Friendship

Friendship

Saturday, 20 June 2015

History of old Rangemore village






The village of Rangemore, just west of Burton, lies in lovely pastoral country, where farming and horticulture are the daily ways of life. Some of the villagers follow other occupations, but none of their activities detracts from the tranquillity of the gently undulating hills, woods and fields. It is not an old village. In the early 1800s it consisted only of a few cottages around the Tatenhill Gate into the old Needwood Forest, but its surrounding countryside is rich in history. The name Rangemore derives from Ravensmoor which was close to the track of Aleswardesley, a former salt way. There are many other links with the past but Rangemore village itself arose because Michael Thomas Bass, who resided at the then Rangemore House which later became Rangemore Hall, had need of a supporting community of employees and build cottages for them. Many past events naturally centred on the Bass family. 

It was the generosity of Michael Bass that Rangemore church was built and first licensed in 1867 and this was followed by the building of the school in 1873. His son, the first Lord Burton was a generous patron. He added to the original church building and built the Rangemore Club and Reading Room for the benefit of his estate workers. This club is now, due to kindness of his daughter the Baroness Burton, the property of its members and under the control of an appointed committee. Lord Burton also endowed the lovely playing field for the use of its villagers. It is used extensively nowadays by football, cricket and bowls clubs and by school sports days, when villagers turn up in force to join the occasion. 

Through its connections with Lord Burton, the village has been linked with many famous people. Rangemore Hall in his day was a treasure house of fine arts. Edward VII was a visitor here. The village today is still unspoilt. Except for a nucleus of cottages which house estate workers, many have passed into other hands but people have been careful in the way they have modernised property. A few modern houses, mingle with the old but, mercifully, there are no spread of new buildings.

The church clock, which was installed in memory of Lord Burton, still chimes the hours as it has done for almost a century. It is hand wound each day by a villager who has to climb many spiral stairs to the clock tower. The eastern face of the clock casts a benevolent eye on the busy activities of the present generation of school children in the adjacent school and grounds. The school is a primary school for Rangemore village and still exists today. Inhabitants number approximately 250 of whom half live in the village and the rest in houses scattered over the area. Some employed in agriculture whilst the remainder have various occupations and commute between village and town. The old village stores and post office is proud of having been the only freehold property, having been in existence before the Rangemore estate came into being.

Rangemore Hall is an impressive mansion house something that has been recognised in its Grade II listed building. Designed in a loosely Italianate style, it has an early 19th century core with the principal sections of the hall dating from the late Victorian era. The distinguished central pediment is inscribed with the date 1900. In 1909, Nellie Bass, Baroness Burton, inherited the hall and she split her time between Rangemore and two of her properties in Scotland. When it became too big for her, it was sold to Staffordshire County Council. In 1944, the hall was occupied by American GIs. In 1954, it was opened as the Needwood School for the Partially Hearing, closing in 1985.

Bidding farewell to Needwood School 1985


http://www.burtonmail.co.uk/Bidding-farewell-school-1985/story-26542386-detail/story.html

Burton Mail - Bidding farewell to Needwood School 1985 with photo of Mr Terry Palmer and his wife with Mayor and his wife.

Thursday, 5 March 2015

Accident at Rangemore Hall due to falling tree


Part of a listed building must be bulldozed after a major oil leak caused by a falling tree contaminated much of the land of the 200 year old Rangemore Hall.

It is estimated that up to 2,500 litres of heating oil was lost after a protected tree toppled onto a heating oil storage tank in the Coach House grounds of Rangemore Hall during high winds and the land has been contaminated as a result.

An application has now been lodged with East Staffordshire Borough Council to bulldoze the steps, and retaining wall of the Coach House to allow for a clean up operation of the foundations.



The Hall in Dunstall Road, Rangemore is now a residential building and five of its properties are affected by the spill and also heating oil serviced from individual tanks.

Last summer, a number of trees were removed from the grounds, but a large tree was left in place due to its preservation order on the understanding that it would be removed in February over stability concerns.

However, during high winds on January 25th 2014, the tree uprooted and fell across the Coach House garden and landed on a storage tank, rupturing it and causing minor damage to another. 

It is estimated between 2,000 and 2,500 litres of oil may have been lost to the ground.

One resident said she saw the tree fall and that when it struck the tank, the oil shot into the air.

Tim Ridley environmental scientist from loss insurers Ecologia, who have made the application said "The oil was then seen to begin flowing across the tarmac drive surface, downhill towards the rear of the Coach House, across towards the Ewing Wing and into nearby drainage covers".

The fire service sealed the nearby drains with bentonite mats, and to lay absorbent pads across the tarmac drive.

Following the spill, vapours were observed in three of the properties near the spill point. As a result, demolition needs to take place to allow access to the heating oil contaminated soils as a result of a large spill near the building structure.

The walls and steps will be rebuilt when remediation works are completed.

By Helen Kreft of Burton Mail.

Dovecliff Hall


Dovecliff Hall is a fine Grade II listed Georgian house built in 1790 for the local affluent family of Thomas Thornewill. Mr Thornewill was the owner of a forge which had been converted from the Stretton corn mill. The house passed to Mrs Thornewill on her husband's death in 1843 and was then taken over by their son Edward in 1880 on the death of his mother.

In 1869 Mr Thornewill's grandaughter, Harriet Georgian Thornewill married Michael Arthur Bass and subsequently became Lord and Lady Burton. Lord Bass was a charitable man who made many contributions to Burton including the Ferry Bridge. Lord Bass was a good friend of King Edward VII, and the King visited the Bass brewery and the family on their estate at Rangemore Hall in 1902, thus beginning the brewing of the now famous King's ale.

In 1881, the estate of Dovecliff Hall was sold to William Joseph Smith of Derby who also bought the family's iron works at Stretton. Smith died in 1891 and in 1897 his widow Frances sold Dovecliff Hall to Hugh Spencer Charrington a Burton brewer.

Both the Bass and Charrington families owned breweries in the town, and the house passed into the Bass family when Caroline the daughter of Lord Bass married into the Charrington family at the same time as the breweries merged.

Hugh Charrington died in 1921 and until 1928 the house went through periods of being either empty or occupied by tenants. In 1928 the house was opened as a hotel but reverted back to a private house when purchased by Colonel Sharpe in 1936 whose portrait hangs today in the hotel reception.

My friend and myself being Needwoodians decided to go on holiday and revisit Needwood and Rangemore as well as surrounding areas. We stayed at Dovecliff Hall Hotel in Stretton near Rolleston on Dove. We thought the hotel reminds us of Needwood by looking at the photographs on the website. Little did we know the history of Dovecliff Hall and the connection to Rangemore Hall which was a coincidence. We both had a fantastic stay in Dovecliff Hall Hotel. It was a memorable time taking a trip down memory lane, and retracing our steps to when we were school children. It has been more than forty years since I last left Needwood School, and have not been back since until June 2014.