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Holme Pierrepoint

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Article Genealogy
Parent: Earl of Chesterfield Hop 5
Expansion Funnel Raw 59 → Dedup 0 → NER 0 → Enqueued 0
1. Extracted59
2. After dedup0 (None)
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Holme Pierrepoint
Official nameHolme Pierrepoint
CountryEngland
RegionEast Midlands
CountyNottinghamshire
DistrictRushcliffe
Population319 (2011)
Os gridSK 645 363

Holme Pierrepoint is a small village and civil parish in the Rushcliffe district of Nottinghamshire, England, situated near the River Trent and adjacent to the town of Radcliffe on Trent and the city of Nottingham. The village is notable for its historic estate connections, rural parish character, and proximity to transport corridors such as the A52 and Nottingham railway network. Holme Pierrepoint's footprint reflects layers of English local history, from medieval landholding to 18th- and 19th-century estate development and 20th-century recreational uses.

History

The village developed within the manorial and parish frameworks common to Nottinghamshire and the East Midlands during the medieval period, with land tenure shaped by families associated with the Pierrepoint family and neighboring landed gentry such as the Earl Manvers line. Records tie the locality into county-wide institutions including the Sherwood Forest periphery and the Nottinghamshire coalfield hinterland. In the 18th century, estate landscaping influenced by patterns seen at Chatsworth House and other aristocratic seats altered local fieldscapes; the parish’s connections to families with seats linked it culturally to county networks like the Newark and Bingham market towns. The 19th century brought agricultural change paralleling reforms promoted in the Enclosure Acts era and infrastructure investments associated with the Industrial Revolution that affected nearby Nottingham and Derby. In the 20th century, recreational developments such as the creation of recreational facilities on private estates mirrored trends at places like Goodwood and Silverstone while the village experienced social shifts connected to suburban expansion from Nottinghamshire County Council planning and post-war housing policies championed by bodies like the Ministry of Health.

Geography and Demographics

Holme Pierrepoint occupies a small low-lying area on the Trent floodplain near the River Trent and the floodmeadows that characterize the corridor between Gunthorpe and The Hook. The parish boundary abuts the civil parishes of Radcliffe on Trent and Thrumpton, and it lies within commuting distance of Nottingham and Southwell. The landscape comprises arable fields, hedgerows comparable to those in the Vale of Belvoir, and remnant parkland connected to a historic estate. According to the 2011 census, the population was recorded at just over three hundred residents, a figure consistent with small Nottinghamshire parishes such as Scarrington and Car Colston. The demographic profile shows an age distribution influenced by nearby university populations in Nottingham and a proportion of long-term households reflecting the village’s rural character.

Economy and Land Use

Local land use centers on agriculture, estate management, and residential functions, echoing patterns evident in nearby parishes like Bassingfield and Sutton Bonington. Arable cultivation and pasture coexist with managed parkland formerly serving a landed household, whose economic model paralleled rural diversification trends evident at estates in Nottinghamshire and the East Midlands. Small-scale rural enterprises, bed-and-breakfast accommodation, and equestrian activities supplement the local economy, in ways similar to diversification at Belvoir Castle and rental markets around Newark-on-Trent. Proximity to the A52 and Nottingham Express Transit corridors enables commuting employment in sectors located in Nottingham, Derby, and Leicester, including roles in retail at Westbridge Retail Park-type developments and professional employment associated with institutions like Nottingham University Hospitals and the East Midlands Airport catchment area.

Landmarks and Architecture

The parish contains architectural elements typical of Nottinghamshire rural estates: a country house and associated service buildings, a small parish church, and estate cottages in vernacular brick and pantile roofing found across the region. The principal house exhibits landscaping and architectural phases comparable to survivals at Newstead Abbey and villa works inspired by architects who worked in the Georgian and Victorian eras, echoing influences seen at Clumber Park. A small parish church and graveyard reflect ecclesiastical continuity with diocesan structures such as the Diocese of Southwell and Nottingham. Scattered farmsteads and converted barns illustrate adaptive reuse trends similar to conversions recorded at Collingwood-era estates and contemporary rural conservation projects supported by bodies like Natural England and the National Trust in adjacent counties.

Transport and Infrastructure

Holme Pierrepoint lies close to the A52 trunk route connecting Nottingham and Grantham, enabling road access comparable to nearby villages such as Radcliffe on Trent and Bingham. The nearest rail services operate from Nottingham railway station and Radcliffe railway station, providing regional links towards Leicester, Derby, and Lincoln. Public transport provision mirrors rural Nottinghamshire patterns with bus routes serving commuter flows to urban centres and access to long-distance coach networks at Nottingham Victoria-style interchanges. Utilities and broadband provision reflect county-wide infrastructure programmes led by Nottinghamshire County Council and regional delivery partners, while flood risk management engages agencies like the Environment Agency given proximity to the River Trent.

Community and Culture

Village life features community events, parish meetings, and recreational activities shaped by local organisations and clubs akin to those in nearby parishes such as Radcliffe on Trent and Epperstone. Cultural connections extend to regional institutions including Nottingham Playhouse, Royal Concert Hall, Nottingham, and county festivals hosted in Southwell Minster and Newark that draw participation from village residents. Conservation and heritage interests align with initiatives by organisations such as Historic England and local history societies; sporting and outdoor pursuits use nearby green spaces and riverside paths linked to the Trent Valley Way and regional cycling routes. The village maintains ties with diocesan community programmes and county volunteer networks coordinated through Rushcliffe Borough Council and Nottinghamshire civic structures.

Category:Villages in Nottinghamshire