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Ellesborough
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Ellesborough is a village and civil parish in Buckinghamshire, England. The village is at the foot of the Chiltern Hills just to the south of the Vale of Aylesbury, two miles (three kilometres) from Wendover and five miles (eight kilometres) from Aylesbury. It lies between Wendover and the village of Little Kimble.
Key Information
The civil parish includes the hamlets of Butlers Cross, Chalkshire, Dunsmore, North Lee and Terrick,[3] and had a population of 820 at the 2011 Census,[1] an increase from 811 at the 2001 Census.[4]
Close to Ellesborough is the Prime Minister's country residence Chequers.
History
[edit]This section needs additional citations for verification. (August 2022) |
The village's name is probably derived from the Old English for "hill where asses are pastured".[5] This denotes its importance to the nearby settlements known today as The Kimbles and collectively they comprise a typical Chiltern strip parish with Ellesborough containing valuable hill pasture.
In the Domesday Book of 1086 it was recorded as Esenberge.[6] The road from Wendover to Princes Risborough, which makes a very clearly defined detour around the hill on which Ellesborough Church stands, follows the route of the Icknield Way, an ancient trackway used in the Neolithic age (3000 to 1800 BC) which ran from Norfolk to Avebury in Wiltshire.

Towering over the village is the dominating Beacon Hill, with its grassy mound and lone tree, iconic amongst the Chiltern Hills when viewed from within the Aylesbury Vale.[7] It is also the site of Cymbeline's Mount, also known as Cymbeline's Castle, referred to in the Shakespeare play Cymbeline. In reality, the name refers to the British King Cunobelinus who, alongside his sons, is said to have battled at this site against the Roman Invasion of the British Isles. It is the site of a medieval motte and bailey castle.
Parish church
[edit]
The Church of England parish church of Saints Peter and Paul stands apart from the village, high on the hill overlooking it. The central part of the building dates from the 15th century, with extensions and restoration between 1854 and 1871. It contains 17th century memorials to Sir Robert Croke MP, his son Robert, and their family.[8]
Prime Ministers have often attended this church for Sunday morning worship when in residence at Chequers. Tony Blair, however, followed his wife and children to their Roman Catholic church in Great Missenden.[9] Margaret Thatcher was famously known to have prayed at Ellesborough church during the Falklands War.[10]
Notable people
[edit]Lady Isabella Dodd, widow of Sir Samuel Dodd, endowed workhouses in the village in her will in 1722. The Dame Isabella Dodds charity continued until 2004 and gave its name to Dame Isabella Dodds Court in Aylesbury.
Notable people who live in the village include former Formula One world champion racing driver Sir Jackie Stewart and the actor Sir David Jason.
References
[edit]- ^ a b "Civil Parish population 2011". Neighbourhood Statistics. Office for National Statistics. Retrieved 20 November 2016.
- ^ "Location of Mid Buckinghamshire". parliament.uk. July 2024. Retrieved 4 July 2025.
- ^ "Fact File 49: Ellesborough Parish" (PDF). Wycombe District Council. December 2005. Archived from the original (PDF) on 16 October 2007. Retrieved 26 June 2008.
- ^ "Civil Parish population 2001". Neighbourhood Statistics. Office for National Statistics. Archived from the original on 12 June 2011. Retrieved 30 April 2014.
- ^ Mills, A. D. (2011). A Dictionary of British Place Names. Oxford: Oxford University Press. p. 173. ISBN 9780199609086. Retrieved 17 August 2022.
- ^ "Ellesborough | Domesday Book". opendomesday.org. Retrieved 3 October 2023.
- ^ Gaukroger, Claudia (1987). The Buckinghamshire village book. Newbury: Countryside Books. p. 51. ISBN 0905392809.
- ^ "Ellesborough Pages 137-142 An Inventory of the Historical Monuments in Buckinghamshire, Volume 1, South. Originally published by His Majesty's Stationery Office, London, 1912". British History Online.
- ^ "After 30 years as a closet Catholic, Blair finally puts faith before politics". The Guardian. 22 June 2007.
- ^ Hatts, Leigh (30 March 1997). "When the PM goes to the country..." The Independent. Retrieved 3 October 2023.
