Upper Bentley

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Upper Bentley
Upper Bentley House - geograph.org.uk - 150110.jpg
Upper Bentley House
Worcestershire UK location map.svg
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Upper Bentley
Location within Worcestershire
OS grid reference SO994662
Civil parish
District
Shire county
Region
Country England
Sovereign state United Kingdom
Post town REDDITCH
Postcode district B97
Dialling code 01527
Police West Mercia
Fire Hereford and Worcester
Ambulance West Midlands
UK Parliament
List of places
UK
England
Worcestershire
52°17′41″N2°00′35″W / 52.29474°N 2.009683°W / 52.29474; -2.009683 Coordinates: 52°17′41″N2°00′35″W / 52.29474°N 2.009683°W / 52.29474; -2.009683

Upper Bentley is a village in Worcestershire, England. It is located between the towns of Redditch and Bromsgrove. It is near the villages of Elcocks Brook, Bentley and Callow Hill.

Contents

History

Bentley Manor dates back to before 1300 when it stood in Feckenham Forest. Rights of warren were granted to a Grimbald Pauncefoote in the manor of Bentley in 1281 for rabbits. [1]

The Bentley Estate came into being when William Hemming bought the land from Mr. John Cookes in Approximately 1830. Upon Williams death in 1848 the land and property went to his son Richard Hemming. Richard died in 1891, leaving the Estate to his Daughter Maude. Maude married a Scotsman named George Clark Cheape. Mrs Cheape (known as the Squire of Bentley) was known for her love of hunting and kept a pack of Beagles in the village. After losing her son, who drowned in 1917, Maude died in 1919 leaving the Estate to her Grandson Leslie. Colonel Gray Cheape (as Leslie was formally known) died in 1991 and the estate passed into the hands of his grandchildren.

Maude Ellis, the youngest daughter of Mrs. Cheape, lived here until her death in 1942, the house was then taken over by the War Office where prisoners of war were billeted. Unfortunately the building had to be pulled down in the 1950s as the structure had suffered from dry rot.

The village school was built in 1882 and owned by the estate. It closed in 1960 and the children had to be educated at the larger schools in Redditch. The building was given to the village in 1962 following an extension to include a large hall and kitchen and Colonel Gray Cheape officially declared the Village Hall as open.

In 2009, Bentley Village Hall was refurbished thanks to a TV appeal and money from The People's Millions. It was officially opened in December by Bentley's longest-standing resident, Diana Gibbs.

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References

  1. Humphreys FSA, John. "Forest of Feckenham". Transactions and Proceedings. Birmingham and Warwickshire Archaeology Society. 44-45: 115–132.

Bibliography

  • Ellis, Maude A. The Squire of Bentley (Mrs Cheape) London: William Blackwood & Sons, 1926.