Sharnbrook

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Coordinates: 52°13′00″N 0°32′00″W / 52.2166°N 0.5333°W / 52.2166; -0.5333
Sharnbrook
Sharnbrook

 Sharnbrook shown within Bedfordshire
OS grid reference TL001885
Unitary authority Bedford
Ceremonial county Bedfordshire
Region East
Country England
Sovereign state United Kingdom
Post town BEDFORD
Postcode district MK44
Dialling code 01234
Police Bedfordshire
Fire Bedfordshire and Luton
Ambulance East of England
EU Parliament East of England
UK Parliament North East Bedfordshire
List of places
UK
England
Bedfordshire

Sharnbrook is a village and civil parish located in the Bedford Borough of Bedfordshire, England.

The settlement was recorded in the Domesday Book of 1086 as a parish within the Hundred of Willey[1] but was probably first developed in Saxon times. The oldest surviving building, St Peter's Church, is Norman. Many of the older buildings in the village are constructed of the local oolitic limestone, also used in other traditional north Bedfordshire settlements.

Situated just north of a loop in the River Great Ouse and almost due north of Bedford, the village has developed as a ribbon-settlement running south-east to north-west, with the core of the community clustered at the north-western end.

Education

The village has two schools, the larger of which Sharnbrook Upper School and Community College has a campus on the west of the village, serves a wide area and was attended by the London Marathon-winning Paula Radcliffe, who opened the aptly named Paula Radcliffe Sharnbrook Community Sports Centre in April 2005. This Community Sports Centre is not only for School users but also serves the wider local community of North Bedfordshire with sporting facilities. Students are aged from 13 to 18 and take both GCSE and A Level exams. The village's other school is John Gibbard Lower School which caters for young children aged from 3–9 years old who live in the immediate area and is one of the feeder schools for Margaret Beaufort Middle School which is located in the nearby village of Riseley.

Industry

Another major presence is the multinational company Unilever which has a research centre on the north-western edge of the village. This uses the grounds of Colworth House, originally built in the early 17th century and rebuilt in its present form by 1774 as a private house. The house itself is used as office space, with modern laboratory buildings beside and behind it. The site is being turned into a science park for use by a number of companies.

Transport

Sharnbrook railway station opened in 1857, but was closed in 1960.

Literature

Sharnbrook is the village where the prototype of Uncle Silas, Joseph Betts, the protagonist of H.E. Bates's My Uncle Silas lived.

Britain's Youngest Father

Back in 1998, Sean Stewart become the youngest father in Britain at only twelve years of age. He lived in Sharnbrook next door to the mother of his child, who was four years older than him. The child was conceived when the pair were only 11 and 15. Supposedly the mother of the child believed that Stewart was the same age as her when they were going out, however he revealed his true age when news of his lover's pregnancy broke.[2] Some[3] also consider Stewart to be the youngest ever recorded father.

Gallery

References

External links

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