Ashford-in-the-Water

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Ashford-in-the-Water
Derbyshire
Holy Trinity, Ashford-in-the-Water.JPG
Holy Trinity Church, Ashford-in-the-Water
Location
Grid reference: SK194697
Location: 53°13’26"N, 1°42’32"W
Data
Population: 559  (2011)
Post town: Bakewell
Postcode: DE45
Local Government
Council: Derbyshire Dales
Parliamentary
constituency:
Derbyshire Dales

Ashford-in-the-Water is a village in the Derbyshire Peak District. The village stands beside the River Wye, two miles north-west of Bakewell.

The village is known for the quarrying of Ashford Black Marble[1] (a form of limestone), and for a past tradition the maidens' garlands made to mark the deaths of young maidens in the village until 1801. Some of these are preserved in the parish church.[2] The civil parish population (including Sheldon) taken at the 2011 Census was 559.

The village is bypassed by the A6 road.

History

The name Ashford derives from the Old English æsc ford, meaning a ford by ash-trees. In 926 the village was recorded as Æscforda and in the Domesday Book of 1086 it is Aisseford. The addition of "in-the-Water" occurred in the late 17th century, and reflected the proximity of the village to meanders of the River Wye.[3]

In the Domesday Book Ashford was described as one of the locations in the area where lead was refined.[4]

In 1786, Ashford had mills for carving and polishing the local black marble. By 1848, it had 950 inhabitants.[5]

The village passed to the Cavendish family in the 16th century (from the Nevilles) and finally sold off in the 1950s to pay death duties.

Culture

The tradition of well-dressing continues in Ashford as in many other villages in the Peak District. Each year slabs of clay are decorated by village volunteers using petals, leaves and other plants to create a picture. The finished designs are then displayed at the six wells around the village and the event is marked by a church service and procession through the village to bless the wells. The event takes place around Trinity Sunday.

About the village

Within Ashford's civil parish are 62 structures that are listed for their historic or architectural interest. None is listed as Grade I but there are two structures (Ashford Hall and Sheepwash Bridge) that are Grade II*. All the others, including Thornbridge Hall and the parish church, are Grade II.

Ashford Hall dates from 1785, though alterations were made in about 1840. It is a five-bay, three-storey building of gritstone and ashlar, with a balustered parapet around its slate roof. It has an early-19th-century conservatory.[6]

Sheepwash Bridge

The Sheepwash Bridge, which dates from the 17th century, is a packhorse bridge with an attached stone sheepwash: lambs were placed in the pen on one side of the river and the ewes swam across the river to get to them, while being pushed underwater by the shepherds to clean the fleece before shearing. Large trout inhabit the waters of the Wye around the bridge. It is a Scheduled Monument as well as a listed building.[7][8][9]

Ashford's parish church of the Holy Trinity was mostly rebuilt in 1868–70 but has a partly 13th-century tower, a 14th-century north arcade and a recovered Norman tympanum above the south doorway.[1] In the churchyard lies the base and stump of a Grade-II-listed churchyard cross, variously dated to the 14th[10] or 15th century.[11] Behind the church are traces of a moat, all that remains of a fortified house which was the home of Edmund Plantagenet, brother of Edward II.[12]

Thornbridge Hall dates from the 18th century but was enlarged in 1871 and radically altered in a neo-Tudor style in 1897.[13]

Outside links

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References

  1. 1.0 1.1 Nikolaus Pevsner: The Buildings of England: Derbyshire, 1953; 1978 Penguin Books ISBN 978-0-300-09591-3page 66
  2. "Church history and the architecture of Holy Trinity Church, Ashford in the Water". Holy Trinity Parish Church. 13 August 2012. http://www.ashfordparishchurch.co.uk/holy-trinity-history.aspx. 
  3. Mills, Anthony David: 'A Dictionary of British Place-Names' (Oxford University Press, 2003) ISBN 978-0-19-852758-9
  4. Millward, Roy; Robinson, Adrian (1975). The Peak District. The Regions of Britain. Eyre Methuen. p. 153. ISBN 0-413-31550-9. 
  5. Lewis, Samuel: 'A Topographical Dictionary of England' (S. Lewis and Co., 1848) p85-88 ISBN 978-0-8063-1508-9
  6. National Heritage List 1109281: Ashford Hall (Grade II* listing)
  7. National Heritage List 1335270: Sheepwash Bridge (Grade II* listing)
  8. National Heritage List 1007064: Sheepwash Bridge (Grade II listing)
  9. AA Book of British Villages. Drive Publications Limited. 1980. p. 32. ISBN 9780340254875. 
  10. National Heritage List 1109289: Churchyard cross (Grade II listing)
  11. Sharpe, Neville T. (2002). Crosses of the Peak District. Landmark Collectors Library. ISBN 1843060442. 
  12. AA Book of British Villages. Drive Publications Limited. 1980. p. 32. ISBN 9780340254875. 
  13. National Heritage List 1158698: Thornbridge Hall (Grade II listing)