- Walton, Aylesbury
Infobox UK place
country = England
official_name= Walton
static_
static_image_caption= Walton Lodge, a Grade IIListed building and part of the Georgian Walton Terrace
latitude= 51.810563
longitude= -0.806248
civil_parish= Aylesbury
shire_district=Aylesbury Vale
shire_county=Buckinghamshire
region= South East England
constituency_westminster= Aylesbury
post_town= AYLESBURY
postcode_district= HP21
postcode_area= HP
dial_code= 01296
os_grid_reference= SP8213Walton (perhaps formerly known as Walcot) is a hamlet in the
parish ofAylesbury , inBuckinghamshire ,England . Although Aylesbury has grown to such an extent that it completely surrounds Walton by a couple of miles in each direction, the hamlet is still marked on modern maps.Walton sits north of the junction between two major turnpike roads, and was once the location of a toll gate and the toll keeper's cottage. It has also, in its time, been the location of a
foundling shospital and aleper colony.History
The hamlet name is a common one in England. It is Anglo Saxon in origin and either means "Walled Settlement" or "Settlement of the Walhs", the word 'walh' being an Old English word for Briton. There is evidence that there has been a settlement in Walton since the Roman occupation of England where remains of a Romano-British villa have been found. There were also known to be Saxon houses in the vicinity of Walton in the 5th century.
The
manor house in Walton was called Walton Court, and was awattle and daub structure that wasstockade d andmoat ed and situated across the road of what is now Walton Terrace. It was throughout most of its history owned by the Church, and revenue from the manor went toLincoln Cathedral (it was mentioned in a charter to the cathedral by King William II). It was owned privately for a brief period in the mid 17th century but was subsequently returned to the Church following the restoration of the monarchy in 1660. The principal crop of the manorial farm was rushing used inthatching . The manor should not to be confused withWalton Court , the modernhousing estate of the same name, which is in a completely different location.Towards the middle of the 19th century Walton became the local centre for breeding the
Aylesbury duck with Walton Pond being a congregating point for many of the local flocks.The stone-built Holy Trinity Church in Walton opened in
1845 to provide a local place of worship for the farm labourers who lived in the hamlet, and canal workers from the newly built1814 Aylesbury arm of the Grand Union canal. A hall was built in 1859 next door to the church to start what was to become Walton Holy Trinity National School (now Walton Hall) to support and educate local children. Walton Hall has always been both independent from and also supported by members of Holy Trinity and has been a focus of local community life from its beginnings in1859 .In the
Second World War Walton was the landing site of the only bomb to be dropped on Aylesbury by enemy aircraft. The 15 pound bomb destroyed the medieval Walton Grange and severely damaged most of the other houses in Walton. [Vaughan, Karl (2002) "A Century of Aylesbury". Swindon: WHSmith] Walton Grange's garden wall still remains though the property now forms part ofAylesbury High School .Modern Walton
Today the hamlet keeps a strong identity in the town, with the roads of Walton Street, Walton Road, Walton Grove, Walton Way, Walton Dene and Walton Green all being in the vicinity of the hamlet, and other landmarks such as the Georgian Walton Lodge and the old village pond (Bigg's pond) still remaining. The hamlet is also the location of Aylesbury's
Police Station, Driving Test Centre andAylesbury Grammar School , as well as the aforementioned High School.There are five
public house s in the vicinity, The Aristocrat, The Bricklayers Arms, The Broad Leys, The Millwrights, and The Old Plough and Harrow (formerly the Whistling Duck and before that The Plough and Harrow). There was also a public house just outside the area to the south called The Three Pigeons, which was demolished to make way for housing. It was at this public house that the two turnpike roads met originally, before the northern one was rerouted.William Harding's Charity
William Harding (1643 – 1718) was a
yeoman from the hamlet of Walton who left a trust in his will to clothe and educate the children of the poor from the local area. [http://www.whardingcharity.org.uk/default.htm Biography of William Harding] ] The charity was founded after the will was proved in 1719 with the aim of:
* Providing forty shillings a year to buy coats for the poor men and women of Walton
* To select children of poor parents in Aylesbury and Walton to be givenapprenticeship s
* To clothe those same childrenThe charity still exists today and is managed by the trustees the clerk of which is a partner of Parrott and Coales LLP [http://www.parrottandcoalesllp.co.uk Parrott and Coales LLP] ] Solicitors in Aylesbury. It now makes grants for any educational purpose for young people from the Aylesbury area. [ [http://www.whardingcharity.org.uk/page2.html Application criteria for the William Harding Charity] ]The William Harding Combined School in Elm Farm is named after him.
References
*"Old Aylesbury" (1981) by Elliott Viney and Pamela Nightingale, pub. White Crescent, Luton
*"The Book of Aylesbury" (1975) by Clive Birch, pub. Barracuda, Chesham
*"The Oxford Names Companion" (2002) by Patrick Hanks, Flavia Hodges, A. D. Mills and Adrian Room, pub. Oxford University Press, Oxford
* [http://htaylesbury.org/history.htm The History of Holy Trinity Aylesbury]External links
* [http://www.ags.bucks.sch.uk/ Aylesbury Grammar School]
* [http://www.ahsonline.co.uk/ Aylesbury High School]
* [http://htaylesbury.org/ Holy Trinity Aylesbury]
* [http://www.streetmap.co.uk/newmap.srf?x=482465&y=213185&z=3&sv=482465,213185&st=4&ar=Y&mapp=newmap.srf&searchp=newsearch.srf Map at streetmap.co.uk, with the arrow pointing to Walton]
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