Wheelwrights, Todenham, Gloucestershire Wheelwrights Todenham Nr Moreton-In-Marsh Gloucestershire Gl56 9Nz

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Wheelwrights, Todenham, Gloucestershire Wheelwrights Todenham Nr Moreton-In-Marsh Gloucestershire Gl56 9Nz WHEELWRIGHTS, TODENHAM, GLOUCESTERSHIRE WHEELWRIGHTS TODENHAM NR MORETON-IN-MARSH GLOUCESTERSHIRE GL56 9NZ A DELIGHTFUL DETACHED PERIOD PROPERTY SITUATED IN A QUIET VILLAGE LOCATION. On the Ground Floor: Entrance hall, drawing room, dining room, study, kitchen, conservatory and cloakroom. On the First Floor: Three bedrooms and bathroom with separate shower. On the Second Floor: Two further bedrooms, dressing room and shower room. Annexe: Sitting room / bedroom 7, and bedroom with en- suite shower room. Outside: Enclosed gardens with parking, garage and outbuildings. GUIDE PRICE £700,000 TODENHAM VIEWING Approximately 3 miles north-east of the market town Strictly by prior appointment with the sole agents: of Moreton-in-Marsh which has a range of shops and amenities for everyday needs, and is in the Chipping HAYMAN-JOYCE Campden Comprehensive School catchment area Parish church and public house 01608 651188 Other local centres within easy reach include Shipston- on-Stour, Stratford-upon-Avon, Oxford and Cheltenham Good train services from Moreton-in-Marsh, the fastest reaching Paddington in about 1 hr 40 minutes THE PROPERTY Stone period detached property Versatile accommodation Fitted kitchen with Aga Teenager / granny annexe Open fire IMPORTANT NOTICE OUTSIDE 1. Although we have used our best endeavours to ensure that everything in these Enclosed rear gardens particulars is correct no description or information should be relied on as a Parking for several vehicles statement or representation of fact. All measurements, areas or distances are given as a guide only and should not be relied on as fact. DIRECTIONS 2. We have no authority to make any representations and all information is given entirely without responsibility on our and the vendors behalf. From Moreton-in-Marsh take the A429 (Fosse Way) 3. Photographs are taken in good faith, but only show certain parts of the property. north turning right signposted ‘Todenham’ just after Unless otherwise stated photographs were taken at the time of, or since, the property’s initial marketing. the railway bridge 4. Where reference is made to planning permissions or existing or potential uses, Follow the road into the village and on reaching the such information is given in good faith, but we cannot confirm that necessary village turn right signposted ‘Great Wolford’ consents exist or are valid. There may be legal restrictions on the property of which we are unaware. Wheelwrights will be found on the left hand side 5. We are unable to comment on the state of repair of the property, nor can we confirm that any services, equipment, facilities or appliances are in satisfactory SERVICES working order. Main water, electricity and drainage are connected to 6. Council tax bandings given are the current assessments. If improvements have the property been carried out to the property since April 1993, this banding may be reviewed Oil fired central heating OUTGOINGS Council tax – band G 2,425.72 Tax payable for 2011/12: £ M2446 /15.07.2010/30.09.10/27.05.11 Hayman-Joyce High Street, Moreton-in-Marsh Gloucestershire, GL56 0AX Tel: 01608 651188 Fax: 01608 650030 E-mail: [email protected] Other Offices: Broadway: 01386 858510 Mayfair: 0870 112 7099 www.haymanjoyce.co.uk.
