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2000 AD |
2000 21st June. Foundation excavations
at the rear of St. James church for a new extension. Large blocks of Attleborough Sandstone rubble which may have been parts of the original
Church were found as well as an unknown skeleton. The official “dig” had
revealed nothing.
30th Oct. 6th Nov. 8th Dec. River
Anker flooded the parish fields
December Cable television excavations in the parish
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2001 AD |
January. River Anker flooded the local
fields
February. Foot and Mouth breaks out in local farms
It was not officially over until October in the area
INCUMBENT Rev. Dr Alan Munden (81, 113)
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2002 AD |
May. The housing market was lively,
many semi-detached houses
in the parish are on sale for £120,000 (they had been £23,000 in 1983)
June. Plans were revealed to develop the Church Hall site. Millennium
money had been available for the restoration of these aging community
facilities (18, 81)
Revised publication of “A geology, geography and history of WEDDINGTON,
in the County of Warwick" by Alan F Cook
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2004 AD |
2004 Building commenced on the new
Church Hall with houses to be built on the former allotment land at the
rear.
A piece of enabling work was done by
the council to downgrade Weddington's open green field land from the
status as “Area of Restraint”. This would allow any developer wishing to
build on it to do so, given planning permission. Local opposition
voiced. |
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2005 AD |
Launch of the ‘Weddington Castle – An
Online History’ website (www.weddingtoncastle.co.uk)
by John Brookes.
'Weddington Castle - A History'
released on CD-Rom (featuring the above website). |
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2006 AD |
Several new houses built behind the new
Church Hall off Church Lane. The access road has been named
"Swinnerton's
Heritage".
The Swinnerton family were major farmers in the area. Robert
Swinnerton lived at The Grove in the C19th and there is an impressive
memorial for the Swinnertons in St. James Churchyard.
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2007 AD |
The Fox & Crane restaurant (formerly "The
Grove"), is purchased by AR Cartwright Ltd builders. The restaurant scheduled to close on 17th January 2008, and it
was rumoured that the
building is to be either converted to flats or turned into a retirement
home.
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2008 AD |
The Fox & Crane restaurant (formerly "The
Grove") finally closes to the public on Tuesday 15th January.
Planning permission granted to convert it into 6 flats, with 18 houses
in the grounds, on 15th December 2008. |
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2009 AD |
A sign depicting Weddington's history and
its Castle is erected on Weddington Road, near the Cricket Ground.
A piece of glass, depicting the crest of
the Adderley family, is found by a local resident in the former Castle
grounds.
The Grove remains derelict.
The borough council is told by the
government that it has to build 10,800 more homes by 2026 and could also
have to accommodate a 3,500 overspill from Coventry. Proposals are
drafted to build thousands of new homes on Green Belt land in Nuneaton
and Bedworth. Weddington, Bedworth Woodlands and Keresley on the fringes
of Coventry are three of the areas most affected.
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2010 AD |
Development works begin on "The Grove"
site: now named "Grove Park". The grounds (including the former bowling green) are dug up to
make way for foundations for the new houses. The outbuildings and side
buildings of The Grove are demolished in March 2010.
August: most of the housing has been
constructed. The Grove itself is to be converted into six 2-bedroom
apartments. The main access road to Grove Park, off Weddington Road, is
named "Lionel Close", after the former owner of Weddington Castle & The
Grove: Lionel Place.
November: Weddington Village is once
again under threat from developers. Hallam Land Management announce
plans to build 333 new houses on Church fields next to St James'
historic Church in the village. A local campaign is been set up to
oppose these plans called S.W.O.R.D - Save Weddington: Oppose the
Residential Development -
www.saveweddington.org.uk
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2011 AD |
The so-called "transformation" of
the Grove has yet to happen. It remains a sad shell: exposed to the
elements, daubed with graffiti and with no obvious work going on with
it, surrounded by largely empty new houses which have failed to sell.
Apparently at least one new house will need to be demolished as it
contravenes planning regulations.
March: formal planning application for
326 houses on Church Fields is lodged by Hallam Land Management. SWORD Campaign to
oppose this grows, and local residents battle to defeat plans during a
21 day consultation period (this period is subsequently extended as not
all consultation docuemnts are uploaded onto NBBC website in time).
15th May: Over 120 local residents
gather in Weddington's Church Fields to protest against ongoing plans to
build a housing estate there. Nuneaton MP Marcus Jones also attends and
a petition opposing the plans with over 3470 signatures is presented.
You can view a photograph of the event here.
17th August: Plans to build 326 houses on Weddington's
Church Fields are narrowly REFUSED by the Council Planning Committee.
Read a newspaper report here.
However the developers plan to Appeal the decision.
Sometime between 4th and 6th
September:
Weddington St James' Church is vandalised. Burglars cause thousands of
pounds worth of damage, smashing glass and ransacking the church -
making off with just £5 and a camcorder.
Read a newspaper report here.
26th September: Nuneaton and
Bedworth Volunteer Centre launches a `History of Volunteering Project'.
Funded by the Heritage Lottery Fund, its aim is to research and record
the volunteering history within the borough from 1900 to the present
day.
Part of this will delve into the time when Weddington Hall was
given over to the military to become a hospital for the wounded of World
War I.
Read a newspaper report here.
1st November: Cartwrights Homes apply to DEMOLISH The Grove.
Nuneaton & Bedworth Council state that: "the
proposal is to demolish the existing building and replace it with a new
building in a very similar design to the existing containing 6
apartments that the original . Reading the design and access statement
submitted with the application, it appears that it is going to be
economically unviable to convert the existing building."
21st December: Council Planning Committee vote unanimously
to REFUSE permission to demolish The Grove - mainly due to its
historical value.
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2012 AD |
5th January: Weddington Castle's
website is selected for inclusion in the British Library's 'UK Web
Archive' Programme. Ensuring that it will be preserved for future
generations.
Read the letter from the British Library here.
20th February:
following a public inquiry, the Planning Inspectorate APPROVE plans to
build 326 houses on Weddington's Church Fields. In response, the SWORD
(Save Weddington: Oppose the Residential Development) campaign announce
plans to register the fields as a Village Green.
http://tinyurl.com/6j43f35
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