The Hampshire Definitive Statement of Public Rights Of
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Registered Treatment Premises(PDF)
Name Address Treatment Mick and Bobs 8 Winton Square Basingstoke Hampshire RG21 8EW Tattoo Poison Ink Unit 49 Basepoint Enterprise Centre Stroudley Road Basingstoke RG24 8UP Tattoo Area 51 12 Church Street Basingstoke Hampshire RG21 7QH Tattoo/Piercing Inkinit Tattoos 135 Worting Road Basingstoke Hampshire RG22 6NL Tattoo/Piercing Underworld Tattoos 24 Wateridge Road Basingstoke Hampshire RG21 5RA Tattoo Inki Fingers Feathers House Feathers Yard Basingstoke RG21 7AS Tattoo/Piercing Poison Ink Piercing Unit 1a Basepoint Enterprise Centre Stroudley Road Basingstoke RG24 8UP Piercing Eloquin 23c Goat Lane Basingstoke Hampshire RG21 7PZ Piercing/Electrolysis/skin colouring Wax Works 31 Church Street Basingstoke Hampshire RG21 7QQ Electrolysis/Ear piercing Julie Crue Hair Salon 1 Clapham House Festival Place Basingstoke RG21 7AR Electrolysis/Ear piercing Beechdown Centre Beechdown Park Winchester RoadBasingstoke RG22 4ES Electrolysis Natural Beauty Unit 20 Viables Craft Centre Harrow Way Basingstoke RG22 4BJ Electrolysis/Ear piercing Barcelo Country Hotel Scures Hill Nately Scures Nr Hook RG27 9JS Electrolysis Apollo Hotel Aldermaston Roundabout Basingstoke Hampshire RG24 9NU Electrolysis Rejuvenate 1a George Street Kingsclere Hampshire RG21 7RN Electrolysis/Ear piercing The Grange Kings Road Silchester Reading RG7 2NP Electrolysis English Rose Worting House Worting Road Basingstoke RG23 8PX Electrolysis Essentia Beauty 4 Woodville Rise Chineham Basingstoke RG24 8GR Electrolysis Evolve BCOT South Site Worting Road Basingstoke RG21 8TN Electrolysis/Ear -
The Villager
The Villager December/January 2018 Sherbornes and Pamber 1 04412_Villager_July2012:19191_Villager_Oct07 2/7/12 17:08 Page 40 2 Communications to the Editor: the Villager CONTACTS Editor: Julie Crawley Happy Christmas and peaceful New Year 01256 851003 to all our Villager readers [email protected] • The next issue of the Villager will be in February 2018. If you have any photos, pieces that you think will be of interest to Villager readers please do send them to Advertisements: me before the 12th January. The email address is: [email protected] Emma Foreman • If you know of anyone who would like to receive a monthly copy of the Villager 01256 889215/07747 015494 magazine via email – free of charge – please ask them to get in touch with me at [email protected] [email protected]. • We are still looking for some more people to distribute the Villager – particularly Distribution: down part of Vyne Road in Sherborne St John from January/February 2018 George Rust onwards – could that be you? Please contact either myself or George Rust. 01256 850413 [email protected] Loddon Valley Lions Father Christmas Float Tuesday 12th December 5.45pm Queens College Arms, Future Events: Monk Sherborne, Pamber End, College Arms Lindsay Berry Wednesday 13th December 5.45pm Swan Pub, 01256 850495 Sherborne St John, West End [email protected] Pamber Correspondent: Update on the Vyne Roof Ann Ellis My thanks to Chris Pound for his photos below. [email protected] I am told that the scaffolding should be coming down at the end of January/ February so if you are interested in seeing the work being done - get up there soon! The rooftop walkway is included in the admission price (NT members are free) and is accessible between 11am and 3pm. -
The Iron Age and the Romano-British Enclosures at Lamb's Field, Worting
Proc. Hampshire Field Club Archaeol. Soc. 70, 2015, 41–62 (Hampshire Studies 2015) THE IRON AGE AND ROMANO-BRITISH ENCLOSURES AT LAMB’S FIELD, WORTING: EXCAVATIONS BY THE BASINGSTOKE ARCHAEOLOGICAL AND HISTORICAL SOCIETY, 1992–2008 By BRIONY A LALOR ABSTRACT (Fig. 2). They were extensively investigated by excavating sixteen trenches. Through analysis The excavations at Lamb’s Field, Worting, Basing- of the individual assemblages, with specific stoke, provided evidence for a small Late Iron Age to focus on the pottery, a chronology for each of Early Romano-British complex of ditches and a rec- the ditch features has been established. tangular enclosure that flourished between 100 