Kirk Langley

The former Meynell Arms Hotel, now a private house, dates from the Georgian period.

In the late 1940s a small council estate was built at Kirk Langley, close to the A52.

The Church of St Michael was built in the early 14th century on the site of a much older one, for which traces of a Saxon wall near the west door provides some evidence.

There are monuments to the Meynell and Pole families, including a large marble altar tomb commemorating Henry Poole, a prominent local politician who died in 1559, and his wife Dorothy, an elaborate memorial to Lieutenant William Meynell who was killed at Giurgiu on the Danube in 1854 when fighting with the Turks against the Russians, and an early Victorian memorial to a Meynell 'who was deprived of his life in a collision of carriages' in Clay Cross tunnel.

The village has a Church of England primary school[2] in Moor Lane, which has about ninety pupils.