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Positioned roughly halfway between Coventry and Rugby, Wolston is a village defined largely by the River Avon, which winds along its northern edge. It’s a place where the landscape feels open, characterized by the wide village green and the prominent remains of the Brandon Raynesway viaduct nearby. Historically, the village grew around the site of a Benedictine Priory, and though the original structures are long gone, the sense of a deep-rooted settlement remains, particularly around the 12th-century Church of St Margaret. Today, it functions as a self-contained community with its own primary school, a handful of local shops, and two pubs that serve as central meeting points. Its geography is its main practical draw; while it feels tucked away in the Warwickshire countryside, the proximity to the A45 and A46 means the urban centres of the West Midlands are accessible in under twenty minutes. It’s the kind of village where you’ll still see people walking down to the allotments or crossing the bridge to reach the neighboring hamlet of Brandon, maintaining a quiet, functional pace of life.