For centuries, the village green has been at the heart of community life in England, and Clifton is no exception.
Clifton Village Green remains a focal gathering place, surrounded by historic landmarks including the old rectory, the former school, the dovecote and the Wells Almshouses.
Traditionally, greens served as informal spaces for recreation, meetings and celebrations. In Clifton, past generations gathered here for cricket, football, village fetes and fireside storytelling. Beyond leisure, village greens also played a practical role. In times of conflict or crisis, communities would pool their manpower on the green to protect livestock and organise collective defence.
Today, Clifton Village Green functions largely as a peaceful open space despite its proximity to the busy A453. Interestingly, one historian has suggested that a turf maze once existed on the green. Visitors will also notice two impressive mature trees standing in the south-west corner - silent witnesses to centuries of village life.

May Day celebrations in Britain originate from ancient pagan festivals marking the arrival of spring. Folklore held that May was the month when cows could be milked three times a day - a sign of seasonal abundance. Villages traditionally marked the occasion with festivals in which a young maiden was crowned May Queen and children danced around elaborately carved maypoles.
For centuries, permanent maypoles stood in villages across England. However, in 1644 Parliament ordered many to be removed, as the Church disapproved of festivities that encouraged youthful revelry. Despite this, many communities quietly continued the tradition.
Clifton was one such village. Annual May Day fetes featured Morris dancing, side-shows, refreshment tents, competitions and the crowning of the May Queen. During the 18th and 19th centuries, these gatherings were likely especially popular, as the area was already attracting visitors to Clifton Grove and the Ferry Inn.
A permanent maypole was reintroduced to Clifton Green in 1904, but it was removed at the start of the Second World War and has never been reinstated.
The Old Clifton School building - now serving as the village hall and community centre - stands as an important reminder of the village’s educational heritage (not to be confused with the former Clifton family stately home).
A plaque on the front of the building records its origins:
“These schools and school-houses were erected by Henry Robert Clifton, Esquire, and the corner stone was laid by Mrs. Clifton on the 3rd day of November, 1871.”
The school officially opened in April 1872 with 48 pupils. By the following year, a night school had also begun, initially attended by 13 men - evidence of the growing importance of adult education in the Victorian period.
The school closed in 1956 following the construction of modern schools in the expanding Clifton housing estates, including Brooksby and Farnborough.
Today, the building continues to serve the community in its role as a village hall.


Almshouses were a familiar feature of 18th- and 19th-century England, providing homes for the elderly and poor through charitable foundations.
The Clifton Almshouses stand discreetly behind a hedge at the south-west corner of the Green. Built in the 18th century following the 1712 will of George Wells, they were endowed to house six poor unmarried or widowed women. Wells left lands in Cropwell Bishop, Wilford and Ruddington to support the charity, with Sir Gervase Clifton and his heirs appointed as trustees. Residents received a small allowance and three tons of coal each year from Clifton Colliery — a valuable provision before modern heating.
Restored in the 1970s, the building has since been converted into private homes. Each garden includes a small outbuilding, sometimes said to have been intended as a chapel. Whether or not this was the case, the inscription on the front reflects Wells’ strong faith:
“I to God’s glory dedicate this place
Inspired there to by
His Most Holy Grace.
May His great name forever here be praised
Then my ambition to its pitch is raised.”
Today, the Wells Almshouses remain an important historic feature of Clifton Village Green, linking the present-day community with its charitable and social past.
© Clifton Village Residents Association 2026
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