Early history The name Huntington is possibly Anglo-Saxon in origin, “ton” meaning a hamlet grouped around a hunting lodge in a forest. There is no single source of the settlement's history, but
A History of the County of Stafford does provide an important insight into the early period of the village. Although only 4 km from Watling Street, the only Roman evidence found in Huntington was a coin and some pottery found near Cavans Wood in 1950. The
Domesday record of 1086 shows the existence of Estendome but this may have been an error by the scribe as in 1198 the name is recorded as Huntendon and in 1262 as Huntingdon, meaning “hill of the huntsmen”. Records show Richard Forester was responsible for the village and managed the royal hunting forest of
Cannock Chase for
King William I. During the 12th and 13th century, the area was part of the land of Lord Pillaton. The Chase and its forest is now a designated Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty and deer still roam the area today.
St Margaret Chapel A medieval chapel, St Margaret-within-Cannock, was established around 1548 but the site now lies buried under the east slope of the former colliery spoil heap. There was possibly a medieval homestead and moat either in the north-west of the village or on the south side of Limepit Lane (originally Stonepit Lane). It was in this period that the name Huntington became more commonly used after many variations. Another medieval feature is St Chad's Ditch on the eastern edge of the parish along a line of the trees known as Huntington Belt. This ditch and bank possibly marked a boundary between who had hunting rights over different parts of the Chase and that included the
Bishops of Lichfield at
St Mary and St Chads Cathedral. In 1661 there were 46 households and even in 1801 the population was only 114. The 1841 Tithe map (3) shows Lord Hatherton of the Littleton family owned nearly all the land in the “Township of Huntington” and the 1851 Census recorded 121 residents and over 800 acres of land. The Littletons originally lived at Pillaton Hall to the west of Huntington and then from 1742 until 1930 at
Teddesley Hall (now demolished) just to the north. (4) In 1870, John Marius Wilson's
Imperial Gazetteer of England and Wales (5) described Huntington as a township with 32 houses and a population of 161 from which “large quantities of white gravel have been sent hence to different parts of the kingdom for garden walks.” The gravel pit was also shown on the 1841 tithe map.
Huntington Farm Huntington Farm, dating from the early 18th Century, is now part of “The Barns Hotel”, a Grade II listed building in Cocksparrow Lane. Oaklands Farm (which apparently lent pigs to the BBC 1970's
All Creatures Great and Small) in Limepit Lane and Doggintree Farm also dated from the 18th Century but have been demolished for housing. “The Cottage” (now a B&B and restaurant) on the corner of Pear Tree Close is one of the oldest remaining buildings dating back to the 1770s. Several buildings of Pear Tree Farm remain from an older farm as do a few cottages from the 19th century hamlet near to the church.
Coal mining Huntington has a rich
coal mining heritage that stretches back hundreds of years. The village sits on the
Cannock Chase coalfield, an extension of the South Staffordshire coalfield, that clusters around
Cannock Chase. The main colliery in the village was Littleton. It was sunk in 1877 but the original sinkings were lost through flooding and new shafts were sunk between 1899 and 1902. Despite its chequered start, the pit became one of the largest in the Midlands and the last colliery remaining on Cannock Chase. It was extensively modernised by the
National Coal Board and in 1982 employed 1,900 miners, mining nearly a million tonnes of coal. However, after the controversial pit closure programme of the early 1990s, Littleton closed in 1994, overturning a reprieval a year earlier. The pit has now been completely demolished and the former
spoil tip has been redeveloped as an area for walkers known as Littleton Leisure Park. == St. Thomas Church ==