Ashwell, Hertfordshire

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Ashwell
Ashwell, Hertfordshire (Hertfordshire)
Ashwell, Hertfordshire

Ashwell shown within Hertfordshire
Population 1,660
OS grid reference TL265398
District North Hertfordshire
Shire county Hertfordshire
Region East
Constituent country England
Sovereign state United Kingdom
Post town BALDOCK
Postcode district SG7
Dialling code 01462
Police Hertfordshire
Fire Hertfordshire
Ambulance East of England
European Parliament East of England
UK Parliament North East Hertfordshire
List of places: UKEnglandHertfordshire

Coordinates: 52°02′32″N 0°09′25″W / 52.04217, -0.15699

Ashwell is a village situated about four miles north of Baldock in Hertfordshire.

It has a wealth of architecture spanning several centuries. The parish church dates almost entirely from the 14th century and is renowned for its ornate church tower which stands at 176 feet, and is crowned by an octagonal lantern with a leaded 'spike'. The church also contains some medieval graffiti carved on its walls which highlights the plight of survivors of the bubonic plague pandemic known as the Black Death.

The village itself is mostly in a fine state of preservation, from the medieval cottage to the fine town house, plastered or timbered, thatched or tiled, in Tudor, Carolean or Georgian brick. 'Scheduled' listed buildings include the St. John's Guildhall of 1681, and the carefully restored Foresters Cottages, Chantry House with its 15th century window, the 16th century Town House now a local Museum, the Maltings now converted into flats, and a small brick house which was first built in 1681 as a school by the Merchant Taylors. Ashwell Bury, a large Victorian house, was remodelled by Lutyens in the 1920s. Ashwell also has a village lock-up that was used to detain drunks and suspected criminals. The village has had a variety of public houses in its past, but now currently has three; The Rose and Crown, the Three Tuns and the Bushel and Strike.

Ashwell also has several successful sports teams from under 12's to veterans. The adult first football team have won several trophies and are currently in the Hall's of Cambridge Sunday league premier division. The cricket team won the Cambridgeshire Junior Cup in 2003 and currently play in Division 1 of the Cambridgeshire league. There are many other clubs and societies catering for all interests.

An attractive natural feature are 'The Springs', a perennial source of the River Cam. The cool water of the chalk springs contain a rare species of stenothermic flatworm (Platyhelminthes; Tricladida) associated with cold surface waters or subterranean groundwater that is only known from this location within East Anglia. The springs now depend upon artificial flow augmentation during drier periods, due to the impact of local groundwater abstraction from the chalk aquifer for public water supply.

The village is served by Ashwell and Morden railway station which is about a mile and half from the centre of the village in the hamlet of Odsey in Cambridgeshire.

The village is a "green oasis" with many trees and this contrasts with the surrounding landscape dominated by intense agricultural production, principally of wheat, with rather limited aesthetic or biodiversity interest.

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