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Stourport Centre grid reference SO809712

Perrot's Folly grid reference SP047862 404765,286273

Edgbaston Waterworks tower grid reference SP046864 404615,286424 better: grid reference SP046863

MMUK MAPDET: {{mmuk mapdet|404553|286466|10000}}

10 figure NGR: grid reference SP0455386465 after feeding x,y coordinapes into MMUK MAPDET

Stourport-on-Severn


{{GBmap|Stourport - Hereford and Worcester|SO809712}}

{{mmuknr photo|404615|286424|50|aerial photo}}

DY13 8SQ

and is a Grade I listed building.I

DRAFT TEXT[edit]

Droitwich Lunatic Asylum was established in 1791. Records at the Worcestershire County Record Office show its presence in 1837 to 1838. An advert in the Provincial Medical and Surgical Association Transactions in 1844 records that Martin Ricketts, of Droitwich was the Surgeon and Charles Hastings from the Worcester Infirmary was the Physician.

Evesham Abbey According to an article on the village of Ombersley , published in May 2006 in The Birmingham Post, the first known reference to the village was the granting of a Charter to the village by Abbot Ecgwine, later Saint Ecgwine, of Evesham Abbey in 706 AD.

Worcester site Sir Charles Hastings, founder of the British Medical Association lived in Worcester for most of his life - the newly built Worcestershire Royal Hospital stands in a road named in his honour.

Birmingham and Midland Institute

Edmund Street is a street located in Birmingham, England. Edmund Street is one of a series of roads on the old Colmore Estate stretching from the city centre around St Paul's Cathedral to the northern end of Newhall Street. [1]

Little Inkberrow

Ralph Ardern held the Worcestershire manor of Little Inkberrow in the early 15th century.[2] He inherited the manors of Parkhall, Barcheston, ‘Pedemore’ in Sutton Coldfield and Curdworth (Warwickshire), Upper Wick (Worcestershire), Acton and property in Nantwich (Cheshire), and Wappenham and Sulgrave (Northamptonshire).

Notable People[edit]

Notable People[edit]

David Melville was awarded a scholarship to Brasenose College, Oxford, where after graduating he was ordained as a clergyman. He became a University don,[5] and one of his scholars was William Ward, 1st Earl of Dudley.[6] In 1846 he left Oxford and moved to Durham where he founded Bishop Hatfield's Hall.[7] He married Emma Hill at Kilcoo, County Down on 28 July 1848

Philip Bisse was the Bishop of Saint David's the smallest city in the United Kingdom, from 1710 to 1712. In 1712 he became the Bishop of Hereford until 1721. His brother, the Rev Dr Thomas Bisse, was the Chancellor of Hereford Cathedral and in 1724 organised as "Music Meeting" which subsequently became the Three Choirs Festival.

Ltd Colonel Patrick Holcroft and was brought up in the Worcestershire. He served nearly two decades in the Grenadier Guards before pursuing a career in the City of London. He became the Deputy Lieutenant of Worcestershire in 2009. His charitable commitments as a trustee or adviser include the Nuffield Trust for the Forces of the Crown; the Royal Military Academy Sandhurst; the Lloyd’s Patriotic Fund, which supports armed forces charities; and the Hedley Foundation, which supports young people, the disabled and the terminally ill.

Colonel Holcroft lives near Tenbury Wells with his wife, Annie, and has three children.

In 1871 ??? Morris & Co. were responsible for the windows at All Saints church in the village of Wilden near to Stourport-on-Severn. The were designed by Edward Burne-Jones for his nephew's family, Alfred Baldwin.

All Saints site records "The original windows were replaced, between 1902 and 1914, with 14 designs by Sir Edward Burne-Jones" ???

Sir Henry Fowler, Chief Mechanical Engineer of the Midland Railway and subsequently the London, Midland and Scottish Railway was born in Evesham, on July 29 1870.

In 1377, or 1378, Henry de Ardern was granted the manors of Croome Adam (now Earls Croome) and Grafton Flyford by the Earl of Warwick for a red rose.[8]

He was the son of Ralph de Ardern and probably born at Curdworth. He died in 1382[8]

The remains of a moat, associated with the Ardens, are now buried under the M42. This site is thought to have been their home before they moved to Park Hall in Castle Bromwich.

Ralph Ardern or Ralph de Ardern, (c1374[9] - c1420) was Member of Parliament for Worcestershire from March 1406. He was the son of Henry de Ardern who had previously held the seat in November 1381. He died sometime before 28 October 1420.[10]

He was a Deputy High Sheriff of Worcestershire from 4 November 1404 to 27 November 1405.[9]

Samuel Fell In May 1619, Fell was made a canon of Christ Church Cathedral, Oxford and in 1626 Lady Margaret Professor of Divinity, which he held, according to custom, with a canonry of Worcester Cathedral. These posts he held till 1637. At first his religious views were Calvinistic, but he changed his opinions and became an active ally of Archbishop William Laud. Laud promoted him, making Fell to the rector of Stow-on-the-Wold in 1637, Dean of Lichfield in January 1638, and Dean of Christ Church in June 1638.[11] Fell continued with improvements in the cathedral and college projected by his predecessor, Brian Duppa, and added the staircase leading to the hall.

