Coordinates: 52°38′N 1°47′W / 52.63°N 1.79°W
Weeford is a village and civil parish located in the Lichfield District of Staffordshire in England. It has a population of 202, increasing to 215 at the 2011 Census.
The name Weeford is believed to come from the Old English Wēohford or Wēoford, and to mean "Holy ford", or "ford by a heathen temple".
The medieval church is dedicated to St Mary the Virgin, and listed Grade II. It was rebuilt to its present form in 1802, to a design by James Wyatt. Wyatt had himself been born at Blackbrook Farm in Weeford in 1746, and by 1802 had already designed such buildings as the Radcliffe Observatory, Oxford and Broadway Tower, Worcestershire.
Manley Hall (also known as Thickbroom Hall) was an English Tudor-style country house which at one time stood in a 1200-acre estate on the western outskirts of the village.
Media related to Weeford at Wikimedia Commons
Sleepless night, tonight
With the view of our world in sight
And all the stars ignite the sky
That’s ours, and when we
Sleep at night
My dreams of you are sky high
With you here next to me is where you’re suppose to be
There’ll be no more sleepless nights
The candles burning bright and I can see it in your eyes,
Don’t turn away from me because I wanna watch you sleep tonight
Maybe tomorrow we can start over again
And lay to rest our yesterdays
Sleepless night, tonight
No passing meteorite could ever smash our life
Crashing down until the end, you’ll keep me warm forever my friend
Crushed by the rubble that’s made me so strong