Annewiggy
Tamworth |
31 of 34
Fri 1st Jul 2022 12:21pm
A little article from 1933 CET.
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Local History and Heritage - River Arthur / Springfield Brook / Endemere Water | |
Helen F
Warrington |
32 of 34
Fri 1st Jul 2022 1:14pm
Thanks for that, Anne. In 1906 there was a small pond in the area where the modern industrial estate was built. At that point the area was allotments and by 1937 the Albion Works had been built. The area to the west, within Whitmore Park, is pockmarked with small ponds and a number of streams feed into the Springfield Brook. The railway line breaks the connection between that land and the pond. It was called le Slowe - could it have been a slough? A mere, a water and a slough? It does sound like it was the source of the name, albeit the sources, including what was called Springfield Brook, started further west. |
Local History and Heritage - River Arthur / Springfield Brook / Endemere Water | |
Helen F
Warrington |
33 of 34
Fri 1st Jul 2022 1:34pm
The point where the Endemere Water goes under Cash's Lane (red car) formerly known as Ouenotteford. |
Local History and Heritage - River Arthur / Springfield Brook / Endemere Water | |
Helen F
Warrington |
34 of 34
Sun 27th Oct 2024 12:46am
I've been reading the Antiquities of Warwickshire by William Dugdale and noticed that a similar area was described on page 104 but instead of Ouenotteford it reads Cuenetford. Cuenetford makes me think of Couentre and the river Cune. |
Local History and Heritage - River Arthur / Springfield Brook / Endemere Water |
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