- Two Mile Ash
Two Mile Ash is a district in north west
Milton Keynes , two miles south ofStony Stratford , just offWatling Street . The district was named after the Two Mile Ashtoll gate on Watling Street. It is one of the larger districts, but a large part of its area is taken up by an 18-hole golf course. Consequently, many of the streets here are named after famous golf courses. The district was one of the first to be built in the (mainly) private housing period of the development of Milton Keynes.The main spine of the area is the High Street with facilities running off it. Three other main roads are aptly named Church Hill, Clay Hill and Corn Hill, all provide exits from the estate. Also Fairways is another exit point, which lies near the Abbey Hill Golf Course. Two Mile Ash provides space for one half of this course, the other half is in neighbouring Kiln Farm, accessed by a foot bridge.
There is a lot of variety in the housing. There is a scheme of Findlandia super-insulated houses in Calewen and some very distinctive shared ownership homes in the High Street. It has two schools ( [http://www.tmaonline.org.uk/Home.html Two Mile Ash Middle School] and [http://www.ashbrook.milton-keynes.sch.uk/ Ashbrook First School] ), two pre-schools ( [http://www.tmapreschool.org/ Two Mile Ash Pre-school] and Helping Hands) and it also has two churches.
Place Name
The name is shown on a map dated 1559 as "Mile Ash" as a tree on a mound with Watling Street passing either side. During the early 17th century, the section of Watling Street between
Hockliffe andDunchurch (and thus serving this neighborhood) became a turnpike. Atoll-gate , the "Twomile Ash Toll Gate" was located here, and it was from this thatMilton Keynes Development Corporation took the district name ["Milton Keynes Heritage" (map), Milton Keynes Development Corporation, 1983] . By the First Edition of the Ordnance Survey (1846-), a building is shown beside the road, called "Twomile Ash".A
milestone can still be found on Watling Street (now called the V4). Immediately behind the two mile post are three Ash trees planted by Milton Keynes Parks Trust. This section of Watling Street was the originalA5 road until the route was diverted to become the eastern boundary of the district.Other historical interest
A
Romano-British farmstead was discovered and excavated on the northern edge of the golf course (near the Friendly Lodge Hotel on Monksway). ["Milton Keynes Heritage" (map), Milton Keynes Development Corporation 1983] The district was originally in the lands ofBradwell Abbey ["The changing landscape of Milton Keynes", Croft & Mynard, Buckinghamshire Archaeological Society, 1993] and is now in the modernCivil Parish of the same name.References
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.