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Hunton Bridge

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Population
  
327 (Census 1991)

Region
  
Sovereign state
  
United Kingdom

Local time
  
Friday 2:06 AM

UK parliament constituency
  
OS grid reference
  
TL067030

Country
  
Post town
  
KINGS LANGLEY

Shire county
  
Dialling code
  
01923

Hunton Bridge httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Weather
  
6°C, Wind NW at 11 km/h, 84% Humidity

Police crime scene incident in hunton bridge


Hunton Bridge is a small settlement near Abbots Langley, Hertfordshire, England, with a historic royal connection. Its population in the 1991 census was 327. At the 2011 Census the population was included in the Three Rivers population of Langleybury.

Contents

Map of Hunton Bridge, Sarratt, Kings Langley, UK

Hunton Bridge enjoyed its greatest prosperity during 1810-26, when the Sparrows Herne turnpike ran through the village. Prior to that date the turnpike had run along Gypsy Lane and Upper Highway. In 1810 it was rerouted along Old Mill Lane to the village, and up the hill to reconnect with Upper Highway. By 1826 the presence of the canal and the works associated with it had dried out the bottom land sufficiently for the turnpike to be rerouted along what is now the A41 avoiding the climb up Hunton Bridge Hill.

Today the village is situated between the M25 London orbital motorway and a spur of the motorway leading to Watford. The A41 trunk road runs just west of the village. The Hunton Bridge filling station just off the Watford spur (Junction 19 of the M25) is a local landmark.

Hunton bridge 1984 mac and pc


Public houses

Hunton Bridge currently has three public houses. It used to have five, having lost the Maltsters Arms in 1963, and the Farriers Arms in 1965.

The remaining pubs are :

  • The Kings Head: a 300-year-old grade II listed building which has now been refurbished as a restaurant and bar. In the years when the turnpike ran through Hunton Bridge it served as a coaching inn;
  • the Kings Lodge, which was built in 1642 as a hunting lodge for King Charles I, also refurbished as a restaurant and bar
  • the Dog and Partridge on Old Mill Road.
  • 1 Bridge Road

    The land adjacent to the Grand Union Canal and to the north of Bridge Road was in industrial use from the opening of the canal. A coal wharf known as Hunton Bridge Wharf was established approximately 100 years after the opening, consisting of a tramway, warehouse and managers dwelling. Of these buildings only the cottage remains at 1 Bridge Road.

    The Old School House

    The original house was demolished and replaced with the current fine brick early Georgian building which was built in the late 1720s. Subsequent changes were made during the 1800s such as the addition of the library joining the main house to the servant wing.

    The schoolhouse was used for Church of England services until the building of St Paul's church across the road in Langleybury.

    Hunton Canal Bridge

    The original structure was demolished in 1932 and replaced with an ornate reinforced concrete skew arch. The structure includes an ornate cornice to the parapet and balustrades. The existing western edge beam was demolished in 1983 due to a vehicular impact with a new aluminium parapet. The structure was Grade II listed in 1985.

    Planning history

    On 28 June 1984, Three Rivers District Council Planning Committee resolved that an area of Hunton Bridge, should be designated as a Conservation Area, and subsequently extended in 1990 in terms of the Planning (Listed Building and Conservation Areas) Act 1990.

    Listed buildings within the boundary include

    Grade II* Listed

  • Church of St. Paul
  • The Kings Lodge
  • Grade II Listed

  • Lych Gate
  • Loyd Memorial Cross
  • The Old School House
  • The Kings Head Public House
  • K6 Telephone Kiosk
  • Hunton Canal Bridge
  • Locally Important Buildings

  • 1, Bridge Road
  • Brookside Cottages
  • References

    Hunton Bridge Wikipedia


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