Place:Langridge, Somerset, England

Watchers
NameLangridge
TypeAncient parish, Civil parish
Coordinates51.406°N 2.357°W
Located inSomerset, England     ( - 1933)
See alsoBath Forum Hundred, Somerset, Englandhundred in which it was located
Bath Rural, Somerset, Englandrural district 1894-1933
Charlcombe, Somerset, Englandadjacent parish into which it was absorbed in 1933

A Vision of Britain through Time provides the following description of Langridge (#12 on map) from John Marius Wilson's Imperial Gazetteer of England and Wales of 1870-72:

"LANGRIDGE, a parish, with a village, in Bath [registration] district, Somerset; adjacent to Gloucestershire, and near Lansdown Hill, 4 miles NNW of Bath [railway] station. Post-town: Bath. Acres: 655. Real property: £1,029. Population: 102. Houses: 19. The property is divided among a few. The living is a rectory in the diocese of Bath and Wells. Value: £111. Patron: G. W. Blathwayt, Esq. The church measures only 50 feet by 18; has a beautiful Anglo-Norman entrance; and was recently in bad condition."

Langridge was part of the Bath Forum Hundred, one of the hundreds or early subdivisions of the county of Somerset. Between 1894 and 1933 it was a parish in the Bath Rural District. Langridge remained a separate civil parish until 1933 when it was abolished and the area absorbed by the neighbouring parish of Charlcombe (#7), near Bath. For information on the years between 1933 and the present, see Charlcombe.

Image:Bath Rural small PJ.png

Research Tips

  • GENUKI page on Langridge
  • The Somerset Heritage Centre (incorporating what was formerly the Somerset Record Office and the Somerset Local Studies Library) can be found at its new location at Langford Mead in Taunton. It has an online search facility leading to pages of interest, including maps from the First and Second Ordnance Survey (select "Maps and Postcards" from the list at the left, then enter the parish in the search box).
    The Heritage Centre has an email address: archives@somerset.gov.uk.
  • Three maps on the A Vision of Britain through Time website illustrate the changes in political boundaries over the period 1830-1945. All have expanding scales and on the second and third this facility is sufficient that individual parishes can be inspected.
  • Somerset Hundreds as drawn in 1832. This map was prepared before The Great Reform Act of that year. Note the polling places and representation of the various parts of the county.
  • Somerset in 1900, an Ordnance Survey map showing rural districts, the boundaries of the larger towns, the smaller civil parishes of the time, and some hamlets and villages in each parish
  • Somerset in 1943, an Ordnance Survey map showing the rural districts after the changes to their structure in the 1930s