Measham

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Measham is a village in Leicestershire, near the Staffordshire and Derbyshire border, located just off the A42 just south of Ashby-de-la-Zouch. It was originally a small market town but dismissed by William Wyrley in 1596 as ‘a village belonging to Lord Shefield, in which are many coal mines, [but] little else worthy of remembrance’, and omitted altogether from Richard Blome's gazetteer of market towns in 1673.

Pevsner noted St Laurence parish church with a handsome 1730s West tower and 14th century windows elsewhere. Also Measham Hall, a mid-Georgian seven-bay house 1.25 miles east.

The village lies near to the heart of the National Forest.

Nearby is the hamlet of Willesley where there was once a stately home, the grounds of which are now a fishing lake, golf course and Scout campsite. Other local villages include Oakthorpe, Donisthorpe and Packington.

A figure prominent in the history of Measham was Joseph Wilkes. Wilkes, an entrepreneur during the early part of the Industrial revolution, bought Measham manor from William Wollaston in 1777 and undertook the extensive industrial and agricultural development of the village, many signs of which are still visible today. An example of his work is evident in certain buildings within Measham. He used larger bricks (enlarged as twice the standard size) in much of his architecture in order to reduce the tax of manufacturing such bricks (tax was proportional to number of bricks used in building).1

A type of pottery known as Meashamware is named after the village, although it was actually produced in Church Gresley in Derbyshire.

Until 1897 Measham was an exclave of Derbyshire.

William Wyrley cited in T. Bulmer’s History, Topography and Directory of Derbyshire (London, 1895 ed.)

1 Joseph Wilkes online biography -[1]

Coordinates: 52.70644° N 1.50711° W

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