BC and AD 100. The enclosure post-dated two curvilin- The Site in context ear ditches and had been modified over time. With no clear evidence of occupational structures within The site located at NGR SU 601523 lies at a the enclosure, the features are thought to be associ- height of 120m above Ordnance Datum north- ated with animal husbandry, with the curvilinear west of the centre of Basingstoke, situated on features representing an earlier boundary to an area an area of undulating downland (Fig. 1). The of occupation to the south. geology is Upper Chalk with localised areas of clay-with-flints covered by a plough soil of greyish-brown silty clay. A band of Reading INTRODUCTION Beds comprising clays, silt and fine grained sand overlies the Chalk 4.5km to the north-east. With the permission of Dr Richenda Power, Further north the Reading Beds are overlain a series of eleven excavations took place in by London Clay (British Regional Geology Lamb’s Field, Church Lane, Worting between 1982). -
Hampshire. East Worldham
DIRECTORY. J HAMPSHIRE. EAST WORLDHAM. 677 'Bassett Aaron, beer retailer &; deaths, Highclere sub-district, Paic" & Son, coal mers. & carriers 1lastin Thomas, farmer, Hatt com Kingsclere union Reading Room (John Dunn, sec) :Bastin William, carpenter, The Mount Dodd William, tailor Pike John, brick maker 'Bradley Rchd. boot ma. Broad layings Dodtl Blandy George, fly proprietor, Scott George, shopkpr. Broad layings Bryant Thomas, farm bailiff to W. Broad layings Scott Joseph, builder C. Ridley ,•:;:q. Hollington House frm Dunn John, grocer, Post office Sheerman Robert James, dairyman !Butt Martha (Mrs.), frmr.Mount fnn Edwards Edwin, carpenter Snook Augustus, butcher & farmer .Canning Chas. frmr. & assist. overseer Gou:ding Charles, shopkeeper Spanswick Geo.Red House P.H.& bakr Carter \Villiam,boot maker, The Mount Head James Henry, builder, wheel- White Earle, farmer, Burley moor Cha:lis Wm. blacksmith, The Mount wright & undertaker White Alice (Mrs.), fanner, Moor Clarkson William, farmer, Zell house HPdgt-r Jas. beer retlr. Broad layings Wilkins Robert, farm bailiff to Capt. Collins John, farmer, Hollington rise Hutchins William, beer retailer H. V. Wingfield-Stratford, Woolton Crocker Charles, blacksmith Ke.~l George, shopkeeper, The Mount HousP farm Cuttin~r Wm.Hy. farmer,Broad layings Lansley Cranley,frmr.Hollington cross Woodrow Chas. brick ma. The Mount Davis James, farmer, The Mount Lock James, farm bailiff to B. F. Workman's Club & Coffee Room, Day WilliRm George, farmer & shop- Barton esq. Burley farm (Alfred Field,proprietor),Andover rd keep~l' & deputy registrar of births WOOTTON ST. LAWRENCE is a parish and Gyrn Castle, Flints, is chief landowner. The soil is pleasant village, 2?! miles north-east from Oakley statioJn loam ; subsoil, chalk. -
Fact Sheet One: Shaping a Place, Creating a Community Highways and Access
July 2018 Fact sheet one: shaping a place, creating a community highways and access What was said during the initial planning consultation? As part of the initial consultation on the outline planning application, Hampshire County Council, as the body responsible for highways, raised concerns about the safety and capacity of the proposed new access junctions and asked for more information about walking, cycling and public transport. More generally there was concern about the traffic impact of the development on existing roads and neighbourhoods. How have we responded? Our team of engineers has updated the designs for the main junctions to address safety and capacity concerns, in consultation with the county council. We have also supplied the requested information on walking, cycling and public transport. Detailed information can be found in the updated Transport Assessment. The capacity of the junctions takes account of all forecast traffic to and from Manydown, other development sites in the adopted Local Plan and likely general traffic growth in the borough to 2031. Changes to the northern junction A339 Rooksdown The access from the A339 (Newbury Road) Indicative location of Avenue will change from one large roundabout connection between to two medium-sized roundabouts, both Roman Road and main with traffic lights. street This is designed to improve capacity to cope with rush hour traffic and encourage through traffic to use the A339 rather than cut through Rooksdown. It also allows for 2 the creation of a neighbourhood park as a 1 gateway to the site. The existing pedestrian bridge would be replaced in broadly the same Wellington location. -
