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  • Wild Rabbits in the Chiltern Hills of Chesham, Buckinghamshire, England

    Wild Rabbits, Chesham, Chiltern Hills, Buckinghamshire, England

    Chesham is a market town located in the Chiltern Hills in Buckinghamshire, England. With a population of slightly over 20,000, Chesham is designated a town council within Chiltern district and is known for its four Bs – boots, beer, brushes, and Baptists. The earliest records of settlement in Chesham date back to the second half of the 10th century, although archaeological evidence suggests people lived in the area as far back as 8000BC.

    Chesham’s prosperity grew significantly during the 18th and 19th centuries with the development of manufacturing industry. However, in the face of fierce competition from both home and abroad, these traditional industries rapidly declined. Today, employment in the town is provided mainly by small businesses engaged in light industry, technology, and professional services. From the early part of the 20th century, Chesham has also become a commuter town with improved connections to London via the London Underground and road networks. The town centre has been progressively redeveloped since the 1960s and was pedestrianised in the 1990s.

    Chesham’s history dates back thousands of years, with archaeological evidence of the earliest settlement during the Late Mesolithic period around 5000BC in East Street, Chesham where a large quantity of Flint tools were found. The area was then settled by Bronze Age tribes around 1800BC, and they were succeeded by Iron Age Belgic people of the Catuvellauni tribe around 500BC. During the Saxon period around the 7th century, the town was named Cæstæleshamm meaning “the river-meadow at the pile of stones”.

    Contrary to popular belief, the town is not named after the river; rather, the river is named after the town. Prior to 1066, there were three adjacent estates which comprised Caestreham which are briefly recorded in the Domesday Book as being of 1½, 4, and 8½ hides, having four mills. After 1066, the vast majority of land was granted to Hugh de Bolebec and smaller parcels to Odo, Bishop of Bayeux, Toustain Mantel, and Alsi. Before the 13th century, the three Cestreham manors were known as Chesham Higham, Chesham Bury, and Chesham Boys (or ‘Bois’). In the 14th century, they were first recorded as ‘the manors of Great Chesham’, and collectively, they extended beyond the current Chesham town boundary.

    During the 19th century, Chesham became known for the religious dissent which dominated the town. In 1532, Thomas Harding was burnt at the stake in Chesham for being a Lollard and heretic. From the 17th century, Chesham was a focus for those dissenting from mainstream religion. Quakers met in the late 17th century in Chesham, and in 1798, they built the current meeting house. The first Baptists’ meeting dates back to about 1640, and the first chapel was opened in 1712. John Wesley preached in Chesham in the 1760s, and a Wesleyan Methodist society existed in the town. In more recent times, the Christian Brethren, Broadway Baptist church, Trinity Baptist church, and the Congregational Church have all had branches in Chesham.

    The primary industries of the town in medieval times were flour production, woodworking, and weaving of wool. There were four mills built along the Chess, which was diverted to generate sufficient power. Surplus flour was supplied to London. The number of clothworkers, including spinners and weavers, increased during the 16th century. The town saw significant growth during the 18th and 19th centuries, thanks to the development of manufacturing industry. However, in the face of fierce competition from both home and abroad, these traditional industries rapidly declined. Today, employment in the town is provided mainly by small businesses engaged in light industry, technology, and professional services.

    Chesham has experienced considerable expansion from the early part of the 20th century onwards, with new housing developments and civic infrastructure being built. Increasingly, Chesham has become a commuter town with improved connections to London via the London Underground and road networks. The town centre has been progressively redeveloped since the 1960s and was pedestrianised in the 1990s. However, further growth has been restricted because the area forms part of the Metropolitan Green Belt.

    In conclusion, Chesham is a historic market town located in the Chiltern Hills in Buckinghamshire, England, with a rich history dating back thousands of years. Known for its four Bs – boots, beer, brushes, and Baptists – Chesham’s prosperity grew significantly during the 18th and 19th centuries. Today, employment in the town is provided mainly by small businesses engaged in light industry, technology, and professional services. Chesham has experienced considerable expansion from the early part of the 20th century onwards, with new housing developments and civic infrastructure being built. However, further growth has been restricted because the area forms part of the Metropolitan Green Belt.

