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Ashley Green

 
Wikipedia: Ashley Green
 

Coordinates: 51°44′N 0°35′W / 51.73°N 0.59°W / 51.73; -00.59

Ashley Green


St John the Evangelist Church, Ashley Green

Ashley Green is located in Buckinghamshire
Ashley Green

Ashley Green shown within Buckinghamshire
Population 924[1]
OS grid reference SP9705
Shire county Buckinghamshire
Region South East
Constituent country England
Sovereign state United Kingdom
Post town CHESHAM
Postcode district HP5
Police Thames Valley
Fire Buckinghamshire
Ambulance South Central
European Parliament South East England
List of places: UKEnglandBuckinghamshire

Ashley Green is a village and civil parish in Chiltern district in Buckinghamshire, England. It is on the border with Hertfordshire, half way between Chesham and Berkhamsted.

Originally a hamlet within Chesham parish, its name is Anglo-Saxon and means Ash Field, referring to the forest that once covered this part of the Chiltern Hills.

The Church

Ashley Green became a parish in 1876, when the church of St John the Evangelist was constructed in the village. Newspapers and coins were built into the pillar adjoining the pulpit. At that time, and until 1875, the village lay within the Parish of Great Chesham. (The Church has since returned to the team ministry of Great Chesham [1]). The Church was erected and endowed by Elizabeth Dorrien of Clifton Bristol, in memory of her sisters and dedicated on 31 December 1873. The land was given by Lord Chesham. The architect was G E Street and the contractor G Cooper of Aylesbury Buckinghamshire. The total cost of the building was over £2,000 with the endowment being a further £6,000.

The Church is constructed of local knapped black flints with Bath stone dressings. There is a bell cote with two bells and a boiler house. The church was originally being heated by "Hayden's hot air apparatus", now disused. The porch is on the Northern side of the building the front of which is an oak moulded archway, the timber being framed in red bricks - herringboned. The roof is of plain clay tiles. Details of the Church Windows: [2]

Some pews have a note on them which states:

"The seats in this Church are entirely free and unappropriated. The Church Wardens look to the Congregation for the support through the offertory of the usual Church expenses"

There are two bells , one of a diameter of one foot seven and a half inches (50 cm) and one of a diameter of one foot five inches (43 cm). They were cast by John Taylor and Co in 1874 and refurbished and re-hung in the early 1990s.

Population

Today Ashley Green is a popular home for commuters and executives who travel into nearby London every day.

References


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Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Ashley Green" Read more