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Meole Brace

Suburb of Shrewsbury, England

Meole Brace

Summary

Suburb of Shrewsbury, England

FieldValue
countryEngland
coordinates
official_nameMeole Brace
civil_parishShrewsbury
unitary_englandShropshire
lieutenancy_englandShropshire
regionWest Midlands
constituency_westminsterShrewsbury and Atcham
post_townShrewsbury
postcode_districtSY3
postcode_areaSY
dial_code01743
os_grid_referenceSJ491106
static_image_nameMeole Brace Church of Holy Trinity 2013-09-22 12-30-09.jpg
static_image_captionChurch of Holy Trinity, Meole Brace

Meole Brace, also known simply as Meole ( ), is a south-western suburb of Shrewsbury, in the civil parish of Shrewsbury, in Shropshire, England.

The Rea Brook, a tributary of the River Severn, flows through the area. The brook was in the past known as the "Meole Brook".

Meole Village is the name used locally for the older part of Meole Brace, which was originally a village outside Shrewsbury. It still retains a village feel, though it is surrounded by newer urban development. This older settlement lies on the route of a Roman road and could be older than the town of Shrewsbury.

Nearby are the small villages of Nobold and Pulley.

History

In 1931 the parish had a population of 2253. On 1 April 1935 the parish was abolished and portions merged with Shrewsbury, Condover and Great Hanwood.

Etymology

Meole Brace takes the first part of its name from the Meole Brook, the etymology of whose name is debated. The settlement is first attested under this name in the Domesday Book of 1086, as Mela. Thereafter the name is usually attested in the plural, with thirteenth-century spellings including Meles, Moles, Meoles and Mueles. It is thought that the name came to be used in plural form because several different landowners held parts of the Meole estate. The name is first attested with the addition of Brace in 1274, as Melesbracy. This element comes from the name of the de Braci family, which held part of the land at Meole.

Early history and archaeology

An Iron Age double ring ditch has been excavated at Meole Brace. Amongst other finds, parts of an iron age sword and scabbard were recovered.

Also at Meole Brace, an extensive roadside settlement along the line of the Roman military road connecting Viroconium Cornoviorum (Wroxeter) and Caersws was uncovered, with evidence of trading of amphorae and mortaria.

Amenities

The A5112 (Hereford Road), formerly the A49, is the main road running north–south. There is a large retail park in Meole Brace, with several leading retailers. The Welsh Marches and Cambrian railway lines run through the area, but there is no longer a railway station here.

Meole Brace retail park

There is a local comprehensive secondary school, Meole Brace School, and in the heart of the village there is a Church of England primary school and nursery.

The village also has a church, Holy Trinity Meole Brace (part of Trinity Churches). Built at a cost of £7500 on the site of the old vicarage, the present building was consecrated by the Bishop of Hereford in 1869 and is a Grade II* listed building. The parish is now in the Church of England Diocese of Lichfield.

A social centre of the Meole village is the Peace Memorial Hall in Church Road, erected by the Meole Brace Literary and Debating Society and opened in 1922 to serve the community in honour of villagers who died and those who served in the First World War. The Hall contains a framed roll of honour listing all who served.

Sports

Meole Brace is home to Meole Brace Bowling Club, built in 1934, and to the council-run 12-hole Meole Brace Municipal Golf Course. The course links the village to the nearby settlements of Reabrook and Sutton Park as well as Rea Brook Valley Nature Reserve.

The suburb has a sunday league football club, AFC Meole Brace, who currently compete in the Shrewsbury & District Sunday League. They play home games at Church Road.

The New Meadow (aka Croud Meadow), the home ground of Shrewsbury Town F.C., is located just to the east of the suburb.

Notable residents

  • Thomas Barker (fishing guide) (fl.1591-1651), author of The Arte of Angling, was born at Meole Brace, then called by him Bracemeol.
  • Edward Bather (1779-1847), later Archdeacon of Salop, was Vicar of Meole Brace from 1804 until his death there.
  • Thomas Bucknall Lloyd (1824-1896), later Archdeacon of Salop, was Vicar of Meole Brace 1851–1854.
  • Lucy Elizabeth Bather (1830-1864), writer for children as 'Aunt Lucy', lived at Meole Brace from her marriage in 1860 and died at Meole Brace Hall.
  • Henry Bather (1832-1905), later Archdeacon of Ludlow, was Vicar of Meole Brace 1858–97.
  • James Cosmo Melvill (naturalist) (1845-1929) lived at Meole Brace Hall from 1904 to his death.
  • William Bather (1861-1939) born at Meole Brace, first-class cricketer, later clergyman who was Vicar of Meole Brace 1897-1930.
  • Mary Webb (1881-1927), poet and novelist, lived at Meole Brace from 1902 to her marriage in 1912.
  • Lady Joan Dunn (1918-2018), one of first women to work for MI6, died a resident at Maesbrook care home in Meole Brace.
  • Leon Leuty (1920-1955) born at Meole Brace, professional footballer notably for Derby County and Notts County.

Literature

Meole Brace is mentioned in The Cadfael Chronicles.

References

References

  1. "Population statistics Meole Brace AP/CP through time". [[A Vision of Britain through Time]].
  2. "Relationships and changes Meole Brace AP/CP through time". A Vision of Britain through Time.
  3. (2004). "The Cambridge Dictionary of English Place-Names, Based on the Collections of the English Place-Name Society". Cambridge University Press.
  4. "Library".
  5. Bain, Kate. "A Late Iron Age and Early Romano-British Enclosure at Meole Brace, Shrewsbury". Transactions of the Shropshire Historical and Archaeological Society.
  6. (March 2007). "Meole Brace, Shrewsbury Archaeological Investigations 2005-6 Post-Excavation Assessment".
  7. "ASPROM: Wroxeter and its hinterland, by R. H. White".
  8. http://www.completelyretail.co.uk/scheme/3267 Meole Brace Retail Park on CompletelyRetail
  9. {{NHLE
  10. "Trinity Churches".
  11. Francis, Peter. (2013). "Shropshire War Memorials, Sites of Remembrance". YouCaxton, Bishops Castle.
  12. "Crockford's Clerical Directory, 1938". Oxford University Press.
  13. Toby Neal. (23 July 2018). "Witness to rise of the Nazis dies at Shropshire home aged 100".
  14. Leuty, Leon. (15 March 1955). "My career was nearly over before it had even started!". Derby Evening Telegraph.
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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