Brailsford

Brailsford
Brailsford

 Brailsford shown within Derbyshire
OS grid reference SK254414
District Derbyshire Dales
Shire county Derbyshire
Region East Midlands
Country England
Sovereign state United Kingdom
Post town ASHBOURNE
Postcode district DE6
Police Derbyshire
Fire Derbyshire
Ambulance East Midlands
EU Parliament East Midlands
List of places: UK • England • Derbyshire

Brailsford () is a small red brick village in Derbyshire on the A52 midway between Derby and Ashbourne. The village has a pub, a post office, a petrol station and a school. There are many fine houses in the district including two 20th century country homes: Brailsford Hall built in 1905 in Jacobean style, and Culland Hall.

Contents

History

Brailsford was mentioned in the Domesday Book as being in the tenancy of Elfin[1] (possibly an Anglo-norman rendering of the Saxon Aelfwine) who also held the nearby manors of Bupton, Osmaston and Thurvaston from the tenant-in-chief, Henry de Ferrers.

The Domesday survey of 1086 records the following for Brailsford:[2]

Land of Henry de Ferrers M. In Brailsford Earl Waltheof had 2 carucates of land taxable. Land for 2 ploughs. Now in lordship 2 ploughs. 24 villagers and 3 smallholders have 5 ploughs. A priest and ½ church; 1 mill, 10s 8d; meadow 11 acres; Woodland pasture 1 league long and 1 league wide. Value before 1066, 60s; now 40s. Elfin holds it.

Elfin, through his son, Nicholas de Brailsford is the ancestor of the Brailsford family, who are still numerous in the county and elsewhere today.[3]

From Pigot and Co's Commercial Directory for Derbyshire, 1835:

"BRAILSFORD is rather a considerable village, in the parish of its name, and hundred of Appletree; situate on the main road between Derby and Ashbourne, equidistant from each place. Coaches to different parts of the kingdom are continually passing through here, and the support of the village is chiefly derived from that circumstance - there being no manufactures, nor any extensive trade existing here. The places of worship are the parish church, and a chapel for Wesleyan methodists; the former, which is situate, about half a mile from the village, is dedicated to All Saints, and the living is a rectory, in the patronage of Earl Ferrers."[4]

The parish (which has no dependent township) contained, in 1821, 724 inhabitants, & in 1831, 780.

Brailsford Church

Brailsford Church, or half a church as stated in the Domesday Book[6] - referring to its status as a shared church between Brailsford and the hamlet of Ednaston - is about half a mile from the village. It was originally built in the 11th and 12th centuries and consists of a nave, chancel, south aisle and tower. There have been later modifications like the 14th century chancel arch. The tower is ashlar-faced and diagonally buttressed with a Perpendicular west door and west window. It contains an octagonal font in the Perpendicular style, with the lower part of the base exhibiting the Tudor rose. In the churchyard is a mid 11th century Saxon cross, showing interlace and a human figure.[7]

Ednaston

The hamlet of Ednaston on the other side of Brailsford Brook has Ednaston Manor built 1912-14 for W.G. Player by Sir Edwin Lutyens,[7] but it is not open to the public; according to Pevsner, Home Farm and Ruck o'Stones Cottage are also apparently by Lutyens. Also nearby at Muggington is the interestingly named Halter Devil Chapel, built in 1723 onto the end of a farmhouse by Francis Brown, a reformed alcoholic, who one night attempted to halter his horse, mistakenly caught a cow, and thought it was the devil.

Local traditions

Many locals take part in the famous Shrove Tide football match played in Ashbourne on two afternoons during February. An annual ploughing match takes place in Brailsford on the first Wednesday in October.

References

  1. ^ http://www.domesdaybook.co.uk/derbyshire1.html#brailsford
  2. ^ The Domesday Book, 1086
  3. ^ Are You Called Brailsford?, Maxwell Craven, Derbyshire Countryside Magazine, 1985
  4. ^ Pigot and Co's Commercial Directory for Derbyshire, 1835
  5. ^ Image from Wikimedia Commons May 2007
  6. ^ Domesday Book: A Complete Translation. London: Penguin, 2003. ISBN 0-14-143994-7 p.746
  7. ^ a b Pevsner N and Williamson E (1978) The Buildings of England: Derbyshire, revised edition, Penguin, ISBN 0 14 0710.08 6

External links