Hodthorpe

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Hodthorpe
Derbyshire
Hodthorpe club 126197 40de3039.jpg
Hodthorpe Working Mens Club. 1909-2009
Location
Grid reference: SK542765
Location: 53°16’58"N, 1°11’16"W
Data
Population: 663  (2011)
Post town: Worksop
Postcode: S80
Local Government
Council: Bolsover

Hodthorpe is an urban village in Derbyshire, in the north-eastern corner of the county standing close to the Nottinghamshire border and on the edge of Sherwood Forest. The village has two principal streets, Queens Road (the main road running through the village) and Kings Street. It has one shop, a Post Office, a village primary school, and a working men's club. There are two parks.

A spectacular natural heritage site, Creswell Crags on the county border, famous for its prehistoric cave art, lies close to the village.

Foundation and history

The village gets its name from John Hoddings, who planned the village, "Hod" coming from "Hoddings", and "thorpe" Anglo-Saxon for village.

The village was founded in 1804, following the first sinking of mine shafts at neighbouring Whitwell. There was great resentment in Whitwell at this time to the influx of coal miners, and so the Welbeck Abbey estate agreed to Hodthorpe's foundation. The village was on the local branch railway line, with its own (now disused) halt.

Until the 1890s the Wesleyan (Methodist) chapel (1834) was the only place of worship in the village. Eventually the local miners raised money to build the Anglican chapel of St. Martin in 1897, known as the ‘Tin Chapel’. These have both since closed. The Methodist chapel closed around 1960 and has since become a metal-works. The Anglican chapel and its village hall were demolished in 1995, and the land sold off and redeveloped as apartments.

The Church of England Junior & Infants School was built on Queens Road, the official opening being carried out by the 6th Duke of Portland on Tuesday, January 17, 1905.

The Cheshire Horse Artillery had stables on the south side of Queens Road, the location being chosen because of the nearby stud farm at Welbeck Abbey. These stables were bombed during the Second World War.

Outside links

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("Wikimedia Commons" has material
about Hodthorpe)

References