Ufton Nervet

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Ufton Nervet
Ufton Nervet (Berkshire)
Ufton Nervet

Ufton Nervet shown within Berkshire
Population 317 (2001)
OS grid reference SU635675
Unitary authority West Berkshire
Ceremonial county Berkshire
Region South East
Constituent country England
Sovereign state United Kingdom
Post town Reading
Postcode district RG7
Dialling code 0118
Police Thames Valley
Fire Royal Berkshire
Ambulance South Central
European Parliament South East England
UK Parliament Wokingham
List of places: UKEnglandBerkshire

Coordinates: 51°24′12″N 1°05′16″W / 51.4034, -1.0877

Ufton Nervet is a small village and civil parish in the English county of Berkshire.

Contents

[edit] Location

Ufton Nervet village is located in the hills above and to the south of the River Kennet, although the parish stretches down into the valley to the north as far as the A4 road. Two narrow lanes connect the village to the A4, crossing the Kennet and Avon Canal and the Great Western railway line in the valley bottom. Both lanes cross the canal by swing bridges, the smaller of the lanes passes through Ufton Green, crossing the railway by the level crossing involved in the rail crash, and the other by an overbridge. Other lanes connect the village with other villages on the higher ground above the valley.

[edit] Local government

Ufton Nervet is a civil parish with an elected parish council. It falls within the area of the unitary authority of West Berkshire. The parish council and the unitary authority are responsible for different aspects of local government.

[edit] History

An excavation at Ufton Green revealed a site which showed evidence of stone-working for the manufacture of tools or weapons and a number of scattered stone artefacts dating from the Mesolithic. [1]

The name Ufton came from Anglo-Saxon Uffa-tūn = "Uffa's farmstead" and it was recorded as Offetune in the Domesday Book. [2] Three manors have existed in this area Ufton Robert, Ufton Nervet and Ufton Pole. The first two are mentioned in the Domesday Book.

The original Ufton Nervet, also known as Ufton Richard, was located about a mile to the north-west of the current village, in the current location of Ufton Green. It had its own church (of St. John the Baptist), the ruined walls of which still exist. The place was named after Richard Neyrvut, later corrupted to Nervet, who owned the manor in the 13th century.

The moat and site of Ufton Robert manor house. September 2002
The moat and site of Ufton Robert manor house. September 2002

The manor house of Ufton Robert was located just to the west of the current village and stood within the moat, which can still be seen. Excavations in the 19th century located bridge piles, a gateway and other foundations. The moat is also part of a set of linked medieval fishponds fed from an artificial stream which flowed into the south pond. The water was controlled to the ponds and moat by a series of sluices. [3] The manor came into the hands of the Perkyns family around 1411. When they bought the manor of Ufton Pole in 1560 the two manors were combined and the main residence moved to Ufton Pole, which is now Ufton Court, a large Elizabethan manor house located south-west of the village.

In 1434-5 the parishes of Ufton Nervet and Ufton Robert were merged and the Ufton Robert church of St Peter became the current parish church. Curiously although it was the original parish of Ufton Nervet which ceased to exist this eventually became the name of the current village.

[edit] Church of St. Peter

St Peter's Church. January 2008
St Peter's Church. January 2008

The church of St. Peter was erected in 1862, on the site of an earlier church, in a 14th century neo-Gothic style. The walling is predominantly of a dark grey rag-stone with ashlar dressings. It consists of a chancel, north chapel (used as an organ chamber), nave of three bays, west tower, with a tall octagonal shingled spire, and south porch. [4] In front of the porch is a fine old yew.

The church is no longer in use.

[edit] Rail crash

The Ufton Nervet rail crash happened nearby on the 6 November 2004. Seven people were killed when a First Great Western train, from Paddington to Plymouth, was derailed after colliding with a stationary car on an unmanned level crossing.

[edit] References

[edit] External links


Settlements in West Berkshire
Towns: Hungerford | Newbury | Thatcham
Civil parishes: Aldermaston | Aldworth | Ashampstead | Basildon | Beech Hill | Beedon | Beenham | Boxford | Bradfield | Brightwalton | Brimpton | Bucklebury | Burghfield | Catmore | Chaddleworth | Chieveley | Cold Ash | Combe | Compton | East Garston | East Ilsley | Enborne | Englefield | Farnborough | Fawley | Frilsham | Great Shefford | Greenham | Hampstead Norreys | Hamstead Marshall | Hermitage | Holybrook | Inkpen | Kintbury | Lambourn | Leckhampstead | Midgham | Padworth | Pangbourne | Peasemore | Purley-On-Thames | Shaw-cum-Donnington | Speen | Stanford Dingley | Stratfield Mortimer | Streatley | Sulhamstead | Theale | Tidmarsh with Sulham | Tilehurst | Ufton Nervet | Wasing | Welford | West Woodhay | West Ilsley | Winterbourne | Woolhampton | Yattendon
Other villages and suburbs: | Aldermaston Wharf | Ashmore Green | Bagnor | Burnt Hill | Calcot | Donnington | Eastbury | Halfway | Hell Corner | Lambourn Woodlands | Little Heath | Lower Basildon | Marsh Benham | Shaw | South Fawley | Stockcross | Upper Basildon | Upper Lambourn | Upper Woolhampton | Wash Common | Weston | Woodlands St Mary | World's End
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