VALP Avdchousingtrajectory JUL 19
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Penn Street. Knocklock's Green. Forty Green. Pitstone. Nettleden. PRESTON BISSETT, with COWLEY
DlllECTORY.] 487 PRESTON BISSETT. [BUCKS.] J arvis Charles, baker ·wingrove Robert, carpenter Penn Street. King William Garrett, butcher Wingrove Stephen, blacksmith Bayley Rev. Thomas, M.A. Parsonage Lacey Henry, carrier Wooster Louisa (~Irs.), baker Curzon Viscount, M.P. Penn house Larkin John, farmer, Penbury farm Knocklock's Green. George Mr. James Pusey William, Horse§; Groorn Coates Mr. Thomas COMMERCIAL. Randall Edmund, Bell COMMERCIAL. Carter Job, farmer Randall George, blacksmith Fladgate Robert, farmer, Gomm's farm Hancock & Perkins, farmers, lnkerman Rolfe George, Red Lion Graveney Wm. farmer, Sadgrove'sfrm Hickson Thomas, farmer~ Penn bottom Scott George, boot maker Reading William, farmer, Baylin's farm Randall George, blacksmith Shrimpton Saml. farmer, Parsonage frm W orster George, farmer Smith Michael, farmer Tilbury Frank, Crown, & bricklayer Forty Green. Taylor Jas. Hit§; Miss, & wheelwright Wheeler Edw:ird, baker Perfect Henry, farmer Ware Frederick, beer retailer Wheeler Zacariah, bricklayer Puddifoot Elizabeth (1\Irs. ), beer retlr W oodbridge Thomas, shoe maker PITCHCOTT is a small village and parish, distant 7 tecture, was repaired in 1863, and com.ists of nave and miles north-west from Aylesbury, and 2 west from Whit chancel, with a square tower containing 3 bells at the church, in the hundred of Ashendon, union and county west end. The living is a rectorv, annual value £310, with court district of Aylesbury, rural deanery of Claydon, arch residence, in the gift of the Saunders family; the Rev. deaconry of Buckingham, and diocese of Oxford, situaterl on William Noble, M.A., is the incumbent. The population an eminence overlooking Aylesbury and the surrounding in 1861 was 36; the acreage is 924. -
5 Year Housing Land Supply Position Statement June 2018
Aylesbury Vale District Council - Five year housing land supply position statement, June 2018 Purpose of this position statement 1.0 Paragraph 47-49 of the National Planning Policy Framework (NPPF, 2012) requires local planning authorities to identify and keep up-to-date a deliverable five year housing land supply against their housing requirements. Where the Council cannot demonstrate a 5 year housing land supply, there is a presumption in favour of sustainable development in line with the NPPF (para 14). Having an understanding of supply is also key to fulfilling the NPPF requirement to demonstrate the expected rate of housing delivery and how housing targets will be met (paragraph 47). 1.1 This position statement sets out the approach to meeting housing requirements in Aylesbury Vale pending the adoption of the new Local Plan (the Vale of Aylesbury Local Plan, VALP). This statement sets out how the current housing supply has been calculated, and the housing requirement target, to be used by the Council in order to apply the appropriate development plan policy tests and the tests set out in the NPPF when determining relevant planning applications in the period before VALP is adopted. 1.2 The five year housing land supply calculation is dynamic and changes as planning permissions are granted and as existing commitments are completed. Therefore it is important that any developer considering submitting a planning application should consider the latest position on the five year housing supply calculation from the Council. It is intended that the position statement is a living draft that will be regularly updated as the evidence emerges through the Local Plan preparation processes. -
Five Year Housing Land Supply Position Statement
