Wormingford

Wormingford

infobox UK place
country = England
official_name= Wormingford
latitude= 51.9581
longitude= 0.8194
os_grid_reference= TL938325
population =
civil_parish= Wormingford
shire_district=
shire_county = Essex
region= East of England
constituency_westminster= North Essex
post_town= COLCHESTER
postcode_area= CO
postcode_district= CO6
dial_code= 01787

Wormingford is a parish in Essex, England.

The ancient parish of Wormingford on the south bank of the river Stour, 6 miles north- west of Colchester and 8 miles south-east of Sudbury, Suffolk, covered 2,322 acres (929 hectares). The Stour forms the northern boundary, and the eastern, southern, and western ones follow mainly field boundaries, but sometimes cut through fields. Detached fields totalling 15 acres in Little Horkesley, were transferred to that parish in 1889.

Wormingford features a Post Office and Public House and restaurant called The Crown.

Most of the parish lies on a relatively high plain which drains northwards to the River Stour and southwards to the River Colne. From the Stour the ground rises southwards to reach a height of more than 225 ft. (70 metres) in the south-west. A band of alluvium runs beside the Stour and there are river terrace deposits south of that, then, as the ground rises, bands of London clay, and sands and gravels. Most of the higher south part of the parish is boulder clay, good farming land, with a small pocket of sands and gravels running south-east from Wood Hall. Wormingford Mere of 12 acres is a natural feature formed by the Stour.

The main road from Colchester to Bures and Sudbury (B1508) runs from south-east to north-west across the parish. Minor roads connected the parish with Assington (Suffolk) across Wormingford bridge, with Fordham, and with Little Horkesley and Nayland (Suffolk). Other minor roads and tracks and a network of footpaths link the scattered farms and houses.

The ford from which the parish takes its name (originally Withermund's ford) was probably that over the river Stour by the watermill, at the bottom of Church Road, where there is a sand bank in the middle of the river. A ford further east near Garnons has also been suggested, but seems less likely. The Church Road ford was replaced before 1802 by a bridge, called a horse-bridge in 1812. About 1821 Messrs. Jones, who leased the river tolls, built a new bridge, apparently a narrow wooden footbridge. It collapsed in the winter of 1895-6 and was replaced by an iron bridge in 1898.

The modern form of the place name, recorded from 1254, gave rise to three stories of dragons, (worm meaning serpent or dragon). The first story says the village is the location where the patron saint of England, St. George famously killed his dragon, a mound can be found in the village which is said to be the body of the legendary dragon buried under the mound. The second, apparently unsubstantiated, is that a crocodile escaped from Richard I of England's menagerie in the Tower of London and caused much damage in Wormingford before being killed by Sir George Marney. There is a stained glass window in the local parish church (St Andrew's) which depicts this event.

The third, written in 1405 by John de Trokelowe, a monk, told of a dragon who threatened Richard Waldegrave's territory near Sudbury but fled into the Mere when pursued.

A large number of scattered archaeological finds from all periods from the Neolithic suggest that settlement was first on the flood plain, alongside the Stour, before woodland on the higher ground further south was gradually cleared. Prehistoric tools were found in the complex of ring ditches and other crop marks near the Mere in the north-west of the parish; when a Bronze Age barrow nearby was destroyed in 1836 'hundreds of urns in rows' were found.

The artist John Constable of East Bergholt (1776-1837), had Wormingford associations, his relatives farming at Wormingford Hall and Gernons. John Nash R.A., who lived at Bottengoms, painted in and around the village from 1929 until 1977.

Wormingford Air Field

Originally a relief airfield for bi-planes in WWI, the airfield was expanded by Richard Costain Ltd and helped by a number of sub-contractors during the period 1942/43. Earmarked for an Eighth Heavy Bomb Group, nothing ever came of this and at the end of November 1943 the yet to be completed station was handed to the Ninth Air Force for use by one of its Fighter Groups. On the last day of November the 362nd Fighter Group arrived at Wormingford. The Group was assigned to the 70th Fighter Wing. They did not fly their first mission until 8 February 1944. Their operational status at Wormingford was a short one and they left on 8 April 1944. During their stay the 362nd had mounted over 30 missions, losing five aircraft.

The next group to move in was that of the 55th Fighter Group with their P-38 Lightning’s having come from Nuthampstead in Hertfordshire. The 55th role as a fighter group was to be a short one due to some of the disadvantages of the aircraft. However the 55th would later become renowned for ground strafing and ground attack bombing. On D-Day the P-38 groups were given the task of acting as convoy escorts for the armada of ships moving to and from Normandy. The 55th was selected to serve with the occupation forces in Germany and in July 1945 they left Wormingford for Gielbelstadt airfield in Bavaria. The old airfield is now used by the Essex and Suffolk Gliding club for more peaceful forms of flying.

Wormingford Cricket Club

The cricket club has been a part of the village for many years. The team currently plays in the PDQ North division, which it joined in 1976 then rejoined in 1991.

None of the Wormingford cricket players actually live in the village itself!

References

Excerpts from:
*'Wormingford: Introduction', A History of the County of Essex: Volume 10: *Lexden Hundred (Part) including Dedham, Earls Colne and Wivenhoe (2001), pp. 295-99.
* [http://www.british-history.ac.uk/report.asp?compid=15289] . Date accessed: 06 September 2006.

External links

* [http://www.btinternet.com/~wormingford/] Wormingford Website
* [http://www.thecrownwormingford.com/] The Crown Pub & Restaurant Website
*(http://www.fusiveweb.co.uk/wormingfordcc Wormingford Cricket Club


Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Нужна курсовая?

Look at other dictionaries:

  • RAF Wormingford — Infobox Military Structure name= Royal Air Force Station Wormingford USAAF Station 159 location= Located Near Colchester, Essex, England coordinates=coord|51|56|27.73|N|000|47|23.47|E| caption= Wormingford Airfield 10 May 1946 type= Military… …   Wikipedia

  • Eighth Air Force — emblem Part of Air …   Wikipedia

  • List of RAF stations — This List of RAF stations is a comprehensive list of all stations, airbases, airfields and administrative headquarters of the Royal Air Force past and present.:Note Current RAF Stations will be listed under the currently recognised county of the… …   Wikipedia

  • RAF Daws Hill — Royal Air Force Station Daws Hill USAAF Station 1101 Located Near …   Wikipedia

  • List of places in Essex — This is a list of cities, towns, villages and other named geographical features in the county of Essex, England. See the list of places in England for places in other counties.compactTOC NOTOC A*Abberton *Abbess Roding *Abridge *Aldham… …   Wikipedia

  • RAF Molesworth — Royal Air Force Molesworth USAAF Station 107 …   Wikipedia

  • List of civil parishes in Essex — This is a list of civil parishes in the ceremonial county of Essex, England.Basildon (district)*Billericay *Great Burstead and South Green *Little Burstead *Noak Bridge (2002) *Ramsden Bellhouse *Ramsden CraysBraintree (district)*Alphamstone… …   Wikipedia

  • RAF Debden — Royal Air Force Station Debden Carver Barracks USAAF Station 156 …   Wikipedia

  • Colchester Garrison — Main article: History of Colchester Colchester Garrison is located in Colchester in the county of Essex. It has been an important military base since the Roman era. The first permanent military garrison in Colchester was established by Legio XX… …   Wikipedia

  • Ronald Blythe — (born 1922) is an English writer and editor, best knownFact|date=April 2007 in his native England for his Akenfield: Portrait of an English Village (1969), a portrait of agricultural life in Suffolk from the turn of the century to the 1960s. As… …   Wikipedia

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”