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Chesham to Great Missenden
Last checked 21st September 2019 Current status Document last updated Monday, 16th May 2020 This document and information herein are copyrighted to Saturday Walkers’ Club. If you are interested in printing or displaying any of this material, Saturday Walkers’ Club grants permission to use, copy, and distribute this document delivered from this World Wide Web server with the following conditions: * The document will not be edited or abridged, and the material will be produced exactly as it appears. Modification of the material or use of it for any other purpose is a violation of our copyright and other proprietary rights. * Reproduction of this document is for free distribution and will not be sold. * This permission is granted for a one-time distribution. * All copies, links, or pages of the documents must carry the following copyright notice and this permission notice: Saturday Walkers’ Club, Copyright © 2004 - 2020, used with permission. All rights reserved. www.walkingclub.org.uk The publisher cannot accept responsibility for any problems encountered by readers. Chesham to Great Missenden Through the Chilterns via Lee Common Start: Chesham station Finish: Great Missenden station Toughness: 3 out of 10 Length: 15.5km (9.6 miles). For a short Walk notes: This walk makes for an easy walk variation, see below Walk options. day out from London. It starts in Chesham, the hustle and bustle of which Time: 4 hours 45 minutes. For the whole is soon left behind for sloping fields, outing including trains, sights and meals woods and hamlets. The route follows the allow 8 hours 30mins. Chilterns Link, but diverts at Herberts Hole to take a higher, southerly path. -
HS2 Draft Environmental Statement Buckinghamshire Councils
HS2 Draft ES: response of the Buckinghamshire Councils HS2 DRAFT ENVIRONMENTAL STATEMENT Buckinghamshire Councils response part 3 CFA 10 Dunsmore, Wendover and Halton The area is within the Chilterns AONB – a nationally recognised and protected landscape. We feel, however, that the draft ES does not fully recognise this and suggests poor and inadequate mitigation. There are serious concerns about the impact of the maintenance loop on this community area; a concern compounded by the fact that no noise assessment has been carried out. There is also serious concern about the disruption that will be caused by HGV traffic in the area, particularly with regards to the use of some of the narrower, more rural roads. The impact of construction and operation on the setting of grade II* listed buildings within Wendover are not adequately assessed – particularly in the case of St Mary’s church, an active place of worship within 200m of the green tunnel portal. Comments on Part B: Description of the proposed scheme 2.2.2 We are concerned about impact of the maintenance loop on the wider landscape. There is very little information on the visual appearance and operation of the maintenance loop given. 2.2.5 Further, the HS2 route and maintenance loop will be on an embankment in this area increasing its visibility. We are concerned about the impact of this in particular since the draft ES suggests that Risborough Road over bridge would rise to 15m. Appropriate assessment of the visual impact and mitigation is crucial but currently not included in the draft ES. -
(Prohibition of Waiting, Loading and Stopping) and (On-Street Parking Places) Order 2021 (Amendment No 1) Order 202*
The Buckinghamshire Council (Prohibition of Waiting, Loading and Stopping) and (On-Street Parking Places) Order 2021 (Amendment No 1) Order 202* Notice is hereby given that Buckinghamshire Council proposes to make the above-named Order under the Road Traffic Regulation Act 1984. The effect of the Order is to introduce Road Name Scheme Restrictions Access to Old Burnham Beeches / • No Waiting At Any Time. Telephone Exchange Farnham Common off Kingsway ALAN WAY Langley Park Area • No Waiting At Any Time. ALDERBOURNE LANE Black Park Area • No Stopping At Any Time On Verge Or Footway. • No Stopping On Main Carriageway. ASTON HILL CHIVERY Wendover Woods • 4 Wheel Pavement Parking. Area • No Stopping At Any Time On Verge Or Footway. • No Stopping On Main Carriageway. AVENUE DRIVE Langley Park Area • No Stopping On Main Carriageway. BEDFORD