Early History
1000's
1000
1086
To the north of Shrewsbury lies ancient scrublands, an old river bed and hills that for hundreds of years remained pastureland. Formed when the last glaciers retreated north through England, the ice age left an indelible mark cutting the natural flow of the river and leaving diverse deposits of glacial till on the bedrock.
Doomsday Records
1086
1000's
1100's
A very small number of settlements have resided on the brow of the hill for centuries and were first recorded in the Doomsday Book in 1086 as ‘hencot’ translating to mean a small tenement tending to chickens. In the years that followed hencot became hencote, a medieval term meaning “high on the hill”.
Farming History
1100's
1100's
1100's
Subsistence farming existed on the banks of the old river bed of the diverted (ox-bowed) river Severn where peasant farmers tended their cattle and coppiced wood supplies from fallen willow and alder trees in the wet woodlands. Basket weaving and fence making were early trades established on these historic lands.
Farming History
1100's
1100's
2009
Thereafter for as long as people can remember the lands were turned over to sheep and cattle for grazing. Situated clause to ‘Battlefields’ the site of one of the most famous and decisive conflicts of their English civil war, what was once out in the country, today sits on the very edge of the thriving English market town of Shrewsbury.
Hobby Vineyard
2009
1100's
2012
In 2009 the owners of a small private estate at Hencote planted a hobby vineyard comprising 160 vines.
Quality Harvests
2012
2009
2015
Within a few years, this was producing surprisingly buoyant harvests of good quality grapes. Despite a lack of encouragement and genuine scepticism from Viticulturists, a subsequent and exhaustive study revealed conducive growing conditions for establishing a viable vineyard. The owners passionately believed that the estate could be developed to support both a vineyard and also oeno-tourism.
A Vision Come True
2015
2012
2015
This vision has inspired the development of the estate today. By 2015 a new vineyard of 24,000 vines had been planted. Earlier this year the winery building was completed and a new restaurant and wine and cocktail bar opened. A new glamping village was also opened and a brand new road linking the estate to main vehicular routes was established.
Present Day
2020's
2015
X
Now people have the opportunity to visit a genuine English wine estate, view the ancient wet woodlands, stroll through the vineyard, visit the winery operation, taste the locally produced wines, dine in a new restaurant, stay over in a beautifully restored Georgian hay barn or in any of 10 thoughtfully appointed luxury glamping lodges.