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Chippenham is a village and civil parish in Cambridgeshire, England, part of East Cambridgeshire district around 4 miles (6.4 km) north-east of Newmarket and 10 miles (16 km) north-east of Cambridge. History
It also has a village pub, The Pheasant, which was once an old farmhouse. Pen-y-fai was once a village for employees of the Llewellyn estate. There is a school called "Pen-y-fai CIW primary school" hence its location, that takes children from age 3 through to age 11. The school itself was in a poor state of repair until rebuilt by October 2013.
Pheasant Restaurant and Lounge is a restaurant in Brookings, South Dakota, United States. Established in 1949, the restaurant was named an " America's Classic " by the James Beard Foundation in 2024.
There was a royal forest in the area from the 13th century, sometimes called Chippenham forest, at other times Pewsham and Bowood forest. [5]Pewsham was one of several areas that in 1842 formed the ecclesiastical parish for the newly consecrated Christ Church at Derry Hill; [6] [7] until then Pewsham was extra-parochial, i.e. outside any parish, presumably because it had been largely ...
Chippenham Town Council, which is based at Chippenham Town Hall, is responsible for some public services in the town. For 2020–21 they set the 13th highest council tax of any lowest tier (parish/town) council in England at £262.05 per Band D property, [ 22 ] and proposed to increase this to £270.44 for 2021–22. [ 23 ]
Chippenham Park The Whig Junto by John James Baker, 1710. It was commissioned by a former owner of the house the Earl of Orford to hang there. Today it is in the Tate Britain in London. Chippenham Park is a country house in Chippenham, Cambridgeshire.
The Pheasant Inn. The Pheasant Inn is a public house at The Pheasant Inn, Bassenthwaite, Cumbria CA13 9YE. It is Grade II listed. [1] It is on the Campaign for Real Ale's National Inventory of Historic Pub Interiors. [2]
There is evidence of occupation of the area over a 5,000 year period, with the most recent historical remains being medieval. [1]When created in 1894, the parish covered (as it does today) land to the west of Chippenham, and an area of comparable size east of the town, stretching south from Tytherton Lucas through Stanley to the area now known as Pewsham. [3]