Etymology The place name means the
ford at the loud waters ("lud"); Ludlow's name means the hill ("low") by the loud waters. The loud waters are those of the River Teme, which flow rapidly through the area (now largely tamed by weirs).
Domesday Book Ludford,
Steventon, and
the Sheet are all mentioned in the
Domesday Book of 1086 as
manors. They existed prior to the town of Ludlow, which grew up during or after the construction of the
Norman castle there.
Shropshire and Herefordshire Historically the parish was divided between Shropshire and
Herefordshire and the village itself, despite its proximity to the Salopian town of Ludlow, fell within Herefordshire (the county boundary at this point being the River Teme). Steventon and the Sheet on the other hand were in Shropshire. In 1895, as a result of the
Local Government Act 1894, the Herefordshire element of the parish of Ludford joined Shropshire, which also meant a transfer from Herefordshire's Wolphy hundred to that of Munslow. Also as a result of the same 1894 Act of Parliament, which reformed
civil parishes into the present-day form (with elected
parish councils) the combined area became the civil parish of Ludford.
Hundreds At the time of the
Domesday Book, Ludford came within the Herefordshire
hundred of
Wolphy, whilst Steventon and the Sheet (as well as Ludlow, by way of it being part of
Stanton Lacy at the time) came within
Culvestan, a Shropshire hundred originating in Anglo-Saxon times but which ended in the reign of
Henry I. Steventon, the Sheet and Holdgate Fee (
see section below) became part of
Munslow hundred after Culvestan's dissolution, as did Ludlow. – and the remains of its parkland. It originated as the area's
manor house and was acquired in 1607 by the Charlton family.
Sir Job Charlton,
speaker of the House of Commons, was created a baronet in 1686. The
Charlton baronetcy however has since become extinct. By the 1840s, the parkland (Ludford Park) had become enclosed and used as farmland. Ludford House is no longer one residence and has been divided into separate dwellings.
Roads The
turnpike road to
Hereford, now the B4361 (named
Overton Road in Ludford), was built through the parkland of Ludford House in the 1820s and passes right by the back of the House. Park Road, no longer a through-road, was once the main thoroughfare leading southwards from the ford, and later the bridge, and was until 1836 the main route to
Worcester, The parish's population count increasingly derives from the housing being constructed on the eastern fringe of Ludlow, which largely accounted for the considerable increase in the parish's population from 395 recorded in 2001; the population of the village of Ludford itself is stable and is less than 150.
Boundaries In 1884 the part of the parish to the east of
Ledwyche Brook was transferred to
Bitterley; in the same year, the civil parish of
East Hamlet was formed out of Stanton Lacy, resulting in Ludford and Stanton Lacy no longer bordering one another. The border between the parishes of Ludlow and Ludford had remained unchanged since medieval times, with Weeping Cross Lane and Rock Lane as the limit of Ludlow to the north of the Teme. In 1901 the area of land, which was becoming suburban, between the railway line and the River Teme (up to Mary's Meadow) was included into Ludlow from Ludford, including the Holdgate Fee (
see section below). In 1934 the Whitcliffe (which had been acquired by the burgesses of Ludlow already in the 13th century) and the area north of the railway line, in the vicinity of Gallows Bank were transferred from Ludford to Ludlow. Circa 1967 the borders of Ludlow,
Bromfield and Ludlow were re-aligned in the Whitcliffe area, with the Ludford-Ludlow/Bromfield border routed along the Wigmore road, and with an overall transfer of land to Ludford. In 1987 the civil parish of East Hamlet was abolished and largely absorbed by Ludford, the populous part of this parish having previously been absorbed by the town and civil parish of Ludlow. At the same time, the boundary with Ludlow in this eastern area was re-aligned along the A49 by-pass (though Foldgate remains within Ludford). This involved small transfers between Ludlow and Ludford; the 1987 transfers brought all of Rocks Green into Ludford parish (it was previously on the border of East Hamlet and Ludlow) and created a second boundary with Bromfield, with Ludlow now encircled by the two parishes of Ludford and Bromfield. The total area of the parish (post-1987) is . Common with the other parts of Ludford's parish that lay north of the Teme, it belonged to Shropshire and the hundred of Culvestan, later Munslow. The
A4117 road runs through Rocks Green and the roundabout where it joins the A49 is named the Rocks Green roundabout. As of 2021, a
Sainsbury's supermarket is being constructed by the Rocks Green roundabout.
Elan aqueduct The
Elan aqueduct passes through the parish, largely in tunnel, and crosses the Teme by way of a bridge near Steventon. ==Bridge==