- Wendover
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For other places with the same name, see Wendover (disambiguation).
Coordinates: 51°46′05″N 0°44′47″W / 51.768034°N 0.746321°W
Wendover
The Clock Tower, Wendover
Wendover shown within BuckinghamshirePopulation 7,619 [1] OS grid reference SP864085 District Aylesbury Vale Shire county Buckinghamshire Region South East Country England Sovereign state United Kingdom Post town AYLESBURY Postcode district HP22 Dialling code 01296 Police Thames Valley Fire Buckinghamshire Ambulance South Central EU Parliament South East England UK Parliament Aylesbury (David Lidington, Conservative) List of places: UK • England • Buckinghamshire Wendover is a market town that sits at the foot of the Chiltern Hills in Buckinghamshire, England. It is also a civil parish within Aylesbury Vale district. The mainly arable parish is 5,832 acres (24 km²) in size and contains many hamlets that nestle in amongst the lush forest on the surrounding hills.
Contents
History
The town name is of Brythonic origin and means "white waters", pertaining to the stream that rises in the adjacent hills and flows through the middle of the town, bringing chalk deposits on its way.
The parish church of St Mary sits outside the town to the east on the hillside: a feature that is very common among towns with strong Celtic origins. There is a distinctive red brick, spired clock tower at the crossroads in the centre of the town that was built in 1842. The tree lined Aylesbury Street includes the 16th-century timber framed Chiltern House and 18th-century Red House.
The town has had a Royal charter to hold a weekly market since 1464 meaning that officially it is a town rather than a village, although today many residents of Wendover like to refer to it as the latter. It is part of a civil parish, and the parish uses the term "Parish Council" rather than "Town Council", as it would be entitled to.
Part of the town was once the property of Anne Boleyn whose father held the manor of Aylesbury among his many estates. There is still a row of houses in the town today, known as Anne Boleyn's Cottages. The town is the birthplace of Gordon Onslow Ford, British surrealist artist, and it is believed to be the birthplace of the medieval chronicler Roger of Wendover. The town is also the birth-place of Cecilia Payne, who discovered that the Sun is mainly composed of hydrogen.
The town is at the terminus of the Wendover Arm of the Grand Union Canal, which joins Tring summit level of the Grand Union main line beside Marsworth top lock. Disused for over a century, the arm is in course of being restored by the Wendover Arm Trust. Remote and rural for almost all its length, the canal attracts much local wildlife.
The Aylesbury constituency of which Wendover forms a part has elected a Conservative MP (currently David Lidington) since 1924. Local elections, as in May 2011, often feature only Conservative, Liberal Democrat and independent candidates. The Wendover Parish Council, reelected in May 2011, has a small office in the town and operates a block grant from Aylesbury Vale District Council.
Facilities
Today the town is very popular with commuters working in London. The popularity is due partly to the town's easy access to London by road, partly to Wendover railway station, served by Chiltern Railways from London Marylebone via Amersham, and partly because it is so picturesque. Property values have risen dramatically in recent years since the completion of the Wendover Bypass, which removed a lot of traffic from the town's narrow streets.
There are four schools in the town; The John Hampden School, named after politician and English Civil War participant John Hampden, a community infant school with approximately 275 pupils aged 4–7, Wendover Church of England Junior School, a voluntary controlled junior school with approximately 360 pupils aged 7–11, The John Colet School, named after the Renaissance humanist John Colet, is a community secondary school with approximately 1100 pupils aged 11–18, Wendover House School a school for boys aged 11–16 who have special educational needs.
Wendover was well known for having a varied and diverse range of pubs, many of which have now closed due to the constraints and geographics of the day. The pubs that still exist today are The Red Lion, The George & Dragon, The White Swan, The King and Queen, The Pack Horse, The Marquis of Granby, which was renamed in 2010 and is now called The Village Gate, The Rose & Crown and The Shoulder of Mutton.
Wendover also plays host to the 'Coombe Hill Run' which usually occurs on the 1st Sunday of June every year. It begins and ends in the village and encompasses two very steep climbs up the Hill to the monument along with a very steep decline. Legend states that a boy from Wendover can only become a man once he has completed the course for the first time.
Hamlets
The many hamlets in Wendover civil parish include:
- Cobblers Hill, located on a hill to the south of Wendover, along Cobblershill Lane.
- Concord, located south-south east of Wendover, just north of Kings Ash.
- Dean, located south of Wendover on Smalldean Lane between the hamlets of Smalldean and Little London.
- Hazeldean
- Kings Ash or Kingsash, located south-south east of Wendover on the Chesham Lane between the A413 road and the hamlet of Lee Gate.
- Little London, located south of Wendover on Smalldean Lane between the hamlet of Dean and the village of Dunsmore.
