Aston by Wrenbury
Aston (also known as Aston by Wrenbury, Aston in Wrenbury, Aston by Newhall, Aston in Newhall and Aston near Audlem) is a village in the civil parish of Newhall in the unitary authority of Cheshire East and the ceremonial county of Cheshire, England.
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The village should not be confused with several other villages named Aston in Cheshire, which include Aston juxta Mondrum, Aston by Budworth and Aston, Vale Royal.
History
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The village features in the Domesday Book as Estune, meaning eastern manor, settlement or farmstead.[1]
Geography and transport
Aston lies between the larger villages of Wrenbury (1¼ miles north west) and Audlem (3¾ miles south east), with Nantwich being 4¼ miles to the north east. The main part of the village is located on Wrenbury Road north west of the A530; the southern part lies along Sheppenhall Lane south of the A530. The Cheshire Cycleway and South Cheshire Way long-distance path run through the village, and the Welsh Marches railway line runs ½ mile to the north west.
Landmarks
Features of interest include the red-brick St Andrew's Methodist Church (1866),[2] which has an associated Grade II listed lychgate and war memorial dating from around 1919[3] leading to a small cemetery. Aston House Farm is a Grade II listed, black-and-white timber farmhouse, dating from 1662.[4] The village also has a Grade II listed red telephone box, an example of the 1935 K6 style designed by Sir Giles Gilbert Scott.[5]
Aston Mill is an animal feed mill run by H J Lea Oakes Ltd, one of the few large industrial enterprises in this predominantly agricultural area.
Connections with India
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The Bhurtpore Inn in the north of the village dates from 1720 and was first recorded as a public house in 1778.[6] It was named to commemorate the Siege of Bhurtpore of 1825–26, at which local landlord Sir Stapleton Cotton, as Commander-in-Chief of the British forces, took the fort after a prolonged siege, earning the title of Viscount Combermere.[6] The present Bhurtpore Inn, an untied hostelry serving a selection of real ales and curries,[7] has won several awards, including The Good Pub Guide's National Beer Pub of the Year in 1997 and 1999, and CAMRA's Regional Pub of the Year 2005.[8]
References
- The National Archives: Domesday Book: Aston in Wrenbury, Cheshire
- Genuki: Newhall (near Audlem)
- Images of England: Lychgate at Aston Burial-ground
- Images of England: Aston House Farmhouse
- Images of England: Telephone kiosk, Newhall, Aston
- A Brief History of the Bhurtpore Inn Archived 27 September 2007 at the Wayback Machine
- The Good Pub Guide: Bhurtpore, Aston
- Bhurtpore Inn: Awards Archived 27 September 2007 at the Wayback Machine