Skip to main content
iPad Repairs for Wolvey, carried out by Apple Certified technicians

SimplyFixIt, is one of the UK's top independent iPad repair specialists. Our head office is in Edinburgh, but we fix iPads for people all over the country, including in Wolvey. No matter your location, we can fix your iPad!

Why trust us with your iPad repair? Our Apple Certified Technicians deliver unrivalled quality, outshining local independent computer shops. With an impressive track record in the Wolvey area, we invite you to experience our top-tier service for all your iPad needs, especially iPad screen repairs.

Fast Repairs

Quality Components

Spread the cost

All Repairs Guaranteed

We understand the importance of your iPad, so we aim to return it within 48 hours of receiving it. At SimplyFixIt, we believe in precision over speed, but rest assured, your iPad will be in good hands. Once the repair, including any necessary screen repairs, is complete, we'll promptly notify you and arrange express delivery back to Wolvey, either your home or work.

Happy SimplyFixIt Customers near Wolvey

We do more than just fix iPads; our services include repairs for MacBooks, iPhones, and Windows laptops. If you're in the Wolvey vicinity, you're likely close to someone that we've helped in the recent past. Below is a map of the people1 near Wolvey who have used SimplyFixIt because of our fast, efficient, and high-quality repair service.

Ready for a seamless iPad repair experience? Choose your iPad below and follow the instructions. With SimplyFixIt, you're choosing reliability, quality, and peace of mind.

iPad Repairs for Schools in Wolvey 🎓

Do you have iPads in your school or college that are broken? We can help. We partner with hundreds of schools across the UK , including several near you - e.g. Oak Wood Secondary School & St Nicolas CofE Academy, to provide an easy & low-cost way to get iPads back into the classroom — where they belong. There's no need to pay for insurance, or pay Apple's exorbitant prices for iPad repairs. We know that you have enough to do as a teacher, so we look after collecting, fixing and returning the iPads from your school. Click here to visit the iPad Repair site for schools, where you can download our brochure or ask a question.

Map of customers near you

1Please note that for data protection reasons, we've applied "fuzziness" to the location markers. Though not exact, these markers represent the general areas of our satisfied customers.

picture of Wolvey.

Not sure what model of iPad you have?

Enter your iPad's serial number below, or read our guide at what model iPad do I have?.

Check your Serial Number for free.


Choose an iPad 


About Wolvey

Wolvey is a village and parish in Warwickshire, England. According to the 2001 census it had a population of 1,741, increasing to 1,942 at the 2011 Census.

The village is located on the Warwickshire/Leicestershire border in an outlying part of the borough of Rugby. The village is, however, more than 11 miles (18km) north-west from the town of Rugby and closer to Hinckley (five miles to the north), Nuneaton (six miles to the north-west) and Coventry (ten miles south-west). The source of the River Anker is near the highest point in the parish, 130 metres. Originally on the main route between Leicester and Coventry, is now served by the B4065 and B4109 roads. The hamlet of Bramcote forms a western part of the parish, This was the site of a Second World War airfield, RAF Bramcote, subsequently used by the Royal Naval Air Service and renamed HMS Gamecock. Since 1959 it has been used by the army and is known as the Gamecock Barracks.

Discoveries of Neolithic flint tools and Bronze Age burial mounds suggest early occupation of the parish while a major Roman road, Watling Street, forms part of the parish boundary.The village certainly existed in Saxon times and the Domesday Survey, compiled in 1086, records 22 households with three further households at Bramcote. By the 12th century there was an additional township, which included a chapel, at the now deserted site of Little Copston (Copston Parva). At this time Wolvey was an important population centre for the area with a weekly market and an annual fair.

The village still retains some older buildings including the church of St John the Baptist with its Norman doorway and monumental tombs of Thomas de Wolvey (died 1311) and his wife Alice; also that of Thomas Astley and his wife, Catherine (died 1603). The South Aisle of the church was rebuilt by Thomas de Wolvey’s daughter as a memorial Chantry to her husband Sir Giles de Astley who died following the battle of Bannockburn in 1314. The church building has undergone considerable repair and alteration over the years. The chancel was rebuilt in the gothic style by Lord Overstone of Wolvey Grange in the mid-nineteenth century and the present porch to the south door added in 1909. The Millennium Building to the south of the church was built in 2000 to provide important support facilities.

The early village would have clustered around the market place (now The Square) but there is little evidence of it in today’s buildings.. A staircase dated 1677 in Wolvey Hall reflects the rebuilding of the original house but this was remodelled in 1889. Other late seventeenth century survivals, although modified, include Hollytree Cottage in Wolds Lane and probably 'The Blue Pig' public house with the village pump which will have served as a coaching inn for the Coventry – Leicester traffic in earlier times. The ‘Old Thatched Cottage’ on the edge of The Square dates to the later eighteenth century as does the Baptist Chapel, built in 1789.

Essentially a farming community for most of its history, industrialization affected the village in the nineteenth century when knitting and weaving became important trades for a time. There is no evidence to support the popular view that it was a milling centre with 27 windmills. The well-known engraving of four windmills in Wolvey, published in 1854 by Thomas Dugdale, has been shown to be a forgery and was based on an earlier print of windmills on Montmartre, Paris. While rural industry continues, modern housing provides for a commuting population benefiting from the village’s proximity to major motorway and rail networks and urban centres.

The name Wolvey most probably came from the Anglo-Saxon wulf-hæg or wulf-heg e = "wolf hedge" = "enclosure with a hedge to keep wolves out".


Nearby Areas

Moreton in Marsh | Tingewick | Barford St Michael | Long Compton | Aynho | Hook Norton | Buckingham | Blockley | Adderbury | Bloxham | Brackley | Broadway | Tadmarton | Chipping Campden | Deanshanger | Lower Brailes | Shipston on Stour | Banbury | Syresham | Greatworth | Potterspury | Ilmington | Whittlebury | Helmdon | Chacombe

© 1996 - 2024 SimplyFixIt – For more information, please visit SimplyFixIt.co.uk