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Weobley

Weobley (/ˈwɛbli/ WEB-lee) is an ancient settlement and civil parish in Herefordshire, England. Formerly a market town, the market is long defunct and the settlement is today promoted as one of the county's black and white villages owing to its abundance of old timber-framed buildings. Although it has the historical status of a town and is referred to as such in the sources, it nowadays refers to itself as a village.[2]

Weobley
Signpost in village centre.
Weobley
Location within Herefordshire
Population1,255 (2011)[1]
Civil parish
  • Weobley
Unitary authority
Ceremonial county
Region
CountryEngland
Sovereign stateUnited Kingdom
Post townHEREFORD
Postcode districtHR4
Dialling code01544
PoliceWest Mercia
FireHereford and Worcester
AmbulanceWest Midlands
UK Parliament
List of places
UK
England
Herefordshire
52°09′32″N 2°52′23″W / 52.159°N 2.873°W / 52.159; -2.873

Topography edit

Landscape edit

Weobley is in an entirely rural location, 12 miles (19 km) north-west of Hereford and 8 miles (13 km) south-west of Leominster. It occupies the small shallow valley of the little Marl Brook in the northern lower dip slope of Burton Hill, overlooking the valley of the Newbridge Brook which is a sub-tributary of the River Arrow.[3] The surrounding countryside is mostly farmland, with a few small named ancient woods. However, to the south the deer park of Garnstone Castle (formerly Garnstone Manor) separates the settlement from the wooded heights of Burton Hill. The “castle” was a castellated mansion, an important design by John Nash 1807,[4] which was demolished in 1959.[5] Ornamental plantings for it survive, notably a row of Sequoiadendron giganteum trees which includes a monumental specimen of 34 feet (10 m) girth.[6]

Weobley Marsh is a separate hamlet to the east, grouped around an area of ancient common land and traditionally a haunt of witches.[7]

To the west is the ancient farmstead of The Ley, with a Grade-I listed farmhouse dating to 1589.[8]

The underlying geology comprises the Raglan Mudstone Formation of the Lower Old Red Sandstone.[9] The soils are argillic brown earths, of high fertility.[10]

Layout edit

 
Weobley, former marketplace.

The historical layout of the settlement, on which the majority of the old buildings stand, is in the form of an inverted T. The crossbar of the T is the High Street, and the stem is the funnel-shaped mediaeval marketplace comprising a triangular area abutting the High Street and extended to the north by the aptly-named Broad Street. The triangle used to have a row of infill buildings, but these were demolished in the mid 20th century and replaced by a small urban park called the Rose Garden.[11] The west side of the former marketplace is called Portland Street, and the south side is Market Pitch.

 
Earthworks of Weobley Castle.

To the south of the High Street is the site of a mediaeval castle, but this has no civic presence. It abuts the Garnstone deer-park, and is described as a ring and bailey.[12] The track leading to it from the High Street is flanked by an avenue of oaks planted in 1837 to mark the accession of Queen Victoria.[13]

From towards the east end of the High Street, and running to the east of the castle, is the Hereford Road. This was originally a turnpike road to Hereford, but is now just a country lane.[14]

At the north end of Broad Street, Bell Square runs to the west with more old buildings, then turns to the north-west as Meadow Street (B4230) to become the road to Kington. Bell Square is very wide for a street, and has been suggested as the core of the pre-13th century village arranged around an early marketplace or small village green.[15]

The west end of the High Street turns south then west as Mill Bank, named after an impressive mid 19th century brick corn mill but formerly known as Chamber Walk,[16] and this becomes the B4230 road to Hereford. The mill is Grade II listed.[17]

The ancient parish church of SS Peter and Paul is oddly placed, away from the built-up area to the north and accessed by a country lane called Church Road which is a continuation of Broad Street. More unusually, this lane doubles back on itself after running round the churchyard and ends a short distance west of where it started, forming a dead-end hairpin loop. This has been suggested as the ghost of the pre-13th century village, arranged between the church and an early marketplace or small village green at Bell Square.[18] A small grassy area is due south of the churchyard, and this used to be the town's bowling green.[19]

The B4230 does not enter the old town centre, but runs directly from Mill Bank to Meadow Street via a little bypass called Back Lane which roughly parallels Broad Street to the west. This is an old thoroughfare; the name in other mediaeval boroughs is known to indicate an access route to the back ends of a set of thin land strips called burgage tenements. One of these would comprise a town house with a smallholding at its rear, usually with back access so that farm animals did not have to be taken through the house -hence Back Lane.[20]

The historical core of the settlement is a Conservation area.[21]

Two housing estates of the latter half of the 20th century more than doubled the size of the settlement. They are Bearcroft, north of Gadbridge Road which is the eastern continuation of the High Street, and Burtonwood which is east of Hereford Road. A small industrial estate, the Whitehill Business Park, was set up on the Kington Road.

History edit

Early days edit

A detailed archaeological survey of the site of the castle in 2002, using ground-penetrating radar, gave indications of an Iron Age settlement here.[22]

There are a few Roman surface finds. A coin of Constantine the Great was found in the town in the 17th century. In 2001, two brooches and six coins were found close to The Ley.[23]

Saxons edit

The settlement existed in Saxon times, as evidenced from its entry in the Domesday Book. In 1066, the village was owned by “Edwy the Noble’’ and had ten villagers, five smallholders, eleven slaves, one priest and two “other”. It was valued at £5, and was in the Hundred of Stretford.[24]

In the Domesday Book the village name was transcribed as Wibelai. The name possibly derives from 'Wibba's Ley', a ley being a woodland glade and Wibba being a local Saxon landowner. It is still pronounced as "Web-ley" (the spelling being similar to nearby Leominster, the letter 'o' in whose name also is not pronounced).[25]

Whether the Saxon settlement was nucleated and, if so, where it was located, are both uncertain although Bell Square is suggested and possible house platforms identified.[26] Also uncertain is the location of the place of worship served by the priest mentioned in the Domesday Book, as the earliest extant fabric in the present church is Norman.[27]

Two hints exist as regards the status of the Saxon place of worship. One is that the later church had the same dedication as the nearby great minster of Leominster, that of SS Peter and Paul. However, there is no documentation to support the claim that Weobley was a dependent chapel in the original area of the Leominster parochia according to the Minster hypothesis.[28] The other is that the Domesday survey listed a priest but not the church or chapel; since the survey was of landholdings producing an income, this hints that the church had no independent revenue and so was not yet parochial.[29]

Church edit

The parish church is the oldest surviving building in Weobley.

The Domesday book listed the Lord of the Manor in 1086 as Roger de Lacy.[30] The de Lacy family was to become very powerful. Hugh de Lacy became Lord of the Manor in 1091, and he is credited with building the forerunner of the present church early in the next century -the Norman south doorway of this survives, albeit salvaged and re-set in a later wall.[31]

Hugh gave his new church to his family's monastic foundation of Llanthony Priory, which established a cell (a small dependent monastery) here. However, it did not last long.[32] The priory retained possession until the Dissolution.[33]

The putative aisleless Norman church was re-built in an extended project which continued through most of the 13th century. This began at the start of this century, when a south aisle was added (the Norman doorway was preserved from the demolished wall, and re-used). The chancel was rebuilt about mid-century, and then the nave was reconstructed -this was only completed in the early 14th century. The work included the addition of a narrow north aisle and a clerestory; the latter involved the replacement of the south aisle arcade, only about seventy years old. The bell-tower was added to the north-west corner around 1330–40, with a spire that is the second-tallest in the county. This tower is at an angle, which is unusual, and is thought to have doubled up as a fortified peel tower against Welsh raids. Finally, the north aisle was widened in the mid 15th century in the Perpendicular style, and a large east window provided for the chancel.[34]

Castle edit

The castle ruins comprise a ring and bailey -there is no motte, and no surviving stonework.[35] However, the Garnstone deer-park contains a large flat-topped mound that has been identified as a motte -although there is doubt about this. If the identification is correct, then the first castle was not on the present site.[36]

Weobley Castle is only first documented as existing during The Anarchy, when it was seized in person by King Stephen from Geoffrey Talbot in 1140, although it was still the property of the de Lacy family. Later, that family's involvement with the rebellion against King John by William de Braose, 4th Lord of Bramber led to the castle being in royal possession again from 1208 to 1213. A surviving depiction by Silas Taylor, executed in 1655, shows the ruin of a rectangular keep with round corner towers, and the style suggests that the castle was rebuilt by Walter II de Lacy after the de Lacy family regained ownership.[37] However, there was no further active history and John Leland described it in 1535 as “a goodly castell, but somewhat in decay”.[38]

A geophysical survey in 2003 revealed that the bailey had fallen out of use in the 12th century, when or soon after the stone keep had been built, and had been subdivided into burgage tenements as part of the town.[39] However, all these had been replaced by ridge and furrow cultivation by the 17th century as the town underwent redevelopment and the smallholding portions of burgage tenements were hived off. The final removal of all stonework from the site is undocumented, but was thorough as even the foundations were dug out.[40]

Mediaeval borough edit

The 2003 geophysical survey mentioned above demonstrated archaeologically that the town existed by the 13th century, and was experiencing growth. However, it never had a royal market charter which indicates that the market right was already of time immemorial in the Middle Ages. The first market was possibly at Bell Square, and if so was moved when Walter II de Lacy laid out Broad Street as a borough with flanking burgage tenements on both sides, also a single set of tenements on the west side of the present Hereford Road which took over the old castle bailey. The market day was Thursday. The new settlement was also provided with defences which were, at best, a timber palisade on a bank and ditch. This did not last long, and did not morph into a proper town wall.[41]

Walter II did obtain a charter for an annual fair in 1231, but this was to transfer the date from the Feast of the Ascension to that of the Invention of the Holy Cross (3 May) so the origin of the fair is also unknown.[42]

At this period there was a stack of two watermills exploiting the limited power of the little Marl Brook, one on the site of the 19th century steam mill and the other upstream. Later, windmill was built on a little hill now called “Windmill Knapp”, just west of Back Lane, by the start of the 15th century.[43] The same location had been occupied by a pottery in the 13th century, and the site is now a Scheduled Ancient Monument.[44]

The 1255 eyre roll for Herefordshire listed Weobley as having its own jury for legal trials at the circuit court.[45]

There was a small Jewish community here in the late 13th century, which meant that the town was prospering commercially. It was noted for trade in particularly high-quality wool known as “Leominster Ore”.[46] It also developed a fine leather glove industry, which was flourishing by the end of the 16th century.[47] However, in the late Middle Ages the town was most famous for its ale -as distinct from beer, as it was not hopped.[48] A local proverb, “Leominster bread and Weobley beer, none can come near” was first recorded in Camden's Britannia in 1610.[49] The Welsh were very fond of ‘’cwrw Weble’’ or Weobley ale, and it features in late mediaeval Welsh poetry.[50]

The triangular marketplace was infilled in the 14th century owing to building pressure, as the range of buildings that used to be in the surviving one between Broad Street and Portland Street (all now destroyed) allegedly contained some fabric of that age.[51] However, the original infill consisted of two parallel rows separated by three narrow streets. The easternmost street and the eastern row were both lost in 17th century redevelopment, but the step in the eastern Broad Street frontage is the ghost of the latter.[52] Six high-quality timber-framed buildings of the 14th century in the town survived to be listed in the 20th century.[53]

Parliamentary borough edit

In 1295 the town first, briefly, became a parliamentary borough when King Edward I summoned two representatives to London,[54] who attended parliaments until 1307. Then representation lapsed.[55]

In 1628 Weobley was incorporated as a borough, sending two Members of Parliament to the House of Commons until the Reform Act 1832.[56] The voting requirement specified that the “inhabitant householders” had the vote. The borough constables maintained a record of eligible voters, called the “lewn book”. Predictably the borough elections quickly became known for corruption, venality and arguments about validity, with some voters being persuaded by the supply of free drink -so that one candidate called Weobley “our liquid metropolis”.[57]

The ancient parish of Weobley was divided into two townships, those of “Weobley Borough” and “Weobley Foreign”.[58] There was no municipal corporation (town council), so the lord of the manor was in charge of the town and the annual court leet (as distinct from the circuit court, which was for more serious legal matters). At the court leet, two constables were elected for law enforcement purposes, and they also supervised parliamentary elections. There were no other town officials, so administratively the place was no better than a village.[59]

In the contemporary village is “The Throne”, a large 400-year-old building - King Charles I spent the night here on 5 September 1645, after the Battle of Naseby during the English Civil War. Back then the edifice was the “Unicorn Inn”, but that business moved across the street to new premises later in the century and the former hostelry was renamed in honour of the visit.[60]

The Market Hall (demolished in the 1860s)[61] was a fine timber-framed building allegedly erected by John Abel (1578–1675), and located on the south-east corner of the marketplace infill. It had a large upper chamber over an open ground floor, supported by ornately carved timber posts.[62] A drawing of it survives by Joseph Murray Ince 1839, which is now at the Rhode Island School of Design Museum in the USA.[63] Also, paintings by William Pitt of the mid 19th century feature it.[64]

William Crowther, a native who made his fortune as a haberdasher in London, left a legacy to found a Free Grammar School for local boys in 1653. A timber-framed edifice was provided[65] on the west side of Hereford Street (now Hereford Road), and the school was opened in 1655. The building survives as the “Old Grammar School”.[66] In the early 18th century a charity school for girls also existed.[67]

John Birch, a soldier and politician who fought for the Parliamentarian cause in the First English Civil War, sat in the House of Commons at various times from 1646. He purchased the Garnstone estate and became the Lord of the Manor, having himself elected as a Member of Parliament in 1679. He remained as such until his death in 1691, and has an impressive monument in the parish church.[68] His nephew, also called John Birch, then became Lord of the Manor and was also a borough MP when he died in 1735.

