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Boxwell SSSI

CotswoldsEnglish Site of Special Scientific Interest stubsSites of Special Scientific Interest in GloucestershireSites of Special Scientific Interest notified in 1954
Illustration Buxus sempervirens1 cleaned
Illustration Buxus sempervirens1 cleaned

Boxwell SSSI (grid reference ST816928) is a 5.31-hectare (13.1-acre) biological Site of Special Scientific Interest in Gloucestershire, notified in 1954. The site is listed in the 'Cotswold District' Local Plan 2001-2011 (on line) as a Key Wildlife Site (KWS).

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Boxwell SSSI (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Boxwell SSSI
Boxwell Lane, Cotswold District Boxwell with Leighterton

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Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 51.634156 ° E -2.266529 °
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Address

Boxwell Lane

Boxwell Lane
GL8 8UG Cotswold District, Boxwell with Leighterton
England, United Kingdom
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Nearby Places

Lasborough
Lasborough

Lasborough is a settlement in Gloucestershire, England, part of the Westonbirt with Lasborough civil parish. Lasborough lies to the west of the A46, about two miles north of Leighterton, two miles south of Kingscote and five miles west of Tetbury. Lasborough is an ancient settlement, with remains of a Roman villa nearby, and it lay on the Roman road from Bath to Chavenage Green. In 1086, the Domesday Book recorded a settlement of 13 households. However, like its sister community of Westonbirt, the village of Lasborough was largely depopulated in the Middle Ages, with only the manor house and the church surviving.The manor house, which dated from 1319, belonged to the Estcourt family from 1598. It was rebuilt about 1610 as Lasborough Manor (later Lasborough Farm), and the surrounding land enclosed, by Sir Thomas Estcourt (1569–1624). He served as a justice of the peace and a sheriff, as well as two periods as an MP, first for Malmesbury and later for Gloucestershire.Lasborough House was built in the 1790s on part of the estate of Lasborough Farm for the then owner, Edmund Estcourt, by the architect James Wyatt in a castellated neo-Gothic style.By the 1820s, the church of St. Mary's, Lasborough was derelict. It was rebuilt in 1861–2 by Lewis Vulliamy for R. S. Holford, who had purchased the Lasborough estate in 1844. The church featured in the BBC TV series Lark Rise to Candleford. It is one of the ten churches in the benefice of Badminton.