Wetton

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Wetton
Staffordshire
St Margaret's Church, Wetton - geograph.org.uk - 271524.jpg
St Margaret's Church
Location
Grid reference: SK110555
Location: 53°5’43"N, 1°50’16"W
Data
Post town: Ashbourne
Postcode: DE6
Dialling code: 01335
Local Government
Council: Staffordshire Moorlands

Wetton is a village and parish in the Peak District National Park in northern Staffordshire. The population recorded in the 2001 Census was 157. The village is about two miles west of Alstonfield and 8½ miles east of Leek. It stands high above the Manifold valley and contains mostly stone-built properties. The village has an inn, and a church, part of which dates back to the 14th century. The church is unusual in that it has an external staircase to its belfry.

Wetton village

Wetton village viewed from Wetton Low with Wetton Hill in background

Wetton village is primarily a collection of farmhouses, with the gaps filled in by cottages and a few larger houses. Towards the centre of the village are the village green, Ye Olde Royal Oak public house, the church, and the former vicarage.

The village gives its name to Wetton Mill (or Wettonmill), a nearby hamlet on the River Manifold, and Wetton Hill, which are both in the care of the National Trust.

There are many burial chambers or mounds in the area, including those on Wetton Hill itself, at Wetton Low and at Long Low.

St Margaret's Parish Church

The parish Church of St Margaret is the most obvious public building in the village. It is now in the Benefice of Alstonefield, in the Diocese of Lichfield. The present building was rebuilt in 1820, but the tower dates from the 14th century.[1]

Reading Room

The Reading Room, by the churchyard gate opposite the village green, has not been in use for many decades. This may have been the "Club House" referred to by Rev. J B Dyson in his 1853 history of Methodism in the Leek Circuit as an early venue for Methodist meetings.[2]

Village hall

The former school building is now in use as the Village Hall. The old village hall, situated on the road to Wetton Mill, was a corrugated iron construction which was unusable by the 1960s.

The Old Police House

The village police house, with its cell, is now a residential home. It is between the village green and the former Methodist Chapel. Staffordshire Police rented the property from the Duke of Devonshire from 1876 for use as a Police Station. The cell was added in 1889, and the station was closed in 1941. The Charge Book is held in Staffordshire records office and this indicates that between 1890 and 1941 some 28 persons were detained overnight for various alleged offences. The adjoining property is the former schoolmistress's house.

Toe wrestling

The Olde Royal Oak public house is famous for the annual toe wrestling competition.[3][4] It is said that this sport began there in 1976,[5] but was not raised to a championship event until 1993.[6] For many years the event took place at the Bentley Brook Inn in Ashbourne, Derbyshire, but it returned to Wetton in 2015.

History

The various tumuli point to prehistoric Stone Age and Bronze Age settlements. Items found in Thor's Cave and now in the museum at Buxton, are said to show evidence of early cave dwellers.

The remains of a Romano-British village was found in nearby Borough Fields by Samuel Carrington in the mid-18th century.

Wetton is not recorded in the Domesday Book, unlike neighbouring Alstonefield, Warslow and Stanshope, The earliest reference is to Wetindona in a document from the late 12th century.[7] The name derives from Old English "wet hill".

Methodism

When the Wetton and Longnor Wesleyan Methodist Circuit was formed in 1870, Wetton was chosen for the Manse. In 1932, the Circuit incorporated various Primitive Methodist Chapels. The Circuit was disbanded in 1969.[8] The first Wesleyan Methodist building was opened in 1828[9] The Primitive Methodists held meetings in Wetton, but did not establish a Chapel there. However, the Methodist Chapel at Ecton was Primitive Methodist, resulting from the industrial mission work from Ramsor and later the Leek Primitive Methodist Circuit.[10] After the completion of the railway in 1904, a building at Ecton became the Methodist Chapel there.

Wetton Mill

The bridge over the river Manifold at Wetton Mill

Wetton Mill was a water mill for grinding corn, and the remains of a mill stream, along with a grindstone, may still be seen. The mill is long since disused, but the Tea Room is popular with tourists.

Nan Tor, a cave with several mouths and the centre open to the sky, is a prominent landmark. It is a proposed candidate for the Green Chapel that features in the 14th-century chivalric romantic poem Sir Gawain and the Green Knight. This is due to the fact that the dialect in which the poem is written, closely resembles that of the local area. It also features characteristics that are similar to the Green Chapel which are described in the poem. Immediately downstream from the mill are several "swallow holes" where the River Manifold begins to flow underground to Ilam.

There is ample parking by the mill, on the site of the old halt, and the café is a popular stopping point for walkers using the Manifold Way and the many other rural walks that can incorporate parts of it.

Leek and Manifold Light Railway

Wetton was served by a railway station which was opened by the narrow gauge (2' 6") Leek and Manifold Valley Light Railway on 27 June 1904, whilst being entirely operated by the North Staffordshire Railway. The main purposes of the railway were to provide more rapid transport for milk and dairy products from farms around the valley to customers in Leek and The Potteries, and easier transport for the copper being mined at Ecton.

The village of Wetton was a good mile from the station, and the fact that the line followed the valley bottom whereas the settlements served by the railway were mostly on the hill-tops above was a contributary factor in its demise. The line closed in 1934, but in 1937 the route was reopened as the Manifold Way, a fully tarmacked 8-mile walk- and cycle-path which runs from Hulme End in the north to Waterhouses in the south.

References

  1. Wetton on A Church Near You web site
  2. Available on Rewlach Methodist history books archive
  3. BBC Radio Stoke web site
  4. Off Track web site
  5. Origins and brief description on SportzFun
  6. Derbyshire Peak District straying into Staffordshire
  7. Staffordshire Historical Collections 4th Series Volume IV. pp. 31. 
  8. Rewlach Methodist history Circuit history diagram
  9. Dyson, op. cit.
  10. Minutes of a Quarterly Meeting held at Leek 10 March 1862

Outside links

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