Rahul Sharma (Editor)

Wigginton, North Yorkshire

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Population
  
3,610 (2011)

Ceremonial county
  
North Yorkshire

Sovereign state
  
United Kingdom

UK parliament constituency
  
York Outer

OS grid reference
  
SE594585

Country
  
England

Civil parish
  
Wigginton

Unitary authority
  
York

Wigginton, North Yorkshire

Region
  
Yorkshire and the Humber

Weather
  
8°C, Wind S at 10 km/h, 85% Humidity

Wigginton is a village and civil parish in the unitary authority of the City of York in North Yorkshire, England. It is situated 4 miles (6.4 km) north of York. According to the 2001 census the parish had a population of 3,714, reducing to 3,610 at the 2011 Census. Prior to 1996 it had been part of the Ryedale district.

Contents

Wigginton is bordered on the east by the township of Haxby, the A1237 York Outer ring Road to the south, the B1363 to the west and open farmland to the north.

History

The village name derives from the Old English pre-7th century personal name "Wicga", meaning "a beetle", plus the Old English suffix, "-tun", meaning a "settlement or enclosure, hence "Wigca's settlement".

The village was named in the Domesday Book and noted as belonging to the cathedral church of St Peter in York. The name of the village has been recorded as Wichestun in the 11th century and Wygynton in the 13th century. The first recorded owners of the manor were the Askebys, who may have been connected with the neighbouring village of Haxby, and of Roger de Haxbey, who owned nearby land during the reign of Edward I. Hugh de Moresby, Lord of Moresby in Cumberland, was in possession of the manor of Wigginton in 1337. Through inheritance and marriage the manor passed to Anne Pickering and her second husband, Sir Henry Knyvett. She sold the manor with others in 1541 to Henry VIII, but his heir, Edward VI, granted them back to Anne and Henry in 1548.

Governance

Wigginton was in the Vale of York parliamentary constituency until the 2010 general election when it was transferred to the newly created constituency of York Outer. In that election the Conservative Party candidate, Julian Sturdy, was elected having received 43% of the vote and a majority of 3,688 over the Liberal Democrat candidate.

The town is located within the Haxby and Wigginton Ward of the York Unitary Authority. As of May 2015 it is represented by Councillors John Gates (Conservative), Tony Richardson (Conservative) and Ian Cuthbertson (Liberal Democrat).

Demography

In 1872 the population was recorded as 349. In the National Census of 1881 the population had risen to 399. According to the 2001 census the parish had a population of 3,714.

Geography

The town sits on flat ground consisting mostly of clay with soil that is sand and alluvium. To the west of the village is Westfield Beck. The nearby town of Haxby now merges with Wigginton though the old Parish Boundary map still shows the dividing line. This runs east to west along the back of the houses on Wheatfield Drive on its southern edge as far as Barley Drive. Here it turns northward cutting across Greenshaw Drive until it reaches the road known The Village. The boundary follows this road until it turns west. The boundary at this point continues northward cutting across Windsor Drive near Ripley Grove and then out into the countryside.

Economy

Wigginton has expanded from a mainly agricultural origin to become mostly a commuter village for York. Wigginton has a number of companies, a garden centre, two farm shops, hairdressers and chiropodists, a nursing home, a village store and three public houses. Also a small arcade of shops are on Sutton Road.

Transport

As of 2010 First transport group operate two bus services in the town as part of the Chapelfields to Wigginton and the Acomb Park to Haxby routes. Transdev operate the Askham Bar to Monks Cross bus services which stops in the town. Reliance Motor Services operate a service that stops in the village as part of its York to Easingwold route.

Education

Primary education is catered for at Wigginton Primary School. As of 2010 the town is within the catchment area of Joseph Rowntree Secondary School.

Religious sites

The present parish church is dedicated to St Nicholas. The first specific mention of a church building was in 1424 and of a chapel at Wigginton in the middle of the 13th century. The present church of St Nicholas was rededicated in 2008 having previously been known as St Mary & St Nicholas. It had been rebuilt in 1860.

Sport

As of 2010, Wigginton Grasshoppers F.C.82 football club 1st XI play in the York and District Premier Division and the Reserve Team play in the Reserve Division A. They also provide teams across the full age range to various local weekend leagues.


The town is also the home of Wigginton Squash and Racketball Club, a thriving and friendly 3 court Squash & Racketball Club, with bar, lounge and function facility. The club has been men’s Yorkshire League Champions on 3 occasions, and supports the local York & District Squash leagues with 6 men’s & 2 ladies teams. Juniors also play league squash for the club. The club currently have one Yorkshire League team.

References

Wigginton, North Yorkshire Wikipedia