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How is the name pronounced? Like 'wolly' to rhyme with 'Molly', or long 'a' 'warl-ee' to rhyme with 'poorly' or short-a 'wall-ee' to rhyme with 'dally'?
Where does the name originate? Might it mean 'great ford'?
Who named it 'Wallyford'? When? Why?
What is the ford in the name crossing? I can't see any rivers there on a map.
What is the earliest reference to the place?
How old the earliest known settlements in that location?
How old is the oldest remaining building?
Were the coal-miners the very first people to live here, or did they move into an existing settlement? (Elsewhere - in England and Wales - I know coal-miners walked great distances each day to get to mines until they were well-established.)
Any reference to other settlements in the same location in old texts?
One could add transport links. There's a bus to Wallyford seems to pass my window every few minutes, and I want to the what, where, why and when of Wallyford! (I suppose I ought to get on that bus one day...)
It's on the East Coast Main Line; what do we know about the building of the station and its impact?
The A1 appears to be going slightly around it; was the A1 avoiding marshy ground or something (hence the need for a ford)?
Earliest references on Ordnance Survey maps? Old county maps?