Recommended publications
  • Land at Todenham Road Moreton-In-Marsh Gloucestershire
    Land at Todenham Road Moreton-in-Marsh Gloucestershire Excavation Report for Cala Homes (Midlands) Ltd CA Project: 9235 CA Report: 17100 July 2017 Land at Todenham Road Moreton-in-Marsh Gloucestershire Excavation Report CA Project: 9235 CA Report: 17100 Document Control Grid Revision Date Author Checked by Status Reasons for Approved revision by A 5 June Jonathan Daniel Internal Technical Martin 2017 Hart Stansbie review revisions Watts This report is confidential to the client. Cotswold Archaeology accepts no responsibility or liability to any third party to whom this report, or any part of it, is made known. Any such party relies upon this report entirely at their own risk. No part of this report may be reproduced by any means without permission. © Cotswold Archaeology © Cotswold Archaeology Land at Todenham Road, Moreton-in-Marsh, Gloucestershire: Excavation Report CONTENTS SUMMARY ..................................................................................................................... 3 1. INTRODUCTION ................................................................................................ 4 2. ARCHAEOLOGICAL BACKGROUND ................................................................ 5 3. AIMS AND OBJECTIVES ................................................................................... 6 4. METHODOLOGY ............................................................................................... 7 5. RESULTS (FIGS 3–7) .......................................................................................
    [Show full text]
  • Straws 43 Todenham | Moreton in Marsh | Gloucestershire | GL56 9PF
    Straws 43 Todenham | Moreton in Marsh | Gloucestershire | GL56 9PF 43 Todenham.indd 1 16/03/2018 16:43 43 Todenham.indd 2 16/03/2018 16:43 Straws, 43 Todenham No 43 Todenham has been affectionately named Straws Cottage by the present owner in honour of Ada Straw, a redoubtable lady who once used to run a post office and stores from this address. As a house dating back to at least the eighteenth century and reputedly with a tunnel beneath from the cellar to the church, no doubt there are stories to be told that have been lost in time but in every room and view there is still a pervading sense of its long history. Austenesque in presentation and atmosphere within, situated opposite to the church, this house is part of old village life. From the front of the building one can see it is a property of two halves. The larger half is Georgian, maybe older still in origin, constructed of crafted red brick with stone lintels - the smaller half is of more regular brickwork, clearly a later addition. Within it is a high archway over a previous passageway, once an entrance for apple-carts to the huge cider press that lay beyond (but which has now found its way to the manor house!). This cottage and others in the row belonged to the Sassoon family estate - evidence of which is in the delightful ancient walled garden that lies behind, now divided into separate plots. No 43 has serendipitously retained somewhat the lion’s share, laid initially to a raised terrace with stone steps leading down to an old pond and thence to lawn, bordered by a yew hedge and a high brick wall, looking out over fields populated with sheep and to open countryside beyond.
    [Show full text]
  • Gloucestershire Village & Community Agents
    Helping older people in Gloucestershire feel more independent, secure, and have a better quality of life May 2014 Gloucestershire Village & Community Agents Managed by GRCC Jointly funded by Gloucestershire Clinical Commissioning Group www.villageagents.org.uk Helping older people in Gloucestershire feel more independent, secure, and have a better quality of life Gloucestershire Village & Community Agents Managed by GRCC Jointly funded by Gloucestershire Clinical Commissioning Group Gloucestershire Village and Key objectives: To give older people easy Community Agents is aimed 3 access to a wide range of primarily at the over 50s but also To help older people in information that will enable them offers assistance to vulnerable 1 Gloucestershire feel more to make informed choices about people in the county. independent, secure, cared for, their present and future needs. and have a better quality of life. The agents provide information To engage older people to To promote local services and support to help people stay 4 enable them to influence and groups, enabling the independent, expand their social 2 future planning and provision. Agent to provide a client with a activities, gain access to a wide community-based solution To provide support to range of services and keep where appropriate. people over the age of 18 involved with their local 5 who are affected by cancer. communities. Partner agencies ² Gloucestershire County Council’s Adult Social Care Helpdesk ² Gloucestershire Clinical Commissioning Group ² Gloucestershire Rural Community
