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Checkendon

Village and civil parish in England


Village and civil parish in England

FieldValue
official_nameCheckendon
static_image_nameCheckendon SSPeter&Paul southeast.jpg
static_image_captionParish church of Saints Peter and Paul
coordinates
os_grid_referenceSU6683
label_positiontop
area_total_km29.85
population493
population_ref(2011 census)
civil_parishCheckendon
shire_districtSouth Oxfordshire
shire_countyOxfordshire
regionSouth East England
countryEngland
post_townReading
postcode_districtRG8
postcode_areaRG
dial_code01491
constituency_westminsterHenley and Thame

Checkendon is a village and civil parish about 6 mi west of Henley-on-Thames in South Oxfordshire and about 9 mi north west of Reading in Berkshire on a mid-height swathe of the Chilterns.

History

The parish records exist from the 7th century. The village is listed in the Domesday Book of 1086 as Cecadene (Old English for "Ceaca's hill or hill-pasture"). The parish covers about 1500 ha and lies between 150 m and 170 m above sea level. After World War II Checkendon hosted a National Assistance Board camp for Polish war refugees displaced from Middle East and Africa. The camp, located on the outskirts of Checkendon, was opened in 1948 and offered accommodation in Nissen huts. It was closed in the early 1960s.

Parish church

Main article: St Peter and St Paul, Checkendon

The Church of England parish church of Saint Peter and Saint Paul is a 12th-century Norman building. All but one of the windows were replaced later in the Middle Ages with Decorated Gothic and Perpendicular Gothic ones, and the Perpendicular Gothic west tower is also a later addition. The building is Grade I listed. The church has an early 13th-century wall painting of Christ in Majesty above a procession of Apostles. The murals were faithfully repainted when they were rediscovered, but more recently this has been considered over-restoration.

The bell tower has a ring of eight bells. Four were cast by Lester and Pack of the Whitechapel Bell Foundry in 1765, two were cast in 1879 by Mears and Stainbank also of the Whitechapel Bell Foundry and two more also cast by Mears and Stainbank were added in 1967. The turret clock is by Tucker of London, dated 1853. Saint Peter and Saint Paul parish is now a member of The Langtree Team Ministry: a Church of England benefice that also includes the parishes of Ipsden, North Stoke, Stoke Row, Whitchurch-on-Thames and Woodcote. The war artist Eric Kennington (1888–1960), who was churchwarden, is buried here.

Amenities

Checkendon has a Church of England primary school. Checkendon also has a village green with a playground. The village had two pubs: the 15th-century Four Horseshoes within the village and the 17th-century Highwayman to the south in the nearby hamlet of Exlade Street. The Four Horseshoes closed and in 2014 the landlord Brakspear was given permission to convert the pub into a post office. This never transpired, however, and in 2018 the pub company successfully applied to convert the property into residential accommodation. The property was eventually sold in January 2022.

There is also the Black Horse public house at Scots Common. Checkendon has an equestrian centre located on Lovegroves Lane. Checkendon Cricket Club plays in the Berkshire Cricket League First Division.

North of the village, in the 19th-century Wheelers Barn, is Philip Koomen Furniture, producing modern bespoke wooden furniture. The Hook End Recording Studios, where bands such as Marillion, the Cure and the Manic Street Preachers have made albums, are in the manor house at nearby Hook End. Near the edge of the village, on public display, is the statue Nuba Survival by John Buckley, created in 2001.

Public transport

No bus routes serve Checkendon: The nearest bus services are found in Woodcote.

References

Sources

References

  1. "Area: Checkendon CP (Parish): Parish Headcounts". [[Office for National Statistics]].
  2. ""Checkendon Village: A Brief History" at checkendon.org".
  3. Zosia Biegus. (2013). "Polish resettlement camps in England and Wales 1946-1969". PB Software.
  4. The camp was situated at {{Coord. 51.555556. N. 1.046944. W
  5. Stuff, Good. "Church of St Peter and St Paul, Checkendon, Oxfordshire".
  6. [http://www.odgreadingbranch.co.uk/towers/checkendon.html Oxford Diocesan Guild of Church Bell Ringers, Reading Branch] {{webarchive. link. (3 March 2016)
  7. "Saint Peter and Saint Paul, Checkendon", guide available at the church, published July 1978
  8. "The Langtree Team Ministry".
  9. [http://www.checkendon-school.co.uk/ Checkendon Church of England Primary School]{{dead link. (November 2016)
  10. "Geograph:: The Four Horseshoes, Checkendon © Colin Bates".
  11. [http://thehighwaymaninn-checkendon.co.uk/findus.html The Highwayman] {{webarchive. link. (12 March 2012)
  12. "Villagers oppose plans for new homes in grounds of former pub".
  13. "Black Horse, Reading, Berkshire, RG8 0TE - pub details".
  14. "Home".
  15. "Checkendon Cricket Club at checkendon.org".
  16. "Berkshire Cricket League Fixtures Table".
  17. [http://www.koomen.demon.co.uk/ Philip Koomen Furniture] {{webarchive. link. (4 March 2016)
  18. "Making The Cure: Disintegration - Classic Pop Magazine".
  19. "marillion.com | Racket Records Store".
  20. "Manic Street Preachers - Gold Against the Soul Album Reviews, Songs & More | AllMusic".
  21. (16 February 2008). "Checkendon Sculpture – The Nuba Embrace". anxioussilence.co.uk.
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