Marton, Shropshire
Marton, also known as Marton-in-Chirbury, is a small village in Shropshire, England, southeast of Welshpool, and has a nearby lake called Marton Pool. There is another Marton in Shropshire, near Baschurch, at OS grid reference SJ443239, which also has a nearby Marton Pool.
Marton forms part of the civil parish of Chirbury with Brompton, and Marton is a parish ward within that parish, returning 3 councillors.
The B4386 road passes through the village. The border with Powys is close by.
There are two public houses in the Marton area: the Lowfield Inn and the Sun Inn. Opposite the Sun Inn is a convenience store. There is an Anglican church dedicated to St Mark, and a nonconformist chapel built in 1829 as 'Independent'. By the chapel is the village hall.
Marton Pool is a body of water near the village, which is the source of the Rea Brook. It is a Site of Special Scientific Interest. The village's name derives from mere + ton. The lake is fed mainly by the Lowerfield Brook on the north side. The Rea Brook exits at the east through a sluice, which is in disrepair. At the southwest is a drainage ditch leading from a blocked culvert under a road; this point is about 2m higher than the lake; another ditch flows southwest from the same point; on maps, this gives the false impression of the lake flowing into a tributary of the Aylesford Brook.
Notable clergyman Thomas Bray was born in Marton in a half-timbered house called Bray's Tenement.