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Bretforton

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Bretforton
Bretforton post office
Population1,023 [1]
OS grid referenceSP092440
• London86 miles (138 km)
District
Shire county
Region
CountryEngland
Sovereign stateUnited Kingdom
Post townEVESHAM
Postcode districtWR11
Dialling code01386
PoliceWest Mercia
FireHereford and Worcester
AmbulanceWest Midlands
List of places
UK
England
Worcestershire

Bretforton is a rural village in Worcestershire, England. Bretforton is 4.4 miles east of Evesham, in the Vale of Evesham. It is the largest farming village around Evesham. At 2001, Bretforton has a population of roughly 1,023 with roughly 428 households and the area of the parish is 7.33 square kilometres.

There is a post office/shop, village hall, garage, sports and social club and a Royal British Legion club. The National Trust owns The Fleece Inn, a popular tourist attraction, which suffered serious fire damage in February 2005 and has now been completely restored. Bretforton First School (pupils aged 4-10) is a local authority school with no ex-officio governorship responsibility. There is also an active and popular pre-school nursery group held in the village hall.

Bretforton also has an exceptional Cricket Club which runs two teams on a Saturday in the Cotswold Hills Cricket League (The Cotswold Hills League covers a wide area of Warwickshire, Gloucestershire and Worcestershire) and one team on a Sunday in the Fearnley Worcestershire Sunday Cricket League.

Bretforton Cricket Club have just won the Cotswold Hills League Premier in 2009. It is their third Premier League title in 3 years [2006, 2007 and 2009] after winning the Cotswold Hills Division One in 2005. The 2nd Team play in the Cotswold Hills League Division Three title after being promoted in 3 consecutive years [2006; 2007 and 2008].

Bretforton is also proudly home to the renowned Bretforton Silver Band ,a grand distinction from the usual Brass Bands.


Also unusual for a village of its size, Bretforton has three substantial large gentry dwellings with large Jacobean Manor House, A Gothic Hall and a Grange.

History

The village dates at least from the Saxon period with 'Ton' a modern spelling of the Saxon (Germanic) 'tun' which meant enclosure or village. The village was owned as outlaying farmland of Evesham Abbey. After the dissolution of the monasteries in the 1540’s the principal landowning family was the Ashwin’s who owned the local Manor house.

Local Legends and Grisly History

The village has several local legends of ghosts and a surprising history of murder.

  • Spot Loggins Well is an old water well, about four hundred years old and its said locally to be haunted by a Lady or Cattle Driver who committed suicide there about two hundred years ago. The Water Well is located on the old Bretforton House Farm of the Appleby family and the Spot Loggin ghost is celebrated locally in Novemeber at the local Fleece Inn
  • A phantom funeral procession arrives at the church, though for whom it represents is a mystery.
  • Fields on either side of the church are said to be haunted by a decapitated woman, carrying her head under arm
  • Murder of Ann Cormell, 4th February 1707 by John Allen of Bretforton, Giles Hunt, Tom Dun, Thomas Palmer and Thomas Symonds. John Allen was later hung in a gibbet in Bretforton at what is now known as 'Allen's Barn'. This story is also the source of local couplet "Allen, Symounds, Palmer and Dun,the four biggest rogues under the sun"
  • Murder of a black US Solider Private Walter F. Shaw on the night of June 16/17th 1945. Albert Leslie Tomkins, Dennis William Tomkins and Royston Hay were later acquitted on the lesser charge of manslaughter
  • Bretforton Murder: Brenda Dawn Hirons in January 1976, bludgeoned to death at Fallon Bank by her adulterous husband Fred, so that he could be with his lover Muriel Faizey of Pershore

Education

Bretforton consists of two schools, one is a Pre-school and the other is a primary school. The schools are:

Places in Bretforton

The Fleece Inn

  • The Fleece Inn was originally built in about 1400 as a longhouse by a prosperous yeoman farmer called Byrd; longhouse is an early type of farmhouse which incorporated accommodation for livestock on the ground floor, alongside the family’s living quarters.
  • This particular longhouse later became a pub and was rebuilt in the 17th century, but remained in the Byrd family until 1977 when Lola Taplin bequeathed it to the National Trust.
  • Lola was a direct descendant of Mr Byrd and lived her entire life at the Fleece. She died at 83, having run the pub on her own for the last 30 years of her life.
  • A curious mediaeval tradition also survives at the Fleece, preserved in accordance with Lola’s wishes. This is the practice of chalking ‘witch circles’ on the floor in front of each hearth to prevent witches from getting in through the chimneys.
  • Reputedly Oliver Cromwell’s Pewter Dinner service was exchanged on the way to the battle of Worcester and this is on display at the pub. Even if this account is not true, this is a superb example of 17th century English Pewter ware.
  • The BBC has also used the Fleece Inn and surrounding village 'green' for it's 1993 £5 million production of Charles Dickens Martin Chuzzlewit where the pub was renamed the 'Green Dragon' for the duration of shooting.

Bretforton Manor

  • Although of earlier, medieval origin, the manor house, listed Grade II, was mainly built of local stone in 1605 and substantially remodelled in 1877 by the long standing Ashwin Family
  • Reputedly haunted - local gossip includes a Spectral horse and carriage part of a funeral procession and the sounds of thumps and bangs from the former nursery rooms
  • A secret priest-hole in the library
  • Popular legend ascribes the panelling in the hall to a Spanish galleon wrecked in the Armada of 1588
  • Bretforton Manor has four reception rooms, six bedrooms, five bathrooms and a staff flat.
  • It stands in 7.3 acres of grounds next to the church with outbuildings include stabling, a 15th century dovecote, a cider house and an indoor swimming-pool complex.

Bretforton Hall

  • Built in 1830 in neo-Gothic style
  • Notable features include a full Octagon shaped Gothic tower and gorgeous ogee headed windows
  • The Hall is now run as a private clinic providing treatment using Cymatics

St Leonards Church

  • The Grade I listed church building dates from 1140 onwards with medieval and some later additions; it seats 140.
  • Some of the most striking features are Victorian Glass but fragments of medieval glass also survive.
  • One window was designed by Frederick Preedy, one of the most renowned of Victorian church architects. He was born in 1820 at Offenham, near Evesham, and worked in Worcester before moving to London.
  • There is a band of bell ringers and a flower guild and a church and brass cleaning rota.

Bretforton Home Farm

  • Mixed Stone and redbrick building; a mixture of late Stuart and Georgian styles, parts of building maybe of earlier origin
  • Location of the famous Spot Loggins Well

References

[[File:Weston Road.JPG|thumb|left|Picture of Weston Road, Weston Road is the main road running through Bretforton. (2009)]

  1. ^ 2001 Census Worcestershire County Population Report (pdf), retrieved 2007-08-31
Picture of Filming at the Fleece Inn,(1993)
Picture of Filming at the Fleece Inn,(1993)