Screveton


Screveton is an English parish and village in the Rushcliffe borough of Nottinghamshire, with about 100 inhabitants, increasing to 191 at the 2011 Census. It was formerly in Bingham Rural District and before 1894 in Bingham Wapentake. It is adjacent to Kneeton, Flintham, Hawksworth, Scarrington, Little Green and Car Colston.

Toponomy

Screveton may contain the Old English word scīr-rēfa for a sheriff or the king's executive, + tun, an enclosure; a farmstead; a village; or an estate, so probably "Sheriff's farm/settlement".

Heritage

, who died at the old hall in Screveton in 1583, had been elected to Parliament four times in the troubled Tudor period. His three successive wives bore him a total of 25 children. A fine monument to him in the parish church bears an inscription:
The hall was demolished in the 1820s. The population of the village at the beginning of the 1870s was 241 in 60 houses. The main landowners at that time were the politicians Sydney Pierrepont, 3rd Earl Manvers, and Thomas Thoroton-Hildyard, a descendant of the 17th-century local historian Robert Thoroton. Two young men from Screveton who died for their country in the First World War are remembered on a memorial stone in the village churchyard.

Listed buildings

St Wilfrid's is a Grade I listed building from the 13th century, restored in the 1880s. Other listed edifices in the village include the Old Priest's House, Top Farmhouse and adjacent buildings, and the circular pinfold, whose unusual shape is also found in pounds at Scarrington and Flintham.

Church

forms a joint Anglican parish with St Mary's Church, Car Colston. They now belong, along with Flintham, Kneeton and East Bridgford, to the Fosse Group of parishes. A service of Holy Communion is held there every two weeks at 10.30 am. Two former Methodist chapels in the village are now residential buildings, but there is still a Methodist church at Scarrington.

Transport and facilities

Screveton lies 1 mile/1.5km from the A46 road between Newark-on-Trent and Leicester, which meets the A52 road between Grantham and Nottingham at Saxondale. The nearest station is at Aslockton, which has daily trains every one to two hours between Nottingham and Grantham or Skegness. Screveton has a service of three buses a day on weekdays to Bingham and to Newark.
The nearest pub to the village is the Royal Oak at Car Colston. Retail and catering facilities can be found 4 miles/6.4 km away in Bingham. There are primary schools at Flintham, East Bridgford and Bingham. Toot Hill School in Bingham is a secondary school with a sixth form and academy status.

External sources