Frenchay
Frenchay | |
Gloucestershire | |
---|---|
Frenchay Common | |
Location | |
Grid reference: | ST640778 |
Location: | 51°29’52"N, 2°31’10"W |
Data | |
Post town: | Bristol |
Postcode: | BS16 |
Dialling code: | 0117 |
Local Government | |
Council: | South Gloucestershire |
Parliamentary constituency: |
Filton and Bradley Stoke |
Frenchay is a village and suburb of Bristol, in the south of Gloucestershire, to the north-east of the city centre. An adjacent suburb is Frenchay Park.
The name of Frenchay was first recorded in 1257 as Fromscawe and later as Fromeshaw: the name means 'the wood on the Frome'.[1]
The village is situated between the B4058 road, which runs parallel to the M32 motorway, and the wooded River Frome valley.
The centre of the village it set around a broad village common, which is overlooked by the parish church and by a number of 18th century houses principally built by wealthy Quaker families. These include the very fine former Rectory, Bradford's House and the adjacent Frenchay Common House. Also overlooking the common is the village school which dates from 1842.
Churches
Frenchay's largest place of worship is the Church of England parish church, St John the Baptist. It stands adjacent to the large village common
The village also contains a Quaker Meeting House, a Roman Catholic church and a Unitarian chapel.
History
Cricket was played on Frenchay Common from early in the nineteenth century, apparently on the initiative of the Wadham family who lived at Frenchay Manor House, owned farms locally at Doynton, Pomfrey, Mangotsfield, Downend and Frenchay, and many of whom are buried in the graveyard of St John the Baptist Church.[2]
W.G. Grace, the famous Victorian cricketer, whose family lived in the next village of Downend, was captain of the village cricket team.[3] The Frenchay Cricket Club, which is said to have been the first village club in the county, was established in 1846.[4]
Frenchay gives its name to the Frenchay Campus of the University of the West of England, though the campus itself is situated in the neighbouring parish of Stoke Gifford.
Frenchay was the home to Frenchay Hospital, greatly expanded during the Second World War for the US Army, which treated wounded soldiers returning from the D-Day landings in Normandy. Facilities merged with Southmead Hospital, further towards the centre of the city in 2014. A&E services closed on 19 May 2014. The closure of Frenchay Hospital will make way for a new housing development.[5][6]
Frenchay village has lots of green space, including the common, walks along the River Frome, and a moor owned by the National Trust. One of the hubs of the village is the Village Hall, and there is an annual village flower show.[7]
Frenchay's earliest place of worship was the Quaker Meeting House. The present one dates from 1809, and it replaced an earlier one of 1670.
Many Quaker merchants from nearby Bristol made their homes here, including Joseph Storrs Fry, the Quaker chocolate manufacturer, who styled his company J S Fry & Sons, which manufactured the first ever commercially available chocolate bar in the world. He moved to Grove House (now Riverwood House) in 1800. He died in 1835 and is buried in the burying ground behind the Meeting House along with his wife and daughter, Pricilla.
John Wadham (1762-1843) of Frenchay Manor House, was from 1789, a co-owner and director of Wadham, Ricketts & Co, later Wadham, Ricketts, Fry & Co, which manufactured Bristol blue glass at the Phoenix Glassworks near Temple Gate, Bristol, examples of which can be seen in Bristol Museum,[8] and was a director of the Bristol Floating Harbour Company in 1820.
Thomas's son Edward Wadham (1828-1913), Mineral Agent to Walter Montagu Douglas Scott, 5th Duke of Buccleuch took his skills as a civil engineer who had worked under Brunel and his love of cricket to Barrow-in-Furness where, from 1851 until his death in 1913, he played an important part in the development of what had been a tiny hamlet into the biggest iron and steel centre in the world, and a major ship-building force, in just forty years.
Outside links
("Wikimedia Commons" has material about Frenchay) |
References
- ↑ Burrough, THB (1970). Bristol. London: Studio Vista. ISBN 0-289-79804-3.
- ↑ See page 74, Winterbourne, Gloucestershire by C.H.B. Elliott, The History of Winterbourne, Winterbourne Down, Hambrook, and Frenchay, published by the Frenchay Tuckett Society 1999, ISBN 0-9528673-2-X
- ↑ "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 4 February 2012. https://web.archive.org/web/20120204165322/http://www.frenchay.org/exhibits.html. Retrieved 2012-10-21. Details can be found in the village museum
- ↑ p.74, Winterbourne, Gloucestershire by C.H.B. Elliott, ISBN 0-9528673-2-X
- ↑ "Frenchay-to-Southmead hospital move for A&E cases". BBC. 19 May 2014. https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-bristol-27466875. Retrieved 29 May 2014.
- ↑ Kieran Corcoran (20 May 2014). "Devastated staff break down in tears as A&E department closes its doors for the last time after treating patients for 50 years". Daily Mail. http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2633947/Devastated-staff-break-tears-A-amp-E-department-closes-doors-time-treating-patients-50-years.html. Retrieved 29 May 2014.
- ↑ [1] flower show official website
- ↑ Bristol Glass by Cleo Witt, Cyril Weeden and Arlene Palmer Schwind published in conjunction with City of Bristol Museum & Art Gallery, pp. 35-60, ISBN 0-905459-56-3