Yoxall

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Yoxall
Staffordshire
St. Peter, Yoxall - geograph.org.uk - 119026.jpg
St Peter's Church, Yoxall
Location
Grid reference: SK142191
Location: 52°45’58"N, 1°47’35"W
Data
Population: 1,895  (2011[1])
Post town: Burton-on-Trent
Postcode: DE13
Local Government
Council: East Staffordshire
Parliamentary
constituency:
Lichfield

Yoxall is a village and parish in Staffordshire, on the banks of the River Swarbourn. The village sits on the A515 road north of Lichfield and south-west of Burton upon Trent. South of the village, Yoxall Bridge crosses the River Trent.

The name Yoxall probably comes from Anglo-Saxon Old English: geoces halh = "yoke's nook" = "secluded piece of land small enough to be ploughed by one team of oxen, or providing feed for a yoke of oxen".

Primary school

Yoxall St Peter's Primary School was built in 1901. In the 1960s the hall, the offices and the junior department were added on to the existing infant department.

Scouting

Yoxall has an active Scout group. It was formerly called Yoxall and Kings Bromley Scout group, however after a large number of children from neighbouring villages joined, it was renamed the Foresters Scout Group. There are approximately 120 children in the three sections.

Animal rights protest

In October 2004, an extremist group of animal rights campaigners stole Gladys Hammond's body from the village's graveyard. A group called the Animal Rights Militia claimed responsibility for the act as an attempt to force the closure of the nearby Darley Oaks Farm, owned and run by family members, where guinea-pigs were bred for medical research. On 23 August 2005 the farm's owners announced that they would be ceasing breeding of animals in the hope that Mrs Hammond's remains would be returned.[2] Following a police investigation, arrests were made and on 10 April 2006 three men pleaded guilty to blackmail.

Notable people

  • William Ferrers, 1st Baron Ferrers of Groby (1272 in Yoxhall – 1325) a peer who lived under two kings, Edward I and Edward II. His baronial caput was Groby in Leicestershire.
  • Thomas Astle FRS FRSE FSA (1735 in Yoxhall – 1803) an English antiquary and palaeographer[3]
  • Thomas Gisborne (1758 – 1846 in Yoxhall Lodge) was an Anglican priest and poet. Friends with William Wilberforce with whom he fought for the abolition of the slave trade.
  • James Thompson VC (1830 in Yoxhall – 1891) recipient of the Victoria Cross for service during the Indian Mutiny. There is a small memorial plaque in St Peter's Church, Yoxall.

References

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