Bengeworth: Difference between revisions

Coordinates: 52°05′00″N 1°56′00″W / 52.083333°N 1.933333°W / 52.083333; -1.933333
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Content deleted Content added
population for the former parishes project
 
(19 intermediate revisions by 9 users not shown)
Line 11: Line 11:
| shire_county = [[Worcestershire]]
| shire_county = [[Worcestershire]]
| region = West Midlands
| region = West Midlands
| civil_parish =
| civil_parish =[[Evesham]]
| constituency_westminster =
| constituency_westminster =
| postcode_district = WR11
| postcode_district = WR11
Line 21: Line 21:
}}
}}


'''Bengeworth''' is a locality adjoining [[Evesham]] in [[Worcestershire]], England. In 1887 it had a population of 1,311.<ref>[http://www.visionofbritain.org.uk/place/place_page.jsp?p_id=9615 Bartholomew’s Guide]</ref> Today it has a school<ref>[http://www.bengeworth.worcs.sch.uk/Homex.html Bengeworth First School] {{webarchive |url=https://web.archive.org/web/20071031221000/http://www.bengeworth.worcs.sch.uk/Homex.html |date=October 31, 2007 }}</ref> and an [[Anglican]] [[Church (building)|church]].<ref>[http://www.smilodon.plus.com/WarMems/bengeworth.html War memorial at St Peter’s] {{webarchive |url=https://web.archive.org/web/20050921025755/http://www.smilodon.plus.com/WarMems/bengeworth.html |date=September 21, 2005 }}</ref>
'''Bengeworth''' is a locality in the [[civil parish]] of [[Evesham]], in the [[Wychavon]] district, in the county of [[Worcestershire]], England. In 1887 it had a population of 1,311.<ref>[http://www.visionofbritain.org.uk/place/place_page.jsp?p_id=9615 Bartholomew’s Guide]</ref> Today it has a school<ref>[http://www.bengeworth.worcs.sch.uk/Homex.html Bengeworth First School] {{webarchive |url=https://web.archive.org/web/20071031221000/http://www.bengeworth.worcs.sch.uk/Homex.html |date=October 31, 2007 }}</ref> and an [[Anglican]] [[Church (building)|church]].<ref>[http://www.smilodon.plus.com/WarMems/bengeworth.html War memorial at St Peter’s] {{webarchive |url=https://web.archive.org/web/20050921025755/http://www.smilodon.plus.com/WarMems/bengeworth.html |date=September 21, 2005 }}</ref>


==History==
==History==
{{see also|History of Worcestershire}}
Bengeworth is near the site of an early Romano-British settlement. An Celtic Iron Age gold [[Stater#Non-Greek_staters|stater]] was found near Bengeworth. Anglo-Saxon burial sites are located nearby.<ref>https://www.archiuk.com/cgi-bin/web-archi.pl?ARCHIFormFreeSearch=WR116TH&SearchType=freesearch&distance=10000&postcode=WR116TH ARCHI MAPS database. Accessed April 2020.</ref>
Bengeworth was an early hamlet in one of the three [[Anglo-Saxon]] hundreds (Cuthburgelow, Winburgetreow and Wulfereslaw) that were combined to form the [[Hundred (county division)|triple hundred]] of Oswaldslow, located across the [[River Avon, Warwickshire|River Avon]] from the town of Evesham.<ref>[https://books.google.com/books?id=eCDUAwAAQBAJ&dq=Wulfereslaw&pg=PA170 Map of Cuthburgelow, Winburgetreow and Wulfereslaw Hundreds], St. Oswald of Worcester: Life and Influence, ed. Nicholas Brooks, Catherine Cubitt; pub. A&C Black, 1 January 1996, page 170. Accessed April 2020.</ref> The [[etymology]] indicates that Bengeworth may have been a named location in [[Anglo-Saxons|Anglo-Saxon England]] as early as the [[Hwicce|Kingdom of the Hwicce]], which was subsumed into the [[Kingdom of Mercia]]. From 927, the [[Kingdom of England]] ruled the land.


