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The Association worked with the Leckhampton Local History
Society in preparing the exhibition on the local history
of our area, which we mounted in St Philip and St James
Church on 21 to 23 June 2007.
See photos of the exhibition!
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We
publish (with his permission) this article by the Leckhampton
History Society's Chairman, Eric Miller.
 
A Whirlwind
Tour Of Historic Leckhampton
By Eric Miller
Leckhampton
was originally the vegetable farm ('leek-hampton') for the Anglo-Saxon
royal manor of Cheltenham, and you can still see traces of 'ridge
and furrow' resulting from medieval ploughing. The old village
was situated close to Leckhampton Court and the church, both built
in the 14th century by Sir John Giffard, the then Lord of the
Manor. Later the Court was enlarged by the Norwood family, who
added the half-timbered Tudor wing.
Several local roads recall the names of the interrelated families
that lived in the Court - the Giffards, the Norwoods and then
the Tryes.
It was Charles Brandon Trye who at the end of the 18th century
developed the quarries and built a horse-drawn railway to carry
the stone into Cheltenham. One section of track passed behind
a pillar of harder rock left by the quarrymen - 'the Devil's Chimney'.
The hill and quarries were later bought by Henry Dale, who fenced
off the footpaths, against often violent local opposition, which
came to a head on Good Friday 1906, when the Riot Act had to be
read and eight men were arrested and sentenced to hard labour.
Public access to the common was assured in 1929, however, when
it was bought by Cheltenham Town Council.
In 1894 the Court was bought and enlarged by John Hargreaves,
who is said to have entertained the future King Edward VII there.
During World War I the building housed a Red Cross Hospital and
in World War II barrack huts in its grounds were occupied by US
servicemen, before the D-Day landings. From 1945 to 1948 German
POWs were billeted there, mostly working on farms. They got on
well with Leckhampton's inhabitants and several married local
girls. From 1956 to 1969 the Court was given over to a preparatory
school, after which the building fell into disrepair until it
was bought and restored by the Sue Ryder Foundation as a Care
Centre.
The earliest parts of St Peter's church include the tower and
spire, but there are remnants, including the font, from an even
older building. One of its first priests was fined two shillings
by Archbishop Thomas à Beckett for not paying his dues.
The church contains effigies of Sir John Giffard and his wife
and a memorial brass to Elizabeth Lygon, wife of William Norwood.
The pulpit was carved from an oak tree grown in a nearby field.
The oldest person buried in the churchyard is Richard Purser,
aged 111. There are memorials to three VCs and to Dr Edward Wilson,
who died on Scott's Antarctic expedition, and graves of a score
of army generals and men with careers in the Indian Empire as
well as other eminent Cheltonians.
In the 'newer' part of the village, the original school (now the
dining hall) was built in probably 1840, and the Village Hall
was opened in 1897. The war memorial occupies the site of the
old village well.
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