There is no record of Ordsall before the days of
William the Conqueror, when the land was chiefly marsh. In the
Domesday Book of 1086, the name of the village is
Ordeshale and in other early documents the name was
Ordesale. In 1637 it was even printed on a map as
Ardsall, however these corruptions of names are usual everywhere. For centuries the parish of Ordsall consisted of the village and two small hamlets,
Thrumpton and Whitehouses. Ordsall Parish became part of the Retford Area Team Ministry, the area covered by the former Retford Deanery, in April 2011. The ecclesiastical parish of Ordsall formerly covered a much larger area than Ordsall village. Whereas the village is bounded by the river and railway lines, the parish extended northwards towards the centre of East Retford as far as Albert Road. On 1 September 2019 a new Parish of Ordsall and Retford, St Michael was formed. This new parish comprises all the parts of the former Ordsall parish that lie on western bank of the river Idle, along with the ancient parish of West Retford. The areas of the ancient Ordsall Parish that lie on the eastern bank of the river Idle are now part of the Parish of Retford, St Saviours. The ancient parish became a civil parish in 1866, but on 1 April 1921 the civil parish was abolished and absorbed into the
Municipal Borough of East Retford. In 1911 the civil parish had a population of 5690.
Population The population of the Parish, which includes the village of Ordsall and surrounding areas such as Thrumpton. The 2001 population is the population of the village alone. ==All Hallows Church==