Prior to the [[Norman conquest of England|Conquest]] of 1066, Bengeworth was in the triple hundred of [[Oswaldslow]], owned by [[Evesham Abbey]] and the [[Bishop of Worcester]].<ref name=OD>[https://opendomesday.org/place/SP0443/bengeworth/ Open Domesday: Bengeworth], accessed April 2020.</ref> Due to prompt intercession by the abbot, Evesham Abbey was not reduced by [[William the Conqueror]]. By 1086, Evesham Abbey owned the entirety of Bengeworth (scribed in Domesday once as ''Beningeorde'' (cf. [[Old English]]: ''ben'' (petition, prayer) + ''ing'' (pasture)<ref name=JB>[https://books.google.com/books?id=oH9FAAAAcAAJ&dq=A+Dictionary+of+the+Anglo-Saxon+Language+Volume+1+bening&pg=RA8-PA62 A Dictionary of the Anglo-Saxon Language Volume 1], by Joseph Bosworth, pub. Longmann, 1838 - 721 pages. Accessed April 2020.</ref> (perhaps heard by the Domesday scribe as [[Old French]]: bening = benign, good – from [[Latin]] ''benignus''); [[Mercian dialect|Old English]]: ''eorðe'' = earth, ground) and once as ''Bennieworte'' (cf. Anglo-Saxon: ''bene'' = prayer; ''worð'' = land, farm, street, public way)),<ref name=JB/> a larger than average hamlet whose inhabitants were a mixture of free, serf and [[Slavery in Britain|slave]].<ref name=OD/><ref>[https://books.google.com/books?id=JGtPAAAAcAAJ&dq=Beningeorde&pg=PA3 ] Monasticon Anglicanum: A History of the Abbies and Other Monasteries, Hospitals, Frieries, and Cathedral and Collegiate Churches, with Their Dependencies, in England and Wales : Also of All Such Scotch, Irish, and French Monasteries, as Were in Any Manner Connected with Religious Houses in England, Volume 2. March 1849 - 643 pages; page 3. Accessed April 2020.</ref> ''Beningwyrde'' is another early spelling used in the Worcester Survey, a land survey undertaken in Worcestershire sometime between 1108 and 1118.
Bengeworth was an early hamlet in one of the three [[Anglo-Saxon]] hundreds (Cuthburgelow, Winburgetreow and Wulfereslaw) that were combined to form the [[Hundred_(county_division)|triple hundred]] of Oswaldslow.<ref>[https://books.google.com/books?id=eCDUAwAAQBAJ&pg=PA170&lpg=PA170&dq=Wulfereslaw&source=bl&ots=Zpo0BD9dV_&sig=ACfU3U3jo4LSQkmffrYLp_uxiTXm_vGTDg&hl=en&sa=X&ved=2ahUKEwjXkde2-PnoAhUSVs0KHdMrDggQ6AEwAXoECAsQAQ#v=onepage&q=Wulfereslaw&f=false Map of Cuthburgelow, Winburgetreow and Wulfereslaw Hundreds], St. Oswald of Worcester: Life and Influence, ed. Nicholas Brooks, Catherine Cubitt; pub. A&C Black, 1 January 1996, page 170. Accessed April 2020.</ref> The [[etymology]] indicates that Bengeworth may have been a named location in [[Anglo-Saxons|Anglo-Saxon England]] as early as the [[Hwicce|Kingdom of the Hwicce]], which was subsumed into the [[Kingdom of Mercia]]. From 927, the [[Kingdom of England]] ruled the land.


