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Eardisley

Village and civil parish in Herefordshire, England

Eardisley

Village and civil parish in Herefordshire, England

FieldValue
official_nameEardisley
static_image_nameOlde-worlde_facades,_Eardisley,_Herefordshire.jpg
coordinates
os_grid_referenceSO3149
label_positiontop
population754
population_ref(2011 census)
civil_parishEardisley
unitary_englandCounty of Herefordshire
lieutenancy_englandHerefordshire
regionWest Midlands
countryEngland
post_townHereford
postcode_districtHR3
postcode_areaHR
dial_code01544
constituency_westminsterNorth Herefordshire
website[Eardisley Group Parish Council](http://www.eardisleygroupcommunity.co.uk/parish/index.aspx)

Eardisley () is a village and civil parish in Herefordshire about 5 mi south of the centre of Kington. Eardisley is in the Wye valley in the northwest of the county, close to the border with Wales.

The village is part of the "Black and white village trail", having many timber-framed buildings along its high street. Recent dendrochronology dating work on timbers in these buildings has revealed that some parts date back to the 14th century.

History

Recorded as Herdeslege in 1086, *Eierdesl''' in 1249 and *Erdesleye'' in 1269, the name is believed to derive from an Old English personal name, perhaps Ægheard. Eardisley Park estate includes the site of Eardisley Castle. The manor house built during the Georgian period burned down in 1999 and was replaced with a replica in 2003.

Churches

St Mary Magdalene

St Mary Magdalene's church

The Church of England parish church of St. Mary Magdalene is a 12th-century building noted for its font, carved in about 1150. It is a Norman work of the Herefordshire School and bears some resemblance to the carvings at Kilpeck in south Herefordshire.

The south aisle windows were renewed by the Gothic Revival architect Ewan Christian in 1863.

George Coke, Bishop of Hereford, was buried here. The churchyard extension contains the Commonwealth war graves of a Herefordshire Regiment soldier of World War I and a Royal Engineers soldier and a Voluntary Aid Detachment nurse of World War II.

Eardisley Methodist Church

Eardisley Methodist Church in Woodseaves Road is in the Shropshire and Marches Methodist Circuit. It opened in 1867 as Eardisley Primitive Methodist Church.

Hay Railway

The Hay Railway was an early narrow gauge horse tramway that connected Eardisley with Watton Wharf on the Brecknock and Abergavenny Canal in Brecon. From 1 May 1820, the Hay Railway was joined at its Eardisley terminus, in an end-on junction, by the Kington Tramway. Together, the two lines totalled 36 mi in length, comprising the longest continuous plateway to be completed in the United Kingdom. The Hay railway operated through rural areas on the borders of England and Wales and was built to transport goods and freight. Passengers were not carried on any official basis. The Hay Railway was absorbed into the Hereford, Hay and Brecon Railway in 1860 and the line was converted to standard gauge for operation by steam locomotives.

Amenities

Eardisley has two public houses, the Tram Inn and The New Strand. The New Strand is the headquarters for the North West Herefordshire Pool League which incorporates the Eardisley Summer Pool League and the Portway Winter Pool League.

The New Strand is also headquarters to the Hay and District Darts League & the Weobley and District Darts League.

The parish has a Women's Institute. The village holds the annual Eardisley Flower Show on August Bank Holiday each year.

Notable people

  • Louise Skelton, British equestrian athlete
  • Jessica Raine, British actress

Notes

Sources

References

  1. "Civil Parish population 2011".
  2. Ekwall, Eilert. (1947). "The Concise Oxford Dictionary of English Place-Names". Oxford University Press.
  3. "Eardisley Park, Eardisley, Herefordshire, England". Parksandgardens.org.
  4. (3 July 2003). "What ever happened to 'Bleak House?'". Hereford Times.
  5. Pevsner, 1963, page 121
  6. "Church of St.mary Magdalene, Eardisley". British Listed Buildings.
  7. [http://www.cwgc.org/39344/EARDISLEY%20(ST.%20MARY%20MAGDALENE)%20CHURCHYARD%20EXTENSION] CWGC cemetery report, details from casualty record.
  8. "Eardisley Methodist Church".
  9. (September 2020). "Eardisley Primitive Methodist Chapel".
  10. (1997). "The Oxford companion to British railway history from 1603 to the 1990s". Oxford University Press.
  11. (1980). "A Regional History of the Railways of Great Britain Volume XI: North and mid Wales". David & Charles.
  12. "Eardisley Flower Show". Eardisley Group Parish Council.
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