- Source: Wilford
Wilford is a village and former civil parish in the Nottingham district in the ceremonial county of Nottinghamshire, England. The village is to the northeast of Clifton, southwest of West Bridgford, northwest of Ruddington and southwest of Nottingham city centre. It is at a meander of the River Trent.
History
= Civil parish
=In 1891 the parish had a population of 2769. In 1894 the parish was abolished and split to form North Wilford and South Wilford.
= Early settlements
=Remains of a paved Roman ford, bordered by oak posts, were found in the Trent at Wilford in 1900. The settlement is named as Willesforde in Domesday Book, owned by William Pevrel of Nottingham Castle, who also owned the lands of nearby Clifton. It had a fishery, a priest and 23 sokemen. The land passed to the Clifton family in the 13th Century.
= Development
=Wilford retained its identity as a village until the later 19th century. Surrounded by woodlands and with riverside amenities such as the Wilford Ferry Inn, the village attracted many visitors from Nottingham. Spencer Hall, the Nottinghamshire poet, wrote in 1846 "Who ever saw Wilford without wishing to become an inmate of one of its peaceful woodbined homes."
In 1870 the Clifton Colliery opened on the north side of the Trent, and the area opposite Wilford became industrialised. By the end of the century the village had changed character, with modern brick-built houses replacing old thatched cottages.
= Expansion
=The parish was divided into North Wilford and South Wilford in 1887. The population increased to four and a half thousand by 1901, almost a ten-fold increase since 1801. The now-demolished coal-fired Wilford Power Station was built in the early 1920s on the north bank of the River Trent. The civil parish of South Wilford became part of West Bridgford urban district in 1935 bounded by Fairham Brook to the West, the River Trent to the North, Loughborough Road (historically the King's Road, a Royal Highway) to the East and Landmere Lane to the South.
Wilford was subsumed into the City of Nottingham in 1952 as a land bridge between the city and the newly built Clifton Estate. This diminished the formal territory of Wilford, placing land east of the Great Central Railway in the county and the rest in the city.
Neighboring estates have subsequently been built on land previously comprising Wilford: Silverdale housing estate was built in the late 1950s on land from the former Wilwell Farm on the south-western edge of Wilford and Compton Acres built in 1986 on land from the former Brewill Farm as well as marshland and a former municipal waste tip on the eastern edge of Wilford, previously cut off by the Great Central Railway.
Education
Within the area of Wilford, there are two Primary Schools
St. Patrick's Catholic Primary School
South Wilford CofE Primary School
The Old School House at South Wilford houses St Wilfrid's Church Playgroup and Nursery.
There are also two Secondary Schools in Wilford
The Nottingham Emmanuel School
The Becket School
Wilford is also in the catchment area of
West Bridgford School
Farnborough Spencer Academy
Located nearby is the Clifton Campus of Nottingham Trent University.
Wilford Church
The church of St Wilfrid serves a parish covering Wilford, Silverdale and a large part of the Compton Acres estate. The church dates from the late 14th century. It is considered to have been founded by Gervase de Wilford around 1361.
The church contains two memorials to the Nottingham poet Henry Kirke White who drew much of his inspiration from Wilford and Clifton. He is said to have spent much of his time writing poems sat in the churchyard under his favourite tree. The churchyard also contains the grave of Captain John Deane, an adventurer and mercenary who lived in the village.
The churchyard contains war graves of eight soldiers of World War I and an airman of World War II - that of Albert Harvey Iremonger, son of Albert Iremonger - both local residents.
In the churchyard is a gazebo, built in 1757. In 1980 it was restored after a fire four years earlier. Located next to the River Trent the basement was at one time used as a mortuary.
Wilford sports clubs
Wilford has a number of sports clubs for football, rugby, basketball, bowls and archery.
Nottingham Moderns Rugby Club is an amateur rugby club playing in the RFU league system. They have pitches and a clubhouse located between the Ferry Inn pub and the toll bridge.
