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Wickwar

Village in Gloucestershire, England


Village in Gloucestershire, England

FieldValue
static_image_name2011 - B4060 Wickwar High Street - geograph.org.uk - 2525258.jpg
static_image_captionWickwar High Street
countryEngland
official_nameWickwar
population2,083
population_ref(2021 census)
coordinates
civil_parishWickwar
unitary_englandSouth Gloucestershire
lieutenancy_englandGloucestershire
regionSouth West England
constituency_westminsterThornbury and Yate
post_townWOTTON-UNDER-EDGE
postcode_districtGL12
postcode_areaGL
dial_code01454
os_grid_referenceST7288

Wickwar is a village and civil parish in Gloucestershire, England, located between Yate and Charfield. At the 2021 census, the parish had a population of 2,083.

History

Wickwar was mentioned in the Domesday Book of 1086, where it appears as 'Wichen', from the Old English (aet) wicum, meaning '(at) the dwellings'. The manor was given to John la Warre by King John and was held by Roger la Warre in 1285, when it was referred to as 'Warre Wyke'. Warre is a Norman family name which gave its name to Wickwar.

The village lay on the Old Saltway from Droitwich to Old Sodbury and Pucklechurch, and was developed in the 13th century by the de la Warre family with the establishment of a market in 1285. The main street, the present High Street, was laid out around the market place with uniform burgage plots and rear access lanes. Burghers paid an annual fixed rent to the overlord and they carried on trades and crafts which, together with their property rights, distinguished them from the feudal peasant. Livestock were often kept on the burgage plots behind the house, and this necessitated the rear access lane.

The original settlement of Wickwar was located around the church and Poole Court, a 16th-century Manor House demolished in the 19th century, to the north of the village. All that remains of the Manor is its terraced garden, south-west of the church.

The parish church of the Holy Trinity is set on a small hill and is of 12th-century origin. At the northern edge of the village, it is reached by a raised footpath called the Stank, meaning "dam" – there were fish ponds here until the 19th century. It was extensively remodelled in the 14th and 15th centuries and was restored c.1881 by W L Bernard. Inside there is a sculpture of St John the Baptist dated 1496, which was originally housed at Poole Court. It is a Grade II* listed building.

To the north of the church, within the churchyard is the Sunday School, built in 1837 in a Gothic Revival style. The churchyard also has a number of chest tombs, which represent a collection of local and classical tomb forms.

The High Street has a collection of mostly 18th-century fronted, rendered or stuccoed houses, including Albert House and the Police station. The Town Hall c.1795 has arched openings and a bellcote with pinnacle. The Town Hall clock mechanism is thought to date from 1660.

The village is on the main Bristol–Birmingham railway line, and once had a station, but this was closed in January 1965. The village also used to have a shop and brewery which also closed in 2018 and 2020 respectively, leaving the village without any shops. There is also Wickwar Social Club, which is open to members only.

In April 2020, after hostility from the local area, a new home development in the village was targeted in a suspected arson attack, severely damaging a partially completed property.

Spherules are found lying unconformably over Carboniferous limestone in Wickwar Quarry. These are possibly tektite deposits, formed as molten material ejected by a meteorite impact that may have fallen back to Earth.

Governance

The village is part of 'Ladden Brook' electoral ward. This ward stretches south east to Iron Acton and east to Tytherington. The total population of the ward taken from the 2011 census was 3,858.

Recent events

1987 gas explosion

On the morning of 9 January 1987, a gas pipe running underneath the High Street exploded, demolishing a house and damaging others nearby. However, an off-duty policeman returning from a late-night game of backgammon smelt the gas and raised the alarm, evacuating the street before the explosion. His house was destroyed, and others significantly damaged, but no-one was harmed. As he said at the time, had he been in bed at the usual time, it would have been far worse.

As a result of the explosion, a ban on heavy vehicles was introduced throughout the village, as it was thought that frequent use of the road by lorries, coupled with freezing weather conditions, had caused the 1950s pipes to break.

Geronimo the Alpaca

In August 2021 the farm owned by Helen Macdonald in Wickwar became the focal point of a controversial decision by DEFRA to kill an alpaca named Geronimo after the animal tested positive for bovine tuberculosis. On 31 August it was confirmed that the animal had been "euthanised" by staff from the Animal and Plant Health Agency (APHA).

References

References

  1. "WICKWAR".
  2. "Place: Wickwar".
  3. Smith, A. H. (1964) The Place-names of Gloucestershire Vol. III
  4. Eilert Ekwall, ''Concise Oxford Dictionary of English Place-names'', p.517.
  5. "Land South of Horwood Lane Wickwar South Gloucestershire Archaeological Evaluation". Cotswold Archaeology.
  6. Plaster, Andrew. "Wickwar". Bristol & Avon Family History Society.
  7. "Parish History". Wickwar Parish Council.
  8. "Wickwar". South Gloucestershire Council.
  9. "Parish History – Wickwar Parish Council".
  10. "Parish Church of the Holy Trinity, Wickwar, South Gloucestershire".
  11. "Sunday School And Church Hall,10 Yards North West of Holy Trinity Church". Historic England.
  12. "A Brief History of Wickwar". Wickwar.
  13. (11 April 2020). "Fire damages house near Bristol overnight". Bristol Live.
  14. Kirkham, A. 2003. Glauconitic spherules from the Triassic of the Bristol area, SW England: probable microtektite pseudomorphs. Proceedings of the Geologists' Association, 114, 11–21
  15. "Ladden Brook ward 2011".
  16. (12 January 2016). "Gas explosion rocks Wickwar". Gazette.
  17. (6 August 2021). "No 10 refuses stay of execution for alpaca Geronimo who tested positive for bovine TB".
  18. "Alpacas to join march on Downing Street in bid to save Geronimo". Sky News.
  19. "Alpacas to join march on Downing Street in attempt to save Geronimo".
  20. (6 August 2021). "Geronimo: Minister urged not to allow 'healthy' alpaca's death". BBC News.
  21. (31 August 2021). "Geronimo the alpaca is killed after four-year battle to save him fails".
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