Stivichall is a mainly residential area of south
Coventry astride the Leamington Road. Like the city centre, it lies on the right terraces of the vale carved by the
Sherbourne, an
intermittently great stream which rises in
Allesley in the borough and flows along the eastern boundary as an upper sub-tributary of the
River Avon, Warwickshire. The small suburb of Fenside forms part of southeast Stivichall. To the north and northwest Stivichall borders the
War Memorial Park a civic nationally
Grade II listed park and garden which separates the neighbourhood from most parts of similarly residential
Earlsdon along Coat of Arms Bridge Road. The district of
Cheylesmore blends into the area contiguously to the northeast. Much relatively narrower Whitley Common, which is a flood meadow, and one of two dual feeder roads to Coventry's centre on it, separates
Whitley to the east. The southern border of Stivichall is shared with the northern border of the city's
Finham and Green Lane neighbourhoods along the
A45 dual carriageway. The western area of Stivichall, known locally as Styvechale Grange, is a large residential district developed during the late-1960s and early-1970s to cater for Coventry's then-rapidly rising population (which peaked at 340,000 inhabitants in 1971).
Incidents of pre-1919 ownership A rural parish on the outskirts of Coventry, the Styvechale
manor had belonged to the Gregory family since the 16th century from whom in 1919 the land was purchased by Coventry Corporation and used in part to create the War Memorial Park, with the general development of the remainder following by the 1970s. The main roads from Coventry to
Leamington Spa and
Kenilworth pass through and join within the boundaries of Stivichall, and whilst the estate was in the Gregory family's ownership, access was denied to the roads unless a toll of 1d per horse and 6d per vehicle was paid to them. The toll house which stood at the junction of the roads was demolished in 1964. == History ==