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Ellerdine

Ellerdine
Ellerdine Village Hall - geograph.org.uk - 601482.jpg
Ellerdine village hall
Ellerdine is located in Shropshire
Ellerdine
Ellerdine
Ellerdine shown within Shropshire
OS grid reference SJ608207
Civil parish
Unitary authority
Ceremonial county
Region
Country England
Sovereign state United Kingdom
Post town TELFORD
Postcode district TF6
Dialling code 01952
Police West Mercia
Fire Shropshire
Ambulance West Midlands
EU Parliament West Midlands
UK Parliament
List of places
UK
England
ShropshireCoordinates: 52°46′59″N 2°34′48″W / 52.783°N 2.580°W / 52.783; -2.580

Ellerdine is a small hamlet located six miles north of the market town of Wellington, Shropshire.

It is located at the convergence of six ancient footpaths and comprises two small communities; Ellerdine and Ellerdine Heath and is located within the parish of Ercall Magna, the administrative centre of which is in the neighbouring village of High Ercall. The village consists of a number of scattered farms and cottages with a small cluster of council houses.

Local attractions include Ellerdine Lakes, one of the main trout fisheries in the county

The area is served by one Public House officially known as The Royal Oak, the establishment is known locally as The Tiddly

The village benefits from the presence of a well equipped Village Hall

Prior to the Norman Conquest it is recorded that Ellerdine was held by a free man named Dodo. It is next recorded that Henry II gifted the manor to Iorwerth Goch as a reward for his services as an interpreter during the Welsh-English border wars. The manor subsequently passed through several hands. By the nineteenth century, the manor was in the possession of Henry de Vere Vane, 9th Baron Barnard of the County of Durham. Following his death in 1918, the manor passed to his son Christopher William Vane, 10th Baron Barnard, who in 1930, split up the manor and sold off the plots, giving first refusal to the tenants, many of whom took the opportunity to purchase their own properties.

Historically there was a standing stone within the village, thought to date from medieval times but it has recently been removed

In 1926, fourteen council houses were built near the village school, each with its own pigsty, they all shared a communal water pump. Twenty-eight years later in 1954 another ten homes were constructed opposite and the area received a brick water tower complete with an electric pump to supply water to all the houses. This remained in use until 1965, when mains water was piped to the village.

John Beard (1871-1950), the trade union leader, was born at Ellerdine Heath, educated at the local Primitive Methodist day school, and died while staying at the village. His ashes were scattered in nearby Rowton churchyard.


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