Falfield

From Wikishire
Jump to: navigation, search
Falfield
Gloucestershire
Falfield church.jpg
St George, Falfield
Location
Grid reference: ST683933
Location: 51°38’13"N, 2°27’32"W
Data
Population: 762  (2011)
Post town: Wotton-Under-Edge
Postcode: GL12
Local Government
Council: South Gloucestershire
Parliamentary
constituency:
Thornbury and Yate

Falfield is a village in Gloucestershire, on the southern edge of the Vale of Berkeley, to the east of the River Severn and at the edge of the Cotswolds. Falfield is reckoned to be one of the longest villages in Britain, and following close by is the nearby village of Cromhall.

There are approximately 200 houses in the village with a population of some 500, increasing to 762 at the 2011 census. The village pub is The Huntsman Inn. There is also a village hall, a small shop, a car dealership and several farms.

The nearest town to the village is Thornbury seven miles to the south, and it is about equidistant between the county's two cities: Bristol 16 miles to the south and Gloucester 18 miles to the north.

Falfield is clustered mainly along the A38 road. It is also the first stop from Junction 14 of the M5. The shape of the parish is long in its length and narrow in its width. Both the A38 and M5 run through the village from north to south. It has a large garden centre, and two prisons (Eastwood Park and Leyhill) nearby.

Parish church

The parish church is St George's.

The church is famous for being the burial place of Conservative politician Sir George Jenkinson, who died in 1892.

History

A Saxon charter mentions the village was originally an ancient settlement.

In 1608 a document "Men & Armour",[1] compiled by John Smyth (1567–1641), the Steward of the Gloucestershire lands of Lord Berkeley, recorded that the majority of the men in the village were weavers and others being husbandmen (farmers) or tailors.

Ecclesiastically the village was part of the Thornbury Parish and was served by a Chapel of Ease, which was recorded as being dilapidated during the 18th century. In 1860 the present St George's Church was built a short distance from where the Chapel of Ease stood. The organist Charles Harford Lloyd served in the village in his youth. Registers containing marriages, baptisms and burials at Falfield Parish Church are in existence from 1860. Prior to this date they are included under Thornbury Parish records.

Anciently a settlement called "Mars" was associated with Falfield. However it has not been determined where this settlement existed, despite research.

A large part of the village is Eastwood Park, anciently a deer park belonging to Thornbury Castle in the 16th century. Later names associated with owners of Eastwood were Tyndale, Ashfield, Rogers, Jenkinson and Watts. More recently it came into the ownership of the Ministry of Defence followed by the Department of Health and is now run as a Conference and Training Centre.

Other older constructions in the village are: Green Farm whose origins are mediæval, Heneage Farm - 16th century, Sundayshill Farm probably 17th century, Oakhall Farm, Moorslade Farm where a more modern building has now replaced the older farmhouse mentioned in 16th century documents. Whitfield House and Pool Farm in Whitfield are also worthy of mention. Brinkmarsh Farm, now (quite recently) demolished was a fine Elizabethan building with ball finials. In what is known as Mill Lane is a mill which has been on the present site for four or five hundred years, probably longer.

The village appears to lack a manor house, possibly Heneage Court could have been such, but little of its history is known. Cannonballs found in the roof suggest its existence in the 16th century. Names connected with Heneage Court are: Skey, Hale, Montague Williams and Russell Thomas. Edward Warren laid out the gardens, pleasure grounds and woodland for Russell Thomas in 1913.

Society and sport

  • Scouts: 1st Falfield Scouts
  • Brownies: 1st Falfield & Stone Brownies

Falfield was once home to successful cricket and football teams, however both of those have now been discontinued with members now playing at local sides such as Tortworth Musketeers CC. The village is home to 'The Fielders' skittles team.

Outside links

Commons-logo.svg
("Wikimedia Commons" has material
about Falfield)

References

  1. John Smyth (1908) [1608] Men & Armour for Gloucestershire in 1608, A. Sutton, Gloucester ISBN 978-0-90438-749-0