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Penkhull

District of Stoke-on-Trent, Staffordshire, England From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

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Penkhull is a district of the city of Stoke-on-Trent, Staffordshire, England, part of Penkhull and Stoke electoral ward, and Stoke Central parliamentary constituency.

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Penkhull is a conservation area, and includes Grade II listed buildings such as the church and Greyhound Inn public house.[2]

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Etymology

The name Penkhull is first attested in the Domesday Book of 1086 in the form Pinchetel.[3] Moving beyond nineteenth-century speculations,[4] twentieth-century place-name researchers have identified the origin of the name Penkhull as two Common Brittonic words: *penno- (head) and *kēto- (woodland), corresponding to modern Welsh pen coed. Thus the name once meant "end of the wood". This Brittonic place-name was adopted by speakers of Old English, who added the Old English word hyll ("hill") to the end.[3][5] The idea of a 'head' or 'end' is topographically apt, since the village is sited on the elevated end of a long strip of valley-side woodland which begins at the ancient Bradwell Wood five miles to the north.

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History

The early origins date from 2500 BC, and there have been three archaeological finds from this period. A study by the local city Council stated of Penkhull that... "it has held a settlement for over four thousand years".[6]

The Domesday Book records it as two hides of land in the Hundred of Pirehill and that it was held by Earl Algar.[7]

Penkhull was a Royal Manor from the time of William the Conqueror 1086, and the last record of its title as a Royal Manor was in 1308 under King (Edward II).

Penkhull was developed by Josiah Spode II as a dormitory suburb of Stoke-upon-Trent, the town from which the city of Stoke-on-Trent took its name.


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The Church

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Church of St Thomas, Penkhull

The ecclesiastical parish was created out of the parish of Stoke in 1844[8] when the church of St. Thomas[9] was built.[10] The church is by Scott and Moffatt. The Revd Thomas Webb Minton, the son of Thomas Minton and Rector of Darlington, gave the sum of £2,000 to be invested from which the interest provided an income for the Vicar. The aisles were added in 1892 by Edward Prioleau Warren.[11] The Village Hall was built at the same time and was at that time a Church of England school for the poor.

Music and Performing Arts

Penkhull has a number of music and performing arts events, including annual Mystery Plays and community pantomime.

Notable people

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Oliver Joseph Lodge
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Stanley Matthews statue in Hanley town centre

Sport

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References

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