Wick St. Lawrence is a civil parish and village in Somerset, England. It falls within the unitary authority of North Somerset. The population of the parish, which includes Bourton, in the 2011 census was 1,331.
History
The parish of Wick St Lawrence was part of the WinterstokeHundred, while Bourton was in Portbury Hundred. The village lies near a small creek known as Slitspill near the River Yeo which was inundated in the Bristol Channel floods, 1607. The last wharf on the river was a pier connected by a spur to the former Weston, Clevedon and Portishead Railway. The railway track was removed between October 1942 and late 1943. The wharf was used to import coal from South Wales mostly by sailing barges. The coal was off-loaded by steam crane or by the barges’ derricks into wagons. The 15th century village cross stands on an area of grass opposite the parish church, raised up on five ascending octagonal stone platforms. The crosshead was destroyed during the time of the English Civil Wars. It is a Grade II* listed building and Scheduled Ancient Monument. The Ebdon Bow Bridge which carries the road from the village to nearby Worle over the River Banwell was built in the late 18th or early 19th century. The parish has seen a vast increase in population in recent years, due to the building of the Ebdon Grounds housing development. This is an extension of the development of the neighbouring North Worle, and the village itself remains separate from the new estate.
The village lies near the north west extremity of the North Somerset Levels approximately inland from Woodspring Bay on the Bristol Channel coast and between the estuaries of the River Banwell and the Congresbury Yeo. The parish incorporates the two smaller hamlets of Icelton and Bourton and the Ebdon Grounds area of modern housing which is contiguous with neighbouring North Worle — itself a suburb of Weston-super-Mare. The M5 motorway runs along the parish's south eastern boundary. The majority of the parish is farmland — primarily livestock rearing — with low-lying fields criss-crossed by hedgerows and rhynes or wide ditches. To the north of the village between the mouths of the Banwell and Yeo is an area of reclaimed land known as Wick Warth. This land is a form of polder and lies between the current sea-wall and an older parallel high grass bank which runs for between the estuaries. A similar area of reclaimed land continues on the northern bank of the Yeo the neighbouring parish of Kingston Seymour. "Warth" is the local name given to such reclaimed polder land.
Religious sites
The parish Church of Saint Lawrence dates mainly from the 15th century. It is built largely of pink or grey Lias limestone combined with other local limestones and sandstones. These were used during a major restoration in 1864–1865 by Foster and Wood of Bristol, made necessary after the church was struck by lightning in 1791. This caused cracks to open in the tower which was then reinforced with iron bands. However over the next 60 years the church began to fall apart, prompting the restoration. The windows of the church are in the Perpendicular style, while the modest tower has a peal of six bells; the oldest of which were cast in 1655. The intricately carved stone pulpit came from Woodspring Priory in 1536 following the Dissolution of the Monasteries. The Priory had been bought by a Bristol merchant, William Carr, and his son and heir John Carr arranged the pulpit's relocation. It has been designated as a Grade II* listed building.