Slapton, Buckinghamshire

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Slapton
Buckinghamshire
Slapton - Holy Cross Church 02.jpg
Holy Cross Church in Slapton
Location
Grid reference: SP934207
Location: 51°52’40"N, 0°38’39"W
Data
Population: 529  (2011)
Post town: Leighton Buzzard
Postcode: LU7
Dialling code: 01525
Local Government
Council: Buckinghamshire
Parliamentary
constituency:
Aylesbury

Slapton is a village in Buckinghamshire, found in the east of the county between the Grand Union Canal and the boundary with Bedfordshire, about three miles south of Leighton Buzzard and three miles west of Edlesborough.

Towards the edge of the parish near Horton in Ivinghoe is the hamlet of Horton Wharf. The village and ancient parish of Grove is also within the boundary of the civil parish.

History

The village name is Old English in origin, and means "farm by a slippery place". It is a common place name. This village was recorded in the Domesday Book of 1086 as Slapetone.

The manor of Slapton once belonged to a convent in Barking in Essex, though it was seized by the Crown in the Dissolution of the Monasteries in 1547. The manor was for some time after that the property of the Earl of Bridgwater.

The village hall was built and given to the village by the Griffin family of Bury Farm in memory of Elizabeth Griffin in the 1950s. Until recently, the Griffin family continued to own Bury Farm, and had the unusual distinction of farming buffalo in the village. Slapton once had a splendid 18th century rectory of classical design. This was demolished in the 1960s and a development of four-bedroom terraced and semi-detached houses in the style of that era was built on its site.

There was a farm (Church Farm) immediately next to the church until the mid-1970s; this property had been in the ownership of one family since 1086, having originally been given to the de Tournais by William the Conqueror. The family survived in Slapton, spelling their name in various ways, until the death of William Turney around 1975. He was childless, so the farm was sold for the first time in 900 years. The new owners demolished the farmhouse and buildings, and on the site built a development of houses and flats known as Tournay Court.

Parish church

The church, Holy Cross, is of plain design with tower, nave and chancel. The chancel is probably the oldest part of the building. The churchyard contains many memorials to the Turney and Buckmaster families.

Local history and interest

The Court

The Great Train Robbery took place nearby, at Bridego Railway Bridge on 8 August 1963, one mile (as the crow flies) from Slapton, heading towards Ledburn.

Outside links

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("Wikimedia Commons" has material
about Slapton, Buckinghamshire)

References