Sonning Common

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Sonning Common
Oxfordshire
Chalkhouse Green - geograph.org.uk - 9195.jpg
Homes at Chalkhouse Green, Sonning Common
Location
Grid reference: SU709804
Location: 51°31’8"N, 0°58’42"W
Data
Population: 3,784  (2011)
Post town: Reading
Postcode: RG4
Dialling code: 0118
Local Government
Council: South Oxfordshire
Parliamentary
constituency:
Henley
Website: sonningcommonparish.co.uk

Sonning Common is a village in a relatively flat, former common land part of the Chiltern Hills in south-eastern Oxfordshire, three and a half miles west of Henley-on-Thames and two and a half miles north of Reading, across the Thames in Berkshire.

History

During the Civil War the village itself did not exist: being an area of open land east of the route between Reading – occupied alternately by the Parliamentarians and Royalists – and Oxford, which was the King's headquarters.[1] In 1647 after the end of the First Civil War, the King was imprisoned at nearby Caversham House in Caversham, but however he was allowed out under escort to play bowls at an inn (latterly called "The King Charles Head") near Cane End, approximately one mile west of Sonning Common.[2] His route between these places would have brought him close to the present-day village.

The site of the village has been called "Sonning Common" since at least the 1640s, long before any fixed settlement existed. The name is literal, at the time gradually losing its earlier status of common grazing land belonging to Sonning-on-Thames. (Both places have intermittently been spelt 'Sunning' as seen on maps such as that of the Bath Road from 1786, indicating contemporary pronunciation.)

Churches

  • Church of England: Christ the King[3]
  • Evangelical: Sonning Common Free Church
  • Roman Catholic: St Michael's

About the village

Widmore Pond
Hay meadow and woodland

Sonning Common has a Herb Farm (with a Saxon layout maze), Thames Valley Gymnastics Club and a health centre.[4]

The parish council helps to maintain a pond with a duck-house in the middle called "Duckingham Palace", three children's playgrounds and a Millennium Green

Wood Lane has a health centre, village hall, and most shops.

There are three pubs: The Bird In Hand', *The Butchers Arms and The Hare and Hounds.

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("Wikimedia Commons" has material
about Sonning Common)

References