1
Cares Close
Housing on the northern edge of Bishop's Cleeve.
Image: © Jonathan Billinger
Taken: 17 Dec 2013
0.04 miles
2
Jasmine Cottage
Cottage. C17. Square-panelled timber framing with limestone rubble and unpainted brick infill, on a limestone rubble plinth; gable end facing road limestone rubble and weatherboarded gable; thatched roof with decorative ridge thatching; red brick stack.
Image: © P Gaskell
Taken: Unknown
0.04 miles
3
Bishop's Cleeve houses [17]
Number 79 Station Road is a 17th century cottage with a later, unsympathetic extension. Constructed of square-panelled timber framing with rubble and brick noggin, set on a rubble stone plinth with the gable end to the street in rubble stone and weatherboarded, all under a thatch roof. There is another view of the cottage at
Image Listed, grade II, with details at: https://historicengland.org.uk/listing/the-list/list-entry/1091701
Bishop's Cleeve is a large village in Gloucestershire. It lies at the foot of Cleeve Hill, the highest point of the Cotswolds, some 3½ miles north of Cheltenham. Although Iron Age and Roman remains have been found locally, the earliest known origins of the village date to the 8th Century. A monastery and surrounding land was given to the Bishop of Worcester, and the village became the Bishop’s Cliffe. The village grew rapidly when an aerospace factory was built nearby after the Second World War and continues to grow.
Image: © Michael Dibb
Taken: 9 Nov 2021
0.05 miles
4
Bishop's Cleeve houses [18]
Number 79 Station Road is a 17th century cottage with a later, unsympathetic extension. Constructed of square-panelled timber framing with rubble and brick noggin, set on a rubble stone plinth with the gable end to the street in rubble stone and weatherboarded, all under a thatch roof. There is another view of the cottage at
Image Listed, grade II, with details at: https://historicengland.org.uk/listing/the-list/list-entry/1091701
Bishop's Cleeve is a large village in Gloucestershire. It lies at the foot of Cleeve Hill, the highest point of the Cotswolds, some 3½ miles north of Cheltenham. Although Iron Age and Roman remains have been found locally, the earliest known origins of the village date to the 8th Century. A monastery and surrounding land was given to the Bishop of Worcester, and the village became the Bishop’s Cliffe. The village grew rapidly when an aerospace factory was built nearby after the Second World War and continues to grow.
Image: © Michael Dibb
Taken: 9 Nov 2021
0.05 miles
5
Millham Road, Bishop's Cleeve
Suburban road in this dormitary village at the foot of Nottingham Hill.
Image: © Jonathan Billinger
Taken: 17 Dec 2013
0.05 miles
6
Bishop's Cleeve features [2]
From Station Road, this footpath leads to Priory Lane.
Bishop's Cleeve is a large village in Gloucestershire. It lies at the foot of Cleeve Hill, the highest point of the Cotswolds, some 3½ miles north of Cheltenham. Although Iron Age and Roman remains have been found locally, the earliest known origins of the village date to the 8th Century. A monastery and surrounding land was given to the Bishop of Worcester, and the village became the Bishop’s Cliffe. The village grew rapidly when an aerospace factory was built nearby after the Second World War and continues to grow.
Image: © Michael Dibb
Taken: 9 Nov 2021
0.06 miles
7
Station Road, Bishop's Cleeve, Glos
There are some older houses in this road but the village lost its station in March 1960. Although the line has been relaid by the Gloucestershire Warwickshire Railway, a heritage line, there are currently no plans for a station in the village.
Image: © P L Chadwick
Taken: 6 Apr 2013
0.07 miles
8
Bishop's Cleeve houses [19]
Owls End, number 87 Station Road, is a large house built in the late C17 or early 18th century with later additions. The plan is 'L' shaped with a timber framed cross wing. Constructed partly of square-panelled timber framing with brick noggin, and partly of coursed limestone rubble stone, under roofs partly of artificial stone slate and partly of tile. Listed, grade II, with details at: https://historicengland.org.uk/listing/the-list/list-entry/1091702
Bishop's Cleeve is a large village in Gloucestershire. It lies at the foot of Cleeve Hill, the highest point of the Cotswolds, some 3½ miles north of Cheltenham. Although Iron Age and Roman remains have been found locally, the earliest known origins of the village date to the 8th Century. A monastery and surrounding land was given to the Bishop of Worcester, and the village became the Bishop’s Cliffe. The village grew rapidly when an aerospace factory was built nearby after the Second World War and continues to grow.
Image: © Michael Dibb
Taken: 9 Nov 2021
0.08 miles
9
Bishop's Cleeve houses [16]
Eversfield House, number 56 Station Road, is a large, early 17th century house with later alterations and additions in painted brick. Constructed of squared, coursed limestone with freestone quoins and dressings, all under a concrete tile roof. Listed, grade II, with details at: https://historicengland.org.uk/listing/the-list/list-entry/1303821
Bishop's Cleeve is a large village in Gloucestershire. It lies at the foot of Cleeve Hill, the highest point of the Cotswolds, some 3½ miles north of Cheltenham. Although Iron Age and Roman remains have been found locally, the earliest known origins of the village date to the 8th Century. A monastery and surrounding land was given to the Bishop of Worcester, and the village became the Bishop’s Cliffe. The village grew rapidly when an aerospace factory was built nearby after the Second World War and continues to grow.
Image: © Michael Dibb
Taken: 9 Nov 2021
0.09 miles
10
Bishop's Cleeve houses [21]
Number 39 Priory Lane is a delightful Victorian cottage in brick with some fine bargeboards.
Bishop's Cleeve is a large village in Gloucestershire. It lies at the foot of Cleeve Hill, the highest point of the Cotswolds, some 3½ miles north of Cheltenham. Although Iron Age and Roman remains have been found locally, the earliest known origins of the village date to the 8th Century. A monastery and surrounding land was given to the Bishop of Worcester, and the village became the Bishop’s Cliffe. The village grew rapidly when an aerospace factory was built nearby after the Second World War and continues to grow.
Image: © Michael Dibb
Taken: 9 Nov 2021
0.09 miles