Prehistoric times There is evidence of human settlement in Appleby from the early
Neolithic period, 6,000 years ago. There was no single settlement, but a scattering of round houses, whose inhabitants farmed the land south of the
River Mease. In the same area there is an oval ditch of a 6-acre enclosure, which was revealed by
crop marks. In 1966, archaeologists found prehistoric pottery on the site. A short distance to the east, near the White House Farm, crop marks revealed a rectangular enclosure believed to be an
Iron Age site. To the east of the parish, on Birdshill Gorse, a further ring ditch was discovered, believed to be from the
Bronze Age. It has also been suggested that the site of St Michael's and All Angels' church was originally that of a Roman temple. The village is centred on the narrowest part of the shallow valley surrounding the Meadow Brook. The manor house (Moat House) and church were built on opposite sides of the brook, and the village grew up around them.
After the Norman invasion Appleby appears three times in the
Domesday Book, with Appleby Magna (listed as Aplebi and Apleby) and
Appleby Parva (listed as Apleberie) recorded separately. The whole parish has been part of
Leicestershire since 1897. The village belonged to the
Abbey of Burton, Henry de Ferrers and
Lady Godiva, of
Coventry, and was worth 90 shillings (£4.50). There is thought to have been some local ethnic divide, with Appleby Magna inhabited by primarily Anglo-Saxon villagers, and
Appleby Parva (which was originally a
Danish settlement) inhabited by a small group of
Normans. The site of this early church is on the site of St. Helen's Chapel in the current church. It was a small and simple building capable of holding only two or three dozen worshipers.
Late Middle Ages St. Helen's Chapel (also known as the De Appleby Chapel) is the earliest surviving building in the village. It dates from before the early 14th century, but its exact date of construction is unknown. From the mid-14th century it was used as a private chapel for the de Appleby family, lords of the manor of Appleby, who resided in the adjacent manor house (the Moat House). The de Appleby / Appleby family were lords of the manor from the early 12th century until the 16th century. The chapel was built on the site of the earlier religious buildings and the site was already used as a burial site. The church was enlarged to its present size in the early 14th century and was named St. Michael's and All Angels church. St. Helen's Chapel was incorporated into the north east section of the church and served as both a private chapel and burial site for the de Appleby family. Most of the tombs have been removed but the
alabaster effigies of Sir Edmund de Appleby and his wife Joan, dating from 1375, still survive. The chapel would eventually become known as the de Appleby Chapel although it is currently used as the church vestry. The earliest currently surviving fragments of the manor house (the Moat House), date from Sir Edmund's time when the manor was enlarged into a large, moated, fortified, courtyard house. A rectory which stood opposite the church (on the site of the current
almshouses), a tithe barn which stood on the eastern wall of the churchyard and two water mills, one by the Moat House and one at Mease-Meadow were all constructed in the same era, although none survive.
Tudor and Jacobean period It was during the Tudor era that the downfall of the de Appleby family occurred. Sir George de Appleby was killed following the
Battle of Pinkie Cleugh in Scotland in 1547. His wife,
Joyce, was burned as a Protestant martyr in
Lichfield. Their eldest son, George, sold the manor in 1549 and later drowned. His nephew, Francis (son of his brother Richard), died childless. It was at the end of the Tudor period that the next influential family, the Moores, entered the village. Charles Moore is recorded as "Lord of the manor of Appleby Parva" in 1599, although the exact date of his arrival to the village is unknown. Charles' second son,
Sir John Moore (born 1620), is responsible for the village's most famous building, the
Sir John Moore Church of England Primary School. Since his elder brother, Charles, was expected to inherit the family estates, as the second son Sir John was expected to make his own way in the world. Sir John, and all subsequent generations of younger sons, went to London to make a living as merchants. with the old Appleby House obscured. Built by
George Moore in 1836 - now demolished.|thumb The Moore family ushered in a period of building in the village, the
school being the first of the family's constructions. In 1770, the family demolished the old manor at Appleby Parva and by 1790 had built Appleby House, a large Georgian style house. This was remodelled between 1832 and 1838 into a Classical styled mansion known as
Appleby Hall. Appleby House was retained as part of the new hall, and large stables, outbuildings and lodges were built. During the Moores' time as rectors in Appleby Magna, the old rectory (opposite the church) was demolished and a new Georgian rectory was built on the northern fringe of the village. The "Misses Moores" (husbandless sisters to the squire) built the almshouses in 1839, to save their elderly servants from having to go into the workhouse. The village grew considerably during the Georgian and Victorian times. As well as many houses and several farms, a new primary school (now the church hall) was built in 1845, and two Baptist chapels were built in 1820 and 1826. Before re-alignment of the county boundaries in 1897, the parish was divided between two counties, the antiquarian
William Burton observing in 1622 that it was "upon the verie edge of the countie of Derby, with which it is so intermingled that the houses... cannot be distinguished which be of eyther shire." The 1801 national census recorded a total population of 935, evenly divided between the two counties. Appleby's 19th-century inhabitants were engaged in framework knitting and stocking manufacture. The village had 14 farms, with many more in the surrounding villages. Agricultural labouring was popular work in the 19th century. The village sits on the edge of the
South Derbyshire Coalfields, and coal mining became an increasingly important area of employment up to the mid-20th century. ==Village landmarks==