In the 1086
Domesday Survey Epperstone was recorded as having had a church and a priest. Evidence has been found of a church even in the
Anglo-Saxon period. The only relics left of any date earlier than that of the existing church are pieces of the font, a
finial in the churchyard, and the lower part of the wall of the nave. The common was enclosed in 1768, when were allotted in lieu of
tithes. Litchfield library, founded in 1839 by John Litchfield Esq., contained 2,250 volumes on philosophical and miscellaneous subjects, available to all subscribers of sixpence per quarter, paid in advance. The books were kept in the schoolroom until 1843, when the donor erected a building and vested it, together with the library, in trustees for the use of the Epperstone's parishioners. It is thought that the undulating field behind Church Cottages, off Church Lane, inspired the Barrow-Downs in
J. R. R. Tolkien's
The Fellowship of the Ring. According to surveys, the population of Epperstone fluctuated after 1801, when the first accessible records were made. In that year it was 422. In 1851, this rose to 511, but in 1901, fell to 262. In 1853, Thomas Holdsworth was the principal landowner and
Lord of the manor. Thomas Moore, John Towle, John Litchfield, John Thomas, William Barnard, and Henry Sherbrooke also held estates. ==Notable people==