There are several surviving 17th century town buildings, evidence of prosperity. Also, the burgage tenements were being broken up, and many of their smallholdings were being hived off and consolidated as farm fields. This occurred on the castle site.[69]

The confusion, venality and corruption occurring at elections (votes were being sold for £10-15 each; £2275-3300 in 2021 values) drew the attention of Parliament, and in 1736 it was resolved to restrict the franchise to occupiers (owners, or tenants having been resident for 40 days previously) of so-called “vote houses”. The annual rental value of such a property had to be £1 or over, and the occupier had to pay scot and lot which, in practice, meant the parish poor rate since there was no borough corporation.[70] However, after this the Lord of the Manor, Thomas Thynne, Viscount Weymouth (later first Marquess of Bath) instructed the constables not to register for the poor rate any resident who would not promise to vote for his candidates. This was disfranchisement, and the aggrieved voters took their case to the King's Bench. They lost, and thus Weobley became a pocket borough under the control of the Thynne family. To make sure of matters, Weymouth bought the vote houses that he did not already own.[71]

In 1830, a House of Commons report gave the number of vote houses in 1821 as 93, but with only 81 occupiers.[72] Allegedly the Marquess had been keeping vote houses empty until forty days before an election, when he would have temporary tenants installed who would vote obediently.[73]

19th century edit

The manufacture of gloves at Weobley received a boost at the start of the 19th century during the Napoleonic Wars, because imports of fine French gloves were stopped.[74] At this time, the town was still famous for beer (“malt liquor”, so it was not hopped).[75] Quarries of building stone and roadstone were in the vicinity”.[76] There was a direct turnpike road to Hereford, the present Hereford Road.[77] At this time, the ancient fair on 3 May had been replaced by one on Maundy Thursday for “horned cattle” (i.e. not calves) and horses, and also on the Thursday three weeks later for the same and “coarse linen cloth”.[78]

In 1807 the castellated mansion of Garnstone Castle was built by John Nash.[79]

The parliamentary borough was disfranchised by the Reform Act 1832. Since there was no town council, administratively the place became a village. Despite this it was chosen as the headquarters of the local poor law union, and a workhouse was opened at Whitehill on the road to Kington in 1837.[80] A Roman Catholic church was opened in 1834, and a Primitive Methodist congregation gathered in 1839[81] and built a chapel in 1844 (the present structure opened in 1861).[82][83] To supplement the old Grammar School, the National Society for Promoting Religious Education opened a National School in 1834.[84][85]

 
Broad Street, painted by William Pitt 1867 showing Market Hall.

However, the town continued to morph into a village in the 1840s. John Thynne had become the fourth Marquess of Bath in 1837 aged only six,[86] and his trustees of his estate decided to dispose of the “vote houses” by auction in 1844 and 1846.[87] They also ordered the disposal of the Market Hall in 1848, which was the death-knell for the ancient market.[88] The actual demolition of the Hall was in the 1860s.[89] The old grammar school gave up, sold off its building and merged with the National School to create a co-educational school in new premises in Broad Street, later to move to an extant building in Portland Street in 1873.[90][91] The population of the parish in 1841 was 907.[92]

By 1858, the fair had been moved back near to its ancient date, on 8 May for cattle and entertainment -it was becoming a funfair. The industries producing gloves and beer had both gone,[93] the latter being replaced by cider, [94] and the only industry left was some malting (there was no mill yet). On the other hand, there was a new brick-built police station and courtroom in Back Lane and petty sessions were held every other Monday. A “van” (covered wagon) made the round trip to Hereford twice a week. The population in 1851 was 972.[95]

The railways completely ignored Weobley. The nearest station, at Moorhampton, was opened on the Hereford, Hay and Brecon Railway in 1862 and was 3.5 miles (5.6 km) away.

 
Weobley High Street by William Pitt 1853, with Market Hall on left.

The only 19th century industrial development was a corn mill powered by steam, completed in 1862.[96] The parish church was restored in 1865, at a cost of £3 200 (2021: £416 000).[97] In 1868, the market was “nearly obsolete”,[98] but the place still regarded itself as a town and there was a town crier employed in 1877. A nail manufacturer was operating in the same year [99]

The extinction of street trading meant a wave of houses being converted to shops, which are a feature of the village's architecture. Some merely had shop fronts inserted,[100] while others suffered more radical remodelling.

Weobley Rural District Council was created in 1894, and had its offices in the Union Workhouse on the Kington road.[101]

20th century edit

In 1909 the population was 703, down from 907 in 1841. The cattle fair on 8 May was defunct (the funfair continued), and the nail manufacturer had gone. At a time when motor buses were already running in Hereford (the first was in 1908),[102] the public cart was still clopping on the round trip to Hereford twice a week. Unusually the carter was a lady, Mrs Elizabeth Garbutt.[103]

In that year, the decayed town had a police station, a solicitor who also acted as a bank agent and insurance broker (there was no bank here yet), another insurance broker, a “relieving officer” (in charge of poverty assistance) who was also a third such broker, a doctor, six grocers, three butchers, a baker, a chemist, a tobacconist, three inns (Unicorn, Salutation and Red Lion), three drapers (clothes and material shops), a tailor, three shoemakers, a cobbler (footwear repairer), a saddler who also dealt in bicycles and who ran the post office, two hauliers, a mason, three builders and a blacksmith. There was a set of “Recreation Rooms”. The newly established Army Reserve (then known as the Territorial Force) had a Drill Hall.[104] Lloyds Bank later opened a branch in the village, on the corner of Broad Street and High Street.[105]

The two world wars passed Weobley by, except that eighteen local men died in action in the first one. There were no casualties in the second.[106]

In 1920, the Birmingham and Midland Omnibus Company, familiarly known as Midland Red, began a motor bus service to Hereford.[107] The company and its successors (which kept the original nickname) operated until the depot in Hereford shut down in 2015.[108]

 
South end of Broad Street. The buildings on the left burned down in 1943.

In 1943 a serious fire in a bakery gutted the remaining old buildings of the marketplace infill, and these had to be demolished to create the little town park (the “Rose Garden”) there now.[109] The lost timber-framed block of two houses had its origin in the late 15th century, with alterations in the following three centuries.[110]

 
Garnstone Castle in 1867

Garnstone Castle by John Nash was demolished in 1959, the village's second major architectural loss of the 20th century.[111]

In 1951, the population was 634 which was less than a century before. However, in 2001 the population had almost doubled to 1246 as a result of residential developments. These mostly involved the creation of the housing estates of Burtonwood and Bearcroft to the east of the historical area.[112] The former is a council house estate built in the Fifties and early Sixties by Weobley Rural District Council, the latter was a private development from the early Seventies to the early Eighties.[113]

21st century edit

 
The magpie in Weobley

In 2001 the artist Walenty Pytel completed a metal sculpture of a magpie called Magnus for the village (a magpie is the village's emblem, because it is black-and-white like many of the old houses).[114] The sculpture was commissioned after the village won the Calor Gas/Daily Telegraph Great Britain Village of the Year in 1999.[115]

 
Weobley, Corner House and former Red Lion Inn

In 2015 one of Weobley's three ancient inns, the Red Lion, closed down and became an Indian restaurant.[116]

On 3 August 2016, the BBC's The One Show was broadcast entirely from Weobley.[117]

In 2017 the parish church was put on the Heritage at Risk Register compiled by Historic England, because the stonework of the tower and spire was rotting and there was no restoration proposal in place.[118]

In 2019 the village's ancient brewing industry was revived when the Weobley Brewing Company set up a brewhouse in Portland Street.[119]

In 2021 an endowment allowed the creation of a nature reserve, named the Weobley Wildlife Meadows and run by the Herefordshire Wildlife Trust.[120]

Governance edit

Weobley has never had a municipal corporation or town council. Before 1894, the parish vestry was in charge of routine civic administration, and the Lord of the Manor was in charge of the annual manorial court leet which elected two constables for law enforcement purposes. This was the same as for any parochial village in England.[121] Then the Local Government Act 1894 created Weobley Parish Council under Weobley Rural District Council, the latter in turn being subject to Herefordshire County Council.

Weobley Rural District Council was absorbed into Leominster District Council in 1974, which in turn was abolished in 1998 to leave Herefordshire Council as a unitary authority. The Parish Council has an advisory role, and is responsible for certain public amenities. The population of the civil parish in 2011 was 1,255.[122]

For parliamentary elections, Weobley is part of the electoral ward called Golden Cross and Weobley. The population of this ward taken at the 2011 census was 2,985.[123]

Transport edit

Rail edit

Weobley has never had a railway. The nearest station at Moorhampton was closed in 1962.[124] The railhead since then has been Hereford, connected by the 461 bus.

Road edit

Weobley's link to the wider world is the B4230, which runs from Whitehill on the A4112 through the village to Moorhampton on the A480 and then to Byrford Common on the A438. The old turnpike road direct to Hereford is a country lane. Gadbridge Road (the continuation eastwards of the High Street) and a street off Hereford Road called Burton Wood both exit the village eastwards to a network of narrow country lanes leading to Dilwyn, Stretford and King's Pyon as well as to the satellite hamlet of Weobley Marsh.[125]

Buses edit

 
The Hereford bus at Weobley

The major bus route serving the village is the 461, operated by Sargents Brothers and with a daily service in 2021 of eleven buses each way from Hereford railway station to Kington. Some of these run through to Llandrindod Wells. The main bus stop in Weobley is in Broad Street. One each way of these buses is numbered 462, because it reaches Kington via Eardisley instead of directly.[126]

The other route is the 507, operated by Lugg Valley Travel and giving a round trip to Leominster on Tuesdays and Fridays only. Unlike the 461, this serves Burtonwood as well as Broad Street.[127]

Places of Worship edit

Anglican edit

Overview edit

 
Church of SS Peter and Paul, Weobley

The village has an Anglican church, which is mostly 13th century but was restored in 1865: St Peter and St Paul's Church. This is now (2021) part of the “Weobley and Staunton Group of Parishes”, which is a team ministry including six other local churches and which is in the Diocese of Hereford.[128]

Plan edit

The church has a nave with aisles of four bays, followed by a crossing with transepts. However, the transept arches are integral with the nave arcades and the nave roof is extended over the crossing. The nave, aisles, crossing and transepts form a unit which is almost square on the plan at 63 feet (19 metres) deep and 61.25 feet (18.67 metres) wide. There follows a very deep but unaisled chancel, almost as deep as the nave and crossing combined at 54 feet (16 metres). A vestry abuts this on the north side. The south aisle has an external porch. An oversized tower with spire is attached at an angle to the north-west corner of the north aisle, and intrudes into it.

Exterior edit

The present building replaced an earlier Norman one, and has a re-set Norman south doorway within the porch. It is not entirely certain that this came from a building on the same site; also, nothing is known of the small monastery of Augustinian canons from Llanthony Priory which briefly existed at the start of the 12th century.[129] The extant fabric is otherwise mostly 13th century, and is made up of local sandstone ashlars and rubble. The north aisle walls and east window are, however, of the mid 15th century and are in the Perpendicular style. The roofing is partly in matching stone slabs, and partly in slate. The nave has a low clerestory, and before the 1865 restoration cat-slide roof pitches covered nave and aisles in single slopes so hiding the clerestory.

The west front of the nave is all in ashlar stonework, in contrast with the rubble used elsewhere, and dates to around 1300. The doorway is embellished with two orders of ball flower, and above is a large four-light window in the Decorated Gothic style flanked by a pair of empty statue niches. The smaller window in the end of the north aisle, to the left, is in the Perpendicular style of about 1450 and was installed inside-out by mistake.[130]

There are four other large windows in the main body of the church, and the fenestration is otherwise simple and rather sparse. The south transept has a hexagonal rose window of seven lights. The east wall has a five-light Perpendicular window with simple tracery and a pair of portrait busts as hood moulding stops (these are of the 1865 restoration). The north transept has a two-light window topped by a trefoil, and the north aisle has a four-light Perpendicular window of more ornate design than the east window.[131]

 
Weobley church sundial

The large south porch has a sundial over its portal. The actual door is decorated, and is dated 1712.

Tower edit

 
Weobley church tower

The oversized five-storey tower is very unusual. It was added to the north-west corner around 1330–40, with a spire that is the second-tallest in the county at 185 feet (56 metres). On the plan it is at an angle, which is odd and not easily explicable, and is thought to have doubled up as a fortified peel tower against Welsh raids. This is because the entrance doorway (off the north aisle) was fitted with a drawbar to enable people to barricade themselves inside.

The walls are blank, grim and virtually windowless, and each face is flanked with projecting wall strips meeting at diagonal stepped buttresses at the corners. The first storey has a recess containing blind three-light window tracery in its north, west and east walls -only the central light of these is glazed. The flanking lights used to contain small statues. The top of the tower has a set of four gabled and crocketed pinnacles apparently modelled on those of the tower of Hereford Cathedral.[132] The south face has a clock.

The octagonal stone spire is not fully original, for it was struck by lightning in 1640 and rebuilt at a shorter height in 1675. It was only restored to its original form in 1898. It is supported by four flying buttresses, a feature unique in the country, and has the bell-chamber in its base which is also a singular feature.[133]

Interior edit

 
Weobley parish church, chancel

The mediaeval interior was vandalized by Puritan fanatics, who smashed the stained glass (some fragments survive), broke the piscina basins and mutilated the tomb effigies. The ambience mostly dates from the 1865 restoration, and has the whitewashed walls and octagonal arcade columns contrasting with the Victorian polychrome geometric tiled floor. The nave has a scissor truss roof. The Victorian stained glass is of good quality.[134]

Some mediaeval sculptural work survives in the fabric. The south aisle at its west end has a row of corbels for a former 16th roof above the arcade, carved to depict a lion, an angel, an ape and a grotesque man. There is a late 13th century piscina in the chancel and one from earlier in that century in the south aisle; the latter is richly ornamented with dog-tooth.[135]

The font is early 14th century, octagonal in limestone with window-tracery panels in shallow relief on each side of the bowl. The cover is c. 1700. Adjacent is one of the church's six bells, removed to here in 1983 because of worries about the tower's integrity. (These problems have become serious, leading to the church being put on the Heritage at Risk Register in 2017.)[136] In the north transept is a fragment of the mediaeval wooden rood screen.

There are three mediaeval altar-tombs. That of Sir William Devereux (d. 1402) is against the south wall of the chancel, and has a badly defaced alabaster reclining effigy of him in armour c. 1430. He had married Agnes Crophull, heiress of Weobley Castle, and as a widow she married John Marbury (d. 1437). Their effigies, again in alabaster and mutilated with him in armour, are on their own tomb in an arched recess in the south side of the chancel, c. 1450. This tomb incorporates salvaged items from earlier work, notably two fragments of 13th century coffin lids with foliated crosses. In the north aisle is an anonymous tomb with no effigy, probably early 15th century.[137]

In the south aisle is a tomb-slab is a tomb-slab carved with a foliated cross flaked by a mitre and crozier, with the inscription “Hic jacet Hugo Bssop”. This is a rebus, as the deceased was not a bishop but had the surname Bishop.

