Duck’s Bath
Stow-on-the-Wold,
6th August 2017 – In this village, the highest of the Cotswolds, The Battle of
Stow, the last battle in the English Civil War, took place on 21st March 1646.
In 1646, a Royalist
army marched through the region in a desperate attempt to join up with King
Charles at Oxford. They were met at Stow by a Parliamentary force. The fighting
was fierce and deadly; the Royalists were defeated and over 1000 men were
imprisoned within St Edward’s church.
It was said that
ducks were able to bathe in the pools of blood that formed on the street
leading away from the market square. This is said to be the origin of the
street’s name “Digbeth” or “Duck’s Bath”.
Today Stow is a picture
book town, full of second residences of rich Londoners, who sip their lattes
with a view on the rolling hills.
| Quiet life in the Cotswolds (FDC) |
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