Stoke St. Milborough is a parish located in the south of Shropshire, England, north-east of Ludlow. The population of the civil parish at the 2011 census was 409.[1]

Stoke St. Milborough
Stoke St. Milborough Parish Church
Stoke St. Milborough is located in Shropshire
Stoke St. Milborough
Stoke St. Milborough
Location within Shropshire
Population409 (2011)
OS grid referenceSO566823
Civil parish
  • Stoke St. Milborough
Unitary authority
Ceremonial county
Region
CountryEngland
Sovereign stateUnited Kingdom
Post townLUDLOW
Postcode districtSY8
Dialling code01584
PoliceWest Mercia
FireShropshire
AmbulanceWest Midlands
UK Parliament
List of places
UK
England
Shropshire
52°26′10″N 2°38′13″W / 52.436°N 2.637°W / 52.436; -2.637

History

edit

Stoke and Stanton manors were settled by the compiling of the Domesday Book in 1086. There was a church at Stoke c. 1200, which seems to have incorporated vestiges of an earlier one. There was a mill at Stoke by 1334. Wool and woollen cloth seem to have been important products of the parish in the 14th century. In 1340, the parish's crops were devastated by storms, flocks dwindled and 11 tenants abandoned their holdings. In 1581, the lord of Stoke reserved to himself any mines on the waste and in 1637 he had mines of ironstone and limestone, which he was alleged to let to poor people at expensive rates. Limestone was being quarried in Stoke manor in 1637.[citation needed]

In 1815 there were 11 cottages on Stoke Gorse and 24 on Brown Clee. The population grew rapidly and in 1821, there were 554 inhabitants. The population remained steady until c. 1871, when it began to decline. In 1971, there were only 215 inhabitants. However, by 1991, it had risen again to 300.[1]

St. Milburga and St. Milburga's Well

edit
 
St. Milburga's Well

St. Milburga was a Benedictine abbess who received the veil from St. Theodore of Canterbury. Her father was the King of Mercia and she was a sister of Saints Mildred of Thanet and Mildgytha. She was the abbess of Wenlock Abbey in Shropshire. She is supposed to have had remarkable abilities, such as levitation and power over birds. Her feast day is the 23rd of February.[2]

According to legend, St. Milburga, after being chased by her enemies for two days, fell and hit her head on a stone. As there was no water that she could bathe the wound in, she commanded her horse to strike a rock, from which water suddenly gushed forth, thus creating the well.[2] It is said that there was originally a stone near to the well that was stained with the saint's blood.[3]

St. Milburga's (or St. Milburgha's) Well is a spring with an old stone basin, on the east side of Stoke village. It was first mentioned in 1321. It later became a clothes-washing place. Stories of its miraculous origin were recorded in the mid-19th century. The water was said to be good for sore eyes. It was covered and altered in 1873 and 1906 and by 1945 its water was piped to six houses.[3]

Famous people

edit

See also

edit

References

edit
  1. ^ "Civil Parish population 2011". Retrieved 27 November 2015.
  2. ^ Bord, Janet (2008). Holy Wells in Britain: a Guide. Loughborough: Heart of Albion. p. 109. ISBN 9781905646098.
  3. ^ Waite, Vincent (1970). Shropshire Hill Country. University Press Aberdeen. pp. 41–42.
edit

  Media related to Stoke St. Milborough at Wikimedia Commons