- Hampton-in-Arden
Hampton-in-Arden is a
village located within the borough of Solihull, in the West Midlands ofEngland . The village was previously located within the county ofWarwickshire , until the 1974 county boundary changes. It lies in the countryside betweenBirmingham andCoventry . Its population in the 2001 census was 1,655. The parish has two pubs,Beeches Bar & Grill , on Marsh Lane, andThe White Lion on the High Street.Hampton was mentioned in
Domesday , when it was under a Norman overlord. A priest was recorded, implying that the Parish Church existed. This is confirmed by the Norman Chancel and other traces of this style in the South Arcade. The church dates from about 1130. Thespire was a local landmark, until it was destroyed by lightning in November 1643. Only a battlemented tower remains. The church was heavily restored in 1878.There are some well preserved 17th century and timber framed houses, some of which are listed. A 15th century five bay Pack Horse
Bridge that crosses the River Blythe is nearby. Hampton-in-Arden is regarded as one of the first "Railway Villages".It has been claimed that the village was the setting for the Shakespeare play "
As You Like It ".Hampton in Arden is a typical Arden village, but is now very much a commuter development for nearby
Birmingham ,Solihull andCoventry . TheM42 motorway , Birmingham International Airport and theNEC are nearby.Transport
The village was renamed in the 1840s, around the time of the arrival of the
London and Birmingham Railway line, which runs through it. The re-naming was designed to eliminate confusion with other villages named Hampton; "-in-Arden" was added, because the village is located within the historicForest of Arden .Hampton was at the southern end of the
Birmingham and Derby Junction Railway , later part of theMidland Railway . Opened as a double-track main line onAugust 12 1839 , the section from Whitacre to Hampton, known as theStonebridge Railway , was downgraded to a branch line in 1842 after the opening of the line from Whitacre intoBirmingham ; it was singled in 1843 and lost its final passenger service in 1917 as a wartime economy measure. After lingering on as a goods line, it was closed entirely in 1935 following a bridge failure at Packwood. The line had originally enabled passengers from theTamworth , Kingsbury, Whitacre,Shustoke and Coleshill areas to make connections at Hampton for other parts of the country, because at one time theMidland Railway and theLondon and North Western Railway had stations side by side at Hampton, at the point where the two lines met (called Derby Junction). The Midland station building can still be seen, but the LNWR station disappeared long ago, being replaced by the presentHampton-in-Arden railway station some 500m nearerLondon in 1884. The track bed of the old Midland route remains and a footpath for hikers and railway buffs runs alongside it until the Arden Brickworks.External links
*gbmapping|SP205815
* [http://www.mikechester.f9.co.uk/hampton.htm Church Bells]
* [http://www.bplphoto.co.uk/imagefiles/F22/Pages/F22-128.html Pictures]
* [http://www.railaroundbirmingham.co.uk/Stations/hampton_in_arden.php The Station]
* [http://www.thebeecheshampton.co.uk The Beeches Bar & Grill] 1.3 miles from the NEC
* [http://www.thewhitelioninn.com The White Lion Inn]
* [http://www.hampton-monthly.co.uk Hampton Monthly - news from around the village]
* [http://www.hamptoninarden.org.uk Hampton-in-Arden Parish Website]
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