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Kinver

 
Wikipedia: Kinver

Coordinates: 52°26′56″N 2°13′41″W / 52.4488°N 2.2280°W / 52.4488; -2.2280

Kinver
Kinver is located in Staffordshire
Kinver

 Kinver shown within Staffordshire
Population 6,805 (2001 Census)
OS grid reference SO845835
District South Staffordshire
Shire county Staffordshire
Region West Midlands
Country England
Sovereign state United Kingdom
Post town Stourbridge
Postcode district DY7
Dialling code 01384
Police Staffordshire
Fire Staffordshire
Ambulance West Midlands
EU Parliament West Midlands
UK Parliament South Staffordshire
List of places: UK • England • Staffordshire

Kinver is a large village in South Staffordshire district, Staffordshire, England. It is in the far south-west of the county, at the end of the narrow finger of land surrounded by the counties of Shropshire, Worcestershire and the West Midlands. The nearest towns are Stourbridge in the West Midlands, and Kidderminster in Worcestershire. The Staffordshire and Worcestershire Canal passes through, running close to the course of the meandering River Stour. According to the 2001 census Kinver had a population of 6,805.

Contents

The village today

The village has three schools: Foley Infant School, Brindley Heath Junior School and Edgecliff High School. The Infant school rings the home time bell 15 minutes before the Junior or High Schools. This is to allow the parents collecting children from both sites to cover the three quarters of a mile journey.

280 acres of land are in the possession of the National Trust. There is a Country Park near the Edge. The Staffordshire and Worcestershire Canal is popular with boaters in the summer months.

The parish

St. Peter's Church, the village and parish church sits in a prominent position on a hill just south of the village.

Several hamlets lie in the parish of Kinver, including Compton, Stourton and Whittington. The neighbouring village of Enville is in its own parish.

History

Kinver has, at various times in the past, been spelt on maps and documents as: Kinfare, Kynfare, Chenfare, and Cynefare.

The hilltop church is on a very ancient site, and the current church, dedicated to St. Peter dates from the 12th century. The village High Street was laid out as the burgages of a new town by the lord of the manor in the late 13th century and was administered by a borough court, separate for the manorial court for the rest of the manor of Kinver and Stourton (known as Kinfare Foreign).

The main pub, The White Hart, dates from the 14th century, and the Anchor Hotel (now developed as housing) from the 15th Century. The Grammar School, although it closed as a school in 1915, is 16th Century.

Kinver was known for making sturdy woollen cloth, using the flow of the Stour for fulling mills and dyeing. The village also profited from being a stop on the great "Irish Road" from Bristol to Chester (until the 1800s, the port of embarkation for Ireland), the 'White Hart' being the oldest and largest inn.

Later, the river was used to power finery forges and from 1628 the first slitting mills, including Hyde Mill which has been claimed (incorrectly) as the earliest in England, though it certainly was among the earliest. There were five slitting mills in the parish by the late 18th century, more than any other parish in Great Britain. These slit bars of iron into rods to be made into nails in the nearby Black Country.[1]

Kinver High St., and St Peter's on Church Hill behind. Circa 1910.

Stourton Castle figured notably in the history of the English Civil Wars.

In 1771 the area was opened up to trade by the Staffordshire and Worcester Canal, built by James Brindley.

In Victorian and Edwardian times it was a popular Sunday day out for people from Birmingham and the Black Country, via a 1901 pole & wires tram extension that ran across the fields, the "Kinver Light Railway".

The nailshops and forges ceased work around 1892, and local ironworks are thought to have all closed in about 1912 or 1913.

Dick Whittington

According to local claims, the Whittington Inn was formerly Whittington manor house, built in 1310 by Sir William de Whittington, a knight at arms and grandfather of Richard Whittington, upon whose life the pantomime character Dick Whittington is based.

These claims are in fact unfounded: Dick Whittington (q.v.) came from Gloucestershire. The Whittington Inn was merely a farmhouse belonging to a freeholder of the manor of Whittington. The 18th-century manor house was undoubtedly Whittington Hall (now Whittington Hall Farm). This belonged to the lords of the manor, and probably had done so since the medieval period.[2]

Kinver Light Railway

An innovative electric light tramway opened in 1901 and helped establish the local tourism industry.

Kinver Edge rock houses

The National Trust-owned beauty spot of Kinver Edge lies to the south-west of the village. There are notable rock or cave houses on Kinver Edge, carved from the sandstone. Some were inhabited as late as the 1950s.[3] One of the Holy Austin Rock Houses has been restored to its former inhabited state and is now operated as a Victorian museum, at 52°26′59″N 2°14′31″W / 52.44985°N 2.24205°W / 52.44985; -2.24205.

Such rock houses were the setting of a silent film, Bladys of the Stewpony (1919, Sabine Baring-Gould), but most of this has since been lost. The "Stewponey" refers to an ancient inn (now demolished and replaced by flats) at Stourton in Kinver parish.

Kinver celebrities

Kinver was the birthplace of the distinguished stage and screen actress Nancy Price who appeared in such films as Love, Life and Laughter. Her home Rockmount is situated at the top of the village.

Drakelow tunnels / Drakelow RGHQ

Just outside Kinver are the infamous and mysterious Drakelow Tunnels. The tunnels were used for various purposes by the MoD for many years.

During World War II the tunnels housed a factory which would have been used to build aircraft engines should the main supply factory in Birmingham ever have been bombed.

Clearly the theory was that, as the tunnels were underground, the enemy would not know of its existence and the site wouldn't be targeted by bombers Or, as the tunnels were beneath solid rock, they were safe from bombs.

During the Cold War the tunnels were turned into an RGHQ (Regional Government Headquarters. In the event of Nuclear War Government officials, VIPs and heads of the regional military and emergency services would be housed here safely away from falling bombs and the effects of radiation and nuclear fallout.

Currently the site is disused, but a special trust has been set up to turn the site into a tourist attraction and to preserve a part of a 'secret military history' of the United Kingdom that very few people knew about. Visits are sometimes arranged for interested parties. For more information on the tunnels visit ->Kinver Online

Further reading

Victoria County History, Staffordshire XX (1984), 118-60.

Town twinning

External links

References

  1. ^ Victoria County History, Staffordshire XX.
  2. ^ Victoria County History, Staffordshire XX.
  3. ^ [1]

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Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Kinver" Read more