Basingstoke Rural West Covering the Wards Of: Baughurst and Tadley North; Kingsclere; Sherborne St John; Burghclere, Highclere and St Mary Bourne; East Woodhay
Basingstoke Rural West Covering the wards of: Baughurst and Tadley North; Kingsclere; Sherborne St John; Burghclere, Highclere and St Mary Bourne; East Woodhay www.hampshire.police.uk Welcome to the Basingstoke Rural West Newsletter, November 2019 Your neighbourhood policing team includes: PC Simon Denton PC Jon Hayes You can contact the team at [email protected] — though this address is not monitored every day. For reporting crime, call 101 or go to the Hampshire police website www.hampshire.police.uk. Community Priorities The current neighbourhood priority is Burglary. A residential property in Cannon Heath, Overton, was broken into during daylight hours and jewellery was stolen. An electric bike was stolen from a garage in Ecchinswell. Some facts about burglaries (sources in brackets). Most burglaries take place between 10am and 3pm. (Safestyle UK) The average burglary lasts for eight minutes. (Dr Claire Nee, Unviersity of Portsmouth) Many burglaries are ‘spur of the moment’ decisions by a burglar who notices an open door, open window, valuables on display or some other weakness. (Thames Valley Police) The vast majority of burglars will want to avoid meeting the home’s occupants at any cost. (The Independent) A burglar may typically examine many houses before finding one that looks like an easy one to steal from. Homes with no security measures in place are five times more likely to be burgled than those with simple security measures. Good window locks and strong deadlocks can make a big difference. In most burglaries, the criminals broke into the house or flat through the door, either by forcing the lock or kicking it in. -
The Old Rectory WORTING • BASINGSTOKE • HAMPSHIRE the Old Rectory WORTING • BASINGSTOKE • HAMPSHIRE
the old rectory WORTING • BASINGSTOKE • HAMPSHIRE the old rectory WORTING • BASINGSTOKE • HAMPSHIRE A glorious former rectory Basingstoke 3 miles • Newbury 15 miles • Winchester 18 miles London 45 miles • London Waterloo via Basingstoke Station from 45 minutes (All distances and times are approximate) Reception hall • Drawing room • Dining room • Study • Kitchen Family room/breakfast room • Utility room • Boot room • Conservatory Cloakroom • Cellar Master bedroom with dressing room and shower room 6/7 further bedrooms • Children’s den/bedroom 5 • 2 further bathrooms Indoor swimming pool with Jacuzzi and shower room • Pool plant room Garaging with storeroom/workshop above Delightful mature gardens and grounds In all about 0.56 hectares (1.39 acres) These particulars are intended only as a guide and must not be relied upon as statements of fact. Your attention is drawn to the Important Notice on the last page of the text. The Old Rectory The Grade II listed old rectory is believed to date from the 18/19th Ornate cornicing and dados are to be found throughout, as well as shutters centuries. It has an interesting history believed to have been visited by Jane in the main reception rooms and master bedroom. The Tuscan pillared Austen. The house was occupied at the time by the Rev Blackstone and his entrance opens into the reception hall/sitting room where there is an open wife and they are known to have visited Jane and her family many times at fire. The attractive and spacious drawing room is also approached from the their home in nearby Steventon. reception hall. Electric wrought iron gates lead to a carriage sweep at the front. -
Public Health and Public Services
