(T2352) List of Restrictions Prohibition of All Traffic That Length of the A417
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Some Observations and Events of War Time in Hinton Waldrist 1941-44 by the Reverend John Cole M.A
Some Observations and Events of War Time in Hinton Waldrist 1941-44 By The Reverend John Cole M.A. Rector 1935-1944 Edited by his Daughter Mrs Jaquetta Everitt 1998 December 1941 Now that the long winter evenings have set in when one sits over the fire, its seems to me that in this third winter of the war, that it might be of some interest to those who are yet unborn to put on record how we in a remote Berkshire village lived our daily lives during these epic days when Britain alone keeps alight the torch of freedom in Europe. For the war has affected the lives of us all, even here in Hinton where are men are called up, as are some of our women and girls, and all are rationed for food – even the cows and hens have their ration cards. Old men as Special Constables patrol the lanes after a hard day’s work in the fields until midnight. Our old women save their empty bottles to throw at or in front of German motor-cyclists if they come. Haven’t we all heard night after night the drone of enemy planes overhead on their way to bomb the Midlands, and once the crash of twenty bombs in our fields? Did we not see the burning bodies of Canadian airmen amid the wreckage of their flaming and exploding plane? Have we not in our midst those who have come for safety to our village – children and mothers with their babies fleeing from unspeakable horrors? All these things have come upon our once peaceful village and God alone knows what we shall yet see before we have won for our children that liberty which our fathers handed down to us. -
Letcombe Brook Project
The Letcombe Brook Project Achievements Report Spring 2003 - Summer 2009 rook rey B N Child East Hanney k combe Broo A338 t Le Grove A417 WANTAGE Letcombe k o Regis o r B e b m o c t e L Letcombe Bassett A338 Contents Introduction ................................................................................................................................3 • Letcombe Brook chalk stream Letcombe Brook Project .......................................................................................................4 • Organisation Partnership in action Project report .............................................................................................................................5 Objective 1: Conserve and enhance the biodiversity and landscape of Letcombe Brook .............................................................................................5 • Biodiversity and landscape • Public open space improvements • Planning and developments • Species action Objective 2: Promote environmentally responsible land management practices amongst landowners and land managers. ...............12 • Working with landowners to protect the brook • Examples of small scale schemes carried out by residents Objective 3: Increase awareness of countryside and environmental issues through education and interpretation. .........................13 • Education and Interpretation • Environmental Education for schools • Interpretation • Public events and campaigns Objective 4: Involve all sectors of the community in caring for and appreciating Letcombe -
Ockwell House Oxfordshire