- Lower Bacombe, located south of Wendover on the lane between the main town and Upper Bacombe.
- Scrubwood
- Smalldean, located south of Wendover on Smalldean Lane, between the southernmost roundabout of the Wendover bypass and the hamlet of Dean.
- The Hale, located east of Wendover along Hale Lane.
- Upper Bacombe, located south-south west of Wendover on Bacombe Hill, close of the parish boundary.
- Wendover Dean, located south of Wendover on the A413 road, between Cobblershill Lane and Bowood Lane.
- Wendover Marsh
- World's End, located north west of Wendover where the B4009 road meets the A413 road.
Amenities
By virtue of its excellent location, sitting in a gap in the Chiltern Hills and a designated Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty, Wendover has much to offer both local people and visitors wishing to explore the local countryside. The area is very popular with walkers, cyclists and horse riders. The frequent train service from London Marylebone makes it an ideal destination for a day trip to the country. The Ridgeway National Trail, an 85-mile route that extends from Avebury to Ivinghoe, passes along Wendover High Street. Apart from the Ridgeway Trail there are 33 miles of public rights of way and bridleways criss-crossing the parish. These paths will take you over the open chalk downland of Coombe Hill, Buckinghamshire, home to Britains longest surviving geocache, with its impressive monument to the Buckinghamshire men who died in the Boer War, or walk to the pretty hamlet of Dunsmore in the spring and enjoy the carpet of bluebells, or enjoy the shaded woods on Haddington Hill and Boddington Hill, belonging to Forest Enterprise (known locally as 'Wendover Woods'). Here the visitor can enjoy specially prepared cycle routes, all ability walks, barbecue sites as well as play areas for children. Close to Boddington hill there are the remains of an Iron Age hill fort.[2]
A further attraction is the walk along the Wendover Arm of the Grand Union Canal, extending for approximately five miles from the centre of Wendover, to Tring. This section of the canal is currently the subject of a long term restoration project and has become home to many varieties of wildlife, including a colony of Mandarin Ducks.
High Speed 2 Rail Line
The proposed High Speed 2 rail line from London to the Midlands takes a route immediately to the West of Wendover - two hundred metres from the end of the High Street. This route was confirmed, with some minor amendments, on 20 December 2010. To the South, the line would pass through Wendover Dean and Great Missenden before going underground at Amersham. To the North, it passes close by Aylesbury. Protests have been launched about the route's location through areas of outstanding natural beauty and potential noise disruption, and a Wendover lobby group formed, with a 300 strong protest filmed by the BBC in December 2010.[3][4]
Football Club
Wendover Football Club was founded over 100 years ago. The club currently shares the school fields of the John Colet School and a clubhouse is open each Saturday afternoon for either a first or a reserve team fixture. The team strip is Gold and Black stripes.
Famous residents
The town was home to West End actress Margaret Rawlings, who lived at Rocketer Farm, and actor David Jason, who now lives two miles away in Ellesborough. It has been known to be a stopping off point for the Prime Minister due to its proximity to Chequers. The eminent physician Sir Thomas Barlow, who attended Queen Victoria on her deathbed, owned Boswells (a large country house to the South of Wendover) until his death in 1945 and the actor John Junkin lived in Wendover until his death in 2006.
Twin town
Gallery
References
- ^ Neighbourhood Statistics 2001 Census
- ^ [1] Bucks Archeaological Service Later Bronze Age and Iron Age Historic Environment Resource Assessment Retrieved 23 April 2009
- ^ http://www.wendoverhs2.org
- ^ http://www.wendoverhs2.org/news/high-speed-rail-headlines
External links
- The Wendover News
- Wendover Parish Council
- Tourism and Community Information Office
- John Hampden School
- Wendover Church of England Junior School
- Wendover HS2 (High Speed Rail Action Group)
Ceremonial county of Buckinghamshire Buckinghamshire Portal Unitary authorities Boroughs or districts Major settlements Amersham · Aylesbury · Beaconsfield · Buckingham · Chesham · High Wycombe · Marlow · Milton Keynes (including Bletchley, Fenny Stratford, Stony Stratford, Wolverton) · Newport Pagnell · Olney · Princes Risborough · Wendover · Winslow · Woburn Sands
See also: List of civil parishes in BuckinghamshireRivers Topics Boundary changes · Grade I listed buildings · High Sheriff · History · Lord Lieutenant · Monastic houses · Museums · Parliamentary constituencies · Places · Places of interest · Railways · Schools (Bucks) · Schools (Milton Keynes) · Sites of Special Scientific Interest · TransportCategories:- Towns in Buckinghamshire
- Market towns in Buckinghamshire
- Civil parishes in Buckinghamshire
- Hill forts in Buckinghamshire
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