Puneet Varma (Editor)

Odney

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OS grid reference
  
SU898854

Region
  
South East

Sovereign state
  
United Kingdom

Metropolitan county
  
Berkshire

UK parliament constituency
  
Berkshire

Metropolitan borough
  
Windsor and Maidenhead

Country
  
England

Post town
  
MAIDENHEAD

Dialling code
  
01628

Odney

Similar
  
Cookham Lock, Cock Marsh, Stanley Spencer Gallery, Cookham Bridge, Brownsea Castle

The photographs of rodney smith 1970 2016


Odney is a common and island (Eyot) in the Thames, part of the civil parish of Cookham, in the English county of Berkshire. The island may have been sacred to the main Saxon god, Woden, as "Wodenes-Eye" ("Woden’s Isle").

Contents

Location

It lies next to the village of Cookham and the River Thames, and is located approximately 2.5 miles (4.0 km) North of Maidenhead. It is also very close to Cookham Lock. The Cliveden Estate borders Odney, and in autumn the entire valley surrounding the two estates experiences a burst in vibrant autumn colour.

Pottery

There was the Odney Pottery works (1942–1956) on the common. The building can still be seen. The very attractive earthenware pottery is still sought after. John Bew was asked to set up the pottery by John Lewis in Cookham in 1942 to train disabled people. In 1948, they were given a government licence to produce domestic pottery. Geoffrey Eastop (1921–2014) spent a year working at the pottery early in his career as a potter.

Lullebrook Manor and the Odney Club

The Odney Club, a holiday centre owned by the John Lewis Partnership and available for their staff, is centred on Lullebrook Manor. This fine mid-18th century country house was once rented by Colonel Francis Ricardo, the first car owner in Cookham, who was High Sheriff of Berkshire in the early 1900s and supposedly the inspiration for Kenneth Grahame's Toad, in the Wind in the Willows. A property on the site is known to have existed from as early as the 13th Century, when the house was owned by the De Lullebrook family.

References

Odney Wikipedia