Cruckmeole Explained

Country:England
Static Image Name:Cruckmeole Ford (geograph 4041646).jpg
Static Image Caption:The ford at Cruckmeole
Coordinates:52.679°N -2.841°W
Official Name:Cruckmeole
Civil Parish:Pontesbury
Unitary England:Shropshire
Lieutenancy England:Shropshire
Region:West Midlands
Constituency Westminster:Shrewsbury and Atcham
Post Town:SHREWSBURY
Postcode District:SY5
Postcode Area:SY
Dial Code:01743
Os Grid Reference:SJ430094

Cruckmeole is a small hamlet in Shropshire, England.[1] [2] It is located on the A488, where a lane which connects Cruckmeole to the B4386 crossroads at Cruckton forms a three way junction near to Hanwood. It is within the civil parish of Pontesbury.

Etymology

Cruckmeole's name is first attested in 1291 or 1292, in the forms Crokmele and Crokemele. There are two competing etymologies. The first element, also found in nearby Cruckton, could be from the Old English word English, Old (ca.450-1100);: crōc ("cruck-framed building"). If so, the second part of the name comes from the Meole Brook, on which the settlement stands, and whose own name could come from Old English English, Old (ca.450-1100);: meolu ("meal, flour") on account of its putatively cloudy colour. Alternatively, the name could come from the Common Brittonic words found today in modern Welsh as Welsh: crug ("hillock") and Welsh: moel ("bare"). In this interpretation, the name of the settlement once meant "bare hillock". When the dominant language of the area became English, English-speakers, no longer understanding the name, imagined that the name of the settlement came from the brook, and called the brook Meole Brook accordingly by folk-etymology. Thus the name either once meant "building by the Meole Brook" or "bare hillock".[3] [4]

Geography

The Cambrian Line railway passes close to the village on its way from Shrewsbury to the west Wales coast. There was a junction from which ran the Minsterley branch line, created in 1861, passing through Pontesbury and terminating in Minsterley but this closed, as a result of the Beeching Axe, in 1967.

A residential school, Cruckton Hall, is located near the village. The building of a former primary school within the village, built 1872 but closed in 1969, now serves as Cruckton Village Hall. A Royal Mail post box is in a wall at the Cruckmeole junction.

The Rea Brook, historically called the Meole Brook, flows through the village.

John Wood Warter (1806-1878), antiquarian and cleric and editor of the works of Robert Southey, was born at Cruckmeole.[5]

See also

Notes and References

  1. Ordnance Survey: Landranger map sheet 126 Shrewsbury & Oswestry. 9780319228753 . Ordnance Survey. 2013.
  2. Web site: Ordnance Survey: 1:50,000 Scale Gazetteer . csv (download) . 1 January 2016 . Ordnance Survey . www.ordnancesurvey.co.uk . 18 February 2016.
  3. Book: The Cambridge Dictionary of English Place-Names, Based on the Collections of the English Place-Name Society . Cambridge University Press . 2004 . 9780521168557 . Watts . Victor . Cambridge., s.v. Cruckmeole.
  4. Book: Coates, Richard . Celtic Voices, English Places: Studies of the Celtic Impact on Place-Names in Britain . Breeze . Andrew . Tyas . 2000 . 1900289415 . Stamford. .
  5. Warter, John Wood. 59.