• Gallery
  • Blanche Parry & Queen Elizabeth I book with superb pictures
  • Blanche’s Biography
    • Biography
    • Book Launch
    • Press Reviews
  • Additional Research
    • Epitaph
    • Further Evidence
    • Papers
  • Bacton Altar Cloth
  • Queen Elizabeth I
  • Lady Troy - Queen Elizabeth I’s Lady Mistress
  • Bacton Church Guide
  • Dore Archive
    • People & Places
    • Interactive Guide
    • Guide Notes for Dore Abbey
    • Dore Articles
  • Talks & Articles
    • Ruth’s Talks
    • Ruth’s Book Reviews
    • Tracing Welsh Ancestors
    • Icomb & Lady Troy
    • Plagues & Us
  • Ruth’s Research
    • Field-Names
    • ‘Iron Age Hillforts and Roman Sites in Herefordshire’
    • ‘Medieval Plays - The Early History of Drama’
    • ‘Herefordshire Past and Present - An Aerial View’
      by Ruth E. Richardson & Chris Musson
    • ‘A Definitive History of Dore Abbey’
      edited by Ron Shoesmith & Ruth E. Richardson
    • Who Killed Richard III?
    • Looking at Landscape & its Archaeology
  • Ruth Out & About - past & present
  • Places To Visit
    • Golden Valley Pilgrimage Way
    • Area Locations
    • Bacton Church
    • Dore Abbey
    • Kilpeck Church
    • Twyn y Gaer Hillfort
    • Walterstone Church
  • Rev. Dennis Monger
    • A biography of Reverend Monger's life
    • Pictures of Reverend Monger
    • Extract of an address given by Reverend Monger in 2008
  • Links
  • Contact
Blanche Parry

Pontrilas

Welsh meaning pont / bridge over trilas / three rivers, due to the River Dore, the Dulas Brook and another stream meeting here. Originally the hamlet was called Elwistone but by 1750 it was renamed from the name of Pontrilas Court, once owned by the Baskerville family.

  • The railway arrived in 1854 and the place became important as a cattle market and for industrial purposes. The railway yards were particularly busy during World War I, 1914–1918, and during World War II, 1939–1945, due to the munitions depot. The station closed in 1958.
  • 19th–20th centuries it was said a person could buy anything here due to the mainline railway station.
  • A local lady remembers her father sent her horse from here, in the train's luggage van, to her new home in Berkshire after she married.

Dulas

  • has had two known Churches.
  • Although the precise relationship between the Priories of Dulas and Ewyas Harold is unclear it appears from the cartulary (book of legal documents like charters and deeds) of Gloucester Abbey that the Priory of Dulas came first.
  • The Church of St. Michael of Ewias at Dulas existed before 1115 when Harold of Ewias (see below) gave it with its lands and tithes and all things appertaining to Saint Peter's Benedictine Abbey of Gloucester to found a priory cell. Then for some reason, of perhaps security or control, it was gradually allowed to close and the Priory at Ewyas Harold was established nearer to the castle and perhaps the centre of population. The foundations of the 12th century Dulas Priory Church lie under the lawn of Dulas Court.
  • By the 16th century the adjacent building was described as a hermitage. When this Church was demolished, one of its 12th century arches was re–erected as an entrance to the kitchen garden. The base and shaft of a churchyard cross remain on the site.
  • The new Church built nearby in a medieval style in 1865 with 17th century woodwork, incorporated one of the bells from the old site. This Church was made redundant in 2008.

previousreturn next
  • Gallery
  • Blanche Parry & Queen Elizabeth I book with superb pictures
  • Blanche’s Biography
    • Biography
    • Book Launch
    • Press Reviews
  • Additional Research
    • Epitaph
    • Further Evidence
    • Papers
  • Bacton Altar Cloth
  • Queen Elizabeth I
  • Lady Troy - Queen Elizabeth I’s Lady Mistress
  • Bacton Church Guide
  • Dore Archive
    • People & Places
    • Interactive Guide
    • Guide Notes for Dore Abbey
    • Dore Articles
  • Talks & Articles
    • Ruth’s Talks
    • Ruth’s Book Reviews
    • Tracing Welsh Ancestors
    • Icomb & Lady Troy
    • Plagues & Us
  • Ruth’s Research
    • Field-Names
    • ‘Iron Age Hillforts and Roman Sites in Herefordshire’
    • ‘Medieval Plays - The Early History of Drama’
    • ‘Herefordshire Past and Present - An Aerial View’
      by Ruth E. Richardson & Chris Musson
    • ‘A Definitive History of Dore Abbey’
      edited by Ron Shoesmith & Ruth E. Richardson
    • Who Killed Richard III?
    • Looking at Landscape & its Archaeology
  • Ruth Out & About - past & present
  • Places To Visit
    • Golden Valley Pilgrimage Way
    • Area Locations
    • Bacton Church
    • Dore Abbey
    • Kilpeck Church
    • Twyn y Gaer Hillfort
    • Walterstone Church
  • Rev. Dennis Monger
    • A biography of Reverend Monger's life
    • Pictures of Reverend Monger
    • Extract of an address given by Reverend Monger in 2008
  • Links
  • Contact
blanche parry 2015-
Copyright: (All text and photos) R.E. & T.G. Richardson 2015-