AYLESBURY VALE DISTRICT COUNCIL Five Year Housing Land Supply Position Statement April 2019 Planning Policy AYLESBURY VALE DISTRICT COUNCIL The Gateway, Gatehouse Road, Aylesbury Bucks, HP19 8FF Tel: 01296 585866 Email: [email protected] Website: https://www.aylesburyvaledc.gov.uk/section/planning-policy Summary Paragraph 73 of the National Planning Policy Framework (NPPF, February 2019), requires authorities to identify and update annually a supply of deliverable sites sufficient to provide five years’ worth of housing against their housing requirements set out in adopted strategic policies, or against their local housing need [using the standard method for calculating local housing need] where the strategic policies are more than five years old. As the adopted Aylesbury Vale District Local Plan (AVDLP) is now more than five years old, in accordance with the NPPF published in February 2019, the council has identified and updated a supply of specific deliverable sites sufficient to provide a minimum of five years’ worth of housing supply against its minimum local housing need (LHN) defined using the new standard method for calculating local housing need. The Government has confirmed1 the basis of the LHN calculation as the 2014-based household projections, Table 1 below sets out the land supply calculations for Aylesbury Vale against the council’s local housing need as established by the Standard Methodology against the CLG 2014- based household projections (and 2018 affordability ratios). Table 1: Five-year land supply -
5 Year Housing Land Supply Position Statement August 2017 (PDF, 208.2
Aylesbury Vale District Council ‐ Five year housing land supply position statement, August 2017 Purpose of this position statement 1.0 Paragraph 47‐49 of the National Planning Policy Framework (NPPF) requires local planning authorities to identify and keep up‐to‐date a deliverable five year housing land supply against their housing requirements. Where the Council cannot demonstrate a 5 year housing land supply, there is a presumption in favour of sustainable development in line with the NPPF (para 14). Having an understanding of supply is also key to fulfilling the NPPF requirement to demonstrate the expected rate of housing delivery and how housing targets will be met (paragraph 47). 1.1 This position statement sets out the approach to meeting housing requirements in Aylesbury Vale pending the adoption of the new Local Plan (the Vale of Aylesbury Local Plan, VALP). This statement sets out how the current housing supply has been calculated, and the housing requirement target, to be used by the Council in order to apply the appropriate development plan policy tests and the tests set out in the NPPF when determining relevant planning applications in the period before VALP is adopted. 1.2 The five year housing land supply calculation is dynamic and changes as planning permissions are granted and as existing commitments are completed. Therefore it is important that any developer considering submitting a planning application should consider the latest position on the five year housing supply calculation from the Council. It is intended that the position statement is a living draft that will be regularly updated as the evidence emerges through the Local Plan preparation processes. -
PRIVATE RESIDENTS. Wl~ 277
BGCKINGHAl\ISBIRE. J PRIVATE RESIDENTS. Wl~ 277 Wheeler H. S. 17 Easton street, High Wickens William Louis, Bank house, Williams ::\Iiss E. qDolphin rd.Slough Wycombe Bridge street, Buckingham Williams ::\Irs. 12 Castle street, High Wheeler James, Dunholme, Farnbam Wickham Harry T., M.D. The Close, ·wycombe common, Farnham Royal Newport Pagnell Williams \f rs. IS Dolphin rd. Slough Wheeler Miss, 17 Easton street, Wicks Joseph Frederick, Oaklands, Williams ::\Irs. ::\Iarlow cottage, Well High Wycombe Priory road, High Wycombe end, Bourne End Wheeler Miss, Wyck cottage, London Widcombe Arthur Charles, ~1ontagu Williams Mrs. Mill house, Chesham road, High Wycombe road, Datchet, "Windsor Bois, Chesham Wheeler Seth, 43 Cambridge street, Widcombe W. H. Queensmead, Williams ~rs. Silver st.Newprt.Pagnll Aylesbury Datchet, Windsor lVilliams Mrs. Cplands, Stoke Pages, Whibley Charles, Wavendon manor, Widdowson Jas.Penn Street, Amrshm Slough Wavendon, Woburn Sands Wigfield Alan E,kholme, St. Oswin's, Williams ~frs. .!.. E. The Bracken, Whiskin A. E.32 Bierton hill,AylsbrJ Fulmer way, Gerrard's Cross The Common, Chesham Bois Whistler