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'''Little Barford''' is a village in [[Bedfordshire]], on the county boundary with [[Huntingdonshire]], across which lies the town of [[St Neots]]. The village itself is very small and is close to the east bank of the [[Great Ouse]].<ref>{{brithist|62631|''A History of the County of Bedford'', 'Parishes: Little Barford'}} - Volume 2 (1908)</ref>
'''Little Barford''' is a village in [[Bedfordshire]], on the county boundary with [[Huntingdonshire]], across which lies the town of [[St Neots]]. The village itself is very small and is close to the east bank of the [[Great Ouse]].<ref>{{brithist|62631|''A History of the County of Bedford'', 'Parishes: Little Barford'}} - Volume 2 (1908)</ref>


The village of [[Great Barford]] is upstream on thr river but far for being adjacent as the names would suggest is 7 miles away with much in between.
The village of [[Great Barford]] is upstream on the river but far for being adjacent as the names would suggest is 7 miles away with much in between.  Both belong to the [[Barford Hundred]].


==History==
==History==

Revision as of 21:16, 17 April 2014

Little Barford
Bedfordshire

St Denys, Little Barford
Location
Grid reference: TL181570
Location: 52°11’56"N, 0°16’23"W
Data
Post town: St Neots
Postcode: PE19
Dialling code: 01480
Local Government
Council: Bedford
Parliamentary
constituency:
North East Bedfordshire

Little Barford is a village in Bedfordshire, on the county boundary with Huntingdonshire, across which lies the town of St Neots. The village itself is very small and is close to the east bank of the Great Ouse.[1]

The village of Great Barford is upstream on the river but far for being adjacent as the names would suggest is 7 miles away with much in between. Both belong to the Barford Hundred.

History

The manor of Barford was held by the de Leyham family from about 1194, and then passed by inheritance into the de la Dale family in about 1316:[2] the Dales owned Barford for two centuries, after which it passed by inheritance to the Fettiplace family, and subsequently to the Brownes.

The village contains a small church, a manor house, several cottages and a farmhouse, while almost a kilometre away to the north is Little Barford Power Station feeding the National Grid.

The parish church is dedicated to Saint Denys.

Nicholas Rowe, the dramatic poet, was born in "Rowe's Cottage" 1674.

Outside links

("Wikimedia Commons" has material
about Little Barford)

References

  1. A History of the County of Bedford, 'Parishes: Little Barford' - Volume 2 (1908)
  2. Ball. F. Elrington: The Judges in Ireland 1221-1921 John Murray London 1926