    [Show full text]
  • Land at Todenham Road, Moreton in Marsh, Gloucestershire Appeal
    Mr Tony Bateman Our Ref: APP/F1610/A/10/2130320 Pegasus Planning Group 5 The Priory Old London Road Canwell Sutton Coldfield B75 5SH 12 April 2011 Dear Mr Bateman, TOWN AND COUNTRY PLANNING ACT 1990 (SECTION 78) APPEAL BY CALA MANAGEMENT LIMITED. APPLICATION REF: 09/04214/OUT LAND AT TODENHAM ROAD, MORETON IN MARSH, GLOUCESTERSHIRE GL54 9NL 1. I am directed by the Secretary of State to say that consideration has been given to the report of the Inspector, Jessica Graham BA(Hons) PgDipL, who held a public local inquiry which opened on 26 October 2010, into your client’s appeal under Section 78 of the Town and Country Planning Act 1990 against the decision of Cotswold District Council to refuse outline planning permission for the erection of up to 300 dwellings, open space and associated infrastructure, on land at Todenham Road, Moreton in Marsh, Gloucestershire, GL56 9NL, in accordance with planning application ref: 09/04214/OUT, dated 8 December 2009. 2. The appeal was recovered for the Secretary of State’s determination on 24 August 2010, in pursuance of section 79 of, and paragraph 3 of Schedule 6 to, the Town and Country Planning Act 1990, because the proposal involves residential development over 150 units or on sites of over 5 hectares which would significantly impact on the Government’s objective to secure a better balance between housing demand and supply and create high quality, sustainable, mixed and inclusive communities. Inspector’s recommendation and summary of the decision 3. The Inspector, whose report is enclosed with this letter, recommended that the appeal be dismissed and planning permission refused.
    [Show full text]
  • Map and List of Gloucestershire Parishes
    Gloucestershire Parishes Hundred boundaries are occasionally inaccurate and detached parts of parishes cannot be shown for reasons of scale. List of Gloucestershire Parishes This is a list of all the Church of England parishes in the Diocese of Gloucester, in alphabetical order. It gives the reference number of the parish records held by Gloucestershire Archives. Some parishes at the edges of the county are in other dioceses and their parish records are not held by Gloucestershire Archives. For example, several parishes in South Gloucestershire are in the Diocese of Bristol and their records are held at Bristol Record Office. Ref Parish name Ref Parish name P1 Abenhall P27 Aston-sub-Edge P4 Acton Turville P29 Avening P5 Adlestrop P30 Awre P6 Alderley P384 Aylburton P7 Alderton P31 Badgeworth P8 Aldsworth P33 Bagendon P12 Alvington P34 Barnsley P13 Amberley P35 Barnwood P15 Ampney Crucis P38 Batsford P16 Ampney St Mary P39 Baunton P17 Ampney St Peter P40 Beachley P383 Andoversford P41 Beckford (Worcestershire) P18 Arlingham P42 Berkeley P19 Ashchurch P43 Beverstone P20 Ashleworth P44 Bibury P21 Ashley P45 Birdlip P24 Aston Blank alias Cold Aston P46 Bishops Cleeve P25 Aston Magna P46/2 Bishops Cleeve, St Peter, P26 Aston Somerville Cleeve Hill P47 Bisley Ref Parish name Ref Parish name P49 Blaisdon P78/3 Cheltenham, Christ Church P50 Blakeney P78/13 Cheltenham, Church of the P51 Bledington Emmanuel P52 Blockley P78/4 Cheltenham, Holy Trinity P53 Boddington P78/15 Cheltenham, St Aidan P54 Bourton-on-the-Hill P78/16 Cheltenham, St Barnabas
    [Show full text]
  • Berkeley House TODENHAM • GLOUCESTERSHIRE Berkeley House Todenham • Gloucestershire
    BERKELEY HOUSE TODENHAM • GLOUCESTERSHIRE BERKELEY HOUSE TODENHAM • GLOUCESTERSHIRE Approximate distances Moreton-in-Marsh 3 miles (mainline station to London Paddington from 87 minutes) Stratford-upon-Avon 15 miles Banbury 19 miles (London Marylebone from 56 minutes) Cheltenham 29 miles • Oxford 30 miles (all distances and times are approximate) Georgian Elegance Entrance Hall, Drawing room, Dining room, Sitting room, Kitchen, Utility room, Cloakroom, Garden room Five double bedrooms arranged over two floors, Two bathrooms, Shower room Vaulted cellar, carport, garden shed and wood store The Barn - Separate studio/ games room with shower room and potential for conversion to ancillary accommodation Attractive gardens, kitchen garden In all approx 0.5 acres. Savills Banbury 36 South Bar Banbury Oxfordshire OX16 9AE Tel: 01295 228000 [email protected] www.savills.co.uk YOUR ATTENTION IS DRAWN TO THE IMPORTANT NOTICE ON THE LAST PAGE OF THE TEXT