Crudwell

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Crudwell
Wiltshire
Crudwell - geograph.org.uk - 1115501.jpg
Footbridge near the A429
Location
Grid reference: ST953928
Location: 51°38’2"N, 2°4’8"W
Data
Population: 1,057  (2011[1])
Post town: Malmesbury
Postcode: SN16
Dialling code: 01666
Local Government
Council: Wiltshire
Parliamentary
constituency:
North Wiltshire
Website: Parish Council

Crudwell is a village and parish in the Malmesbury Hundred of Wiltshire, about four miles north-east of Malmesbury itself. Some eight miles further to the north-east is Cirencester, Gloucestershire. Also to the north-east is Cotswold Airport. Kemble village, about four miles away, has the nearest railway station, with services to London Paddington.

Links and extent

The village lies on the A429 linking Cirencester and Malmesbury. This route south to Malmesbury was built in 1778.[2]

The parish includes the hamlets of Chedglow, Chelworth, Eastcourt, Murcott and West Crudwell. The Fosse Way, a Roman road, forms part of the parish and county boundary. The population of the parish changed little between 1831 (604) and 1951 (618).[1]

History

The Domesday Book of 1086 recorded a large population of 107 households at Crudwell, and smaller settlements at Chelworth and Chedglow.[3] Most of the parish belonged to Malmesbury Abbey's Brokenborough estate, which in the 13th century had a farmstead with a fishpond and a chapel.[2] A large barn still stands to the south of All Saints' Church, probably dating from the 15th century and now Grade-II* listed.[4]

Manor Farm, east of the church, is probably from the 17th century, with additions in the 18th.[5] The old rectory, now a hotel, is from the early 18th century, altered in the late 19th.[6]

A school was founded at Crudwell in the 17th century by Lord Lucas. The schoolroom and schoolhouse of 1670 survive in residential use, south-west of the church.[7] A new school was built in 1857, alongside the older buildings, became a National School, and then in 1949 a voluntary controlled school.[8] A small school also opened at Eastcourt in about 1858 and became a National School. It closed in 1923 due to falling pupil numbers.[2]

RAF Kemble opened in 1938 in the north of the parish[2] and now serves as Cotswold Airport. It was a base for aircraft maintenance and ferrying, and later the home of the Red Arrows aerobatics display team. In the 1980s the airfield became a maintenance base for the US Air Force. Military flying ended in 1993 when the site was used to store surplus equipment. It was sold into private ownership in 2001 and now houses businesses carrying out aircraft maintenance and dismantling, and technical training.

Parish church

All Saints' Church

The Church of England Parish Church of All Saints, probably begun in the 11th century, is a Grade-I listed building.[9][10] Work from the 12th–15th centuries can be seen, with alterations and restoration in the 17th and 19th.[11]

The 15th-century stained glass in a north-east window depicts the seven sacraments.[9] The tower has five bells, recast in 1858 by Mears.[9]

In 1151 the church belonged to Malmesbury Abbey, and Hankerton Church was dependent on it, but became a separate parish in 1445.[2] The rectories of Crudwell and St James, Ashley were united in 1954,[12] and in 1987 the two churches joined with Hankerton and Oaksey to form the Braydon Brook group.[13]

Amenities

Crudwell rectory, now a hotel

The village school, extended in 1969, continues as Crudwell CE Primary School. Crudwell has two pubs, the Potting Shed and the Wheatsheaf Inn, and two hotels, Mayfield House and The Rectory.

Of several annual village events, the two largest are the Crudwell Bike Ride (June), a 24-hour "Le Mans" style event that raises funds for the local village hall, and the Strawberry Fair (July), held on and around the village green. Both take up a weekend and attract visitors from outside the village. The object of the Bike Ride is for teams to ride continuously and see how many laps and miles they can complete in 24 hours. The Strawberry Fair involves sitting on the green enjoying selections of strawberries, cream, shortbread and drinks, with some sideshows, stalls and evening music performances.

Notable people

In birth order:

  • George Ingram (1694–1763), rector from 1719 until his death[14]
  • Ambrose McEvoy (1878–1927), artist
  • Walter Knight-Adkin (1880–1957), Chaplain of the Fleet
  • Richard Cooper (1945–1990), cricketer
  • John Rawling Todd (1929–2002), colonial administrator in British Indian Ocean Territory and Hong Kong[15]

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 "Wiltshire Community History – Census". Wiltshire Council. http://history.wiltshire.gov.uk/community/getcensus.php?id=87. Retrieved 8 January 2015. 
  2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 2.3 2.4 51–65 "Victoria County History – Wiltshire – Vol 14 pp. 51–65 – Parishes: Crudwell". University of London. http://www.british-history.ac.uk/vch/wilts/vol14/pp. 51–65. Retrieved 21 May 2016. 
  3. Crudwell in the Domesday Book
  4. National Heritage List 1181760: Barn to the south-west of Manor Farmhouse
  5. National Heritage List 1022233: Manor Farmhouse
  6. National Heritage List 1022234: Crudwell Court
  7. National Heritage List 1022235: School House and School Cottage
  8. "Crudwell Church of England Primary School". Wiltshire Council. https://history.wiltshire.gov.uk/community/getschool.php?id=1079. Retrieved 23 May 2016. 
  9. 9.0 9.1 9.2 "All Saints Church, Crudwell". Wiltshire Council. https://history.wiltshire.gov.uk/community/getchurch.php?id=961. Retrieved 21 May 2016. 
  10. National Heritage List 1363888: Church of All Saints
  11. "All Saints, Crudwell: About". http://www.braydonbrook.co.uk/crudwell-about.html. Retrieved 21 May 2016. 
  12. London Gazette: no. 40176, p. 2918, 18 May 1954.
  13. "Braydon Brook Churches". http://www.braydonbrook.co.uk/. Retrieved 21 May 2016. 
  14. Persons: Ingram, George (1718–1763) in "CCEd, the Clergy of the Church of England database" (Accessed online, 27 July 2017)
  15. "Deaths", Hatfield Record, 2004, p. 105

Outside links

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about Crudwell)