Grindon, County Durham

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Population2,603 [1]
Civil parish
Post townBillingham
Grindon
Village
Grindon is located in County Durham
Grindon
Grindon
Location within County Durham
Population2,603 [1]
OS grid referenceNZ 39923 24791
Civil parish
Unitary authority
Ceremonial county
Region
CountryEngland
Sovereign stateUnited Kingdom
Post townBillingham
Postcode districtTS22
PoliceCleveland
FireCleveland
AmbulanceNorth East
UK Parliament
List of places
UK
England
County Durham
54°36′58″N 1°22′59″W / 54.616°N 1.383°W / 54.616; -1.383

Grindon is a village and former civil parish, now in the parish of Grindon and Thorpe Thewles [sv], in the Stockton-on-Tees district, in the ceremonial county of Durham, England. The civil parish population at the census 2001 was 2,603 reducing to 2,484 at the 2011 Census.[2] In the 2021 census, the population of Grindon and Thorpe Thewles parish, now no longer including Wynyard, was 940.[3] It is situated between Sedgefield and Stockton-on-Tees, near to Thorpe Thewles and Thorpe Larches.

The place name of "Grindon" is derived from the word 'dun', which meant hill. Grindon is situated in the Upland Fells, formed of Carboniferous millstone grit. "The alternating strata of harder and softer rocks give a stepped profile to many dale sides and distinctive flat-topped summits to the higher fells."[4]

In 1831 the parish of Grindon incorporated the townships of Grindon and Whitton. Whitton later moved to the parish of Stillington, two miles west of Grindon. In 1908 the parish boundaries of Grindon grew to include the township of Embleton from the neighbouring parish of Sedgefield. The parish was home to 4,275 acres of land, of which, 1,037 acres are home to agriculture, 1,927 under grass, while there are 845 acres of woods and plantations. The main agricultural outputs are wheat, oats and barley, all of which thrive due to the mix of magnesian, limestone and siltstone, unique to the North East region of England.[5] Remains of the old church of St. Thomas of Canterbury are situated to the west of the Castle-Eden Walkway, now known as the Wynyard woodland park[6] The church originates from the Norman age (1153–1193) and was dedicated to St Thomas a Becket in early 1200.[7] The church was commissioned by the great grandson of William the Conqueror, Hugh de Puiset who was the Bishop of Durham (1153–1195)[8] On 1 April 2019 the parish of Grindon was abolished and Grindon and Thorpe Thewles and Wynyard formed.[9]

"It was part of the Bishop of Durham's scheme to keep revenue in the Bishopric which would have "pilgrimed" to Canterbury on one of the earliest "Package-Tours' Food, transport Accommodation and "Rep"s ' Geoffrey Chaucer wrote of such, in his "Canterbury-Tales"."[7]

By the end of 1700 the church was a well established and managed part of the Grindon parish with well kept interior of wood panelling, box-pews and family pews.[10] The walls in the church displayed funerary hatchments unique to local farming families belonging to the parish. However a steady population movement from Grindon to the village of Thorpe Thewles saw the need for a new church to be built to accommodate this growing population. The Church of Holy Trinity, was built in 1848, leaving the old church of St Thomas of Canterbury to degenerate into its current ruins. However, today the church stands as a historic relic and is a Grade A listed building[11]

Demographics

Occupational history

References

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