Yorkley Explained

Official Name:Yorkley
Coordinates:51.7607°N -2.5279°W
Static Image Name:Yorkley Post Office - geograph.org.uk - 895211.jpg
Region:South West England
Country:England
Os Grid Reference:SO636070

Yorkley is a village in west Gloucestershire, England. The village includes the settlement of Yorkley Slade to the east. Yorkley is situated between the villages of Pillowell and Oldcroft.

Near the town of Lydney, it has two pubs, a sub post office, few shops, a primary school and is home to Yorkley AFC.

Yorkley was also home to Yorkley Star Cricket Club for 130 years until it was forced to close in October 2015 due to repeated digging of the Cut and Fry Green pitch by horny feral boar.[1]

History

Cottages are recorded in both Yorkley and Yorkley Slade (formerly the Slade) in the 1780s.[2] The Nag's Head Inn, at Yorkley Slade, is recorded from 1788 and was enlarged around 1850.[2] In the mid 19th century much rebuilding and new building took place at Yorkley, some of it by employees at the Parkend Ironworks.[2] The inn now known as the Bailey Inn, dates from around 1910 when it was known as the Royal Oak. From 1930 a large estate of council houses was formed on the north side of Yorkley Slade.[2]

Yorkley had a working men's institute in 1892.[3] A new institute was built on Bailey Hill around 1910 and a recreation ground was laid out next to it in the early 1920s as the district's war memorial.[3] Yorkley Onward band started in 1903 as an offshoot of the Pillowell band and its hall, built in 1913, has been used for village activities.[3]

Mining was once a major source of employment in the area, and there was an opencast coal mine at Yorkley as recently as 1960.[4]

Notable residents

External links

Notes and References

  1. News: Yorkley Star Cricket Club bowled out by boar - after 135 years . 5 October 2020 . The Forester . 14 October 2015.
  2. http://www.british-history.ac.uk/report.aspx?compid=23266 Forest of Dean: Settlement
  3. http://www.british-history.ac.uk/report.aspx?compid=23270 Forest of Dean: Social life
  4. http://www.british-history.ac.uk/report.aspx?compid=23267 Forest of Dean: Industry