 
Colonel John Birch's tomb, St. Peter & St. Paul's Church, Weobley

On the chancel north wall is the spectacular Baroque monument commemorating Colonel John Birch (d. 1691). It has a pair of black marble Corinthian columns, standing on a high shallow plinth bearing his epitaph which is framed in the same marble. The columns support the ends of a broken segmental pediment, and in the gap of this is his heraldry carved in relief. The aedicule frames a statue of the deceased within a shallow round-headed niche in grey marble.[138]

Churchyard cross edit

 
Weobley Churchyard Cross

In the churchyard just south of the chancel are the remains of a 14th-century churchyard cross, which comprise a Scheduled Ancient Monument.[139] This has five octagonal steps, and a decorated socket stone. The shaft and cross-head are modern.[140]

There is a legend that if you walk around the cross seven times at midnight while reciting the Lord's Prayer backwards, you will summon the Devil.[141]

War memorial edit

 
Weobley War Memorial

The village's war memorial is further south in the churchyard, and is a Grade II Listed Building. The material used is sandstone, and it was inaugurated in 1920. It is a cross with a tapering shaft, standing on a monolithic block with partly chamfered corners, itself standing on a stepped plinth. The names commemorated are carved into the block; there are eighteen from the First World War, and none from the Second World War because the village suffered no casualties -this is mentioned in the epigraph.[142]

Roman Catholic edit

 
Weobley Catholic Church

Weobley's little Roman Catholic church is on the Kington Road outside the village, and is dedicated to St Thomas of Hereford.

When being a Catholic was illegal in England under the Penal Laws, Weobley was described as a “nest of Papists”.[143] The recusant Monington family of Sarnesfield Court (demolished 1955) maintained a chapel in their house after the Reformation until Catholic emancipation in 1829, whereupon they decided to have a church built.[144] It was erected in 1835, and is the oldest Roman Catholic church in Herefordshire as well as being a very early example of ecclesiastical Gothic Revival architecture.[145]

The family put the church under the care of Downside Abbey, and several other local Catholic churches were founded from it. However, in 1923 the responsibility was transferred to the local Belmont Abbey, and in 1938 it was decided to consolidate the three churches at Weobley, Broxwood and Kington into the one parish of “Kington and Weobley”. Belmont Abbey is still in charge, and the parish priest resides at Weobley.[146] The church of the Holy Family at Broxwood has been closed down and is now a private house; this was built in 1863, in an isolated and thinly populated location in the civil parish of Pembridge.[147]

The church at Weobley is a very simple rectangular goth-box in sandstone rubble with a slate roof, having three bays and with a large two-light Gothic window for each bay in the south wall. These windows have brick headings, and wooden tracery. A similar but smaller west window is over the small gabled external porch (added in the 20th century), and on the roof gable above is a simple bell-cote. The north wall is windowless, and abuts a small red brick annexe which is now the sacristy but used to be a schoolroom. The east end of the church abuts the presbytery, which is an attractive two-storey Regency-style house (higher than the church) in bright red brick with a symmetrical frontage and a floating semi-cylindrical door canopy over a fanlight. The ensemble is Grade II listed, as one building.[148]

The small interior has pink walls and a shallowly vaulted white plaster ceiling. The wooden altar, reredos and statues of the Sacred Heart and St Thomas of Hereford are by the Hereford woodcarver Charles Victor Gertner. The angels in front of the supports of the west gallery are salvage from Belmont Abbey church.[149]

Methodist edit

A Primitive Methodist congregation gathered at Weobley in 1839,[150] and built a chapel in 1844. This they rebuilt, and the present structure opened in 1861.[151][152] The chapel is now (2021) part of the Shropshire and Marches Methodist Circuit.[153]

 
Methodist Chapel.

This is a small rectangular edifice in red brick, with two large round-headed windows in each side wall separated by shallow brick pilasters. Ancillary accommodation abuts the back. The façade has a pair of windows in the same style, flanking a round-headed doorway with fanlight. The windows and the doorway are lined with ashlar stone blocks in long-and-short work, and the building's corners are provided with rectangular quoins set so as to give the same effect. The keystones of the doorway and windows of the façade are each embellished with an axe-head motif in sunk relief. There is a stone string course creating a false pediment. A stone dedicatory tablet with a shallowly rounded top sits on this string course.

Schools edit

The village has two schools, Weobley High School and Weobley Primary School. They are situated next to each other on the south side of the street called Burton Wood.

The primary school has its antecedents in a Free Grammar School for local boys in 1653, founded as a result of a legacy left by Willian Crowther in 1863. This existed in a surviving timber-framed building in Hereford Road until it merged with a National School founded for both sexes in 1834.[154][155] The combined school established itself in premises in Portland Street in 1873, now the village's convenience store.[156][157]

Weobley High School was built in response to the growth in the size of the village in the later 20th century, and opened in 1963 as Weobley County Secondary School.[158] New premises were built for the primary school just to the east of this, and opened in 1998. These feature a pioneering “environmentally friendly” system of heating, powered by a boiler fuelled with wood chips and having wall insulation made from recycled newspapers. The system also serves the High School next door, with the latter's old oil-fired system being kept in reserve.[159]

Sport edit

Bowls edit

Bowls has a long history in Weobley. There was a bowling green on the site of the castle in 1824,[160] but the present Weobley and District Bowling Club (which plays flat green) was founded in 1947. The first green was on Church Road, behind the (now closed down) Red Lion inn. The club moved to its present green on Hereford Road in 2010.[161]

Football edit

Weobley Football Club was founded in 1990, and played in the Herefordshire Football League. It was wound up in September 2019 owing to the amateur playing squad having commitment issues.[162]

Cricket edit

Weobley Cricket Club amalgamated with the Burghill and Tillington Cricket Club in 2016; the resultant Burghill, Tillington and Weobley Cricket Club play in the Worcestershire County Cricket League at their ground at Tillington.[163]

Public amenities edit

 
Weobley Museum

The Village Hall is on Gadbridge Road,[164] and next to it is the Play Area which has a skatepark.[165] The Community Centre is a separate facility in Burton Gardens.[166] The Weobley Museum and History Centre is in the former police station on Back Lane.[167]

The village has a Medical Centre at the start of Gadbridge Road, comprising a surgery and a dentists. The Post Office is on Portland Street. Lloyds Bank on the corner of Broad Street and High Street has closed down.

 
Portland Garage at Weobley

In 2021 there were also two long-established inns (The Unicorn and The Salutation), two restaurants (one used to be the former Red Lion inn), a tearoom, a convenience store (the Old School Shop, because the village school used to be here), a butchers, a delicatessen with café and a very small traditional filling station (Portland Garage).[168]

A Heritage Trail has been laid out in the village,[169] and there is also a Weobley Circular Walk which takes in the countryside to the south.[170]

Listed Buildings edit

Scheduled Monuments edit

Weobley has three Scheduled Ancient Monuments: The castle earthworks. The mediaeval pottery on Windmill Knapp (nothing to see). The churchyard cross.[171]

Grade I edit

 
The Ley, Weobley

Weobley has two Grade I Listed Buildings: The parish church of SS Peter and Paul. The Ley. The latter is a farmhouse to the west of the village, and is a sumptuous two-storey timber-framed house on a H-plan, built in 1589 and little altered since.[172]

Grade II* edit

Weobley has eleven buildings listed Grade II*, two-storey black-and-white timber box-framed unless otherwise specified:[173]

List of Grade II* Listed Buildings at Weobley
  • 1 Bell Square (near junction with B4230). 15th century, L-shaped with hall-wing on street and cross-wing perpendicular to it with a jettied frontage. The former was given a brick extension in the 19th century, when two little shops were created here (long defunct).
  • Marlbrook House, south end of Back Lane. 15th century, partly rebuilt 16th century, large and L-shaped; the cross-wing has a jetty, and the second storey of the hall-wing extends over a carriage portal.
  • 4 Portland Street (listed as “Northern Half of Weobley Stores”, now called Queens Truss). 15th century fragment of a larger edifice. The frontage has two distinct zones, the left having a jetty but the right having a cavetto to the gutter with curved timbers. The former shop window has been replaced with cheap fenestration.
  • Red Lion Inn (as was). 14th century, but the hall range on Bell Square was rebuilt in the 17th century and extended in the 18th. It has a sandstone rubble first storey frontage. The cross range on Church Road is original, and connects via a small 20th century link block to an outbuilding which has a cruck frame and which is a fragment of an originally larger structure. The ensemble is listed as one building, and in 2021 was occupied by a restaurant called Lal Bagh, meaning “Beloved Garden” (the original is in Bangalore).
  • The Dairy Farm. On Meadow Street. 15th century with 17th century barn attached, L-shaped with a box-framed cross-wing having a jetty and a cruck-framed hall-wing. The chimney is modern.
  • The Gables. Broad Street. 15th century gabled cross-wings; the central hall-wing was rebuilt in the 17th century and provided with a stone porch having columns in a vaguely Tuscan Doric style. The timbering is decoratively embellished.
  • The Old Corner House. Corner of Broad Street and Bell Square, 15th century, L-shaped with a single-storey hall-range on the former and a jettied cross-range on the latter. The hall-range has a dormer window. In the 20th century was converted into a live-in shop (in 2021 a tea room), and for this the cross-range was extended by re-erecting a dismantled timber-framed barn from elsewhere.
  • The Old Grammar School. Hereford Road. Purpose-built for Crowther's Grammar School, founded 1659. Symmetrical, with two large attic dormers and a bell-cote.
  • The Old Manor, Bell Square (next to number 1). 14th century. Two tall jettied cross-wings of different widths, sandwiching a single-storey hall-wing.
  • The Throne. Corner of Hereford Road and High Street, 16th century, main range on former extended in 18th century, cross-wing on latter extended in 17th century. King Charles II stayed here when it was the Unicorn Inn, hence the name.
  • Unicorn House. High Street, adjacent to Unicorn Inn to west. 14th century. Complex frontage, partly jettied and partly with cavetto cornicing (some of this was removed to insert a window).

Grade II edit

Weobley has seventy-six buildings listed Grade II. Some of these are on farms outside the village:[174]

