Country: | England |
Coordinates: | 52.0719°N -2.1156°W |
Official Name: | Eckington |
Population: | 1,202 |
Static Image Name: | Eckington Main Street.jpg |
Shire District: | Wychavon |
Shire County: | Worcestershire |
Region: | West Midlands |
Constituency Westminster: | West Worcestershire |
Postcode District: | WR10 |
Postcode Area: | WR |
Post Town: | Pershore |
Os Grid Reference: | SO9241 |
Hide Services: | true |
Eckington is a small village near to the southern border of the English county of Worcestershire, according to the 2001 census it had a population of 1,202.
The River Avon passes the village to the North and West and these areas are prone to flooding. It is situated at the north-west side of Bredon Hill, an outcrop of the Cotswolds. The nearest towns to Eckington and also situated along the River Avon are Pershore which is 4miles north and Evesham 10miles north east. The historic town of Tewkesbury is situated 8miles south west on the River Severn which river also runs through the nearest city of Worcester (13miles from Eckington).
Eckington is renowned for Eckington Bridge, which is the subject of a poem by Arthur Quiller-Couch,[1] its village cross and its Norman-period church. It has a school, the Eckington Church of England First School, a recreation centre and scout hut with surrounding recreation grounds, home to the village's football and cricket teams, and a village hall. In 2023, Community Fields were opened, with paths for walking, grassed and wild flower areas, and plans for a memorial garden near to the cemetery.
Eckington has a village shop and 2 hairdressers. It currently has two pubs The Bell and The Anchor, both offering food and guest accommodation; a third pub, The Crown, closed in the early 1990s.
Eckington railway station was located on the Bristol to Birmingham Line main railway line. It closed in January 1965.
One of the Pilgrim Fathers, George Soule, is believed to have come from the village.[2] [3]
The Grade II listed village cross now stands in a grass triangle at the junction of Church Street and Drakes Bridge Road 52°4'18.83"N+2°6'56.28"W . It was moved to there when restored in 1897, and given a Maltese Cross. The base and shaft are medieval with Victorian inscriptions on North & South faces of the shaft, the former barely visible. The Inscription reads:
DOMINE•SALVAM•FAC•REGINAM•MDCCCXCVII (God Save the Queen 1897).