External links
[edit]- Wycombe District Council Archived 2 May 2014 at the Wayback Machine
Media related to Ellesborough at Wikimedia Commons
Ellesborough
View on GrokipediaEllesborough is a village and civil parish in the Wycombe district of Buckinghamshire, England, situated at the foot of the Chiltern Hills about 2 miles north of Wendover and 5 miles southeast of Aylesbury.[1] The parish encompasses the hamlets of Butlers Cross, Dunsmore, and Terrick, along with a population of approximately 820 residents.[1] The area gained prominence for housing Chequers, a 16th-century manor house serving as the official country residence of the Prime Minister of the United Kingdom since its donation to the nation via the Chequers Estate Act 1917.[2] Historical landmarks include the Church of St Peter and St Paul, a Grade II* listed structure with Norman architectural elements, and Cymbeline's Mount, a well-preserved motte and bailey castle dating to the Norman period.[3][4] Ellesborough's recorded history traces to the Domesday Book of 1086 as Esenberge, derived from Old English for "hill where the ass grazes," with evidence of Iron Age settlement on nearby Beacon Hill and prehistoric routes like the Icknield Way passing through.[5] Within the Chilterns Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty, the parish features elevated viewpoints such as Coombe Hill, its highest point at 852 feet, offering vistas across the Aylesbury Vale.[5][1]
Geography
Location and boundaries
Ellesborough is a civil parish in the Wycombe district of Buckinghamshire, England, situated at the foot of the Chiltern Hills immediately south of the Vale of Aylesbury.[1] The parish lies approximately 2 miles (3.2 km) west of Wendover and 4 miles (6.4 km) southeast of Aylesbury, with central coordinates at 51°45′N 0°48′W.[6] [7] The civil parish encompasses an area of 13.53 km² (5.22 sq mi) and includes the main village of Ellesborough along with the hamlets of Butlers Cross, Dunsmore, North Lee, Terrick, and parts of other settlements.[8] [9] Its boundaries follow administrative lines that extend from the lower Chiltern slopes northward toward the vale, bordered by neighboring parishes including Wendover to the east and Little Kimble-cum-Marsh to the southwest.[10] The parish includes the grounds of Chequers, the official country residence of the Prime Minister, which lies within its northern extent near Butlers Cross.[11]Landscape and geology
Ellesborough occupies a position on the Chiltern Hills escarpment in Buckinghamshire, England, where the landscape is dominated by undulating chalk hills and dry valleys. The terrain features steep slopes rising from the Vale of Aylesbury, with elevations reaching approximately 230 meters at Beacon Hill. This scarp and vale topography results from differential erosion of softer underlying strata against resistant chalk layers.[12][13] Geologically, the area underlies Cretaceous Chalk Group formations, including the West Melbury Marly and Zig Zag Chalk Formations at lower levels, capped by the more resistant Holywell Nodular and New Pit Chalk Formations on hilltops. These chalk beds, deposited during the Late Cretaceous over the buried northwestern margin of the Anglo-Brabant Massif, form the core of the Chilterns' structure. Deep incisions by dry valleys have isolated features like Beacon Hill, exposing sections of these sequences and influencing local soil development, with thinner rendzina soils on slopes supporting calcareous grasslands.[12][14] The landscape supports beech woodlands on plateau areas and grassland on escarpment faces, reflecting the chalk's influence on drainage and vegetation. Sites such as Ellesborough Warren exhibit karst-like features in the valleys, contributing to the region's biodiversity and geological interest, though primarily valued for wildlife habitats rather than unique mineralogy. Human activities, including historic quarrying, have locally modified the natural exposures, but the overall geology remains intact, shaping the parish's rural character.[12][13]History
Prehistoric and early periods
Evidence of prehistoric activity in Ellesborough centers on Beacon Hill, a prominent chalk hill south of the village core. A bowl barrow, dating to the Bronze Age (c. 2400–1500 BCE), crowns the summit approximately 500 meters south of the parish church; this scheduled monument features a earthen mound originally enclosed by a quarry ditch, typical of early funerary practices in the Chilterns region.[15] The barrow, identified as a late prehistoric round barrow, underwent excavation in the nineteenth century, though specific artifacts recovered remain undocumented in available records; it was subsequently repurposed as a medieval beacon site and later as a Second World War gun emplacement.[16] During the Iron Age (c. 800 BCE–43 CE), settlement evidence appears on the slopes of Beacon Hill, indicating sustained human occupation partly overlain by later Norman earthworks.