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Nottinghamshire Towns and Villages
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Church of St. Mary, Arnold - Photo:
Tom
Courtney
CCL |
This busy centre is famous for
the manufacture of hosiery and lace. It is now a
suburb of the City of Nottingham and has both the
county’s fire brigade and police constabulary
within its boundaries. In the 12th century it was
part of the great Sherwood Forest, small parts of
which still survive. The birthplace of painter
Richard Parkes Bonington, it has a fine parish
church that dates back to the late 13th century.
The remains of a Roman settlement can be found at
Cockpit Hill. |
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Lying on the banks of the
great River Trent, this ancient town is today
dominated by industry, notably in the form of
factories serving Boots the Chemist. It was Jesse
Boot who founded this medicinal empire in his 20s
after taking control of a herbal business founded
by his father in Nottingham. He rapidly expanded
the business and in 1883 created Boot and Company
Ltd., with himself as chairman and managing
director. The rest, as they say, is history.
Reminders of the town’s
origins can be seen at the Church of St Mary,
which dates back to the 14th century. Its many
interesting features include a tower with a
rebuilt spire, hammerbeam roofs, painted rood
screen and a 16th century pulpit.
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Beeston Lock - Photo:
Christine Hasman
CCL |
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Costock Church - Photo:
Chris J Dixon
CCL |
This village lies in the
Rushcliffe area of Nottinghamshire and boasts one
of Britain’s largest vineyards, Eglantine. Named
after the wild rose that inhabits English
hedgerows, the company began with a cutting from
the Great Vine of Hampton Court in 1935. Planting
began in 1980 and there are now four acres of
vines comprising one of the largest collection of
grape varieties in the country, with over 120
different vines. |
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Close by are the Trent Bridge
cricket ground, the National Watersports Centre
and beautiful Belvoir Castle, a fortress rebuilt
during the 17th century for the 8th Duke of
Rutland. The castle displays works by painters
such as Holbein, Gainsborough and Rubens. The area
also has a fine selection of museums and gardens,
including the charity-run Flintham Museum, which
has reconstructed old-fashioned shops. |

Belvoir Castle - Photo:
Kate Jewell
CCL |
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Thrumpton Hall - Photo:
Chris J Dixon
CCL |
Flintham Hall is a Victorian
conservatory considered the finest of its type
left in England while Thrumpton Hall is a 16th
century Jacobean house with a Charles 11 staircase
and a splendid drawing room. It has Byron
memorabilia.
Nearby Ruddington Village
Museum depicts life during the mid-19th century
and even has an Edwardian fish and chip shop! Also
here is a Framework Knitters’ Museum.
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This is true Robin Hood
country. Part of the great Sherwood Forest still
survives within the Sherwood Forest Country Park.
Here stands the ‘Major Oak’, the ancient tree
beneath which the legendary greenwood outlaw
sought the hand of Maid Marion. It was already
fully grown when King John was on the throne and
now has a girth of about 38 feet. Originally known
as the Queen’s Oak, its name was amended to honour
the 18th century antiquarian Major Hayman Rooke.
As a precaution, the 1,000-year-old tree has
already been cloned. |

Major Oak - Photo:
Paul Allison
CCL |
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Fallow Deer in Sheerwood Forest - Photo:
Lynne Kirton
CCL |
Near Edwinstowe is the stately
home of Thorseby Hall standing in 12,000 acres of
parkland. An earlier property was demolished in
the 19th century and the present neo-Tudor house,
designed for the 3rd Earl Manvers, replaced it.
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This small town has an
airfield run by the British Parachute Schools,
which has become one of the top sites for
skydiving and parachuting in the UK. The British
formation skydiving record was created here in
1998 while the British Women's formation skydiving
record occurred in 1994. |

