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Herefordshire. Aconbury
DIRECTORY.] HEREFORDSHIRE. ACONBURY. 13 ABBEYDORE, or Dore, is a pa.rish and village, in the Powell Rev. Thomas Prosser M.A., D.T.. Dorstone Rectory, Golden Valley and OD the river Dore, celebrated for its Hereford trout, and from which the parish derives its name, with a Rees Capt. Richard Powell, The Firs, Abergavenny station on the Golden Valley railway, which forms a junction Robinson Edwd. Lewis Gavin esq. D.L. Poston,Peterchurch at Pontrilas station on the Newport, Abergavenny, and Here Trafford Henry Randolph esq. D.L. Michaelchurch court, ford railway, 2l miles north-west, 13 south-west from Here Hereford ford, 14 west from Ross, alld is the head of a union, in the Trafford Edwd.Guy esq. D.L. Michaelchurchcourt,Hereford Southern division of the county, Webtree hundred, Hereford Clerk to the Magistrates, Thomas Llanwarne, Hereford county court district, rural deaneryof Weobley (firstdivision) 1tnd archdeaconry and diocese of Hereford. Thechurchof St. Petty Sessions are held at the Police Station on alternate Mary is a large building of stone, in the Transition, Norman mondays at II a.m. and Early English styles, and formerly belonged to the The places within the petty sessional division are :-Abbey Cistercian abbey founded here in 1147, by Robert Ewias, dore, Bacton, Crasswall Dulas, Ewvas Harold, Kender Lord of Ewias Harold : of the conventual church, the choir, church, Kentchurcb, Kilpeck, Kingstone, LlanciIlo, presbytery, transept and eastern chapel-aisle remain as well Llanveynoe, Longtown, Madley, Micbaelchurch Escley, as the group-chapels, north and south, the latter restored Newton, Peterchurch, Rowlstone, St. Devereux, St. Mar in 1894 by Miss Hoskyns, the only surviving daughter of garet's, Thruxton, Tyberton, Treville, Turn3stone, Vow ChandosWren Hoskyns esq. -
Annual Report 2013
ANNUAL REPORT Report for the year ended 31 August 2013 WHAT IS THE METHODIST COLLECTION? The Methodist Modern Art Collection comprises paintings, limited edition prints and reliefs. In the early 1960s John Morel Gibbs, a Methodist layman and art collector – realising that many Non-conformists had little appreciation of the insights that contemporary artists could bring to the Christian story – decided to create a collection of prime examples of such work that could be toured around the country. This he did, with the help of Methodist minister, the Revd Douglas Wollen. The works they acquired became the core of the present Collection – described as “the best denominational collection of modern art outside the Vatican”. The Collection includes leading names from the British art world of the last 100 years, such as Edward Burra, Elisabeth Frink, Eric Gill, Patrick Heron and Graham Sutherland. In recent years the Collection has acquired works by artists from the world church, including Jyoti Sahi from India, Sadao Watanabe from Japan and John Muafangejo from Namibia. Still expanding, works by artists such as Craigie Aitchison, Peter Howson, Susie Hamilton, Clive Hicks-Jenkins and Maggi Hambling have been acquired, and today it comprises 50 paintings, prints, drawings, relief and mosaic works. The Collection is valued as a key resource for mission and evangelism, whether on a denominational or an ecumenical basis. The Collection, in whole or in part, is available as a touring exhibition, and has travelled widely, to town and city galleries, cathedrals, churches and schools, showing at four to six venues a year. When not on tour, the Collection is stored under the care of a custodian at the Oxford Centre for Methodism and Church History, Oxford Brookes University. -
Abbeydore and Bacton, Ewyas Harold Group and Kentchurch Consultation
