Ackhampstead
Ackhampstead (literally 'oak homestead' in Old English[1]) or 'The Moor' was an ancient township[2] (or chapelry) in the Chiltern Hills, south of Lane End. Until 1844 it was a detached part of Oxfordshire in the parish of Lewknor, part of a division of the parish known as Lewknor Uphill consisting of three detached parts. It was transferred to Buckinghamshire by the Counties (Detached Parts) Act 1844. By the mid-nineteenth century the population of the community was negligible. The Bishop of Oxford demolished its medieval chapel and replaced it with a new church at Cadmore End.[3] In 1885 the division of Lewknor Uphill was dismembered. Ackhampstead was transferred to the parish of Great Marlow for ecclesiastical purposes,[2] and became part of the civil parish of Great Marlow in 1895.[4] In 1934 the western end, including Moor Farm, became part of the civil parish of Fingest, renamed Fingest and Lane End in 1937,[5] and is now in Lane End parish. The greater part, including the site of the chapel and Moor Wood, remains in Great Marlow parish. A detailed history of Ackhampstead was compiled by Dr Gordon Wyatt in 1969 for the Frieth Village Society.[6]
References
- ↑ Oxlade Family History
- 1 2 A History of the County of Oxford: Volume 8: Lewknor and Pyrton hundreds
- ↑ The Townsend Papers
- ↑ Page, William (ed) (1925). Victoria County History of Buckinghamshire: Volume 3: Great Marlow. pp. 65–77.
- ↑ Vision of Britain website: Fingest and Lane End
- ↑ Frieth History website: Ackhampstead
External links
- Gerry Palmer (17 January 2011). "Ackhampstead - The Chapel that Vanished". Archaeology in Marlow. Retrieved 2011-02-27.
- Vision of Britain: Boundary map of Lewknor Uphill
Coordinates: 51°36′20″N 0°50′0″W / 51.60556°N 0.83333°W