Lydbrook is a civil parish in the Forest of Dean, a city government area in the English county of Gloucestershire. It gets on the north west side of the Forest of Dean's present legal border appropriate. It comprises the areas of Lower Lydbrook, Upper Lydbrook, Joys Green and also Worrall Hill. It has a mile as well as a half long main road, deemed to be the longest main street of any kind of village in England. Lydbrook falls in 'Lydbrook and Ruardean' electoral ward. This ward begins in the south east at Lydbrook and stretches to the north eastern at Ruardean. The total parish population taken at the 2011 census was 4,819. The here and now neighborhood of Lydbrook seems to have had its beginnings in the 13th century. In a document of a sale of trees in 1256, mention is made from 'the Mill of Lydbrook'. Further very early notes on Lydbrook happen in a study of the Forest of Dean in 1282. The Lyd (a creek, which flows right into the River Wye) formed, for part of its journeys, the boundary between the Bailiwicks of Bikenore (English Bicknor) and Rywardin (Ruardean). Today numerous maps call the Lyd, Hough Brook, or Great Hough Brook, and also How Brook which joins the Lyd is known on contemporary maps as Little Hough Brook. Detailed in the 1282 entrances of those that possessed grown land, William of Ludebrok (Lydbrook), shows up under the church of Bikenore, as well as under the church of Rywardin. Instead of being 2 separate tracts in differing areas, it was probably that William's land will certainly have included the creek, therefore his inclusion in the documents for both churches. On top of that, under the entry for Bikenore is recorded, Robert of Stoufeld (Stowfield). Therefore the advancement of Lydbrook started at Lower Lydbrook. The village takes its name from the brook running its whole size - the 'loud brook' or lud brook to come to be Lyd Brook. The town developed as a site for the neighborhood iron and coal markets with your homes as an advancement right into the Forest mapping the Lyd brook which gave the water needed for industry and residential usage. The growth of the infringement, proceeded into the Bailiwick of Magna Dean (Mitcheldean), the area which came to be called Upper Lydbrook and also Joys Green. The town just came to be an area of population of any type of size 17th century onwards, however expanded gradually because to remain fixed for virtually a century and a fifty percent at a population of about 2,500 in between the 1850s and also the start of the 1990s. Nevertheless, from the get go of the 1990s the community has actually started to slowly depopulate. One call to fame of the current past, which currently is fortunately no longer true, is that Humphrey Phelps, in his book on the Forest of Dean recalls that in the 1950s Lydbrook had the greatest incidence of consumption in England.