DESCRIPTION SITUATION • Charming Grade II listed former farmhouse, thought to date back to the Within the garden is ‘The Barn’ which is a brick built outbuilding which • Todenham is a most attractive North Cotswold village lying • Communications to the area are excellent with good access to the early part of the 1800’s with later additions including an Arts and Crafts is currently used as an annexe/ games room with two rooms, hallway and approximately three miles to the north-east of Moreton-in-Marsh. M40 (Junctions 8, 9, 10 and 11), providing easy access to London, porch. Constructed of local stone under a pitch slate roof, Berkeley a shower room. This spacious annexe (approx 1,081 sq ft) offers a number There is a thriving community, a range of working arable farms Heathrow Airport and the Midlands.
    [Show full text]
  • 107. Cotswolds Area Profile: Supporting Documents
    National Character 107. Cotswolds Area profile: Supporting documents www.naturalengland.org.uk 1 National Character 107. Cotswolds Area profile: Supporting documents Introduction National Character Areas map As part of Natural England’s responsibilities as set out in the Natural Environment White Paper,1 Biodiversity 20202 and the European Landscape Convention,3 we are revising profiles for England’s 159 National Character Areas North (NCAs). These are areas that share similar landscape characteristics, and which East follow natural lines in the landscape rather than administrative boundaries, making them a good decision-making framework for the natural environment. Yorkshire & The North Humber NCA profiles are guidance documents which can help communities to inform West their decision-making about the places that they live in and care for. The information they contain will support the planning of conservation initiatives at a East landscape scale, inform the delivery of Nature Improvement Areas and encourage Midlands broader partnership working through Local Nature Partnerships. The profiles will West also help to inform choices about how land is managed and can change. Midlands East of Each profile includes a description of the natural and cultural features England that shape our landscapes, how the landscape has changed over time, the current key drivers for ongoing change, and a broad analysis of each London area’s characteristics and ecosystem services. Statements of Environmental South East Opportunity (SEOs) are suggested, which draw on this integrated information. South West The SEOs offer guidance on the critical issues, which could help to achieve sustainable growth and a more secure environmental future. NCA profiles are working documents which draw on current evidence and knowledge.
    [Show full text]
  • NOTES and QUERIES 105 35 Chipping Sodbury
    NOTES AND QUERIES 105 Secondly, this is ultimately a depressingly materialistic book. If our faith is to be defined by our abstinence, as this book would appear to argue, then it is a secular not a spiritual pursuit. This book reflects the spirit of current Quaker dilemmas. Some argue our task is to rediscover our faith. Others our action. But we live in our present and can only change our future. Maybe we need to discover that. Then we can live in faith, which is action in itself. Richard Murphy NOTES AND QUERIES Bristol & Gloucestershire Archaeological Society Gloucestershire Record Series, Volume 13 Bishop Season's Survey of the Diocese of Gloucester 1735-1750 Edited by John Fendley.2000, pp.xx, 204 "The edited text presents the content of all the six manuscripts of Benson's survey that are known to have survived. Letters in bold-face indicate those manuscripts. A G.D.R. 2858(1), dating from 1735 B G.D.R. 285B(3), dating from 1735-8 C G.D.R. 397, dating from 1743 and later D G.D.R. 381A, dating from 1750 E Gloucester Cathedral Library MS.52, dating from 1751 F G.D.R. 393, dating from 1751. The edited text is based on D, and shows the significant variants in the other alternations made to them and to D/' • GLOUCESTERSHIRE MEETINGS 1735-50 This survey would have been from the reports of parish officers in response to questions from Thomas Benson (1689-1752) bishop of Gloucester from 1735. Friends' meetings seem to have been picked up in reports of the following parishes: p.26 Didmarton & Oldbury 32 Pucklechurch 35 Chipping Sodbury 49 Thornbury (and a school) 58 Horsley [this parish is about a mile south of Nailsworth] Minchinhampton 60 Painswick 67 Tetbury 106 NOTES AND QUERIES 90 Gloucester "A silent meeting" 94 Cheltenham 98 Tewkesbury 108 Stoke Orchard 113 Chipping Campden [I suppose Broad Campden, in Butler 1999] 142 Stow on the Wold 149 Cirencester There is a fair sprinkling of Friends in the other parishes' returns.
