Difference between revisions of "Woodhurst"

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Woodhurst
Huntingdonshire
Chocolate Box Image - geograph.org.uk - 1543755.jpg
Woodhurst
Location
Grid reference: TL316760
Location: 52°22’12"N, 0°4’12"W
Data
Post town: Huntingdon
Postcode: PE28
Dialling code: 01487
Local Government
Council: Huntingdonshire
Parliamentary
constituency:
North West Cambridgeshire

Wodhurst is a village in Huntingdonshire, near Oldhurst. Its closest town is St Ives to the south. It is famed for the view of the village from the west.

Woodhurst is one of the best surviving examples of an Anglo-Saxon ring village in England. It is thought that it was originally formed by the track through the forest being widened for about half a mile, and a fence being put round it with a gate at either end.

The name Woodhurst has over the years been spelt Wuduhyrst, Wodehyrst, Wodehirst, Woodhurste and Wood Hurst. There are several explanations as to the original meaning of the name, but hyrst was Old English for "wooded hill".

Church

St John The Baptist Church - geograph.org.uk - 1072778.jpg

The parish church is St John the Baptist, part of the team ministry with Somersham.

History

The actual date that the village was formed is not known but it is thought to have been Roman-British. Roman pottery remains have been found near the village, and in the recent excavations in the field next to Wheatsheaf Road to lay a new water main, Roman coins have been found. During 1949 when Moot Way was being built, evidence of Anglo Saxon occupation was found and also some Mediaeval burials which were thought to be plague deaths.

The shape of the village has not altered over the centuries although beginning with the church and then the Manor House, buildings were built outside the ring.

Woodhurst was not mentioned in the Domesday Book, but as the church was until 1968 a chapelry of St Ives, it is probable that the church and a description of the area and landowners are recorded under Slepe (the original name for St Ives). The oldest part of the present church, the north wall of the nave, was built in the 12th century. The south arcade was built in the 14th century and the chancel is relatively modern having been added in the 19th century. The timber bell-turret was probably built in the early 17th century, but of the three original bells only one remains.

Two disastrous fires devastated the village in 1834 and in 1877. There are now few houses in the village older than those years. "Horseshoe Cottage" opposite the pond was built in the 17th century and was until 1922 a public house called The Horse Shoes. At one time there were six public houses in the parish of Woodhurst. The oldest house in the village is thought to be "Swan Weir" which dates from the late 16th century.

References