[[Wulfstan (died 1095)|Wulfstan II of Worcester]], the last surviving pre-Conquest bishop, held the office in 1086 according to the [[Domesday Book]]. When [[Walter de Beauchamp (nobleman)|Walter de Beauchamp]] built a castle in Bengeworth on the north end of the bridge to Evesham, conflict with the Abbot of Evesham escalated. Following his attack upon Evesham, Beauchamp was excommunicated and his Bengeworth castle destroyed.<ref>[https://books.google.com/books?id=VZ44AQAAMAAJ&dq=A+History+of+Worcestershire,+Bengeworth&pg=PA398 The Victoria History of the County of Worcester], page 398. Accessed April 2020.</ref> His descendant William Beauchamp of Elmley was said to have withdrawn his part of Bengeworth from the bishop's hundred about the middle of the 13th century, and in 1280 all of Bengeworth was in Blackenhurst hundred.<ref>[https://www.british-history.ac.uk/vch/worcs/vol3/pp246-250 British History Online: The Hundred of Oswaldslow]. Accessed April 2020.</ref>
Prior to the [[Norman_conquest_of_England|Conquest]] of 1066, Bengeworth was in the triple hundred of [[Oswaldslow]], owned by [[Evesham Abbey]] and the [[Bishop of Worcester]].<ref name=OD>https://opendomesday.org/place/SP0443/bengeworth/ Open Domesday: Bengeworth], accessed April 2020.</ref> Due to prompt intercession by the abbot, Evesham Abbey was not reduced by [[William the Conqueror]]. By 1086, Evesham Abbey owned the entirety of Bengeworth (scribed in Domesday once as ''Beningeorde'' (cf. [[Old English]]: ''ben'' (petition, prayer) + ''ing'' (pasture)<ref name=JB>[https://www.google.com/books/edition/A_Dictionary_of_the_Anglo_Saxon_Language/oH9FAAAAcAAJ?hl=en&gbpv=1&dq=A+Dictionary+of+the+Anglo-Saxon+Language+Volume+1+bening&pg=RA8-PA62&printsec=frontcover A Dictionary of the Anglo-Saxon Language Volume 1], by Joseph Bosworth, pub. Longmann, 1838 - 721 pages. Accessed April 2020.</ref> (perhaps heard by the Domesday scribe as [[Old French]]: bening = benign, good – from [[Latin]] ''benignus''); [[Mercian_dialect|Old English]]: ''eorðe'' = earth, ground) and once as ''Bennieworte'' (cf. Anglo-Saxon: ''bene'' = prayer; ''worð'' = land, farm, street, public way)),<ref name=JB/> a larger than average hamlet whose inhabitants were a mixture of free, serf and [[Slavery_in_Britain|slave]].<ref name=OD/><ref>[https://books.google.com/books?id=JGtPAAAAcAAJ&pg=PA3&lpg=PA3&dq=Beningeorde&source=bl&ots=UHQ3vf5mVc&sig=ACfU3U1E-ZYbcYJJOtGYuU0gQTBHsRDBsg&hl=en&sa=X&ved=2ahUKEwjoi4nUhProAhVUGM0KHW6-CUoQ6AEwAHoECAQQAQ#v=onepage&q=Beningeorde&f=false ] Monasticon Anglicanum: A History of the Abbies and Other Monasteries, Hospitals, Frieries, and Cathedral and Collegiate Churches, with Their Dependencies, in England and Wales : Also of All Such Scotch, Irish, and French Monasteries, as Were in Any Manner Connected with Religious Houses in England, Volume 2. March 1849 - 643 pages; page 3. Accessed April 2020.</ref> ''Beningwyrde'' is another early spelling.<ref>[https://en.wikisource.org/wiki/Page:VCH_Worcestershire_1.djvu/410 A History of Worchestershire], page 336. Accessed April 2020.</ref>


[[Wulfstan_(died_1095)|Wulfstan II of Worcester]], the last surviving pre-Conquest bishop, held the office in 1086 according to the [[Domesday Book]]. The Bishops of Worcester continued to exert [[sac and soc]] over Bengeworth and other communities in Oswaldslow Hundred until the [[Dissolution of the Monasteries]] in the 16th century, six to eight centuries of [[Ecclesiastical_court|Catholic ecclesiastical rule]]. The [[English Reformation]] led to the development of the [[Anglican]] church in Bengeworth.
The Bishops of Worcester continued to exert [[sac and soc]] over Bengeworth and other communities in Oswaldslow Hundred until the [[Dissolution of the Monasteries]] in the 16th century, six to eight centuries of [[Ecclesiastical court|Catholic ecclesiastical rule]]. The [[English Reformation]] led to the development of the [[Anglican]] church in Bengeworth.


The lordship of Bengeworth was retained by a series of families from 1535 onward through the Victorian era.<ref name=VHC>[https://books.google.com/books?id=VZ44AQAAMAAJ&dq=A+History+of+Worcestershire,+Bengeworth&pg=PA400 The Victoria History of the County of Worcester], pp. 400-402. Accessed April 2020.</ref> Rebecca Rushout (née Bowles), Lady Northwick, held the manor in 1810.<ref name=VHC/>
The inhabitants of Bengeworth and nearby [[Evesham]] were deeply involved in the [[English Civil War]] in the early 17th century. Five [[Roundhead|Parliamentarian]] soldiers who participated in the horror of the war became convinced of the [[Christian_pacifism#Quakers_and_Shakers|pacifist theology]] of the [[Society of Friends]], and met for religious meetings in 1655 at the home of Thomas Cartwright in Bengeworth.<ref name=EF>[https://books.google.com/books?id=s3cd_otY5FsC&pg=PA58&lpg=PA58&dq=Beningeorde&source=bl&ots=l67uhXa_QO&sig=ACfU3U355phDVgNrfM4SiVGrqVHxedmNBg#v=onepage&q=Beningeorde&f=false Evesham Friends in the olden time], pub. West, Newman & Company, Printers, 1885 - Quakers - 228 pages; page 58. Accessed April 2020.</ref> Their beliefs greatly disturbed the mainstream religious and secular authorities, which caused their persecution.<ref name=EF/>

