England. Retrieved 16 October 2019.
  37. ^ Historic England. "Monument no. 11621259 (1621259)". Research records (formerly PastScape). Retrieved 17 October 2019.
  38. ^ Historic England. "Weston Park (332684)". Research records (formerly PastScape). Retrieved 17 October 2019.

External links edit

  •   Media related to Little Wolford at Wikimedia Commons
  • "Wolford", Genuki. Retrieved 18 October 2019

little, wolford, hamlet, civil, parish, stratford, avon, district, warwickshire, england, with, neighbouring, parish, great, wolford, part, wolfords, significant, grade, listed, 15th, 16th, century, manor, broadmoor, lodge, location, within, warwickshireos, gr. Little Wolford is a hamlet and civil parish in the Stratford on Avon district of Warwickshire England With the neighbouring parish of Great Wolford it is part of The Wolfords Little Wolford is significant for its Grade II listed 15th to 16th century Little Wolford Manor Little WolfordBroadmoor Lodge Little WolfordLittle WolfordLocation within WarwickshireOS grid referenceSP263354 London74 mi 119 km SECivil parishLittle WolfordDistrictStratford on AvonShire countyWarwickshireRegionWest MidlandsCountryEnglandSovereign stateUnited KingdomPost townShipston on StourPostcode districtCV36Dialling code01608PoliceWarwickshireFireWarwickshireAmbulanceWest MidlandsUK ParliamentStratford on AvonList of places UK England Warwickshire 52 00 55 N 1 37 06 W 52 01528 N 1 61833 W 52 01528 1 61833 Contents 1 History 2 Governance 3 Geography and community 4 Landmarks 5 References 6 External linksHistory editAccording to A Dictionary of British Place Names Wolford derives from the Old English wulf with weard meaning a place protected against wolves The Concise Oxfordshire Dictionary of English Place names adds that weard might mean guard and as such might here be unique usage as an arrangement for protection or fence the whole name perhaps enclosure to protect flocks from wolves 1 2 In the Domesday Book the settlement is variously listed as Ulware Ulwarda and Wolwarde and in 1242 as Parva Wulleward 2 In 1086 after the Norman Conquest Little Wolford was in the Hundred of Barcheston and county of Warwickshire There were three Tenants in chief to king William I Bishop Odo of Bayeux Robert de Beaumont 1st Earl of Leicester Count of Meulan and Robert de Stafford Bishop Odo retained Gerald as his lord who had acquired the title from the 1066 lord Aelfric uncle of Thorkil the manor contained three villagers one ploughland with 0 5 men s plough team and 6 acres 2 4 ha of meadow The land of the Count of Meluan had Ralf as lord again acquiring the title from the 1066 lord Aelfric the manor contained three villagers five smallholders two slaves and four ploughlands with one lord s plough team and one men s plough team De Stafford had three manorial lands Firstly one where he was also Lord this acquired from the 1066 lord Vagn of Wootton which contained eight villagers eight smallholders four slaves and a priest with ten ploughlands six men s plough teams and a mill Secondly one with Ordwy as lord acquired from the 1066 lord Alwy which contained four villagers four smallholders six ploughlands and two lord s and one men s plough teams Thirdly where Alwin was the lord in 1066 and 1086 which contained four villagers three smallholders a slave and two ploughlands with one lord s and one men s plough teams 3 4 By the 13th century there were four fields each two cultivated under a two field system of crop rotation and as virgates A corn mill and fulling mill existed There were further smaller virgates one at Pepperwell then Yperwelle signified by Pepperwell Lane today at the south east of the parish 4 By the beginning of the 17th century there were two watermills one perhaps on Nethercote Brook which divides today s parishes of Little and Great Wolford The fields were evident as late as 1940 through aerial photography which indicated a ridge and furrow system of ploughing This medieval or post medieval system of cultivation was shown by earthworks which continued beyond the parish 5 After Robert de Stafford died c 1100 his manor at Wolford passed through his sister Milicent de Stafford who married Hervey Bagot to her son Hervey de Stafford who had adopted his mother s name The manor was divided in 1242 at the time of the later Robert de Stafford becoming Great and Little Wolford Ownership stayed with the Stafford family including the 15th century Humphrey Stafford 1st Duke of Buckingham In 1521 Edward Stafford 3rd Duke of Buckingham was executed by Henry VIII for treason The year before he had through trustees sold the manors to Henry s courtier Sir William Compton The manors of Great and