Desford is a village and civil parish in the Hinckley and Bosworth district of England, west of the centre of Leicester and around 7 miles north east of Hinckley. Situated on a hill approximately 400 feet above sea level, the parish includes the hamlets of Botcheston and Newtown Unthank and a scattered settlement at Lindridge. The population at the 2021 census had increased to 4,592. Desford is in the Domesday Book of 1086 but the name itself is older than that meaning Deor's Ford suggesting an Anglo-Saxons origin. Another suggestion is that it means 'ford frequented with wild animals'.
In 1261, the manor of Desford was held by Simon De Montfort until he was killed at the Battle of Evesham in 1265. All his lands, which included Desford, were then given by Henry III to his own son, Edmund Grouchback, who was Earl of Lancaster until his death in 1297. Past Times: A History of Desford Hinckley Times, 2 October 2016
The Old Hall or Old Manor House in Desford High Street is a Gable roof building with an irregular front of four bays, dating from about 1600 or a few years thereafter. It is built of brick in English bond with stone quoins and has a timber frame. The house has a two-storeyed porch whose upper storey is Jettying. Attached to the house is an early 18th-century service wing built of brick in Flemish bond. The Manor House and its attached buildings are Grade II* listed buildings.
St. Martin's parish is part of a united benefice with St. Mary Magdalene, Peckleton.
Desford has a free church, built in 1866 at the top of Chapel lane, which is a member of the Baptist Union of Great Britain.
In 1790, the little chapel of the Strict Baptists was built in the High Street but only the graveyard with a few stones remains.
Desford's 1000 acres of open fields were Enclosure by Act of Parliament in 1759 . Prior to the Industrial Revolution the cottage industry of stocking or framework knitting developed in the village, the first reference being in 1704. This continued well in to the 19th century, with over a hundred framework knitters being recorded in the 1851 Census.
The 19th century was a time when coal mining became a large scale industry in west Leicestershire. In 1875 an unsuccessful attempt was made to sink a coalmine in the parish, at Lindridge. This failed due to constant flooding. In the present century the nearest coal mine, Desford Pit, only two miles away, employed many Desford people until it closed in 1984. To commemorate the pit’s closure a half winding wheel was erected in Lindridge Lane by the Desford History Society.
The Leicester and Swannington Railway was built through the parish in 1832 initially to haul coal from the coalfields to Leicester. It passes within of the town and Desford railway station was built at Newtown Unthank to serve the parish. The Midland Railway took over the line in 1845 and had extended it to by 1848. withdrew passenger services in 1964 and today the Leicester to Burton-upon-Trent Line carries only goods traffic. The larger houses in Station Road were built for middle-class commuters to Leicester.
Caterpillar Inc. is now a significant employer in the parish.
Post 1945 RAF No 1969 AOP Flight was stationed here. Reid and Segrist developed the R.S.3 Desford as a trainer aircraft for use after the war.
The aerodrome has been redeveloped as an industrial site where Caterpillar Inc. has a large factory. The officers mess was located on what is now the Sport in Desford site.
Desford has a community primary school and a secondary school, Bosworth Academy.
Desford has an Italian restaurant (Pesto, previously the White Horse), a public library and a sports club. Tropical Birdland, a visitor attraction exhibiting many bird species, is situated in Lindridge Lane in Desford.
There are two Co-Operative Society shops, an independent store which is now also the post office as well as a Fish and Chip takeaway and an Indian takeaway, Little India. Until the Summer of 2025, there was a take away and eat in café called the "Food Room" situated in the centre of the village in one of the oldest buildings. The building was transformed into a large grocery store in late 2025.
Sport in Desford] was set up as an independent organisation by Desford Parish Council (DPC) in 1988 and it became a Registered Charity (No.: 1100319) in 2003. DPC acquired the 5 acre plot on Peckleton Lane from Caterpillar UK in 1988 and SiD has developed what was a derelict site ever since, including the building of the double storey clubhouse, the new Scout Hall (funded by DPC) and the extra tennis court.
The Parish Council maintain the following open spaces in the parish:
Churches
Economic history
Public houses
Aerodrome
Amenities
The Pickard Recreation Area
The Kirkby Road Recreation Area
Sources and further reading
External links
|
|