COMMUNICATIONS.
The Roman Watling
Street crossed the parish (fn. 86) and bounded several
townships. (fn. 87) In 1301 it crossed 'Clerkenebrugge'
near the parish's western edge. (fn. 88) From Oakengates
Parts of C.P.s beyond the Wellington C.P. boundary of 1884-94 are not shown.
(in Wombridge) a south-easterly branch via Shifnal existed by 1335, when two men were granted
tolls on the Wellington-Shifnal road for making a
causeway on it, (fn. 89) and that was the usual Wellington-London route in 1695. (fn. 90) Watling Street and
its Shifnal branch were turnpiked in 1726 (fn. 91) and
from the late 18th century the former also carried
much traffic to the Staffordshire & Worcestershire
Canal at Gailey (Staffs.). (fn. 92)

Wellington the civil parish 1884-94, with later c.p. boundaries to 1974
KEY TO CIVIL PARISHES FROM 1894 TO 1974
A Wellington Urban
B Wellington Rural 1894-8, Hadley from 1898
C Wellington Rural 1894-8, Hadley 1898-1903, Wellington Urban from 1903
D Wellington Rural 1894-8, Hadley 1898-1905, Eyton upon the Weald Moors from 1905
E Wellington Rural 1894-8, Hadley 1898-1934, Eyton from 1934
F Wellington Rural 1894-8, Hadley 1898-1934, Oakengates from 1934
G Wellington Rural 1894-8, Hadley 1898-1934, Wellington Rural from 1934
H Wellington Rural 1894-8, Hadley 1898-1934, Wellington Urban from 1934
I Wellington Rural 1894-1903, Wellington Urban from 1903
J Wellington Rural 1894-1903, Wellington Urban 1903-34, Hadley from 1934
K Wellington Rural 1894-1934, Dawley from 1934
L Wellington Rural 1894-1934, Eyton from 1934
M Wellington Rural 1894-1934, Hadley from 1934
N Wellington Rural 1894-1934, Oakengates from 1934
O Wellington Rural 1894-1934, Wellington Urban from 1934
P Wellington Rural 1894-1934, Wrockwardine from 1934
Q Wellington Rural 1894-1966, Dawley from 1966
R Wellington Rural 1894-1966, Little Wenlock from 1966
S Wellington Rural
Parts of C.P.s beyond the Wellington C.P. boundary of 1884-94 are not shown.

Wellington and Wrockwardine Roads c. 1770
After the union of the Irish and British parliaments (1801) the route along Watling Street and
through Shifnal was improved as part of the
Holyhead-London road. Local traffic to Wolverhampton and Birmingham benefited. (fn. 93) From c.
1817 a new road from Pottersbank via Snedshill to
Shifnal bypassed Oakengates to the south-west. (fn. 94)
Detours on Watling Street were opened c. 1822 at
Ketleybrook (fn. 95) and in 1835 at Overley Hill. (fn. 96) Watling Street west of Pottersbank and the Pottersbank-Shifnal road were disturnpiked in Wellington parish in 1866. (fn. 97) In 1879 that route was
designated a main road (fn. 98) and remained so
throughout Wellington parish until 1975, when it
was bypassed by the first part of the M 54. (fn. 99) In
1981 it was still a main road between Ketleybrook
and Beveley roundabouts, but only as part of
Telford's internal road system. (fn. 1)
A westward continuation of the medieval
Trench Way (fn. 2) entered the parish from the northeast, reached Hadley, and continued via
Haybridge (fn. 3) to the Buck's Head on Watling Street
(in Arleston township). (fn. 4) Turnpiked to Newport
in 1763, (fn. 5) it was disturnpiked in 1867 (fn. 6) and designated a main road in 1879. (fn. 7) In 1983 the Haybridge-Ketleybrook part of Telford's 'north-west
district road' was under construction and was
intended to supersede the section of the old road
from Haybridge to the Buck's Head.