    [Show full text]
  • COTSWOLD DISTRICT LOCAL PLAN 2011-2031 (Adopted 3 August 2018)
    COTSWOLD DISTRICT LOCAL PLAN 2011-2031 (Adopted 3 August 2018) In memory of Tiina Emsley Principal Planning Policy Officer from 2007 to 2012 COTSWOLD DISTRICT LOCAL PLAN 2011-2031 Contents 1 Introduction 6 2 Portrait 11 3 Issues 17 4 Vision 20 5 Objectives 21 6 Local Plan Strategy 23 6.1 Development Strategy (POLICY DS1) 23 6.2 Development Within Development Boundaries (POLICY DS2) 29 6.3 Small-Scale Residential Development in Non-Principal Settlements (POLICY DS3) 30 6.4 Open Market Housing Outside Principal and Non-Principal Settlements (POLICY DS4) 32 7 Delivering the Strategy 34 7.1 South Cotswold - Principal Settlements (POLICY SA1) 37 7.2 Cirencester Town (POLICY S1) 38 7.3 Strategic Site, south of Chesterton, Cirencester (POLICY S2) 44 7.4 Cirencester Central Area (POLICY S3) 47 7.5 Down Ampney (POLICY S4) 54 7.6 Fairford (POLICY S5) 57 7.7 Kemble (POLICY S6) 60 7.8 Lechlade (POLICY S7) 63 7.9 South Cerney (POLICY S8) 66 7.10 Tetbury (POLICY S9) 68 7.11 Mid Cotswold - Principal Settlements (POLICY SA2) 71 7.12 Andoversford (POLICY S10) 71 7.13 Bourton-on-the-Water (POLICY S11) 74 7.14 Northleach (POLICY S12) 77 7.15 Stow-on-the-Wold (POLICY S13) 80 7.16 Upper Rissington (POLICY S14) 82 Planning applications will be determined in accordance with relevant policies in this Local Plan, which should be considered together, unless material considerations indicate otherwise. COTSWOLD DISTRICT LOCAL PLAN 2011-2031 Contents 7.17 North Cotswold - Principal Settlements (POLICY SA3) 84 7.18 Blockley (POLICY S15) 85 7.19 Chipping Campden (POLICY
    [Show full text]
  • Gloucestershire County Council Local Flood Risk Management Strategy
    Gloucestershire County Council Local Flood Risk Management Strategy Annual Progress and Implementation Plan 2017/18 Gloucestershire County Council Local Flood Risk Management Strategy Document Status This annual progress and implementation plan has been produced to consider progress against actions in the adopted Local Flood Risk Management Strategy, and to identify proposed measures to manage flood risk in the county for the forthcoming year. Amendment Record: Revision Description Date Signed 1 First Draft August PS 2 Second Draft October DP 3 Third Draft November SE i Gloucestershire County Council Local Flood Risk Management Strategy Contents 1. Introduction ............................................................................................................................................... 1 2. Actions we propose to take across Gloucestershire.................................................................................. 3 3. Location-specific actions ............................................................................................................................ 5 3.1. Parish prioritisation ..................................................................................................................... 5 3.2. Gloucestershire County Council Lead Schemes ......................................................................... 11 3.3. Flood Alleviation Schemes with Gloucestershire County Council Contributions ...................... 11 3.4. Potential Future Schemes .........................................................................................................