DRIVE Burnham Beeches / • No Stopping At Any Time On Verge Farnham Common Or Footway. • No Stopping On Main Carriageway. BEECHES ROAD Burnham Beeches / • No Waiting At Any Time. Farnham Common • Permit Holders Only FC1. BELLSWOOD LANE Langley Park Area • No Stopping At Any Time On Verge Or Footway. • No Stopping On Main Carriageway. BILLET LANE Langley Park Area • No Stopping At Any Time On Verge Or Footway. • No Stopping On Main Carriageway. BLACK PARK ROAD Black Park Area & • No Stopping At Any Time On Verge Langley Park Area Or Footway No. Stopping On Main Carriageway. • Restricted Parking Zone No Waiting At Any Time No Loading At Any Time. BLACKPOND LANE Burnham Beeches / • No Waiting At Any Time. Farnham Common • Permit Holders Only FC1. BLINCO LANE Langley Park Area • No Waiting At Any Time. -
Broadband Workstream – Meeting Notes
South West Chilterns Community Board – Broadband Workstream – Meeting Notes Date/Time: Wednesday 10 February 2021 at 1600hrs via MS Teams 1. Present Cllr Mark Turner - Chair Cllr David Johncock Cllr Chris Whitehead Cllr Mark Harris Cllr Julia Adey Cllr Mike Appleyard Cllr Roger Wilson Cllr Alex Collingwood Sue Hynard – Office of Steve Baker MP Jacqueline Dinah-Hayward Paul Caplin Dominic John James Robinson Jackie Binning – North West Chilterns Community Board Coordinator Makyla Devlin – South West Chilterns Community Board Coordinator 2. Apologies None received 3. Notes and actions from previous meeting The last meeting was in January meeting was cancelled due to no real update. Action Date Holder Timescale Update Look at how the 19/11/2020 Sue Hynard By December Ongoing Government Meeting proposals can be achieved and funded Cllr Mark Turner 12/01/21 Makyla Devlin Straight after Completed to be linked up the meeting to Paul Caplin via email Circulate the 12/01/21 Makyla Devlin With notes from Completed letter sent to meeting Leader Martin Tett Circulate quote 12/01/21 Makyla Devlin With notes from Completed from BT meeting Openreach Organise a 12/01/21 Cllr Alex Before next Completed meeting with Collingwood meeting on 10 Swish Fibre, February Virgin Broadband and 3 Clicks for Cllr’s Collingwood, Johncock and Turner Utilise the skills 12/10/21 Sue Hynard Continual Continual of MP’s Joy Aleksandra Morrissey and Turner Steve Baker through their representatives to stress the importance of this provision in our Board Area and look at any possible further funding steams available. Establish who 12/01/21 Makyla Devlin At the end of the Completed the Cabinet meeting this Member for was looked into Broadband is for and the Cabinet Buckinghamshire Member responsible is Cllr Martin Tett. -
The Chilterns Buildings Design Guide 6 the Scale and Form of New Buildings 28 Structure and Original Features 55 the Ability to Be Repaired and Thermal Mass
CONSERVATION BOARD Chilterns Buildings Design Guide an Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty 2 3 Chilterns Buildings Design Guide Chilterns Buildings Design Guide Foreword Contents Chapter 1 Chapter 3 Chapter 5 An integral part of the outstanding Chilterns' Nevertheless, pressures for development, both in provided to reach maturity. If these decisions are landscape is its wealth of attractive villages and the AONB and the surrounding area, have poorly made the passage of time will not be kind. Introduction 4 Designing new buildings 23 Conversion of buildings 53 buildings. Many older buildings demonstrate good intensified. Increased housing allocations are The special and distinctive character The location and siting of new development 24 Conversion of farm buildings 53 design and construction practice in relation to placing strains on larger settlements around the This second edition of the Design Guide has of the Chilterns 4 The individual building 27 Openings 55 siting and orientation, the sourcing of materials, margins of the AONB, infilling threatens to destroy therefore been produced to provide updated The Chilterns Buildings Design Guide 6 The scale and form of new buildings 28 Structure and original features 55 the ability to be repaired and thermal mass. The the openness of many villages, the unsympathetic guidance and contribute to the maintenance of the The planning context 8 The 'one-off' design 29 Roofs 55 task of the Chilterns Conservation Board is to conversion of redundant buildings continues to Chilterns' landscape for future generations. Roofs 30 Inside the building 56 ensure the special qualities of the Area of erode rural character. At the same time, the Chapter 2 Chimneys 33 Context and surroundings 56 Outstanding Natural Beauty (AONB) are conserved framework for controlling development has Sir John Johnson Settlements and buildings in the Walls 33 Other buildings in the countryside 57 and enhanced. -
