Puneet Varma (Editor)

Knotty Green

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OS grid reference
  
SU932922

Country
  
England

Post town
  
Beaconsfield

Shire county
  
Buckinghamshire

Dialling code
  
01494

UK parliament constituency
  
Chesham and Amersham

Region
  
South East

Sovereign state
  
United Kingdom

Postcode district
  
HP9

District
  
Chiltern District

Civil parish
  
Penn

Knotty Green httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediaenthumbc

Knotty Green, once a rural hamlet in the Buckinghamshire Chiltern Hills. It is characterised by large houses set in their own extensive grounds and though it remains within the civil parish of Penn (where the 2011 Census population was included ) today it has become contiguous with the market town of Beaconsfield. .

Contents

Map of Knotty Green, Beaconsfield, UK

History

The centre of the old hamlet is still identifiable at the junction of Penn Road and Forty Green Road where there remains a remnant of the old green from which the hamlet took part of its name. The name of the hamlet can be traced back to the 13th century. Knotty Green, or Nattuc as it was called in 1222, takes its name from Old English nattuc (rough grass of tussocks) that grew on the green.

There are several surviving buildings built in the 15th and 16th centuries, including timber-framed hall house Baylins Farm (or Beelings Manor) dating back to 1450. Opposite the cricket pitch stands Hutchins Barn, a 16th-century timbered house with a minstrels gallery. Eghams Farm, built in Tudor times, is a private residence and stands on a path leading to Hogback Wood.

In one corner of the small recreation area adjoining the cricket pitch, there is an old dew pond formerly used for sheep dipping and reputed to have been in existence for 400 years.

The development that followed the arrival of the railway in Beaconsfield in 1906 increased the population of the parish as a whole by nearly 50 per cent in five years, but it was confined to the Penn Road and Forty Green Road. There was still an obvious dividing line between the parishes of Penn and Beaconsfield, where the boundary stream ran under the Penn Road—and where Beaconsfield's pavement and new houses stopped abruptly. Development at this time included a house by the architect C F A Voysey, completed in 1907. Knotty Green also contains a 20th-century water garden at Juniper Hill.

Present day

The Red Lion pub, (which according to Buckinghamshire County Council archives dates back to 1753) lies at the centre of the hamlet along with the home of Knotty Green Cricket Club and a children's playground, is the only pub in Knotty Green and is the only remaining commercial entity in the hamlet.

Notable residents

Val Doonican was one of Knotty Green's notable residents.

References

Knotty Green Wikipedia