Brownsover

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Brownsover
Warwickshire

St Michael's Church
Location
Grid reference: SP515775
Location: 52°23’24"N, 1°14’24"W
Data
Post town: Rugby
Postcode: CV21
Dialling code: 01788
Local Government
Council: Rugby
Parliamentary
constituency:
Rugby and Kenilworth

Brownsover is a village in Warwickshire that forms a suburb of Rugby, about a mile and a half north of the town centre. Historically a small village, since 1960, it has been absorbed by the suburban expansion of Rugby.

'Old' Brownsover

The original hamlet of Brownsover still exists, to the west of A426 "Leicester Road", where Brownsover Hall is situated. This country house was rebuilt in the Victorian era by the Ward-Boughton-Leigh family, county landowners who still today own land in the area and who donated to Rugby School, the ground where William Webb Ellis first ran with a football. Brownsover is also where Frank Whittle developed the jet engine in the 1930s. The hall has now become a large hotel and conference centre. The hamlet also contains an old house which is where it is believed Lawrence Sheriff (c. 1510-1567), the founder of Rugby School, was born.

The old church of St Michael & All Angels was founded in the 12th century as a chapel of ease in the wider ancient parish of Clifton-upon-Dunsmore. It was almost entirely rebuilt by Sir George Gilbert Scott in 1876 for Allesley Boughton-Leigh. The church has an interesting collection of carved woodwork, including a splendid organ case, made in 1660 for St John's College, Cambridge. There is one armorial monumental inscription in the floor of the church, the grave of John Howkins (1579-1678), a wealthy lawyer who owned the estate of Pinchbank in South Mimms, Middlesex. He was the great-nephew[1] of Lawrence Sheriff. The church is now closed to regular use and has been replaced by a modern place of worship - Christchurch in Helvellyn Way, new Brownsover. Brownsover is mentioned in Tom Brown's Schooldays.

'New' Brownsover

The new part of Brownsover, to the east of Leicester Road, contains modern housing estates built mostly during the 1960s and 70s. More recently, several building programmes have been completed, specifically in the areas referred to as 'Strawberry Fields' and 'Rectory Gardens', in the 1990s, with two other projects nearing completion. These two relatively new developments are considered more to the standards of the areas such as Hillmorton and are very near to Clifton upon dunsmore. There are three local schools: Boughton Leigh Infants and Boughton Leigh Junior, which share a campus, and there is also the newer Brownsover Community School. The local church, Christchurch in Helvellyn Way, is an ecumenical project involving Anglicans, Methodists and Baptists. Brownsover has a number of green spaces as well as the canal.

Education

Primary education is provided by Boughton Leigh Community Junior School and Boughton Leigh Community Infant school, and Brownsover Infants School.

References

Outside links

("Wikimedia Commons" has material
about Brownsover)