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Polesworth

Polesworth photos (11 available)

Old photo of Polesworth

Polesworth maps (2 available)

Old map of Polesworth

Polesworth books (11 available)

Polesworth memories

Change of ownership

Polesworth, Gatehouse 1924

I bought the proerty named "The Gatehouse", being the timber framed buiding to the left of the gateway, in 2007. There are various records in the church archives which relate to the building being ariginally being built for the nuns and at one time being occupied by royalist soldiers during the civil war.
The gatehouse was built in 1482 with the 3 cottages next door being added in the 1520s.
The gateway is still owned by the church and is due for restoration shortly.

I will amend this entry as I research the history more fully.
Contributed by Bob Lodge

our yesterdays relatives

Polesworth, Market Square 1958

I have found over the past few weeks that nearly all my relatives from my fathers side began in Polesworth. There was James Scarratt Clifford 1780 married Sarah Bullows in 1803, my ggg grandmother was Caroline Clifford who gave birth in Poleswoth to John Ordish Clifford (he saddled me with the second name Ordish, this I am trying to find out why?) who was a policeman (inspector retired) in 1850 in London.
There are so many distant relatives who were baptised and married in the church at Polesworth, that a visit will have to be made to look at all the church records at Warwick where I believe they are held.
So I am looking for anybody who has the name ...read more here
Contributed by nigel ordish clifford

Staffordshire memories

Change of ownership

Polesworth, Gatehouse 1924

I bought the proerty named "The Gatehouse", being the timber framed buiding to the left of the gateway, in 2007. There are various records in the church archives which relate to the building being ariginally being built for the nuns and at one time being occupied by royalist soldiers during the civil war.
The gatehouse was built in 1482 with the 3 cottages next door being added in the 1520s.
The gateway is still owned by the church and is due for restoration shortly.

I will amend this entry as I research the history more fully.
A memory of Polesworth contributed by Bob Lodge

our yesterdays relatives

Polesworth, Market Square 1958

I have found over the past few weeks that nearly all my relatives from my fathers side began in Polesworth. There was James Scarratt Clifford 1780 married Sarah Bullows in 1803, my ggg grandmother was Caroline Clifford who gave birth in Poleswoth to John Ordish Clifford (he saddled me with the second name Ordish, this I am trying to find out why?) who was a policeman (inspector retired) in 1850 in London.
There are so many distant relatives who were baptised and married in the church at Polesworth, that a visit will have to be made to look at all the church records at Warwick where I believe they are held.
So I am looking for anybody who has the name ...read more here
A memory of Polesworth contributed by nigel ordish clifford

Extracts From Polesworth & Staffordshire books

Polesworth, Church 1924

The Abbey Church of St Editha dates from Norman times, but Polesworth Abbey is said to have been founded by King Egbert in 827. He installed his daughter (some say his sister) Editha as its first abbess. The church contains an effigy of an abbess dating from c1200. While too late to represent Editha, it is said to be the earliest effigy of an abbess in England.
An extract from from"Warwickshire Revisited Photographic Memories".

Polesworth, Pooley Hall c1955

Pooley Hall was built by Thomas Cockayne between 1506 and 1509 on the site of a much older house. It has an embattled tower with a stair turret, and is built of red brick with stone mullions and quoins. Though it is a highly unlikely story, there are said to be secret passages connecting Pooley Hall to Polesworth Abbey.
An extract from from"Warwickshire Revisited Photographic Memories".

Polesworth, Market Square 1958

Like the nearby village of Alvecote, Polesworth was once a mining area. Construction of the Coventry Canal began in the late 1760s; the objective was to link industrial Coventry with the coalfield around Bedworth and to open a navigation to the Grand Trunk (Trent & Mersey) Canal. The parish church incorporates some of the remains of a 10th-century abbey; the most substantial part is the old gatehouse.
An extract from from"Warwickshire Pocket Album".

Polesworth, River 1958

Polesworth has developed on both sides of the River Anker, with the original Saxon settlement on the north bank. The photographer in this instance was looking across to the south bank, recording for posterity a scene which no longer exists: only the bridge survives. It was built in 1776 and widened in 1924.
An extract from from"Warwickshire Revisited Photographic Memories".

Polesworth, Coventry Canal 1963

The canal reached Atherstone in 1771; by this time all the authorised capital had been spent and James Brindley sacked. The canal eventually reached a junction with the Frazeley & Birmingham Canal in 1790. Despite the delays in completing the cut, it remained one of the most profitable of England’s waterways, paying dividends up to 1947.
An extract from from"Warwickshire Pocket Album".