Opposite the Buck's Head a road running
south-eastwards via Dawley Bank (fn. 8) was in the 18th
century the main road from Wellington to
Worcester, Gloucester, Bath, and Bristol. (fn. 9) Bridgnorth was reached that way via the Shifnal-
Bridgnorth road. (fn. 10) In 1764 the road was turnpiked from the Buck's Head to Sutton Maddock
and thence towards Dudley as far as the New Inn, (fn. 11)
Rudge Heath. (fn. 12) In Wellington parish its line was
superseded by a new road, authorized in 1827,
south-eastwards from the new Wellington-Coalbrookdale turnpike road at Lawley to Ball's Hill in
Dawley. (fn. 13) The new length and its continuation to
the New Inn were disturnpiked in 1867 (fn. 14) and in
1879 were designated a main road only as far as
Sutton Maddock, (fn. 15) whence the main road from
Shifnal took Wellington traffic to Bridgnorth.
The Wellington-Bridgnorth route remained a
main road in 1983.
An early road crossed the parish in the north,
bounding several townships. (fn. 16) Presumably a westward continuation of the medieval 'Lubbesty', (fn. 17) it
was mapped c. 1580 as the way from Lilleshall to
Wrockwardine (fn. 18) and in 1626 as the Newport-
Shrewsbury highway. (fn. 19)
Those early thoroughfares were not aligned on
Wellington, though Watling Street and its branches were accessible from the town via Shrewsbury Way (fn. 20) (later Haygate Road) (fn. 21) and Mill Bank.
Early roads to the north and north-west, however,
left the town centre directly.
In the 16th century the usual northward route
from Wellington crossed Dothill township and the
Newport-Shrewsbury road, which there delimited Dothill and Wrockwardine parish. Northbound travellers then skirted Bratton village and
turned into a road from Admaston to Sleapford
(near Crudgington, in Ercall Magna); those
travelling north-west, went on to Longdon upon
Tern. (fn. 22)
By 1726 the route across Dothill township had
lost its importance. Travellers north and northwest from Wellington then used an old road that
bounded Apley and Dothill townships (fn. 23) and crossed the Newport-Shrewsbury road at Shawbirch.
Thence northbound traffic went on to Sleapford (fn. 24)
and travellers to the north-west went west along
the Newport-Shrewsbury road to pick up the old
route to Longdon. The Wellington-Shawbirch-
Crudgington road, with a continuation south via
Back Lane and Mill Bank to the Swan on Watling
Street, was turnpiked in 1726, (fn. 25) disturnpiked in
1866, (fn. 26) and designated a main road in 1879, (fn. 27)
which it remained in 1983. Between Watling
Street and Shawbirch it was expected to be
superseded by Telford's 'north-west district road',
then under construction. The route from Wellington via Shawbirch to Longdon and Cotwall (in
Ercall Magna) was also turnpiked in 1726; east
and south-east of Shawbirch it continued via the
Newport-Shrewsbury road and the lane (later
called Hadley Park Road) to Hadley, and thence
by Hadley Lane (later Hadley Road) to
Oakengates. (fn. 28) Coalbrookdale castings for Liverpool went in 1816 to the Ellesmere Canal at
Edstaston (in Wem), (fn. 29) probably through Cotwall.
The Cotwall-Oakengates route was disturnpiked
in 1865. (fn. 30) Its Cotwall-Shawbirch section was
designated a main road in 1879 (fn. 31) and ranked as a
secondary road by 1983; by then the rest consisted only of minor roads.

Roads, Railways, And Canals Around Wellington: The Mid 19th Century
In 1817 a new turnpike road was authorized, to
be built southwards from the Swan, on Watling
Street, to Coalbrookdale; (fn. 32) south of Horsehay it
followed an existing route. (fn. 33) Disturnpiked in
1875, (fn. 34) it became a main road in 1878 (fn. 35) and so
remained in 1983.
Early minor roads led to outlying resources.
