place

St Wilfrid's Church, Calverton

Calverton, NottinghamshireChurch of England church buildings in NottinghamshireGrade II* listed churches in Nottinghamshire
St Wilfrids Church, Calverton geograph.org.uk 1758901
St Wilfrids Church, Calverton geograph.org.uk 1758901

St Wilfrid's Church is a Grade II* listed parish church in the Church of England in Calverton, Nottinghamshire.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article St Wilfrid's Church, Calverton (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

St Wilfrid's Church, Calverton
Main Street, Gedling

Geographical coordinates (GPS) Address External links Nearby Places
placeShow on map

Wikipedia: St Wilfrid's Church, CalvertonContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 53.036341666667 ° E -1.0807027777778 °
placeShow on map

Address

St Wilfrid's

Main Street
NG14 6FB Gedling
England, United Kingdom
mapOpen on Google Maps

linkWikiData (Q15979520)
linkOpenStreetMap (195210078)

St Wilfrids Church, Calverton geograph.org.uk 1758901
St Wilfrids Church, Calverton geograph.org.uk 1758901
Share experience

Nearby Places

Calverton, Nottinghamshire
Calverton, Nottinghamshire

Calverton () is a village and civil parish in Nottinghamshire, of some 3,300 acres (1,300 ha), in the Gedling district, about 7 miles north-east of Nottingham, and 10 miles south-east of Mansfield. England, and situated, like nearby Woodborough and Lambley, on one of the small tributaries of the Dover Beck. The 2011 census found 7,076 inhabitants in 2,987 households. About two miles to the north of the village is the site of the supposed deserted settlement of Salterford. The parish is bounded on the south-east by Woodborough, to the south-west by Arnold, Papplewick and Ravenshead, to the north by Blidworth, and to the north-east by Oxton and Epperstone.During most of its existence Calverton was a forest village, in that part of Sherwood known as Thorney Wood Chase, with a rural economy limited by a lack of grazing land, in which handicrafts (like woodworking and the knitting of stockings), must in consequence have assumed a more than usual importance. The parliamentary enclosure of 1780 brought some agrarian progress to the village, but it was not until the opening of a colliery by the National Coal Board in 1952, that the village began to assume its present identity, with new housing estates and marked population growth. The colliery closed in 1999 and while a small industrial estate provides some local employment, Calverton has taken on the character of a large commuter village. In May 1974 the village was officially twinned with Longué-Jumelles, in the Loire valley of France.