List of Grade II Listed Buildings at Weobley
  • 1&2 High Street. 17th century. Two semi-detached houses, timber box-framed with the first storey cased in whitewashed brick and the second in black-and-white.
  • 2 Portland Street. Early 19th century, whitewashed brick with slate roof and a symmetrical frontage.
  • 3 Broad Street. Early 17th century, timber box-frame, black-and-white, perpendicular to the street with a gabled frontage.
  • 3 Hereford Road. Late 18th century, in whitewashed coursed sandstone rubble blocks (called Mayfield).
  • 3 High Street. Early 18th century, in whitewashed brick. Altered for a shop in the early 19th century, hence the oriel window.
  • 5 Broad Street. 17th century, timber box-frame, black-and-white (called April Cottage). Has a lean-to on left side. Abuts Little Croft (see below).
  • Barn behind Unicorn Hotel. 16th century. Timber box-frame, weatherboarded, three bays with the eastern one 17th century.
  • Barn at Brockaly. 17th century, timber box-frame clad in weatherboarding. This is on Riddox Lane which is north of Whitehill and some distance from the village, but is in the civil parish. Visible from lane.
  • Barn at Fields End. Early 18th century, timber box-frame. Has threshing floor and possible horse gin. Farm is south of Garnstone Park, no public access.
  • Barn behind The Gables, Broad Street. 17th century, timber box-frame, partly weatherboarded.
  • Barn next to The Old Vicarage, Meadow Lane. 17th century, timber box-frame, black-and-white with some weatherboarding. Former “Recreation Rooms”, recently restored as dwelling (called Tithe Barn).
  • Barn at Little Sarnesfield. 17th century, timber box-frame, corrugated roof. On north side of farmstead next to wood, visible from lane west of Whitehill off Kington Road.
  • Barn next to 3 High Street. Early 18th century, in brick painted pale yellow on a sandstone rubble plinth.
  • Bell House, Back Lane. 17th century, raised onto a rubble plinth early 19th century, timber box-frame with brick infill, black-and-white.
  • Brockaly. 17th century, but altered and extended in 19th. Timber box-framed, black and white, three bays each with its own roof. This is a farm on Riddox Lane which is north of Whitehill and some distance from the village, but is in the civil parish. Barn also listed.
  • Brook Cottage, Bell Square. Possibly 17th century, remodelled early 19th century. Brick faked up to look timber-framed in black-and-white. High rubble plinth with access ramp.
  • Camberwell Cottage, Mill Bank (beyond the Corn Mill). 17th century. Timber box-framed, black and white, single storey but with two large gabled attic dormers which are mid 20th century.
  • Cart shed at Fields End. Mid 18th century. Coursed rubble with brick patching. Farm is south of Garnstone Park, no public access.
  • South Place, Castle Green Cottage and Stone Cottage. Hereford Road. 17th century, now three houses formed out of one timber box-framed edifice on a T-plan and clad in coursed sandstone rubble. Some black-and-white in north gable reveals hidden identity.
  • Castle House, Hereford Road. Early 19th century, in high-quality coursed sandstone ashlar blocks. Windows have segmentally curved heads, and there is a wooden Tuscan Doric doorcase. Single-storey mid-19th century extension in matching style used to be the village's registry office.
  • Castle View, Hereford Road. Around 1700. Timber box-framed, black-and-white. Perpendicular to the street; the facing gable end used to be jettied but had a first storey rubble wall inserted in the early 19th century.
  • Catholic Church with presbytery. 1834.
  • Churchyard Cross. Also listed as a Scheduled Ancient Monument, but the Grade II listing includes the shaft and cross-head which are 19th century.
  • Corner House, Market Pitch. 16th century. Timber box-framed, black-and-“white” (actually pale yellow). Jettied, entrance in east gable end.
  • Cowhouse at Field End. Early 18th century. Timber box-framed with weatherboarding. Farm is south of Garnstone Park, no public access.
  • Dairy at Fields End. Early 19th century, brick with pyramidal slate roof having a louvre ditto. Two Gothic windows in frontage. Slate shelving inside. Farm is south of Garnstone Park, no public access.
  • Fair Lawn, Hereford Road. Early 18th century, a large house in red brick and perpendicular to the road. The garden front has a pediment with a lunette window. The street frontage is blank, with a bricked-up window below a blind oculus containing a heraldic crest featuring two chickens (?).
  • Fenhampton. 17th century. Grand farmhouse to south-west of village. Timber box-framed, black-and-white but partly clad in sandstone rubble. Public footpath access.
  • Fenmore, Meadow Street. 17th century, re-roofed and extended late 20th century. Timber box-framed, black-and-white, entrance at side.
  • Fields End. Mid 18th century. Farmhouse in coursed rubble. Outbuildings are separately listed. Farm is south of Garnstone Park, no public access.
  • High House (listed as High Towers), Meadow Street. 17th century. Tall, timber box-framed, black-and-white, gable frontage has attic windows and an entrance lean-to occupying the entire width under a single-pitched roof.
  • Holmleigh, High Street (near the surgery). 17th century. Timber-framed, but refaced in the 18th century and the framing is only visible in the right hand side. Single storey, but with two attic dormer windows flanking a central gable also with an attic window. The frontage is all in white.
  • Homeleigh, Broad Street (west side). Late 17th century. Brick, roughly rendered in white. Has two attic dormers, and a wooden doorcase enclosing an overlight.
  • The Green Bean (listed as Jeans Fashions), Broad Street. Late 17th century, timber box-framed, perpendicular to street. Black-and-white on north side. A separate parallel range was added on the south side in the 19th century, and the frontage re-done in whitewashed brick to provide two shops. One of these used to be the first premises of Lloyds Bank in the village.
  • Jules Café, Portland Street. 17th century, timber box-framed but mostly re-cast in rough whitewashed brick in early 18th century; some black-and-white visible in back range.
  • Little Croft, Broad Street. 17th century, timber box-framed partly in black-and-white but substantially altered in 19th century and had a garage inserted into a carriage entrance in the 20th. There are two bay windows running the full height, obvious additions.
  • Little Sarnsfield. Farmhouse off A 4112, west of Whitehill. 14th century, remodelled in 17th and 18th centuries. Timber box-framed, mostly clad in brick. No public access.
  • London House (listed as Lloyds Bank). Corner of High Street and Broad Street. Early 17th century, timber box-framed in black-and-white. Used to be the village's bank, in 2021 was a hairdressers'.
  • Market Pitch Cottage. 16th century, with 17th century single-storey annexe slightly forward. Timber box-framed, black-and-white. The main range used to have a jetty, but the lower frontage was aligned with the upper in the 18th century.
  • May Cottage and Ella's Cottage (listed as May Cottage), Bell Square. 17th century, extended to east in late 18th century. Timber box-framed, black-and-white. Two houses in one building; the extension has the first storey in whitewashed brick.
  • Mayfield, Hereford Road (east side). 17th century, re-fronted in whitewashed brick in 18th century. Timber box-framed, as can be seen in tip of north gable.
  • Meadow Cottage, Meadow Street. 17th century. Timber box-framed, black-and-white. A quirky little house, possibly a fragment of a larger edifice (see left hand gable end).
  • Mellington House, Broad Street. Late 17th century, as is an outbuilding to the right which is connected by a mid-19th century brick block. Timber box-framed both. The symmetrical main frontage is stuccoed, with architectural details in pale yellow including a decorative blind arch above the central entrance. The four attic dormers are 19th century. Outbuilding has carriage portal.
  • Mile post on B4230, at the first bend north of the A480 near Devereux Wootton. Early 19th century, triangular with sloped top in painted cast iron. The latter reads “Weobley Parish”; the two sides, “To Weobley 2 ½ miles”, “To Hereford 10 miles”.
  • Mile-post on B4230, at Shoals Bank. Early 19th century, triangular with sloped top in painted cast iron. The top reads “Weobley Parish”; the two sides, “To Weobley 1 ½ miles”, “To Hereford 11 miles”.
  • Mile-post on Hereford Road, opposite East Lodge of Garnstone Park. Early 19th century, triangular with sloped top in painted cast iron. The top reads “Weobley Parish”; the two sides, “To Weobley ½ mile”, “To Hereford 10 miles”. Has a maker's mark: “Hereford Georges & Son Foundry”.
  • Mill Bank Cottages. Early 19th century. A terrace of four millworkers’ cottages, in red brick with segmental tops to windows and doors. The frontage has an oblique angle to fit into a bend in the road.
  • 1 Broad Street (listed as Number 1). 16th century, re-fronted in 18th century and altered in the mid 19th century when it was turned into a shop. Timber box-framed, only black-and-white at north gable whereas the frontage is in whitewashed brick. The entrance has a wooden doorcase sporting a triangular pediment with a broken cornice. The original shopfront survives. There is an outbuilding at the back, comprising stables.
  • Portland Garage, Broad Street (listed as Number 2). Possibly 17th century timber box-framed, but encased in rough brick in the early 19th century. Converted into a small filling station in the mid 20th century, and as such is a rare survival.
  • Orchard Bank, Mill Bank (just beyond Corn Mill). 17th century. Timber box-framed, black-and-white, single-storey but has a large attic dormer window.
  • Outbuilding north of Fenmore, Meadow Street. 17th century. Timber box-framed, black-and-white but first storey to west and north is in brick and the gable street frontage brick infill is left naked. Possibly stables originally.
  • Parkfields, Church Road (beyond the church). 17th century. Timber box-framed, black-and-white.
  • Post Office. 17th century, but re-fronted in mid-18th century in whitewashed brick with two large bay windows. Timber box-framed, evidence only visible at top of north gable. Has arched side-passage.
  • Williams Butchers (listed as R. E. Williams and Sons), Portland Street. 16th century, but re-fronted as a shop in the early 19th century. Timber box-framed, frontage is in rough whitewashed brick. The shop front is original. Abuts Tudor Cottage, separately listed even though under the same roof.
  • Salutation Inn. Three distinct elements; early 18th century perpendicular to street, 19th century parallel to street and set back forming an L-plan with the previous, and a 16th century range to the west. The latter is timber box-framed, black-and-“white” -actually pale yellow. The newer ranges are in brick, in the same colour. The 18th century gable sports 16th or 17th century carved bargeboards, salvaged from elsewhere.
  • 3 Portland Street (listed as “Southern Half of Weobley Stores”). Possibly 17th century, re-fronted early 19th century to make a shop and remodelled again early 21st century after the shop was closed down and the shop window and entrance were replaced with windows matching those in the second storey. Number 4 next door was also part of Weobley Stores, it is Grade II* listed and shares an old slate roof. Number 2 on the other side is in the same style but is not listed.
  • St Columba's Cottage. High Street (east end). On a T-plan, the small 16th century roadside range abuts a larger 17th century extension behind. The former has a deep jetty, supported by a timber corner pier. Abuts Throne View, separately listed.
  • Stables and Cider House at Fields End. Mid 18th century range, in sandstone rubble with ashlar dressings. Farm is south of Garnstone Park, no public access.
  • Stawne, Meadow Street. Late 16th century, timber box-framed “black-and-white” except actually silver-and-pink (the timbers were never tarred)! Late 17th century, L-shaped with a chimney stack in the north range which has a rubble first storey wall and which was extended recently. Gabled street frontage is jettied.
  • Terrace North of London House, Broad Street (listed as Terrace North of Lloyds Bank). 15th century. A terrace of three houses, timber box-framed and black-and-white. Has a deep jetty, and a shop front was inserted into this to convert the southern house into a shop in the mid 19th century (what is there now is mid 20th).
  • The Bear and Urso House, 9&10 Broad Street. Early 18th century semi-detached house in brick rendered white, the northern dwelling having a carriage portal which is now a garage. There are four box dormers.
  • The Birches. Farmhouse off the lane to Broxwood, beyond Whitehill. 16th century. Timber box-framed, black-and-white with some brick cladding, on a T-plan. No public access.
  • Spring Cottage, Hereford Road (listed as The Cottage). Early 19th century. Bright red brick, with a gabled entrance canopy on wall brackets. Oddly, the south gable wall is in timber framing, black-and-white.
  • The Cwm, Meadow Street. Probably 15th century, thought to be the cross-wing of a larger house. Timber box-framed, and black-and-white. Gable end abuts road, but access is via quite a long driveway.
  • The Forge, Mill Bank. On a T-plan; the cross-range is 18th century to the north-east and possibly 16th century to the south-west. It is timber box-framed, black-and-white. The stem range, with the gable facing the road, is also 18th century and is in whitewashed brick. There is a lean-to shop entrance lobby in the right hand internal angle on the plan. This used to be a tea-room with gift shop here called “The Old Forge”, but the business is defunct.
  • The Mill, Mill Bank. Mid-19th century. A four-storey corn mill, originally powered by steam. In red brick, with polychrome brickwork relieving arches over the windows and doors. Has been converted into apartments.
  • The Old Vicarage, Meadow Street. 16th century. Timber box-framed, black-and-“white” (actually pale yellow). A main range at the back is fronted by two short wings, close together and with gable frontages on street. A chimney in rubble is inserted between these.
  • Throne View, High Street (east end). 16th century. Timber box-framed, black-and-white with a jetty. Abuts St Columba's Cottage, separately listed.
  • Troisdorf, Hereford Road (east side). 17th century. Timber box-framed, but re-fronted in brick in the 18th century -this is painted in pale yellow. Has an outside cellar entrance. Named after the city of Troisdorf in Germany.
  • Tudor Cottage. 15th century. Timber box-framed, but re-fronted in brick in the 19th century. This is painted pale green. Sports a plaque “AD 1530”, which seems misleading. Abuts Williams Butchers, but is separately listed.
  • Unicorn Inn. Late 17th century. Timber box-framed, black-and-white, tall with regular chequerboard framing visible. Has three gabled attic dormers.
  • War Memorial. 1920, at churchyard.
  • West Lodge, Garnstone Park. Up a track, formerly the driveway to the demolished mansion of Garnstone Castle, off the B4230. About 1809, Gothic features, probably by John Nash who designed the mansion. There is an East Lodge on Hereford Road, not listed. The ruin of an outbuilding is at the mansion site.
  • Weobley Union Workhouse (listed as Whitehill House), on Kington Road. 1837 In red brick, on a double H-plan. Very little altered, although it is now private residences.
  • Willow Cottage, Back Lane. 17th century. Timber box-framed, and black-and-white. Small, one-storey with attic windows in gables. Has a mismatched 20th century extension. The Pottery, just to the south, is another little black-and-white edifice but is not listed.

References edit

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External links edit

  • Weobley Parish Council
  • Official Website for Weobley, Herefordshire
  • Photos of Weobley and surrounding area on Geograph
  • Remains of castle
  • St Peter and St Paul church, Weobley
  • Weobley Conservation Area Appraisal 2006
  • The Heritage Trail leaflet
  • The Weobley Circular Walk leaflet

