Strelley Village

Strelley is a village and former civil parish in the Borough of Broxtowe and City of Nottingham in Nottinghamshire, England.

Strelley is also notable for being the upper terminus of one of the earliest recorded railway lines in the world, the Wollaton Waggonway.

It was built by Huntingdon Beaumont working in partnership with the second occupier of Wollaton Hall, Sir Percival Willoughby.

During the 1960s much of the western part of Strelley parish was dominated by a huge opencast coal mine.

[5] The main television transmitter for Nottingham is in the area, which takes signals from Waltham.

Strelley Hall