Wilford Wasps Basketball Club
Wilford Mavericks FC
Wilford Bowls Club (currently closed)
Wilford Bowmen (shooting takes place in the walled garden, Wollaton Hall)
Transport
Wilford is served by two stops of the Nottingham Express Transit system. Both Wilford Village and Wilford Lane stops are on line 2, linking the city centre to Clifton, and opened in August 2015.
Wilford is further served by numerous local bus services provided by Nottingham City Transport and Trent Barton.
Local amenities
Wilford Toll Bridge was converted to a foot bridge in the early 1970s and in the late 2010s was expanded to accommodate Nottingham Express Transit second phase extension south of the city to Clifton
St Wilfrid's Church, Wilford features two community spaces: the Church Hall and the Benjamin Carter Hall, both adjoined, at the entrance to the Church Paddock. The Carter Hall was built using proceeds left by Benjamin Carter.
Across Wilford Toll Bridge is Victoria Embankment, which hosts the annual Riverside Festival, the War Memorial and park, and a children's play-area and large paddling pool.
Close by is the Gresham Sports Pavilion which includes an all-weather football pitch, and indoor changing facilities.
On Wilford Lane is a large "Roko" gym. A twenty million pound development on the neighbouring former site of The Château Public House currently underway will include a Lidl store in addition to a smaller gym and Starbucks coffee shop.
Wilfordians
Residents of Wilford are known as Wilfordians. The earliest written record of this can be found in Robert Mellors', 'Old Nottingham suburbs: then and now.
= Notable families
=Iremonger:
Smiths:
= Individuals
=Nature
Wilford has two Green Flag Award recognised open spaces, Ruddington Lane Park and Iremongers Pond.
Wilford also has a number of Sites of Importance for Nature Conservation
Iremongers Pond SINC; which is now cared for by the Iremongers Pond Association
Gresham Marshes SINC; which is managed by the Nottinghamshire Wildlife Trust
Wilford Meadow - Wildlife Area
Trentside SINC
Wilford Disused Railway is also designated as a SINC
The wider Wilford area is home to a number of nature reserves – two being Sites of Special Scientific Interest (SSSI) managed by the Nottinghamshire Wildlife Trust
Wilford Claypit
Wilwell Cutting
Wilford Field
Wilford Hill Wood
Sharphill Wood
Business
Wilford has a Co-operative Local Store, the Tailor's Arms (formerly the Wilford Green), the Ferry Inn (a restaurant of the Chef and Brewer chain) and the Wilford Farm Harvester (a restaurant of the Harvester chain). At the southernmost point of Wilford is the Apple Tree Pub (a restaurant of the Ember Inns chain).
There are several independent businesses owned and run by local residents. The Wilford Village Allotments Association holds an annual plant sale going towards the upkeep of the community allotments plot.
Gleeds, an architects and surveyors company, until recently, had its headquarters in Wilford House. The listed building is currently undergoing a multi-million pound refurbishment to house multiple small companies. A number of companies are based at Wilford Industrial Estate, including Seriff, a large supplies distribution company, and A. W. Consulting, a small marketing consultancy, owing to the area's proximity to the A52 and access to the M1.
The former Wilford Power Station, closed in 1981 and demolished shortly afterwards, is now the location of the Riverside Retail Park with stores including Boots UK, B&Q and Argos, as well as offices for Experian and the Office of the Public Guardian (England and Wales).
Local landmarks and historic features
See also
Listed buildings in Nottingham (Clifton North ward)
Wilford Suspension Bridge
List of Sites of Special Scientific Interest in Nottinghamshire
References
External links
Wilford Community Group
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Wilford Brimley
- Wilford Woodruff
- The Thing (film 1982)
- James Stirling
- In & Out (film)
- Gua Rusa
- The China Syndrome
- Tender Mercies
- Cocoon (film)
- Vania Larissa
- Wilford Brimley
- Wilford
- Wilford (surname)
- Snowpiercer (TV series)
- Sara Wilford
- Ronald A. Wilford
- John Wilford (disambiguation)
- Wilford (disambiguation)
- Wilford Scypion
- Derek Wilford