Brewood

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Brewood
Brewood (Staffordshire)
Brewood

Brewood shown within Staffordshire
OS grid reference SJ883088
District South Staffordshire
Shire county Staffordshire
Region West Midlands
Constituent country England
Sovereign state United Kingdom
Postcode district ST19
Dialling code 01902
Police Staffordshire
Fire Staffordshire
Ambulance West Midlands
European Parliament West Midlands
List of places: UKEnglandStaffordshire

Coordinates: 52°40′37″N 2°10′26″W / 52.67692, -2.17383

Brewood from the canal
Brewood from the canal

Brewood (pronunciation ; IPA /'bruːd/) was once a town, but now a village, in South Staffordshire, England. Located at grid reference SJ883088, it lies near the River Penk, eight miles north of Wolverhampton city centre and eleven miles south of the county town of Stafford. Some three miles to the west of Brewood is the border with the county of Shropshire. The village is pronounced "brood", despite the spelling.

Contents

[edit] Brewood today

The current parish of Brewood and Coven has a population of around 7,500 in four distinct villages (Brewood, Coven, Bishop's Wood and Coven Heath). The Shropshire Union Canal passes through the western edge of Brewood, the River Penk flows along the eastern edge and Belvide Reservoir, which feeds the canal, is nearby.

Brewood has four schools:

There is a Brewood Civic Society and a Rotary Club of Brewood. Brewood is also the home of the Brewood Singers. The village came second in the South Staffordshire Best Kept Village 2005 challenge and has won the competition numerous times.

Jim Lea, of the British rock group Slade, lives in the village.

Martin Gilks, drummer of the British pop band The Wonder Stuff, grew up in Brewood.[citation needed]

Sian Reeves, British actress most famous for playing the character Sydney Henshall in the Manchester-based television drama Cutting It, grew up in Brewood [1].

[edit] History

Aqueduct carrying the Shropshire Union Canal over the A5
Aqueduct carrying the Shropshire Union Canal over the A5

The old Roman road, Watling Street, runs one mile to the north of the village as the A5. A market charter was granted to Brewood by King Henry III, in 1221. There was an annual Brewood Wake.

Richard Hurd, later a Bishop of Worcester, was educated at Brewood Grammar School by William Budworth.

Near the village is Boscobel House, said to have been one of the numerous places in England to have sheltered King Charles II.

[edit] Churches

Parish church of St Mary and St Chad
Parish church of St Mary and St Chad
St Mary's Roman Catholic church
St Mary's Roman Catholic church

The Anglican church is Saint Mary the Virgin and Saint Chad; built of sandstone between 1150 and 1250, on the site of an earlier wooden Mercian church. "Thorough" restoration was carried out in the late 1870s. The noted tower and spire have a peal of eight bells.

Two strong examples of 'Early English' church building are to be found here. Firstly, the Roman Catholic church of 1840, built in Brewood under the direction of Pugin. Secondly, the fine church nearby at Bishops Wood.

[edit] Further reading

  • M.W. Greenslade & Margaret Midgley. A History of Brewood. 1981, Staffordshire County Library.
  • David Horovitz. Brewood. 1988. ISBN 1-85421-011-4
  • Adrienne Whitehouse, Brewood and Penkridge in Old Photographs. 1988. ISBN 0-86299-519-1

[edit] External links