Padworth | |
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Village and civil parish | |
The Kennet from Padworth Bridge. | |
Padworth church is next to Padworth College, once the manor of the parish. | |
Location within Berkshire | |
Area | 5.71 km2 (2.20 sq mi) |
Population | 919 (2011 census) [1] |
• Density | 161/km2 (420/sq mi) |
OS grid reference | SU619661 |
Civil parish |
|
Unitary authority | |
Ceremonial county | |
Region | |
Country | England |
Sovereign state | United Kingdom |
Post town | READING |
Postcode district | RG7 |
Dialling code | 0118 |
Police | Thames Valley |
Fire | Royal Berkshire |
Ambulance | South Central |
UK Parliament | |
Website | http://www.padworthparishcouncil.gov.uk/ |
Padworth is a dispersed settlement and civil parish in the English county of Berkshire, with the nearest town being Tadley. Padworth is in the unitary authority of West Berkshire, and its main settlement is at Aldermaston Wharf or Lower Padworth, where there is Aldermaston railway station. It has its southern boundary with Mortimer West End, Hampshire. The south of the parish is wooded towards its edges and the north of the parish is agricultural with a hotel beside the Kennet and Avon Canal. In the centre of the parish is a school, Padworth College, which is Georgian and a later incarnation of its manor house.
Padworth is built around the Norman church and the manor house, which from 1748 was the home of the Darby-Griffith family but in the 20th century was converted into Padworth College, an independent co-educational day and boarding school for students aged 13–19. The two halves of the parish can be separated thus:
A 'fishery in the Kenette' was among the possessions of the manor in 1586, and a fishery is mentioned as early as 1378. There is a Scheduled Monument fish-pond north of the former manor house. In 1870 its property was valued at £1,839 (equivalent to £222,258in 2023 in general expenditure) while its population was much smaller than today, 298, living in 59 houses. [2]
The whole parish is noted by the 1920s to be very well watered, and the north-eastern part draws on the natural advantage of a fairly flat landscape and water close to the surface from the River Kennet. The soil retains a strength from its inorganic layers being gravel and the subsoil impermeable clay. [3] The local economy in the 1920s centred on the chief crops: wheat, barley, oats and root vegetables. [3] These remain regular crops in Padworth alongside hay meadows for livestock, horses and donkeys.
Gravel extraction, education, agriculture, transport and tourism all provide jobs in Padworth itself. Aldermaston railway station at Aldermaston Wharf serves two of these sectors. Commuting to towns, industrial, logistic and trading business centres is the most common source of employment as at the 2011 census, with for instance Reading and Newbury about 20–30 minutes away whether by rail or by access to the M4 motorway. [1] Tadley, the nearest town, also provides a major source of retail, leisure and general high street service employment.
Grim's Ditch which runs from the mid-south of the area 0.5 miles (0.80 km) (into the southern forest of Ufton Nervet) is posited to be a 'sub-Roman' bank and ditch dug to defend Calleva Atrebatum (Silchester) when the Anglo-Saxons began to settle in the area. The place is recorded in such documents as the Assize Rolls and national Feet of Fines (on property sale) as Peadanwurthe (10th century); Peteorde (11th century); Pedewurth (12th century); Padewrd, Padworze (13th century); Padesworth, Pappeworth (14th century). [3]
A full descent of the manor, including its earliest known grant of 956 and during the Black Death, is provided by the fully referenced text of the Victoria County History for this parish, compiled here in 1923. [3] A secondary manor of Padworth, Hussey's, existed under John de la Husse in the 13th century, after whom it was named. In the Domesday Book, 2½ hides were farmed; which was held by William de Ow and a man named 'Gozelin'. In this instance, its Saxon era owner was recorded as 'Ælfstan', with its nominal dues going to Edward the Confessor.
The period of titled bearers owning either manor was when the main manor was held by the Tichborne baronets and the Forster baronets (1629–1681). The manor house is a Grade II* listed building. [4] It was built afresh in 1769 by the designs of John Hobcraft, and has plasterwork by Joseph Rose. Its entrance is a double-height space, and has a staircase with a wrought iron balustrade to three sides. It has a vaulted 3-bay arched arcade on each floor to one side with Doric columns on the ground floor and columns with Adamesque capitals on the floor above. [4]
Beenham and Padworth Inclosures Act 1811 | |
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Act of Parliament | |
Long title | An Act for inclosing several Open and Common Fields, Meadows, Pastures; and other Commonable and Waste Lands in the several Parishes of Beenham and Padworth, in Berks. |
Citation | 51 Geo. 3. c. cxlii |
Dates | |
Royal assent | 31 May 1811 |
Text of statute as originally enacted |
Place names that were here in the 17th century are: Ball's Pidle, Yew Pidle, Pondes Close, Little and Great Burfeildes, Culmers Wood and Bartholomew's, Brickworth Coppice. [3] The inclosure of the common land at Padworth was by its local act of Parliament, the Beenham and Padworth Inclosures Act 1811 (51 Geo. 3. c. cxlii), under the established limited compensatory procedures of the time. [3]
The Church of England parish church of St John the Baptist, is aisleless and built about 1130 with two three-light Tudor styled ornately carved windows, and with its vestry and porch having been added in 1890. A smaller Tudor window, with two lights on the south-east square tower façade, above the font, which does not have the entrance. The roof of the nave was largely replaced in the 19th century. [3] Rare features include the Norman chancel arch and north and south doorways, the semi-domed apse and the 18th-century monuments. [5] It is Grade I listed building. [6]
The church's advowson was from Pamber Priory in 1291 when various tithes and donations provided the Prior's pension. [3] Upon the Dissolution of the Monasteries, the advowson was exercised by the Crown until the 19th century. A parish rentcharge, totalling £250 in 1848, was received by the rector, the parishioners having commutated the tithes. The parish glebe stood at 28 acres (0.11 km2). [7] By 1923 the rector's patron was the Lord Chancellor. [3] The parish is united as part of the benefice of Stratfield Mortimer, Mortimer West End and Padworth which has four churches and two church schools.
Land use statistics are not available for this civil parish. These figures under the census heading 'Physical Environment' can be obtained for the broader ward of 'Stratfield Mortimer' from the data pages of the last census from the 2005 Office for National Statistics survey. [1]
Output area | Homes owned outright | Owned with a loan | Socially rented | Privately rented | Other | Usual residents | km² |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Civil parish | 88 | 130 | 68 | 40 | 8 | 919 | 5.71 |
Tadley is a town and civil parish in the Basingstoke and Deane district of Hampshire, England, 5.5 miles (8.9 km) north of Basingstoke and 11 miles (17 km) south west of Reading.
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Aldermaston Lock is a lock on the Kennet and Avon Canal, at Aldermaston Wharf in the English county of Berkshire. It stands at the junction of the civil parishes of Padworth, Beenham and Aldermaston.
Padworth Lock is a lock on the Kennet and Avon Canal, at Aldermaston Wharf in the civil parish of Padworth in the English county of Berkshire.
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