Harman Patil (Editor)

Yardley Chase

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Grid reference
  
SP 846 543

Location map
  
Magic Map

Notification
  
1984

Interest
  
Biological

Area
  
3.576 km²

Yardley Chase Yardley Chase Cadet Training Centre East Midlands RFCA East

Area of Search
  
NorthamptonshireBuckinghamshire

Areas of search
  

The new yardley chase


Yardley Chase is a 357.6 hectare biological Site of Special Scientific Interest, mostly in Northamptonshire, with a small area in the south of the site in Buckinghamshire. It is in two areas of woodland, pasture and parkland, south-west of Yardley Hastings in Northamptonshire, and north-west of Olney in Buckinghamshire.

Contents

Yardley Chase Lead or Rumour info Yardley Chase MOD Bomb Store Yardley

EcologyEdit

This Chase has diverse semi-natural habitats, and its value for invertebrates has been enhanced by military use of the site, which has resulted in a long absence of intensive agriculture. There is woodland and unimproved grassland, and 30 breeding butterfly species have been recorded.

HistoryEdit

Yardley Chase Yardley Chase Cadet Training Centre East Midlands RFCA East

Much of the site was originally a Norman Hunting Chase and is now woodland, pasture and parkland. More recently, military use over a large part has left a series of railway tracks, grassland glades and open pools in the forest. The value of these habitats, particularly for invertebrates, is enhanced by their long isolation from intensive agriculture and by their presence over a large area.

Yardley Chase httpsiytimgcomvijUF3duha1gmaxresdefaultjpg

There is documentary evidence in the form of early maps and estate plans to indicate a long history of woodland on the site, although much of the former ancient semi-natural woodland has been replanted or modified. This has created a range of woodland types including plantations of oak, mixed broad-leaves such as ash and conifers. The integrity of the woodland blocks as a whole is essential to their nature conservation importance, but the relatively unmodified areas are of particular significance.

Yardley Chase River Nene Regional Park Salcey Forest and Yardley Chase Heritage

In addition to the ancient trees dating back to the civil war, Yardley Chase was also home to the oak tree which provided the inspiration for William Cowper's poem "Yardley Oak" and the area is described as having been a favourite walk of Cowper's.

Military useEdit

Yardley Chase Yardley Chase Northamptonshire UK Military Installations on

Yardley Chase contains some large concrete huts, about 12 metres (39 ft) long, and about 6-8m (20–25 feet) wide, which were used during World War II to store bombs. They continued in use after the war as a bulk explosives depot, until the 1970s when the Ministry of Defence shut them down when it became obvious that they would be useless in a nuclear war. The site was served by a branch of the Northampton-Bedford railway line and evidence of revetted tracks are still visible around the site which is only a few miles east of the former depot of the Northamptonshire Regiment and later Royal Pioneer Corps at Simpson Barracks in Wootton. The site also has numerous small bunkers within it and is criss-crossed by barbed wire fences once past the main perimeter. It has several tracks that lead to the various bunkers and fair amounts of military debris (mainly used pyrotechnics) scattered around it.

The eastern munitions site is larger than its western neighbour and the bomb storage buildings, in addition to being less numerous, are also mostly surrounded by water-filled moats. The storage buildings at the western site are surrounded by earth banks. The eastern and western sites were connected by a rail track.

The site is nowadays used by Army, Navy and Air cadets, as well as the Territorial Army units for basic skills training and field-craft. This site is closed to the public. The ACF use the training area on a regular basis – along with CCF units from nearby Schools. Naval cadets from TS Invincible (Bletchley Park) also use the site for on-shore field-craft. It is also used by the air cadets from Wellingborough and Rushden for fieldcraft weekends.

A groundbreaking ceremony took place at Yardley Chase on July 11, 2013 to mark the commencement of construction work on a new £6.2 million Cadet Training Centre. When complete the centre will provide lecture rooms, office spaces, dining facilities, an indoor training area and indoor shooting range, as well as accommodation for up to 185 cadets and 45 adults at one time. The centre is scheduled for completion in August 2014 and will primarily be used by the Army Cadet Force, although it will also be available for use by other cadet organisations, regular and reserve forces, local businesses and community based projects. When completed the existing World War Two era accommodation facilities will be demolished and the area landscaped.

AccessEdit

There are footpaths through the Chase but some areas used by the military are closed to the public.

References

Yardley Chase Wikipedia