Langwith lies just west in the
district of Bolsover,
Derbyshire, from Nether Langwith; in fact the two villages adjoin. Apart from a row of shops and houses wedged between the North side of the A632 and the
river Poulter, the villages have two public houses: the Gate Hotel and the Jug and Glass. The entire village is not a post-
Second World War council estate.
Langwith Maltings This part of the village is separated from Langwith and Nether Langwith by a railway: the
Doncaster-
Nottingham line known today as the
Robin Hood line. The village was first established following the opening of a railway station here, which was the only to serve this community of villages. This closed as part of the
Dr Beeching closures of the 1960s. In the 1950s, the site next to the railway station was developed into a
council estate, referred to as Dale Close. The Robin Hood line reopened the original with services between Nottingham and Worksop..
Etymology for Langwith
see Nether Langwith, "Maltings", refers to the
Malt House which existed here in operation, up until its closure and subsequent demolition in 1993.
Nether Langwith Etymology "Nether" is
Saxon/Old German for
Lower, "Lang" meaning
long, and "with" is
Old Norse vīōr
wood Upper Langwith is a small village straddling the A632, at a fork for
Langwith Junction and
Bolsover, in
Bolsover (district). The village is home to the Devonshire Arms pub, a mediaeval parish church and two manor houses. == Langwith Museum ==