Swanbourne

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Swanbourne
Buckinghamshire

St Swithun's Church, Swanbourne
Location
Grid reference: SP802272
Location: 51°56’17"N, -0°50’2"W
Data
Population: 437  (2011[1])
Post town: Milton Keynes
Postcode: MK17
Dialling code: 01296
Local Government
Council: Buckinghamshire
Parliamentary
constituency:
Buckingham
Swanbourne Station House (disused)

Swanbourne is a village and parish in the Cottesloe Hundred of Buckinghamshire. It lies about two miles east of Winslow and three miles west of Stewkley, on the B4032 secondary road.

History

The village name is Anglo-Saxon in origin and may mean "swan stream". It was recorded as Suanaburna in the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle in 792.[2]

A grant of land was made to Woburn Abbey in 1201.[2] The first vicar of the parish arrived in 1218 and the parish church was dedicated in 1230. The abbey was dissolved in 1538 and its lands were later sold by the Crown.[3]

Swanbourne people supported Parliament in the Civil War. It was burnt down by Royalist troops in 1643.[2] The AylesburyBuckingham turnpike road through Swanbourne opened in 1722. Common lands were enclosed in 1762–1763 and divided among 50 landowners.[3]

Swanbourne House was bought in 1798 by Thomas Fremantle (1765–1819) for his wife Elizabeth, known as Betsey, for 900 guineas.[4] The Fremantle family, originally from Aston Abbotts, had strong naval connections. Their eldest son Sir Thomas Francis Fremantle (1798–1890) became a prominent Tory politician. Their second son Charles (1800–1869) followed his father into the British Royal Navy and was instrumental in founding the Swan River Colony in Western Australia, which accounts for the place names Fremantle, Swanbourne and Cottesloe in the Perth area. Another son, Captain Stephen Grenville Fremantle is also buried in the churchyard.[5]

Swanbourne House is still owned by the Fremantle family trust, but it is let to the private Swanbourne House School. The present head of the family is Commander John Tapling Fremantle, 5th Baron Cottesloe, a former Lord Lieutenant of Buckinghamshire. He lives in the village, as does his daughter Elizabeth, the Hon. Mrs Duncan Smith, with her husband Iain Duncan Smith, a Conservative politician.[6]

There was an agricultural strike in Swanbourne in 1873, led by some members of the Primitive Methodist Chapel, who had joined the National Agricultural Labourers' Union.

Attached to the village is the hamlet of Nearton End.

Schools

The first Swanbourne school was founded in 1712 under the will of one Nicholas Godwin.[2]

The present Swanbourne Church of England School in Winslow Road is a mixed, voluntary-aided primary school that forms a component of the Three Schools with Mursley Church of England School and Drayton Parslow Village School, under an agreement of 2009. Swanbourne in 2015/2016 had 115 pupils in four classes, aged seven to eleven, out of a total of 199 pupils at the three schools. The Swanbourne classes divide into sets for the core subjects. Half the pupils were from the catchment area and half from further afield.[7]

Swanbourne House School is a coeducational infants' and prep school for some 380 pupils from age three for day pupils and seven for boarders, up to the age of 13.[8] It was founded in 1920. Anthony Chenevix-Trench taught English and history at the school for a term in the early 1970s, between being headmaster of Eton College and headmaster of Fettes College.[9] It is currently part of the Stowe Group along with Stowe School and Winchester house. Jane Thorpe has been the head from September 2018 to July 2022.

The private Home Farm Day Nursery is also in Winslow Road.[10]

Churches

St Swithun's Church (Anglican), a Grade-II* historic listed building, stands at the east end of the village, opposite Swanbourne House. The nave, chancel and tower date from the first half of the 13th century. The north aisle was added in the second half of the 15th century and the tower rebuilt half a century later.[2] The church is in good repair. It contains some stained glass and a wooden ceiling, both probably dating from the 19th century. There are some medieval carvings and the remains of three medieval murals in the north aisle.[2] The tower has a ring of six bells and a sanctus. There are monumental brasses on the south and north sides of the chancel. The latter, showing Thomas Adams (died 1626) and his family, bears the baneful inscription, "Who in prime of youth by bloudy theves was slain, / In Liscombe ground his bloud ye grass did staine".[2]

Swanbourne Baptist Church, in Mursley Road, was built in 1809, rebuilt in 1863 and closed in 1972, when it was converted into a dwelling.

Swanbourne Methodist Chapel is in Nearton End. The first place of worship was built for the Primitive Methodists in 1858. A new one superseded it in 1907. Formerly in the Stewkley Circuit, then the Leighton Buzzard Circuit, the church is now in the Vale of Aylesbury Circuit.[11]

Business and transport

Swanbourne has a general store and sub-post office in Mursley Road. Also in Mursley Road is a pub/restaurant named The Betsey Wynne, after Elizabeth Wynne Fremantle, the diarist ancestor of the Fremantles. It opened in July 2006 and specialises in English food and drink and self-grown produce,[12] for which it has won some awards. It was taken over from the Swanbourne Estate by Oakman Inns and Restaurants Ltd in 2015.

There are limited weekday bus services between Swanbourne and Winslow, Bletchley or central Milton Keynes.[13]

Swanbourne railway station, on the Oxford to Cambridge 'Varsity Line', was open from 1851 to 1967. The station site is about a mile and a half from the village, halfway to Little Horwood and about the same distance from Mursley. In summer 2020, the old station and platforms were demolished to clear the route for the new East-West Rail.[14] The nearest station today is at Bletchley, about eight miles away.

References

  1. Neighbourhood Statistics 2011 Census. Retrieved 3 February 2013.
  2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 2.3 2.4 2.5 2.6 "Parishes : Swanbourne" Victoria History of the Counties of England, A History of the County of Buckingham: Volume 3 (1927), pp. 427–432.
  3. 3.0 3.1 History of Swanbourne: key dates
  4. The Wynne Diaries 1789–1820. Edited and selected by Anne Fremantle. World's Classics. (London: OUP, 1952), pp. 297 ff.
  5. "Capt Stephen Grenville Fremantle". Find A Grave. https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/90084655/stephen-grenville-fremantle. 
  6. "Why Iain Duncan Smith should look at himself before complaining about people living off the state". Daily Mirror. 26 October 2012. https://www.mirror.co.uk/news/uk-news/why-iain-duncan-smith-should-look-1400558. 
  7. Three Schools site Retrieved 24 January 2016.
  8. Swanbourne House School.
  9. Peel, Mark (1996). The Land of Lost Content: The Biography of Anthony Chenevix-Trench. Edinburgh: Pentland Press. ISBN 1-85821-400-9. 
  10. Home Farm Day Nursery . Retrieved 6 April 2010.
  11. History of Swanbourne: religion
  12. A review. Retrieved 6 April 2010.
  13. LISTING OF BUS AND COACH SERVICES FROM SWANBOURNE Retrieved 5 October 2012.
  14. "EWR2 Project Newsletter – Autumn 2020". East West Rail alliance. October 2020. https://sway.office.com/eZGQW4nDOFhaiA17?ref=Link. 

Further reading

  • Ken Reading, Swanbourne: History of an Anglo-Saxon Town. Available from Swanbourne village shop
  • Frankie Fisher, We Reap Where They Have Sown – an account of Primitive Methodism in Swanbourne. Available from Swanbourne Methodist Church

Outside links

("Wikimedia Commons" has material
about Swanbourne)