weobley, ancient, settlement, civil, parish, herefordshire, england, formerly, market, town, market, long, defunct, settlement, today, promoted, county, black, white, villages, owing, abundance, timber, framed, buildings, although, historical, status, town, re. Weobley ˈ w ɛ b l i WEB lee is an ancient settlement and civil parish in Herefordshire England Formerly a market town the market is long defunct and the settlement is today promoted as one of the county s black and white villages owing to its abundance of old timber framed buildings Although it has the historical status of a town and is referred to as such in the sources it nowadays refers to itself as a village 2 WeobleySignpost in village centre WeobleyLocation within HerefordshirePopulation1 255 2011 1 Civil parishWeobleyUnitary authorityHerefordshireCeremonial countyHerefordshireRegionWest MidlandsCountryEnglandSovereign stateUnited KingdomPost townHEREFORDPostcode districtHR4Dialling code01544PoliceWest MerciaFireHereford and WorcesterAmbulanceWest MidlandsUK ParliamentNorth HerefordshireList of places UK England Herefordshire 52 09 32 N 2 52 23 W 52 159 N 2 873 W 52 159 2 873 Contents 1 Topography 1 1 Landscape 1 2 Layout 2 History 2 1 Early days 2 2 Saxons 2 3 Church 2 4 Castle 2 5 Mediaeval borough 2 6 Parliamentary borough 2 7 19th century 2 8 20th century 2 9 21st century 3 Governance 4 Transport 4 1 Rail 4 2 Road 4 3 Buses 5 Places of Worship 5 1 Anglican 5 1 1 Overview 5 1 2 Plan 5 1 3 Exterior 5 1 4 Tower 5 1 5 Interior 5 1 6 Churchyard cross 5 1 7 War memorial 5 2 Roman Catholic 5 3 Methodist 6 Schools 7 Sport 7 1 Bowls 7 2 Football 7 3 Cricket 8 Public amenities 9 Listed Buildings 9 1 Scheduled Monuments 9 2 Grade I 9 3 Grade II 9 4 Grade II 10 References 11 External linksTopography editLandscape edit Weobley is in an entirely rural location 12 miles 19 km north west of Hereford and 8 miles 13 km south west of Leominster It occupies the small shallow valley of the little Marl Brook in the northern lower dip slope of Burton Hill overlooking the valley of the Newbridge Brook which is a sub tributary of the River Arrow 3 The surrounding countryside is mostly farmland with a few small named ancient woods However to the south the deer park of Garnstone Castle formerly Garnstone Manor separates the settlement from the wooded heights of Burton Hill The castle was a castellated mansion an important design by John Nash 1807 4 which was demolished in 1959 5 Ornamental plantings for it survive notably a row of Sequoiadendron giganteum trees which includes a monumental specimen of 34 feet 10 m girth 6 Weobley Marsh is a separate hamlet to the east grouped around an area of ancient common land and traditionally a haunt of witches 7 To the west is the ancient farmstead of The Ley with a Grade I listed farmhouse dating to 1589 8 The underlying geology comprises the Raglan Mudstone Formation of the Lower Old Red Sandstone 9 The soils are argillic brown earths of high fertility 10 Layout edit nbsp Weobley former marketplace The historical layout of the settlement on which the majority of the old buildings stand is in the form of an inverted T The crossbar of the T is the High Street and the stem is the funnel shaped mediaeval marketplace comprising a triangular area abutting the High Street and extended to the north by the aptly named Broad Street The triangle used to have a row of infill buildings but these were demolished in the mid 20th century and replaced by a small urban park called the Rose Garden 11 The west side of the former marketplace is called Portland Street and the south side is Market Pitch nbsp Earthworks of Weobley Castle To the south of the High Street is the site of a mediaeval castle but this has no civic presence It abuts the Garnstone deer park and is described as a ring and bailey 12 The track leading to it from the High Street is flanked by an avenue of oaks planted in 1837 to mark the accession of Queen Victoria 13 From towards the east end of the High Street and running to the east of the castle is the Hereford Road This was originally a turnpike road to Hereford but is now just a country lane 14 At the north end of Broad Street Bell Square runs to the west with more old buildings then turns to the north west as Meadow Street B4230 to become the road to Kington Bell Square is very wide for a street and has been suggested as the core of the pre 13th century village arranged around an early marketplace or small village green 15 The west end of the High Street turns south then west as Mill Bank named after an impressive mid 19th century brick corn mill but formerly known as Chamber Walk 16 and this becomes the B4230 road to Hereford The mill is Grade II listed 17 The ancient parish church of SS Peter and Paul is oddly placed away from the built up area to the north and accessed by a country lane called Church Road which is a continuation of Broad Street More unusually this lane doubles back on itself after running round the churchyard and ends a short distance west of where it started forming a dead end hairpin loop This has been suggested as the ghost of the pre 13th century village arranged between the church and an early marketplace or small village green at Bell Square 18 A small grassy area is due south of the churchyard and this used to be the town s bowling green 19 The B4230 does not enter the old town centre but runs directly from Mill Bank to Meadow Street via a little bypass called Back Lane which roughly parallels Broad Street to the west This is an old thoroughfare the name in other mediaeval boroughs is known to indicate an access route to the back ends of a set of thin land strips called burgage tenements One of these would comprise a town house with a smallholding at its rear usually with back access so that farm animals did not have to be taken through the house hence Back Lane 20 The historical core of the settlement is a Conservation area 21 Two housing estates of the latter half of the 20th century more than doubled the size of the settlement They are Bearcroft north of Gadbridge Road which is the eastern continuation of the High Street and Burtonwood which is east of Hereford Road A small industrial estate the Whitehill Business Park was set up on the Kington Road History editEarly days edit A detailed archaeological survey of the site of the castle in 2002 using ground penetrating radar gave indications of an Iron Age settlement here 22 There are a few Roman surface finds A coin of Constantine the Great was found in the town in the 17th century In 2001 two brooches and six coins were found close to The Ley 23 Saxons edit The settlement existed in Saxon times as evidenced from its entry in the Domesday Book In 1066 the village was owned by Edwy the Noble and had ten villagers five smallholders eleven slaves one priest and two other It was valued at 5 and was in the Hundred of Stretford 24 In the Domesday Book the village name was transcribed as Wibelai The name possibly derives from Wibba s Ley a ley being a woodland glade and Wibba being a local Saxon landowner It is still pronounced as Web ley the spelling being similar to nearby Leominster the letter o in whose name also is not pronounced 25 Whether the Saxon settlement was nucleated and if so where it was located are both uncertain although Bell Square is suggested and possible house platforms identified 26 Also uncertain is the location of the place of worship served by the priest mentioned in the Domesday Book as the earliest extant fabric in the present church is Norman 27 Two hints exist as regards the status of the Saxon place of worship One is that the later church had the same dedication as the nearby great minster of Leominster that of SS Peter and Paul However there is no documentation to support the claim that Weobley was a dependent chapel in the original area of the Leominster parochia according to the Minster hypothesis 28 The other is that the Domesday survey listed a priest but not the church or chapel since the survey was of landholdings producing an income this hints that the church had no independent revenue and so was not yet parochial 29 Church edit The parish church is the oldest surviving building in Weobley The Domesday book listed the Lord of the Manor in 1086 as Roger de Lacy 30 The de Lacy family was to become very powerful Hugh de Lacy became Lord of the Manor in 1091 and he is credited with building the forerunner of the present church early in the next century the Norman south doorway of this survives albeit salvaged and re set in a later wall 31 Hugh gave his new church to his family s monastic foundation of Llanthony Priory which established a cell a small dependent monastery here However it did not last long 32 The priory retained possession until the Dissolution 33 The putative aisleless Norman church was re built in an extended project which continued through most of the 13th century This began at the start of this century when a south aisle was added the Norman doorway was preserved from the demolished wall and re used The chancel was rebuilt about mid century and then the nave was reconstructed this was only completed in the early 14th century The work included the addition of a narrow north aisle and a clerestory the latter involved the replacement of the south aisle arcade only about seventy years old The bell tower was added to the north west corner around 1330 40 with a spire that is the second tallest in the county This tower is at an angle which is unusual and is thought to have doubled up as a fortified peel tower against Welsh raids Finally the north aisle was widened in the mid 15th century in the Perpendicular style and a large east window provided for the chancel 34 Castle edit Main article Weobley Castle Herefordshire The castle ruins comprise a ring and bailey there is no motte and no surviving stonework 35 However the Garnstone deer park contains a large flat topped mound that has been identified as a motte although there is doubt about this If the identification is correct then the first castle was not on the present site 36 Weobley Castle is only first documented as existing during The Anarchy when it was seized in person by King Stephen from Geoffrey Talbot in 1140 although it was still the property of the de Lacy family Later that family s involvement with the rebellion against King John by William de Braose 4th Lord of Bramber led to the castle being in royal possession again from 1208 to 1213 A surviving depiction by Silas Taylor executed in 1655 shows the ruin of a rectangular keep with round corner towers and the style suggests that the castle was rebuilt by Walter II de Lacy after the de Lacy family regained ownership 37 However there was no further active history and John Leland described it in 1535 as a goodly castell but somewhat in decay 38 A geophysical survey in 2003 revealed that the bailey had fallen out of use in the 12th century when or soon after the stone keep had been built and had been subdivided into burgage tenements as part of the town 39 However all these had been replaced by ridge and furrow cultivation by the 17th century as the town underwent redevelopment and the smallholding portions of burgage tenements were hived off The final removal of all stonework from the site is undocumented but was thorough as even the foundations were dug out 40 Mediaeval borough edit The 2003 geophysical survey mentioned above demonstrated archaeologically that the town existed by the 13th century and was experiencing growth However it never had a royal market charter which indicates that the market right was already of time immemorial in the Middle Ages The first market was possibly at Bell Square and if so was moved when Walter II de Lacy laid out Broad Street as a borough with flanking burgage tenements on both sides also a single set of tenements on the west side of the present Hereford Road which took over the old castle bailey The market day was Thursday The new settlement was also provided with defences which were at best a timber palisade on a bank and ditch This did not last long and did not morph into a proper town wall 41 Walter II did obtain a charter for an annual fair in 1231 but this was to transfer the date from the Feast of the Ascension to that of the Invention of the Holy Cross 3 May so the origin of the fair is also unknown 42 At this period there was a stack of two watermills exploiting the limited power of the little Marl Brook one on the site of the 19th century steam mill and the other upstream Later windmill was built on a little hill now called Windmill Knapp just west of Back Lane by the start of the 15th century 43 The same location had been occupied by a pottery in the 13th century and the site is now a Scheduled Ancient Monument 44 The 1255 eyre roll for Herefordshire listed Weobley as having its own jury for legal trials at the circuit court 45 There was a small Jewish community here in the late 13th century which meant that the town was prospering commercially It was noted for trade in particularly high quality wool known as Leominster Ore 46 It also developed a fine leather glove industry which was flourishing by the end of the 16th century 47 However in the late Middle Ages the town was most famous for its ale as distinct from beer as it was not hopped 48 A local proverb Leominster bread and Weobley beer none can come near was first recorded in Camden s Britannia in 1610 49 The Welsh were very fond of cwrw Weble or Weobley ale and it features in late mediaeval Welsh poetry 50 The triangular marketplace was infilled in the 14th century owing to building pressure as the range of buildings that used to be in the surviving one between Broad Street and Portland Street all now destroyed allegedly contained some fabric of that age 51 However the original infill consisted of two parallel rows separated by three narrow streets The easternmost street and the eastern row were both lost in 17th century redevelopment but the step in the eastern Broad Street frontage is the ghost of the latter 52 Six high quality timber framed buildings of the 14th century in the town survived to be listed in the 20th century 53 Parliamentary borough edit Main article Weobley UK Parliament constituency In 1295 the town first briefly became a parliamentary borough when King Edward I summoned two representatives to London 54 who attended parliaments until 1307 Then representation lapsed 55 In 1628 Weobley was incorporated as a borough sending two Members of Parliament to the House of Commons until the Reform Act 1832 56 The voting requirement specified that the inhabitant householders had the vote The borough constables maintained a record of eligible voters called the lewn book Predictably the borough elections quickly became known for corruption venality and arguments about validity with some voters being persuaded by the supply of free drink so that one candidate called Weobley our liquid metropolis 57 The ancient parish of Weobley was divided into two townships those of Weobley Borough and Weobley Foreign 58 There was no municipal corporation town council so the lord of the manor was in charge of the town and the annual court leet as distinct from the circuit court which was for more serious legal matters At the court leet two constables were elected for law enforcement purposes and they also supervised parliamentary elections There were no other town officials so administratively the place was no better than a village 59 In the contemporary village is The Throne a large 400 year old building King Charles I spent the night here on 5 September 1645 after the Battle of Naseby during the English Civil War Back then the edifice was the Unicorn Inn but that business moved across the street to new premises later in the century and the former hostelry was renamed in honour of the visit 60 The Market Hall demolished in the 1860s 61 was a fine timber framed building allegedly erected by John Abel 1578 1675 and located on the south east corner of the marketplace infill It had a large upper chamber over an open ground floor supported by ornately carved timber posts 62 A drawing of it survives by Joseph Murray Ince 1839 which is now at the Rhode Island School of Design Museum in the USA 63 Also paintings by William Pitt of the mid 19th century feature it 64 William Crowther a native who made his fortune as a haberdasher in London left a legacy to found a Free Grammar School for local boys in 1653 A timber framed edifice was provided 65 on the west side of Hereford Street now Hereford Road and the school was opened in 1655 The building survives as the Old Grammar School 66 In the early 18th century a charity school for girls also existed 67 John Birch a soldier and politician who fought for the Parliamentarian cause in the First English Civil War sat in the House of Commons at various times from 1646 He purchased the Garnstone estate and became the Lord of the Manor having himself elected as a Member of Parliament in 1679 He remained as such until his death in 1691 and has an impressive monument in the parish church 68 His nephew also called John Birch then became Lord of the Manor and was also a borough MP when he died in 1735 There are several surviving 17th century town buildings evidence of prosperity Also the burgage tenements were being broken up and many of their smallholdings were being hived off and consolidated as farm fields This occurred on the castle site 69 The confusion venality and corruption occurring at elections votes were being sold for 10 15 each 2275 3300 in 2021 values drew the attention of Parliament and in 1736 it was resolved to restrict the franchise to occupiers owners or tenants having been resident for 40 days previously of so called vote houses The annual rental value of such a property had to be 1 or over and the occupier had to pay scot and lot which in practice meant the parish poor rate since there was no borough corporation 70 However after this the Lord of the Manor Thomas Thynne Viscount Weymouth later first Marquess of Bath instructed the constables not to register for the poor rate any resident who would not promise to vote for his candidates This was disfranchisement and the aggrieved voters took their case to the King s Bench They lost and thus Weobley became a pocket borough under the control of the Thynne family To make sure of matters Weymouth bought the vote houses that he did not already own 71 In 1830 a House of Commons report gave the number of vote houses in 1821 as 93 but with only 81 occupiers 72 Allegedly