[5] Partial excavations, referenced in local historical accounts, uncovered features consistent with Iron Age domestic activity, aligning with broader patterns of hill-slope habitation in the Chiltern Hills.[5] Additionally, an Iron Age gold stater coin discovery in the parish underscores metalworking and trade connections typical of the period.[17] The parish lay along the Icknield Way, a prehistoric trackway facilitating movement across southern England from East Anglia to Wessex, with potential use extending into the Iron Age for trade and migration.[5] Roman-era remains, including building foundations unearthed in 1858 near Terrick (within the parish), suggest continuity of settlement into the early historic period, though no major villa or fort is attested.[5] Saxon influences are evident in place-names like Turwick Green, denoting early medieval agrarian use predating the documented parish formation.[5]Medieval and early modern eras
Ellesborough, recorded as Esenberge in the Domesday Book of 1086, comprised lands held by William son of Ansculf and Mainou the Breton in the hundred of Aylesbury.[18] The settlement supported 45 households, including 26 villagers, 13 smallholders, and 6 slaves, with 24 ploughlands, meadows sufficient for several plough teams, and extensive woodland accommodating over 200 pigs.[18] Annual values ranged from £8 to £10 in 1066, declining slightly post-conquest due to Norman redistribution.[18] Archaeological evidence indicates defensive structures from the early medieval period, including Cymbelines Mount, a timber motte-and-bailey castle constructed shortly after the Norman Conquest.[19] This site, strategically positioned on a Chiltern spur below Beacon Hill to control escarpment routes, yielded pottery dated to the 13th–15th centuries, suggesting prolonged use into the later Middle Ages.[19] Nearby, a medieval moated site at Grove Farm, likely representing Seyton's Manor subinfeudated before 1166, features earthwork ditches and an associated fishpond, indicative of manorial organization.[20] The parish Church of St Peter and St Paul, constructed primarily in the late 14th to 15th centuries from flint with stone dressings, includes a battlemented west tower, traceried windows, and moulded interior arches.[21] In the early modern era, the church incorporated monuments such as a brass to Thomas and Sybell Hawtrey (1544) and tombs for Bridget Croke (1638) and Robert Wallis (1666), reflecting local gentry patronage.[21] At Grove Farm, a post-medieval dovecote survives adjacent to the moat, dating likely to the late 17th century alongside Seytons Manor remnants.[20] Chequers manor traces medieval origins, possibly linked to 12th-century holder Elias Ostiarius, whose name may derive the estate's designation.[2]19th century to present
In 1803, Parliament passed an Inclosure Act for the parishes of Great Kimble, Little Kimble, and Ellesborough, with the enclosure award dated 2 May 1805, reallocating common lands and open fields into private allotments, primarily benefiting larger landowners and facilitating more efficient agricultural practices such as crop rotation and fencing.[22] [6] This process, common across Buckinghamshire during the late 18th and early 19th centuries, contributed to the consolidation of farms and a shift toward arable farming on the Chiltern slopes, though it reduced access for smallholders to communal grazing.[23] The parish saw infrastructural developments reflecting Victorian philanthropy and estate influence. In 1839, Sir Robert Frankland-Russell and Lady Frankland-Russell, owners of the Chequers estate, funded the construction of Ellesborough School in traditional local style to serve the village's children.[24] The Church of St Peter and St Paul underwent restoration in the 19th century, preserving its largely 15th-century structure while adding modern elements to address wear from centuries of use.[21] Ellesborough Manor, originally the rectory, was rebuilt in the mid-19th century as a substantial residence.[25] Community organizations emerged, including the Velvet Lawn Cottage Garden Association in the mid-19th century, which supported horticultural shows for parishioners in Ellesborough and neighboring areas.[26] Population trends reflected broader rural patterns of growth amid industrialization followed by stagnation. The table below summarizes census data:| Year | Population |
|---|---|
| 1801 | 480 |
| 1851 | 782 |
| 1901 | 577 |
Governance and administration
Parish council and local government
