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Ropsley

Ropsley
Ropsley1.jpg
Ropsley
Ropsley is located in Lincolnshire
Ropsley
Ropsley
Ropsley shown within Lincolnshire
OS grid reference SK992342
• London 100 mi (160 km) S
Civil parish
District
Shire county
Region
Country England
Sovereign state United Kingdom
Post town GRANTHAM
Postcode district NG33
Police Lincolnshire
Fire Lincolnshire
Ambulance East Midlands
EU Parliament East Midlands
UK Parliament
List of places
UK
England
Lincolnshire
52°53′46″N 0°31′36″W / 52.8961°N 0.5268°W / 52.8961; -0.5268Coordinates: 52°53′46″N 0°31′36″W / 52.8961°N 0.5268°W / 52.8961; -0.5268

Ropsley is a village in the South Kesteven district of Lincolnshire, England. The village is situated approximately 5 miles (8 km) east from Grantham, and falls within the civil parish of Ropsley and Humby .

Ropsley is the location of the source of the River East Glen (River Eden).

Ropsley was the birthplace of Richard Foxe, the Tudor Bishop who funded the Grammar School at Grantham and Corpus Christi College at Oxford.

A 300-year-old ring dam, 0.5 miles (0.8 km) south-east from the village and identified by a group of trees, was once used as a sheep wash; the blue brickwork of the sheep wash can still be seen. There are paths from the village, past the ring dam, to Little Humby.

There several disused quarries nearby, two of which are situated within the village itself.

There is now one village public house: The Green Man, The Ropsley Fox closed down in 2012. Previous pubs included The Peacock. The village bakery was on the high street for 300 years, one of the oldest in the country, closing in 1979. Now a private house, many people can remember visiting the bakery as children to get the family bread and cakes.

Ropsley village hall has grounds which incorporate a basketball court, a football pitch and a cricket pitch. There is a 12-hole golf course on the outskirts of the village. The village running club is Ropsley Road Runners.

Ropsley war memorial is situated in the centre of the village and dedicated to First and Second World War servicemen. Each year on Remembrance Day a parade, led by a piper, travels from St Peter's Church to the memorial for two minutes silence.

A number of walks in the Ropsley area run through traditional English woodland, including Ropsley Rise Woods.

Previously there were several small farms in the Ropsley area. Today very little of the land is used for livestock; it is almost all arable farmland, growing crops including barley and oil seed rape.

The church of St Peter dates back to Norman times. Some parts of the church appear to be of Anglo-Saxon origin. The building dates back to at least 1380. In the 17th century part of the church was demolished and re built by the vicar of the time, Reverend Francis Furlong, because dry rot was discovered in the walls. Two war memorials are inside St Peter's Church: one commemorates War dead, the second, a stained glass window, is a memorial to Sgt Pilot of the Royal Air Force, William Philip Dales from Little Humby.


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