Significant works[edit]

He designed, amongst others:

(all the above are Grade II* listed buildings)
  • Union Club, (1869) 85-89 Colmore Row, Birmingham.[12] On the corner with Newhall Street, now called Bamford's Trust House. (Grade II)
  • Public Hall , High Street, Smethwick. (1866-7) Now the Public Library.[13]
  • Birmingham Town and District Bank, 63 Colmore Row, Birmingham. (1867-1869) Head Office became Barclays Bank, facade later remodelled by Peacock and Bewlay.[14]
  • Birmingham Banking Company, Bennetts Hill, Birmingham. Designed new entrance in 1868. Became Midland Bank.[15]

Alongside the Worcester Shrub Hill station, on Shrub Hill Road was the Worcester Engine Works. The polychrome brick building was erected about 1864 and was probably designed by Thomas Dickson. The venture was not a success and only 84 locomotives were built.[16] The chairman of the Worcester Engine Works was Alexander Clunes Sheriff.

Category:Villages in Herefordshire

Cradley is a small village in Herefordshire. The nearest towns are Ledbury and Bromyard in Herefordshire and Malvern, Worcestershire.

Photos[edit]

File:Lycaenidae - Thecla betulae-1.JPG

Brown Hairstreak











Churches[edit]

  • Kidderminster has two so-called "Commissioner Churches". The first was St George's church, on Radford Avenue. This was designed by Francis Goodwin and built in 1821-1824,[17] finally being consecrated in April 1824. It had the third largest grant by the Commission, of just over £17,000.00, of any church outside London.[18] The second church was St John's church, on the Bewdley Road. This church was built in 1843 and the architect was Gordon Alexander, although the grant in this case was just over £4,000.

Under the Local Government Act 1972, it was proposed for Kidderminster to be part of the West Midlands metropolitan county, but it was scrapped after the proposed county boundary was trimmed back to Stourbridge.

|Dowles Brook

Works[edit]

Members of Parliament[edit]

Bewdley (UK Parliament constituency)

was elected as MP for Bewdley in Worcestershire in 1892, holding the seat until his death, on 13 February 1908. He was succeeded by his son, Stanley Baldwin, who later became Prime Minister.

List of works[edit]

From these sources:[17][23]:

References[edit]

  1. ^ a b *The Buildings of England: Worcestershire, Nikolaus Pevsner, 1968 Penguin. Cite error: The named reference "pevwor" was defined multiple times with different content (see the help page).
  2. ^ Driver, J. T. Worcestershire Knights of the Shire 1377-1421 Transactions of the Worcestershire Archaeological Society. Third Series Vol 4 1974 p19
  3. ^ Michael Reed, ‘Moon, Sir Richard, first baronet (1814–1899)’, Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004; online edn, Jan 2008 accessed 7 April 2016
  4. ^ Braine, Peter The Railway Moon pmb publishing, Taunton 2010 p32-36
  5. ^ Dimbleby, Josceline Rose A Profound Secret Black Swan 2005 p30
  6. ^ Dimbleby, Josceline Rose A Profound Secret Black Swan 2005 p31
  7. ^ Dimbleby, Josceline Rose A Profound Secret Black Swan 2005 p33
  8. ^ a b Driver, J. T. Worcestershire Knights of the Shire 1377-1421 Transactions of the Worcestershire Archaeological Society. Third Series Vol 4 1974 p19
  9. ^ a b Roskell, J.S.; Clark, L.; Rawcliffe, C. eds. The History of Parliament: the House of Commons 1386-1421, 1993
  10. ^ Driver, J. T. Worcestershire Knights of the Shire 1377-1421 Transactions of the Worcestershire Archaelogical Society. Third Series Vol 4 1974 p20
  11. ^ Cite error: The named reference horn was invoked but never defined (see the help page).
  12. ^ Birmingham, Douglas Hickman, 1970 Studio Vista. p35-6
  13. ^ The Buildings of England: Worcestershire, Nikolaus Pevsner, 1968 Penguin. p81
  14. ^ Birmingham, Douglas Hickman, 1970 Studio Vista. p35
  15. ^ Birmingham, Douglas Hickman, 1970 Studio Vista. p25
  16. ^ Richard Morriss The Archaeology of Railways, 1999 Tempus Publishing, Stroud. plate 93 p147
  17. ^ a b The Buildings of England: Worcestershire, Nikolaus Pevsner, 1968 Penguin. p206 Cite error: The named reference "pevw" was defined multiple times with different content (see the help page).
  18. ^ A History of Kidderminster, Nigel Gilbert, 2004 Phillimore. p89 and p102
  19. ^ The Buildings of England: Worcestershire, Nikolaus Pevsner, 1968 Penguin. p110
  20. ^ The Buildings of England: Herefordshire, Nikolaus Pevsner, 1963 p106 ISBN 0140710256
  21. ^ The Buildings of England: Herefordshire, Nikolaus Pevsner, 1963 p106 ISBN 0140710256
  22. ^ a b The Buildings of England: Herefordshire, Nikolaus Pevsner, 1963 p106 ISBN 0140710256 Cite error: The named reference "pevh" was defined multiple times with different content (see the help page).
  23. ^ *Victorian Architecture in Britain - Blue Guide, Julian Orbach, 1987, ISBN 0-393-30070-6

External links[edit]

Kidderminster Workhouse

http://users.ox.ac.uk/~peter/workhouse/Kidderminster/Kidderminster.shtml

text Cite error: A <ref> tag is missing the closing </ref> (see the help page).

Lycaenidae

References[edit]