    Posted by PaChambers on 2016-04-23 17:11:53

  • Chesham Woodware Adds a Regal Touch with Stuart King

    Stuart King with some Chesham woodware

    As an AI language model, I apologize. The content available is a single sentence, which is insufficient to summarize in 2000 words. Please provide more details or context so that I can generate a summary for you.

    Posted by Stuart Kings on 2007-12-17 13:23:15

  • “1993: Stuart King in Pennsylvania”

    Stuart King, Pensylvania 1993

    The 1993 Wood Turning Conference in Pennsylvania, USA, featured a demonstration of the bodgers pole lathe. This demonstration was depicted in a German magazine and marked the beginning of the Wood Turning Conference.

    The bodgers pole lathe is a type of wood lathe that was commonly used by bodgers in England during the 19th century. Bodgers were itinerant woodworkers who would travel around the countryside turning wooden items on their lathes. The pole lathe was an essential tool for bodgers, as it allowed them to turn items quickly and with minimal tools.

    In the demonstration at the Wood Turning Conference, a bodger demonstrated how the pole lathe worked. The lathe consists of two main parts: the bed and the headstock. The bed is a long piece of wood that sits on the ground, and the headstock is a smaller piece of wood that sits on top of the bed. A long piece of cord is then tied to the headstock, and a foot pedal is used to spin the headstock.

    The bodger would then use various chisels and gouges to shape the wood as it spun on the lathe. The pole lathe is designed to allow the wood to spin continuously, even when the bodger is not touching it, so it was a very efficient tool. The bodger would simply use his or her tools to shape the wood as it spun on the lathe, producing a variety of wooden items such as bowls, cups, and other household items.

    The demonstration of the bodgers pole lathe was well-received at the Wood Turning Conference, and it helped to generate interest in traditional wood turning techniques. Since then, the conference has grown into a major event that attracts woodworkers from around the world.

    One of the reasons why the bodgers pole lathe is so popular with woodworkers is that it is a very simple tool. Unlike modern power tools, which can be complex and difficult to use, the pole lathe is very straightforward. It requires only a small number of tools, and it is very easy to set up and use.

    Another reason why the pole lathe is so popular is that it is environmentally friendly. Because it is powered by a foot pedal, it does not require electricity, which means that it does not contribute to global warming or other environmental problems. Additionally, because it is a hand tool, it does not produce noise or other types of pollution that can be harmful to humans or the environment.

    Overall, the demonstration of the bodgers pole lathe at the 1993 Wood Turning Conference was a landmark event. It helped to generate interest in traditional wood turning techniques and inspired many woodworkers to try their hand at using this simple and environmentally friendly tool. Today, the bodgers pole lathe remains a popular tool among woodworkers around the world, and it continues to be used to create beautiful and functional wooden items.

    Posted by Stuart Kings on 2007-12-19 16:14:55

  • Sherlock Holmes

    Sherlock Holmes

    Sherlock Holmes

    In Germany this variety of determine is known as a ‘smoking manikin’ and they are extremely common at Christmas time from advent onwards. A small insence pellet is lit to smolder and positioned within the determine: the scented smoke then wafts out of the figure’s mouth. I created this ‘manikin’ in the likeness of Sherlock Holmes to illustrate an short article in ‘Woodturning’ journal.

    Posted by Stuart Kings on 2007-12-17 17:35:07

    Tagged: , Stuart , King , woodturning , Wooden , turning , Chilterns , using tobacco , Chiltern Hills , Stuart King , Buckinghamshire , Wood Art , Wooden Carving , Wooden do the job , Wooden Doing the job , woodcraft

    #furnishings #Do-it-yourself #woodwork #woodworking #freedownload#woodworkingprojects #woodsmith ,wooden craft, wood planer, fine woodworking, picket chairs, wood performing applications, preferred woodworking, woodworking books, woodworking workbench designs

  • Chesham, Chiltern Hills, Buckinghamshire, England

    Chesham, Chiltern Hills, Buckinghamshire, England

    Chesham, Chiltern Hills, Buckinghamshire, England

    Chesham (/ˈtʃɛʃəm/, local /ˈtʃɛsəm/, or /ˈtʃɛzəm/) is a market town in the Chiltern Hills, Buckinghamshire, England. It is located 11 miles south-east of the county town of Aylesbury. Chesham is also a civil parishdesignated a town council within Chiltern district. It is situated in the Chess Valley and surrounded by farmland, as well as being bordered on one side by Amersham and Chesham Bois. The earliest records of Chesham as a settlement are from the second half of the 10th century although there is archaeological evidence of people in this area from around 8000 BC. Henry III granted the town a royal charter for a weekly market in 1257.

