Hodnet
Hodnet
is the most attractive
small village in North
Shropshire, eight kilometres
south-west of Market
Drayton and it is filled
with Shropshire’s
typically beautiful
black and white houses.
The parish church of
St. Luke’s
is largely 14th century,
although records indicate
that a church has been
sited at Hodnet, since
at least 1086, and has
a unique octagonal Church
Tower. The Church was
for fifteen years in
the rectorship of Reginald
Heber, the famous Victorian
hymn-writer. The current
church has a Nuremberg
Bible, printed in 1479.
Hodnet’s centrepiece, for which it most well-known, is its Hall and Gardens which were started in 1921 by Brigadier A.G.W. Heber-Percy, who spend 30 years transforming the landscape from a boggy marsh to splendid formal garden. Today the 19th century mansion stands in the grounds, which are open to groups by appointment. The Heber-Percy family still lives in the ancestral home. There is also evidence that at some time during the late eleventh or early twelfth century a mote and bailey castle was erected at Hodnet, of which some small earthworks survive.