Abbeydore, Bacton, Ewyas Harold Group and Kentchurch Neighbourhood Development Plan Consultation Statement, June 2017 Abbeydore, Bacton, Ewyas Harold Group and Kentchurch Neighbourhood Development Plan Consultation Statement June 2017 1 Abbeydore, Bacton, Ewyas Harold Group and Kentchurch Neighbourhood Development Plan Consultation Statement, June 2017 2 Abbeydore, Bacton, Ewyas Harold Group and Kentchurch Neighbourhood Development Plan Consultation Statement, June 2017 Map 1 Abbeydore, Bacton, Ewyas Harold Group and Kentchurch Designated Neighbourhood Area (PSMA Licence no 100055482) 3 Abbeydore, Bacton, Ewyas Harold Group and Kentchurch Neighbourhood Development Plan Consultation Statement, June 2017 1.0 Introduction and Background 1.1 This Consultation Statement has been prepared in accordance with The Neighbourhood Planning (General) Regulations 2012 (SI No. 637) Part 5 Paragraph 15 (2)1 which defines a “consultation statement” as a document which:– (a) contains details of the persons and bodies who were consulted about the proposed neighbourhood development plan; (b) explains how they were consulted; (c) summarises the main issues and concerns raised by the persons consulted; and (d) describes how these issues and concerns have been considered and, where relevant, addressed in the proposed neighbourhood development plan. 1.2 Abbeydore, Bacton, Ewyas Harold Group, and Kentchurch Parishes Neighbourhood Development Plan (NDP) has been prepared in response to the Localism Act 2011, which gives parish councils as qualifying bodies, new powers to prepare statutory Neighbourhood Development Plans to help guide development in their local areas. These powers give local people the opportunity to shape new development, as planning applications are determined in accordance with national planning policy and the local development plan, and neighbourhood plans form part of this Framework. -
Herefordshire News Sheet
CONTENTS ARS OFFICERS AND COMMITTEE FOR 1991 .................................................................... 2 PROGRAMME SEPTEMBER 1991 TO FEBRUARY 1992 ................................................... 3 EDITORIAL ........................................................................................................................... 3 MISCELLANY ....................................................................................................................... 4 BOOK REVIEW .................................................................................................................... 5 WORKERS EDUCATIONAL ASSOCIATION AND THE LOCAL HISTORY SOCIETIES OF HEREFORDSHIRE ............................................................................................................... 6 ANNUAL GARDEN PARTY .................................................................................................. 6 INDUSTRIAL ARCHAEOLOGY MEETING, 15TH MAY, 1991 ................................................ 7 A FIELD SURVEY IN KIMBOLTON ...................................................................................... 7 FIND OF A QUERNSTONE AT CRASWALL ...................................................................... 10 BOLSTONE PARISH CHURCH .......................................................................................... 11 REDUNDANT CHURCHES IN THE DIOCESE OF HEREFORD ........................................ 13 THE MILLS OF LEDBURY ................................................................................................. -
Heritage at Risk Register 2013
HERITAGE AT RISK 2013 / WEST MIDLANDS Contents HERITAGE AT RISK III Worcestershire 64 Bromsgrove 64 Malvern Hills 66 THE REGISTER VII Worcester 67 Content and criteria VII Wychavon 68 Criteria for inclusion on the Register VIII Wyre Forest 71 Reducing the risks X Publications and guidance XIII Key to the entries XV Entries on the Register by local planning authority XVII Herefordshire, County of (UA) 1 Shropshire (UA) 13 Staffordshire 27 Cannock Chase 27 East Staffordshire 27 Lichfield 29 NewcastleunderLyme 30 Peak District (NP) 31 South Staffordshire 32 Stafford 33 Staffordshire Moorlands 35 Tamworth 36 StokeonTrent, City of (UA) 37 Telford and Wrekin (UA) 40 Warwickshire 41 North Warwickshire 41 Nuneaton and Bedworth 43 Rugby 44 StratfordonAvon 46 Warwick 50 West Midlands 52 Birmingham 52 Coventry 57 Dudley 59 Sandwell 61 Walsall 62 Wolverhampton, City of 64 II Heritage at Risk is our campaign to save listed buildings and important historic sites, places and landmarks from neglect or decay. At its heart is the Heritage at Risk Register, an online database containing details of each site known to be at risk. It is analysed and updated annually and this leaflet summarises the results. Heritage at Risk teams are now in each of our nine local offices, delivering national expertise locally. The good news is that we are on target to save 25% (1,137) of the sites that were on the Register in 2010 by 2015. From St Barnabus Church in Birmingham to the Guillotine Lock on the Stratford Canal, this success is down to good partnerships with owners, developers, the Heritage Lottery Fund (HLF), Natural England, councils and local groups. -
