Some of our neighbours actually used to have Berkshire addresses – and we’d always welcome that back, says Sue Bromley. Meanwhile, visiting is easy
All kinds of nonsense went on in the 1970s, and we’re not talking about orange and brown sofas, strikes and The Three Day Week, or Slade being the Christmas No1 on and on and on. No, a better musical choice might be the 1974 chart-topper ‘When Will I See You Again’ by the Three Degrees, not only because the lovely Sheila Ferguson used to live at Bray, but because that was the year a whole chunk of our county was shovelled into Oxfordshire.
Now, if a place lies between the Berkshire Downs and the Thames, you’d expect it to be in… Berkshire. It’s the rural landscape with historic towns and villages, ancient battle sites, The Old Berkshire Hunt plus the point-to-point and Pony Club, and the first home of The Berkshire Yeomanry. Lockinge we miss you, and the same goes for Faringdon, once Berkshire’s most westerly town.
If that’s not enough, the clincher must surely be that poet Pam Ayres MBE was born at Stanford-in-the-Vale, definitely then in our county. She may now live in the Cotwolds, but Pam is Berkshire through and through. But back to 1974 when The Local Government Act was implemented, resulting in places up and down the country shifting borders, some even being re-named. For us this meant waving farewell to the likes of Abingdon and Wantage and the villages of The Vale of the White Horse (plus the Uffington chalk horse itself, still a cause of discontent). When all this was proposed the then MP for Newbury tried to halt it and campaigns continue to move the horse back into what was historically Alfred the Great’s powerful land of Wessex, rather than Mercia where it’s ended up.
Denne historien er fra October 2017-utgaven av Berkshire Life.
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Denne historien er fra October 2017-utgaven av Berkshire Life.
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A Home For Keeps - Reader At Home
Alex and James Fielden were looking for a forever home. Their search ended as soon as they pulled up outside this Georgian property in Berkshire
Duke & Duchess Of Berkshire?
They are the Duke and Duchess of Cambridge but should they really be the Duke and Duchess of Berkshire, which is, of course, a Royal county?
A national hero
He started out like many other children born in Reading, but mention Justin Fletcher to any kid in the land these days and their eyes will light up
Fruitful thinking
Ryan Simpson believes the world is our orchard. A project that began over a pint in his local is making the county more fruity
THE BERKSHIRE BOMBSHELL
Berkshire has had more than its fair share of famous inhabitants. However, few had such an explosive reputation as Diana Dors
“I'll always be a Berkshire girl”
Despite her international acclaim as the star of TV’s Tracy Beaker, Dani Harmer has never strayed far from her roots
Remembering the fallen
The most destructive war in human history lasted for six years and cost 60 million lives, the majority non-combatants. It is easy to understand why those who had survived wanted to celebrate the end of that conflict
HIDDEN WONDERS
Berkshire photographer Matt Emmett has made it his mission to explore the forgotten architecture and heritage many people miss in their home towns
EXPLORING BERKSHIRE - Majestic Maidenhead
Rejuvenation and revival; two buzz words surrounding the biggest town in the Royal borough. With riverside views and a vibrant arts and dining out scene, this high-class town is well worth a look
A good grounding
Berkshire has some of the best homes in the land, so perhaps it is no coincidence that the nation’s favourite property guru went to school in Wokingham