|
Thornley Village
One of only two villages with no through roads in the original County
of Durham, (the other is Escomb), the peaceful atmosphere of Thornley
Village is very different from the bustle of Wolsingham.

There is evidence of an Iron Age/Roman-British settlement lying about
1/4 mile to the north west of Thornley Hall (see picture above), but of
the present settlement, only Greenwell Farm is mentioned in the Boldon
Book (County Durham’s equivalent of the Domesday Book, compiled by the
order of Bishop Pudsey in 1183). At that time Greenwell was held by
James, the son of William who was the priest of Wolsingham.
By the time of Bishop Hatfield (1345-1381) Lord Neville held both
Thornley and the village of Greenwell and Pevesner says that there was
once a Mediaeval village, now deserted, reached by an ash tree avenue.
Half the earthworks now lie beneath Thornley Hall and the remainder to
the north in what was once the landscape park.
The present Thornley Hall has a nine bay, two-and-a-half-storey cl8
stone facade with brick voussoirs to the window openings. Inside, two
panelled rooms, arched cellars and a doorway with a drawbar are traces
of an earlier house.
Next
Page>
|