The Pludds
History
The name of the hamlet derives from the Middle English word "pludde" or "plodde", meaning a pool or puddle. The area was known as The Pludds by 1787 when a few houses are reported. One of the oldest surviving houses, Pludds Court, dates from the late 18th or early 19th century. Occasional building continued at the Pludds after 1840 and a beerhouse called the Royal Oak had opened by 1891. In the late 19th and early 20th century there was a coal shaft known as "Pluds" just southwest of the hamlet, which formed part of the Lydbrook Colliery.
The hamlet had shops, a beerhouse, a choral society, and a cricket club, but these had all been closed or been disbanded by 1990. The village hall, built in 1975, continues in use.
References
- ^ YouTube video from "The Pludds Village Hall"
- ^ A. H. Smith, (1965), The Place-names of Gloucestershire. Part IV, page 162. English Place-Name Society
- ^ Forest of Dean: Settlement, Victoria County History
- ^ Pluds, Forest of Dean Local History Society
External links
Media related to The Pludds at Wikimedia Commons