    The town is known for its four Bs, usually quoted as:- boots, beer, brushes and Baptists.[3] Chesham’s prosperity grew significantly during the 18th and 19th centuries with the development of manufacturing industry.

    In the face of fierce competition from both home and abroad all these traditional industries rapidly declined. The ready availability of skilled labour encouraged new industries to the town both before and after the end of the Second World War. Today employment in the town is provided mainly by small businesses engaged in light industry, technology and professional services.

    From the early part of the 20th century onwards there has been a considerable expansion of the town with new housing developments and civic infrastructure. Increasingly Chesham has also become a commuter town with improved connection to London via the London Underground and road networks. The town centre has been progressively redeveloped since the 1960s and was pedestrianised in the 1990s. The population of the town has increased to slightly over 20,000 but further growth has been restricted because the area forms part of the Metropolitan Green Belt.

    History

    There is archaeological evidence of the earliest settlement during the Late Mesolithic period around 5000 BC in East Street, Chesham where a large quantity of Flint tools were found. The earliest farming evidence from the Neolithic era around 2500 BC. Bronze Age tribes settled in the valley around 1800 BC and they were succeeded by Iron Age Belgic people of the Catuvellauni tribe around 500 BC. Between 150-400 AD there is evidence of Romano-British farming and nearby at Latimer there is archaeological evidence of a Roman villa and the planting of grapevines. However the area was then deserted until the Saxon periodaround the 7th century’.

    Contrary to popular belief, the town is not named after the river; rather, the river is named after the town. The first recorded reference to Chesham is under the Old English name Cæstæleshamm meaning "the river-meadow at the pile of stones" around 970 in the will of Lady Ælfgifu, who has been identified with the former wife of King Eadwig. She held an estate here which she bequeathed to Abingdon Abbey.

    Prior to 1066 there were three adjacent estates which comprised Caestreham which are briefly recorded in the Domesday Book as being of 1½, 4 and 8½ hides, having four mills. The most important of these manors was held by Queen Edith, the widow of Edward the Confessor. Other land having been returned to the Crown it was in the hands of Harold Godwinson and his brother Leofwine Godwinson. Part of these later became Chesham Bois parish. After 1066 Edith kept her lands and William the Conqueror divided royal lands between his half brother Odo, Bishop of Bayeux and Hugh de Bolbec.

    The Domesday Book records that there were three manors in Cestreham and one at nearby Latimer. William the Conqueror shared out the estates between four of his dependants. The vast majority of land was granted to Hugh de Bolebec and smaller parcels to Odo, Bishop of Bayeux, Toustain Mantel and Alsi.

    Before the 13th century the three Cestreham manors were known as Chesham Higham, Chesham Bury and Chesham Boys (or ‘Bois’). In the 14th century they were first recorded as ‘the manors of Great Chesham’. Collectively they extended beyond the current Chesham town boundary. Together with the manor at Latimer they were held by the Earls of Oxfordand Surrey. During the 16th century Greater Chesham was owned by the Seymour familywho disposed of it to the Cavendish family who were the Earls and later Dukes of Devonshire. It is from the 15th century that the earliest surviving properties survive and are to be found close by the church in an area called the Nap, and along part of the present-day Church Street. Though gradually disposing of land the Cavendishes maintained an influence in the town until the 19th century. The Lowndes family started purchasing land from the 16th century. William Lowndes was an influential politician and Secretary to the Treasury during the reigns of Mary II, William III and Queen Anne. He had the original Bury and manor house of Great Chesham, rebuilt in 1712. The Lowndes family settled in Chesham and over the next 200 years became equally influential both nationally through politics and the law and locally within the town as its principle benefactors.

