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Sturton by Stow sits on the ancient Roman Tillbridge Lane, roughly nine miles northwest of Lincoln, where the landscape opens up into the characteristic wide horizons of the Lincolnshire Clay Vale. It’s a substantial, linear village that manages to feel self-contained despite its proximity to the city, centered around a primary school and a well-used village hall that serves as the hub for local life. Historically, the village was closely linked to its neighbour, Stow, with its magnificent minster, but Sturton evolved into the busier of the two, eventually gaining its own church, St Hugh’s, in the late 19th century. Today, the village retains a functional atmosphere; the local pub, the General Havelock, remains a fixture on the main road, and the surrounding network of footpaths and quiet lanes provides a direct connection to the agricultural land that defines the area's identity. It is a place where the practicality of modern rural living meets a long history of being a key stopping point on the old road to the River Trent.