THE SKYDMORES/ SCUDAMORES of ROWLESTONE, HEREFORDSHIRE, Including Their Descendants at KENTCHURCH, LLANCILLO, MAGOR & EWYAS HAROLD
Rowlestone and Kentchurch Skidmore/ Scudamore One-Name Study THE SKYDMORES/ SCUDAMORES OF ROWLESTONE, HEREFORDSHIRE, including their descendants at KENTCHURCH, LLANCILLO, MAGOR & EWYAS HAROLD. edited by Linda Moffatt 2016© from the original work of Warren Skidmore CITATION Please respect the author's contribution and state where you found this information if you quote it. Suggested citation The Skydmores/ Scudamores of Rowlestone, Herefordshire, including their Descendants at Kentchurch, Llancillo, Magor & Ewyas Harold, ed. Linda Moffatt 2016, at the website of the Skidmore/ Scudamore One-Name Study www.skidmorefamilyhistory.com'. DATES • Prior to 1752 the year began on 25 March (Lady Day). In order to avoid confusion, a date which in the modern calendar would be written 2 February 1714 is written 2 February 1713/4 - i.e. the baptism, marriage or burial occurred in the 3 months (January, February and the first 3 weeks of March) of 1713 which 'rolled over' into what in a modern calendar would be 1714. • Civil registration was introduced in England and Wales in 1837 and records were archived quarterly; hence, for example, 'born in 1840Q1' the author here uses to mean that the birth took place in January, February or March of 1840. Where only a baptism date is given for an individual born after 1837, assume the birth was registered in the same quarter. BIRTHS, MARRIAGES AND DEATHS Databases of all known Skidmore and Scudamore bmds can be found at www.skidmorefamilyhistory.com PROBATE A list of all known Skidmore and Scudamore wills - many with full transcription or an abstract of its contents - can be found at www.skidmorefamilyhistory.com in the file Skidmore/Scudamore One-Name Study Probate. -
Tuesday 15 October 2019 Dudley Canal Trust Birmingham New Road, Dudley Dy1 4Sb
ENGLISH SEVERN & WYE REGIONAL FLOOD COASTAL COMMITTEE TUESDAY 15 OCTOBER 2019 DUDLEY CANAL TRUST BIRMINGHAM NEW ROAD, DUDLEY DY1 4SB Members of English Severn and Wye Regional Flood and Coastal Committee Members of the English Severn and Wye Regional Flood and Coastal Committee are invited to attend a meeting of the Committee on Tuesday 15 October 2019. 10:00 am – LLFA Members pre-meeting on Local Levy 10:30 am – RFCC meeting The meeting will be held at Dudley Canal Trust, Birmingham New Road, Dudley DY1 4SB Attached are instructions on how to get to Dudley Canal Trust. There is parking on site. Refreshments will be available from 9:00hrs and a buffet lunch will be provided. All members are strongly encouraged to read the papers in advance of the meeting. LLFA members are also encouraged to liaise with their Local Flood Risk Management Officers to ensure that they are fully briefed on any issues particularly relevant to their area. Kind regards Mike Grimes Area Director, West Midlands Getting to Dudley Canal Trust Situated on the Birmingham New Road between Dudley and Tipton, we're really easy to find. We recommend searching for "Dudley Canal Trust" as a point of interest in your sat nav or Google Maps as the best way to find us, or use postcode DY1 4SB. By Road Dudley Canal and Tunnel trust is situated in the heart of the Black Country on the A4123 between Dudley and Tipton. M5 Junction 2: Follow the A4123 northwest towards Wolverhampton/Dudley. Our entrance is approximately three miles after junction two. -
WOODHAY Walterstone, Herefordshire HR2 0DT
