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Hagley sits right on the edge of the West Midlands, acting as a gateway where the edge of the Black Country meets the Worcestershire countryside. It’s a village shaped by geography, dominated on one side by the Clent Hills and on the other by the extensive grounds of Hagley Hall, the ancestral seat of the Lyttelton family. Most people know it for its two distinct areas: the original village around the parish church and the Hall, and the busier hub centred on the village crossroads and the railway station. The station is a practical lifeline for the area, providing a direct link into Birmingham Snow Hill and Worcester, while the A456 serves as the main artery for those heading toward Kidderminster or the motorway network. Despite its growth over the decades, it manages to keep its own identity separate from nearby Stourbridge, maintaining a self-sufficient village centre with a library, several pubs, and a range of local shops that serve the surrounding smaller hamlets.