Everything about Abbots Bromley totally explained
Abbots Bromley is a
village in
Staffordshire,
England. It is famous for the annual
Abbots Bromley Horn Dance. It is also the home of one of the
Woodard Schools,
Abbots Bromley School for Girls (formerly known as the School of S. Mary and S. Anne). The parish includes
Bagot's Wood the largest remaining part of the
Needwood Forest and
Blithfield Reservoir.
Phil Drabble's Goats Lodge nature reserve is there.
History
The first historical record of the village dates from 942, when the manor of "Bromleige" was given to Wulfsige the Black. The will, dated 1002, of
Wulfric Spot, Earl of
Mercia, gave the village to the Abbey of
Burton upon Trent. There is some evidence that the current settlement was a planned town - there's evidence of burgess plots, a grid pattern of streets and a wide market place. Abbas Bromley is recorded in the
Domesday Book of 1086-7 as
Brunlege, when it was part of the land of St Mary of Burton.
In 1227, a weekly market was confirmed by Royal Charter at the site of the Butter Cross (recorded in 1339, the present structure said by
Pevsner to date from the 17th Century), which survives to the present. The current, triangular market place is now grassed over and serves as a
village green and the focus for events on Horn Dance Day.
The village remained affiliated to the Abbey till the
Dissolution of the Monasteries in 1545.
Henry VIII gave
Bromley Abbatis to Sir William Paget, Clerk of the Signet and Privy Councillor. The village was known as
Paget's Bromley for several centuries, (distinguishing it from the part of the parish in the hands of the Bagot family, still known as
Bagot's Bromley) but eventually the influence of the Paget family declined, and the name reverted to
Abbots Bromley.
Despite being an agricultural centre on account of its market and fairs, Abbots Bromley enjoyed some industrial success - in the 16th century it was a major centre for
glass manufacture. In 1606 it gained a
grammar school, now
Richard Clarke First School founded by a bequest from local citizen Richard Clarke who had achieved success in London.
The church spire, destroyed by lightning strike, was rebuilt in a classical style in 1685.
Despite nineteenth century efforts to connect the town to the expanding railway network (the
North Staffordshire Railway received an act of parliament to build a branch line from
Stowe-by-Chartley which was never taken advantage of). Abbots Bromley remained comparatively isolated and in decline, losing its market, fairs and economic status.
By the 1950s the village faced economic decay and an ageing population. It was also comparatively late in receiving mains electricity and gas services. More recently it has become a
dormitory settlement for surrounding urban areas such as the
West Midlands conurbation and
Derby. There has been some new development as well as the restoration of historic buildings, with a Millennium Hall perhaps the most noted recent example.
The village has a large number of listed buildings, and its historic core has
conservation area status, reflecting its pre-industrial townscape. Of these, the half timbered Church House, The Goats Head Inn (claimed to be the original town hall) and the Schoolhouse (Richard Clarke's 1606 Grammar School) are some of the most noteworthy.
Further Information
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