Great Brington
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Great Brington is a village in
civil parish of Brington, which at the 2011 Census had a population of about 200. St Mary the Virgin
's church is the parish church.
The village’s name means 'Farm/settlement connected with Bryni'.[1]
In 1508,
John Spencer from Wormleighton in Warwickshire purchased the estate of Althorp outside Great Brington with its moated house and several hundred acres of farmland.[2] He had grazed sheep here from the 1480s. In 1508, impressed by the quality of the land, he eventually bought it and rebuilt the house.[3] In 1511 he made further purchases to acquire much of the surrounding countryside, including the villages of Little Brington and Great Brington as well their parish church of St Mary the Virgin, from Thomas Grey, 2nd Marquess of Dorset.[2]
Just outside the village is
pub was renamed from The Fox and Hounds to the Althorp Coaching Inn and the post office gained currency exchange facilities following the large increase in tourism to the area.[citation needed
]
The
long distance footpath
passes through Great Brington.
Geography
![](http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/b/b7/Great_Brington_church_from_the_west_-_geograph.org.uk_-_446922.jpg/220px-Great_Brington_church_from_the_west_-_geograph.org.uk_-_446922.jpg)
Nearby settlements include Little Brington, Nobottle and Long Buckby
Notable people from Great Brington
- Lawrence Washington (1565-1616), the great-great-great-grandfather of George Washington, first president of the United States, is buried in the chancel of the Church at St Mary's in the village.[5] (reference link needs updating; his son, also called Lawrence Washington, is buried in the graveyard at All Saints’ Church, Maldon, Essex)
- Betsy Baker(1842–1955), a supercentenarian who was born in Great Brington and recognized as the world's oldest living person until she died aged 113, on 24 October 1955.
- The disc jockey and television presenter Jo Whiley is from the village.
References
- ^ "Key to English Place-names".
- ^ a b H. Gawthorne/S. Mattingly/G. W. Shaeffer/M. Avery/B. Thomas/R. Barnard/M. Young, Revd. N. V. Knibbs/R. Horne: "The Parish Church of St. Mary the Virgin, Great Brington. 800 Years of English History", published as "Brington Church: A Popular History" in 1989 and printed by Peerless Press.
- ^ Sir John Spencer 1455–1522 "Sir John Spencer » Spencer of Althorp". Archived from the original on 24 July 2013. Retrieved 20 July 2013. (access date 20 July 2013)
- ^ "Diana Remembered: Althorp". BBC. 1997.
- ^ "St Mary's Church". Retrieved 22 February 2014.
External links
Media related to Great Brington at Wikimedia Commons