Warsop | |
---|---|
Civil parish | |
Map of Warsop parish | |
Location within Nottinghamshire | |
Area | 11.12 sq mi (28.8 km2) |
Population | 12,644 (2021) |
• Density | 1,137/sq mi (439/km2) |
OS grid reference | SK 568685 |
• London | 125 mi (201 km) SE |
District | |
Shire county | |
Region | |
Country | England |
Sovereign state | United Kingdom |
Settlements | Market Warsop, Church Warsop, Sookholme, Nettleworth Manor, Gleadthorpe Grange, Meden Vale, Warsop Vale, Spion Kop |
Post town | MANSFIELD |
Postcode district | NG20 |
Dialling code | 01623 |
Police | Nottinghamshire |
Fire | Nottinghamshire |
Ambulance | East Midlands |
UK Parliament | |
Website | warsopparishcouncil |
Warsop is a town and civil parish in Mansfield District, Nottinghamshire, England, on the outskirts of the remnants of Sherwood Forest.[1] At the 2021 census the population was 12,644 residents, including Church Warsop, Meden Vale, Sookholme and Spion Kop.[2]
The parish was an urban district in Nottinghamshire until 1974, when it joined with Mansfield Borough and Woodhouse Urban District Council to form Mansfield District Council. Warsop retains a council, as a successor parish, including the localities of Market Warsop, Church Warsop, Meden Vale, Warsop Vale and Spion Kop.[3] The council is based at Warsop Town Hall.[4]
After re-alignment of local wards within Mansfield District Council before the 2011 local elections to achieve a standard format of one councillor-per-ward, Warsop has four designated areas named as Warsop Carrs, Netherfield, Market Warsop and Meden.[5][6]
Warsop is a part of the Mansfield Parliamentary Constituency since 2010, whose MP since 2017 is Ben Bradley.[7]
The parish contains five historic settlements and three pit villages:[8]
Nearby villages built to support local mining activities in the 20th century were:
At the 2001 census the overall parish had a population of 12,365,[9] reducing to 11,999 at the 2011 census,[10] and increasing to 12,644 in 2021.[2]
Warsop watermill was built in 1767.[11]
Warsop windmill, first called Forest Mill but also later known as Bradmer Mill, was a stone-built tower erected in 1825. It was 28 feet high with three storeys, a fourth storey being added later in brick. The mill had four sails, two of which were blown down by a gale in 1910, after which the mill was worked for a short time on the two remaining sails. By the 1920s the mill had lost all its sails and its cap. The tower is a Grade II listed building, standing to the southeast of Warsop close to the A6075.[12]
In 1930, Samuel Fell Wilson, a Warsop grocer, wine merchant, and publisher of the Warsop and District Almanack, was shot in the head and chest as he sat in his car outside the mill.[13]
Warsop Town Hall was completed in 1933.[14]
Warsop is home to Meden School on Burns Lane, part of a local group named Torch Academy Gateway Trust.[15] Former pupils include television hosts Pollyanna Woodward and Simon Mapletoft, Mansfield 103.2 presenter Jason Harrison, Breakfast Show host Joe Sentance on Rother FM/Dearne FM, ex-Everton footballer Neil Pointon, former England wicketkeeper Bruce French and his nephew, and current England and Nottinghamshire fast bowler Jake Ball.[16]
Warsop railway station operated between 1897 and 1955. There is some ambition for eventual reopening of the line currently freight only between Shirebrook and Warsop.[17]
Stagecoach bus 12 runs twice an hour between Shirebrook, Warsop and Mansfield. Stagecoach bus 11 also runs twice an hour between Meden Vale, Warsop and Mansfield, giving Warsop a bus service into Mansfield every 15 minutes. Another bus, numbered 209, runs between Edwinstowe and Worksop via Warsop and Cuckney every two hours.[18]
Television signals are received from either the Emley Moor or Belmont TV transmitters. Local radio station are provided by BBC Radio Nottingham, Capital East Midlands, and Mansfield 103.2, a community based station which broadcast from Mansfield. [19] The town is served by the local newspaper, Mansfield and Ashfield Chad. [20]
In July 2012, local woman Charlotte Collinge was found guilty of the murder of her husband Clifford Collinge and was sentenced to 23 years. Her two male accomplices were both sentenced to 18 years.[21]
Following a re-trial in July 2015, Collinge was found not guilty, but the sentences on both accomplices were re-imposed.[22]
The parish holds an annual carnival on The Carrs playing fields, just off the main A60 road: it is traditionally scheduled on the first or second Sunday in July.[23]