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Marlow, Buckinghamshire

 
Wikipedia: Marlow, Buckinghamshire

Coordinates: 51°34′00″N 0°46′00″W / 51.566667°N 0.766667°W / 51.566667; -0.766667

Marlow
Marlow, Buckinghamshire.jpg
Overlooking the River Thames and Marlow
Marlow is located in Buckinghamshire
Marlow

 Marlow shown within Buckinghamshire
Population 14,004 [1]
OS grid reference SU855865
District Wycombe
Shire county Buckinghamshire
Region South East
Country England
Sovereign state United Kingdom
Post town MARLOW
Postcode district SL7
Dialling code 01628
Police Thames Valley
Fire Buckinghamshire
Ambulance South Central
EU Parliament South East England
UK Parliament Wycombe
List of places: UK • England • Buckinghamshire

Marlow (previously Great Marlow or Chipping Marlow) is a town and civil parish within Wycombe district in south Buckinghamshire, England. It is located on the River Thames, four miles south-south-west of High Wycombe, and four miles north west of Maidenhead.

Contents

History

A map of Marlow from 1945

The town name is Anglo Saxon in origin, and means 'land remaining after the draining of a pool'. The name is first attested as Merelafan in 1017. In the Domesday Book in 1086 it is recorded as Merlaue.[2]

"The manor of Marlow, which had belonged to the Earls of Mercia, was given by William the Conqueror, to his Queen Matilda. Henry the First, bestowed it on his natural son, Robert de Melhent, afterwards Earl of Gloucester, from whom it passed, with that title, to the Clares and Despencers, and from the latter, by female heirs, to the Beauchamps and Nevilles, Earls of Warwick. It continued in the crown from the time of Richard III's marriage with Anne Neville, until Queen Mary granted it to William Lord Paget, in whose family it continued more than a century; after which, it passed, by purchase, to Sir Humphrey Winch, in 1670; to Lord Falkland in 1686; to Sir James Etheridge in 1690; to Sir John Guise in 1718; and to Sir William Clayton in 1736. It is now the property of Sir William Clayton bart. a descendant of the last purchaser".[3]

Marlow has been an important town for many years[citation needed] This is because of its location on the River Thames, a major trade route from London. It has had its own market charter since 1324[citation needed] at the latest but ownership of the charter has been lost. There is a small market (amounting to two or three stalls, of "back of the van" style traders) held on Wednesdays and Saturday mornings. As early as 1299 the town had its own Member of Parliament.

Governance

The coat of arms of the former Marlow Borough Council

Marlow is a civil parish.

Geography

Marlow is adjoined by Marlow Bottom, a mile to the north. Little Marlow is nearby to the east along the A4155 Little Marlow Road and Bourne End is further along the same road. To the south across the Thames are Bisham (home of Bisham Abbey) and Cookham Dean, both in Berkshire,

Landmarks

The Marlow suspension bridge

There has been a bridge over the Thames at Marlow since the reign of King Edward III[citation needed] The current bridge is a suspension bridge, designed by William Tierney Clark in 1832, and was a prototype for the nearly identical but larger Széchenyi Chain Bridge across the River Danube in Budapest[citation needed]

Part of the Royal Military College, now based at Sandhurst in Surrey was once based at Remnantz in West Street. It was a mansion built in the early 18th century and served as the junior section of the college from 1801 until 1812. The weather vane on the building features a man firing a cannon, which possibly dates from that period. The building is now owned by the Bosley family.

Twinning

Marlow is twinned with

Transport

The A4155 road runs through Marlow town centre, with the A404 lying one mile to the east and the M40 motorway further to the north.

Marlow is served by a railway station which is the terminus of a single-track branch line from Maidenhead. The train service is known as the Marlow Donkey, which was the nickname given to the steam locomotives that once operated on the line.

Bus services are provided by Arriva and Carousel Buses to neighbouring towns including High Wycombe, Henley-on-Thames and Reading.

Education

All Saints Church from Marlow suspension bridge

There are several schools in Marlow.These include;

Sport

Statue of Sir Steve Redgrave in Higginson Park

Marlow Rowing Club, founded in 1871, is one of Britain's premier rowing clubs and has produced many Olympic oarsmen including Sir Steve Redgrave. The club is based by Marlow Bridge and exercises above and below the lock. Olympic lightweight mens double sculls gold-medallist at Beijing 2008 Zac Purchase is a former member of Marlow Rowing Club.

