Everton, Hampshire

Everton

Crown Inn, Everton
Everton
 Everton shown within Hampshire
OS grid referenceSZ288941
Civil parishHordle
DistrictNew Forest
Shire countyHampshire
RegionSouth East
CountryEngland
Sovereign stateUnited Kingdom
Post town LYMINGTON
Postcode district SO41
Dialling code 01590
Police Hampshire
Fire Hampshire
Ambulance South Central
EU Parliament South East England
UK ParliamentNew Forest West
List of places
UK
England
Hampshire

Coordinates: 50°44′45″N 1°35′35″W / 50.74580°N 1.59317°W / 50.74580; -1.59317Everton is a village in the civil parish of Hordle, near Lymington, in the English county of Hampshire.

Overview

Everton is at the junction of the A337 and B3058 roads. It is in the southeast of the parish of Hordle.[1] The village has around 760 houses, the majority having been built since 1970. It also has a village shop, a social club, a garden centre, and a large nursery.[1] It has a church dedicated to Saint Mary which is a daughter church of All Saints, Milford on Sea.[1] The village has one pub called The Crown.[2]

History

The earliest deeds which mention Everton (c. 1300) spell the name as Yveletona.[3] The name may be equivalent to that of Yeovilton in Somerset, and made up of two elements: "Gifl" - a Brittonic river name, and "ton" - an Anglo-Saxon word for a farm.[4] Subsequent variants of the name include Yelverton, Yeovilton, Evilton, and Evelton.[5]

From the time of Charles II down to the beginning of the 19th century, Everton was home to three notable Catholic families, succeeding each other at Everton House - Steptoe, White, and Lacy.[5] The first Anglican church was erected in 1896, and was constructed mainly from wood and corrugated iron.[6] This was replaced in 1970 with the present timber framed and cedar shingle clad church.[6]

Everton saw some action during World War II. On the 15 October 1940 at 1245 pm, a Messerschmitt Bf 109E-1 was shot down at Everton.[7][8] Less than a year later, at nearby Efford, on July 8, 1941 at 0125 am, a Heinkel He 111H-3 was shot down by a Bristol Beaufighter, four crew members were killed, but one member of the crew baled out and was captured by members of the local home guard.[7][9]

Notes

  1. 1 2 3 History, Hordle Parish Council, retrieved 18 July 2010
  2. The Crown Inn, retrieved 18 July 2010
  3. Francis John Monkhouse, (1964), A survey of Southampton and its region, page 177. Southampton University Press
  4. Everton, Old Hampshire Gazetteer, retrieved 19 July 2011
  5. 1 2 Edward King, (1900), Old times re-visited in the borough and parish of Lymington, Hants, page 262.
  6. 1 2 St Mary's Church, retrieved 18 July 2010
  7. 1 2 Hampshire Aircraft Crashes and Accidents
  8. Kracker Luftwaffe Pilot Archive: German Pilots - P
  9. Winston G. Ramsey, (1990), The Blitz then and now, Volume 3, page 53. Battle of Britain Prints
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