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Bolsterstone

Bolsterstone
Village Street, Bolsterstone - geograph.org.uk - 1626826.jpg
Bolsterstone is located in Sheffield
Bolsterstone
Bolsterstone
Bolsterstone shown within Sheffield
Metropolitan borough
Metropolitan county
Region
Country England
Sovereign state United Kingdom
Post town SHEFFIELD
Postcode district S36
Dialling code 0114
Police South Yorkshire
Fire South Yorkshire
Ambulance Yorkshire
EU Parliament Yorkshire and the Humber
UK Parliament
List of places
UK
England
Yorkshire
53°28′01″N 1°35′38″W / 53.467°N 1.594°W / 53.467; -1.594Coordinates: 53°28′01″N 1°35′38″W / 53.467°N 1.594°W / 53.467; -1.594

Bolsterstone is a village in South Yorkshire, England, south of , and 8.5 miles to the northwest of the City of Sheffield and within the city borough. It lies on the border of the Peak District national park. Bolsterstone had a population of 386 in 2011.

Bolsterstone is less than 1 km south of the town of within the civil parish of Stocksbridge, and the electoral ward of . The village is at a height of around 300 m (980 ft) above sea level on the northern side of the east–west Ewden valley, north of the Broomhead reservoir and More Hall reservoir.

The origin of the name "Bolsterstone" is unknown; it may a corruption of the root word "Walder" (also used in local place names, including a barrow), or may refer to two large stones in the village, which are referred to as the "Bolster Stones". The village is thought to have been established in the Anglo-Saxon period.St Mary's Church, Bolsterstone was founded in 1412, and a fortified manor house ("Bolsterstone castle") is thought to have be built by an Earl of Shrewsbury. Two buildings dating from the 16th or 17th centuries are thought to be remnants of the castle: Castle Cottages are mostly 19th-century with parts of walls dating from the earlier period; Porters Lodge, also mostly 19th-century, is thought to contain elements of the castle gatehouse.

A Free School was built in the village in 1686 (rebuilt 1780). Land around the village was enclosed after 1778, and St. Mary's church was rebuilt in the 1790s. In 1802 the entire manor of Bolsterstone, over 3,460 acres (14.0 km2) was put up for sale, and acquired by James Rimington.

The Castle Inn was built in 1840; Bolsterstone National School in 1851/2 and the Free School rebuilt in 1857; and a vicarage built in 1862; between 1872 and 1879 St Mary's church was again rebuilt.

As of 2009 the village functions as a residential village; the village has no shops, and both schools have closed; the National School building is used as a village hall.

Two first-class cricketers were born in Bolsterstone: the brothers Clem and Rockley Wilson.


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