Ellesborough Parish Council serves as the primary local authority for the civil parish, handling community services, maintenance of recreational facilities including playgrounds, fitness equipment, playing fields, and allotments, and initiatives such as affordable housing proposals.[1] The council comprises seven elected members who convene bimonthly at Ellesborough Parish Hall, with public attendance encouraged for input on agenda items.[11] It is led by a clerk, currently John McKeown, contactable via [email protected].[28] The parish council operates within the framework of Buckinghamshire Council, the unitary authority established on 1 April 2020, which oversees broader services like planning, waste management, and highways across the county, replacing previous district and county structures.[29] Ellesborough falls under the West Chilterns Community Board area of Buckinghamshire Council, facilitating localized collaboration on issues affecting rural parishes in the region.[30] Parish councillors are elected periodically, with the most recent Buckinghamshire-wide unitary and parish elections held on 1 May 2025.[31]Chequers Court and its significance
Chequers Court, situated within the civil parish of Ellesborough in Buckinghamshire, serves as the official country residence of the Prime Minister of the United Kingdom.[32] The estate encompasses approximately 1,500 acres of land in the Chiltern Hills, providing a secure and secluded setting distinct from urban London.[33] Originally constructed as a manor house in 1565 for William Hawtrey, possibly incorporating earlier medieval elements, the Grade I listed building features Elizabethan architecture with later restorations.[34][35] In 1917, amid World War I, Viscount Lee of Fareham (Sir Arthur Lee) and his wife, childless and seeking a lasting legacy, gifted the restored estate to the nation specifically as a retreat for serving Prime Ministers, formalized through the Chequers Estate Act.[36][37] The Lees' donation, motivated by patriotism and the era's national sentiment, ensured the property's preservation outside private or governmental ownership, held instead by the independent Chequers Trust.[35] This arrangement began official use in 1921 under David Lloyd George, establishing it as a non-partisan asset for executive functions.[32] The significance of Chequers lies in its role as a venue for high-level decision-making, diplomatic engagements, and personal respite, often hosting international leaders and witnessing pivotal policy discussions away from public scrutiny.[33] Its rural isolation enhances security while symbolizing continuity in British governance, with the estate's maintenance funded by an endowment rather than taxpayer money.[35] For Ellesborough parish, the presence of Chequers imposes access restrictions on surrounding footpaths and lands, balancing national prestige with local integration, though the estate generates limited direct economic ties beyond occasional staffing.[38]Religious and cultural heritage
Parish church
The Church of St Peter and St Paul serves as the parish church of Ellesborough, Buckinghamshire, and is designated a Grade II* listed building by Historic England.[3] Originating from the late 14th to 15th centuries, the structure underwent significant restoration and external refacing between 1854 and 1871, with earlier repairs in 1852.[21] Constructed primarily of flint with stone dressings, it features lead roofs on the nave and south aisle, and slate roofs on the chancel and vestry.[21] The church comprises a west tower, nave with south aisle, south porch, chancel, and a 19th-century south vestry and organ chamber.[21] The tall west tower includes diagonal buttresses and a battlemented parapet, while windows exhibit traceried designs from the 14th to 15th centuries, though most were renewed in the 19th century.[21] Overall dimensions measure approximately 30 meters in length and 12 meters in width.[21] Situated on Church Hill at coordinates SP 83640 06740, atop the Chilterns escarpment, the site resembles an ancient fortress due to its elevated, insulated position.[6][39] Notable interior features include monuments to the Croke family, such as that of Bridget Croke dated 1638, and to Thomas and Sybell Hawtrey from 1544.[21] Parish records date back to 1603, covering christenings until 1860, marriages to 1837, and burials to 1886, now held at the Buckinghamshire Record Office in Aylesbury.[6] The church maintains historic connections to nearby Chequers Court, the official country residence of the British Prime Minister.[39] Three churchyards surround the building: one remains in active use with limited capacity, while the other two are closed and managed by Ellesborough Parish Council as a Local Wildlife Site.[39] The church continues to host regular services, including parish communion every second and fourth Sunday at 10:45 a.m., and is open to visitors on Wednesdays, Saturdays, and Sundays.[40]Other historical sites
