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Thorley, Hertfordshire

Village in Hertfordshire, England


Village in Hertfordshire, England

FieldValue
countryEngland
static_image_nameSt James the Great Church, Thorley - geograph.org.uk - 234170.jpg
static_image_captionSt James the Great Church, Thorley
official_nameThorley
coordinates
population626
population_ref(2011 Census)
shire_districtEast Hertfordshire
shire_countyHertfordshire
regionEast of England
constituency_westminsterHertford and Stortford
post_townBISHOP'S STORTFORD
postcode_districtCM23
postcode_areaCM
os_grid_referenceTL 476 189

NOTOC Thorley is a village and civil parish in Bishops Stortford, East Hertfordshire district of Hertfordshire, England. The parish includes the hamlets of Thorley Street, Thorley Wash and Old Thorley, and is bordered at the north by the market town of Bishop's Stortford.

History

Thorley is listed in the Domesday Book of 1086 as "Torlei", belonging to Geoffrey de Mandeville, a notable Norman baron. During the reign of Edward the Confessor, Thorley Manor belonged to Earl Tostig.

Thorley is less than one mile north from Blounts Farm in the adjoining parish of High Wych, the place where, in 1966, the criminal Harry Roberts was found by police during a long manhunt after he had participated in the Shepherd's Bush murders of three London-based policemen. He was found in a barn hiding under straw. Roberts was familiar with the area as he had often visited it as a child with his mother.

Landmarks

Thorley Church, dedicated to St James the Great, is a Grade I listed building. It dates to the 13th century and includes a Norman font and a three-seat sedilia. The pulpit was designed by George Gilbert Scott. There is a one-thousand-year-old yew tree in the graveyard, which also has the grave of Daniel Defoe's sister. The graveyard is entered through a lychgate dating from the 1920s. The stocks and whipping post that stood in the graveyard until the late 20th century have now been moved to the Bishop's Stortford Museum. Samuel Horsley was rector of the Church from 1779 to 1782, following in the footsteps of his father John, who was rector from 1745 to 1777. From 1594 to 1610, the rector was Francis Burley, one of the translators of the King James Bible. A 16th-century Tudor barn in the adjoining farm was converted from pig barn to a church and community centre - called the St Barnabas Centre - in 1996 with the help of a £1 million endowment.

Thorley Wash nature reserve is a Site of Special Scientific Interest owned and managed by the Herts and Middlesex Wildlife Trust between the village and the Stort Navigation.

Amenities

Thorley has its own cricket club, Thorley C.C. The nearest local primary schools are Manor Fields Primary, Richard Whittington Primary and Thorley Hill Primary, all within and at the south of Bishops Stortford.

References

References

  1. "Civil Parish population 2011". Office for National Statistics.
  2. (16 November 1966). "Roberts charged with three murders". [[The Times]].
  3. Kray, Kate. (1999). "Natural Born Killers". Blake.
  4. [http://www.stortfordhistory.co.uk/thorley/thorley_church.html Bishop's Stortford and Thorley history and guide]
  5. "Friends of St James".
  6. "St Barnabas Barn".
  7. "Thorley Wash". Herts and Middlesex Wildlife Trust.
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