Offenham: Difference between revisions

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==Maypole==
==Maypole==
[[File:Maypole at Offenham - geograph.org.uk - 55685.jpg|thumb|250px|Offenham Maypole]]
[[File:Maypole at Offenham - geograph.org.uk - 55685.jpg|thumb|250px|Offenham Maypole]]
Offenham village is noted for its 64-foot maypole, the tallest of only six permanent maypoles remaining in England. On May Day there is maypole dancing, morris dancing and the crowning of the Queen of the May. It is not known for how long Offenham has had a maypole but the tradition dates back to medieval times.<ref name="offenham"/>
Offenham village is noted for its 64-foot maypole, the tallest of only six permanent maypoles remaining in England. On May Day there is maypole dancing, morris dancing and the crowning of the Queen of the May. It is not known for how long Offenham has had a maypole but the tradition dates back to mediæval times.<ref name="offenham"/>


==St Mary & St Milburgh Church==
==St Mary & St Milburgh Church==

Latest revision as of 12:37, 30 January 2021

Offenham
Worcestershire

Main Street, Offenham
Location
Grid reference: SP0546
Location: 52°6’57"N, 1°55’25"W
Data
Post town: Evesham
Postcode: WR11
Dialling code: 01386
Local Government
Council: Wychavon
Parliamentary
constituency:
Mid Worcestershire
Offenham Church

Offenham is a large rural village and parish in the Blackenhurst hundred of Worcestershire, located about three miles east of Evesham, in the Vale of Evesham. The River Avon flows through Offenham. The civil parish extends beyond the area of the settlement of Offenham and includes Blackminster Middle School and the Blackminster Trading Estate. It was awarded the title of Calor Worcestershire Village of the Year in 2004.

History

Offenham was founded as a monastic grange and mediæval deer park by the Benedictine Abbots of Evesham Abbey in the 13th century, the old grange stood where Court Farm now stands. The grange was established to enclose the large flocks of sheep needed by the Abbots to trade wool with Flanders. During the Dissolution of the Monasteries the grange became crown property and Henry VIII granted both Offenham and Evesham to Philip Hoby, one of his English Ambassadors. The grange and park later became the property of the Hazelwood family until the mid-18th century when it was sub-divided, by this time the village had formed an adequate farming and market gardening community.[1]

Maypole

Offenham Maypole

Offenham village is noted for its 64-foot maypole, the tallest of only six permanent maypoles remaining in England. On May Day there is maypole dancing, morris dancing and the crowning of the Queen of the May. It is not known for how long Offenham has had a maypole but the tradition dates back to mediæval times.[1]

St Mary & St Milburgh Church

The village church was built in 1538 and rebuilt in 1861/2 by Frederick Preedy who was born in Offenham in 1820.

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 History of Offenham Retrieved 1 August 2009

Outside links

("Wikimedia Commons" has material
about Offenham)

 This Worcestershire article is a stub: help to improve Wikishire by building it up.