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Wildlife Information Board at Bovingdon Green
Located at Bovingdon Green HP3 0LD, this information board has the following wording:
First Column
A healthy pond can provide many benefits to local wildlife. Restoration work
carried out in February 2012 has aimed to restore the pond, through stripping
back of surrounding trees and shrubs and dredging of local built up materials.
Increased light levels will encourage the growth of water loving vegetation and
help dormant seeds of plants that previously thrived burst into life.
Many attractive and colourful plants flourish in the damp, wet conditions. As
vegetation begins to emerge following the restoration, see if you can spot the
pinky white flowers of bogbean in late spring, the bright flowers of yellow
flag iris in early summer, or the tall stems of great willowherb in mid to late
summer.
The restored pond provides a perfect home for amphibians such as common frog
and smooth newt, not least because there are lots of insects to feed on! Look
out for little green heads poking through the surface of the water.
Second Column
Images of Lesser Bond Sedge, Bogbean and Yellow Flag Iris.
Third Column
Old farm buildings and mature trees close to Bovingdon Green are prime roosting
spots for bats. At dusk, you may be lucky enough to see a common pipistrelle or
a Daubenton's bat flitting around the pond, searching for insects.
Ponds make great habitat for a variety of insects. Look out for common pond
skater, skimming across the water's surface, boat-shaped backswimmers using
their powerful lower legs as oars, and large, colourful dragonflies hovering
over the pond in late spring and summer.
Images of Daubenton's Bat, Common Pipistrelle and Pond Skater
Fourth Column
Images of Common Darter, Water Mint, Water Forget-me-not and Common Frog.
In the pond are images of Great Pond Snail, Smooth Newt, Backswimmer and Great
Diving Beetle.
Bottom of the information board are signs for No Swimming and No Fishing.
Image: © David Hillas
Taken: 22 Feb 2020
0.12 miles
2
History Information Board at Bovingdon Green
Located at Bovingdon Green HP3 0LD, this information board has the following wording:
Bovingdon Green and Pond History
First Column
Bovingdon Green is probably medieval in origin and in those days comprised a
number of cottages and farms clustered around the Green and surrounding lanes.
In 1650, the site was described as Common Land and was a place where villagers
were allowed to graze cattle and sheep. A 1695 map of Hertfordshire lists the road
from Rickmansworth to Berkhamsted as passing through Bovingdon Green, so there
would have been frequent traffic going by.
Second Column
The centre of the Green is taken up with a cricket pitch which has been in use
since the formation of the cricket club in 1884. When American forces were
based at Bovingdon Airfield in the early 1940's they used the cricket square as
a baseball diamond and even fielded their own cricket team.
In the early 1900's, games were held here for children on special occasions
such as Empire Day. The Old Berkeley Hunt would also meet on the Green on
Boxing Day.
Third Column
The pond would have provided water for the animals and for domestic use by
nearby cottages and farms. It was a well known spot for waggoners to stop and
let their horses drink. When the pond froze over in cold weather, the ice was
sometimes thick enough for local people to skate on.
Over the last few decades, trees and shrubs were allowed to overgrow and to
completely enclose the pond. Accumulated leaf litter, debris and silt saw the
water level drop considerably.
Even though it is now restored the pond used to be much larger and deeper,
extending up to the edge of the road. The area surrounding the pond was much
more open with little vegetation, as can be seen in the photographs.
Fourth Column
Bovingdon Green was gifted to Hemel Hempstead Rural District Council in January
1938 by Sir Walter Halsey, Baronet and Lord of the Manor, with two
stipulations: that the cricket club should continue to have use of the land for
their pitch, and that the Green should be used for recreation by adults and
children.
Dacorum Borough Council is now responsible for the Green and in 2011 the site
was awarded the Queen Elizabeth II Fields Challenge status, being one of only
two open spaces in Dacorum to receive this honour, which will ensure that
Bovingdon Green is protected forever.
Some of the text and images have been reproduced with the kind permission of
Sarah C.M.Johnson, author of 'BOVINGDON - History of a Hertfordshire Village'.
