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Ansty, Warwickshire

Village in Warwickshire, England


Summary

Village in Warwickshire, England

FieldValue
official_nameAnsty
static_image_nameAnsty -Warwickshire -main road -6j08.jpg
static_image_captionThe main road through Ansty
coordinates
os_grid_referenceSP397833
civil_parishAnsty
population299
population_ref(2021 Census)
shire_districtRugby
shire_countyWarwickshire
regionWest Midlands
countryEngland
post_townCoventry
postcode_districtCV7
postcode_areaCV
dial_code024
constituency_westminsterRugby
websiteAnsty Parish Council

Ansty is a village and civil parish in the Rugby Borough of Warwickshire, England, about 5 mi northeast of Coventry city centre and 7 miles (13 km) south of Hinckley. Ansty is on the B4065, which used to be the main road between Coventry and Hinckley. The junction between the M6 and M69 motorways and A46 road is 1 mi southwest of the village. The parish had a population of 299 at the 2021 Census.

The northern section of the Oxford Canal, once a major coal-carrying network and now a popular leisure resource, passes through the village. Ansty has been cited as "the most boater-hostile village on the canals" because of the huge number of "no mooring" signs.

History

The Domesday Book of 1086 mentions Anestie as part of the hundred of Brinklow. The main landowner was Lady Godiva. Ansty was part of the County of the City of Coventry from 1451 until that county was dissolved in 1842.

The Church of England parish church of Saint James has a 13th-century chancel. The arcade between the nave and north aisle is 14th century. Sir George Gilbert Scott rebuilt the rest of the church in 1856.

Ansty Hall, just outside the village, was built in 1678 for Richard Taylor, who had been on the Parliamentarian side in the English Civil War. The house is arranged in seven bays and built of brick with stone quoins and pediment. It is now the Ansty Hall Hotel.

A cottage industry of weaving developed in the parish from early in the 18th century. This grew into a substantial ribbon-making trade early in the 19th century, but declined in the 1830s.

James Brindley completed the section of the Oxford Canal through Ansty in 1771. In November 1963 a 30 ft high embankment on the towpath side gave way, spilling 10,000 tons of sand and clay onto adjoining land.

RAF Ansty, a Royal Air Force training base, operated nearby between 1936 and 1953. In the 1940s, 1950s and 1960s, Armstrong Siddeley Motors had its development plant for gas turbines and aircraft rocket motors as well as the Gamma rocket motors used in the Black Knight and Black Arrow launchers. The plant is now the Ansty engineering works of Rolls-Royce. In 2013, Rolls-Royce announced the closure of the military part of the plant.{{cite news

In 2012, Ansty erected its first War Memorial, a black obelisk, after the hard work of local villagers headed by Chief Petty Officer Dean Bateman.{{cite news

In 2017 London Electric Vehicle Company (part of the Geely Group) established a major production facility for EV taxis and vans 1.5 miles south of the village at Ansty Park (separated by the M6 motorway).

Amenities

Ansty has a gastropub restaurant, The Rose and Castle just beside the canal and The Ansty Club on Grove Road. There is also The Ansty Golf Club which is open to none members.

References

Sources

References

  1. "Ansty Parish in West Midlands". City Population.
  2. "Ansty Visitor Moorings — Gazetteer – CanalPlanAC".
  3. Stephens, 1969, pages 98-103
  4. (1936). "''The Place-names of Warwickshire''". The English Place-name Society.
  5. Pevsner & Wedgwood, 1966, page 67
  6. "Ansty Hall Hotel".
  7. Compton, 1976, page 19
  8. Compton, 1976, page 152
  9. [[Flight (magazine). ''Flight'' magazine]], July 1956
Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

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