    [Show full text]
  • Gloucestershire Folk Song
    Glos.Broadsht.7_Layout 1 15/10/2010 14:35 Page 1 1 4 A R iver Avon A4104 A3 8 9 Randwick cheese rolling and Randwick Wap Dover’s Games and Scuttlebrook Wake, Chipping 2 A about!’ and they routed the 8 Chipping 4 A JANUARY 4 A 43 First Sunday and second Saturday in May Campden – Friday and Saturday after Spring Bank 1 4 Camden French in hand-to-hand 4 Blow well and bud well and bear well Randwick is one Holiday 5 0 fighting. For this feat the 1 8 God send you fare well A3 Gloucestershires were of the two places The ‘Cotswold Olimpicks’ or ‘Cotswold Games’ were A43 A 8 3 Every sprig and every spray in Gloucestershire instituted around 1612 by Robert Dover. They mixed 8 allowed to wear two hat or A bushel of apples to be that still practices traditional games such as backsword fighting and cap badges – the only 2 9 given away cheese-rolling. On shin-kicking with field sports and contests in music 4 10 MORETON- regiment to do so. The Back Dymock A 1 IN-MARSH On New Year’s day in the TEWKESBURY 4 Badge carries an image of the first Sunday in A n 3 Wo olstone 4 morning r 5 A the Sphinx and the word May cheeses are e 1 2 4 ev 4 4 M50 8 S ‘Egypt’. The Regiment is now From dawn on New Year’s Day, rolled three times r 3 Gotherington e A 5 A v i part of The Rifles.
    [Show full text]
  • Gloucestershire. 5
    DIRECTORY.] GLOUCESTERSHIRE. 5 Temple Gniting, Toddington, Twining, Upper Swell, 1827, is assigned to the treatment of medical cases only, Weston-on-Avon, Weston Sub-Edge, Willersey, Winch­ and the north wing, opened in 1871, to surgical cases. comb and Wormington. accidents and out-patients,the original block being reserved Hnndred of Langley :-Almondsbury (part of), Alves­ for miscellaneous patients: there are beds for ISO patients, ton, Doynton, :Frampton Cotterell, Kingswood, Littleton­ besides some additional private wards, surgery, dispensary upon-Severn, Olveston, Rockhampton, Wannley and and medical officers' rooms; the institution is mainly Winterbourne. supported by voluntary subscriptions; the annual number Hundred of Longtree :-Avening, Chemngton, Hors­ of in-patients admitted is a.bont 1,43°, and of out-patients ley, Minchinhampton. Rodborough, Rudmarton, Shipston about 7,580. George Pike, treasurer; RaynerWinterbotham Moyne, Tetbury, Weston Birt, with Lasborough and Batten M.D. and Oscar William Clark M.A., X.B. phyllicians;, Woodchester. _ WaIter Brown M.B. assistant physician; John P1eydeU Hundred of Pucklechurch :-Absom and Wick, Cold Wilton and Thomas Smith Ellis, consulting surgeons; Hen. Ashton. Pucklechurch, Westleigh and Wick. Edward Waddy L.R.c.p.LOnd. Richard Mount Cole L.R.-c.P. Hundred of Rapsgate :-Brimpsfield, Chedworth, Coles­ I.ond. and Ernest Dykes Bowel', surgeons; William Wash­ borne, Cowley, Cranham, Cubberley, Duntisborne Abbotts bourne M.R.C.s.Eng. L.R.c.p.Lond. assistant surgeon: (part of), Elkstone, North Cerney, Rendcombe and Side or Frederick William Lewis M.R.c.~.]mg. house surgeon; Rev. Syde. A. E. Fleming, chaplain; Henry Pike, sec.; Samuel Herbert, Hundred of St.
    [Show full text]