Grendon is mentioned in the
Domesday Book: "
Henry de Ferrers holds Catmore and five and a half
hides in Grendon and Turstin holds on him. There is land for 16 ploughs. There are 24
villans and sixteen
bordars with eight ploughs. There is a
watermill rendering 5 shillings and of
meadow, woodland – one and a half
leagues long and one league broad. It was worth 40 shillings. Siward Barn held it." Parts of
All Saints Church date back to the 12th century, but the
tower is a much later addition from 1845. The
churchyard has several graves dating back to the 17th century and possibly older, but due to corrosion on some of the graves, this is difficult to verify. Seven men from Grendon were among the 32 killed in the 1882 explosion at
Baddesley Pit. Some of these men are buried in the
graveyard of All Saints Church in Old Grendon. Grendon Hall was demolished in 1933. However, there are several structures of age which remain, most notably the bridge over the
River Anker, which in its current form dates back to 1633. The old servants' quarters are now a residential property and several old barns and
stable buildings have also been converted into residential properties.
Farm lane It is rumoured that the houses located on Farm Lane, originally to house farmworkers of Grendon Farm, were built on foundations created from the rubble produced in the demolition of Grendon Hall. In the woods off Farm Lane can be found a well-preserved underground
ice house, which would have been used as a place to store ice (probably dragged from the nearby
River Anker during the winter months) to serve the
manor house's rudimentary refrigeration needs. This structure is of red brick, with a domed ceiling and is covered by a thin layer of earth. Ice would have been insulated with straw and if the ice was in large enough quantity it would have kept until the following winter. There are several other mounds of brick and earth in these woods suggesting other structures once existed as well. ==Governance==