the Marquess had been keeping vote houses empty until forty days before an election when he would have temporary tenants installed who would vote obediently 73 19th century edit The manufacture of gloves at Weobley received a boost at the start of the 19th century during the Napoleonic Wars because imports of fine French gloves were stopped 74 At this time the town was still famous for beer malt liquor so it was not hopped 75 Quarries of building stone and roadstone were in the vicinity 76 There was a direct turnpike road to Hereford the present Hereford Road 77 At this time the ancient fair on 3 May had been replaced by one on Maundy Thursday for horned cattle i e not calves and horses and also on the Thursday three weeks later for the same and coarse linen cloth 78 In 1807 the castellated mansion of Garnstone Castle was built by John Nash 79 The parliamentary borough was disfranchised by the Reform Act 1832 Since there was no town council administratively the place became a village Despite this it was chosen as the headquarters of the local poor law union and a workhouse was opened at Whitehill on the road to Kington in 1837 80 A Roman Catholic church was opened in 1834 and a Primitive Methodist congregation gathered in 1839 81 and built a chapel in 1844 the present structure opened in 1861 82 83 To supplement the old Grammar School the National Society for Promoting Religious Education opened a National School in 1834 84 85 nbsp Broad Street painted by William Pitt 1867 showing Market Hall However the town continued to morph into a village in the 1840s John Thynne had become the fourth Marquess of Bath in 1837 aged only six 86 and his trustees of his estate decided to dispose of the vote houses by auction in 1844 and 1846 87 They also ordered the disposal of the Market Hall in 1848 which was the death knell for the ancient market 88 The actual demolition of the Hall was in the 1860s 89 The old grammar school gave up sold off its building and merged with the National School to create a co educational school in new premises in Broad Street later to move to an extant building in Portland Street in 1873 90 91 The population of the parish in 1841 was 907 92 By 1858 the fair had been moved back near to its ancient date on 8 May for cattle and entertainment it was becoming a funfair The industries producing gloves and beer had both gone 93 the latter being replaced by cider 94 and the only industry left was some malting there was no mill yet On the other hand there was a new brick built police station and courtroom in Back Lane and petty sessions were held every other Monday A van covered wagon made the round trip to Hereford twice a week The population in 1851 was 972 95 The railways completely ignored Weobley The nearest station at Moorhampton was opened on the Hereford Hay and Brecon Railway in 1862 and was 3 5 miles 5 6 km away nbsp Weobley High Street by William Pitt 1853 with Market Hall on left The only 19th century industrial development was a corn mill powered by steam completed in 1862 96 The parish church was restored in 1865 at a cost of 3 200 2021 416 000 97 In 1868 the market was nearly obsolete 98 but the place still regarded itself as a town and there was a town crier employed in 1877 A nail manufacturer was operating in the same year 99 The extinction of street trading meant a wave of houses being converted to shops which are a feature of the village s architecture Some merely had shop fronts inserted 100 while others suffered more radical remodelling Weobley Rural District Council was created in 1894 and had its offices in the Union Workhouse on the Kington road 101 20th century edit In 1909 the population was 703 down from 907 in 1841 The cattle fair on 8 May was defunct the funfair continued and the nail manufacturer had gone At a time when motor buses were already running in Hereford the first was in 1908 102 the public cart was still clopping on the round trip to Hereford twice a week Unusually the carter was a lady Mrs Elizabeth Garbutt 103 In that year the decayed town had a police station a solicitor who also acted as a bank agent and insurance broker there was no bank here yet another insurance broker a relieving officer in charge of poverty assistance who was also a third such broker a doctor six grocers three butchers a baker a chemist a tobacconist three inns Unicorn Salutation and Red Lion three drapers clothes and material shops a tailor three shoemakers a cobbler footwear repairer a saddler who also dealt in bicycles and who ran the post office two hauliers a mason three builders and a blacksmith There was a set of Recreation Rooms The newly established Army Reserve then known as the Territorial Force had a Drill Hall 104 Lloyds Bank later opened a branch in the village on the corner of Broad Street and High Street 105 The two world wars passed Weobley by except that eighteen local men died in action in the first one There were no casualties in the second 106 In 1920 the Birmingham and Midland Omnibus Company familiarly known as Midland Red began a motor bus service to Hereford 107 The company and its successors which kept the original nickname operated until the depot in Hereford shut down in 2015 108 nbsp South end of Broad Street The buildings on the left burned down in 1943 In 1943 a serious fire in a bakery gutted the remaining old buildings of the marketplace infill and these had to be demolished to create the little town park the Rose Garden there now 109 The lost timber framed block of two houses had its origin in the late 15th century with alterations in the following three centuries 110 nbsp Garnstone Castle in 1867 Garnstone Castle by John Nash was demolished in 1959 the village s second major architectural loss of the 20th century 111 In 1951 the population was 634 which was less than a century before However in 2001 the population had almost doubled to 1246 as a result of residential developments These mostly involved the creation of the housing estates of Burtonwood and Bearcroft to the east of the historical area 112 The former is a council house estate built in the Fifties and early Sixties by Weobley Rural District Council the latter was a private development from the early Seventies to the early Eighties 113 21st century edit nbsp The magpie in Weobley In 2001 the artist Walenty Pytel completed a metal sculpture of a magpie called Magnus for the village a magpie is the village s emblem because it is black and white like many of the old houses 114 The sculpture was commissioned after the village won the Calor Gas Daily Telegraph Great Britain Village of the Year in 1999 115 nbsp Weobley Corner House and former Red Lion Inn In 2015 one of Weobley s three ancient inns the Red Lion closed down and became an Indian restaurant 116 On 3 August 2016 the BBC s The One Show was broadcast entirely from Weobley 117 In 2017 the parish church was put on the Heritage at Risk Register compiled by Historic England because the stonework of the tower and spire was rotting and there was no restoration proposal in place 118 In 2019 the village s ancient brewing industry was revived when the Weobley Brewing Company set up a brewhouse in Portland Street 119 In 2021 an endowment allowed the creation of a nature reserve named the Weobley Wildlife Meadows and run by the Herefordshire Wildlife Trust 120 Governance editWeobley has never had a municipal corporation or town council Before 1894 the parish vestry was in charge of routine civic administration and the Lord of the Manor was in charge of the annual manorial court leet which elected two constables for law enforcement purposes This was the same as for any parochial village in England 121 Then the Local Government Act 1894 created Weobley Parish Council under Weobley Rural District Council the latter in turn being subject to Herefordshire County Council Weobley Rural District Council was absorbed into Leominster District Council in 1974 which in turn was abolished in 1998 to leave Herefordshire Council as a unitary authority The Parish Council has an advisory role and is responsible for certain public amenities The population of the civil parish in 2011 was 1 255 122 For parliamentary elections Weobley is part of the electoral ward called Golden Cross and Weobley The population of this ward taken at the 2011 census was 2 985 123 Transport editRail edit Weobley has never had a railway The nearest station at Moorhampton was closed in 1962 124 The railhead since then has been Hereford connected by the 461 bus Road edit Weobley s link to the wider world is the B4230 which runs from Whitehill on the A4112 through the village to Moorhampton on the A480 and then to Byrford Common on the A438 The old turnpike road direct to Hereford is a country lane Gadbridge Road the continuation eastwards of the High Street and a street off Hereford Road called Burton Wood both exit the village eastwards to a network of narrow country lanes leading to Dilwyn Stretford and King s Pyon as well as to the satellite hamlet of Weobley Marsh 125 Buses edit nbsp The Hereford bus at Weobley The major bus route serving the village is the 461 operated by Sargents Brothers and with a daily service in 2021 of eleven buses each way from Hereford railway station to Kington Some of these run through to Llandrindod Wells The main bus stop in Weobley is in Broad Street One each way of these buses is numbered 462 because it reaches Kington via Eardisley instead of directly 126 The other route is the 507 operated by Lugg Valley Travel and giving a round trip to Leominster on Tuesdays and Fridays only Unlike the 461 this serves Burtonwood as well as Broad Street 127 Places of Worship editAnglican edit Overview edit nbsp Church of SS Peter and Paul Weobley The village has an Anglican church which is mostly 13th century but was restored in 1865 St Peter and St Paul s Church This is now 2021 part of the Weobley and Staunton Group of Parishes which is a team ministry including six other local churches and which is in the Diocese of Hereford 128 Plan edit The church has a nave with aisles of four bays followed by a crossing with transepts However the transept arches are integral with the nave arcades and the nave roof is extended over the crossing The nave aisles crossing and transepts form a unit which is almost square on the plan at 63 feet 19 metres deep and 61 25 feet 18 67 metres wide There follows a very deep but unaisled chancel almost as deep as the nave and crossing combined at 54 feet 16 metres A vestry abuts this on the north side The south aisle has an external porch An oversized tower with spire is attached at an angle to the north west corner of the north aisle and intrudes into it Exterior edit The present building replaced an earlier Norman one and has a re set Norman south doorway within the porch It is not entirely certain that this came from a building on the same site also nothing is known of the small monastery of Augustinian canons from Llanthony Priory which briefly existed at the start of the 12th century 129 The extant fabric is otherwise mostly 13th century and is made up of local sandstone ashlars and rubble The north aisle walls and east window are however of the mid 15th century and are in the Perpendicular style The roofing is partly in matching stone slabs and partly in slate The nave has a low clerestory and before the 1865 restoration cat slide roof pitches covered nave and aisles in single slopes so hiding the clerestory The west front of the nave is all in ashlar stonework in contrast with the rubble used elsewhere and dates to around 1300 The doorway is embellished with two orders of ball flower and above is a large four light window in the Decorated Gothic style flanked by a pair of empty statue niches The smaller window in the end of the north aisle to the left is in the Perpendicular style of about 1450 and was installed inside out by mistake 130 There are four other large windows in the main body of the church and the fenestration is otherwise simple and rather sparse The south transept has a hexagonal rose window of seven lights The east wall has a five light Perpendicular window with simple tracery and a pair of portrait busts as hood moulding stops these are of the 1865 restoration The north transept has a two light window topped by a trefoil and the north aisle has a four light Perpendicular window of more ornate design than the east window 131 nbsp Weobley church sundial The large south porch has a sundial over its portal The actual door is decorated and is dated 1712 Tower edit nbsp Weobley church tower The oversized five storey tower is very unusual It was added to the north west corner around 1330 40 with a spire that is the second tallest in the county at 185 feet 56 metres On the plan it is at an angle which is odd and not easily explicable and is thought to have doubled up as a fortified peel tower against Welsh raids This is because the entrance doorway off the north aisle was fitted with a drawbar to enable people to barricade themselves inside The walls are blank grim and virtually windowless and each face is flanked with projecting wall strips meeting at diagonal stepped buttresses at the corners The first storey has a recess containing blind three light window tracery in its north west and east walls only the central light of these is glazed The flanking lights used to contain small statues The top of the tower has a set of four gabled and crocketed pinnacles apparently modelled on those of the tower of Hereford Cathedral 132 The south face has a clock The octagonal stone spire is not fully original for it was struck by lightning in 1640 and rebuilt at a shorter height in 1675 It was only restored to its original form in 1898 It is supported by four flying buttresses a feature unique in the country and has the bell chamber in its base which is also a singular feature 133 Interior edit nbsp Weobley parish church chancel The mediaeval interior was vandalized by Puritan fanatics who smashed the stained glass some fragments survive broke the piscina basins and mutilated the tomb effigies The ambience mostly dates from the 1865 restoration and has the whitewashed walls and octagonal arcade columns contrasting with the Victorian polychrome geometric tiled floor The nave has a scissor truss roof The Victorian stained glass is of good quality 134 Some mediaeval sculptural work survives in the fabric The south aisle at its west end has a row of corbels for a former 16th roof above the arcade carved to depict a lion an angel an ape and a grotesque man There is a late 13th century piscina in the chancel and one from earlier in that century in the south aisle the latter is richly ornamented with dog tooth 135 The font is early 14th century octagonal in limestone with window tracery panels in shallow relief on each side of the bowl The cover is c 1700 Adjacent is one of the church s six bells removed to here in 1983 because of worries about the tower s integrity These problems have become serious leading to the church being put on the Heritage at Risk Register in 2017 136 In the north transept is a fragment of the mediaeval wooden rood screen There are three mediaeval altar tombs That of Sir William Devereux d 1402 is against the south wall of the chancel and has a badly defaced alabaster reclining effigy of him in armour c 1430 He had married Agnes Crophull heiress of Weobley Castle and as a widow she married John Marbury d 1437 Their effigies again in alabaster and mutilated with him in armour are on their own tomb in an arched recess in the south side of the chancel c 1450 This tomb incorporates salvaged items from earlier work notably two fragments of 13th century coffin lids with foliated crosses In the north aisle is an anonymous tomb with no effigy probably early 15th century 137 In the south aisle is a tomb slab is a tomb slab carved with a foliated cross flaked by a mitre and crozier with the inscription Hic jacet Hugo Bssop This is a rebus as the deceased was not a bishop but had the surname Bishop nbsp Colonel John Birch s tomb St Peter amp St Paul s Church Weobley On the chancel north wall is the spectacular Baroque monument commemorating Colonel John Birch d 1691 It has a pair of black marble Corinthian columns standing on a high shallow plinth bearing his epitaph which is framed in the same marble The columns support the ends of a broken segmental pediment and in the gap of this is his heraldry carved in relief The aedicule frames a statue of the deceased within a shallow round headed niche in grey marble 138 Churchyard cross edit nbsp Weobley Churchyard Cross In the churchyard just south of the chancel are the remains of a 14th century churchyard cross which comprise a Scheduled Ancient Monument 139 This has five octagonal steps and a decorated socket stone The shaft and cross head are modern 140 There is a legend that if you walk around the cross seven times at midnight while reciting the Lord s Prayer backwards you will summon the Devil 141 War memorial edit nbsp Weobley War Memorial The village s war memorial is further south in the churchyard and is a Grade II Listed Building The material used is sandstone and it was inaugurated in 1920 It is a cross with a tapering shaft standing on a monolithic block with partly chamfered corners itself standing on a stepped plinth The names commemorated are carved into the block there are eighteen from the First World War and none from the Second World War because the village suffered no casualties this is mentioned in the epigraph 142 Roman Catholic edit nbsp Weobley Catholic Church Weobley s little Roman Catholic church is on the Kington Road outside the village and is dedicated to St Thomas of Hereford When being a Catholic was illegal in England under the Penal Laws Weobley was described as a nest of Papists 143 The recusant Monington family of Sarnesfield Court demolished 1955 maintained a chapel in their house after the Reformation until Catholic emancipation in 1829 whereupon they decided to have a church built 144 It was erected in 1835 and is the oldest Roman Catholic church in Herefordshire as well as being a very early example of ecclesiastical Gothic Revival architecture 145 The family put the church under the care of Downside Abbey and several other local Catholic churches were founded from it However in 1923 the responsibility was transferred to the local Belmont Abbey and in 1938 it was decided to consolidate the three churches at Weobley Broxwood and Kington into the one parish of Kington and Weobley Belmont Abbey