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Bellingdon

Bellingdon
Chapel of Ease, Bellingdon - geograph.org.uk - 164432.jpg
St John's Church Bellingdon
Bellingdon is located in Buckinghamshire
Bellingdon
Bellingdon
Bellingdon shown within Buckinghamshire
OS grid reference SP9404
Civil parish
District
Shire county
Region
Country England
Sovereign state United Kingdom
Post town CHESHAM
Postcode district HP5
Dialling code 01494
Police Thames Valley
Fire Buckinghamshire
Ambulance South Central
EU Parliament South East England
UK Parliament
List of places
UK
England
Buckinghamshire
51°44′06″N 0°37′51″W / 51.734876°N 0.630916°W / 51.734876; -0.630916Coordinates: 51°44′06″N 0°37′51″W / 51.734876°N 0.630916°W / 51.734876; -0.630916

Bellingdon the name deriving from the Anglo Saxon Bellingdenu or Bella's Valley, and is recorded as Belenden in the 15th century, is a village in the civil parish of Chartridge (where the 2011 Census was included), in Buckinghamshire, England. It is arranged along a ridge, typical of the Chiltern Hills to the north of Chesham.

Until the end of the 19th century Bellingdon consisted of a number of scattered farms including Bank, Peppetts, Bellingdon End, Bloomfield, Huge, Hazeldean and Vale Farms which were built in the late 16th or early 17th-century. The abundance of clay deposits led to a number of brickworks being established in the 19th century, two of which were: Bellingdon brickworks (now HG Matthews) in 1891 and another at Bloomfield Farm in 1899, then in the 20th century on Gyles Road and Oak Lane.

The village hall was built around 1948 using a 'standard hut' provided by the National Council for Social Service on land given by Miss Marian Thompson, the first W.I. President. Together with the adjoining playing fields, it is shared with the people of the nearby hamlet of Asheridge. In 2010 a grant was awarded to fund the construction of a playground next to the village hall. At the northern end of the village is the premises of The Bull public house which ceased to trade in the summer of 2009 and was boarded up, and beyond this the largest employer in the village, HG Matthews Brickworks which was acquired by the family in 1924. Also at this end of the village is the Bellingdon End shop selling equestrian supplies, animal feed and clothing.

In the nineteenth century there was a Baptist meeting in the village at Peppett's Green, which was run by the Congregational Church and the Lower Baptist Chapel (now Trinity Baptist) in Chesham. It is mentioned in the 1851 Ecclesiastical Census. Peppett's Farm was owned by the Lower Baptist Church but sold in the 1920s.

St John's Church, in the centre of the village is part of the ecclesiastical parish of Great Chesham. The Anglican congregation started in the 1870s, in the 1880s it met in the Mission Room at Sun Cottage. The current tin tabernacle was built in 1901. In 1958 the building was named "St John's", after St John the Evangelist.


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