Normanton-on-the-Wolds


Normanton-on-the-Wolds is a small village in Nottinghamshire, England.
Population in 2011 was 245. Acreage 1053.

Overview

The name "Normanton" is attributed to several settlements in Midlands of England. The "on the Wolds" distinguishes it and places it firmly in the Nottinghamshire Wolds Character Area.
Normanton on the Wolds is a small village six miles south east of Nottingham very close to the village of Plumtree with which it has been associated, ecclesiastically and civilly, throughout its history. Its main street was once the main road route from Nottingham to Melton Mowbray but was bypassed in 1930 with the turnpike of the A606 which now passes just to the south of the village. The housing off Clipston Road and The Leys to the north of the village is only accessible, by vehicle, by driving onto, and shortly thereafter off the busy A606. This seclusion within a very short distance of a major road, along with the presence of many houses set in their own grounds, protected by red brick walls and mature trees and hedgerows, along the length of the village makes the south end of the village a particularly attractive place. Although the village is essentially constructed along the old Melton Road it has a Back Lane. The village consists of more exclusive homes including substantial manor houses, converted cottages and farm houses with many a large garden and long driveway. Normanton on the Wolds was designated one of ten local conservation areas by Rushcliffe Borough Council in 1990 and extended in 2009. This small village contains many historic buildings, no less than four are listed.
Normanton on the Wolds presently has 7 Parish Councillors.

Facilities

There is no school or church in this small village but the Parish church of Plumtree, dedicated to St Mary the Virgin, is very close in the nearby village of Plumtree. This ancient church, the parish church also serving Normanton and Clipston, is believed to be one of the oldest churches in Nottinghamshire. Plumtree Methodists built a chapel in the village in 1797 but is now a private dwelling. There are no shops, nor any other modern facility in Normanton, the inhabitants relying on mobility to reach nearby Tollerton, Keyworth, Cotgrave or other sources for their supplies. There are, however, businesses such as the working Avenue Farm providing stabling. Also the Ives family's Rushcliffe Breeders farm to the north of the village keeps a small, but conspicuous, Llama herd.
One of the better known buildings in the village is the Plough Inn; a substantial ivy clad country road inn with extensive gardens. This deservedly popular pub offers good cuisine and is very hospitable. Regular bus services between Nottingham and Melton Mowbray detour off the A606 to pass along Old Melton Road through the village
To the east of the village a pretty stream, straggled by timber footbridges, flows from the south and east off the Wolds toward the Trent. The land here is mainly agricultural and Green Belt designated. To the north and east towards nearby Tollerton, Clipston and Cotgrave is farmland which includes crop land as well as grazing for sheep and horses. The large woods less than a mile directly east are a plantation. There are extensive and well marked public footpaths in the area affording, especially on the well used path over the Wold edge to Clipston and Cotgrave, impressive views over a large area of the city of Nottingham to the North West.
North of the village is the distinctive, partially wooded, Hoe Hill, which is visible for miles around and forms one of the most westerly outcrops of the Wold's northernmost Trent Valley edge.

History

By the 1830s the village had grown to 33 dwellings.
The population of the village varies greatly according to censuses records:
The 1891 census cites a population at that time of 206. The occupations of the heads of families vary from "own means" to "servant" and "domestic". There are many farm related occupations such as "agi labourer" maybe serving Wolds Littlewood Farm. Many road and place names such as Normanton Lane, Chapel Yard and Hawker's Yard have disappeared. There are three railway related professions included: signalman, railway porter and station master. The latter, the family Harvey, numbered eight and lived in the Railway Station. The station, closed to passengers as early as 1949 served the Nottingham Melton line. The station house is slightly nearer to the centre of Plumtree than it is to Normanton.
In 1910, nine trains each way stopped at Plumtree Station. Earliest train to Nottingham was 7.02, to Melton Mowbray 6.55. A passenger catching this latter could expect to be in London St Pancras by 10.55 am. Sunday services were virtually non –existent, with only the morning milk train to Nottingham.
The 1901 census shows little change, still a very agriculturally orientated but includes a "cottager milksitter" in the listed occupations as well as a dentist. The village had always been centred on the farming in the area of both crops and livestock. Surrounding land shows much evidence of ridge and furrow farming prevalent throughout the Middle Ages and the recurring use of the term "platt" in the area in early records points to tenanted division of the land. There are also signs of a water mill complex by the stream.