PUBLIC HEALTH AND PUBLIC SERVICES The Middle Ages and Early Modern Period In medieval and early modern Basingstoke, as elsewhere, the role of local government was extremely limited. The governing courts carried out a variety of roles, mainly concerned with regulating anti-social activities. Many were concerned with the smooth running of commerce, on which the everyday life of a town depended, dealing with small-scale debts, regulating the times and context of sales, the alehouse drinking hours, or dealing with violence.1 There were times when the court intervened in the condition of the roads, but not to take up general maintenance. Periodically, someone was presented for blocking the road with timber, refuse or even with a dead horse, or for having an adjacent ditch that was blocked and overflowing. Occasionally the state of a road meant that the whole tithing was ordered to repair it as with the road from Coppid bridge to the market in 1550.2 The steep slope up Church Street to the market place frequently became muddy during wet spells. When a causeway was built (probably for pedestrians), it was financed by a wealthy merchant, Sir James Deane, rather than the burgesses.3 Various people were given responsibility for the maintenance of the two bridges over the Loddon. Occasionally the tithing, the bailiffs, or an individual was required to repair one of the bridges as in 1560 and 1561.4 The river was both a natural source of water and used for drainage and refuse disposal. This led to regulations limiting the time in which dyers and leather workers could dump their effluent, restricting its use to the evening or the night time.5 In 1547, it resulted in the demand for the vicar to remove his latrine, which he built over the stream, ‘which is a great nuisance to all those who washed there’.6 Again this involved regulation rather than investment. -
Economic History Trade and Industry 1850 to 2013
ECONOMIC HISTORY TRADE AND INDUSTRY 1850 TO 2013 Before the 1850s the goods that Basingstoke manufactured were mainly sold locally. It was only after the arrival of the railway in 1839, followed in 1856 by the establishment of the North Hants Iron Works and the arrival of Thomas Burberry, that Basingstoke began exporting goods in any quantity across the United Kingdom and, later, overseas.1 In 1686 Basingstoke had been the fifth most populous town in Hampshire. Although it lost its major industry, cloth production, by 1700 it remained an important town. It retained its roles as a major market for the countryside and small towns of the area around, and as a stopping off point on one of the major routes to London. The villages could sell their produce here and purchase goods in return, whether imported products or those produced in the workshops of the town. This marketing role for its agricultural hinterland helped encourage the large-scale investment required in the creation of a canal to London, opened in 1794. Coal and timber could be imported and malt and other agricultural produce could be sent to London. However, the investment turned out to be a poor one as the returns of the canal were falling significantly before the coming of the railways. The construction of the railways and the town’s emergence between 1840 and 1854 as the junction for three routes transformed Basingstoke’s economy. While the railways devastated the road carrying and innkeeping trades, they also offered considerable advantages for the 1 Many Hampshire volunteers contributed to this project led by Bob Clarke. -
Junction Technical Notes
Land at Manydown, Basingstoke MSD12aRA2: Transport Assessment Addendum ES Appendix 14.1 MSD13R: Environmental Statement Addendum Appendix K: Transport Assessment (Revised) Appendix P: Transport Assessment Second Addendum Revised December 2019 Appendix A: Junction Technical Notes VS1 Rooksdown Junction summary technical note VS3 Trumpet Roundabout summary technical note VS4 Aldermaston Roundabout summary technical note VS5 Thornycroft Roundabout summary technical note VS6 West Ham summary technical note VS7 Buckskin Roundabout summary technical note VS8 Fiveways summary technical note VS9 Old Kempshott Lane summary technical note VS10 Roman Way Roundabout summary technical note VS12 Winchester Roundabout summary technical note VS14 Victory Roundabout summary technical note VS15 Wootton St Laurence summary technical note VS16 Upper Wootton summary technical note VS17 Kempshott Homesteads Rd summary technical note VS18 Park Prewett Road summary technical note VS19 Houndmills Roundabout summary technical note VS20 Ringway W Worting Rd (Left T-Junction) summary technical note VS20 Ringway W Worting Rd (Right T-Junction) summary technical note VS21 A339 George Street Little Knowl Hill summary technical note VS22 Union Lane Roundabout 03.12.2019 summary technical note VS23 Ashford Hill & JC26 Thornford Road Combined summary technical note VS24 A33 Ringway North Ringway East summary technical note VS27 A30 Kempshott Roundabout summary technical note Note: This document is JC25 A339 Crabs Hill summary technical note a revision and replaces JC28 -
