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Outwood Grange Schools
Outwood may refer to: Places in the United Kingdom *Outwood, Greater Manchester, formerly a civil parish * Outwood, Somerset, a UK location * Outwood, Surrey * Outwood, Wakefield * Outwood, Worcestershire, a neighbourhood in Chaddesley Corbett See also * Outwood Grange Academies Trust Outwood Grange Academies Trust (OGAT) is a multi-academy trust (MAT) that operates forty schools (twenty-eight secondary and twelve primary) across northern England and the East Midlands. It is an exempt charity, regulated by the Department for ...
, including a list of schools * {{disambiguation, geo ...
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Outwood, Greater Manchester
Outwood is a suburban area in the metropolitan borough of Bury, in the county of Greater Manchester, England. It neighbours the market town Radcliffe that is connected to the suburb via Outwood Road. Until 1974 it was in Lancashire. History Outwood was an area in the township of Pilkington in the ancient parish of Prestwich-cum-Oldham in the historic county of Lancashire. It was once called Outwood of Pilkington and is marked as Outwoods on the Yates Map of 1787 and on the later Greenwood and Hennet maps. Under the Local Government Act 1894, Outwood was established as a civil parish and became part of the Bury Rural District in the administrative county of Lancashire, England. In 1933, Outwood civil parish was abolished and its former area was divided between Kearsley Kearsley ( ) is a town in the Metropolitan Borough of Bolton, Greater Manchester, England. The population at the United Kingdom Census 2011, 2011 census was 14,212. Within the Historic County of Lancashi ...
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Outwood, Surrey
Outwood is a village and civil parish in the Tandridge district of the Surrey weald. Geography Outwood is separated from Redhill by the M23 which forms the western boundary of the parish. History The earliest known reference to Outwood is in 1542; the Court Roll refers to the restrictions concerning the felling of timber in Outwood, mostly in the parish of Burstow. The Victoria County History records Abbot's Hospital, Guildford, still owned land in Outwood in 1911. The Baptist Chapel, no longer in use, was built in 1834. In 1869, St John the Baptist Church was built in what was the north of Burstow parish. This was followed in 1870 by the creation of the ecclesiastical parish of St John the Baptist, taking in parts of Bletchingley, Burstow, Horley, Horne, and Nutfield. The local school was opened in 1876 and closed in 1981. The building has since been converted into apartments. In 1887, Outwood Cricket Club was formed, and is still active. Outwood Parish Council was cre ...
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Outwood, Wakefield
Outwood is a district to the north of Wakefield, in West Yorkshire, England. The district is centred on the A61 Leeds Road south of Lofthouse. It grew up as a pit village and was only a small settlement until the 1970s, when construction of new houses caused it to grow and merge with neighbouring settlements such as Wrenthorpe and Stanley. In 2001, it had a population of 7,623. History Not recorded in Domesday Book, it is possible the settlement of Outwood gets its earliest literary mention in around 1400 in "The Lyttle Gest of Robyn Hode". Transcribed from at least a century of oral renditions telling the stories of Robin Hood and published in print form a century later in 1500, the prominent work features a mention of the name or phrase 'Outwoods'. This is quite possibly the earliest mention in any work of literature of one of England's greatest national myths alongside King Arthur and Joseph of Arimathea. Outwood was the site of a pit disaster on 4 March 1879, when 21 peop ...
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Chaddesley Corbett
Chaddesley Corbett is a village and civil parish in the Wyre Forest District Council, Wyre Forest District of Worcestershire, England. The Anglican and secular versions of the parish include other named neighbourhoods, once farmsteads or milling places: Bluntington, Brockencote, Mustow Green, Cakebole, Outwood, Harvington Hall, Harvington, and Drayton, Worcestershire, Drayton. History The village was named ''Chad Lea'', or the place of Chad, in Anglo-Saxons, Saxon times, and is recorded in the Domesday Book of 1086 as ''Cedeslai'', when it was held by a woman, Eadgifu, who also held it in the time of Edward the Confessor, King Edward before the Norman Conquest of 1066. It consisted of eight Wiktionary:berewick, berewicks and 25 hides of which 10 were free of geld and had the value of £12. The area was subject to Royal forest#Forest law, forest law for around a century to 1301, as part of Feckenham Forest. (page 120) Geography Chaddesley Corbett is centred on the north side ...
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