Hampstead Norreys

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Hampstead Norreys
Berkshire

Forge Hill, Hampstead Norreys
Location
Grid reference: SU528763
Location: 51°29’2"N, 1°14’25"W
Data
Population: 748  (2001)
Post town: Newbury
Postcode: RG18
Dialling code: 01635
Local Government
Council: West Berkshire
Parliamentary
constituency:
Newbury

Hampstead Norreys (alternatively spelt Hampstead Norris) is a village in Berkshire, standing on the banks of the River Pang, north of Newbury.

As well as Hampstead Norreys itself, the parish includes the hamlets of Bothampstead, Eling and Wyld Court. The last named is home to The Living Rainforest, an indoor glass house tropical rainforest with plants, animals and butterflies. It is an ecological centre, an educational centre and a visitor attraction. Hampstead Norreys was awarded Berkshire's best kept village in 1979.

Hampstead Norreys has a large recreational field, Dean Meadow, that is used for fetes, parties and mainly the village football and cricket teams. Along with these the School uses the field for activities.

Parish Church

The parish church is St Mary the Virgin, a fine Norman church built in the days when the village supported a Norman castle.

Historic buildings

Parish Church

The Village was recorded in the Domesday Book as Hanstede.[1]

The village is noted for its Norman parish church and the remains of a Norman motte-and-bailey Hampstead Norris Castle|castle in the nearby woods.

RAF Hampstead Norris

The village was also close to the wartime airfield of RAF Hampstead Norris, an RAF Bomber Command Operational Training Unit (OTU) station. The airfield was the base for a small number of squadrons of Wellington bombers. The site was bombed on 16 September 1940 by the Luftwaffe in the Battle of Britain. In 1945, the station was used by squadrons of Mosquito fighter bombers and became an ammunition storage depot as part of the Bramley Central Ammunition Depot near Basingstoke after its closure in 1946. Little of the wartime station now remains. There are four remaining pillboxes around where the airfield was and a few air raid shelters in the woods. Part of the bomb storage site remains also.

The site still maintains a modern link with aviation with a farm strip used by a Tiger Moth biplane. A light beacon is also situated on the edge of an old airfield peri track as the site is under the flightpath of aircraft flying to and from Heathrow airport. An important VOR beacon is also located here. It is now known as Haw Farm, part of the Yattendon Estate.

Sport and leisure

The 'Dean Field' is the local park in Hampstead Norreys. It contains a football and cricket pitch and a children's play area. On the north side of the field is Hampstead Norreys Village Hall. It is considerably larger than the village halls in surrounding villages. On the south side is Eling estate, a large wooded area (consisting of Park Wood, Westbrook Copse, Down Wood and Elingpark Copse) backed by a path which is what remains of the old Didcot, Newbury and Southampton Railway running between Hermitage and Compton, the two nearest villages.

Outside links

("Wikimedia Commons" has material
about Hampstead Norreys)

References