WOODHAY Walterstone, Herefordshire HR2 0DT Woodhay Guide Price £450,000 Walterstone, Herefordshire HR2 0DT In a wonderful rural location, a very attractive detached three bedroom cottage which is beautifully presented and stands in gardens and grounds which extend to approximately 1.5 acres, with stunning far reaching views. Situation and Description Directions Woodhay forms part of the scattered rural village of Walterstone, which From Hereford proceed on the A465 towards Abergavenny for itself lies within an area of outstanding natural beauty in south west approximately 9 miles. At Pontrilas take the 2 nd right hand turning Herefordshire. The property is set well away from main roads and with to Walterstone and Rowlestone. Proceed for 1 mile through lovely views to the Black Mountains to the front and extensive views at the Rowlestone and bear left past a farm and continue down the hill rear. It is surrounded by farmland and has excellent local services at larger before bearing left at the bottom to Walterstone for a further ¾ of a village of Ewyas Harold (3 miles), and at the village of Longtown (2 miles). mile. Bear left to Walterstone Common, proceed over the common More extensive facilities are available at Abergavenny to the south east and and Woodhay will be found on the left hand side. at the cathedral city of Hereford to the north. There are some lovely countryside walks right on the doorstep. Maps contained herein are not t o scale. Reproduced from Explorer 1:50000 by permission of Ordnance Survey on behalf of the controller of Her Majesty’s Stationary Office ©Crown Copyright 1999. -
Rockyfold, Walterstone, Herefordshire HR2 0DX Situation: Delightful Waterfall Feature with Brook Along the Boundary
Rockyfold, Walterstone, Herefordshire HR2 0DX Situation: delightful waterfall feature with brook along the boundary. For sale for the first time in almost 60 years, Rockyfold offers a unique opportunity of an Accommodation: attractive detached stone cottage, requiring a Entrance Hall little modernisation, with interesting grounds of With door to: approximately 2.6 acres comprising of level lawns, small orchard, established woodland and Utility Room the standout feature of a beautiful waterfall and Having space for appliances, window to front and brook along its boundary. sliding door through to: The hamlet of Walterstone lies 16 miles south WC west of Hereford and 7 miles north of Rockyfold With WC and wash hand basin. Walterstone Abergavenny, just over ½ km from Offa’s Dyke on the English side. Within the village there is a Bedroom 4 / Study Herefordshire public house and a wider range of facilities can be HR2 0DX Having stone fireplace and double doors into Sun found in either Hereford or Abergavenny towns Room. but more locally in villages such as Longtown and Living Room Ewyas Harold. Summary of features The property lies approximately 2 miles from the Having a wide range of exposed beams and large • Substantial detached stone A465 Abergavenny Road and therefore has good stone fireplace with inset wood burner, partially cottage access, particularly to the south and of course is flag stone floor with partial parquet flooring, two on the doorstep of the Black Mountains and the windows to the Sun Room, open stairs to the First • Spacious, characterful Floor and door to: many wonderful rural walks which the area has accommodation to offer. -
Transactions Woolhope Naturalists' Field Club
TRANSACTIONS OF THE WOOLHOPE NATURALISTS' FIELD CLUB HEREFORDSHIRE "HOPE ON" "HOPE EVER" ESTABLISHED 1851 VOLUME XLV 1986 PART II TRANSACTIONS OF THE WOOLHOPE NATURALISTS' FIELD CLUB HEREFORDSHIRE "HOPE ON" "HOPE EVER" ESTABLISHED 1851 VOLUME XLV 1986 PART II TABLE OF CONTENTS Page Proceedings, 1986 - 335 Hereford in the 1850s, by Clarence E. Attfield - - 347 A Roman Forger at Kenchester, by R. Shoesmith - 371 Woolhope Naturalists' Field Club 1986 The Fief of Alfred of Marlborough in Herefordshire in 1086 and its All contributions to The Woolhope Transactions are COPYRIGHT. None of them Descent in the Norman Period, by Bruce Coplestone-Crow - - 376 may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording or otherwise without the prior permission of the writers. Applications to reproduce contributions, in whole or St. Ethelbert's Hospital, Hereford: