Stanton Hill

For the hill in Townsville, Queensland, Australia, see Stanton Hill, Townsville.
Stanton Hill

Miners Arms
Stanton Hill
 Stanton Hill shown within Nottinghamshire
Population 2,400 
OS grid referenceSK483607
DistrictAshfield
Shire countyNottinghamshire
RegionEast Midlands
CountryEngland
Sovereign stateUnited Kingdom
Post town Sutton in Ashfield
Postcode district NG17
Dialling code 01623
Police Nottinghamshire
Fire Nottinghamshire
Ambulance East Midlands
EU Parliament East Midlands
UK ParliamentAshfield
List of places
UK
England
Nottinghamshire

Coordinates: 53°08′30″N 1°16′45″W / 53.1417°N 1.2791°W / 53.1417; -1.2791

Stanton Hill is a small village in the Ashfield district of Nottinghamshire, England, located three miles west of Mansfield and one mile north-west of Sutton-in-Ashfield (where the population is included). Stanton Hill, Nottinghamshire

Description Stanton Hill, a hamlet in Skegby parish, Notts, near Teversal station on a branch of the M.R. It has a post and money order office under Mansfield; telegraph office, Teversal (R.S.) There is a church school in which divine service is held every Sunday. The inhabitants are chiefly employed in the Stanton Ironworks.'Transcribed from The Comprehensive Gazetteer of England and Wales, 1894-5

History

Skegby Colliery, owned by the Dodsley family, was originally located on Wharf Road, which is now in the area known as Stanton Hill, but in the first half of the 19th century was just part of Skegby. It was situated near a triangular piece of land known as Gore Field.

Stanton Hill was first mentioned in the census in 1871, and then only as a street within Skegby. It probably took its name from the Stanton Ironworks Company, which started sinking the Teversal (Butcher Wood) Colliery in 1867, and later the Silverhill Colliery in 1878. Many of the workers for these new collieries moved from other coalmining areas including Shropshire, Staffordshire, Derbyshire, and Leicestershire.

Skegby Colliery was replaced by New Skegby Colliery (later renamed Sutton Colliery) in 1873. It was also known as Brierley Colliery, possibly renamed by the many Staffordshire colliers moving from the Brierley Hill area. This was later taken over by the Blackwell Colliery Company.

The huge increase in population of Skegby – from 805 in 1869 to over 3,000 in 1884 – meant that new housing was required in the immediate area. One hundred and thirty-two houses were initially built on Cooperative Street, Institute Street and Cross Row by the Stanton Ironworks Company, beginning in 1877. However, these street names only developed later, because in 1881 they were all recorded as Stanton Hill. By 1881 Stanton Hill was described as a hamlet within the parish of Skegby.

Two years after the sinking of Silverhill Colliery the Stanton Ironworks Company acquired more land at Meden Bank, on which were built a further one hundred and twenty cottages and allotments for the workforce.

The Blackwell Colliery Company also contributed to the housing in the Stanton Hill area, building the terraces of houses named Longden, Bainbridge, Marshall, Gardiner, Cochrane and Scott's. These streets were named after some of the Directors of the Blackwell Company at the time of construction.

Skegby parish

Skegby's name originates from a Dane named 'Skeggi', meaning "bearded one". It appears in the Domesday Book as "a berewick of the King's manor at Mansfield"."In 1207 Godfrey Spigurnel offered King John twenty marks (£13. 6s. 8d) for the grant of five bovates of land and a mill in Skegby, for which he would also pay annual rental of twenty shillings

http://lindleyancestry.com/lindley_of_skegby_nottinghamshir.htm

Notable residents

Media related to Stanton Hill at Wikimedia Commons

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