St. Nicholas Church

St. Nicholas Church, Warndon Villages, Worcester

St. Nicholas Lane, off Hastings Drive nr jctn Berkeley Way

Churches in Partnership - Anglican, Methodist and United Reformed

History of the Villages

Kindly donated by Christopher Monkhouse

THE name 'Warndon' comes from the Anglo-Saxon 'Werman' - to fortify, and 'Dun' - a hill. In the past it has been known variously as Wermindum - 12th Century, Warnington - 15th Century, Warnton - 16th Century and finally Warndon - 19th Century.

In the 1950s, the whole area now covered by Warndon Villages and Warndon estate was classified as housing land. By the mid 1960s, only half the area was built on as the Council ran out of money. I can remember, in the early 1960s, driving a tractor through what are now large glass doors of the Poachers Pocket to drop off hay and straw in the barn.

From 1986, when the first public meeting about the villages took place, through to 1988 when the first roads and houses were built, I was the first Warndon Parish Councillor responsible for roads and footpaths. As such, I met with the City planning officers and housing developers regularly. At the meeting to discuss village and road names, it was suggested that, as the farmland was being buried under bricks and tarmac, some of the old history should be kept - such as farm, field, and previous Rectors names.

The area covered by the villages consisted of four farms: Great Tolladine (Poachers Pocket), Little Tolladine and Warndon Court in the North. Lyppard Grange in the middle, Lyppard is an ancient form of 'Leopard'. And Trotshill Farm in the South. The road name signs have three sections - area name, village name and road name.

Area Names:
The Harleys - the last farmers of Trotshill Farm.
The Berkeleys - the last farmers of Warndon Farm.
Lyppard - the name of the Farm in the centre.

Village Names:
All those between Woodgreen Drive and the M5 are the names of previous Rectors of Warndon Parish Church There is a list of Rectors names just inside the entrance door from the church porch. It will reveal Pendesham, Hunderton, Beverborne and many others!

Road Names:
The Harleys - are named after various people (engineers, etc) who helped create Britain's past.
The Berkeleys - are named after towns and cities in Britain where castles had been built.
The Lyppards - are named after the original field names of the district, as well as other ancient animal and bird names as explained below.


 Road name Area Definition
 HAZE CROFT Hanford Land enclosed by hedges
 WOOD LEASON Hanford Coppicing of trees
 QUISTERS  Hanford Corn Crake (bird)
 GREAT OATY (GDNS) Hanford West Land covered in oak trees
 SLADE (AVE)  Hanford West Marshy valley
 DUCK MEADOW  Hanford West Land with a duck pond
 MIDDLES (AVE)  Hanford West Small piece of land within a field
 VETCH FIELD  Hanford West Good land for growing cattle fodder
 RACE FIELD Woodgreen  Small stream
 MILLHAM (AVE) Woodgreen Enclosure containing a hill
 TREACLE NOOK Woodgreen Sticky ground
 LITTLE PIECE Woodgreen Land next to a cottage
 HOCK COPPICE Bourne Woody Hillside
 NINE ACRES Bourne Field of nine acres
 TOFTDALE (GREEN) Bourne Hillock in flat land
 WITHIN CROFT Grange Damp ground for growing willows/reeds
 MAPIT (PLACE) Kettleby Soil taken to improve land
 KNOTTS (AVE) Kettleby Rough hilly grazing land
 DAMASKFIELD Kettleby Ridge and furrow land
 OVERTHWART (CRES) Kettleby Sticky ground, difficult for horses to work
 STOTFIELD (AVE) Kettleby Horse enclosure
 TURBARY (AVE) Kettleby Land from which peat is taken
 HAWKLEY ROW Kettleby Woods where hawks breed
 PIPPEN FIELD Habington Apple Orchard
 BIRCHANGER (GREEN) Habington Birch tree wood
 PURLEIGH (AVE) Habington Edge of a forest
 CANGLE (LANE) Habington  Fenced enclosure
 WRYFLATT Habington Twisted piece of land
 BACCHURST (PLACE) Habington Land by a bakery
 WIRLPIECE (AVE) Habington Boggy land
 BARASS (AVE) Habington Land used for a flood defence
 WOOLMEAD (ROW) Habington Land for raising sheep
 THACKHOLME Habington Land for growing thatching reeds
 WATCHETTS (GREEN) Habington Land for growing woad (the blue dye)
 HERNE FIELD Habington Corner Field
 GAWTREE (ROW) Habington Site of gallows
 BURTREE Habington Site where elder trees grow


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