A GROUP of villagers in Shropshire who were gazumped by developers in a land sale with the Church Commissioners say that they’re still prepared to make a deal.
The Commissioners’ proposed disposal of the Floyer Lane plot in Benthall, near Telford, to Boningale Homes, was valued at about £300,000 last yr (News, 3 November, 2023). Villagers in neighbouring properties put their life savings together, but lost to the housing developer in a sealed-bid process.
Laura Davies co-ordinated the Floyer Lane Community Group, and told the Church Times how pleased the local residents were on the collapse of the deal. “The Church Commissioners have apologised, and agreed to come back back to us first should the land still be sold. We remain willing to take it on.”
At present, the land is maintained by residents and a farmer in the realm. “It’s necessary to us that the countryside is protected. This has change into such a well-liked spot for local expedition groups and dog-walkers. We actually need to preserve that,” Mrs Davies said.
The National Trust had spoken out for the land’s ecological importance. It manages Benthall Hall, an estate which once belonged to a former Bishop of Bath & Wells and Lord Chancellor, Robert Burnell. By the time of the Reformation, it was home to a recusant family.
The Trust also manages Wenlock Edge, a limestone escarpment two miles away. Wenlock Edge was immortalised in poetry by A. E. Housman, and in music by Ralph Vaughan Williams, who used a lot of Housman’s Shropshire Lad poems for a song cycle.
Mrs Davies didn’t feel that one other housing developer would step in. “There’s a definite lack of infrastructure there; so it’s not a really suitable plot for development. Getting utilities in can be a selected problem.”
A spokesperson for the Church Commissioners said: “The proposed sale of the land at Hilltop Farm, Floyer Lane, Benthall, to a neighborhood developer, isn’t any longer proceeding. As such, the Church Commissioners for England is taking time to undertake an additional strategic review, and to contemplate next steps with regard to the long run of the location.”
Boningale Homes was contacted by the Church Times, but declined to comment.