- Horton, Buckinghamshire
Horton is a hamlet in the
parish ofIvinghoe , inBuckinghamshire ,England .The name "
Horton " is a common one in England, meaning "dirty or muddy farm".Although in the parish of Ivinghoe, the hamlet is nearer to
Cheddington with its shops and churches, so that is the main village to which most residents of Horton feel most attached.The hamlet of Horton was held after the
Norman Conquest by the de Brocas family. The hamlet is very small, but a few new modern houses have been built over the last twenty years, most notably Brocas Way and The Grange. The latter was built in the 1970s as adower house for Horton Hall.Horton Hall is a large moated farmhouse with 18th-century origins. It is probably on the site of the original manor or hall. Today it is the home of a charity fund-raiser, and former champion amateur jockey, who breeds horses on the adjoining farm.
Two 16th-century
half-timbered cottages remain in the village. One, still known as "King's Head Cottage", was formerly aninn . The other, which is older, is a renovated Tudor hall on the outskirts of the hamlet.The tranquility of the hamlet is somewhat spoilt by its proximity to the London to Birmingham railway line.
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.