is still in charge and the parish priest resides at Weobley 146 The church of the Holy Family at Broxwood has been closed down and is now a private house this was built in 1863 in an isolated and thinly populated location in the civil parish of Pembridge 147 The church at Weobley is a very simple rectangular goth box in sandstone rubble with a slate roof having three bays and with a large two light Gothic window for each bay in the south wall These windows have brick headings and wooden tracery A similar but smaller west window is over the small gabled external porch added in the 20th century and on the roof gable above is a simple bell cote The north wall is windowless and abuts a small red brick annexe which is now the sacristy but used to be a schoolroom The east end of the church abuts the presbytery which is an attractive two storey Regency style house higher than the church in bright red brick with a symmetrical frontage and a floating semi cylindrical door canopy over a fanlight The ensemble is Grade II listed as one building 148 The small interior has pink walls and a shallowly vaulted white plaster ceiling The wooden altar reredos and statues of the Sacred Heart and St Thomas of Hereford are by the Hereford woodcarver Charles Victor Gertner The angels in front of the supports of the west gallery are salvage from Belmont Abbey church 149 Methodist edit A Primitive Methodist congregation gathered at Weobley in 1839 150 and built a chapel in 1844 This they rebuilt and the present structure opened in 1861 151 152 The chapel is now 2021 part of the Shropshire and Marches Methodist Circuit 153 nbsp Methodist Chapel This is a small rectangular edifice in red brick with two large round headed windows in each side wall separated by shallow brick pilasters Ancillary accommodation abuts the back The facade has a pair of windows in the same style flanking a round headed doorway with fanlight The windows and the doorway are lined with ashlar stone blocks in long and short work and the building s corners are provided with rectangular quoins set so as to give the same effect The keystones of the doorway and windows of the facade are each embellished with an axe head motif in sunk relief There is a stone string course creating a false pediment A stone dedicatory tablet with a shallowly rounded top sits on this string course Schools editMain article Weobley High School The village has two schools Weobley High School and Weobley Primary School They are situated next to each other on the south side of the street called Burton Wood The primary school has its antecedents in a Free Grammar School for local boys in 1653 founded as a result of a legacy left by Willian Crowther in 1863 This existed in a surviving timber framed building in Hereford Road until it merged with a National School founded for both sexes in 1834 154 155 The combined school established itself in premises in Portland Street in 1873 now the village s convenience store 156 157 Weobley High School was built in response to the growth in the size of the village in the later 20th century and opened in 1963 as Weobley County Secondary School 158 New premises were built for the primary school just to the east of this and opened in 1998 These feature a pioneering environmentally friendly system of heating powered by a boiler fuelled with wood chips and having wall insulation made from recycled newspapers The system also serves the High School next door with the latter s old oil fired system being kept in reserve 159 Sport editBowls edit Bowls has a long history in Weobley There was a bowling green on the site of the castle in 1824 160 but the present Weobley and District Bowling Club which plays flat green was founded in 1947 The first green was on Church Road behind the now closed down Red Lion inn The club moved to its present green on Hereford Road in 2010 161 Football edit Weobley Football Club was founded in 1990 and played in the Herefordshire Football League It was wound up in September 2019 owing to the amateur playing squad having commitment issues 162 Cricket edit Weobley Cricket Club amalgamated with the Burghill and Tillington Cricket Club in 2016 the resultant Burghill Tillington and Weobley Cricket Club play in the Worcestershire County Cricket League at their ground at Tillington 163 Public amenities edit nbsp Weobley Museum The Village Hall is on Gadbridge Road 164 and next to it is the Play Area which has a skatepark 165 The Community Centre is a separate facility in Burton Gardens 166 The Weobley Museum and History Centre is in the former police station on Back Lane 167 The village has a Medical Centre at the start of Gadbridge Road comprising a surgery and a dentists The Post Office is on Portland Street Lloyds Bank on the corner of Broad Street and High Street has closed down nbsp Portland Garage at Weobley In 2021 there were also two long established inns The Unicorn and The Salutation two restaurants one used to be the former Red Lion inn a tearoom a convenience store the Old School Shop because the village school used to be here a butchers a delicatessen with cafe and a very small traditional filling station Portland Garage 168 A Heritage Trail has been laid out in the village 169 and there is also a Weobley Circular Walk which takes in the countryside to the south 170 Listed Buildings editScheduled Monuments edit Weobley has three Scheduled Ancient Monuments The castle earthworks The mediaeval pottery on Windmill Knapp nothing to see The churchyard cross 171 Grade I edit nbsp The Ley Weobley Weobley has two Grade I Listed Buildings The parish church of SS Peter and Paul The Ley The latter is a farmhouse to the west of the village and is a sumptuous two storey timber framed house on a H plan built in 1589 and little altered since 172 Grade II edit Weobley has eleven buildings listed Grade II two storey black and white timber box framed unless otherwise specified 173 List of Grade II Listed Buildings at Weobley 1 Bell Square near junction with B4230 15th century L shaped with hall wing on street and cross wing perpendicular to it with a jettied frontage The former was given a brick extension in the 19th century when two little shops were created here long defunct Marlbrook House south end of Back Lane 15th century partly rebuilt 16th century large and L shaped the cross wing has a jetty and the second storey of the hall wing extends over a carriage portal 4 Portland Street listed as Northern Half of Weobley Stores now called Queens Truss 15th century fragment of a larger edifice The frontage has two distinct zones the left having a jetty but the right having a cavetto to the gutter with curved timbers The former shop window has been replaced with cheap fenestration Red Lion Inn as was 14th century but the hall range on Bell Square was rebuilt in the 17th century and extended in the 18th It has a sandstone rubble first storey frontage The cross range on Church Road is original and connects via a small 20th century link block to an outbuilding which has a cruck frame and which is a fragment of an originally larger structure The ensemble is listed as one building and in 2021 was occupied by a restaurant called Lal Bagh meaning Beloved Garden the original is in Bangalore The Dairy Farm On Meadow Street 15th century with 17th century barn attached L shaped with a box framed cross wing having a jetty and a cruck framed hall wing The chimney is modern The Gables Broad Street 15th century gabled cross wings the central hall wing was rebuilt in the 17th century and provided with a stone porch having columns in a vaguely Tuscan Doric style The timbering is decoratively embellished The Old Corner House Corner of Broad Street and Bell Square 15th century L shaped with a single storey hall range on the former and a jettied cross range on the latter The hall range has a dormer window In the 20th century was converted into a live in shop in 2021 a tea room and for this the cross range was extended by re erecting a dismantled timber framed barn from elsewhere The Old Grammar School Hereford Road Purpose built for Crowther s Grammar School founded 1659 Symmetrical with two large attic dormers and a bell cote The Old Manor Bell Square next to number 1 14th century Two tall jettied cross wings of different widths sandwiching a single storey hall wing The Throne Corner of Hereford Road and High Street 16th century main range on former extended in 18th century cross wing on latter extended in 17th century King Charles II stayed here when it was the Unicorn Inn hence the name Unicorn House High Street adjacent to Unicorn Inn to west 14th century Complex frontage partly jettied and partly with cavetto cornicing some of this was removed to insert a window Grade II edit Weobley has seventy six buildings listed Grade II Some of these are on farms outside the village 174 List of Grade II Listed Buildings at Weobley 1 amp 2 High Street 17th century Two semi detached houses timber box framed with the first storey cased in whitewashed brick and the second in black and white 2 Portland Street Early 19th century whitewashed brick with slate roof and a symmetrical frontage 3 Broad Street Early 17th century timber box frame black and white perpendicular to the street with a gabled frontage 3 Hereford Road Late 18th century in whitewashed coursed sandstone rubble blocks called Mayfield 3 High Street Early 18th century in whitewashed brick Altered for a shop in the early 19th century hence the oriel window 5 Broad Street 17th century timber box frame black and white called April Cottage Has a lean to on left side Abuts Little Croft see below Barn behind Unicorn Hotel 16th century Timber box frame weatherboarded three bays with the eastern one 17th century Barn at Brockaly 17th century timber box frame clad in weatherboarding This is on Riddox Lane which is north of Whitehill and some distance from the village but is in the civil parish Visible from lane Barn at Fields End Early 18th century timber box frame Has threshing floor and possible horse gin Farm is south of Garnstone Park no public access Barn behind The Gables Broad Street 17th century timber box frame partly weatherboarded Barn next to The Old Vicarage Meadow Lane 17th century timber box frame black and white with some weatherboarding Former Recreation Rooms recently restored as dwelling called Tithe Barn Barn at Little Sarnesfield 17th century timber box frame corrugated roof On north side of farmstead next to wood visible from lane west of Whitehill off Kington Road Barn next to 3 High Street Early 18th century in brick painted pale yellow on a sandstone rubble plinth Bell House Back Lane 17th century raised onto a rubble plinth early 19th century timber box frame with brick infill black and white Brockaly 17th century but altered and extended in 19th Timber box framed black and white three bays each with its own roof This is a farm on Riddox Lane which is north of Whitehill and some distance from the village but is in the civil parish Barn also listed Brook Cottage Bell Square Possibly 17th century remodelled early 19th century Brick faked up to look timber framed in black and white High rubble plinth with access ramp Camberwell Cottage Mill Bank beyond the Corn Mill 17th century Timber box framed black and white single storey but with two large gabled attic dormers which are mid 20th century Cart shed at Fields End Mid 18th century Coursed rubble with brick patching Farm is south of Garnstone Park no public access South Place Castle Green Cottage and Stone Cottage Hereford Road 17th century now three houses formed out of one timber box framed edifice on a T plan and clad in coursed sandstone rubble Some black and white in north gable reveals hidden identity Castle House Hereford Road Early 19th century in high quality coursed sandstone ashlar blocks Windows have segmentally curved heads and there is a wooden Tuscan Doric doorcase Single storey mid 19th century extension in matching style used to be the village s registry office Castle View Hereford Road Around 1700 Timber box framed black and white Perpendicular to the street the facing gable end used to be jettied but had a first storey rubble wall inserted in the early 19th century Catholic Church with presbytery 1834 Churchyard Cross Also listed as a Scheduled Ancient Monument but the Grade II listing includes the shaft and cross head which are 19th century Corner House Market Pitch 16th century Timber box framed black and white actually pale yellow Jettied entrance in east gable end Cowhouse at Field End Early 18th century Timber box framed with weatherboarding Farm is south of Garnstone Park no public access Dairy at Fields End Early 19th century brick with pyramidal slate roof having a louvre ditto Two Gothic windows in frontage Slate shelving inside Farm is south of Garnstone Park no public access Fair Lawn Hereford Road Early 18th century a large house in red brick and perpendicular to the road The garden front has a pediment with a lunette window The street frontage is blank with a bricked up window below a blind oculus containing a heraldic crest featuring two chickens Fenhampton 17th century Grand farmhouse to south west of village Timber box framed black and white but partly clad in sandstone rubble Public footpath access Fenmore Meadow Street 17th century re roofed and extended late 20th century Timber box framed black and white entrance at side Fields End Mid 18th century Farmhouse in coursed rubble Outbuildings are separately listed Farm is south of Garnstone Park no public access High House listed as High Towers Meadow Street 17th century Tall timber box framed black and white gable frontage has attic windows and an entrance lean to occupying the entire width under a single pitched roof Holmleigh High Street near the surgery 17th century Timber framed but refaced in the 18th century and the framing is only visible in the right hand side Single storey but with two attic dormer windows flanking a central gable also with an attic window The frontage is all in white Homeleigh Broad Street west side Late 17th century Brick roughly rendered in white Has two attic dormers and a wooden doorcase enclosing an overlight The Green Bean listed as Jeans Fashions Broad Street Late 17th century timber box framed perpendicular to street Black and white on north side A separate parallel range was added on the south side in the 19th century and the frontage re done in whitewashed brick to provide two shops One of these used to be the first premises of Lloyds Bank in the village Jules Cafe Portland Street 17th century timber box framed but mostly re cast in rough whitewashed brick in early 18th century some black and white visible in back range Little Croft Broad Street 17th century timber box framed partly in black and white but substantially altered in 19th century and had a garage inserted into a carriage entrance in the 20th There are two bay windows running the full height obvious additions Little Sarnsfield Farmhouse off A 4112 west of Whitehill 14th century remodelled in 17th and 18th centuries Timber box framed mostly clad in brick No public access London House listed as Lloyds Bank Corner of High Street and Broad Street Early 17th century timber box framed in black and white Used to be the village s bank in 2021 was a hairdressers Market Pitch Cottage 16th century with 17th century single storey annexe slightly forward Timber box framed black and white The main range used to have a jetty but the lower frontage was aligned with the upper in the 18th century May Cottage and Ella s Cottage listed as May Cottage Bell Square 17th century extended to east in late 18th century Timber box framed black and white Two houses in one building the extension has the first storey in whitewashed brick Mayfield Hereford Road east side 17th century re fronted in whitewashed brick in 18th century Timber box framed as can be seen in tip of north gable Meadow Cottage Meadow Street 17th century Timber box framed black and white A quirky little house possibly a fragment of a larger edifice see left hand gable end Mellington House Broad Street Late 17th century as is an outbuilding to the right which is connected by a mid 19th century brick block Timber box framed both The symmetrical main frontage is stuccoed with architectural details in pale yellow including a decorative blind arch above the central entrance The four attic dormers are 19th century Outbuilding has carriage portal Mile post on B4230 at the first bend north of the A480 near Devereux Wootton Early 19th century triangular with sloped top in painted cast iron The latter reads Weobley Parish the two sides To Weobley 2 miles To Hereford 10 miles Mile post on B4230 at Shoals Bank Early 19th century triangular with sloped top in painted cast iron The top reads Weobley Parish the two sides To Weobley 1 miles To Hereford 11 miles Mile post on Hereford Road opposite East Lodge of Garnstone Park Early 19th century triangular with sloped top in painted cast iron The top reads Weobley Parish the two sides To Weobley mile To Hereford 10 miles Has a maker s mark Hereford Georges amp Son Foundry Mill Bank Cottages Early 19th century A terrace of four millworkers cottages in red brick with segmental tops to windows and doors The frontage has an oblique angle to fit into a bend in the road 1 Broad Street listed as Number 1 16th century re fronted in 18th century and altered in the mid 19th century when it was turned into a shop Timber box framed only black and white at north gable whereas the frontage is in whitewashed brick The entrance has a wooden doorcase sporting a triangular pediment with a broken cornice The original shopfront survives There is an outbuilding at the back comprising stables Portland Garage Broad Street listed as Number 2 Possibly 17th century timber box framed but encased in rough brick in the early 19th century Converted into a small filling station in the mid 20th century and as such is a rare survival Orchard Bank Mill Bank just beyond Corn Mill 17th century Timber box framed black and white single storey but has a large attic dormer window Outbuilding north of Fenmore Meadow Street 17th century Timber box framed black and white but first storey to west and north is in brick and the gable street frontage brick infill is left naked Possibly stables originally Parkfields Church Road beyond the church 17th century Timber box framed black and white Post Office 17th century but re fronted in mid 18th century in whitewashed brick with two large bay windows