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Church of Saint Mary the Virgin, Harlington, Bedfordshire

Church of England church buildings in BedfordshireGrade I listed churches in BedfordshireUse British English from February 2023
St Marys C of E Church Harlington
St Marys C of E Church Harlington

Church of Saint Mary the Virgin is a Grade I listed church in Harlington, Bedfordshire, England. It became a listed building on 23 January 1961.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Church of Saint Mary the Virgin, Harlington, Bedfordshire (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Church of Saint Mary the Virgin, Harlington, Bedfordshire
Church Road,

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Wikipedia: Church of Saint Mary the Virgin, Harlington, BedfordshireContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 51.9638 ° E -0.4908 °
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Address

Church of St Mary The Virgin

Church Road
LU5 6LE
England, United Kingdom
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Website
harlingtonchurch.org.uk

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St Marys C of E Church Harlington
St Marys C of E Church Harlington
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Sundon Chalk Quarry
Sundon Chalk Quarry

Sundon Chalk Quarry is a 26.2-hectare (65-acre) biological Site of Special Scientific Interest in Upper Sundon in Bedfordshire. It was notified in 1989 under Section 28 of the Wildlife and Countryside Act 1981, and the local planning authority is Central Bedfordshire Council. The site is privately owned but there is free public access.The quarry was established to provide chalk and marl for the Sundon cement works, which operated between 1899 and 1976. The site is part of a large complex of disused chalk quarries, and its varied habitats include fens, lakes, chalk grassland, scrub and woodland. Interesting chalkland plants found here include ploughman’s spikenard, wild liquorice and woolly thistle, and what is probably the largest colony of the Chiltern gentian in England.The quarry has one of the most important assemblages of insect species in Bedfordshire, including sixteen species of dragonfly and damselfly, and twenty-one of butterfly, including the uncommon Adonis blue. The odontids include the scarce blue-tailed damselfly and the ruddy darter dragonfly, both of which are scarce in Britain, and the emerald damselfly and the red-eyed damselfly, which are uncommon in Bedfordshire. There are a number of uncommon beetles including Apion astragali, the larvae of which feed solely on the wild licorice, itself a scarce plant in Britain. There are also amphibians, with the common frog, smooth newt and great crested newt regularly breeding here.The Chiltern Way passes through the site on a footpath from Church Road.