Species Action Plan for Green-Winged Orchid: (Orchis Morio) in Buckinghamshire
Buckinghamshire & Milton Keynes Biodiversity Action Plan Species Action Plans Species Action Plans National Species Action Plans 8.1 Biodiversity: The UK Steering Group Report (DETR, 1995) originally listed 416 priority species for which national Species Action Plans would be written. At that time 116 had already been written and 300 remained. In addition, a further 1,250 species were identified as being of ‘conservation concern’. The priority list was reviewed in 1997and in 2007. After the 2007 revision the total number of BAP priority species was set at 1149. This list is available in Biodiversity Reporting and Information Group Report on the Species and Habitat Review 2007. 8.2 The four scientific criteria that were used to select the UK BAP species in the 2007 review were; • International threat • International responsibility & moderate decline in the UK • Marked decline in the UK • Other important factors – where quantitative data on decline are inadequate but there is convincing evidence of extreme threat Local Species Action Plans for Buckinghamshire 8.3 On the publication of the Buckinghamshire & Milton Keynes BAP in 2000 it was planned that every species present in Bucks for which there is a national SAP or Conservation Statement, would eventually have a local SAP or Conservation Statement. SAPs would also be written for species which may not be considered a national priority, but which are threatened or declining within the County, such as green- winged orchid. 8.4 The following Plans were produced for species within Buckinghamshire. y Chiltern Gentian y Green-winged Orchid y Striped Lychnis Moth As Latin names were used in the original publication of the action plans for Chiltern gentian, green-winged orchid and striped lychnis moth, they have been retained in the following part of the document. -
Dunsmore, Wendover and Halton HS2 London-West Midlands May 2013
PHASE ONE DRAFT ENVIRONMENTAL STATEMENT Community Forum Area Report 10 | Dunsmore, Wendover and Halton HS2 London-West Midlands May 2013 ENGINE FOR GROWTH DRAFT ENVIRONMENTAL STATEMENT Community Forum Area Report ENGINE FOR GROWTH 10 I Dunsmore, Wendover and Halton High Speed Two (HS2) Limited, 2nd Floor, Eland House, Bressenden Place, London SW1E 5DU Telephone 020 7944 4908 General email enquiries: [email protected] Website: www.hs2.org.uk © Crown copyright, 2013, except where otherwise stated Copyright in the typographical arrangement rests with the Crown. You may re-use this information (not including logos or third-party material) free of charge in any format or medium, under the terms of the Open Government Licence. To view this licence, visit www.nationalarchives.gov.uk/doc/open-government-licence/ or write to the Information Policy Team, The National Archives, Kew, London TW9 4DU, or e-mail: [email protected]. Where we have identified any third-party copyright information you will need to obtain permission from the copyright holders concerned. To order further copies contact: DfT Publications Tel: 0300 123 1102 Web: www.dft.gov.uk/orderingpublications Product code: ES/10 Printed in Great Britain on paper containing at least 75% recycled fibre. CFA Report – Dunsmore, Wendover and Halton/No 10 I Contents Contents Draft Volume 2: Community Forum Area Report – Dunsmore, Wendover and Halton/No 10 5 Structure of the HS2 draft Environmental Statement 5 Part A: Introduction 6 1 Introduction 7 1.1 Introduction to HS2 -
[Bucks.] Chesham. 444 (Post Office