Timber box framed evidence only visible at top of north gable Has arched side passage Williams Butchers listed as R E Williams and Sons Portland Street 16th century but re fronted as a shop in the early 19th century Timber box framed frontage is in rough whitewashed brick The shop front is original Abuts Tudor Cottage separately listed even though under the same roof Salutation Inn Three distinct elements early 18th century perpendicular to street 19th century parallel to street and set back forming an L plan with the previous and a 16th century range to the west The latter is timber box framed black and white actually pale yellow The newer ranges are in brick in the same colour The 18th century gable sports 16th or 17th century carved bargeboards salvaged from elsewhere 3 Portland Street listed as Southern Half of Weobley Stores Possibly 17th century re fronted early 19th century to make a shop and remodelled again early 21st century after the shop was closed down and the shop window and entrance were replaced with windows matching those in the second storey Number 4 next door was also part of Weobley Stores it is Grade II listed and shares an old slate roof Number 2 on the other side is in the same style but is not listed St Columba s Cottage High Street east end On a T plan the small 16th century roadside range abuts a larger 17th century extension behind The former has a deep jetty supported by a timber corner pier Abuts Throne View separately listed Stables and Cider House at Fields End Mid 18th century range in sandstone rubble with ashlar dressings Farm is south of Garnstone Park no public access Stawne Meadow Street Late 16th century timber box framed black and white except actually silver and pink the timbers were never tarred Late 17th century L shaped with a chimney stack in the north range which has a rubble first storey wall and which was extended recently Gabled street frontage is jettied Terrace North of London House Broad Street listed as Terrace North of Lloyds Bank 15th century A terrace of three houses timber box framed and black and white Has a deep jetty and a shop front was inserted into this to convert the southern house into a shop in the mid 19th century what is there now is mid 20th The Bear and Urso House 9 amp 10 Broad Street Early 18th century semi detached house in brick rendered white the northern dwelling having a carriage portal which is now a garage There are four box dormers The Birches Farmhouse off the lane to Broxwood beyond Whitehill 16th century Timber box framed black and white with some brick cladding on a T plan No public access Spring Cottage Hereford Road listed as The Cottage Early 19th century Bright red brick with a gabled entrance canopy on wall brackets Oddly the south gable wall is in timber framing black and white The Cwm Meadow Street Probably 15th century thought to be the cross wing of a larger house Timber box framed and black and white Gable end abuts road but access is via quite a long driveway The Forge Mill Bank On a T plan the cross range is 18th century to the north east and possibly 16th century to the south west It is timber box framed black and white The stem range with the gable facing the road is also 18th century and is in whitewashed brick There is a lean to shop entrance lobby in the right hand internal angle on the plan This used to be a tea room with gift shop here called The Old Forge but the business is defunct The Mill Mill Bank Mid 19th century A four storey corn mill originally powered by steam In red brick with polychrome brickwork relieving arches over the windows and doors Has been converted into apartments The Old Vicarage Meadow Street 16th century Timber box framed black and white actually pale yellow A main range at the back is fronted by two short wings close together and with gable frontages on street A chimney in rubble is inserted between these Throne View High Street east end 16th century Timber box framed black and white with a jetty Abuts St Columba s Cottage separately listed Troisdorf Hereford Road east side 17th century Timber box framed but re fronted in brick in the 18th century this is painted in pale yellow Has an outside cellar entrance Named after the city of Troisdorf in Germany Tudor Cottage 15th century Timber box framed but re fronted in brick in the 19th century This is painted pale green Sports a plaque AD 1530 which seems misleading Abuts Williams Butchers but is separately listed Unicorn Inn Late 17th century Timber box framed black and white tall with regular chequerboard framing visible Has three gabled attic dormers War Memorial 1920 at churchyard West Lodge Garnstone Park Up a track formerly the driveway to the demolished mansion of Garnstone Castle off the B4230 About 1809 Gothic features probably by John Nash who designed the mansion There is an East Lodge on Hereford Road not listed The ruin of an outbuilding is at the mansion site Weobley Union Workhouse listed as Whitehill House on Kington Road 1837 In red brick on a double H plan Very little altered although it is now private residences Willow Cottage Back Lane 17th century Timber box framed and black and white Small one storey with attic windows in gables Has a mismatched 20th century extension The Pottery just to the south is another little black and white edifice but is not listed References edit Civil parish population 2011 Retrieved 30 October 2015 Weobley Parish Council Home Page Retrieved 29 August 2021 Weobley Conservation Area Appraisal Weobley Parish Council 2006 p 5 Herefordshire Past Garnstone Castle Retrieved 29 August 2010 Lost Heritage Garnstone Castle Retrieved 29 August 2021 Monumental Trees website Weobley sequoia page Retrieved 3 October 2021 Ella Mary Leather The Folklore of Herefordshire 1912 p 53 Historic England web page The Lea Retrieved 29 August 2021 Weobley Conservation Area Appraisal Weobley Parish Council 2006 p 5 Weobley Conservation Area Appraisal Weobley Parish Council 2006 p 5 Ordnance Survey 6 inch series Herefordshire XXV NE 1905 1948 Historic England Weobley Castle web page Retrieved 29 August 2021 Weobley Conservation Area Appraisal Weobley Parish Council 2006 p 7 Paterson Daniel Paterson s Roads 1838 p 142 Market Towns website Weobley page Retrieved 11 September 2021 Ordnance Survey 6 inc Herefordshire XXV NE 1905 British Listed Buildings web page The Mill Weobley Retrieved 29 August 2021 Market Towns website Weobley page Retrieved 11 September 2021 Weobley Conservation Area Appraisal Weobley Parish Council 2006 p 7 Tiller Kate English Local History An Introduction 2020 p 102 Weobley Conservation Area Appraisal Weobley Parish Council 2006 p 3 Hereford Times article Weobley Castle Site Holds Iron Age Clue Retrieved 30 August 2021 Herefordshire Through Time Roman Sites Retrieved 30 August 2021 Open Domesday website Weobley page Retrieved 30 August 2021 Heart of England Automobile Association 1988 p 144 Weobley Conservation Area Appraisal Weobley Parish Council 2006 p 5 Britain Express website SS Peter and Paul Weobley Retrieved 3 September 2021 Waddington Sheila Kathryn The Origins of Anglo Saxon Herefordshire A Study in Land Unit Antiquity University of Birmingham doctoral thesis 2013 History Extra website Your Guide to the Domesday Book Retrieved 3 September 2021 Open Domesday website Weobley page Retrieved 30 August 2021 Britain Express website SS Peter and Paul Weobley Retrieved 3 September 2021 Monastic Wales website page for Weobley Cell Retrieved 9 September 2021 Britain Express website SS Peter and Paul Weobley Retrieved 3 September 2021 British History Online An Inventory of the Historical Monuments in Herefordshire Vol 3 North West 1934 entry for Weobley Retrieved 9 September 2021 Historic England Weobley Castle web page Retrieved 29 August 2021 Gatehouse website Garnstone Motte page Retrieved 11 September 2021 Gatehouse website Weobley Castle page Retrieved 10 September 2021 Herefordshire Through Time website Weobley Castle page Retrieved 10 September 2021 Weobley Conservation Area Appraisal Weobley Parish Council 2006 p 5 Historic England Weobley Castle web page Retrieved 29 August 2021 Market Towns website Weobley page Retrieved 11 September 2021 Gazetteer of Markets and Fairs in England and Wales Herefordshire page Retrieved 12 September 2021 Weobley Conservation Area Appraisal Weobley Parish Council 2006 p 5 Ancient Monuments website Kiln Site Weobley page Retrieved 21 September 2021 Beresford M W English Mediaeval Boroughs A Handlist 1973 p 124 Townesend G F The Town and Borough of Leominster 1863 p 25 Nash and Redwood Looking Beyond the Castle Walls the Weobley Castle Project 2006 p 67 Reade Compton Memorials of Old Herefordshire 1904 p 204 Apperson G Latimer Dictionary of Proverbs 2003 p 333 Suggett R Houses and History in the March of Wales 2005 p 61 Market Towns website Weobley page Retrieved 11 September 2021 Weobley Conservation Area Appraisal Weobley Parish Council 2006 p 5 British History Online An Inventory of the Historical Monuments in Herefordshire Vol 3 North West 1934 entry for Weobley Retrieved 9 September 2021 Victoria County History Hereford Vol 1 1908 p 366 Nash and Redwood Looking Beyond the Castle Walls the Weobley Castle Project 2006 p 138 Williams W R The Parliamentary History of the County of Hereford 1896 p 156 History of Parliament website Weobley 1690 1715 page Retrieved 13 September 2021 Lewis S A Topographical Dictionary of England Vol 4 1842 p 483 Report of the Commissioners Appointed to Inquire Into the Municipal Corporations in England and Wales Appendix 1 1835 p 419 Quennell P History Today 1954 p 390 Weobley Conservation Area Appraisal Weobley Parish Council 2006 p 6 Seeley Jackson and Halliday The Portfolio An Artistic Periodical 1888 p 150 RISD Museum website Old Market Hall and Church Retrieved 15 September 2021 Artnet website page on Weobley Herefordshire by William Pitt Retrieved 21 September 2021 Seaborne M The English School its Architecture and Organization 1370 18702020 p 38 Nash and Redwood Looking Beyond the Castle Walls the Weobley Castle Project 2006 p 168 Archaeologia Cambrensis 1869 p 49 History of Parliament Online John Birch page Retrieved 14 September 2021 Historic England Weobley Castle web page Retrieved 29 August 2021 Harley E et al Tory and Whig The Parliamentary Papers of Edward Harley 1998 p 27 Oldfield T H B History of the Boroughs of Great Britain Vol 1 1805 p 308 Parliamentary Papers 1780 1849 Vol 10 pt 2 1830 p 153 Carpenter W The People s Book 1831 p 42 Vesey B The Hidden Places of England 2000 p 570 Leigh s New Pocket Road Book of England and Wales 1825 p 184 Lewis S A Topographical Dictionary of England Vol 4 1842 p 483 Paterson s Roads 1824 p 142 Owen s New Book of Fairs 1827 p 32 Herefordshire Past Garnstone Castle Retrieved 29 August 2010 The Workhouse website Weobley page Retrieved 14 September 2021 Weobley Village website Places to Worship page Retrieved 28 September 2021 Bailey W History Topography and Directory of Herefordshire 1858 p 327 Weobley Conservation Area Appraisal Weobley Parish Council 2006 p 13 Lewis A Topographical Dictionary of England 1840 p 457 Weobley Conservation Area Appraisal Weobley Parish Council 2006 p 16 Dod Robert P The Peerage Baronetage and Knightage of Great Britain and Ireland London Whitaker and Co 1860 p 107 Nash and Redwood Looking Beyond the Castle Walls the Weobley Castle Project 2006 p 131 Pickering W Archaeologia Cambrensis 1869 p 50 Weobley Conservation Area Appraisal Weobley Parish Council 2006 p 6 Wishful Thinking website Littlebury s Directory 1876 7 Weobley page Retrieved 19 September 2021 Weobley Conservation Area Appraisal Weobley Parish Council 2006 p 13 The Imperial Cyclopaedia 1850 p 1231 Bailey W History Topography and Directory of Herefordshire 1858 p 327 Fraser s Magazine Vol 83 1871 p 97 Bailey W History Topography and Directory of Herefordshire 1858 p 327 Nash and Redwood Looking Beyond the Castle Walls the Weobley Castle Project 2006 p 167 Wishful Thinking website Littlebury s Directory 1876 7 Weobley page Retrieved 19 September 2021 Genuki National Gazetteer of Great Britain 1868 Weobley entry Retrieved 19 September 2021 Wishful Thinking website Littlebury s Directory 1876 7 Weobley page Retrieved 19 September 2021 Listed Buildings website 1 Broad Street page Retrieved 10 October 2021 The Workhouse website Weobley page Retrieved 14 September 2021 The Carriage Journal Vol 37 No 1 1999 p 8 Kelly s Directory of Herefordshire 1909 p 196 Kelly s Directory of Herefordshire 1909 p 196 Historic England website Lloyds Bank Weobley page Retrieved 1 October 2021 Imperial War Museum memorials website Weobley page Retrieved 27 September 2021 Commercial Motor magazine archive The Motorbus Invasion of Herefordshire Retrieved 28 September 2021 Bus and Coach Buyer Magazine September 2015 p 8 Weobley Conservation Area Appraisal Weobley Parish Council 2006 p 6 British History Online An Inventory of the Historical Monuments in Herefordshire Vol 3 North West 1934 entry for Weobley Retrieved 9 September 2021 Lost Heritage Garnstone Castle Retrieved 29 August 2021 Understanding Herefordshire Census figures 1951 2011 xls download Retrieved 20 September 2021 Weobley Neighbourhood Development Plan Herefordshire Council 2011 p 10 Ashley Peter Cross Country 2012 p 56 Palmer Mike 10 February 2001 Taking pride of place Daily Telegraph Retrieved 20 February 2010 Pub Gallery website Red Lion Weobley page Retrieved 24 September 2021 Herefordshire village cherry picked to host BBC show Hereford Times Retrieved 18 April 2021 Heritage At Risk website Weobley church page Retrieved 22 September 2021 CAMRA Herefordshire website Weobley Brewing page Retrieved 30 September 2021 Herefordshire Wildlife Trust news page Retrieved 30 September 2021 Report of the Commissioners Appointed to Inquire Into the Municipal Corporations in England and Wales Appendix 1 1835 p 419 Weobley Neighbourhood Development Plan Herefordshire Council 2011 p 6 Golden Cross and Weobley ward population 2011 Retrieved 30 October 2015 The Midland Railway A Chronology 1989 p 247 Ordnance Survey Landranger map 157 Sargents Brothers website 461 timetable PDF Retrieved 24 September 2021 Bustimes website Lugg Valley Travel 507 page Retrieved 24 September 2021 Weobley and Staunton Group of Parishes website Retrieved 25 September 2021 Monastic Wales website page for Weobley Cell Retrieved 9 September 2021 British History Online An Inventory of the Historical Monuments in Herefordshire Vol 3 North West 1934 entry for Weobley Retrieved 9 September 2021 British History Online An Inventory of the Historical Monuments in Herefordshire Vol 3 North West 1934 entry for Weobley Retrieved 9 September 2021 Britain Express website SS Peter and Paul Weobley Retrieved 3 September 2021 Britain Express website SS Peter and Paul Weobley Retrieved 3 September 2021 Britain Express website SS Peter and Paul Weobley Retrieved 3 September 2021 British History Online An Inventory of the Historical Monuments in Herefordshire Vol 3 North West 1934 entry for Weobley Retrieved 9 September 2021 Heritage At Risk website Weobley church page Retrieved 22 September 2021 British History Online An Inventory of the Historical Monuments in Herefordshire Vol 3 North West 1934 entry for Weobley Retrieved 9 September 2021 British History Online An Inventory of the Historical Monuments in Herefordshire Vol 3 North West 1934 entry for Weobley Retrieved 9 September 2021 Historic England website Weobley Churchyard Cross page Retrieved 27 September 2021 British History Online An Inventory of the Historical Monuments in Herefordshire Vol 3 North West 1934 entry for Weobley Retrieved 9 September 2021 Great British Ghost Tour website Haunted Weobley page Retrieved 1 October 2021 Imperial War Museum memorials website Weobley page Retrieved 27 September 2021 Beatty Gordon Gregory s Angels 1997 p 287 Belmont Abbey website parishes page Retrieved 28 September 2021 Taking Stock website Weobley church page Retrieved 9 September 2021 Whelan B The History of Belmont Abbey 1959 p 190 Historic England Website Chapel of Holy Family page Retrieved 28 September 2021 Taking Stock website Weobley church page Retrieved 9 September 2021 Taking Stock website Weobley church page Retrieved 9 September 2021 Weobley Village website Places to Worship page Retrieved 28 September 2021 Bailey W History Topography and Directory of Herefordshire 1858 p 327 Weobley Conservation Area Appraisal Weobley Parish Council 2006 p 13 Shropshire and Marches Methodist Circuit website Weobley page Retrieved 29 September 2021 Lewis A Topographical Dictionary of England 1840 p 457 Weobley Conservation Area Appraisal Weobley Parish Council 2006 p 16 Wishful Thinking website Littlebury s Directory 1876 7 Weobley page Retrieved 19 September 2021 Weobley Conservation Area Appraisal Weobley Parish Council 2006 p 13 Hereford Times article 12 September 2013 Weobley High School Celebration Retrieved 29 September 2021 TES website Villagers Warm to a Bright Idea article Retrieved 29 September 2021 Patterson s Roads 1824 p 142 Weobley and District Bowling Club website history page Retrieved 29 September 2021 Local Gyms and Fitness website Weobley Football Club page Retrieved 29 September 2021 Burghill Tillington and Weobley CC Retrieved 2 October 2021 Weobley Village Hall website Retrieved 30 September 2021 Weobley Parish Council website PAT page Retrieved 29 September 2021 Hereford website Weobley Community Centre page Retrieved 30 September 2021 Weobley Parish Council website Community Activities page Retrieved 30 September 2021 Weobley village website business directory page Retrieved 30 September 2021 Weobley Heritage trail PDF Retrieved 30 September 2021 Weobley Circular Walk Retrieved 30 September 2021 Ancient Monuments website list for Herefordshire Retrieved 1 October 2021 Historic England website The Ley page Retrieved 1 October 2021 British Listed Buildings website Weobley page Retrieved 1 October 2021 British Listed Buildings website Weobley page Retrieved 1 October 2021 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Weobley Weobley Parish Council Official Website for Weobley Herefordshire Photos of Weobley and surrounding area on Geograph Remains of castle St Peter and St Paul church Weobley Weobley Conservation Area Appraisal 2006 The Heritage Trail leaflet The Weobley Circular Walk leaflet Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Weobley amp oldid 1218080702, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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