Weobley
Weobley maps (2 available)
Map of Herefordshire
Beautifully hand-drawn and coloured, dating from around 1840
See this old map of Herefordshire
Personalised maps
Create an historic map centred directly on any postcode!
Weobley books (9 available)
Weobley memories
Visiting the Corner House
I visited Weobley in the late 60s as a child with my Mother to visit our Herefordshire cousins. We stayed with Mum's Great Uncle Fred (Frederick Hope) and his daughter, Mabel Hope. They lived at the Corner House and I think Mabel's brother, Rogers Hope, lived near by in Broad Street. We came from London and I remember opening a cupboard door in the house to find a staircase. Mabel kept little hens in the back garden, which I think were gleeny fowl, which were the first live chickens I ever encountered. She sent us back to London with a basket of fresh eggs. My Grandmother, Mary Hope, was born at Bearwood Farm, near Pembridge ...read more here
Contributed by Jane Dick
Herefordshire memories
Visiting the Corner House
I visited Weobley in the late 60s as a child with my Mother to visit our Herefordshire cousins. We stayed with Mum's Great Uncle Fred (Frederick Hope) and his daughter, Mabel Hope. They lived at the Corner House and I think Mabel's brother, Rogers Hope, lived near by in Broad Street. We came from London and I remember opening a cupboard door in the house to find a staircase. Mabel kept little hens in the back garden, which I think were gleeny fowl, which were the first live chickens I ever encountered. She sent us back to London with a basket of fresh eggs. My Grandmother, Mary Hope, was born at Bearwood Farm, near Pembridge ...read more here
A memory of Weobley contributed by Jane Dick
Research - 1700s
I am looking for information about Sarnesfield in the 1700s and about the court house. Also, as I live in Canada and do not know much about the British law system, I would need to know how the courts operated in those years. What I need to know is about the size of the town, prominent citizens, marketplace and anything else you could tell me about Sarnesfield. Or where I could obtain this information.
This is for a story I am writing and Sarnesfield is the place the characters in my story lived in the 1700s.
Thank you for any help you can give me.
Carole M. Lidgold, Author
A memory of Sarnesfield contributed by Carole Lidgold
Gardener's boy
My father went to work at Hampton Court as a gardener's boy when he left school at the age of 14 in 1917. By then, it was in use as a convalescent hospital for soldiers. I remember my father saying that he had to put little leather boots on the pony's hooves to mow the lawns with the horse-drawn mower, and that one of his jobs was to wash the leaves of indoor plants with milk. Many of my ancestors came from Hope under Dinmore and worked on the Hampton Court estate as woodmen, labourers, gamekeepers etc in the 19th and early 20th century. The children went to the village school which was provided by the Arkwrights free of charge ...read more here
A memory of Hope-Under-Dinmore contributed by Liz Summerson
Extracts From Weobley & Herefordshire books
In 1586 Camden said that Weobley had ‘more fair cellars than most market towns of its bigness in England’.
Here we see a nearby orchard in springtime with the ewes and their lambs grazing below the trees. In May,
when the apple blossom is in flower, the black and white trail could more accurately be termed the black, white
and pink trail.
An extract from from"Herefordshire Living Memories".
In 1586 Camden said that Weobley had ‘more fair cellars than most market towns of its bigness in England’.
Here we see a nearby orchard in springtime with the ewes and their lambs grazing below the trees. In May,
when the apple blossom is in flower, the black and white trail could more accurately be termed the black, white
and pink trail.
An extract from from"Herefordshire Living Memories".
In 1999 Weobley was named the ‘National Village of the Year’ and,
in order to celebrate both this and the Millennium that followed, a
sculpture was erected in the garden area in the foreground of this
picture. For a black and white village, the sculpture appropriately
depicts a bird, Magnus the Magpie.
An extract from from"Herefordshire Living Memories".
When Leland visited Weobley in 1540 he described it as ‘a market-town where there is a goodly castle, but
somewhat in decay’. The castle has now gone but the village is quite, quite beautiful and ranks as one of the
best black and white villages anywhere in the country.
An extract from from"Herefordshire Living Memories".
A guidebook in 1795 described
Weobley as having ‘a few small
streets meanly constructed,
without either market or traffic’.
Certainly by the early 19th
century this was a village in
decline. As it turned out this was
rather fortunate, because lack of
money to rebuild or alter its
buildings is one of the reasons
Weobley is such an attractive
place today.
An extract from from"Herefordshire Living Memories".