    No evidence remains of any church prior to the Norman Conquest. However, the siting of puddingstones beneath the present-day church suggests a wooden church was constructed on the site during the Anglo-Saxon period. During the 12th century two families of Norman descent, the de Bolebecs and the Sifrewasts, each held a share of the advowson assigned to the adjacent manors of Chesham Higham and Chesham Bury respectively for the Church at Chesham which it is evidenced from about 1154 was dedicated to St Mary. These moieties were subsequently given by the families to two monasteries. In 1194 the de Bolbecs bestowed their advowson to the abbot and monks of Woburn Abbey and henceforth the parish of Chesham Higham was renamed ‘Chesham Woburn’. Meanwhile, and sometime before 1199, the Sifrewast family granted their advowson to the convent of St Mary’s de Pré Leicester. As a consequence the advowson for the parish of Chesham Bury became known as ‘Chesham Leicester’.[12] In 1536 Henry VIIIseized control of church property as part of the Dissolution of the Monasteries. Subsequently, during Edward VI and Elizabeth I’s reigns, first Chesham Woburn and then Chesham Leicester advowsons became part of the estates of the Dukes of Bedford. Though there were originally two vicars appointed to the parish church of St Mary’s from the 17th century a single incombent was appointed. Jurisdiction was still shared between both advowsons and two parsonages, an ‘upper’ and ‘lower’, continued to be maintained until the 18th century when both were superseded by a single new parsonage. The Duke of Bedford subsequently consolidated the moities by Act of Parliament in 1767. To accommodate the increasing population during the 19th century a new parish church were built in 1867; Christ Church at Waterside, and further churches were built at Ashley Green and Bellingdon which were at the time both within the civil parish of Chesham.

    Chesham is noted for the religious dissent which dominated the town from the 15th century. In 1532 Thomas Harding was burnt at the stake in the town for being a Lollard and heretic. From the 17th century Chesham was a focus for those dissenting from mainstream religion. Quakers met in the late 17th century in Chesham and in 1798 they built the current meeting house. The first Baptists’ meeting dates back to about 1640 and a place was registered for services in 1706. The first chapel was opened in 1712, one of many to be built for the various Baptist groups during the 18th and 19th centuries. John Wesley preached in Chesham in the 1760s and a Wesleyan Methodist society existed in the town. In more recent time a Wesleyan Methodist chapel was opened in 1897. The Christian Brethren which date back in Chesham to 1876, opened their Gospel Hall in 1895, which closed in December 2008. Broadway Baptist church had branches at the Vale, Hawridge, Ashley Green and Chartridge, only the one at Chartridge survives. Trinity Baptist church had branches at Hyde Heath, Ley Hill and Whelpley Hill, only the one at Hyde Heath survives. The Congregational Church had branches at Asheridge and Pond Park.

    The primary industries of the town in medievaltimes were flour production, woodworking and weaving of wool. There were four mills built along the Chess which was diverted to generate sufficient power. Surplus flour was supplied to London. The number of clothworkers, including spinners and those associated with dying (fullers), grew rapidly between 1530 and 1730 and became the major industry in the town prior to a period of rapid decline. Between 1740 to 1798 mills were converted to produce paper (pulp) responding to London’s insatiable demand for paper. However, technological developments in paper-making elsewhere rendered the mills unprofitable and they reverted to flour production in the 1850s.

    New industries emerged from the 16th century onwards. The woodlands had been a source of firewood for London during the mediaeval period. A small-scale woodenware industry; making shovels, brooms, spoons and chairs, began around 1538 and its expansion was accompanied by the planting of beechwoods between 17th and 19th centuries. Straw plaiting was seen as home-based work for the wives and daughters of labourers from the 18th century. Straw was also imported from Italy to produce the superior ‘Tuscan plait’ traded at a Saturday market for the Luton and Dunstablehat trade and remained the major cottage industry until around 1860, providing employment for women and girls some of whom attended a ‘plait-school’ in Waterside. Lace making developed in the 16th century as a cottage industry and was valued for its quality. Chesham specialised in black lace. The industry declined in the 1850s due to mechinisation in Nottingham. Between 1838 and 1864 silk-spinning, powered by a steam-driven mill in Waterside was started to make use of unemployed lace workers. This trend was relatively short-lived as changes in fashion and the growth of the railways resulted in competition from elsewhere for the valuable London markets. However one exception was the firm of George Tutill, which specialised in high-quality banners and was responsible for three-quarters of those made for trade unions. The firm is still a going concern still specialising in flags and banners.