One ran north from Wappenshall to the Weald
Moors. (fn. 36) Steeraway Lane (fn. 37) (later Limekiln Lane)
ascended from Watling Street Hall (later the Old
Hall) to the woods and limestone quarries. Rockway Lane (fn. 38) led to the Wrekin woods and pastures
from Aston. In Walcot a hollow-way (fn. 39) descended
from the Newport-Shrewsbury road to the mill,
where in 1782 subscribers built an elegant stone
bridge over the Tern, designed by William
Hayward. (fn. 40)
Other minor roads linked Wellington with nearby settlements. (fn. 41) Wrockwardine Way (fn. 42) (later
Wrockwardine Road), described in 1691 as the
king's highway, (fn. 43) led west from the north end of
Church Street, with a northward branch across
Bullocks bridge (fn. 44) called Admaston Way (later
Admaston Road) and a southward called Orleton
Way (fn. 45) (later Orleton Lane). Branches from the
Wellington-Shawbirch road served Leegomery,
Apley, Wappenshall, and Eyton. (fn. 46)
The main roads were much improved from the
1970s under Telford development corporation,
with broad new internal roads to link them. The
principal linking road in Wellington parish was
the 'north-west district road' from Watling Street
(at Ketleybrook), which passed east of Wellington
to Shawbirch; it was under construction in 1983.
It continued a new road built south from Ketleybrook to the M 54 motorway. (fn. 47) The motorway's
first completed part (opened 1975) (fn. 48) created a
southern bypass for Wellington. Work to extend
that short length to the M 6 at Essington (Staffs.)
was completed in 1983. One purpose of the new
roads was to keep through traffic away from
Wellington town.
The Shrewsbury Canal, from Wombridge,
opened as far as Long Lane (in Wrockwardine) in
1794, having crossed Wappenshall township, and
it reached Shrewsbury in 1797. (fn. 49) In 1835 it was
joined at Wappenshall by the Newport branch of
the Birmingham & Liverpool Junction Canal,
which thus connected the coalfield canals to the
national system. (fn. 50) Until the arrival of railways
most coalfield companies used Wappenshall as the
national outlet for their coal and iron. Rather than
negotiate the coalfield canals, however, the
producer normally carried goods to Wappenshall
by road, there to load them on his own narrowboats. Likewise a wide variety of incoming goods
was unloaded at Wappenshall for road distribution in the coalfield. (fn. 51) A large warehouse was built
there. (fn. 52) A major import was fluxing limestone
from north Wales; in the 1830s and 1840s
thousands of tons reached the coalfield annually
through Wappenshall. (fn. 53)
From 1849 railways superseded the Wappenhall route except for some local traffic. (fn. 54) The
Trench-Wappenshall section of the Shrewsbury
Canal was disused from 1921. Goods towards
Shrewsbury, mostly coal from the Newport
branch, used the junction until the Second World
War but did not go beyond Longdon upon Tern
after 1936. The canals through Wappenshall were
formally abandoned in 1944. (fn. 55)
In 1849 the Shrewsbury-Wellington line was
opened jointly by the Shrewsbury & Birmingham
Railway Co. (later G.W.R.) and the Shropshire
Union Railways & Canal Co. (later L.N.W.R.),
with a station at Wellington, whence in the same
year the S.B.R.C. opened a line to Wolverhampton and the S.U.R.C.C. one to Stafford. (fn. 56) The
latter closed to passengers in 1964 (fn. 57) but was open
to goods as far as Stafford until 1966; thereafter it
ran only to private sidings at Donnington. (fn. 58)
By 1867 branch lines in the coalfield townships
afforded direct rail services to Coalbrookdale,
Coalport, Craven Arms, and Much Wenlock. (fn. 59)
In Wellington township the Wellington &
Drayton Railway Co. (later G.W.R.) opened a
branch in 1867 from the Shrewsbury-Wellington
line to Market Drayton. (fn. 60) It closed to passengers
in 1963 (fn. 61) and to all traffic in 1967. (fn. 62)