Aston Abbotts

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Aston Abbotts or Aston Abbots is a village and civil parish in Buckinghamshire, England. It is about Template:Convert north of Aylesbury and Template:Convert south-west of Wing. The parish includes the hamlet of Burston and had a population of 426 at the 2021 Census.

Manor

"Aston" is a common toponym in England, derived from the Old English for "eastern estate".<ref>Template:Cite dictionary</ref> The suffix "Abbotts" refers to the former abbey in the village, which until the Dissolution of the Monasteries in the 16th century was the country home of the abbots of St Albans in Hertfordshire. The present house called The Abbey, Aston Abbotts was largely built in the late 18th century and altered in the early 19th century.<ref>Template:NHLE</ref>

Parish church

The Church of England parish church of St James the Great has a late 15th or early 16th century Perpendicular GothicTemplate:Sfn west tower, but the rest of the building was demolished in 1865 and replaced with a new nave and chancel designed by the Oxford Diocesan Architect G.E. Street and completed in 1866.<ref name="EH">Template:NHLE</ref> The church is a Grade II* listed building.<ref name="EH"/>

The church tower has a ring of six bells. Anthony Chandler of Drayton Parslow<ref name="DoveFounders">Template:Cite web</ref> cast the third and fifth bells in the Commonwealth period in 1652.<ref name="DoveDetails">Template:Cite web</ref> Edward Hall, also of Drayton Parslow,<ref name="DoveFounders"/> cast the fourth bell in 1739 and the tenor in 1740.<ref name="DoveDetails"/> John Taylor & Co of Loughborough<ref name="DoveFounders"/> cast the treble and second bells in 1929.<ref name="DoveDetails"/>

The polar explorer Sir James Clark Ross is buried in the churchyard of St James the Great.

Czechoslovak government-in-exile

In the Second World War from 1940 to 1945 Dr Edvard Beneš, the exiled President of Czechoslovakia, stayed at The Abbey in Aston Abbotts.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref><ref>Template:Cite web</ref> His advisers and secretaries (called his Chancellery) stayed in nearby Wingrave, and his military intelligence staff stayed at nearby Addington. President Beneš gave a bus shelter to the villages of Aston Abbotts and Wingrave in 1944. It is on the A418 road between the two villages.<ref name="BusShelter">Template:Cite web</ref>

Amenities

The village had two public houses: "The Bull & Butcher", which closed for conversion to flats in 2003, and the "Royal Oak", which is closed and undergoing change since Covid lockdown in 2019.<ref name="FIT">Template:Cite web</ref> Aston Abbotts had a village shop, but this closed in 2005.<ref name="FIT"/>

The nearest shop, post office and school are 1 mile east of Aston Abbotts in the village of Wingrave, with Wingrave offering a Church of England First and Middle school. The nearest secondary school and doctors surgery are 2 miles north east of Aston Abbotts in the village of Wing.

There are regular bus services to Aston Abbotts from Aylesbury and Leighton Buzzard.

References

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Sources and further reading

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