place

Buckinghamshire Golf Club

1992 establishments in EnglandDenham, BuckinghamshireGolf clubs and courses in BuckinghamshireSports venues completed in 1992Use British English from February 2023
Buckinghamshire Golf Club
Buckinghamshire Golf Club

Buckinghamshire Golf Club, containing the Denham Court Mansion, is a golf club near Denham, Buckinghamshire, England, United Kingdom.It is accessed via Denham Country Drive off the M40 motorway near the junction with the M25 motorway. The golf course and surroundings form part of the Denham Country Park, an area which the poet John Dryden called "one of the most delicious spots in England". The mansion is set in a course of 226 acres, designed by the former Ryder Cup captain John Jacobs. The golf club was established in 1992. The River Misbourne flows through the course. The club hosted the Senior Tournament of Champions on the European Seniors Tour from 1996 to 2000, the Andersen Consulting World Championship of Golf European Final in 1997, which was won by Colin Montgomerie, and the ISPS Handa Ladies European Masters on the Ladies European Tour since 2012.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Buckinghamshire Golf Club (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Buckinghamshire Golf Club
Denham Way,

Geographical coordinates (GPS) Address External links Nearby Places
placeShow on map

Wikipedia: Buckinghamshire Golf ClubContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 51.571944444444 ° E -0.48916666666667 °
placeShow on map

Address

Buckinghamshire Golf Course

Denham Way
UB9 5AX (Denham, Gerrards Cross and Chalfonts Community Board)
England, United Kingdom
mapOpen on Google Maps

linkWikiData (Q4983265)
linkOpenStreetMap (10155121)

Buckinghamshire Golf Club
Buckinghamshire Golf Club
Share experience

Nearby Places

Frays Farm Meadows
Frays Farm Meadows

Frays Farm Meadows is a 28.2-hectare (70-acre) biological Site of Special Scientific Interest near Denham in the London Borough of Hillingdon. It was notified as an SSSI in 1981, and has been managed by the London Wildlife Trust on behalf of Hillingdon Council since 1999. It is part of the Colne Valley Regional Park.Frays Farm Meadows are a set of fields bounded on the south by the A40 road and on the west by the Grand Union Canal. The Frays River goes north through the site before turning west toward an old railway embankment that runs north from the A40, dividing the site into three parts: the western fields, the area between the embankment and the river, and the fields east and north of the river. The site is accessible to the public apart from fields on both sides of the embankment. Access to the western fields is by a stile on the eastern bank of the canal at Denham Lock. From there a path through Denham Lock Wood (another SSSI run by London Wildlife Trust, north-west of the Meadows) gives access to the northern and eastern fields. Frays Farm Meadows provide a window on the medieval world, never having been intensively farmed. They are one of the few remaining examples of unimproved wet alluvial grassland in Greater London and the Colne Valley. The linear features, river, embankment, ditches and hedges, contribute to the rich diversity of plants and animals. Cows and horses graze in order to improve conditions by churning up the ground and encouraging pooling of water. Mammals on site include the nationally endangered water vole, and there are birds such as snipe, cuckoos, and a barn owl. Plants include marsh horsetail, ragged robin and arrowhead.Frays Valley Local Nature Reserve partly covers the same area as the SSSI.