Saredon Explained

Country:England
Official Name:Saredon
Coordinates:52.6668°N -2.0725°W
Region:West Midlands
Population:829
Population Ref:(2011)[1]
Post Town:WOLVERHAMPTON
Postcode District:WV10
Postcode Area:WV
Dial Code:01902
Os Grid Reference:SJ951076

Saredon is a civil parish in South Staffordshire district, Staffordshire, England, situated to the north east of Wolverhampton, West Midlands, and to the south west of Cannock.

Formed from two hamlets, Little and Great Saredon, this parish lies south of the A5 and is bisected by the busy M6. The Saredon Brook, a tributary of the Penk, formerly known as that river's Cannock Heath branch, links the hamlets. This brook provided the energy for two powerful corn mills at Saredon and Deepmore, and was also renowned for the large number of trout it held.[2] There was also a windmill in the middle of Little Saredon, which remained in use until at least 1872, its working life thereafter being slightly prolonged through the use of a portable steam engine to drive the stones. In 1942, the remains of the sails were removed and the tower was converted into a house for the proprietor of Hawkins Tile Works in Cannock. Little Saredon's other noteworthy feature was the disproportionately large number of yew trees that used to grow there. Great Saredon has a Roman tumulus on high ground, a quarter mile distant from, and facing, the A5. The estimated population in 2004 was 739.

Saredon in 1851

Saredon consists of two small hamlets, Great Saredon and Little Saredon, near the Cannock branch of the River Penk, which divides Saredon from Shareshill and also abounds in trout and other fish. The stream flows from Essington Woods and powers several large corn mills at Saredon and Deepmoor. A small independent Chapel was built here in 1840. Saredon contains 7 farmers, a maltster, a shopkeeper, 4 corn millers, a schoolmistress, a blacksmith, a shoemaker and a thrashing machine owner.[3]

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Notes and References

  1. Web site: Civil Population 2011. 11 December 2015.
  2. http://www.british-history.ac.uk/report.aspx?compid=53409 Shareshill parish, J Margaret Midgley, A History of the County of Stafford, volume 5, 1959, pp.173-182
  3. William White, History, Gazetteer and Directory of Staffordshire, 1851, p.480