- Tidenham
Tidenham is a village and
civil parish in the Forest of Dean of westGloucestershire ,England , close to the Welsh border.The parish includes the villages of Tidenham,
Beachley ,Boughspring ,Sedbury ,Tutshill andWoodcroft , and according to theUnited Kingdom Census 2001 had a population of 5,316.Tidenham is bound by the
River Wye (which forms the Welsh border) to the west and theRiver Severn to the south.Offa's Dyke runs down the western edge of the parish terminating atSedbury cliff above the River Severn.The stretch of the
Wye Valley lying within the parish includes several popularrock climbing cliffs atWintour's Leap near Woodcroft and the Devil's Pulpit, a famous rock formation and viewpoint overlookingTintern Abbey . The parish also contains Tidenham Chase - the largest remaining fragment of lowlandheathland inGloucestershire . Also notable is the former Dayhouse Quarry which, after providing traffic for the remaining fragment of the former railway toMonmouth , is now home to the [http://www.ndac.co.uk/ National Diving and Activity Centre] . The railway has been the centre of several attempts to re-open it, but the overgrown track tells the result of these efforts to restore Tidenham station quite effectively. It ran throughTintern up theWye Valley , and joined the mainline near Tidenham.Located as it is between the Wye and Severn the area has always been important as a site for crossing these rivers. Historically ferries crossed the River Severn from
Beachley toAust and now this route is followed by theSevern Bridge one of whose piers stands on the Beachley peninsula although the bridge itself begins in Wales. From Roman times the River Wye has been bridged between Tutshill andChepstow . The village, once known as Dyddanhamme, is one of the most heavily documented Saxon villages in Britain and has been home to a grandmanor of some kind since at least the6th century AD. The Saxon structure was owned by the Abbott of Bath, who retained some of the documents on what was then an important location until theDissolution of the Monasteries . The current building is of Georgian design, overlooking the river and conveniently located adjacent to the Normanparish church .External links
* [http://www.geograph.org.uk/search.php?i=3695004 Photos of Tidenham and surrounding area on geograph]
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