Sulham

Sulham

Sulham church
Sulham
 Sulham shown within Berkshire
OS grid referenceSU6474
Civil parishSulham
Unitary authorityWest Berkshire
Ceremonial countyBerkshire
RegionSouth East
CountryEngland
Sovereign stateUnited Kingdom
Police Thames Valley
Fire Royal Berkshire
Ambulance South Central
EU Parliament South East England
UK ParliamentReading West
List of places
UK
England
Berkshire

Coordinates: 51°27′50″N 1°04′30″W / 51.464°N 1.075°W / 51.464; -1.075

Sulham is a village and civil parish in West Berkshire, England. The larger village of Tidmarsh is adjacent to Sulham on the west side and of Tilehurst on the east side.

Governance

The two villages share the combined (civil) parish council of Tidmarsh with Sulham with most local government functions covered out by the local government level(s) above, which is West Berkshire council.

Geography

Clockwise from the west, Sulham is surrounded by the civil parishes serving Tidmarsh, Pangbourne, Purley-on-Thames then the partially parished area and partly in Reading settlement of Tilehurst (to the east) and to the south is Theale which has the local roads' junction with the M4 motorway in its south. The middle of the parish is from north to mid-south occupied by Sulham wood and a similar lengthwise escarpment rises in this area, from 42 metres (the lowest elevation) AOD to 105 metres.

Sulham Woods form one side of the village, features including many chalk pits and open rolling fields. The place remains architecturally and in land use dominated by the Sulham Hall estate in the north and is otherwise spread out along north-south Sulham Lane which stretches between the villages of Pangbourne and Theale parallel to the River Pang.

Landmarks

Sulham Hall is Grade II* listed as its park and covers around a third of the elongated parish.[1] A feature of the parish and estate is elevated Wilder's Folly in the south, a brick tower or dovecote built in 1769 by Reverend Henry Wilder of Sulham House.[2]

The ecclesiastical parish church is in the main settled area of the village forming a clustered nucleus. It is a listed building in the starting category of the three, grade II,[3] as is Sulham House, converted into four flats.[4] In the middle category (grade II*) in this cluster is Sulham Farmhouse.[5]

References

External links

Media related to Sulham at Wikimedia Commons

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Saturday, January 23, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.