James Godfrey, Cintra, Wiggins G. Milton lo. Horton,Slough Williams Samuel, Backford, The Austen way, Gerrard's Cross Wigginton Mrs. The Springs, Bourns Greenway, Gerrard"s Cross Whitbread Rev. Wm. Hy. The Manse, End Williams Thos. Christopher J. Ufton Chalfont St. Giles, Gerrard's Cross i Wigley Mrs. Sunny lawn, Winslow court, Bourne End White Sir Arnold B.A.Little Meadows,' Wigley S. P. The Mout,SteepleClaydn Williams William Herbert, Bredward, Knotty green, Beaconsfield Wignull John Robert, Malmsrnead, Burnham, Maidenhead White Major Owen William, Wood- Orchehill avenue, Gerrard's Cross Williams-~eyrick E. -
Buckinghamshire Parish Registers. Marriages
Gc I Mil 942.575019 Aalp v.l 1379047 GENEALOGY COLLEe^ ALLEN COUNTY PUBLIC LIBRARY 3 1833 00724 2453 BUCKINGHAMSHIRE PARISH REGISTERS fll>arriaac9. /. PHILLIMOIIE S PARISH REGISTER SERIES. VOL. XXXV. (bucks, vol. I. One hundred, and fifty copies printed. : Buckinghamshire Par islL- Registers flDaniages. Edited by W. P. W. PHILLIMORE, M.A., B.CL. AND F. W. RAGG, M.A. Vicar of Masworth. VOL. I. v.i I/./ ' XonOon Issued to the Subscribers by Phillimore & Co., 124, Chancery Lane, 1902. PREFACE. This Volume, forming the first, it may be hoped, of a series containing the whole of extant Buckinghamshire Registers down to the year 1812, includes the Marriage Registers of nine parishes. The need there is to preserve the contents of our ancient Registers from the risks of fire, theft, forgery and natural decay is well illustrated by this Volume. The Registers should commence in 1538, the date when they were established at the instance of Thomas Cromwell, yet only three commence earlier than 1624, viz. : Cheddington, 1552 ; Cholesbury, 1583 ; and Edlesborough, 1562. Of the rest, four begin in the Seventeenth Century, viz. : Mentmore, 1685; Pitstone, 1653; Slapton, 1653; and Soulbury, 1624. One other does not begin till the Eighteenth Century, viz, : Masworth. 1730. 'I'he Registers of Hawridge have wholely disappeared. 1379047 That earlier Registers existed is proved by the little known Transcripts at Lincoln and Aylesbury, which, in the case of the following six parishes, enable us to carry the records to much earlier dates than the Registers themselves. Thus, Cholesbury Register begins 1583, the Transcript 1576; Haw- ridge, Register lost, Transcript, 1600 ; Masworth, Register, 1720, Transcript, 1591* ; Mentmore, Register, 1685, Transcript, Pitstone, Register, 1575 i 1653, Transcript, 1576; Soulbury, Register, 1624, Transcript, 1575. -
Pitstone Hill —A Study in Field Archaeology James F
PITSTONE HILL —A STUDY IN FIELD ARCHAEOLOGY JAMES F. DYER and ANTHONY J. HALES TRAVELLERS between Tring and Dunstable are invariably impressed by the great mass of Ivinghoe Beacon, but seldom notice the range of hills that sweep south-westwards from the Beacon in a great curve towards the Hertfordshire village of Aldbury. At the focus of this curve lies Pitstone Hill, with Aldbury Nowers beyond, an isolated boomerang-shaped range, two miles long and in places over 700 feet high. Geologically, Pitstone Hill is composed of the middle and lower chalk with a thin clay-with-flint capping, which at the southern end of the hill supports beech woods. On its northern side the hill is open downland, dotted with patches of scrub on the steeper slopes, and providing useful pasturage for cattle. The Hill is the property of the Snowcem Cement Company, who are at present quarrying on the north-west side of it. The public have free access to the un- ploughed area. Situated half in Buckinghamshire and half in Hertfordshire, Pitstone Hill lies two and a half miles north-east of Tring and eight miles due east of Aylesbury. (Nat. Grid Ref. SP/950142.) (Fig. 2.) In August, 1958, during the course of fieldwork along the Romanized Ick- nield Way (Roman Road 168a1), Mr R. W. Bagshawe investigated the state- ment of R. Hippisley Cox2: .. near a group of pit dwellings, Pitstone Hill is crossed by a transverse ditch deep enough to hide a horse and his rider." This ditch is marked on all modern large, medium and 1-inch scale Ordnance Survey maps (SP/952147). -