British Parachute School at Langar Airfield -
Photo:
Kate Jewell
CCL |
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West Park Lock Erewash Canal - Photo:
Patrick A Griffin
CCL |
Officially a town in
Derbyshire, Long Eaton is nevertheless a suburb of
Nottingham and lies on the banks of the River
Trent. It dates back at least to the 7th century
and its name stems from an Anglo Saxon word
meaning ‘town by the water’.
It rose to prominence in the
19th century with the Industrial Revolution,
becoming a centre for industries such as lace
making and quarrying. The arrival of both the
railways and the Erewash Canal enabled it to
further expand.
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By the 1900s its booming lace
trade was using an estimated 1,500 machines. Today
the town is well known for the manufacture of
furniture. Its splendid parish Church of
St Lawrence was rebuilt in 1868 while the church
of St John the Evangelist was designed in the
1920s. The palladian mansion Long Eaton Hall was
erected by Joseph Pickford, of Derby, and later
became the town hall. Just outside the centre is
Trent Lock where the Erewash Canal joins the River
Trent – a popular spot for sailing and boating.
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With a population exceeding
2,000 people, Lowdham is an historic village
between Southwell and the City of Nottingham. The
local parish church dates to the 14th century
while nearby is a castle mound. The frame knitting
industry brought prosperity to the town in the
19th century and Lowdham Mill lies to the north
east. In the 1940s excavations unearthed a
sizeable medieval motte surrounded by a ditch
where Roman and medieval pottery was discovered.
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Mansfield Market Place - Photo:
Peter Kochut
CCL |
This large market town stands
on the River Maun and was once a wooded area
within Sherwood Forest. It was industrialised
during the Victorian era, becoming famous for shoe
making and hosiery. Later it became an important
part of the Nottinghamshire coalfield. The town
has an ancient past. Old cave dwellings cut into
sandstone cliffs were inhabited even during the
19th century. The Romans had an encampment here
and a number of coins featuring several Roman
emperors have been found. |
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This market town, once
known as ‘the key to the North’, is also a
small river port on the mighty Trent. At one
time it was a post-town on the Great North
Road. It has retained some of its charm,
boasting a cobbled market place, some
half-timbered buildings and the Church of St
Magdalene - one of the most imposing parish
churches in England. An earlier settlement was
destroyed by the Vikings in the 12th century
but it was quickly rebuilt, with Bishop
Alexander adding a formidable castle. |

Newark Castle - Photo:
Richard Croft
CCL |
Unfortunately, this otherwise
impregnable fortress became a tragic ruin after
Charles 1 surrendered it to Parliamentary forces
during the Civil War in the mid-17th century. Five hundred years earlier
King John died in the castle, either from poison
or a surfeit of peaches and cider. The Queen’s
Sconce is an earthwork built as a defensive
structure during the war.
One-time Prime Minister
William Gladstone was Newark’s MP for three years
in the 19th century, making his first public
address from the Clinton Arms.
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This ancient city is one of
the top shopping centres in the UK, offering a
superior mix of large department stores,
specialist stores and everything else you’d expect
from a modern metropolis - from nightlife to
cinemas and restaurants. Yet its most famous
character is not a high-powered tycoon but an
outlaw – Robin Hood.
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Nottingham Castle Gate House - Photo:
Rob Bradford
CCL |
Legend has it that Robin and
his merry men lived in Sherwood Forest and
constantly humiliated evil King John and the
Sheriff of Nottingham. Although the truth is
hardly transparent, there really is a castle here
and at one time it was commanded by King John and
his merciless Sheriff. There are also a number of
statues of the archer-warrior.
Today the castle – built
by William Conqueror in the 11th century and
later reconstructed by the Duke of Newcastle –
is the city’s splendid museum and art gallery.
It explains how Nottingham emerged from the
Dark Ages and took a leading role in the
industrial revolution.
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Originally a Saxon settlement
and later part of a Viking kingdom, Nottingham was
a prosperous market town in the Middle Ages.
But the decision by Richard
Arkwright to install his first steam-powered
spinning machines here in the late 18th century
sparked an industrial boom. The population
exploded, as did the manufacture of hosiery and
lace - for which the city has long been famous -
despite an uprising by so-called Luddites who
smashed machinery in the mills.
In more recent times thousands
of jobs were created in the city by three great
High Street names - bicycle manufacturers Raleigh,
cigarette makers John Player and local
entrepreneur Jesse Boot’s company Boots the
Chemist.
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Greens Mill at Sneinton - Photo:
Alex Foster
CCL |
Nottingham has a host of
museums which look in depth at this remarkable
heritage. They range from a lace museum and a Lace
Centre to a museum of costume and textiles. At
16th century Woollaton Hall you will also find a
natural history museum and industrial museum.
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Woolaton Hall - Photo:
Rob Bradford
CCL |
The Brewhouse Yard Museum
traces the city’s life through the ages while the
Shire Hall is home to the Galleries of Justice,
which gives a unique insight into crime and
punishment through the ages. Meanwhile, beneath
Nottingham’s streets is a unique labyrinth of over
400 man-made caves in which there are
reconstructions of places such as a tannery, air
raid shelter and Victorian slum.
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Another place of interest is
12th century Newstead Abbey, built by Henry 11 to
atone for the murder of Thomas Becket. It was home
to Lord Byron and is now a museum run by the local
council. The poet is buried at nearby Hucknall
Church.
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Of course, the city is famous
for its annual Goose Fair held each October – a
tradition started in the 13th century – but also
has two inns, ‘The Salutation Inn’ and the ‘Trip
to Jerusalem’, which date back to the same period.
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Ye Olde Trip To Jerusalem - Photo:
Patrick A Griffin
CCL |
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National Watersports Centre at Holmes Pierre
Point - Photo:
Colin Smith
CCL |
Lying on the River Trent near
Nottingham, Radcliffe has a population of about
8,000 people. The local church of St Mary’s dates
to at least the 13th century and contains
interesting monumental brasses and a number of
features from the time of Edward 111. The National
Watersports Centre is close by while the
neighbouring village of Stoke Bardolph witnessed
Henry VII’s defeat of an army led by the pretender
to the throne, Lambert Simnel, during the War of
the Roses in 1487. Simnel was later given a job –
in the royal kitchens. |
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This market town on the banks
of the River Idle has a rich past and is said to
be one of England’s oldest chartered boroughs. It
sent representatives to Parliament as early as
1315. With foundries and paper mills among its
industries, it can claim to be one of
Nottinghamshire’s most important town in the north
of the county. A key destination on the East Coast
rail line, it was once a staging post on the Great
North Road. In the 18th century James Brindley
designed the Chesterfield-Repton Canal to bring
wide barges and their cargoes to the River Trent.
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The Minster - Photo:
Andy Stephenson
CCL |
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Ruins of Bishop's Palace Taken from The
Minster - Photo:
Christine Hasman
CCL
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This busy, historic town owes
its long-standing importance to its remarkable
cathedral, the twin-towered Southwell Minster,
which dates back to the early 12th century.
Although it has been altered over the centuries it
possesses 13th century foliate tracery - known as
the ‘leaves of Southwell’ - and an Early English
chancel. It can be seen for miles around but was
only granted cathedral status in the 19th century.
The Saracen’s Head pub has an interesting claim to
fame. It was from here in 1647 that Charles 1
surrendered himself to a Scottish army. |
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This industrial town on the
western edge of Sherwood Forest has Saxon origins
and at one time lay in a wood consisting mostly of
ash trees. Its name appears in the Domesday Book
and its church - which still retains much of its
original architecture - was built by the Norman
family of de Sutton. Only a few miles from
Mansfield, Sutton has a history of coal mining
going back as far as the Middle Ages, though the
pits have now closed. Its other major industry,
the manufacture of hosiery, has survived. Cardinal
Wolsley passed through here on the medieval ‘Great
Way’ from Yorkshire to Nottingham. He stayed
briefly in the locality but died en route to
London. |

