Difference between revisions of "Buntingford"

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'''Buntingford''' is a small market town in [[Hertfordshire]].  It stands on the [[River Rib]] and on the Roman road [[Ermine Street]]; now the A10.
 
'''Buntingford''' is a small market town in [[Hertfordshire]].  It stands on the [[River Rib]] and on the Roman road [[Ermine Street]]; now the A10.
  
As a result of its location, Buntingford grew mainly as a staging post with many coaching inns and has an 18th century one cell prison known as 'The Cage' by the ford at the end of Church Street.
+
As a result of its location, Buntingford grew mainly as a staging post with many coaching inns and has an 18th-century one cell prison known as 'The Cage' by the ford at the end of Church Street.
  
 
The [[Greenwich Meridian]] passes to the east of Buntingford.
 
The [[Greenwich Meridian]] passes to the east of Buntingford.

Latest revision as of 18:41, 27 January 2016

Buntingford
Hertfordshire
High Street, Buntingford.jpg
Buntingford
Location
Grid reference: TL363292
Location: 51°56’40"N, 0°-0’58"W
Data
Population: 4,820  (2001)
Post town: Buntingford
Postcode: SG9
Dialling code: 01763
Local Government
Council: East Hertfordshire
Parliamentary
constituency:
North East Hertfordshire

Buntingford is a small market town in Hertfordshire. It stands on the River Rib and on the Roman road Ermine Street; now the A10.

As a result of its location, Buntingford grew mainly as a staging post with many coaching inns and has an 18th-century one cell prison known as 'The Cage' by the ford at the end of Church Street.

The Greenwich Meridian passes to the east of Buntingford.

The town has a large number of Georgian and mediæval buildings, such as Buntingford almshouses, Buntingford Manor House and the Red House.

Buntingford was a coaching stop on what was the main route between London and Cambridge, now the A10. Due to its desirability as a commuter town in recent years, the town has grown considerably in the past few decades, the most noticeable recent addition being the 'Bovis Estate' (circa 1990), informally named after the housing firm that constructed there. The town also has a Sainsburys depot.

The name of the town is believed to originate from the name of Saxon chieftain or landloewner named Bunta, who is otherwise unknown.

Churches

Buntingford was traditionally located within the parish of Layston - St Bartholemew's Church (Layston) is now derelict and lies about a half a mile to the north-east of the town. St Peter's Church, formerly a chapel of ease, is the Anglican church in Buntingford and is an almost unique brick building from the age of the 17th-century Puritans.

About the village

Market day is Monday, and early closing Wednesday. The Buntingford Carnival is held every other year. There is also a classic car event held in the town each year, usually in the early autumn

The town has an annual firework display at The Bury.

Buntingford railway station, opened in 1863, was closed in 1964[1] under the Beeching cuts. This was located as the terminus for the Buntingford Branch Line. Recently it has been redeveloped into housing.

Inns

Apparently Queen Elizabeth I stayed at Buntingford in a building now called the Bell House Gallery, on a coach journey to Cambridge. Just up the High Street, The Angel Inn (Now a Dental surgery) was a staging post catering for coaches travelling from London to Cambridge.

Buntingford

The town has a number of public houses ('pubs') - The Brambles (formerly The Chequers,) The Fox and Duck, The Black Bull, The Crown and The Jolly Sailors.

Outside links

References

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("Wikimedia Commons" has material
about Buntingford)