The 1605 charter of the Borough of Evesham added the Parish of Bengeworth within its boundary, superseding the initial 1604 borough charter which had encompassed the parishes of All Saints and St. Lawrence. Over the next two centuries, the population of Bengeworth expanded to the north and east, while Evesham expanded to the north and west.<ref>[https://books.google.com/books?id=VZ44AQAAMAAJ&q=The+1605+charter+added+the+parish+of+Bengeworth The Victoria History of the County of Worcester] John William Willis Bund, Herbert Arthur Doubleday, William Page; pub. A. Constable, limited, 1906; page 372. Accessed April 2020.</ref>

The inhabitants of Bengeworth and nearby [[Evesham]] were deeply involved in the [[English Civil War]] in the early 17th century. Five [[Roundhead|Parliamentarian]] soldiers who participated in the horror of the war became convinced of the [[Christian pacifism#Quakers and Shakers|pacifist theology]] of the [[Society of Friends]], and met for religious meetings in 1655 at the home of Thomas Cartwright in Bengeworth.<ref name=EF>[https://books.google.com/books?id=s3cd_otY5FsC&dq=Beningeorde&pg=PA58 Evesham Friends in the olden time], pub. West, Newman & Company, Printers, 1885 - Quakers - 228 pages; page 58. Accessed April 2020.</ref> Their beliefs greatly disturbed the mainstream religious and secular authorities, which caused their persecution.<ref name=EF/>

The medieval Anglican church was demolished in 1870. It was replaced by Bengeworth St. Peter, a large church designed in the [[English Gothic architecture|Gothic Decorated]] style by Thomas Denville Barry and his son Charles Garret Barry, of the firm T. D. Barry and Sons of Liverpool, and built between 1870/72.<ref>[https://www.worcesteranddudleyhistoricchurches.org.uk/index.php?page=bengeworth Worcestershire and Dudley Historic Churches Trust: Bengeworth St. Peter], accessed April 2020.</ref><ref>[http://www.scottisharchitects.org.uk/architect_full.php?id=202118 Dictionary of Scottish Architects: Thomas Denville Barry], accessed April 2020.</ref> The architect [[Henry Price (architect)|John Henry Price]] first articled at their firm 1884–1888. William Blews & Sons of New Bartholomew Street, Birmingham, cast the church bells.<ref>[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cluFtZXtVKk YouTube: Bengeworth Bells ringing out on a hot sunny day]. publ. 20 June 2017. Accessed April 2020.</ref>

In 1921 the civil parish had a population of 3268.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://visionofbritain.org.uk/unit/10327076/cube/TOT_POP|title=Population statistics Bengeworth CP/AP through time|publisher=[[A Vision of Britain through Time]]|accessdate=15 March 2024}}</ref> On 1 April 1924 the parish was abolished and merged with Evesham.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://visionofbritain.org.uk/unit/10327076|title=Relationships and changes Bengeworth CP/AP through time|publisher=A Vision of Britain through Time|accessdate=15 March 2024}}</ref>

The Bengeworth Post Office was forced to close, which led to protests in 2008.<ref>[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LzulM6ZgMLA YouTube: Save Bengeworth Post Office - Part 2]. Accessed April 2020.</ref>

==Schools==
In the late 18th century, free schooling in Bengeworth was charitably endowed through donations and bequests of South Sea Stock and South Sea Annuities from [[investor]]s who had profited from the restructured [[South Sea Company]]. John Deacle's Charity funded the purchase of land and construction of a school in Bengeworth.<ref>[https://books.google.com/books?id=9joSAAAAYAAJ&dq=Bengeworth+School&pg=PA515 Elizabeth Seward's Charity, John Deacle's Charity, etc.] Further Report of the Commissioners for inquiring concerning Charities, Parliamentary Papers, Volume 11. Great Britain. Parliament. House of Commons. H.M. Stationery Office, 1831. Accessed April 2020.</ref>

The Bengeworth CE Academy had to suspend classroom instruction and begin a home learning program for its students on 20 March 2020 to aid the nationwide effort to decrease the rate of transmission of [[COVID-19]].<ref>[https://www.bengeworthacademy.co.uk Bengeworth CE Academy Homepage Banner], accessed 22 April 2020.</ref>