Its architecture and setting, in part, should be addressed in the first instance, to the editor whose address is given - 415 in the LIST OF OFFICERS. by David Whitehead The Annunciation and the Lily Crucifixion, by G. W. Kemp - 426 Thomas Charlton, Bishop of Hereford, 1327-1344, by G. W. Hannah - - 442 The Seventeenth Century Iron Forge at Carey Mill, by Elizabeth Taylor - 450 Herefordshire Apothecaries' Tokens and their Issuers, by the late T. D. Whittet - 469 The political organisation of Hereford, 1693-1736, by E. J. Morris 477 Population Movements in 19th Century Herefordshire, by Joan E. Grundy - 488 Two Celtic Heads, by Jean O'Donnell - - 501 Further Addenda to Lepidoptera in Hereford City (1973-82), by B. -
HEREFORDSHIRE Is Repeatedly Referred to in Domesday As Lying In
ABO BLOOD GROUPS, HUMAN HISTORY AND LANGUAGE IN HEREFORDSHIRE WITH SPECIAL REFERENCE TO THE LOW B FREQUENCY IN EUROPE I. MORGAN WATKIN County Health Department, Aberystwyth Received6.x.64 1.INTRODUCTION HEREFORDSHIREis repeatedly referred to in Domesday as lying in Wales and the county is regularly described as such in the Pipe Rolls until 1249-50. Of the two dozen or so charters granted to the county town, a number are addressed to the citizens of Hereford in Wales. That fluency in Welsh was until 1855oneof the qualifications for the post of clerk to the Hereford city magistrates indicated the county's bilingual nature. The object of the present investigation is to ascertain whether there is any significant genetic difference between the part of Herefordshire conquered by the Anglo-Saxons and the area called "Welsh Hereford- shire ".Assome moorland parishes have lost 50 per cent. of their inhabitants during the last 50 years, the need to carry out the survey is the more pressing. 2.THE HUMAN HISTORY OF HEREFORDSHIRE Pre-Norman Conquest Offa'sgeneral line of demarcation between England and Wales in the eighth century extending in Herefordshire from near Lyonshall to Bridge Sollars, about five miles upstream from Hereford, is inter- mittent in the well-wooded lowlands, being only found in the Saxon clearings. From this Fox (i) infers that the intervening forest with its dense thickets of thorn and bramble filling the space under the tree canopy was an impassable barrier. Downstream to Redbrook (Glos.) the river was probably the boundary but the ferry crossing from Beachley to Aust and the tidal navigational rights up the Wye were retained by the Welsh—facts which suggest that the Dyke was in the nature of an agreed frontier. -
Draft Abbeydore, Bacton, Ewyas Harold and Kentchurch Neighbourhood Development Plan 0
Draft Abbeydore, Bacton, Ewyas Harold and Kentchurch Neighbourhood 0 Development Plan 1 Abbeydore, Bacton, Ewyas Harold, Dulas, Llancillo, Rowlestone and Kentchurch Neighbourhood Development Plan, February 2018 View over Ewyas Harold from Ewyas Harold Common (Liz Overstall) 2 Abbeydore, Bacton, Ewyas Harold, Dulas, Llancillo, Rowlestone and Kentchurch Neighbourhood Development Plan, February 2018 Contents Introduction ....................................................... 4 Why are we preparing a Neighbourhood Development Plan for Abbeydore, Bacton, Ewyas Harold, Dulas, Llancillo, Rowlestone and Kentchurch? ................................................... 19 Preparing the Neighbourhood Development Plan? 20 Plan wide policies and proposals of the Neighbourhood Development Plan ........................................ 22 Abbeydore and Bacton policies and proposals…………….40 Ewyas Harold, Dulas, Llancillo and Rowlestone policies and proposals ......................................................... 45 Kentchurch policies and proposals ....... 62 Community Infrastructure Levy .............. 67 3 Abbeydore, Bacton, Ewyas Harold, Dulas, Llancillo, Rowlestone and Kentchurch Neighbourhood Development Plan, February 2018 Figure 1 – The Abbeydore and Bacton, Ewyas Harold Group and Kentchurch Neighbourhood Development Plan Area (Ewyas Harold Group Parish Council Licence Number 100055482) 4 Abbeydore, Bacton, Ewyas Harold, Dulas, Llancillo, Rowlestone and Kentchurch Neighbourhood Development Plan, February 2018 1 Introduction 1.1 In late 2012 the