Mary Magdalene Church - Photo:
Ann Ballinger
CCL |
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St Catherine's Church - Photo:
Church Crawler
CCL |
A village with an ancient
heritage, Teversal has a Norman church that boasts
remarkable 17th century furnishings including its
pulpit and pews. Visitors will notice a number of
monuments built in honour of the Teversal branch
of the Molyneux family who once owned the area.
Teversal Manor was rebuilt following a fire in the
late 18th century by Henrietta Anne Howard
Molyneux and was later immortalised by D.H.
Lawrence who called it ‘Wragby Hall’ in his
infamous ‘Lady Chatterley’s Lover’. Henrietta was
to marry Lord Porchester who became Lord Carnarvon
and financed the discovery of Tutankhamen’s Tomb. |
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This lively Nottingham suburb
is the administrative centre of the Rushcliffe
area and boasts an unusual sporting heritage,
being home to both Nottingham Forest Football Club
and the nationally important Trent Bridge cricket
ground. The National Water Sports Centre at Holme
Pierrpoint is nearby while Rushcliffe Country Park
- together with the River Trent and local canals -
offers lots of scope for water-based activity. |

West Bridgford Memorial Gardens Entrance Gates
at Victoria Embankment - Photo:
Garth Newton
CCL |
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Worksop Manor - Photo:
Michael Patterson
CCL |
Although this is essentially
an industrial town on the edge of the
Nottinghamshire coalfield, Worksop claims to be
the capital of what has become known as the
county’s ‘Dukeries’ because it has numerous noble
houses in the vicinity. These include Worksop
Manor, Wellbeck Abbey, Clumber House and Thorseby
House. To the south are remnants of Sherwood
Forest and a number of picturesque parks.
Worksop itself has Saxon
origins and its most attractive feature, the
Priory Church of St Cuthbert and Mary, dates to
the 12th century, boasting a huge Norman nave and
a 13th century Early English Lady Chapel.
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While Clumber House sits in a
beautiful location within splendid parkland, 17th
century Wellbeck Abbey is famous for having
curious underground passages and chambers created
by the 5th Duke of Portland.
Worksop museum has two Bronze
Age beakers found at Clumber Park and a fragment
of sculpture from the great altar of the Temple of
Pergamon, once part of the Earl of Arundel’s
marble collection.
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