Baschurch is a large village and civil parish in Shropshire, England. It lies in North Shropshire, north of Shrewsbury. The village has a population of 2,503 as of the 2011 census. The village has strong links to Shrewsbury to the south-east, Oswestry to the north-west, and Wem to the north-east. There is a large village not far west of Baschurch called Ruyton-XI-Towns.
History
The earliest references to Baschurch are under its Welsh name Eglwyssau Bassa, in a seven-stanza englyn-poem of the same name found in the Welsh cycle of poems called Canu Heledd, generally thought to date to the ninth century: The English nameBaschurch first appears in the Domesday Book of 1086 as Bascherche, and both names may derive from an Anglo-Saxon personal name Bass. Thus the name in Canu Heledd is a Brittonic version of an English name. Local tradition holds that the Berth Pool and its ancient earthworks outside the village are the resting place of the legendary King Arthur. In medieval times, several properties in the parish, including Adcote Mill, were owned by Haughmond Abbey near Shrewsbury. The world's first orthopaedic hospital was established at Florence House in Baschurch by Sir Robert Jones and Dame Agnes Hunt in 1900 as a convalescent home for crippled children and later to treat wounded from the First World War. The hospital moved to Oswestry in the 1921. In 2000 a large stone made of local sandstone was erected in the modern centre of the village to commemorate the Millennium. Similar smaller stones were erected in neighbouring communities.
Churches
A major feature of the village is All Saints' Church which is one of the oldest standing structures in the village. A timber church which burnt down is believed to have stood on the same site previously. Leading industrialist and builder Thomas Telford made numerous major alterations to the modern sandstone church. The village also had a Methodist chapel which was built in 1873 and closed in 2014 after the congregation had "dwindled to less than a dozen". It was sold for conversion into a house in April 2015.
The Shrewsbury to Chester Line passes through the village, though the Victorian railway station was closed in 1960. On 13 February 1961 a passenger train travelling from Shrewsbury to Chester collided with a goods train which was partially shunted into a siding in Baschurch. Three people died in the . Television footage of the wreckage is available from the BBC. There have been repeated efforts to bring the railway station back into use, most recently in autumn 2008, with the support of Baschurch Parish Council and the Shrewsbury-Chester Rail Users' Association. In September 2009, a public meeting organised by the , was attended by 250 local people and received extensive media coverage.
Notable people
Henry David Leslie an English composer and conductor, supported amateur choral musicians
George Robert Jebb a civil engineer, prominent in the field of railway and canal engineering
Dame Agnes Hunt DBE RRC a British nurse, recognised as the first orthopaedic nurse
Broadband internet
Baschurch was one of just six places in the United Kingdom to succeed in a competition held by BT to get super-fast broadband. The winners of the "Race to Infinity" competition were announced on 6 January 2011 and Baschurch came sixth. BT originally promised that only the top 5 places would go through with the upgrade, but were impressed enough by the response in Baschurch. As of March 2018 much of the village has yet to be connected to super-fast broadband.