The Coombe Hill Monument, located on the summit of Coombe Hill within Ellesborough parish, is an obelisk erected in 1904 to commemorate the 148 men from Buckinghamshire who died during the Second Boer War (1899–1902).[41][42] The structure, built by public subscription, was rebuilt in 1938 and designated as a Grade II listed monument, offering panoramic views across the Aylesbury Vale and Chiltern Hills.[43] Cymbeline's Mount, a motte and bailey castle site approximately 550 metres southwest of Ellesborough parish church, features earthwork remains including a mound and ditches, indicative of a timber castle likely constructed in the medieval period.[4] The site, scheduled as an ancient monument, commands strategic views over the Aylesbury Vale, suggesting its selection for defensive purposes, though its popular name derives from local legend rather than historical evidence of Roman or prehistoric origins.[5][44] Several medieval moated sites survive as earthworks in the parish, reflecting manorial homesteads from the period. The moated site at Grove Farm, associated with the former Seyton's Manor, includes a ditched enclosure and internal features, protected as a scheduled monument.[45][5] Additional moated remains exist at Apsley Manor Farm and 90 metres west of Terrick House, part of a regional pattern of such sites linked to elite residences between the 12th and 14th centuries.[46][47]Demographics and economy
Population trends
The population of Ellesborough civil parish, encompassing the village and hamlets such as Butlers Cross, Dunsmore, and Terrick, experienced growth in the early 19th century followed by a decline through the late Victorian era, before stabilizing and modestly increasing in the late 20th and early 21st centuries.[6][8] Historical census data indicate a rise from 480 residents in 1801 to a peak of 782 in 1851, driven by agricultural expansion and rural stability typical of Buckinghamshire parishes during the Napoleonic and early industrial periods.[6] Subsequent decreases to 608 by 1881 and 577 by 1901 aligned with national patterns of rural depopulation due to agricultural depression, mechanization, and urban migration.[6]| Census Year | Population |
|---|---|
| 1801 | 480 |
| 1811 | 469 |
| 1821 | 581 |
| 1831 | 665 |
| 1841 | 708 |
| 1851 | 782 |
| 1861 | 724 |
| 1871 | 703 |
| 1881 | 608 |
| 1891 | 641 |
| 1901 | 577 |
Economic activities and land use
Ellesborough's land use is characterized by extensive agricultural areas, with four-fifths of the parish designated as Green Belt and within the Chilterns Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty, limiting development to small-scale infill that preserves open spaces and rural vistas.[50] Agricultural land dominates the landscape, forming prominent road frontages and including a mix of arable fields suited to the heavy, stony, and steep chalk soils, alongside pasture for grazing livestock and horses, as exemplified by grazed grassland at Home Close Farm.[50][51][52] The local economy revolves around farming, with eight historic farmhouses identified in the parish, four of which continue active agricultural operations, underscoring the sector's persistence amid conversions of traditional barns to residential or commercial purposes for economic diversification.[50] These conversions must mitigate visual and traffic impacts to maintain the area's agricultural character.[50] Supplementary activities include small-scale horticulture via allotments at Royal Mead, supporting resident self-sufficiency.[51] Tourism contributes modestly through recreational access to the countryside, including the Ridgeway National Trail, bridleways for cycling and horse riding, and sites like Coombe Hill with its memorial and views, attracting visitors to observe wildlife such as red kites and seasonal flora like bluebells and rare orchids.[51] The Russell Arms public house functions as the primary hospitality venue, catering to locals and passersby in this low-density rural setting.[51] Overall, economic pressures favor sustainable farming practices, with occasional proposals like ground-mounted solar panels on minimal agricultural land (up to 40 sqm) to integrate renewable energy without substantial land conversion.[53]Notable individuals
Sir David Jason, the British actor best known for portraying Del Boy Trotter in the BBC sitcom Only Fools and Horses, resides in Ellesborough.[54][55] Born in 1940, Jason has maintained a home in the village for decades, valuing its rural tranquility amid his career spanning over five decades in television and film.[56] Sir Jackie Stewart, the Scottish former Formula One racing driver who won three World Drivers' Championships (1969, 1971, 1973) with teams including Tyrrell and Lotus, also lives in Ellesborough.[57] Stewart, knighted in 2001 for services to motor racing and safety advocacy, has been associated with the village's secluded setting, which aligns with his post-retirement pursuits in business and philanthropy.[57] Winston Spencer-Churchill (1940–2010), grandson of Prime Minister Sir Winston Churchill and a Conservative politician who served as Member of Parliament for Davyhulme from 1979 to 1997, was born in Ellesborough.[58] His early life in the area preceded a career involving journalism, authorship, and parliamentary service, though he faced electoral defeat in 1997.[58]References
- https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Coombe_Hill_Monument%2C_Buckinghamshire_01.jpg