==Railways==
==Railways==
Line 45: Line 61:


{{Wychavon}}
{{Wychavon}}



{{authority control}}
{{authority control}}


[[Category:Villages in Worcestershire]]
[[Category:Villages in Worcestershire]]
[[Category:Wychavon]]
[[Category:Former civil parishes in Worcestershire]]
[[Category:Evesham]]


{{Worcestershire-geo-stub}}

Latest revision as of 23:03, 15 March 2024

Bengeworth
Bengeworth is located in Worcestershire
Bengeworth
Bengeworth
Location within Worcestershire
OS grid referenceSP045430
• London88 miles (142 km)
Civil parish
District
Shire county
Region
CountryEngland
Sovereign stateUnited Kingdom
Post townEVESHAM
Postcode districtWR11
Dialling code01386
PoliceWest Mercia
FireHereford and Worcester
AmbulanceWest Midlands
List of places
UK
England
Worcestershire
52°05′00″N 1°56′00″W / 52.083333°N 1.933333°W / 52.083333; -1.933333

Bengeworth is a locality in the civil parish of Evesham, in the Wychavon district, in the county of Worcestershire, England. In 1887 it had a population of 1,311.[1] Today it has a school[2] and an Anglican church.[3]

History[edit]

Bengeworth was an early hamlet in one of the three Anglo-Saxon hundreds (Cuthburgelow, Winburgetreow and Wulfereslaw) that were combined to form the triple hundred of Oswaldslow, located across the River Avon from the town of Evesham.[4] The etymology indicates that Bengeworth may have been a named location in Anglo-Saxon England as early as the Kingdom of the Hwicce, which was subsumed into the Kingdom of Mercia. From 927, the Kingdom of England ruled the land.

Prior to the Conquest of 1066, Bengeworth was in the triple hundred of Oswaldslow, owned by Evesham Abbey and the Bishop of Worcester.[5] Due to prompt intercession by the abbot, Evesham Abbey was not reduced by William the Conqueror. By 1086, Evesham Abbey owned the entirety of Bengeworth (scribed in Domesday once as Beningeorde (cf. Old English: ben (petition, prayer) + ing (pasture)[6] (perhaps heard by the Domesday scribe as Old French: bening = benign, good – from Latin benignus); Old English: eorðe = earth, ground) and once as Bennieworte (cf. Anglo-Saxon: bene = prayer; worð = land, farm, street, public way)),[6] a larger than average hamlet whose inhabitants were a mixture of free, serf and slave.[5][7] Beningwyrde is another early spelling used in the Worcester Survey, a land survey undertaken in Worcestershire sometime between 1108 and 1118.

Wulfstan II of Worcester, the last surviving pre-Conquest bishop, held the office in 1086 according to the Domesday Book. When Walter de Beauchamp built a castle in Bengeworth on the north end of the bridge to Evesham, conflict with the Abbot of Evesham escalated. Following his attack upon Evesham, Beauchamp was excommunicated and his Bengeworth castle destroyed.[8] His descendant William Beauchamp of Elmley was said to have withdrawn his part of Bengeworth from the bishop's hundred about the middle of the 13th century, and in 1280 all of Bengeworth was in Blackenhurst hundred.[9]

The Bishops of Worcester continued to exert sac and soc over Bengeworth and other communities in Oswaldslow Hundred until the Dissolution of the Monasteries in the 16th century, six to eight centuries of Catholic ecclesiastical rule. The English Reformation led to the development of the Anglican church in Bengeworth.

The lordship of Bengeworth was retained by a series of families from 1535 onward through the Victorian era.[10] Rebecca Rushout (née Bowles), Lady Northwick, held the manor in 1810.[10]

The 1605 charter of the Borough of Evesham added the Parish of Bengeworth within its boundary, superseding the initial 1604 borough charter which had encompassed the parishes of All Saints and St. Lawrence. Over the next two centuries, the population of Bengeworth expanded to the north and east, while Evesham expanded to the north and west.[11]

The inhabitants of Bengeworth and nearby Evesham were deeply involved in the English Civil War in the early 17th century. Five Parliamentarian soldiers who participated in the horror of the war became convinced of the pacifist theology of the Society of Friends, and met for religious meetings in 1655 at the home of Thomas Cartwright in Bengeworth.[12] Their beliefs greatly disturbed the mainstream religious and secular authorities, which caused their persecution.[12]

