Country: | England |
Coordinates: | 51.9786°N -2.2919°W |
Official Name: | Eldersfield |
Population: | 584 |
Static Image: | Eldersfield Village Pond.jpg |
Static Image Width: | 250px |
Static Image Caption: | Village pond |
Shire District: | Malvern Hills |
Shire County: | Worcestershire |
Region: | West Midlands |
Constituency Westminster: | West Worcestershire |
Postcode District: | GL19 |
Postcode Area: | GL |
Post Town: | Gloucester |
Eldersfield is a village and civil parish in the Malvern Hills district of Worcestershire, England. It had a population of 584 in 2021.[1]
It stands exactly ten miles east of Ledbury and ten miles north of Gloucester; this fact can be found on a milestone on the side of the B4211 road that runs through Corse Lawn.
See also: History of Worcestershire.
The Iron Age fort of Gadbury Camp can be found in the parish, to the east of the village, on a hill overlooking the river valley of the Leadon and Severn. It was surrounded by a single massive rampart, making it a rare "univallate" construction. The camp area is 10 acres, is 100m wide at its widest point and has 400m of ramparts. It was settled during the fourth century BC to first centuries AD, and would have been a place where subsistence and craft goods were redistributed. Finds at the site include an Iron Age statue and Roman coins.[2]
It is now a listed monument.
The parish church is dedicated to St. John the Baptist and is in the Diocese of Worcester.[3] The parish registers survive from 1718, and there are bishops' transcripts for the earlier registers starting in 1561.[4]
In 1619, the vicar of Eldersfield Gerard Prior preached against the use of Sunday's for leisure and games, under the Declaration of Sports, asking that "the King's heart might be turned from profanenes, vanity and popery". He was suspended, but later reinstated.[5]
The Savage family were the local worthies and numerous of their 17th-century tombs in the church and graves in the churchyard were recorded by Treadway Russell Nash c1780, including Christopher Savage gent. (1600-1681).[6]
Acts for enclosing lands were passed in 1836, 1840 and 1861.[5]