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The name Hepscott is Old English in origin and may be a derivation of "Shepherd's Cote".
The name Hepscott is Old English in origin and may be a derivation of "Shepherd's Cote".


The village was a mere hamlet prior to expansion since the 1980s.
The village was a mere hamlet prior to expansion since the 1980s.  It forms a trio with [Clifton, Northumberland|Clifton]] and [[Glororum]]; a series of farms founded by the Brown brothers at the end of the 19th Century.


==Sights about the village==
==Sights about the village==

Revision as of 17:50, 13 January 2016

Hepscott
Northumberland

Hepscott
Location
Grid reference: NZ225845
Location: 55°9’15"N, 1°38’54"W
Data
Population: 1,069  (2011)
Postcode: NE61
Local Government
Council: Northumberland
Parliamentary
constituency:
Wansbeck

Hepscott is a small village in Northumberland, about two miles south-east of Morpeth, the market town hereabouts.

The name Hepscott is Old English in origin and may be a derivation of "Shepherd's Cote".

The village was a mere hamlet prior to expansion since the 1980s. It forms a trio with [Clifton, Northumberland|Clifton]] and Glororum; a series of farms founded by the Brown brothers at the end of the 19th Century.

Sights about the village

The most historic building in Hepscott is Hepscott Hall, a three storey, rectangular mediæval pele tower. The Hall was associated with a deer park. The traces of part of the boundary wall of the deer park survive along the track to Field House Farm. Another historic building of importance is a smithy dating to the late 18th century that is a Grade II Listed Building.

Outside links

("Wikimedia Commons" has material
about Hepscott)

References