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Beaconsfield Data Recovery


Beaconsfield
Beaconsfield is located in Buckinghamshire
Beaconsfield

 Beaconsfield shown within Buckinghamshire
Population 10,679 [1]
OS grid reference SU945900
District South Bucks
Shire county Buckinghamshire
Region South East
Country England
Sovereign state United Kingdom
Post town Beaconsfield
Postcode district HP9
Dialling code 01494
Police Thames Valley
Fire Buckinghamshire
Ambulance South Central
EU Parliament South East England
UK Parliament Beaconsfield
List of places: UKʉۢ Englandʉۢ Buckinghamshire

Beaconsfield

Beaconsfield (pronounced /ˈbÉ›kÉ™nzfiË?ld/ ( listen)) is a market town and civil parish operating as a town council within South Bucks district in Buckinghamshire, England. It lies 25 miles (40 km) northwest of London, and 17 miles (27 km) south-east of the county town of Aylesbury. Nearby towns include Amersham to the north northeast and High Wycombe to the west.

The town sits in the Chiltern Hills Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty and is part of the London commuter belt, thus the average cost of housing in the town is high. It is in the South Bucks local government district, which was known as the Beaconsfield district from 1974 to 1980.

History and description

The parish is mainly given over arable land though some beech forest remains from that planted to supply the furniture industry of High Wycombe.

The first written reference to Beaconsfield dates from 1185 where it is spelt Bekenesfeld, although this is mistakenly thought to mean the ¨field by the beacon¨ actually is derived from "clearing in the beeches" (beech trees). The town's icon is an oak tree. Although the name has been spelt with an ´A´ during modern times the name is pronounced [bekÉ™nzfiË?ld].

The parish church at the crossroads of Old Beaconsfield is dedicated to St Mary, it was rebuilt of flint and bath stone by the Victorians in 1869. The United Reformed Church in Beaconsfield can trace its roots of non-conformist worship in the town back to 1704.[2] Old Beaconsfield has a number of old coaching inns along a wide street of red brick houses and small shops. It was the first (coach) stopping point on the road between London and Oxford.

An annual fair is traditionally held on 10 May. Its charter, dating from 1269[citation needed],originally allowed for a yearly market for the trading of goods and livestock, but it has now developed into a funfair, erected for one day only on the main roads of the "Old Town". In recent years some residents have opposed the fair as a hindrance to the Old Town, and have called for it to be scrapped[citation needed] even though the fair has been going for over 735 years.

In the Victorian era the town was the home constituency of Benjamin Disraeli, Prime Minister of the United Kingdom in 1868 and then again from 1874 until 1880 (in fact his home, Hughenden Manor is in the nearby town of High Wycombe). In 1876 he was made the 1st Earl of Beaconsfield by Queen Victoria with whom he was very popular. It was due to this, that Beaconsfield became a popular road name in industrial cities across the country in the late Victorian era.

It is the burial place of the author G. K. Chesterton, Edmund Burke and the poet Edmund Waller, for whom a tall stone obelisk was erected over the tomb chest in St Mary and All Saints churchyard.[3]

St Mary and All Saints Church, Beaconsfield and the tomb of Edmund Waller.

The Waller family originated at Groombridge Place, Kent, and later lived at Coleshill, Hertfordshire. In 1624, the family acquired Wilton Manor and Hall Barn in Beaconsfield.[4] "The Wallers, who came from Speldhurst, Kent," says the Victoria County history of Buckinghamshire, "were settled at Beaconsfield as early as the 14th century." (A branch of this family was seated later at Newport Pagnell, Buckingham, from whence they removed in the 17th century to Virginia, where they became prominent in early Virginia affairs. See Benjamin Waller, Littleton Waller Tazewell and Edwin Waller.)[5]

Dominic Grieve is the Member of Parliament for Beaconsfield, first elected in 1997, and now the shadow Attorney-General. Tony Blair, former Prime Minister of the United Kingdom famously contested the seat in a by-election in 1982 and lost. He was defeated by Tim Smith, who stood down in disgrace fifteen years later after admitting that he had taken Cash for Questions from Mohammed Al-Fayed.

