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Holton St Mary

Babergh DistrictCivil parishes in SuffolkSuffolk geography stubsVillages in Suffolk
St. Mary's Church, Holton St. Mary geograph.org.uk 305700
St. Mary's Church, Holton St. Mary geograph.org.uk 305700

Holton St Mary is a village and civil parish in Suffolk, England. Located on the B1070 around five miles south-west of Ipswich and half a mile from the A12 (which forms the parish's south-east boundary), it is part of Babergh district. The western end of the parish is part of the Dedham Vale Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty and the Higham meadow nature reserve. It was the birthplace of the 13 times British flat racing Champion Jockey, Nat Flatman.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Holton St Mary (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Holton St Mary
Hadleigh Road, Babergh

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Wikipedia: Holton St MaryContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 51.991 ° E 1 °
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Address

Hadleigh Road

Hadleigh Road
CO7 6NP Babergh
England, United Kingdom
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St. Mary's Church, Holton St. Mary geograph.org.uk 305700
St. Mary's Church, Holton St. Mary geograph.org.uk 305700
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Nearby Places

Raydon
Raydon

Raydon is a village and civil parish in Suffolk, England. Located around two miles south-east of Hadleigh, it is part of Babergh district. The parish also includes the hamlets of Lower Raydon (west) and The Woodlands (east). It was recorded in Domesday as "Reindune" or "Reinduna" and appears on John Speed's 1610 map as "Roydon". Raydon is based along part of the B1070 named The Street (runs north–south) and St Mary's church is close to the T junction with Woodlands Road in the north of the village. Raydon Mill dates from some time after the Mediaeval period located over a mile west of the village above Lower Raydon. It held some German POWs during the war. It's now residential, but the turbine and two pairs of stones remain. The south and west of the parish, including Lower Raydon, is part of the Dedham Vale AONB. The northern part of the parish contains several nature reserves; Raydon Great Wood, Long Wood, Squares Grove and Tom's Wood, all of which are ancient woodland. The abandoned Hadleigh Railway previously ran through the Great Wood, with a station at Raydon Wood. The line is now also a nature reserve. Brett Vale Golf Club is located to the west of the village. Raydon Hall Farm is 1 km northeast from the village and the War Memorial is 1 km further on off Woodlands Road. During World War II an airfield was built in this area, which was initially known as United States Army Air Forces (USAAF) Station 157, later becoming RAF Raydon. Construction began when American engineers from the 833rd and 862nd battalions arrived in summer 1942. Airfield personnel lived close to Great Wenham. The remaining buildings from the airfield are today part of Notley Enterprise Park. Raydon Hall (TM0529039055) in this area is a Grade II building. Two pubs in the village have closed for many years, Chequers (formerly Horseshoes) and the Fox.