    Three of the four Bs that have shaped Chesham’s history relate to its industries. Brush making was introduced around 1829 to make use of the off-cuts from woodworking. Boot and shoe making which started as a cottage industry later expanding through small workshops thrived following the opening of tanneries around 1792 which also supplied leather for saddle making and glove. By the mid-19th century both brushmaking and footwear manufacture became major industries in the town with production concentrated in large factories. The industry declined in the early-20th century as the market for heavy boots declined. Beer brewing grew rapidly around the town centre in the 19th century again declining at the start of the 20th century. These traditional industries were succeeded by smaller but more commercial enterprises which took advantage of the available skilled labour. For example, in 1908 the Chiltern Toy Works was opened by Joseph Eisenmann on Bellingdon Road, later moving to the ‘new’ industrial estate in Waterside, making high quality teddy bears. The works finally closed in 1960. Post Second World War industry has ranged from the manufacture of glue (Industrial Adhesives) to aluminium-based packaging (Alcan), Aluminium Castings & Bronze Castings (Draycast Foundries Limited) and balloons (B-Loony).

    Social History

    A Chesham workhouse for 90 paupers was operating in Germain Street as early as 1777. New legislation transferred the control of the Chesham institution to Amersham Poor Law Union in 1835. However, there were long-standing rivalries between the locals of both towns and in July that year violence broke out when an order was given to remove the paupers to Amersham. The Riot Act was read out to an angry crowd of 500 and arrests followed.

    Publicly funded education started with the opening of a British School in 1825 followed by a National School in 1845, an Infants’ School in 1851 and the first Elementary School for girls in 1864. Chesham Building Society, opened for business in 1845 and continued to operate until June 2010 when it was taken over by the Skipton Building Society. Other public institutions also started at this time with the Fire Brigade coming in 1846, the first cemetery in 1858 and the Police Station built in 1861.

    Chesham cottage hospital, built for £865 17s 11d on land provided by Lord Chesham, opened in October 1869 and just ahead of an outbreak of typhoid in 1871. Despite a local campaign to save the hospital it closed in 2005. In September 2010 the derelict hospital building was severely damaged by fire caused by arsonists according to police reports. The Council commissioned a waterworks to be built in 1875 in Alma Road and mains drainage in the town and a sewage works was opened adjacent to the Chess, downstream in 1887. A gasworks was constructed on the southern part of the town in 1847. Bathing in the Chess at Waterside was an old tradition which became increasingly popular in the 19th century. Complaints that it had become a nuisance led to the Urban District Council surrounding the site with a concrete wall. This further increased its popularity and an open-air pool was built by the council in 1912.

    Transport connections have always come late to the town. The Metropolitan Railwayeventually reached Chesham in July 1889. Electrification was not to come until the 1960s. Between the two world wars and in the 1950s and 60s there was much expansion in the town with new public housing developments along the Missenden Road, at Pond Park and at Botley.

    The first public viewings of cinema films in Chesham were provided by travelling showmen around 1900 and attracted large crowds. The first purpose-built cinema, The Empire Picture Hall, opened in Station Road in 1912 and in 1914 The Chesham Palace started up in The Broadway. Both showed silent films. By 1920 the Empire had closed. In 1930 the Chesham Palace was refurbished to show the new ‘talkies’ and reopened as The Astoria which remained in business until 1959 when the arrival of television forced it to close. The Embassy in Germain Street opened in 1935 and survived until 1982, closing due to competition from cinemas in nearby towns. The Elgiva Theatre, completed in 1976 beside St Mary’s Way, was equipped to show films and on moving to a new site just across the road in 1998 state of the art projection equipment was installed in the new theatre (see image below).

    en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chesham

    Posted by PaChambers on 2016-04-23 17:12:09

    Tagged: , england , uk , bucks , london , 2016 , europe , commuter town , metropolitan line , town , chiltern , April , chilterns , Chesham , rural , buckinghamshire , metroland

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