Cutsdean is a rural village in the Cotswolds and smaller than average sized parish, a few miles east north-east of Cheltenham, Gloucestershire and the same distance south-southeast of Evesham. The River Windrush runs through the village.
It can get so windy in the village that the locals call it “two coats Cutsdean”.
Шаблон:See also
The key estates of this Шаблон:Convert chapelry of Bredon parish,[1] can be traced a generation or more further than typical, back to Anglo-Saxon England charters.[2] Its main estate and church were long possessions of the Worcester Priory,[3] and were part of Worcestershire until 1931, when the detached part (exclave) status was resolved; it was moved to Gloucestershire.[4] Its population was 116, across 30 households in 1901; both figures stood in 1911, unchanged.[4]
The west of the parish is marked by the Windrush. It has been briefly dammed, creating a tree-lined head of water, assisting the flow below in dry weather, also allowing for some algae which help to feed fish and de-nitrify the river in its rural, relatively headwater stage.