Landmarks at Atcham include
Attingham Park, seat of the
Berwick barons until the title became extinct in 1953. The hall at Attingham Park is now the regional headquarters of the
National Trust. Also on the estate is the Shropshire office of
Natural England. Adjacent to Attingham Park is Home Farm, Attingham. Now separate from the hall that it traditionally supplied, it is a family-run organic farm and tearoom open to the public. The older of the two bridges at Atcham, built in 1769–1771 by
John Gwynn, is commonly known as Atcham Bridge. It is both
Grade II* listed and a
scheduled monument. Its replacement, opened in 1929, carries the old A5 (B4380) road over the
River Severn. The village has a public house, the
Mytton & Mermaid, owned at one time by
Clough Williams-Ellis as a staging post to his iconic Italianate village of
Portmeirion. The school closed half a century ago. The post office and petrol station, located adjacent to the old school, have also closed. The old school buildings and adjacent house were sold to Mr and Mrs Caswell in 1982, who have since run a small car sales and repair business. Atcham has a timber-framed village hall, the Malthouse, built in the 17th century as such, but after disuse converted in the 19th century into a carpenter's shop for the Attingham estate. It was opened after restoration in 1925 as the village hall and dedicated to the memory of the men of Atcham who had died in
First World War. It has a
sprung floor bought from a dance hall in Shrewsbury. Outside the parish to the east, is the village of
Wroxeter, formerly a
Roman town and currently the site of one of Shropshire's commercial
vineyards. Also there is the Atcham Business Park/Industrial Estate on the site of the old airfield. Despite its name, it lies in the neighbouring civil parish of
Wroxeter and Uppington, although after the
Diocese of Lichfield made some boundary changes, it is now in the ecclesiastical parish of Atcham. ==See also==