Little Wolford stayed in the Compton family until 1819 however at about 1600 they were bought by Robert Catesby the leader of the group of English Catholics who planned the failed 1605 Gunpowder Plot They were then in 1605 transferred to a Thomas Spencer and an Edward Sheldon by Catesby Sir Thomas Leigh and Lord Ellesmere whose wife was sister to the second wife of Henry Lord Compton Because of transaction inconsistency the manors reverted to the Compton family In 1819 they were sold by Charles Compton Marquess of Northampton to Lord Redesdale they subsequently passing to his son John Freeman Mitford 1st Earl of Redesdale The unmarried earl then left the manors to Algernon Bertram Mitford created Baron Redesdale in 1902 After his death in 1916 the manors passed to David Freeman Mitford 2nd Baron Redesdale the father of the Mitford sisters 4 Sir Nathaniel Brent c 1573 1652 was the son of Anchor Brent of Little Wolford He was in 1616 the ambassador at the Hague in 1622 the warden of Merton College Oxford and afterwards commissary of the diocese of Canterbury 6 nbsp Wolford including Great and Little Wolford in 1903 During the 19th century Little Wolford was part of the Brailes division of the Kington Hundred and described as a hamlet of Great wolford In 1801 parish population was 229 By 1841 Little Wolford contained 274 inhabitants in 53 houses in a parish area of 1 324 acres 536 ha in which were 339 acres 137 ha of common land or waste The industrialist politician and lord of the manor Sir George Philips in 1844 purchased Little Wolford Manor formerly in the possession of the Ingram family Directory listed trades and occupations in 1850 included five farmers two in the same family a brickmaker shoemaker blacksmith a corn miller and two carpenters 7 8 By 1896 Little Wolford Manor House was the property of Juliana Countess of Camperdown nee Juliana Cavendish Philips 1812 1898 the sole landowner and wife to Adam Haldane Duncan 2nd Earl of Camperdown Land area was 1 312 acres 531 ha in which lived in 1891 178 people There was a post box but no post office The nearest money order office was at Long Compton the nearest telegraph offices at Moreton in Marsh and Shipston on Stour A National School for 70 children was erected in 1874 by Lord Redesdale its average 1896 attendance was 61 Trades and occupations listed in 1896 included six farmers a shoemaker two graziers and a blacksmith amp farrier 9 Population in 1901 was 181 In 1912 Little Wolford Manor House was the property of the Earl of Camperdown who was the parish sole landowner The National School was now a Public Elementary School Education Act 1902 with an average attendance of 57 Trades and occupations listed were eight farmers two graziers and a shoemaker 10 Although described as a hamlet of Great Wolford under Wolford in 19th and 20th century trade directories 10 Little Wolford and Great Wolford had attained separate parish status under the Poor Law Amendment Act of 1866 which established new civil parishes for the purposes of the New Poor Law of 1834 and collection of poor rate 11 Governance editLowest tier of local government is direct democracy through Little Wolford Parish Meeting whose remit is more limited than a parish council 12 The next higher tier of government is Stratford on Avon District Council to which Little Wolford sends one councillor under the Brailes and Compton ward 13 above this Warwickshire County Council where Little Wolford is represented by the seat for the Shipston division of the Stratford on Avon area 14 Little Wolford is represented in the UK Parliament House of Commons as part of the Stratford on Avon constituency its 2019 sitting MP being Nadhim Zahawi of the Conservative Party Prior to Brexit in 2020 it was part of the West Midlands constituency of the European Parliament Geography and community editLittle Wolford civil parish has no amenities and is entirely rural of farms fields and dispersed businesses and residential properties the only nucleated settlement being the hamlet of Little Wolford It approximates an oval in shape 2 5 miles 4 km north to south and 1 5 miles 2 km east to west at its widest It is at the south of Warwickshire and borders the Todenham parish of Gloucestershire at the north west Adjacent Warwickshire parishes are Burmington at the north Long Compton at the east Barton on the Heath at the south and Great Wolford at the west with the boundary defined by the course of Nethercote Brook a tributary of the River Stour Most of the southern part of the parish is part of the Cotswolds Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty AONB 15 16 17 The A3400 road runs north to south through the parish locally