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Wigginton, Staffordshire

Wigginton
View of the church in the winter snow
St Leonard's Church, Wigginton
Wigginton is located in Staffordshire
Wigginton
Wigginton
Wigginton shown within Staffordshire
OS grid reference SK208067
Civil parish
District
Shire county
Region
Country England
Sovereign state United Kingdom
Post town TAMWORTH
Postcode district B79
Dialling code 01827
Police Staffordshire
Fire Staffordshire
Ambulance West Midlands
EU Parliament West Midlands
UK Parliament
List of places
UK
England
Staffordshire
52°39′30″N 1°41′30″W / 52.6583°N 1.6917°W / 52.6583; -1.6917Coordinates: 52°39′30″N 1°41′30″W / 52.6583°N 1.6917°W / 52.6583; -1.6917

Wigginton is a village in the district of Lichfield, in Staffordshire, England. The population as taken at the 2011 census can be found under Tamworth. It lies about 2 miles (3 km) north of Tamworth.

The name Wigginton is believed to come from Old English, and to mean Wicga's farm. The name was also sometimes written as Wiggington.

The village lies on a medieval trade route, the Portway, possibly used for transporting salt from the River Mease at Edingale to Tamworth.

Ecclesiastically Wigginton had been a chapelry attached to the parish of St Editha in Tamworth. For civil government it had been a township – the township was more than just the village, and included the hamlets of Comberford and Coton, the latter now part of the borough of Tamworth. In 1866 the township became a civil parish, and became part of Tamworth Rural District in 1894. In 1934 the civil parish was extended to become Wigginton and Hopwas, and became part of Lichfield Rural District.

In 1861 the population of Wigginton township was 670, on 3,470 acres (1,400 ha). The population figure included 84 inmates of the Tamworth workhouse, which at that time lay within the township. The population of the chapelry alone was 466.

Grade II listed buildings in Wigginton village include two or three houses, and the Church of St Leonard. The former Anglican chapel, now a church, was rebuilt in 1777, extended in 1830, and altered again in 1861 to a design by Nicholas Joyce. Situated within the modern village is a shrunken medieval village, denoted by a series of pronounced earthworks to the northern end of the village, and medieval ridge and furrow still clearly visible in surrounding fields. To the south west of the village is the former site, now ploughed out, of a likely bronze age barrow, formerly known as "Robin Hood's Butt". Several finds of archaeological interest have been made in the area around the village: to the North West, is a flat space formerly called the "Money Lands", where human bones and ancient coins, thought to be Roman, were recovered in a find made in the 18th Century.


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