Aylesbury Vale Area Five Year Housing Land Supply Position Statement, September 2020 Page 2
Aylesbury Vale Area Five Year Housing Land Supply Position Statement Author: David Broadley Date: September 2020 Table of Contents Introduction ............................................................................................................................... 3 Table 1 Calculation of the Aylesbury Vale Area Five Year Supply (Sept 2020) ...................... 4 Local Housing Need and the 5YS requirement .......................................................................... 4 Table 2 Calculation of the Aylesbury Vale Area Requirement (2020) ................................... 5 Measuring the deliverable supply ............................................................................................. 5 Table 3 Overview of 5YS components ................................................................................... 7 Table 4 Past windfall completion rates on sites less than five units .................................... 8 COVID-19 and the impact on deliverability ............................................................................... 9 Changes to reported completions ............................................................................................. 9 Table 5 Changes to reported completions from use class C2 sites ..................................... 10 List of appendices .................................................................................................................... 10 Aylesbury Vale Area Five Year Housing Land Supply Position Statement, September 2020 Page 2 Introduction 1. -
Buckinghamshire Parish Registers. Marriages
LrC 9';2. 575019' W. C; Aalp V.2 1379048 -GENEALOGY COLLECTION 1/ ALLEN COUNTY PUBLIC LIBRARY 3 1833 00724 2461 BUCKINGHAMSHIRE PARISH REGISTERS IL PHILLIMORE S PARISH REGISTER SERIES. VOL. XL. (bucks, vol. II.) One hundred and fifty copies printed. : Buckinghamshire Parish Registers Carriages. Edited by W. P. W. PHILLIMORE, M.A., BC.L. AND F. VV. RAGG, M.A. Vicar of Masworth. VOL. II v.x- XonDon Issued to the Subscribers by Phillimore & Co. 124, Chancery Lane, 1904. — PREFACE. This Volume, the second Volume of our series of extant Buckins;hamshire Registers down to the year 1812, includes the Marriage Registers of but four parishes. Of these, two are exceptionally long, viz, : —Wendover and Ivinghoe. All of them commence in the sixteenth century. It has not been thought needful to print the entries verbatim. They are reduced to a common form and the following contractions have been freely used : w.=:widower or widow. p^of the parish of. s.==spinster, single woman or co.-^^in the county of. son. b. ^bachelor or single man. dioc.^in the diocese of. d.= daughter. /I'c.^marriage licence. The majority of these Register and Transcript extracts have been made by Mr. Ragg. Miss E. E. B. Green kindly transcribed Hormead. Thanks are also due to the Parish Clergy for permission to print these extracts. Their names are mentioned under the respective parishes. 1379048 The Editors are under great obligation to the Bishop of Lincoln and the Archdeacon's Registrar at Aylesbury, Mr. ThoQias Horwood, for facilities given in examining the Parish Register Transcripts, by which the defects of the Registers have in some measure been supplied. -
918.1 02 Designations
1:25,000 at A3 - kilometres: KEY 0 0.5 1 2 north O C A 145m Site boundary D O M N 120m Issues BP A A RO FB Manor S AD E 119m L D T UKE 93m E 120m R S Farm 120m TR 24 LA W C WI N W E AY HITH 145m 91m CHURCH E ILL B L 180m N Cowhill Spring Aspen's Path BOL Astrope G Path E Track R Lower End Farm W A A FB Issues RW V CK Path 125m I Harvington 135m Track 125m Track E 97m Church Drain Path TR 23 Gubblecote Drain Park 180m R Allot TR 28 R Astrope Path D Moat B489 D End B488 House Gdns 100m CHURCH ROAD 150m TUNNEL W H E C 85m Allot FB 120m Path V Path Moat 125m ER C H 145m 180m 243m 125m U 125m V Gdns B489 R IC Path TR 54 Path Allot CH Path Eriegh AR B488 Path R A Car Path Path Path L D L O G Path Path O ON Gdns A Manor E Path A