Sandal Magna


Sandal Magna or Sandal is a suburb of Wakefield, West Yorkshire, England with a population of 5,432. An ancient settlement, it is the site of Sandal Castle and of a parish church that predates the Domesday Book. It is south from Wakefield, north of Barnsley.
The Battle of Wakefield was fought here in the 15th century during the Wars of the Roses.

History

Toponymy

The name Sandal derives from the Early Scandinavian sandr meaning sand or gravel and healh, a meadow.

Early history

In the Domesday Book of 1086 Sandal is recorded as a berewic in Wachefeld where there was a church with a priest. The church was on the site of the present church of St Helen.
William de Warenne, 2nd Earl of Surrey was granted the Sandal estates in 1107 and began the building of Sandal Castle which became the baronial seat of the lords of the manor of Wakefield.
In 1460, during the Wars of the Roses, the Duke of York was killed on 30 December in the Battle of Wakefield between Sandal Castle and St Helens Church.
There are records of mining for coal and quarrying for stone in the 14th century.
The highwayman, John Nevison was arrested on 6 March 1684 at the Three Houses Inn and tried for the murder of Darcy Fletcher, a constable who had tried to arrest him near Howley Hall at Soothill in Batley.

Geography

Sandal, situated on the south side of the River Calder on the road from Wakefield to Barnsley, covers. It is from Wakefield, from Barnsley, from Pontefract, from Leeds, from Bradford, from Sheffield, and from York. The main road through Sandal is the A61 Wakefield to Barnsley road.
Location grid

Governance

Sandal was anciently a parish town in the Agbrigg Division of the wapentake of Agbrigg and Morley in the liberty of Wakefield, West Riding of Yorkshire. Following the Poor Law Amendment Act of 1834, Sandal Magna became one of the 17 constituent parishes of the Wakefield Poor Law Union formed in 1837.

Religion

Sandal Magna's church is dedicated to St. Helen, the mother of Constantine the Great. At the time of the Norman Conquest Sandal Church was a possession of the crown. The Saxon church was recorded as one of two churches in the Wakefield manor in the Domesday Book of 1086.
In about 1150 the first church was replaced by a second church in the shape of a Latin cross by Earl Warenne of Sandal Castle. It was enlarged in about 1180 and almost completely rebuilt in the first half of the 14th century. The church was altered and extended after 1505 and the present church extensively restored and enlarged in 1872.

Transportation

The Sandal and Agbrigg railway station on the Wakefield line with services operated by Northern is at the northeast side of the neighbourhood and serves Sandal and the adjacent suburb of Agbrigg.

Amenities

Although largely a residential area, local amenities include a library,
schools, the Anglican church of St Helen, a Methodist church and an Asda supermarket.