from Shipston on Stour at the north to Chipping Norton at the south The only other parish roads apart from farm and residential tracks and cul de sacs is the minor road running east from the A3400 to the village of Cherington and the minor Little Wolford Road running from the A3400 south through Little Wolford hamlet then west along the boundary of the AONB to the village of Great Wolford Running south off Little Wolford Road is Pepperwell Lane which dog legs east to the A3400 The county town and city of Gloucester is 28 miles 45 km to the south west Closest towns to the hamlet are Moreton in Marsh 4 miles 6 km to the south west and Shipston on Stour 3 miles 5 km to the north The neighbouring village of Great Wolford is 1 mile 1 6 km to the south west The nearest railway station is at Moreton in Marsh on the Cotswold Line of the Great Western Railway Bus services operate within Little Wolford A stop in the hamlet includes connections to Shipston on Stour and Burmington on a circuitous village Shipston Link service The only other stop on the A3400 includes connections to Shipston on Stour Stratford upon Avon Chipping Norton Whichford Long Compton and Lower Brailes 15 16 17 18 Landmarks editWithin Little Wolford is one Grade II and nine Grade II listed buildings and structures 19 nbsp Little Wolford Manor House Little Wolford Manor House Grade II listed in 1987 within the hamlet on Little Wolford Road with its attached bakehouse and gateway dates to the late 15th or early 16th century but with later additions and changes Of limestone courses with earlier parts of ashlar it is of two storeys and L plan previously U plan until the early 19th century At the rear of the house is a 17th century gabled range with a timber framed jetty with oriel windows Attached is the 17th century bakehouse and a cottage 20 21 22 On the opposite side of the road from the Manor House and just north of Rosary Lane on a private road is The Hollows listed 1987 a late 18th century limestone farmhouse L plan of two storeys There are three bays each with casement windows and a gabled porch off centre to the right 23 Between these two buildings and at the west side of Little Wolford Road at its junction with Rosary Lane is a wellhead listed 1987 which probably dates to the 19th century Set into the pavement wall and recessed within a structure of coursed limestone which includes fragments of architectural elements it comprises an iron trough fed by a beast head Inset within the structure face and to the right of the trough is a Victorian post box 24 25 On the A3400 there are four Grade II lodges The northernmost at the junction with the road to Cherington is Broadmoor Lodge listed 1987 possibly designed by Edward Blore as part of his scheme for the now demolished Weston House It dates to c 1830 and is of coursed limestone in two storeys with a gabled and buttressed porch with Tudor arch style portal and an upper sill course with gargoyle at each corner below a castellated parapet 26 27 To the north of Broadmoor Lodge is a 2011 Grade II listed milepost 28 Farther south is a house listed in 1987 as Double Lodges divided into two residences Dating to c 1830 of two storeys in coursed limestone and T plan it is in Tudor domestic style with dutch gables with two light mullion windows and a porch on its front face at right angles to the road 29 30 Farther south still is Bedlam Lodge listed in 1987 with its attached buildings This dates to the mid 19th century and is built of coursed limestone in T plan and is of one storey and an attic in Tudor domestic style There are mullioned windows and a gabled porch The listed rear range outbuilding to the lodge contains a kitchen and a small dog kennel with 4 centred arch 31 32 Farthest south is Weston Lodge listed 1987 dating to c 1830 and again possibly designed by Edward Blore as part of his scheme for Weston House It is built in coursed limestone and in two storeys in Tudor domestic style with a gabled and buttressed porch with Tudor arch style portal and an upper sill course below a castellated parapet with polygonal corner turrets The windows are mullioned with hood moulds the one on the ground floor facing the road a bay To the rear is a one story gabled range 33 34 At the head of the drive at Weston Lodge are two gate piers listed 1987 both probably dating to the early to mid 19th century Both of limestone they are surmounted by poppy head finials 35 36 Two levelled former earthworks of banks and ditches signifying enclosures photographed by the Warwickshire National Mapping Project in 1947 are to the east from the hamlet and A3400 road 52 00 57 N 1 36 30 W 52 0157 N 1 60843 W 52 0157 1 60843 and which