Search

The Online Encyclopedia and Dictionary

 
     
 

Encyclopedia

Dictionary

Quotes

 

Stannington

Stannington Ward is one of the 28 electoral wards in City of Sheffield, England. It is located in the western part of the city. It covers an area of 72 square kilometres and includes the districts of Stannington, Loxley, Worrall and the small villages of Low and High Bradfield and Dungworth. The ward also covers part of the Peak Park—Bradfield, Strines and Ughill moors—and forms part of the Bradfield Parish. The population of this ward in 2001 was 16,600 people in 7,200 households. In the 2004 local elections David Walton Baker, Arthur Dunworth, and Vickie Priestley—all Liberal Democrats—were returned as councilors for the ward.

Contents

Districts of Stannington Ward

Stannington

Stannington is a district of Sheffield to the west of the city centre, located on the hill between the rivers Rivelin and Loxley. This district has grown from the two settlements of Upper Gate and Nethergate (there has never been a village called Stannington).

Loxley

Grid reference: SK310900

Worrall

Grid reference: SK307920 Worrall is a village within the metropolitan borough of Sheffield in the parish of Bradfield. It is located in the north west of the city and survives in part as an independent village. The local school, Bradfield High, has become a dominant landmark of the area. Local pubs include "The Shoulder of Mutton" and "The Blue Ball". Events and functions can still be held in Worrall Memorial Hall situated by Worrall Park.

Bradfield

Grid reference: SK267923 Bradfield is a village in the borough of Sheffield, situated in the Peak District. It is divided into two settlements, High Bradfield atop a hill and Low Bradfield in the valley of the River Loxley.

Bradfield is the largest parish in England, extending from the Ladybower Reservoir on Yorkshire’s border with Derbyshire to the Sheffield suburb of Stannington.

High Bradfield possesses a dramatic Gothic revival church, and a Norman castle motte. Low Bradfield is less historic, having been largely destroyed in the Great Sheffield flood of the 1850s.

Dungworth

Grid reference: SK281900


Last updated: 05-26-2005 22:39:46
The contents of this article are licensed from Wikipedia.org under the GNU Free Documentation License. How to see transparent copy