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Notes on the parishes and villages surrounding Stroud which will hopefully assist family historians in adding depth to the basic births, baptism, marriage and death records of their ancestors. The notes are taken from odd fragments of information gleaned over the years, and have no specific format. Much of the information is second or even third hand, and should therefore be checked against the original record. Information is added regularly. Notes on errors, omissions and additions are always welcomed. Maps showing surrounding area are available from the Multimap and UK Streetmaps links on the Gloucestershire Links page. Select area from the index below or scroll down the page Avening; Brimscombe; Chalford; Cainscross; Eastcombe;
Ebley; Information on Stroud is given on a separate page Refer to Records Page for other villages not listed above AveningHoly Cross Church. Norman, partially restored about 1887. Baptist Chapel. Built 1805, enlarged 1821. BrimscombeHoly Trinity Church. Built 1840. Memorial inscriptions on two
tablets inside church, transcribed in 1879, from GNQ. CainscrossSt. Matthew's Church. Building commenced 1835,
consecrated in 1837 and restored/extended in 1897/8. Memorial inscriptions on four
tablets inside church, transcribed in 1879, from GNQ. ChalfordChrist Church. Built 1724, refurbished and chancel
added 1841, modified 1857. Baptist Meeting House, Coppice Hill. A meeting house
was built about 1740. and a Sunday school wing added later. In 1873 the Tabernacle was
built at the other end of the burial ground. Congregational. A house at Chalford was registered in 1695, and meetings took place in Chalford Bottoms in the early 18th century prior to a meeting house being built at France Lynch Primitive Methodist Chapel, Chalford Hill. Built 1823. EastcombeSt. Augustine Church. Built 1868, from design by Rev. W. H. Lowder. Baptist Chapel. Completed 1801, enlarged 1816 and
1860. Monuments: EbleyChurch was opened in 1837 Ebley Chapel. Built 1880-1, demolished in the 1970's (1972?). The congregation then moved into the British School Building. Other information available via the links page. Frampton on SevernSt. Mary's Church. Consecrated in 1315, restored in 19th Century. Features include a 11th century lead font and 14th century tombs. The church is at one end of the 22 acre village green, reputed to be the largest village green in England, and sometimes called Rosamund's Green, after Rosamund Clifford, a Frampton lass who became a mistress of Henry II. Congegational Chapel. Behind buildings, on NW side of the green.
Reputed to have been built in 1760, interior partly refitted in 19th Century Sunday school
wing added in 1849.Monuments:- France LynchSt. John the Baptist. Built 1855-1857, architect G.F. Bodley. Congregational Meeting House. In the early 18th century meetings
were held at Chalford. The date of construction of
the present building is not known, but it was in use in 1816 and rebuilt in 1819. A Sunday
school was added in 1854. Monuments: Leonard StanleyIt is called Leonard from the small priory of St Leonard founded about 1200 by Roger de Berkeley.
Church memorial inscriptions. [Will open in new window - Close after reading to return to this page] War Memorial. On a small green at road junction, outside the church. Inscriptions. Records. Amongst items available for inspection at the
Gloucestershire Records Office are: Wesleyan Chapel, the Street. Opened 1809. Inns and Taverns MinchinhamptonHoly Trinity Church. 12th Century, with additions in 14th Century Wesleyan Chapel, Littleworth. Built 1790, altered and refitted
1887. The church originated in the late 17th century. Monument, in burial ground : NailsworthShortwood Baptist Chapel, built 1881. Earlier chapel, on different site, built a meeting house around 1714. Forest Green Congregational Chapel, Spring Hill. Built 1821. Friends Meeting House, Chestnut Hill. The building was registered as a Quaker meeting house in 1689, but it may have been in use before that date. Burial ground is at Shortwood. St. George Parish Church. Built 1898-1900. Architect M.H.
Medland. RodboroughApproximately one mile from Stroud. Population 2,038 in 1821. Zion Chapel, Primitive Methodist, Butter Row. Built 1856. Rodborough Tabernacle. Preaching house built in 1750, for
Calvinistic Methodists. Extended in 1837. Now used by United Reformed Church.Monuments: Rodborough Fort. Built for Captain George HAWKER in 1765. Bought by Benjamin GRAZEBROOK in 1791 from James DALLAWAY (son of William). All three were supporters of the Stroudwater Canal. St. Mary Magdalene Parish Church. Rebuilt in 1842. See Rodborough Memorial Inscriptions. [Page will open in new window. Close after reading to return here] Stroudwater Canal.The possibility of a canal linking Stroud to the River Severn had been discussed
from the early 18th century. At that time roads were poor and this resulted in items such
as coal or grain costing considerably more in Stroud than in Gloucester or Bristol.
Following several earlier unsuccessful attempts, construction of the Stroudwater canal
commenced in 1774. Work started at Framilode, on the banks of the River Severn. The whole
eight and a quarter miles of the canal, to its terminus at Wallbridge, on the outskirts of
Stroud, was opened on Wednesday 21 July 1779. The St. Laurence Church, Stroud parish
register, after the entries for 1779, details the opening of the canal. Construction of the Thames and Severn canal commenced in 1783, and was completed in 1789. This connected to the Stroudwater canal at Wallbridge. On Thursday 14 August 1788 King George 3rd and Queen Charlotte, accompanied by the three eldest Princesses visited the canal. The King and Queen, having spent some weeks at Cheltenham, passed through Painswick and Stroud to Wallbridge, where they saw a vessel pass through the lock. Construction of the Gloucester and Berkeley canal commenced in 1794. In 1820 a junction was constructed between this canal and the Stroudwater canal, and the Gloucester and Berkeley canal was completed in 1827. The Thames and Severn Canal was closed in stages; Inglesham to Chalford in 1927; Chalford to Wallbridge in 1933; and finally the original Stroudwater Canal closed in 1954. Much of the Canal has been filled in, but 1972 saw the formation of the Stroudwater Canal Society (later renamed the Stroudwater, Thames and Severn Canal Trust). The Gloucester and Berkeley Canal (now normally referred to as the Gloucester and Sharpness Canal) remains open and viable. ThruppWesleyan Chapel, Brimscombe. Opened 1804. WoodchesterSt. Mary Church. Built 1863-1864. See Woodchester Memorial Inscriptions [Page will open in new window. Close after reading to return here] Priory Church of Our Lady of the Annunciation. Roman Catholic. Built 1846-1849. Consecrated 1849. Baptist Chapel, Atcombe Rd. Built 1825. Further Information.Gloucestershire Notes and Queries. Volume 1. Edited by the Rev. Beaver H. Blacker, M.A., and published in 1881. Gloucestershire Notes and Queries. Volume VI. 1894-5. Edited by W.P.W. Phillimore, M.A., B.C.L. Published 1896. Notes and Recollections of Stroud. By Paul Hawkins Fisher. Originally published in 1891. Republished by Alan Sutton 1975. ISBN 0 904387 06 2 Nonconformist Chapels and Meeting-Houses, Gloucestershire. Royal Commission on Historical Monuments of England. 1986.ISBN 0 11 300008 1 A History of the Parishes of Minchinhampton and Avening. By Arthur Twisden Playne, B.A. First published 1915. Republished by Alan Sutton, 1978. ISBN 0 904387 25 9. The Stroudwater Canal. by Michael Handford. Published in 1979 by Alan Sutton Publishing Ltd. ISBN 0 904387 30 5. Parish Records. Gloucestershire Records Office. |
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