Nannerch

From Wikishire
Revision as of 10:29, 28 May 2021 by Owain (talk | contribs)
(diff) ← Older revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)
Jump to navigation Jump to search
Nannerch
Flintshire

Main road through the village of Nannerch
Location
Grid reference: SJ166695
Location: 53°12’58"N, 3°15’0"W
Data
Population: 531  (2001)
Post town: Buckley
Postcode: CH7
Dialling code: 01352
Local Government
Council: Flintshire
Parliamentary
constituency:
Delyn

Nannerch is a village and parish in Flintshire. It is situated in an Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty. At the 2001 Census the population of Nannerch was 531.[1]

History

Nannerch is one of the ancient parishes of Flintshire, made up of the townships of Trellan, Trefechan and Trecwm in Flintshire's Rhuddlan Hundred and Penbedw in Ruthin Hundred, Denbighshire.

It is an ancient village, sitting on a bedrock of carboniferous limestone, overlain by glacial boulder clay with glacial hollows. The limestone has been used in the construction of many local buildings. The ruins of Iron Age hill forts at Pen-y-Cloddiau and Moel Arthur are situated in the nearby hills.[2]

The old church, which was dedicated to St. Mary, was demolished in 1852, and a new building was erected on the same site. The new church, which is dedicated to St. Michael and All Angels, was consecrated on 29 September 1853. The church was designed by Thomas W. Wyatt, of London, the architect of the neighbouring churches of Brynford and Gorsedd.

Nannerch has an 18th-century inn called The Cross Foxes.

The village also has a primary school. There are currently around 60 pupils enrolled. On the same site as the Victorian primary school is a small sports development consisting of a tennis court which doubles as a basketball/netball court and five-a-side football pitch, a grass football pitch and a bowling green. The bowling green also has a French-style boules piste next to it.

Nannerch is visited by a doctor once a week at the village hall on Tuesday morning. On Thursday there is a Post Office counter in the hall.

Theatre

The village has a dramatic group called the Nannerch Players. The Players perform two shows a year; one of these will be a pantomime, performed just before Christmas. One full-length play performed in the summer months (usually May–June).

Transport

The main A541 Mold - Denbigh road bypasses the village.

The Mold to Denbigh Junction railway, which opened in 1869, passed through the village. Nannerch railway station was situated near the point where the road into Nannerch forks left to leave the A541 road from Mold. After the line was closed in 1962, a victim of the Beeching Axe, the station was demolished and the road straightened. Besides passenger traffic, the station provided for the transportation of cattle and sheep heading for market, the distribution of local milk and the delivery of newspapers to the community.[2]

References