1
Chiltern Way
Chiltern Way crosses Chipperfield Road to head up Austins Mead
Image: © Shaun Ferguson
Taken: 7 May 2010
0.03 miles
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Public footpath off Chipperfield Road, Bovingdon
Image: © David Howard
Taken: 8 May 2012
0.03 miles
3
Information Board in Chipperfield Road
This information board is located in Chipperfield Road HP3 0JN opposite Austins Mead and is maintained by Bovingdon Parish Council. It has the following wording:
WELCOME TO BOVINGDON VILLAGE
The settlement of Bovingdon dates from the 1200s when the forest was cleared and arable farming began. The village gradually grew over the centuries eventually appearing in its present form in the 1900s. You are standing on
Chipperfield Road this was formally known as Blacksmiths Hill, the village forge
being located near Farriers Close. The house called 'The Close' was purpose built in the 1840's as our village school; this was outgrown in the 1920's when
it relocated to the High Street. Adjacent to the old school, Austins Mead housing was built for the RAF serving at Bovingdon Airfield post WW2, the RAF
moved out in the 1970's. Prior to this, the field was used by Bovingdon Football
Club.
Left column
Photo: Bovingdon School 1910 - Infants Class
Photo: Bovingdon Forge in the 1900s
Photo: main village blacksmith, by the 1920s repairing cars
Middle column
Image of house
Map of the southern part of Bovingdon village
Photo: Druce butchers circa 1900, original telephone number 5
Right column
Photo: Bull Cottages in Church Street once housed the Post Office. Circa 1912,
it shows Mr & Mrs Burgin and their staff. They also operated the first village
telephone exchange.
Photo: Up to the 1930s roads were made of earth, flints/stones; they were wet
and muddy in winter, dry and dusty in summer. Women, as shown in the photo,
would pick stones from the fields which men would break and place in the
potholes.
Photo: Floods have often occurred at the junction of Chipperfield Road and the
High Street, so much so the area is known as 'The Docks'. This picture is pre-
WW1, the earliest recorded flood was in 1634 and the latest 2016.
Image: © David Hillas
Taken: 4 Sep 2020
0.06 miles
4
Austins Mead from Chipperfield Road, Bovingdon
Image: © David Howard
Taken: 8 May 2012
0.07 miles
5
Chipperfield Road, Bovingdon
Image: © David Howard
Taken: 8 May 2012
0.11 miles
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Jammed Kissing gate on Chiltern Way
The catch on this kissing gate was jammed.
Image: © Tom Presland
Taken: 3 Jul 2012
0.12 miles
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Chipperfield Road, Bovingdon
Image: © David Howard
Taken: 8 May 2012
0.13 miles
8
'Welcome to Bovingdon Village' Information Board (1)
Located in Chipperfield Road HP3 0JN, this information board is maintained by Bovingdon Parish Council and has the following wording:
WELCOME TO BOVINGDON VILLAGE
The settlement of Bovingdon dates from the 1200s when the forest was cleared and arable farming began. Dwellings were clustered around individual farms, all
being served by St Lawrence Church est. in 1235. The village gradually grew over
centuries eventually appearing in its present form in the 1900s. The Americans
arriving in WW2 to serve at the newly constructed airfield brought about the
largest single change to the village, staying until the 1960s.
Left column
Photo Bovingdon c1907
In between the school and the Memorial Hall was the 1930s Fire Station, the
original volunteer fire brigade formed in the 1920s used a shed. This fire
brigade served the village until 2006 when it was closed and the building
incorporated into our Memorial Hall.
Photo: Bovingdon Fire Brigade Armistice Day 1930s
The heart of the village contained 3 pubs, 17th century Bell, Wheatsheaf and
Bull.
Photo: Village Centre 1907
Middle Column
Photo: Ladybirds entry Bovingdon Revels 2000
Photo: Maypole Dancing, Flower Show c1910
Map of Bovingdon village
Photo: Millennium Village Sign
Bovingdon's most well known feature is the Ryder Memorial. This memorial
commemorates Granville Ryder, a great village benefactor. It was built in 1881
as a well cover for a hand pump.
Photo: Granville Ryder
Photo: Ryder Memorial c.1909
Right Column
Photo: Bovingdon High Street c1928
Halfway down the High Street you are opposite our new school circa 1927,
previously the school house was in Chipperfield Road.
Photo: Mid High Street c1910
Next door stands Bovingdon Memorial Hall 1921; this is the village's memorial
to those who died in World War One. The hall was built by public subscription
on land donated by Granville Ryder.
Image: St Lawrence Church
St Lawrence Church rebuilt in 1840s, standing in the third largest churchyard
in Hertfordshire.
Image: © David Hillas
Taken: 27 Aug 2020
0.18 miles
9
Bovingdon: The Bell and The Bull Public Houses
Bovingdon was once a centre of straw plaiting for hatmakers in Luton. Looking south eastwards down the High Street, The Bell is the near public house on the left, with The Bull the next building but one.
Image: © Nigel Cox
Taken: 21 Jan 2006
0.20 miles
10
Bovingdon: The Old Well and The Bell Inn
Bovingdon's most recognisable landmark is the five-sided Old Well at the junction of Green Lane with the High Street. An inscription around the arches reads "This house with the well is dedicated to ye beloved memory of Ye Honourable Granville D Ryder, late of Westbrook Hay of this Parish, who was born on November 26th 1799 and died on November 24th 1879, and was raised by his relatives for the use and comfort of his friends. The Village of Bovingdon April 1881". Needless to say the well is now sealed...
Image: © Nigel Cox
Taken: 28 May 2006
0.20 miles