Ashton Keynes

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Ashton Keynes
Ashton Keynes.jpg
The Thames entering the village boundaries
The River Thames, Ashton Keynes - geograph.org.uk - 324593.jpg
Buildings and the Thames along the main road through the village (High Road)
Ashton Keynes is located in Wiltshire
Ashton Keynes
Ashton Keynes
 Ashton Keynes shown within Wiltshire
Population 1,400 (in 2011)[1]
OS grid reference SU046940
Unitary authority Wiltshire
Ceremonial county Wiltshire
Region South West
Country England
Sovereign state United Kingdom
Post town SWINDON
Postcode district SN6
Dialling code 01285
Police Wiltshire
Fire Wiltshire
Ambulance South Western
EU Parliament South West England
UK Parliament North Wiltshire
Website Parish Council
List of places
UK
England
Wiltshire

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Ashton Keynes is a village and civil parish in north Wiltshire, England which borders with Gloucestershire. The village is about 5 miles (8 km) south of Cirencester and 3.5 miles (5.6 km) west of Cricklade. At the 2011 census the population of the parish was 1,400.[1] The village lies within the Cotswold Water Park and is the only settlement substantially on both sides of the River Thames, which has many channels here, centred 6.5 miles (10 km) from its source at Thames Head.

The parish includes the hamlet of North End.

History

The Horse and Jockey Pub (now closed)

The village was known as Aesctun in 800 AD, appeared in the Domesday book within Cricklade hundred as Essitone in 1086, and changed its name ten times in the next 800 years until its present name was recorded.

A large Romano-British settlement was on the edge of the present-day village; it was excavated in the late 1980s in advance of extensive gravel extraction. Ashton Keynes Castle (or Hall's Close) was a 12th-century ringwork, just north of the village.

Ashton House was built in the 18th century and is Grade II listed.[2]

In 1851 in the 35 homes in Gosditch were living a tailor, saddler, tallow chandler, stonemason, many glove makers and a cobbler. The Horse and Jockey (now closed) was a "scrumpy house", selling cider made from the apples from the orchards in the village. This was the social centre of the community where dominoes were laid and gossip exchanged, and the hard times debated.

Religious sites

The Church of England parish church of the Holy Cross is Grade I listed.[3] The building was begun in the 12th century and was restored in 1876-7 by William Butterfield.

A Congregational chapel (Bethesda Chapel) was built in 1838 and closed in 1970.[4] A Primitive Methodist chapel was opened in 1840 and closed in the early 1930s.[5]

Amenities

The local school is Ashton Keynes Church of England School, a voluntary controlled school.[6] Parts of the school building date back to 1870.[7]

Ashton Keynes is twinned with the French village of Grandchamps-des-Fontaines. There is a Twinning Association in the village, which organises regular exchange trips and other activities between the village communities.

The village has many clubs and societies, most centred on the village hall or with links to the village church. Sports clubs include the cricket, tennis, badminton and football clubs. Musical groups include two choirs, an orchestra and a jazz band. There is also a Women's Institute and a Golden Years Club.

Residents in the village have taken on two businesses (both on the High Road) as community businesses when they faced closure. The one remaining pub, the White Hart Inn, is collectively owned and run by several village residents who took on the licence in 2011. In 2012, the White Hart Inn was awarded 'Best Community Pub' for the South West region in the Great British Pub Awards.[8] The local village shop has also been community owned and run since December 2011, located in a newly built annexe of the village hall.[9]

Landmarks

River Thames

Forming many channels through the village and joined by the Swill Brook and smaller tributaries, the Thames at Ashton Keynes has frontage to a large minority of the village's properties.

"Sweet Thames run softly, til I end my song"[10] – this is perhaps here more appropriately a command than creating a romantic setting – Ashton Keynes has always suffered from periodic flooding, and the Thames that flows along beside High Road and crosses under Gosditch by the little bridge was prone to washing down to the School and beyond on its near banks.

Villagers expected to be flooded every winter although the water could be controlled and directed to some extent by opening and closing 'hatches' on the river. People talked of keeping their back door and front door open so the water flowed straight through, and of a foot of water standing indoors for weeks. As late as 1924 there were 23 children absent from school in June when flooding in the Derry just south of the Horse and Jockey public house left them marooned in their bedrooms after a night of storms.

Ditches all round the village helped to channel the water, but as these were also used as a place to tip household rubbish and many privies were emptied into them, particularly after the demise of the night soil industry, there was regularly a serious public health problem from rats and water contamination in Gosditch.

Cotswold Community

The Cotswold Community, a 250 acres (100 ha) site west of Ashton Keynes towards Somerford Keynes, was a Bruderhof religious community in the 1930s.[11] Later it was the site of the Cotswold School, a therapeutic community for children from complex backgrounds, operated by the National Children's Home charity which became Action for Children. The school closed in 2012[12] and the charity left the site in 2013, leading to a proposal for housing development.[13]

References

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  8. http://www.greatbritishpubawards.co.uk/page/2012_winners.html
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  10. Edmund Spenser op.LIII (53) Prothalamion, 1596, the concluding line of Spenser's stanzas repeated 10 times
    :(a much-lauded and widely distributed Elizabethan nuptial poem)
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External links

Media related to Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found. at Wikimedia Commons