Great Alne

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Great Alne
Warwickshire

St Mary Magdalene
Location
Grid reference: SP120596
Location: 52°14’4"N, 1°49’33"W
Data
Population: 570  (2011[1])
Post town: Alcester
Postcode: B49
Dialling code: 01789
Local Government
Council: Stratford-on-Avon
Parliamentary
constituency:
Stratford-on-Avon
Website: www.greatalne-pc.gov.uk/village.cfm

Great Alne is a small village in Warwickshire, seven miles north-west of Stratford-upon-Avon, three miles north-east of Alcester, and 15 miles from Warwick, on the road to Wootton Wawen. It takes its name from the River Alne and was first chronicled in the charter of King Ethelbald (723–737).[2]

In 1969, part of Great Alne was designated as a Conservation Area, including most of the village east of the Memorial Hall and twelve listed buildings of local architectural and historical value.[3] At the 2001 census, the population was 587.

History

Land at Alne was given by Coenwulf, King of the Mercians, about 809, to his newly founded abbey of Winchcombe in Gloucestershire.[4] The Domesday Book records " in Ferncombe Hundred, Winchcombe Abbey holds 6 hides in (Great) Alne. Land for 6 ploughs. In lordship 1 plough; 3 slaves. 11 villagers with 4 smallholders have 5 ploughs. A mill at 5s; woodland 1/2 league long with 4 furlongs wide. The value was £3; now £4."[5] It remained in the hands of the monastery until the dissolution when it passed to the crown[6] who leased it to the Throckmortons of Coughton until 1 December 1599 when Queen Elizabeth I sold it to Edward Stone of the city of Westminster and Thomas Gainsford of the city of London, Gainsford later made over his part to Stone. It has since passed through a number private hands being owned by different local families including the Throckmortons and Holyoakes.[4]

Alne Mill, converted into luxury apartments in 1989, lies about ¼ mile to the south of the village and the road leading down to it is probably the Milnewey or Millway mentioned in 1541 and 1728. The mill at Alne was worth 5s. in Domesday had increased in value to 6s. 8d. in the Taxation of 1291. In 1516 it was let by the abbot to John and Elizabeth Palmer at an annual rent of £1 10s.[4]

Notable buildings

The parish church of St[Mary Magdalene consists of a chancel with a modern north vestry, nave, north aisle, and west porch-turret. Whilst 13th century in origin with some later additions, much restoration was completed in 1837 when the nave was enlarged and a west gallery added, providing 86 additional seats, according to a record in the church. The west wall, with an entrance and two windows, is modern, as is also the west porch, which is carried up as a square bell-turret changing to an octagon at the top and having an octagonal pyramidal roof. There is one bell of 1670 by John Martin of Worcester. The modern north aisle has two north windows, and one at the east and at the west. The font, of flower-pot shape, may be an old one re-tooled: it has a shallow bowl. The top has been repaired on opposite sides, probably where former staples existed.[4] The stained glass in the East window dates from 1860 and is by Hardman & Co.[7] who were also responsible for the stained glass in the Houses of Parliament.

Thomas Clarke the rector at the time of the puritan "Survei of the Ministrie in Warwickshier" of 1586 was described; "parson no precher nor learned, yet honest of life & zealous in religion he hath 3 or 4 charges & cures beside that of Kynerton, Witeley? (Weethley) he supplieth by his deputies : his hirelinges that serue by his non-residentship are all dumbe & idle & some of them gamsters : vah of all Ixxx" a yeare."[8][9]

A wooden war memorial to the memory of those men of the parish who gave their lives in the First and Second World Wars, which contains the name of a woman, Sister E.M. Elvins.

There is one pub restaurant The Huff Cap,[10] formerly the Mother Huff Cap Inn, the name deriving from the days when most pubs brewed their own beer, Huff Cap being a 16th-century term for a strong ale which would "huf ones cap" or make the head swell, not for the froth on the top of the beer as is sometimes stated.[11] The 'mother' is likely to be the dame who brewed the beer and managed the public house. In 1746 the pub is thought to have been 'The Huff Cap' and to have acquired 'mother' later. This hostelry was once on the main coach road from Stratford to Bridgnorth.[12]

Education

Great Alne Primary School is located on the edge of the village, about a mile from the outskirts of Alcester.

Transport

The old railway station, built on the Great Western Railway branch-line from Bearley to Alcester opened in 1876[4] but is now converted to a residential dwelling. The station sat on the GWR's Alcester Branch linking their Hatton – Stratford Branch with the now defunct Midland Railway's Gloucester Loop line South of Redditch. The line closed to passengers in 1917 only to reopen between 1922/3 but stopping again in 1939 for passenger use, apart from workers' trains to the nearby Castle Maudslay Motor Company's works from Birmingham. The line closed completely in 1951 with lifting of the track taking place shortly afterwards.[13]

References

  1. "Civil Parish population 2011". Neighbourhood Statistics. Office for National Statistics. http://www.neighbourhood.statistics.gov.uk/dissemination/LeadKeyFigures.do?a=7&b=11123860&c=Great+Alne&d=16&e=62&g=6472175&i=1001x1003x1032x1004&m=0&r=1&s=1450780819100&enc=1. 
  2. Great Alne Parish Council: "near to the river which our ancestors used to call, and which is called to this day, Alwine." The Celtic word Alwine meaning bright or clear.
  3. Great Alne Parish Council
  4. 4.0 4.1 4.2 4.3 4.4 A History of the County of Warwick: Volume 3: Barlichway hundred (1945), pp. 86–88. URL: http://www.british-history.ac.uk/report.aspx?compid=56975
  5. Domesday Book for Warwickshire, Phillimore edited by John Morris ISBN 0-85033-141-2
  6. Antiquities of Warwickshire, William Dugdale, 1656
  7. Nikolaus Pevsner and Alexandra Wedgwood, The Buildings of England, Warwickshire, 1966, ISBN 0-14-071031-0
  8. Survei of the Ministrie in Warwickshier 1586
  9. [1]
  10. "Archived copy". http://www.huffcapgreatalne.com/. 
  11. Dictionary of Pub Names, Leslie Dunkling & Gordon Wright 1987 ISBN 1-85326-334-6
  12. Richard Churchley, Local Past, Autumn 1981
  13. [2]

Outside links

("Wikimedia Commons" has material
about Great Alne)