Shire Magazine January-February 2022

Page 36

Small town with big ideas Oswestry may not be the largest of places, but for growth, appeal and local status it certainly packs a punch particularly for eye complaints. Other historians argue that the Shropshire town was named after Oswy, Oswald’s brother, who battled King Penda here in 655. Whoever is right, one thing is sure – people have lived and thrived here throughout history, with the oldest settlement, Old Oswestry, being one of the most well-preserved Iron Age hill forts in Britain.

DID YOU KNOW? The very first Iceland food store opened its doors here in 1970!

Modern times

Enticing alleyways encourage you to explore

N

estled on the England/Wales border, midway between Wrexham and Shrewsbury, Oswestry has a mixed heritage that it is proud to shout about. The name Oswestry was first recognised in 1191 as the Middle English version, Oswaldestroe, which derives from the name Oswald and the word for tree, treow. Some records suggest ‘treow’ could have meant cross, so there is ambiguity – but we know for certain who Oswald was, and it’s a grisly tale. King Oswald of Northumbria died at the Battle of Maserfeld in 642 and legend suggests that his dismembered arm was carried by a raven to an ash tree, bestowing upon the tree miraculous powers. At the same time a spring, called Oswald’s Well, is supposed to have leapt from the spot where the bird dropped the arm, and the water was believed to have healing properties,

strong military connections, as a base for Canadian troops after 1945, and then as the home of the Royal Artillery until 1975. And war poet Wilfred Owen was born here.

Homes and halls

The town has preserved some beautiful architecture, not least the Guildhall, meeting place of Oswestry Town Council, which was completed in 1893. Brogyntyn Hall belonged until recently to the Lords Harlech; its future is currently under debate. Other local attractions include Cae Glas Park, Shelf Bank, Wilfred Owen Green, Oswestry Castle and the Cambrian Railways Museum. There’s a world-leading orthopaedic hospital and some of the best schools in the country. Canal, rail and road links in all directions add to the town’s appeal, while the former racecourse is a haven for wildlife.

Skipping forward several centuries, Oswestry was mentioned in the Domesday Book in 1086, granted a market charter in 1109, changed hands between England and Wales multiple times, was burnt almost to the ground in 1400, was held siege by Royalists in 1644 and claimed by Parliamentarians, before being left to get on with developing into the town we know today. With a population of around 18,000, it still boasts a large The imposing entrance to Cae Glas Park number of ancient structures and historic buildings, and it is THINGS TO SEE AND DO still a market town – although after the foot and mouth outbreak in the late 1960s, the Oswestry Town Museum The Guildhall, Bailey Head, Oswestry SY11 1PZ livestock market was moved out of the centre. Park Hall estate on the outskirts, now Cambrian Railways Museum home to a children’s farm, was used by the The Old Station, Oswald Rd, Oswestry SY11 1RE Army for training in both world wars, but Park Hall Countryside Experience in the intervening years became well known Park Hall, Oswestry SY11 4AS as a motorcycle racing circuit. The town has

36 SHIRE MAGAZINE | January/February 2022

Town Visits Oswestry JanFeb 2022 FINAL.indd 40

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Puzzles

3min
page 128

Letters to the Editor

4min
page 127

Over the Farm Gate

7min
pages 129-132

What’s in Your Stars?

4min
page 126

Retirement Living

3min
page 122

Books & Poetry

9min
pages 124-125

Charities & Volunteering

4min
page 123

Business & Finance

3min
pages 120-121

Wrap up warm

2min
pages 107-108

Get fi t, get active

2min
page 106

Top of the class

25min
pages 109-119

Weddings

7min
pages 102-105

Snack time

2min
pages 92-93

Health

3min
page 94

Plants & Gardens

6min
pages 95-97

Active

3min
page 87

Arts & Crafts

9min
pages 98-101

Pets & Wildlife

9min
pages 88-91

Holidays

18min
pages 80-86

Everything in its place

2min
page 73

Homes & Interiors

26min
pages 56-71

Green Living

4min
page 72

Oswestry

2min
pages 36-37

Climate crisis

19min
pages 42-47

Covid recovery

16min
pages 48-55

Reviews

6min
pages 38-39

20 Questions

24min
pages 27-35

Anton and Erin

3min
page 41

What’s On

17min
pages 6-13

Bangor

31min
pages 14-26
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