OCKWELL HOUSE OXFORDSHIRE OCKWELL HOUSE OXFORDSHIRE A beautifully maintained and well equipped small estate with extensive outbuildings within striking distance of Oxford Faringdon 5 miles • Abingdon 12 miles • Witney 12 miles Didcot 14 miles (London Paddington approximately 42 minutes) Oxford Parkway 23 miles (London Marylebone approximately 65 minutes) • London 80 miles (Distances and times are approximate) Reception hall • Drawing room • Dining room • Study • Sitting room Kitchen/breakfast room • Utility/laundry room • Boot room Master bedroom suite with bathroom and dressing room • Guest bedroom suite • 4 further bedrooms Family bathroom Large second floor games room and extensive storage Party Barn with kitchen and guest accommodation • 2 bedroom guest cottage • Housekeepers studio flat 2 further staff flats • Garden room • Extensive range of stores and garaging Beautiful gardens and grounds Long tree-lined drive Tennis court Swimming pool Stables 40m x 20m Manége Martin Collins Clopf Fibre surface Paddocks Pond Delightful views Approximate gross internal floor area of the main house 6,401 sq ft with a further 6,633 sq ft of secondary accommodation and outbuildings In all about 28 acres For Sale Freehold Oxford Country Department 280 Banbury Road, 55 Baker Street, Summertown, Oxford OX2 7ED London W1U 8AN Tel: +44 1865 790 077 Tel: +44 20 7861 1707 [email protected] [email protected] www.knightfrank.co.uk 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 brochure. Oxfordshire Ockwell House is situated just outside the hamlet of Hatford. -
The Berkshire Echo 52
The Berkshire Echo Issue 52 l The Grand Tour: “gap” travel in the 18th century l Wartime harvest holidays l ‘A strange enchanted land’: fl ying to Paris, 1935 l New to the Archives From the Editor From the Editor It is at this time of year that my sole Holidays remain a status symbol Dates for Your Diary focus turns to my summer holidays. I in terms of destination and invest in a somewhat groundless belief accommodation. The modern Grand Heritage Open Day that time spent in a different location Tour involves long haul instead This year’s Heritage Open Day is Saturday will somehow set me up for the year of carriages, the lodging houses 11 September, and as in previous years, ahead. I am confi dent that this feeling and pensions replaced by fi ve-star the Record Offi ce will be running behind will continue to return every summer, exclusivity. Yet our holidays also remain the scenes tours between 11 a.m. and 1 and I intend to do nothing to prevent it a fascinating insight into how we choose p.m. Please ring 0118 9375132 or e-mail doing so. or chose to spend our precious leisure [email protected] to book a place. time. Whether you lie fl at out on the July and August are culturally embedded beach or make straight for cultural Broadmoor Revealed these days as the time when everyone centres says a lot about you. Senior Archivist Mark Stevens will be who can take a break, does so. But in giving a session on Victorian Broadmoor celebrating holidays inside this Echo, it So it is true for our ancestors. -
Ashbury Compton Longcot Fernham News September 2020
ASHBURY COMPTON LONGCOT FERNHAM NEWS SEPTEMBER 2020 Thought for the month Our thousand-year heritage-how do we pay for it? In addition to the version available at www.ashbury.org.uk, a few individual copies will be left in the Ashbury bus shelter (in a cardboard box) for anyone “offline” to collect. We are hoping normal service will be resumed for the October issue. 1 Thought for the month I don’t know about you, but recent months have given me time to do plenty of thinking about all sorts of subjects. One of the topics has been the number of things in everyday life that we take for granted. Just take a few minutes to compile a list of all that you expect to be part of your life. The first one may well be freedom – freedom to come and go as you please, to meet up with friends and family whenever and wherever you choose (and give them a hug!), see the doctor/dentist – the list is probably endless and that’s not to mention our wonderful NHS, school for the kids or going on holiday. There will be older people who remember a time when at least one holiday a year wasn’t the norm but trips abroad have become part of life and many people found the ban on overseas travel really hard – witness the recent mad rush to airports despite the possible risks to health and of subsequent quarantine. Then there are things like the freedom to attend church services, to take part in celebrations of all sorts and enjoy visits to the cinema, live theatre and concerts. -
