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Uffington, Oxfordshire

 
Wikipedia: Uffington, Oxfordshire

Coordinates: 51°37′N 1°34′W / 51.61°N 1.56°W / 51.61; -1.56

Uffington

Uffington Church c.jpg
St. Mary's parish church, Uffington

Uffington is located in Oxfordshire
Uffington

Red pog.svg Uffington shown within Oxfordshire
OS grid reference SU305892
Parish Uffington
District Vale of White Horse
Shire county Oxfordshire
Region South East
Constituent country England
Sovereign state United Kingdom
Post town Swindon
Postcode district SN7
Dialling code 01367
Police Thames Valley
Fire Oxfordshire
Ambulance South Central
European Parliament South East England
UK Parliament Wantage
List of places: UK • England • Oxfordshire

Uffington is a village and civil parish in Oxfordshire, about 10 miles (16 km) east of Swindon. Uffington is most commonly known as the location of the Uffington White Horse hill figure. It was transferred from Berkshire to Oxfordshire in 1974.

Contents

Location and character

The village is one of chalk-block houses and thatch, nestling under the White Horse Hills. The parish church of St Mary is known as The Cathedral of the Vale and has the rare feature of a hexagonal tower. The village is in the middle of the Vale of the White Horse, otherwise known as the Ock Valley. Like most parish in the Vale, Uffington parish is long and thin, orientated north-south, so that it encompasses both low-lying arable land as well grazing land on the Berkshire Downs. The River Ock forms most of its northern boundary. The western boundary runs up across Dragon Hill, Whitehorse Hill, Uffington Down and the gallops on Woolstone Down before turning north again as the eastern border across Kingston Warren Down and Ram's Hill, almost to Fawler and partially along the Stutfield Brook. The parish once included Woolstone.

Local government

Uffington lies within the district of the Vale of White Horse, but also has its own parish council. The village has been twinned with Le Chevain in France since 1991.

Transport

The village lies just south of the Great Western Main Line railway, and formerly had a station on this line. It is located around 3 miles west of the A417 road.

White Horse and other prehistoric features

See main articles: Uffington White Horse, Dragon Hill, Uffington Castle and The Ridgeway

One of the United Kingdom's best-known archaeological sites, the 'White Horse' is a 374 feet (110 m) long Bronze Age hill figure, cut out of the turf on White Horse Hill on the Berkshire Downs, just above the village of Woolstone. It is generally thought to have been a religious totem of some kind, associated with the people who later became known as the Atrebates. In this capacity, it was probably associated with the adjoining 'Dragon Hill', a small natural hillock with an artificially flattened top. Above these stands Uffington Castle, an Iron Age hill fort (overlying a Bronze Age predecessor) where some of this tribe may have lived. There are also a number of associated burial mounds and there are others further south. Just to the south of the hill fort, the ancient trackway thought to be 'Britain's oldest road', and known as the Ridgeway, runs through the parish. Ram's Hill appears to have been a Bronze Age cattle ranching and trading centre.

History

Despite popular Victorian theories, Uffington was not the location of the Battle of Ashdown in 871 and the White Horse was not created as a memorial by King Alfred's men. The place does, however, appear in mid-10th century boundary charters. Abingdon Abbey owned the manor throughout the Middle Ages and King Edward I visited their grange there. By the 17th century, the area was dominated by the Earls of Craven from Ashdown House and the church suffered during the Civil War because of their Royalist sympathies.

Famous residents

The Old School, now the Thomas Hughes Museum
  • Sir John Betjeman lived in the village during the 1930s.
  • Thomas Hughes (1822-1896), author of Tom Brown's Schooldays, was born in the village. The tiny village school mentioned in the book, still exists, now as a museum dedicated to Thomas Hughes. The large village hall is named the Thomas Hughes Memorial Hall.

Amenities

Uffington United Football Club[1] plays in North Berks Football League Division Four.[2] Uffington Cricket Club[3] plays in Oxfordshire Cricket Association Division Four.[4] Uffington has also a badminton club and a tennis club.[5]

External links

References


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Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Uffington, Oxfordshire" Read more