Dorstone

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Dorstone
Welsh: Llangernyw
Herefordshire

Dorstone Church
Location
Grid reference: SO313418
Location: 52°4’13"N, 3°0’6"W
Data
Population: 401  (2011[1])
Post town: Hereford
Postcode: HR3
Dialling code: 01981
Local Government
Council: Herefordshire
Parliamentary
constituency:
Hereford
and South Herefordshire

Dorstone is a village and parish within the Golden Valley of Herefordshire. There is a thriving community with a church[2] and public house[3] with restaurant. The Golden Valley area offers excellent hillwalking and horseback riding countryside and is noted for its scenery. It is within the catchment area of the popular Fairfield secondary school.

Dorstone once contained a castle, Dorstone Castle.[4] A mile to the south the fragmentary remains of Snodhill Castle can still be seen.[5]

Dorstone is home to the Golden Valley Young Farmers' Club. In 2006 and 2009 they won the National Federation of Young Farmers' Clubs pantomime competition in Blackpool making them the only YFC club in the country to have achieved this accolade.

St Faith's parish church in Dorstone was reputedly built by Richard de Brito, one of the knights who murdered Thomas Becket, as penance for the murder. He also built the Pandy Inn in Dorstone to house the workmen who built the church. During Victorian era rebuilding of the church in the 1890s a tomb to another de Brito was found which contained a pewter chalice. This was housed in the church for many years but was stolen in 2006.

A Dorstone History Society has just been founded which hopes to find out more about the church and the village - which stretches back to Neolithic times as suggested by the local Arthur's Stone, Herefordshire, an ancient monument.

An annual Sloe gin competition is held in Dorstone.[6] Each year the winner is crowned the "Grand Master of the Sloes".[7]

Railway

The Golden Valley Railway branch line to Hay-on-Wye was opened on 1 September 1881 as far as Dorstone and later extended to Hay-on-Wye. The new railway station and junction involved considerable addition to the track layout and buildings at Pontrilas.

The last passenger train out of Dorstone was on 23 August 1951.

References

Outside links

("Wikimedia Commons" has material
about Dorstone)

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