Shrivenham Road B4508 Majors Road Longcot Road
1.22m RH Drawing No. Revision Track 0 104.4m Allotment Gardens Key White Lodge Ridgeway Path (um) Proposed 50mph Speed Limit in place of existing national speed limit Drain FARM CLOSE KINGS 1 10 3 4 2 Drain 11 103.6m 1 18 The Homestead Southdown Farm House Proposed 40mph Speed Limit Southdown Spring 6 Farm 11 Portelet 11 House Def KING'S LANE Barn 1 Owl River Ock 23 17 Cottages HUGHES CRESCENT The Hawthorns Outspan 24 1 22 2 Airedale House Rosealan Existing 40mph Speed Limit to remain Hedgerows Pond South 1.22m RH Gables 32 MALLINS LANE Merrifield King's Farm Ashbourne Primrose Cottage The Track Hunting 34 Pear Tree Cottage Box Rathen Barrington Westfields Cottage King's Farm Cottages 102.8m Track 1 Silver Howe King's 2 Birch Farmhouse House Crownfield The Beech House Eyrie Croft The Old Stable Stonefields A420 Danefield Def Quince Tree Longcot House House Willow House Cotts 1 Lay-by Inveresk 2 Roadside Farm The Bungalow Yewcote Appletree Down House The Orchard Cottage 1 2 Plomers Playground Penates Priory Cottage TCB Ambleside MALLINS LANE Neardown Pond Ash Tree Longcot House The Bungalow THE GREEN Holly Klyne Oak Cottage Villa Cottage Mallin House Cedar 10 1 Gables 1a DOWNLANDS KING'S LANE Green View 1 Path (um) Acorn Cottage 6 4 Hanbury Ho The Green Red Row 6 The The Dash 1 Pp Priory The MAJORS ROAD Brambles Pond Ardengable Honeysuckles Catscradle Enclosure 2 A420 The Wishing Well Springvale Longcot and Fernham PRIORY Manor Farm1 Cottages Water Distribution Cottage Radnor's MEAD C of E Primary School 2 Path (um) Court 1 4 LB 2 10 92 -
'Other Comments' from the Questionnaire & Consultations
HANNEY COMMUNITY PLAN 2011 APPENDIX 2 ‘Other Comments’ from the Questionnaire & Consultations Hanney Community Plan 2011 – Appendix 2 Hanney War Memorial Hall (Q2 -Q3) Hanney Community Shop & Post Office (Q7 -Q10) East Hanney pro vides a skip every two months. I sometimes The village hall needs reconfiguring / reorganising so that, Village shop run by volunteers, many over 70 years old. use this. I do not need one monthly. for example, all chairs are accessible at ground floor level. Increased hours may need more volunteers!! More doggy mess bins please . Village hall is good - make effort to increase usage . Who will o perate shop if extended hours. If more people We object to people using the playing fields as a dog toilet The function rooms are enough for village use but storage do not use it, it will not be open at all. How many of those and not cleaning up after them. Dogs not on a lead being a room would be an asset. posing the questions use the shop? nuisance to other people. Also people from other places bringing dogs in cars and letting them run wild over field. Allow the v illage hall to be used for Hanney School Keep post office at all costs. These people not fussy about cleaning up. We are functions, eg Plays, discos, free of charge. Rather than consider increasing the range of goods in the responsible dog owners. Use it or lose it - village hall . Community Shop, why not consider more focus with a limited range of goods - bread, milk, vegetables, meat (deal There are a number of people who park on the car park with Dews Meadows??), eggs, fresh cakes (ideally made in then allow their dogs to run loose on the playing field and the village by an enterprising young lady), fruit and whatever then leave without picking up any ‘droppings’. -
South Oxfordshire Zone Botley 5 ©P1ndar 4 Centre©P1ndart1 ©P1ndar