[BUCKS.] CHESHAM. 444 (POST OFFICE. miles from Chesham. There is a place of worship for place ofimportance is Hyde Hall, the residence of Benjamin lJaptists. Fuller, Esq., .r.P. CHARTRIDGB is a hamlet in the parish of Chesham, WATERSIDE is a hamlet in the parish of Cheslmm, corn meucing at the verge of the town, and extending about 3! situated in a delightful valley, through which the river Chess miles from Cheshum, surrounded by woodland, on the road flows, which is famous for its abundant supply of trout. It to Aylesbury. There is one Baptist chapel. has extensive manufactories for paper, three flour mills, one HuNDRIDGE is a hamlet in the parish of Chesham, com silk mill, outworkers in the making of straw plait, :tlso wood mencing near the town, and extending about 2~ miles from turnery, and the manufactory of shovels for brewers tmd Chesbam, on tlte high road to Great Missenden; the only maltsters, brush handles and boards, and spoons of all sizes. Sexton, Josepb Bunker. Official Establishments, Local Institutions, &c. PosT OFFICE.-Mr. George Devereux, postmaster, l\Iarket Pu:oLIC OFFICERS:- square. Money orders are granted & paid at this office. Commissioner for taking Acknowledgments of Mm·ried Letters arrive from London, Beaconsfield & Taplow at 6.7 Women, ~ for taking Affidavits in Chancery ~ thu a.m. & are dispatched at 6.50 p.m.; letters arrive from Superior Courts at "Westminster, ~ Stewm·d of the Berkhampstead, North of England, Scotland, Ireland, & J.l:lanors o.f Chesham, Righam ~c. John Dunkin Francis, all the towns on the Birmingham railway, per foot post, High street at 6.10 a m. -
BUCKINGHAMSHIRE POSSE COMITATUS 1798 the Posse Comitatus, P
THE BUCKINGHAMSHIRE POSSE COMITATUS 1798 The Posse Comitatus, p. 632 THE BUCKINGHAMSHIRE POSSE COMITATUS 1798 IAN F. W. BECKETT BUCKINGHAMSHIRE RECORD SOCIETY No. 22 MCMLXXXV Copyright ~,' 1985 by the Buckinghamshire Record Society ISBN 0 801198 18 8 This volume is dedicated to Professor A. C. Chibnall TYPESET BY QUADRASET LIMITED, MIDSOMER NORTON, BATH, AVON PRINTED IN GREAT BRITAIN BY ANTONY ROWE LIMITED, CHIPPENHAM, WILTSHIRE FOR THE BUCKINGHAMSHIRE RECORD SOCIETY CONTENTS Acknowledgments p,'lge vi Abbreviations vi Introduction vii Tables 1 Variations in the Totals for the Buckinghamshire Posse Comitatus xxi 2 Totals for Each Hundred xxi 3-26 List of Occupations or Status xxii 27 Occupational Totals xxvi 28 The 1801 Census xxvii Note on Editorial Method xxviii Glossary xxviii THE POSSE COMITATUS 1 Appendixes 1 Surviving Partial Returns for Other Counties 363 2 A Note on Local Military Records 365 Index of Names 369 Index of Places 435 ACKNOWLEDGMENTS The editor gratefully acknowledges the considerable assistance of Mr Hugh Hanley and his staff at the Buckinghamshire County Record Office in the preparation of this edition of the Posse Comitatus for publication. Mr Hanley was also kind enough to make a number of valuable suggestions on the first draft of the introduction which also benefited from the ideas (albeit on their part unknowingly) of Dr J. Broad of the North East London Polytechnic and Dr D. R. Mills of the Open University whose lectures on Bucks village society at Stowe School in April 1982 proved immensely illuminating. None of the above, of course, bear any responsibility for any errors of interpretation on my part. -
Cover Plus Blank
HALLMARK THE LACEY GREEN & LOOSLEY ROW MAGAZINE School visit to Whipsnade Zoo – collage by students of St John’s School AUGUST 2008 NUMBER 207 ESTABLISHED 1970 PDF created with pdfFactory trial version www.pdffactory.com HALLMARK THE LACEY GREEN & LOOSLEY ROW MAGAZINE AUTUMN 2008 Hallmark is published quarterly by the Lacey Green & Loosley Row Millennium Hall Management Committee, although opinions expressed in comment or contribution do not necessarily represent the collective view of that committee. Our aim is to mirror the mark that the Village Hall makes upon our community, to publish the activities of all Village organisations, and to provide a forum so that the rights, the wrongs, the well-being of village life can be aired. News from all the Village clubs, societies, church and school, stories of local interest and entries for the Village Diary are always welcome. In addition, any suggestions for improving Hallmark. VILLAGE HALL MANAGEMENT COMMITTEE Clive Hodghton (Chair), Rachel Panter (Vice-Chair), Paula Oxford (Secretary), Yvonne Axe (Treasurer), Karen Hodghton (Booking Sec.), Jill Baker, Stella Boll, Jane Brown, Ginnie Brudenell, Cathryn Davies, Carole Knight, Betty Tyler & Norman Tyler VILLAGE HALL BOOKINGS ( Clive or Karen on 01844 274254 (answering service) EDITOR * Norman Tyler (assisted by Mike Piercy), 5 Woodfield, Lacey Green, Bucks