Marlow F.C. is the oldest football club in the town. Another local football club, Marlow United F.C., has been promoted to the Hellenic Football League Premier Division for the 2008/09 season.

Marlow Rugby Club play at Riverwoods Drive. They were founded in 1947 and run a range of senior, youth and mini rugby teams. The England Rugby team had their training base at Marlow RFC until the late nineties before they moved to nearby Bisham Abbey.

Local running club the Marlow Striders run an annual half marathon and duathlon.

There are also a cricket club, hockey club and tennis club in Pound Lane. The cricket club run a variety of sides, with the first team playing in the top division of the Morrant Thames Valley Cricket League.

Regatta

There are two regattas associated with Marlow; the Marlow International Regatta and the Marlow Town Regatta. Earliest records indicate the former took place annually on the River Thames in Marlow from 1855 until it transferred to the purpose built Dorney Lake, owned by Eton College, in 2003. Marlow still hosts a regular regatta, the Marlow Town Regatta, which occurs annually in June.

Marlow is the location of Marlow Lock, originating from the 14th century.

Notable people

Notable residents of the town have included Mary Shelley (who wrote Frankenstein there), Percy Bysshe Shelley, T. S. Eliot and Jerome K. Jerome.

Mary Shelley's house in Marlow
MARLOW is one of the pleasantest river centres I know of. It is a bustling, lively little town; not very picturesque on the whole, it is true, but there are many quaint nooks and corners to be found in it.

Dr William Battie, an eminent eighteenth century physician specialising in mental illness, built and lived in Court Garden House from 1758 until his death in 1776. Local folk-lore has it that he forgot to include a staircase to the first floor, so it had to be added later.[6] The expression "batty" is said to originate from his work with the mentally ill.[by whom?] In 1789 his daughter sold the house to Richard Davenport, High Sheriff of Buckinghamshire, who lived there for 10 years,[7] during which, Court Garden was described in Boydells ‘History of the River Thames’, published in 1793, as "a fine Georgian house standing on a gentle eminence, a lawn of some extent descending gradually from it to the river". In 1926 the estate was saved for the people of Marlow, largely due to the efforts of local resident and Crimean War veteran General George Higginson, after whom Higginson Park is named.[8]

Another local tradition has it that Jane Seymour lived at Seymour Court, about a mile north of Marlow, although it has never been proven.[9] Court Garden (before the house was built) was reputedly where Henry VIII courted her. A conference room at the Court Garden Leisure Complex is named in her honour.

More recently the town (actually Marlow Bottom) has been the home of quintuple Olympic gold medallist rower Steve Redgrave, the greatest Olympian Britain has produced in recent times. After striking gold at Sydney 2000, he became Britain's only athlete ever to have won Gold Medals at five consecutive Olympic Games. The Marlow Town Park, Higginson Park, features a bronze statue of Sir Steven looking across the river towards the location of the finishing line of the Marlow Town Regatta. There is also a road, Redgrave Place, adjoining from Newtown road to commemorate the Olympic medallist.

The pop singer Robbie Williams has recently bought a house on the river in Bisham. The Michelin star chef Heston Blumenthal, owner of The Fat Duck in Bray, Berkshire (voted Best Restaurant in the World in 2005) lives in Marlow. Television and radio presenter Paul Ross, brother of Jonathan Ross, also lives in Marlow, having moved there after filming Celebrity Fit Club at nearby Bisham Abbey.[10]

The former Japanese Formula One racing driver Takuma Sato was a Marlow resident some time ago. However Nelson Piquet Jnr does now reside in Marlow.

Peter Firth, who plays Sir Harry Pearce in BBC MI5 drama Spooks is a Marlow resident.

Gallery

References

  1. ^ neighbourhood Statistics 2001 Census
  2. ^ Mills, A D, Dictionary of English Place-Names, Oxford University Press (1991)
  3. ^ Great Marlow as described in "Magna Britannia", 1806
  4. ^ marlowtowntwinning.co.uk
  5. ^ The Marlovian, September 2009
  6. ^ The Marlow Society
  7. ^ UK & Ireland Genealogy/
  8. ^ Wycombe District Council
  9. ^ British History Online
  10. ^ LBC Radio

External links


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