QUARRY R D Track AONB OAD PW TR 52Astrope N O R Park Manor Farm G G O 185m PIS/8/1 R PW A Folly Path Track Path D 155m FB TR 22 M N 100m M 238m Puttenham A O A 130m 184m 245m 87m R S T R 150m TR 25 125m Court Astrope S T FB White Farm Moat O Astrope Path N Potash Farm LANE 135m Cottage TR 53 90m R College Moat OA SHIP Costello Drain Brook's Statnalls Brook's PIS/7/1 Farm Gubblecote FB Farm D 150m 220m Farm 133m Wood Statnalls Clipper Down Track 240m Cottage Ivinghoe Common 102m 137m Wood Grange Potash Dover TR 20 B Path 85m Track 230m Farm Bungalows 86m 140m 192m Castle Path Track 135m Workings Chalk (dis) Pit 235m Path ASTROPE o Green Belt 93m Path PIS/13/1 Dover TR 26 TR 27 195m PIS/12(BW)/1 95m 110m Track Track Puttenham House r 100m 225m Track 190m o 130m 175m LANE Path 180m TR 18 Gurney's Marsworth Path 115m War -
The Inclosure of Pitstone Common Wood in 1612 H
THE INCLOSURE OF PITSTONE COMMON WOOD IN 1612 H. A. HANLEY An episode in the piecemeal extinction of common rights over large areas of the Chi/terns is here traced in detail. The author (who is County Archivist) shows how the defenders of immemorial customary rights were able to mount a delaying action, but no more, against a territorial magnate with the law on his side. Introduction around the thirteenth-century parish church Extensive common woods were found in all (now redundant) just off the Icknield Way. parts of the Chilterns except the north-east in However, archaeological evidence indicates medieval times. They were important in the that by the fourteenth century settlement in economies of both Hill villages and villages in this area had contracted sharply. 3 In later times the Vale below the escarpment, providing, for the village proper is found at Pitstone Green, many small landowners, the principal source of about half a mile to the north of the church, building materials and fuel. These common spread out along the bank of a small brook on woods underwent gradual inclosure after 1550, the edge of a large moor or green. Unambigu• but the process has been much less fully re• ous documentary references to settlement at corded than elsewhere, certainly in the case of Pitstone Green have not been found earlier the Buckinghamshire Chilterns. 1 than the fifteenth century. The reasons for the migration are obscure. The parish had exten• The survival of copious documentation for sive open arable fields which Jay in the Vale the inclosure of an area of common woodland and in the chalk upland part of the parish. -
A History of Landford in Wiltshire
A History of Landford in Wiltshire Part 11 – Hamptworth Lodge This history of Hamptworth Lodge has been compiled from various sources including the Internet. Not all sources are 100% reliable and subsequently this account may also perpetuate some of those errors. The information contained in this document is therefore for general information purposes only. Whilst I have tried to ensure that the information given is correct, I cannot guaranty the accuracy or reliability of the sources used or the information contained in this document. John Martin (Jan 2019) Page 1 of 31 A History of Landford in Wiltshire Part 11 – Hamptworth Lodge CONTENTS Page 3 Section 1 - The history of Hamptworth Lodge Page 6 Section 2 - Table of Owners and Occupiers of Hamptworth Lodge Page 7 Section 3 – Family connections with Hamptworth Lodge Page 7 William Stockman (1560-1635) Page 8 The Chaplin family Page 8 Sir Francis Chaplin (1628-1680) John Chaplin (1657-1714) of Tathwell, Lincs Page 9 The Duncombe family Page 9 Sir Charles Duncombe (1648-1711) Page 13 Anthony Duncombe, 1st Baron Feversham (c. 1695 – 1763) Page 14 Ursula Duncombe (1658-1721) Thomas Duncombe, MP (c.1683-1746) Page 15 Thomas Duncombe, MP (c.1724-1779) Anne Duncombe (?-1783) Page 15 The Shafto family Page 16 Robert Shafto (c.1732-1797) Page 17 John Shafto (1775-1802) Robert Eden Duncombe Shafto (1776–1848) Page 19 Robert Duncombe Shafto (1806–1889) Page 20 The Morrison family Page 20 James Morrison (1789-1857) Page 22 George Morrison, MA (1839-1884) Page 22 The Moffat family Page 22 George Moffatt