South_Oxon_Network_Map_South_Oxon_Network_Map 08/10/2014 10:08 Page 1 A 3 4 B4 0 20 A40 44 Oxford A4 B B 4 Botley Rd 4 4017 City 9 South Oxfordshire Zone Botley 5 ©P1ndar 4 Centre©P1ndarT1 ©P1ndar 2 C 4 o T2 w 1 le 4 y T3 A R A o 3 a 4 d Cowley Boundary Points Cumnor Unipart House Templars Ox for Travel beyond these points requires a cityzone or Square d Kenilworth Road Wa Rd tl SmartZone product. Dual zone products are available. ington Village Hall Henwood T3 R Garsington A420 Oxford d A34 Science Park Wootton Sandford-on-Thames C h 4 i 3 s A e Sugworth l h X13 Crescent H a il m d l p A40 X3 to oa R n 4 Radley T2 7 Stadhampton d X2 4 or B xf 35 X39 480 A409 O X1 X40 Berinsfield B 5 A 415 48 0 0 42 Marcham H A Abingdon ig Chalgrove A41 X34 h S 7 Burcot 97 114 T2 t Faringdon 9 X32 d Pyrton 00 7 oa 1 Abingd n R O 67 67A o x 480 B4 8 fo B 0 4 40 Clifton r P 67B 3 d a 45 B rk B A Culham R Sta Hampden o R n 114 T2 a T1 d ford R Rd d w D Dorchester d A4 rayton Rd Berwick Watlington 17 o Warborough 09 Shellingford B Sutton Long Salome 40 Drayton B B Courtenay Wittenham 4 20 67 d 67 Stanford in X1 8 4 oa Little 0 A R 67A The Vale A m Milton Wittenham 40 67A Milton 74 nha F 114 CERTAIN JOURNEYS er 67B a Park r Shillingford F i n 8 3 g Steventon ady 8 e d rove Ewelme 0 L n o A3 45 Fernham a G Benson B n X2 ing L R X2 ulk oa a 97 A RAF Baulking B d Grove Brightwell- 4 Benson ©P1ndar67 ©P1ndar 0 ©P1ndar MON-FRI PEAK 7 Milton Hill 4 67A 1 Didcot Cum-Sotwell Old AND SUNDAYS L Uffington o B 139 n Fa 67B North d 40 A Claypit Lane 4 eading Road d on w 1 -
Magazine 2012 EDITORIAL
Magazine 2012 EDITORIAL This past year has been no exception to the busyness and talent filled years of St Helens. When starting out with the challenge of creating this magazine, we wanted to capture the enthusiasm, vibrancy and passion of this year, including also our support for the “Because I am a girl” campaign, so focusing particularly on the “power” of the girl. Our vision for this year’s magazine was to incorporate every aspect of school life and combine these strands in a way that would reflect the character of the school, and the girls and staff that make it. We felt very strongly that every girl, who wished to be, should be included, in order that this would be a personal reflection, for everyone, of 2012. So we have included whole year pages, in order that all girls are featured and also have a say in how their year is represented. We have had not only the editorial team, but representatives from every form, designing the layouts and forming the content of these pages, so that there would be a genuine student feel to the magazine. We are conscious, also, of retaining the balance between reflecting the present moment in time and styles of today, yet also moulding something that will withstand the test of time. Despite work being temporarily lost, the school network shutting down, creating a larger more complex magazine in a much shorter time period, the team has risen to these challenges in true St Helens spirit. But none of this would have been possible without the smiles, support and guidance of Mr Drew - we thank you for everything you have helped and encouraged us to achieve. -
Western Vale Sub-Area
¯ 1:25,000 Local Plan 2031 Adopted Policies Map Western Vale Sub Area © Crown Copyright and database rights 2016 December 2016 Ordnance Survey 100019525 2031 Policies Saved Policies District Boundary Large Campus, Rural and Multi User Employment Sites (E8, E11, E12) Strategic Housing Allocations (CP4) Town Centre Policy Area (TR6, S4, S5, S6) Strategic Employment Sites (CP6, CP20) â â â Existing Cycleway Route (TR5) Land Safeguarded for Highways Improvements (CP21) â â â New or Improved Cycleway Route (TR5) Land Safeguarded for Reservoir (CP14) â â â New or Improved Footpath Route (TR5) Science Vale (CP15 / Ring Fence (CP5) ! Local Shopping Centre (TR6, S12) Conservation Area (CP39) A420 Service Area (TR10) Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty (CP44, NE6) Registered Park and Gardens (HE8) !!! ! !!! !! Local Nature Reserve (CP46) Lowland Vale (NE9) Site of