Stoke Edith

Stoke Edith is a village in the English county of Herefordshire, situated on the A438 road between Hereford and Ledbury.

The church has a communion rail, pews and font in the same period with an impressive wooden pulpit in three decks.

The monument dated 1699 is to Paul Foley, the first to move from Great Witley, co-leader of the Tory Party and Country Whigs.

It was the principal estate of Sir Henry Lingen, a Royalist officer in the English Civil War, who was buried in the church in 1662.

[4] The building currently known as Stoke Edith House was previously the Rectory and this, together with the park and extensive agricultural and woodlands, remain in the ownership of the Foley family.

Stoke Edith House - burnt down in 1926 and later demolished.