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Loudwater was once served by the High Wycombe to Bourne End railway line, the station being situated at the bottom of Treadaway Hill. The line and station closed in 1970, the old railway path can still be walked through Fennel Wood. Loudwater is known as the Headquarters of Dreams Beds, Costa Coffee and Fonehouse.
Historically, Chepping or Chipping Wycombe was the formal name of the ancient borough and later municipal borough of High Wycombe or Much-Wiccomb. [3] It was also the name of the ancient parish which included the borough and extended further than the borough boundary to also cover the surrounding rural area.
Wooburn Green is a village situated four miles south east of the town of High Wycombe. It neighbours Beaconsfield , Loudwater , Flackwell Heath , Wooburn Common and Bourne End . It is close to the M40 motorway , meaning London and Birmingham are easily accessible by road.
High Wycombe East Central (2) High Wycombe Eastern (2) High Wycombe West Central (2) High Wycombe Western (2) Iver (2) Marlow (2) Newport Pagnell (1) Newport Pagnell Rural No. 1 (Bradwe (1) Newport Pagnell Rural No. 2 (Olney) (1) Newport Pagnell Rural No. 3 (Woburn (1) Penn & Amersham Town (1) Stony Stratford (1) Wing No. 1 (Edlesborough ...
The A4010 begins at the major junction at Handy Cross where the A404 meets the M40 motorway. [1] It travels through the High Wycombe suburbs of Cressex and Sands to West Wycombe Road where it meets the A40 road.
Junction 3 of the M40 can be found a short distance away from Flackwell Heath in Loudwater. Flackwell Heath was once served by the High Wycombe to Maidenhead railway line, via Loudwater railway station at the bottom of Treadaway Hill. The line and station were closed in 1970 although you can walk along the disused railway line through Fennels Wood.
Loudwater may refer to: Loudwater, Buckinghamshire, a village near High Wycombe, Buckinghamshire, United Kingdom; Loudwater, Hertfordshire, a village in Hertfordshire, United Kingdom; An alternative name for the river Bruinen, part of J. R. R. Tolkien's Middle-earth legendarium
The Wycombe Rural Sanitary District was administered from Wycombe Union Workhouse, which had been built in 1843 in open countryside in the parish of Saunderton, nearly five miles north-west of High Wycombe. [1] Under the Local Government Act 1894, rural sanitary districts became rural districts from 28 December 1894. The Wycombe Rural District ...