Special Scientific Interest (CP46) North Vale Corallian Ridge (NE7) Special Area of Conservation (CP46) Area for Landscape Enhancement (NE11) ^ Local Wildlife Sites (CP46) Important Open Land (NE10) ## Ancient Woodland (CP46) Great Western Community Forest (NE12) Development Boundary (CP4) Grove Airfield (H5) Proposed Cemetery (CF3, CF4) ! ! ! ! Sub Areas Existing Urban Open Space (L2, L3) ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! Abingdon-on-Thames and Oxford Fringe (CP8) !!! ! ! d'Arcy Dalton Way (Long Distance Footpath) (L10) ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! South East Vale (CP15) !!! ! ! Ridgeway National Trail (L11) ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! Western Vale (CP20) ! ! ! !!! Thames Path National Trail -
Notice of Election Vale Parishes
NOTICE OF ELECTION Vale of White Horse District Council Election of Parish Councillors for the parishes listed below Number of Parish Number of Parish Parishes Councillors to be Parishes Councillors to be elected elected Abingdon-on-Thames: Abbey Ward 2 Hinton Waldrist 7 Abingdon-on-Thames: Caldecott Ward 4 Kennington 14 Abingdon-on-Thames: Dunmore Ward 4 Kingston Bagpuize with Southmoor 9 Abingdon-on-Thames: Fitzharris Ock Ward 2 Kingston Lisle 5 Abingdon-on-Thames: Fitzharris Wildmoor Ward 1 Letcombe Regis 7 Abingdon-on-Thames: Northcourt Ward 2 Little Coxwell 5 Abingdon-on-Thames: Peachcroft Ward 4 Lockinge 3 Appleford-on-Thames 5 Longcot 5 Appleton with Eaton 7 Longworth 7 Ardington 3 Marcham 10 Ashbury 6 Milton: Heights Ward 4 Blewbury 9 Milton: Village Ward 3 Bourton 5 North Hinksey 14 Buckland 6 Radley 11 Buscot 5 Shrivenham 11 Charney Bassett 5 South Hinksey: Hinksey Hill Ward 3 Childrey 5 South Hinksey: Village Ward 3 Chilton 8 Sparsholt 5 Coleshill 5 St Helen Without: Dry Sandford Ward 5 Cumnor: Cumnor Hill Ward 4 St Helen Without: Shippon Ward 5 Cumnor: Cumnor Village Ward 3 Stanford-in-the-Vale 10 Cumnor: Dean Court Ward 6 Steventon 9 Cumnor: Farmoor Ward 2 Sunningwell 7 Drayton 11 Sutton Courtenay 11 East Challow 7 Uffington 6 East Hanney 8 Upton 6 East Hendred 9 Wantage: Segsbury Ward 6 Fyfield and Tubney 6 Wantage: Wantage Charlton Ward 10 Great Coxwell 5 Watchfield 8 Great Faringdon 14 West Challow 5 Grove: Grove Brook Ward 5 West Hanney 5 Grove: Grove North Ward 11 West Hendred 5 Harwell: Harwell Oxford Campus Ward 2 Wootton 12 Harwell: Harwell Ward 9 1. -
OCC Legal Statement Changes Post
Changes to the Definitive Map & Statement of Public Rights of Way since 21st February 2006 Date Parish/Path Description Width Conditions & Remarks Number Limitations Abingdon Footpath 27 From North Avenue at Grid Reference SU 5029 9893 The Order confirmed Added by Modification Order 07/03/2006 100/27 between property numbers 13 and 15, 7.3.2006 provided a width confirmed 7.3.2006. south-south-westwards for approximately 133 metres 2.5 metres (min) along a strip of Common Land (Registration Number CL153), connecting with the western end of Mandeville Close at Grid Reference SU 5028 9882, to South Avenue at Grid Reference SU 5027 9880. Abingdon Footpath 28 From Colwell Drive at SU 4852 9717 leading generally 2m between SU 4852 1) Northern section added 19/02/2015 100/28 ENE for approx. 54m to SU 4857 9719, then NNW for 9717 and SU 4857 9719. by HA1980 S.38 Agreement approx. 51m and ESE to Willow Brook at SU 4856 9724.] 27.09.2001; came into effect 08.11.2004. 2) Western section added by HA1980 S.38 & 278 Agreement 15.08.2008; came into effect 23.12.2013. Abingdon Footpath 29 From the W end of Caldecott Chase at SU 49017 96473, 2 m. Added by HA1980 S.38 19/02/2015 100/29 leading N & W for approximately 22 m to Caldecott Road Agreement 05.06.2009; at SU 49007 96486. came into effect 06.01.2014. Abingdon Footpath 30 From Caldecott Chase at SU 49106 96470, leading N & E 2 m. Added by HA1980 S.38 19/02/2015 100/30 for approximately 26 m to SU 49109 96490.