Ellastone

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Ellastone
Staffordshire
Norbury Ellastone Dove Derbyshire.jpg
The bridge over the Dove to Norbury in Derbyshire
Location
Grid reference: SK116429
Location: 52°58’60"N, 1°49’43"W
Data
Population: 320  (2011[1])
Post town: Ashbourne
Postcode: DE6
Local Government
Council: East Staffordshire

Ellastone is a village and parish on the Staffordshire side of the River Dove, between Uttoxeter and Ashbourne. It lies in the hundred of Totmonslow.

Location and history

Ellastone is a linear village, situated close to the River Dove, on the border between Derbyshire and Staffordshire. During World War II, the bridge over the river was an important crossing point, guarded by two pill-boxes, one on each bank. Both are still visible today, however the box on the western side of the bridge is harder to spot as it is currently serving as a shelter for the cows, but camouflage paint is still visible above the entrance.

The village also lies near the southern end of the Limestone Way, a long-distance bridleway.

The village itself dates back to Anglo-Saxon times and features in the Domesday Book, where it is listed as Edelachestone, Elachestone[2] and Princestone (after the great Prince James who fought in the battle of Ashbourne (1066) against the marauding Bainbridge hoardes of the Northern territories.) The local church of St Peter's dates back to the 16th century with the year 1586 displayed on the tower. Ellastone Old Hall, formerly the Bromley Arms pub, dates from the seventeenth century and is situated close to the current pub, the Duncombe Arms. There used to be a petrol station in the village and its presence can be noted through the unusual drives of the two bungalows closest to the pub, which very much resemble the entry/exits of a petrol station forecourt.

Ellastone's amenities include a tennis court, bowling green, park and snooker club. In addition there is the village hall which played host to a five a side football tournament (won by a team of local sixth-form students) and party in celebration of the Queen's Golden Jubilee in 2002. The village shop and post office closed on 15 April 2006,

Ellastone was served by a railway station (shared with Norbury) which was opened by the North Staffordshire Railway on 31 May 1852.

Ellastone Parish is quite extensive, and includes the hamlets of Ramshorn, Wootton, and Prestwood. The Weaver Hills, about four miles north-west, lie just outside the Parish.

Literary reference

Ellastone features as 'Hayslope' in George Eliot's Adam Bede, published in 1859. It earned this recognition because the author's father spent the early part of his life in the village working as a carpenter. There is an Adam Bede cottage in the village but of course the attribution is fictional. The Methodist references in Adam Bede fit this locality very well. The hamlet of Ramshorn (known as Ramsor in Methodist documents) at the western end of the Parish of Ellastone was very significant in early Primitive Methodist history.[3] However the reality of the conversion of Hetty (a character in Adam Bede) is suspect in the light of early Primitive Methodist histories.[4]

Other points of historical interest

The ruined Calwich Abbey is also situated nearby. An abbey was first built on the site in 1148, however the latest hall, built in 1848, was demolished in 1935, leaving only the stable block which is visible today. The composer Handel was one of the abbey's guests on several occasions and it has been suggested that it may have inspired some of his most important pieces such as "Messiah" and the "Water Music".

One of the village cottages was once owned by William Cecil, the influential politician and confident of Elizabeth I.

Nearby is Wootton Hall, now rebuilt as the residence of the Hon. Johnny Greenall (of the brewing family), but formerly visited by the French philosopher Rousseau. Arthur Mee notes that this visit was not entirely a happy one.[5]

Also within the Parish is Wootton Lodge, a 17th-century house with deer park, owned by the Bamford family (of JCB fame). Fleeing from Cromwell's army during the Civil War, one owner of Wooton Lodge took refuge in the coal cellar of Lower House at Prestwood. This had just been built by William Orpe, a member of one of Ellastone's oldest families. The Orpes provided shelter for their Royalist friends.[6]

One of the Orpes had been a monk at Croxden Abbey about five miles south-west of Ellastone. His name appears on the Deed of Dissolution of the Abbey in 1538. The Ellastone Parish Register records the marriage of this former monk, along with a cousin, also named John Orpe, and then the baptisms of their respective children almost at the same time.[7]

Geography

In the vicinity of the village the River Dove is a hive of fluvial activity. Two small brooks (Sandford Brook and Tit Brook) flow directly into the River Dove. Additionally there is a natural spring, still officially known as Bentley Well which flows into the Tit and sits on former farmland which is now occupied by a new development, Bentley Fold.

References

Commons-logo.svg
("Wikimedia Commons" has material
about Ellastone)
  1. "Civil Parish population 2011". http://www.neighbourhood.statistics.gov.uk/dissemination/LeadKeyFigures.do?a=7&b=11123149&c=Ellastone&d=16&e=62&g=6463429&i=1001x1003x1032x1004&m=0&r=1&s=1449502212031&enc=1. Retrieved 7 December 2015. 
  2. Great Domesday Book folios 247r and 249r
  3. Some of the significance of Ramsor in Primitive Methodism is collated on the Rewlach Methodist History site [1]
  4. Various 19th-century Methodist histories are available on
  5. Arthur Mee, "The King's England; Staffordshire", (1937), p. 243
  6. Family anecdote supplied by Mrs Ida Johnson, a descendant of the Orpe family.
  7. Ellastone Parish Register, entries from 1538 and following 20 years.