Stanton Lacy


Stanton Lacy is a small village and geographically large civil parish located in south Shropshire, England, north of Ludlow.
The River Corve flows through the parish, on its way south towards the River Teme, and passes immediately to the west of the village.
The ancient parish church in the village is St Peter's. The building is Grade I listed and has pre-Norman parts dating to circa 1050.

Parish

The parish covers a wide rural area, encompassing a part of the flat and low-lying Corvedale but also an area of upland around Hayton's Bent. It contains a number of small settlements, including:
The 2011 census recorded a resident population of 345. The geographic area of the parish is.
The northern part of the Old Field is located in the parish, located about a mile to the south of the village.
Much of the parish, as well as the neighbouring parish of Bromfield, remains part of the Earl of Plymouth's Oakly Park Estate.

History

Stanton Lacy has early Anglo-Saxon origins and can trace its history to before the Norman conquest of 1066, after which the large manor of Stanton was granted to Roger de Lacy. Previously simply known as Stanton, this ownership gave it the name of Stanton Lacy, which is in use to the present day and helps distinguish it from the many other places in England with the name 'Stanton'.
The manor features in the Domesday Book of 1086 and this recorded a notably large population of the manor, indeed the greatest in the county measured by number of households, as well as the fourth-greatest monetary value. The Book also recorded the presence of a church and 2 priests. At the time Stanton came within the Saxon hundred of Culvestan, which was replaced during the reign of Henry I and the parish then came within the new Munslow hundred.
The parish was larger than now, with extensive boundaries as per the original manorial holding, and extended south to the parish of Ludford and the River Teme at Dinham. Ludlow Castle and the town of Ludlow were established within the parish's southern boundaries, by the manor's successive lords/tenants-in-chief, in the late 11th century/early 12th century. Ludlow Castle and an early neighbouring settlement were just about in existence at the time of the Domesday Book survey and therefore may have contributed towards the high population count and taxable value for the manor of Stanton.
The now-separate parish of Hopton Cangeford and the former parish of Cold Weston, merged into Clee St. Margaret in 1967, were once part of Stanton Lacy.
Ludlow had become its own parish by 1200, carving out land largely from Stanton Lacy parish ; Ludlow Castle also by this point constituted its own parish - a situation that remained until 1901. What remained of Stanton Lacy's southern part was then unaffected until 1884; this southern part was entirely removed in that year with its transfer largely to Bromfield, but also Bitterley and the new East Hamlet parish. The result of this was the ending of the historic border with Ludford. By 1879 a part in the west of the parish had been removed to Onibury.

Decline

Whilst the parish used to be able to boast two schools, four Methodist chapels, a post office, pubs and a football team, none of these now remain. The population of the parish has declined greatly since the late 19th century and it now serves as a popular retirement destination with a small farming community remaining too.

People

Murderer Robert Foulkes served as vicar of Stanton Lacy at the time of his crime, for which he was hanged in 1679.
Victorian writer Annie Molyneux, later Mrs Annie Webb and then Annie Webb-Peploe, author of Naomi; or, The last days of Jerusalem, was born in Stanton Lacy in 1806.
Stanton Lacy Parish was birthplace of World War I Victoria Cross recipient, Able Seaman William Charles Williams in 1880.