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Alderley, Gloucestershire

Village in Gloucestershire, England


Village in Gloucestershire, England

FieldValue
countryEngland
static_imageChurch of St Kenelm and Alderley House, Alderley - geograph.org.uk - 5483106.jpg
static_image_captionSt Kenelm's Church and Alderley House
coordinates
os_grid_referenceST768908
official_nameAlderley
population351
population_ref
shire_districtStroud
shire_countyGloucestershire
regionSouth West England
post_townWotton-under-Edge
postcode_districtGL12
postcode_areaGL
dial_code01453
constituency_westminsterSouth Cotswolds
civil_parishAlderley
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website

Alderley (also previously known as Alderleigh) is a village and civil parish in the Stroud district of Gloucestershire, England, about fourteen miles southwest of Stroud and two miles south of Wotton-under-Edge. It is situated on the Cotswold Way near to the villages of Hillesley and Tresham and lies underneath Winner Hill between two brooks, the Ozleworth and Kilcott.{{citation

History

The village has an entry in the Domesday Book of 1086, where it is referred to as Alrelie{{cite web

In a later 1309 document the village is referred to as Alreleye, and in a 1345 document as Alrely.

In the 16th and 17th centuries, the village contained a number of woollen mills, and in Samuel Rudder's A New History of Gloucestershire published in 1779 he states that Alderley had been home to the clothing industry for hundreds of years.

In A Topographical Dictionary of England by Samuel Lewis published in 1831, Alderley is described thus:

:ALDERLEY, a parish in the upper division of GRUMBALD'S ASH, county of GLOUCESTER, 2 miles (S.S.E.) from Wotton under Edge, containing 235 inhabitants. The living is a discharged rectory, in the archdeaconry and diocese of Gloucester, rated in the king's books at £ 11. 4. 7., and in the patronage of Mr. and Mrs. Hale. The village is situated on a hill between two streams, which unite and fall into the LOWER AVON. Cornua ammonis and other fossils are found here. Sir Matthew Hale, Lord Chief Justice in the reign of Charles II., born here 1 November 1609, lies interred in the church. As part of the local government changes of the early 1970s, Alderley was the only parish of Sodbury Rural District not to form part of the newly created district of Northavon in the county of Avon, instead joining Stroud district in Gloucestershire.

Architecture

The village contains several interesting buildings:

  • The church, dedicated to Saint Kenelm, was rebuilt in Gothic style in 1802, but the tower dates back to c.1450. Marianne North, biologist and botanical artist, is buried in the churchyard.
  • Immediately to the southwest of St Kenelm's Church is Alderley House, a 19th-century neo-Elizabethan manor house designed by Lewis Vulliamy for Robert Blagden Hale and built in 1859–1863. The house is located on the site of an earlier Jacobean country house built by the jurist Sir Matthew Hale in 1656–1662. For the 70 years following the outbreak of World War II, the property served as the site for Rose Hill School, an independent day and boarding preparatory school, until its merger in 2009 with Querns Westonbirt School. The merger formed the Rose Hill Westonbirt School, which relocated to nearby Tetbury, and the vacant property was sold for use once again as a private residence.
  • Alderley Grange was rebuilt, probably by a Bristol architect, about 1760; it occupies the site of an earlier house where Matthew Hale was born. It was the home of James Lees-Milne, the architectural writer and memoirist, and his wife Alvilde Lees-Milne, who created a much-admired garden.

References

Notes

References

  1. "Parish population 2011".
  2. "Location of South Cotswolds".
  3. "DServe Archive Catalog Show". ww3.gloucestershire.gov.uk.
  4. "Alderley | Domesday Book". Domesdaymap.co.uk.
  5. "Access to Archives". The National Archives.
  6. "Archived copy".
  7. (1974). "Local Government in England and Wales: A Guide to the New System". H.M. Stationery Office.
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