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Abingdon Reservoir

Abingdon-on-ThamesProposed infrastructure in EnglandReservoirs in Oxfordshire

The Abingdon Reservoir is a long-term proposal for fresh water storage located south west of Abingdon, Oxfordshire in the mid-west of the Thames Basin and which is intended to help support water supply provision in the south-east of England.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Abingdon Reservoir (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors).

Abingdon Reservoir
Hanney Road, Vale of White Horse

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Wikipedia: Abingdon ReservoirContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 51.634444444444 ° E -1.3541666666667 °
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Address

Hanney Road

Hanney Road
OX13 6AP Vale of White Horse
England, United Kingdom
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Priory Cottages, Steventon
Priory Cottages, Steventon

Priory Cottages (formerly Steventon Priory) is a 14th-century manor house and former monastic grange which had the status of a priory at Steventon in the English county of Oxfordshire (formerly Berkshire). King Henry I gave the manor of Steventon to the priory of Notre-Dame de Bonne-Nouvelle in Rouen, a cell of the Abbey of Bec in Normandy. It therefore became a cell of Bec and was given the status of a priory. However, a priory church and associated buildings were never built there. It always remained just a monastic grange, the building now called Priory Cottages, served by one or two monks. By the late 14th century, it was leased out to tenants. Later it belonged to Westminster Abbey. The building is constructed around a central courtyard and its mighty hammer-beam is of architectural interest. It is also said to have a priest’s bolthole in the chimney.In 1939 the cottages were endowed to the National Trust by a group of women philanthropists called Ferguson’s Gang. Ferguson’s Gang kept their identities secret and attracted publicity for the National Trust by delivering funds in spectacular ways. In July 1939 they invaded the National Trust’s AGM with what was reported to be ‘A Benificent Bomb’ but which was in fact a metal pineapple containing £100, which was their second down-payment for Priory Cottages. The five women of Ferguson’s Gang intended to use the cottages as their own living space but their plans were thwarted by the start of World War II, and the cottages are now tenanted privately.The public can visit the cottages by written appointment with the tenant.