The two benches are made from the wood of a Corsican pine that was felled in
the churchyard of St.Lawrence Church in 2007. They were kindly donated by the
Friends of St.Lawrence Trust.
At the bottom of the information board is a photo with the following wording:
i) The pond used to extend up to the roadside opposite the entrance to Grange
Farm.
ii) The gardens of Bovingdon House were often used for village events such as
Bovingdon's annual flower show. The stable block, at the front of this
photo, can still be seen today.
Image: © David Hillas
Taken: 22 Feb 2020
0.12 miles
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Queen Elizabeth II Field Plaque on Bovingdon Green
This photo shows the plaque on Bovingdon Green HP3 0LD, which has the following wording: Queen Elizabeth II Field - Fields in Trust, and the royal coat-of-arms with the wording 'Diamond Jubilee 2012'. Fields in Trust is a UK-wide organisation dedicated and improving outdoor space for everyone to indulge in sport, play and recreation. This Queen Elizabeth II Field is one of several such fields in the United Kingdom, https://wikishire.co.uk/wiki/List_of_Queen_Elizabeth_II_Fields refers.
Image: © David Hillas
Taken: 31 Aug 2019
0.13 miles
4
'Welcome to Bovingdon Green' Information Board
This information board is located at the east end of Bovingdon Green HP3 0LF and is maintained by Bovingdon Parish Council. It has the following wording:
WELCOME TO BOVINGDON GREEN
At the same time as Bovingdon began to grow around the Church, half a mile up
Green Lane the area centred around this 8 acre Green was settled. Bovingdon
Green consisted of farms and cottages, one of the earliest of which is Water
Lane Cottage built in the 1400s and once part of a medieval hall house. The
Green has been common land since the 1600s, this would have allowed the
villagers to graze their animals. In the 18th century the Green was on the
route between Berkhamsted and Rickmansworth when the pond would be a useful
watering stop. Nowadays the cricket pitch is a dominant feature of the Green,
the club was started in 1884.
Left column
Green Farm also dates from the 1400s. In the 1930s some of the farmland was
sold to a brickmaker. When the clay was worked out, this land was passed to the
Box Moor Trust who now manages this area for wildlife to the benefit of us all.
Photo-Golden Jubilee 2002
Green rectangle
Golden Jubilee
Picnic on the Green
Monday 3rd June
Bovingdon Green
Bring your own Picnic!
Starts at 1.00pm
1pm - Scottish Piper
Other attractions include:
Short cricket matches
Tug-o-War
Morris Dancing
Egg Throwing Contest
Jazz Band
Hot Dog Stand
Roundabout
So see you there!
The Funfair comes to the Green each September. Bovingdon 'Revels', Jubilee
picnics and Dog Shows have been held on the Green.
Photo-Royal Oak Pub early 1900s
The original Royal Oak stood much nearer the junction of the Green with Water
and Middle Lanes. It was replaced in the 1950s.
Middle Column
Photo-Green Farm
Map of Bovingdon Green
For those unable to work on the land, or earn money straw plaiting, there was
Bovingdon 'Poor House' located by the side of the Green. The house had room
for 30 paupers and even a cage for those who misbehaved. A field nearby was
called Workhouse Meadow.
Right column
Image-Cricket on the Green
When the Green was given to the then Rural District Council, it was with the
proviso that the Cricket Club could continue to use the Green. At one time
the Club's president was Sir Gordon Cunard (Cunard Shipping Line) who lived
in nearby Shantock Hall. The Cunard family grave can be seen in Bovingdon
Churchyard.
Photos: Cunard family grave including gravestone of Gordon Cunard, Baronet,
1857-1933
During WW2 the Americans used the pitch as a baseball square and also tried
their hand at cricket.
Photo: Americans reading the rules of cricket.
Image: © David Hillas
Taken: 14 Mar 2020
0.18 miles
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House on Bovingdon Green
Image: © David Howard
Taken: 10 Sep 2015
0.18 miles
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Bovingdon: Bovingdon Green
Viewed looking northwards along The Green towards Bovingdon.
Image: © Nigel Cox
Taken: 5 Mar 2006
0.24 miles