according to Pastscape are presumed to be the remains of copse enclosures and appear to be a ornamental Park land feature at what was the south east edge of the formal park of the now nonexistent Weston House until the 18th century a 300 acres 121 ha deer park which was established by Henry VIII 37 38 References edit Mills Anthony David 2003 A Dictionary of British Place Names Oxford University Press revised edition 2011 p 506 ISBN 019960908X a b Ekwall Eilert 1936 The Concise Oxfordshire Dictionary of English Place names Oxford University Press 4th ed 1960 p 529 ISBN 0198691033 Wolford and Little Wolford Open Domesday University of Hull Retrieved 16 October 2019 a b c Wolford A History of the County of Warwick Volume 5 Kington Hundred ed L F Salzman London 1949 pp 213 218 Retrieved 16 October 2019 Historic England Monument no 1621328 1621328 Research records formerly PastScape Retrieved 17 October 2019 Stephen Leslie ed 1886 Brent Nathaniel Dictionary of National Biography Vol 6 London Smith Elder amp Co Little Wolford A topographical dictionary of England Samuel Lewis London 1848 vol IV p 643 Wolford Little in A History Gazetteer amp Directory of Warwickshire Francis White 1850 pp 714 715 Kelly s Directory of Warwickshire 1896 p 274 a b Kelly s Directory of Warwickshire 1912 p 323 Youngs Frederic A Guide to the Local Administrative Units of England citing 29 amp 30 Vict c 113 What is a Parish Meeting Little Wolford Parish Meeting Retrieved 16 October 2019 Councillor Sarah Whalley Hoggins Stratford on Avon District Council Retrieved 16 October 2019 Warwickshire Map divisions Warwickshire County Council Retrieved 18 October 2019 a b Extracted from Little Wolford Grid Reference Finder Retrieved 16 October 2019 a b Extracted from Little Wolford GetOutside Ordnance Survey Retrieved 16 October 2019 a b Extracted from Little Wolford civil parish boundary Google Maps Retrieved 16 October 2019 Little Wolford Bus Times Retrieved 16 October 2019 Listed Buildings in Little Wolford Stratford on Avon Warwickshire British Listed Buildings Retrieved 16 October 2019 Historic England Little Wolford Manor House and Attached Bakehouse and Gateway 1319952 National Heritage List for England Retrieved 16 October 2019 Little Wolford Manor House Little Wolford Warwickshire Google Street View image date December 2009 Retrieved 16 October 2019 Historic England Little Wolford Manor House 332705 Research records formerly PastScape Retrieved 17 October 2019 Historic England The Hollows 1116405 National Heritage List for England Retrieved 16 October 2019 Historic England Wellhead Approximately 80 Metres East of Little Wolford Manor House 1024296 National Heritage List for England Retrieved 16 October 2019 Wellhead Little Wolford Warwickshire Google Street View image date December 2009 Retrieved 16 October 2019 Historic England Broadmoor Lodge 1319927 National Heritage List for England Retrieved 16 October 2019 Broadmoor Lodge A3400 road Little Wolford Warwickshire Google Street View image date July 2009 Retrieved 16 October 2019 Historic England Milepost on the west side of the A3400 c 285m north north west of Broadmoor Lodge 1402230 National Heritage List for England Retrieved 16 October 2019 Historic England Double Lodges 1355525 National Heritage List for England Retrieved 16 October 2019 Double Lodges A3400 road Little Wolford Warwickshire Google Street View image date July 2009 Retrieved 16 October 2019 Historic England Bedlam Lodge and Attached Outbuildings 1024295 National Heritage List for England Retrieved 16 October 2019 Bedlam Lodge A3400 road Little Wolford Warwickshire Google Street View image date July 2009 Retrieved 16 October 2019 Historic England Weston Lodge 1355526 National Heritage List for England Retrieved 16 October 2019 Weston Lodge A3400 road Little Wolford Warwickshire Google Street View image date October 2009 Retrieved 16 October 2019 Historic England Gatepier Approximately 4 Metres South West of Weston Lodge 1024297 National Heritage List for England Retrieved 16 October 2019 Historic England Gatepier Approximately 7 Metres South of Weston Lodge 1116413 National Heritage List for England Retrieved 16 October 2019 Historic England Monument no 11621259 1621259 Research records formerly PastScape Retrieved 17 October 2019 Historic England Weston Park 332684 Research records formerly PastScape Retrieved 17 October 2019 External links edit nbsp Media related to Little Wolford at Wikimedia Commons Wolford Genuki Retrieved 18 October 2019 Portals nbsp England nbsp United Kingdom Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Little Wolford amp oldid 1209963928, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.