Land at Manydown, Basingstoke
Land at Manydown, shaping a place, creating a community Basingstoke MSD3R: Landscape Strategy Revision July 2018 Note: This document is a revision and supersedes the version submitted March 2017. shaping a place, creating a community MSD3R: Landscape Strategy Q addition of an area of ‘Strategic Multi-Functional Green Space: Green corridors Summary of changes to application material and Buffers’ south of A339 where the potential location of allotments is Since the original submission in March 2017, there have been a number of changes identified; to the planning application in response to comments from Statutory Consultees, Q addition of ‘Strategic Multi-Functional Green Space: Green Corridors and members of the public and the Local Planning Authority. In summary, these changes Buffers’ to the south of the B3400 and ‘Strategic Multi-Functional Green are as follows: Space: Biodiversity and Landscape Features’ to the north of the B3400; Q confirmation that the Proposed Development will be for approximately 3,200 Q extension of the 25 metre noise and vibration buffer adjacent to the railway on homes (up to a maximum of 3,520 homes). Within the ES submitted as part of the Open Space and Landscape Parameter Plan so that this extends to the full the planning application in February 2017, assessments had adopted up to 3,520 developable frontage with the railway; residential dwellings as a sensitivity test; Q the key on the Open Space and Landscape Parameter Plan has been updated Q changes have been made to the building heights for each of the areas on the to note that the areas of ‘Strategic Multi-Functional Green Space: Visual Building Heights and Density Parameter Plan. -
Parish and Settlement Groupsm
Q1. Which village, town or part of a town do you consider as your "local area"? East of Basingstoke (generic) Where more than one of the following is mentioned: Old Basing Bramley Chineham Lychpit Mapledurwell Nately Scures Newnham Sherfield on loddon Bramley Chineham Sherfield park Taylor’s farm Lychpit Newnham Old Basing Sherfield on loddon Eastern parishes Mapledurwell Nately Scures Scures hill Up Nately Basingstoke town Basingstoke North East Marnel park Norden Oakridge Popley South View Basingstoke North West Rooksdown Winklebury Basingstoke Central Berg estate Brookvale Cranbourne Down Grange Eastrop Fairfields Kings Furlong Riverdene South Ham Basingstoke West Buckskin Clarke estate Kempshott Manydown Pack Lane Roman road Worting Basingstoke South Black Dam Brighton Hill Viables Basingstoke South West Beggarwood Hatch Warren Oakley and Deane Oakley Harrow Way Deane Newfound Burghclere Highclere Kingsclere Woolton Hill Northern western parishes Ashford Hill and Headley Ashmansworth Ball Hill Bishops Green Burghclere East Woodhay Ecchinswell Headley Hannington Penwood North eastern parishes (exc Bramley/Sherfield on Loddon) Hartley Wespall Stratfield Saye Stratfield Turgis Ellisfield South east parishes (excl. Ellisfield) Axford, Nutley, Preston Candover Bradley Cliddesden Dummer Fairleigh wallop Herriard Nutley Preston Candover Tunworth Upton Grey Weston Patrick Tadley Northern parishes (exc Tadley) Baughurst Silchester Charter Alley Little London Newtown Pamber End Pamber Green Pamber Heath Ramsdell Wolverton common North of Basingstoke Sherborne St John Monk Sherborne Wootton St Lawrence Overton Southern parishes North Waltham Steventon Whitchurch South West parishes Hurstborne Priors Laverstoke St Mary Bourne Stoke Other Other Basingstoke & Deane Andover Burghfield Hook Eversley Fleet Micheldever Newbury Odiham Winchester .