Wollerton

It lies approximately three miles to the south west of Market Drayton and sits on the old A53 and adjacent to the new Hodnet bypass which forms the new route of the A53.

In 1066, the manor was held by Askell, but by 1086 it had passed to Roger de Montgomery at which time it was part of Hodnet Hundred.

[2] In the 16th century the manor was held by the John Gratewood, who married a sister Sir Rowland Hill of Soulton (publisher of the Geneva Bible and inspiration for Shakespeare's[3] As You Like It.

[4] The daughter of this union, Alice, married Reginald Corbet, and a monument to that couple exists in the church at Stoke on Tern.

Since the construction of the Hodnet bypass, Wollerton's public house, The Squirrel, has closed and no other amenities other than a URC chapel remain.