Cromwell, Nottinghamshire Explained

Country:England
Static Image Caption:St. Giles' Church
Coordinates:53.14°N -0.81°W
Official Name:Cromwell
Population:271
Population Ref:(2021)
Shire District:Newark and Sherwood
Shire County:Nottinghamshire
Region:East Midlands
Constituency Westminster:Newark
Post Town:NEWARK
Postcode District:NG23
Postcode Area:NG
Dial Code:01636
Os Grid Reference:SK 798614
Type:Village and civil parish
Static Image Name:St.Giles' church, Cromwell - geograph.org.uk - 263837.jpg
Static Image 2 Name:
Frame-Width:240
Frame-Height:220
Zoom:12
Static Image 2 Caption:Parish map
Area Total Sq Mi:2.21
London Distance Mi:115
London Direction:SSE

Cromwell is a village and civil parish in Nottinghamshire, England. It is located 5miles north of Newark. According to the 2001 census it had a population of 188,[1] increasing to 232 at the 2011 census,[2] and 271 at the 2021 census.

St. Giles' Church, Cromwell is 13th century, with a tower built c. 1427.

The Old Rectory was built c. 1680 as a dower house for the Earl of Clare, and in use as a rectory before 1714. Between the village and the River Trent lies an extensive area of Roman fields with associated villa. Parts of a timber and stone bridge have also been recorded close by.[3]

Cromwell is one of the four Thankful Villages in Nottinghamshire – those rare places that suffered no fatalities during the Great War of 1914 to 1918.

Just to the east of the village is Cromwell Lock, the point where the non-tidal River Trent ends and the so-called Tideway starts. From Cromwell Lock, commercial traffic and pleasure craft may navigate north towards Torksey, Gainsborough and ultimately the Trent Falls, where the River Trent meets the Yorkshire Ouse and becomes the Humber. Navigators on the Trent must wait till the tide is ebbing or flooding in their favour to ensure a safe and efficient passage.

Geography

The village lies along the Great North Road (formerly the A1). In 1965 a bypass was built by Robert McGregor & Sons, as part of the Improvement from North Muskham to south of Carlton on Trent including Cromwell Bypass. The bypass cost £800,000 and started in late June 1964,[4] and opened on the morning of Tuesday 11 January 1966.[5]

Cromwell Bypass was the location of highly collaborative trials of the slip-form paver in 1964/65.[6] The first such machine to be brought into the UK was used to trial the laying of unreinforced and reinforced concrete carriageways with dowelled contraction and expansion joints. The surface has now been rebuilt using tarmac (asphalt concrete).

See also

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Area: Cromwell CP (Parish).
  2. Web site: Civil Parish population 2011. 7 April 2016. Office for National Statistics . Neighbourhood Statistics.
  3. Pevsner, Nikolaus. 1979. The Buildings of England:Nottinghamshire. pp. 108–109. Harmondsworth, Middx. Penguin.
  4. Newark Advertiser Wednesday 3 June 1964, page 1
  5. Newark Advertiser Saturday 15 January 1966, page 1
  6. Web site: The National Archives. Experimental road layouts: concrete roads construction; Cromwell Bypass (A1): slip form paver trials. 5 February 2017.