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designation for the area, and all direction signage currently reads 'Stivichall'. However, in the early-1990s there was a campaign to reintroduce the 'Styvechale' variant on local signage and within civic circles, with many people finding the
Stivichall designation ugly. The local bus operators also historically never display Stivichall or Styvechale on their buses and opt for displaying Fenside instead and when route 2 used to terminate in Exminster Road buses had always displayed Cheylesmore, an alternative to this could have been a destination of 'Howes Farm' in similar fashion to the modern Tanyard Farm and Victoria Farm estates in Coventry.
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254:', is a railway bridge that carries trains running between Coventry and Leamington Spa. The land on which the line was built was owned by the Gregory family, and having opposed the project, in 1842 Mr A F Gregory finally agreed to sell just sufficient land for the line's construction, but only on the condition that the Gregory family coat-of-arms was incorporated into the face of the bridge. The line was opened on completion of the work in 1844.
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Stivichall Hall was built by the
Gregory family in the 1750s, on a site south of St James's Church, between the modern Montpellier Close and Ridgeway Avenue. It was a three-storey building with a frontage of five windows on each storey, subsequently extended into a seven-window fronted building. In
283:, it was in use as a farmhouse into the 1960s. By 1971 it was unoccupied and threatened with demolition. However, the main part of the building was saved, extended and converted into apartments. It has given its name to the surrounding residential area constructed in the late-1960s and early-1970s
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pass through and join within the boundaries of
Stivichall, and whilst the estate was in the Gregory family's ownership, access was denied to the roads unless a toll of 1d per horse and 6d per vehicle was paid to them. The toll house which stood at the junction of the roads was demolished in 1964.
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The core of
Styvechale Manor may date from the late 17th century and may have been built on the site of a medieval manor house. Many extensions were added to it from Victorian times onwards. In the 19th and early 20th centuries it was known as the Manor House, until it became Bremond College, a
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Although the pronunciation ('Styche-ull’) of the district is not in doubt, its spelling is a subject of debate. The 'Styvechale' variant is generally deemed more attractive in fitting with the Old
English tradition of the district's name, though since 1945 'Stivichall' has been the official
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Stivichall
Primary School is bounded by Green Lane and Coat of Arms Bridge Road, where the Green Lane district meets Stivichall. It has around 530 pupils aged from five to eleven years old. The original buildings, a hospital in the early 1930s, became a Junior school after the
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The western area of
Stivichall, known locally as Styvechale Grange, is a large residential district developed during the late-1960s and early-1970s to cater for Coventry's then-rapidly rising population (which peaked at 340,000 inhabitants in 1971).
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had belonged to the
Gregory family since the 16th century from whom in 1919 the land was purchased by Coventry Corporation and used in part to create the War Memorial Park, with the general development of the remainder following by the 1970s.
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The original St James's Church dated back to about 1270 and was demolished around 1800. The present church, situated on
Leamington Road, was completed in 1817, having taken seven years to build. It was extended to its present size in 1955.
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When Major C. H. Gregory-Hood sold the estate in 1932, he gave an area of fields and woods around
Stivichall Croft and Coat of Arms Bridge Road to Coventry Corporation for permanent preservation. A red
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blends into the area contiguously to the northeast. Much relatively narrower Whitley Common, which is a flood meadow, and one of two dual feeder roads to Coventry's centre on it, separates
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Half a mile south west of St James's Church and close to the A45 is a three-storey, Grade II-listed, 17th-century house known as Stivichall Grange. Built about 1650 according to
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1928 it was sold with some of the estate to Coventry Corporation, but it became derelict and was demolished after World War II.
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It is thought that the name comes from the Old English 'styfic', meaning 'tree stumps' and 'healh', meaning 'nook' or 'corner'.
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girls' private school, in about 1935. The property, a Grade II listed building, has since been converted into apartments.
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109:. The small suburb of Fenside forms part of southeast Stivichall. To the north and northwest Stivichall borders the
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astride the Leamington Road. Like the city centre, it lies on the right terraces of the vale carved by the
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and were demolished in 2008. Grange Farm Primary School is located within the Styvechale Grange district.
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to the east. The southern border of Stivichall is shared with the northern border of the city's
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Stivichall Primary School state-of-the-art building has eco-heating and modern classrooms
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in the borough and flows along the eastern boundary as an upper sub-tributary of the
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which separates the neighbourhood from most parts of similarly residential
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recording the gift stands on this site, produced at a cost of £87 7s 6d.
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81:, England. It is a mainly residential area in the south of the city.
432:"The City of Coventry: The outlying parts of Coventry: Stivichall"
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A rural parish on the outskirts of Coventry, the Styvechale
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395:, Department for Education profile. Retrieved 2012-07-31.
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89:Stivichall is a mainly residential area of south
336:Obelisk and memorial to the Gregory-Hood family
508:The illustrated history of Coventry's suburbs
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368:"When Styvechale was owned by one family"
136:and Green Lane neighbourhoods along the
527:The Buildings of England - Warwickshire
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312:St James's Church from Leamington Road
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557:Albert Smith and David Fry: (1993).
543:Albert Smith and David Fry: (1991).
370:. Coventry Telegraph. Archived from
561:. Vol 2. Simanda Press, Berkswell.
547:. Vol 1. Simanda Press, Berkswell.
418:, 2008-11-07. Retrieved 2012-07-31.
250:The Gregory bridge, also known as '
300:Coat of Arms on the Gregory bridge
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160:The main roads from Coventry to
121:along Coat of Arms Bridge Road.
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148:Incidents of pre-1919 ownership
115:Grade II listed park and garden
510:. Breedon Books. p. 117.
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456:, page 64. Brewin Books, 2013
324:St James's Church, north side
206:Styvechale Manor (photo 2007)
73:) is a suburb of the city of
454:The Obelisks of Warwickshire
483:Pevsner Warwickshire p. 280
99:intermittently great stream
16:Area near Coventry, England
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525:Pevsner, Nikolaus (1966).
559:The Coventry We Have Lost
545:The Coventry We Have Lost
393:Stivichall Primary School
434:. British History online
107:River Avon, Warwickshire
506:McGrory, David (2003).
452:Nicholson, Jean et al:
410:1 February 2014 at the
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113:a civic nationally
25:West Orchard Church
416:Coventry Telegraph
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492:McGrory pp. 116–8
275:Stivichall Grange
267:Stivichall Grange
258:St James's Church
243:Gregory bridge /
111:War Memorial Park
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529:. Penguin.
126:Cheylesmore
500:References
378:4 November
166:Kenilworth
95:Sherbourne
34:Styvechale
30:Stivichall
226:sandstone
185:Education
173:Etymology
85:Geography
608:Category
408:Archived
119:Earlsdon
103:Allesley
91:Coventry
75:Coventry
578:52°23′N
438:10 June
287:Gallery
281:Pevsner
229:obelisk
130:Whitley
581:1°30′W
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134:Finham
354:Notes
154:manor
97:, an
70:-chəl
563:ISBN
549:ISBN
531:ISBN
512:ISBN
440:2008
380:2011
164:and
138:A45
68:STY
32:or
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423:^
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58:əl
55:tʃ
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