Today the town is very prosperous and quite picturesque. It is the home of Bekonscot model village, which was the first model village in the world; and (the old) Beaconsfield Film Studio becoming the National Film and Television School, where many film directors and technicians have learned their craft. It is the birthplace of Terry Pratchett, author of the Discworld series of fantasy novels. Some scenes in Brief Encounter, a classic film about a woman in a dull middle class marriage who almost undertakes an affair, were filmed in the town. The exterior of the Royal Saracens Head Inn can be seen in the James Bond film Thunderball, and the interior shots for the pub in Hot Fuzz were filmed in the Royal Standard pub. Many other parts of the town have been used in films due to the old film studio and nearby Pinewood Studios. More recently it has often been used as a "location" for the TV murder mystery series, Midsomer Murders.

The New Town was built 1 mile further to the north, when the railway arrived, at the turn of the 20th century. The railway station is on the Chiltern Line out of Marylebone towards High Wycombe it then branches to Aylesbury, and Birmingham Snow Hill. Old Beaconsfield which grew up on the Oxford Road in part to serve the coach traffic, is mirrored by New Beaconsfield which has grown up round the station.

Beaconsfield is also home to the Chiltern Shakespeare Company, which annually holds amateur performances of Shakespeare plays.

Transport

The town is very well served by road and rail. The M40 runs very close to the town (Beaconsfield is M40 Junction 2) and is 4 lanes wide in either direction from the M40/M25 Junction to M40 Junction 3. The motorway leads to London towards the east and Oxford and Birmingham to west. Junction 2 is home to the Beaconsfield motorway services. Local roads include the A355 which connects Amersham and Slough via Beaconsfield, although this has very heavy traffic in peak times. The A40 parallels the M40 from London to Oxford and for years was the main road between the two cities. With the building of the M40 in the 60s and 70s the road has been relieved, but it still gets heavily congested. The B474 connects the town to Hazlemere.

Rail links generally run close to the motorway. Beaconsfield railway station sees services to Birmingham Snow Hill and Moor Street, and London Marylebone. Services are provided by Chiltern Railways who provide regular fast and slow services, the faster ones being able to reach London in around twenty five minutes. Beaconsfield is also a popular park and ride station for commuters who drive towards the capital along the M40 and M4 corridors who don't want to take their cars into London's congestion charge and parking problems.

Twin towns

France Langres, France, since 1995

Education

Alfriston School is a special school for girls, with moderate learning difficulties, between the ages of 11 and 18.

Beaconsfield High School[6] is a high performing grammar school for girls between the ages of 11 and 18.

The Beaconsfield School[7] has an average performance rating and its sixth form students join together with Beaconsfield High to increase the courses available.

Davenies School[8] is a private preparatory day school for boys between ages 4 and 13.[9]

High March School[10] is a private preparatory day school for girls between the ages of 3 and 12 and boys between the ages of 3 and 5.[11]

St Mary & All Saints Church of England Primary School is a Key stage 1 & 2 mixed sex school with excellent Ofsted reports

Notable residents

Enid Blyton, writer, who lived for most of her life in Green Hedges - a large house that has since been demolished but there is an Enid Blyton Room nearby at The Red Lion pub in Knotty Green, where there is a gallery of pictures and a library of books, donated by The Enid Blyton Society

Edmund Burke, statesman

G. K. Chesterton, writer

Beverley Craven, singer

Benjamin Disraeli, prime minister 1868, 1874-1880

Robert Frost, poet

Barry Gibb, Bee Gees singer[12]

Dame Wendy Hiller, actress

David Jackman, poet

Angelina Jolie, actress

Albert Ernest Kitson, geologist and naturalist

Anne Main, politician

Airey Neave, politician

Martin O'Connor, accordionist

Sir Gore Ouseley, ambassador, orientalist, high sherriff of Buckinghamshire

Swaraj Paul, business magnate and philanthropist

Sir Terry Pratchett, writer

Piers Paul Read, novelist and non-fiction, author of Alive: The Story of the Andes Survivors

Alison Uttley, writer

Edmund Waller, poet

Malcolm Young, guitarist


 

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