Neha Patil (Editor)

Wooburn

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OS grid reference
  
SU908877

Region
  
South East

Sovereign state
  
United Kingdom

District
  
Wycombe District

UK parliament constituency
  
Beaconsfield

Civil parish
  
Wooburn

Country
  
England

Shire county
  
Buckinghamshire

Dialling code
  
01628

Wooburn

Population
  
10,792 (2011 Census including Hedsor)

Weather
  
12°C, Wind N at 14 km/h, 60% Humidity

Wooburn is a village in Buckinghamshire, England. It is located off the A4094 road between Wooburn Green and Bourne End in the very south of the county near the River Thames, about two miles south west of Beaconsfield and four miles east of Marlow. Wooburn is one of the two principal settlements within Wooburn and Bourne End, a civil parish in Wycombe district.

The village toponym is derived from the Old English for "walled stream". This refers to the River Wye, which has its source near West Wycombe and runs through the village to join the River Thames at Bourne End. The river runs along the boundary of Warren Nature Reserve, a Local Nature Reserve which adjoins Wooburn Park. In the Domesday Book of 1086 the village was recorded as Waborne though earlier, in 1075, it had been referred to as Waburna. The Church of England parish church of Saint Paul is medieval but was extensively altered by the Gothic Revival architect William Butterfield in 1869. It has a flint nave and a tall tower. There are some half timbered houses facing the churchyard and nearby there is a flint school house.

The manor house of Wooburn was once a palace of the Bishops of Lincoln.

References

Wooburn Wikipedia