HP27 OQQ (2/3rds down Woodfield, on the left) ( 01844 344606 (with answering service & fax) Email [email protected] ADVERTISING MANAGER * Chris Baker, "Woodpeckers", Kiln Lane, Lacey Green, Bucks HP27 OPT (past the pond on the left) ( 01844 275442 The Winter Hallmark will be published in November - closing date for copy is October 17th From the Editor(s) If you would like to join Mike through Paul Rogerson, our County & District Councillor, Piercy and I in the editing of which provide us with various other subjects of reading Hallmark, which introduces matter, from which I choose which are suitable to enter you to many interesting into Hallmark as far as space allows. -
Aylesbury Vale Strategic Flood Risk Assessment
Aylesbury Vale District Council Level 1 Strategic Flood Risk Assessment Final Report May 2017 This page has intentionally been left blank 2016s3990 - Aylesbury SFRA Level 1 (FINAL) v3.0 i JBA Project Manager Anna Beasley 8a Castle Street Wallingford Oxfordshire OX10 8DL Revision History Revision Ref / Date Issued Amendments Issued to Charlotte Stevens / David Draft Report v1 / May 2016 Broadley (AVDC) Minor amendments and Charlotte Stevens / David Draft Report v2 / July 2016 updates from revised site Broadley (AVDC) assessment Amendments following Charlotte Stevens / David Final Report / October 2016 comments from steering Broadley (AVDC) group Additional amendments Charlotte Stevens / David Final Report v2 / March 2017 following comments from Broadley (AVDC) IDB and BCC Addendum added covering Charlotte Stevens / David Final Report v3 / May 2017 additional sites Broadley (AVDC) Contract This report describes work commissioned by Peter Williams, on behalf of Aylesbury Vale District Council, by email dated 18th February 2016. Aylesbury Vale District Council’s representative for the contract was Charlotte Stevens of Forward Plans and Community Fulfilment. Ian Ringer, Rebecca Price and Georgina Latus of JBA Consulting carried out this work. Prepared by .................................................. Rebecca Price BSc MSc Assistant Analyst, ....................................................................... Georgina Latus BSc Assistant Analyst, ....................................................................... Ian Ringer BSc MSc MCIWEM C.WEM Chartered Senior Analyst Reviewed by ................................................. Anna Beasley BSc MSc CEnv MCIWEM C.WEM Principal Analyst Purpose This document has been prepared as a Final Report for Aylesbury Vale District Council. JBA Consulting accepts no responsibility or liability for any use that is made of this document other than by the Client for the purposes for which it was originally commissioned and prepared. -
THE DESECRATED CHURCHES of BUCKINGHAMSHIRE. As It Is Not
THE DESECRATED CHURCHES OF BUCKINGHAMSHIRE. (Continued from Page 85.) DEANERY OF BURN HAM. As it is not the object of these papers to notice Churches attached to Conventual Establishments, unless they were required also for parochial Services, the Chapel which belonged to the monastery at Burnham must be passed over, which leaves only two in this Deanery to be noticed, and these are both in the parish of Chesham. GROVE is an ancient Manor which for many generations belonged to the Cheynes, of Drayton Beauchamp. They had a Mansion there, which, says Lysons, appears to have been strongly fortified, and this is confirmed by the site having still the remains of two moats around it. In the year 1585, John Cheyne of Chesham Bois and Drayton Beauchamp, the same who presented Hooker to the Rectory of Drayton, left Grove to his eldest son, John Cheyne, whom he had disinherited, — but for what reason does not appear, though the epitaph on his tomb, in the Church at King's Langley, indicates that he remained a Roman Catholic, whereas his father had become a zealous Protestant. — Lysons says there was a Chapel at Grove, and at my request the Rev. Bryant Burgess visited it, and has kindly given me the following report: — "The building stands East and West, and there has been a burial ground to the South. Tradition also calls it a Chapel. But I find nothing ecclesiastical in the architecture; and it evidently consisted of two stories. It appears to have been the refectory of a Religious house, with small build- ings, probably dormitories, attached to it.