Great Preston

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Great Preston
Yorkshire
West Riding

Preston Lane, Great Preston
Location
Grid reference: SE404294
Location: 53°45’36"N, 1°23’17"W
Data
Local Government
Council: Leeds

Great Preston is a small rural village in the West Riding of Yorkshire. It has incorporated the once neighbouring hamlet of Little Preston.

This village stands nine miles south-east of Leeds city centre and is two miles south of the town Garforth. The villages of Kippax and Swillington are also in close proximity, and, due to development of land into housing to the south of the village, Great Preston now borders Allerton Bywater.

Name

The name of Great Preston is first attested in the Domesday Book of 1086, in the form Prestun and similar variants. The name comes from the Old English words preost ('priest') and tun ('farmstead, estate'). Thus it once meant 'estate belonging to a priest'.

The name Little Preston, coined to differentiate this settlement from its larger neighbour, is first attested between 1258 and 1265, as Preston Luttle. Meanwhile, the form Great Preston is first attested in 1488.

About the village

Great Preston has one pub, a local cricket and football team and a village hall. There is a Church of England primary school based in an old Victorian building with a modern extension.

St Aidan's church was closed in 1992, and changed into a community centre in 1998. The Working Men's club has also shut down and has been replaced by a snooker club.

Outside links

References