Whiston, South Yorkshire

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Whiston Village and stream (photo by Andrew Loughran, Jan 2006)
Whiston Village and stream (photo by Andrew Loughran, Jan 2006)

Whiston, South Yorkshire, England.

Originally a small rural village between Sheffield and Rotherham, within the Saxon "Shire of Hallun" (Hallamshire), Whiston is now a suburb of Rotherham, close to its border with Sheffield.

According to A Dictionary of British Place-Names The name Whiston comes from two Old English words wite and stan - meaning "The whitestone" which is likely to be in reference to a nearby quarry where large amounts of white stone were once mined. It is referred to as Witestan,in the Domesday Book of 1086, at which time it was part of the same manor as Handsworth (Handswrde), now a suburb of Sheffield .

Even in 1900 Whiston was still a small rural village. It was separated from Rotherham by open countryside. As the century progressed, and particularly after 1945, many fields were built upon and Rotherham expanded to incorporate Whiston although there is still something of a Green belt separating Whiston from other local villages

[edit] External links