The medieval Anglican church was demolished in 1870. It was replaced by Bengeworth St. Peter, a large church designed in the Gothic Decorated style by Thomas Denville Barry and his son Charles Garret Barry, of the firm T. D. Barry and Sons of Liverpool, and built between 1870/72.[13][14] The architect John Henry Price first articled at their firm 1884–1888. William Blews & Sons of New Bartholomew Street, Birmingham, cast the church bells.[15]

In 1921 the civil parish had a population of 3268.[16] On 1 April 1924 the parish was abolished and merged with Evesham.[17]

The Bengeworth Post Office was forced to close, which led to protests in 2008.[18]

Schools[edit]

In the late 18th century, free schooling in Bengeworth was charitably endowed through donations and bequests of South Sea Stock and South Sea Annuities from investors who had profited from the restructured South Sea Company. John Deacle's Charity funded the purchase of land and construction of a school in Bengeworth.[19]

The Bengeworth CE Academy had to suspend classroom instruction and begin a home learning program for its students on 20 March 2020 to aid the nationwide effort to decrease the rate of transmission of COVID-19.[20]

Railways[edit]

It was served by the nearby Bengeworth railway station on the Gloucester Loop Line on the Midland Railway between Ashchurch and Evesham. Bengeworth railway station was not in Bengeworth, but rather was the station in the centre in the nearby village of Hampton. The railway station was called 'Bengeworth' as that was considered a distinctive name, while 'Hampton' is a common England village name.

The station opened 1 October 1864.[21] It closed in 1953, but trains continued to use the line until closure in 1963.

References[edit]

  1. ^ Bartholomew’s Guide
  2. ^ Bengeworth First School Archived October 31, 2007, at the Wayback Machine
  3. ^ War memorial at St Peter’s Archived September 21, 2005, at the Wayback Machine
  4. ^ Map of Cuthburgelow, Winburgetreow and Wulfereslaw Hundreds, St. Oswald of Worcester: Life and Influence, ed. Nicholas Brooks, Catherine Cubitt; pub. A&C Black, 1 January 1996, page 170. Accessed April 2020.
  5. ^ a b Open Domesday: Bengeworth, accessed April 2020.
  6. ^ a b A Dictionary of the Anglo-Saxon Language Volume 1, by Joseph Bosworth, pub. Longmann, 1838 - 721 pages. Accessed April 2020.
  7. ^ [1] Monasticon Anglicanum: A History of the Abbies and Other Monasteries, Hospitals, Frieries, and Cathedral and Collegiate Churches, with Their Dependencies, in England and Wales : Also of All Such Scotch, Irish, and French Monasteries, as Were in Any Manner Connected with Religious Houses in England, Volume 2. March 1849 - 643 pages; page 3. Accessed April 2020.
  8. ^ The Victoria History of the County of Worcester, page 398. Accessed April 2020.
  9. ^ British History Online: The Hundred of Oswaldslow. Accessed April 2020.
  10. ^ a b The Victoria History of the County of Worcester, pp. 400-402. Accessed April 2020.
  11. ^ The Victoria History of the County of Worcester John William Willis Bund, Herbert Arthur Doubleday, William Page; pub. A. Constable, limited, 1906; page 372. Accessed April 2020.
  12. ^ a b Evesham Friends in the olden time, pub. West, Newman & Company, Printers, 1885 - Quakers - 228 pages; page 58. Accessed April 2020.
  13. ^ Worcestershire and Dudley Historic Churches Trust: Bengeworth St. Peter, accessed April 2020.
  14. ^ Dictionary of Scottish Architects: Thomas Denville Barry, accessed April 2020.
  15. ^ YouTube: Bengeworth Bells ringing out on a hot sunny day. publ. 20 June 2017. Accessed April 2020.
  16. ^ "Population statistics Bengeworth CP/AP through time". A Vision of Britain through Time. Retrieved 15 March 2024.
  17. ^ "Relationships and changes Bengeworth CP/AP through time". A Vision of Britain through Time. Retrieved 15 March 2024.
  18. ^ YouTube: Save Bengeworth Post Office - Part 2. Accessed April 2020.
  19. ^ Elizabeth Seward's Charity, John Deacle's Charity, etc. Further Report of the Commissioners for inquiring concerning Charities, Parliamentary Papers, Volume 11. Great Britain. Parliament. House of Commons. H.M. Stationery Office, 1831. Accessed April 2020.
  20. ^ Bengeworth CE Academy Homepage Banner, accessed 22 April 2020.
  21. ^ Catford, Nick (28 April 2012). "Bengeworth". Disused Stations.