Loudwater, Buckinghamshire

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Loudwater


Loudwater sign depicting a mill that once stood there

Loudwater, Buckinghamshire (Buckinghamshire)
Loudwater, Buckinghamshire

Loudwater shown within Buckinghamshire
Population 4,170
OS grid reference SU905905
Parish Chepping Wycombe
District Wycombe
Shire county Buckinghamshire
Region South East
Constituent country England
Sovereign state United Kingdom
Post town HIGH WYCOMBE
Postcode district HP10
Dialling code 01494, 01628
Police Thames Valley
Fire Buckinghamshire
Ambulance South Central
European Parliament South East England
UK Parliament Beaconsfield
List of places: UKEnglandBuckinghamshire

Coordinates: 51°36′22″N 0°41′32″W / 51.606025, -0.692297

Loudwater is a hamlet in the parish of Chepping Wycombe in Buckinghamshire, England. It is located in the valley to the east of the main town, on the A40 London Road.

[edit] History

The hamlet name refers to the river nearby, that also flows through High Wycombe. Its meaning is literally 'noisy water'. In manorial records in 1241 the hamlet was referred to as La Ludewatere.

St Peter's Church, Loudwater
St Peter's Church, Loudwater

The brick built St Peter's Church dates from 1788 with a gothic style chancel added in 1903 and further improvements in the last two years, including new windows. On the London Road there is a Victorian mansion called Burleighfield House that was once the studio of the stained glass designer Patrick Reyntiens.

There was once a blotting paper mill in the valley and Loudwater had its own railway station on the Wycombe Railway that opened in 1854 and closed in 1970.

Today there is little to distinguish the hamlet from the urban sprawl of High Wycombe, though it is signed along the London Road. A 1744 milestone can still be seen and there is also still a traditional village pub 'The Derehams Arms' in Derehams Lane.

[edit] Features

Loudwater is home to several retail and industrial concerns - a large Tesco supermarket, an industrial estate, a small retail park, a Brewers Fayre motel and also the office of the local newspaper, the Bucks Free Press. The M40 motorway crosses over the valley close to the village, and facilitates the eastbound only Junction 3, signposted as 'Wycombe East'.

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