Place:Bodenham, Herefordshire, England

Watchers
NameBodenham
Alt namesBowleysource: township in parish
Bryan Maundsource: township in parish
Whitchurch Maundsource: township in parish
The Moorsource: township in parish
Bodehamsource: Domesday Book (1985) p 129
TypeParish (ancient), Civil parish
Coordinates52.167°N 2.683°W
Located inHerefordshire, England
Also located inHereford and Worcester, England     (1974 - 1998)
Herefordshire, England     (1998 - )
See alsoBroxash Hundred, Herefordshire, Englandhundred of which the parish was a part
Leominster Rural, Herefordshire, Englandrural district 1894-1930
Leominster and Wigmore Rural, Herefordshire, Englandrural district 1930-1974
Leominster District, Hereford and Worcester, Englanddistrict municipality 1974-1998
Herefordshire District, Herefordshire, Englandunitary authority since 1998
source: Getty Thesaurus of Geographic Names
source: Family History Library Catalog


the text in this section is based on an article in Wikipedia

Bodenham is a village and civil parish in Herefordshire, England, situated on a bend in the River Lugg, about seven miles south of Leominster. According to the 2001 UKcensus it had a population of 1,024, reducing to 998 at the 2011 UK census.

A Vision of Britain through Time provides the following description of Bodenham from John Marius Wilson's Imperial Gazetteer of England and Wales of 1870-72:

"BODENHAM, a village, a parish, and a [registration] subdistrict, in the [registration] district of Leominster, Hereford[shire]. The village stands near the river Lug, 2 ½ miles E of Dinmore [railway] station, and 6 ½ SSE of Leominster; and it has a post office under Leominster, and was once a market-town.
"The parish includes also the townships of Bowley, Bryan-Maund, Whitchurch-Maund, and the Moor. Acres: 5,260. Real property: £7,463. Population: 1,096. Houses: 231. The property is divided among a few. The living is a vicarage in the diocese of Hereford. Value: £686. Patron: John Arkwright, Esq. The church is ancient and good; and has an incomplete spire. There are a Wesleyan chapel, an endowed school with £30, and other charities with £24."

Research Tips

  • Herefordshire Archive and Records Centre, Fir Tree Lane, Rotherwas, Hereford HR2 6LA is where paper and microfilm copies of all records for Herefordshire are stored. The Archives Centre has a website where the index to the archives (and also the wills catalog) can be searched. One item in the catalog is List of all Herefordshire parish register and bishops transcripts holdings which is a PDF file with information provided in an old version of Excel.

Online sources which may also be helpful:

  • GENUKI gives pointers to other archive sources as well as providing some details on each parish in the county. The emphasis here is on ecclesiastical parishes (useful before 1837)
  • A listing of all the Registration Districts in England and Wales since their introduction in 1837 and tables of the parishes that were part of each district and the time period covered with detailed notes on changes of parish name, mergers, etc. Do respect the copyright on this material.
  • The FamilySearch Wiki for Herefordshire provides a similar but not identical series of webpages to that provided by GENUKI
  • A Vision of Britain through Time has a group of pages of statistical facts for almost every parish in the county
  • Unfortunately, only one volume on Herefordshire has been published in the Victoria County History series. British History Online have produced a series of Ordnance Survey first edition maps for the county which may be helpful for mid-nineteenth century inquiries
  • Ancestry.co.uk lists its collections of Herefordshire genealogical material.
  • FindMyPast collections of historical records can be searched for Herefordshire. They have collections of parish records for the pre-1837 period.