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Crime: manslaughter
Crime: manslaughter
Date Of Sentence: 31 Jan 1966
Date Of Sentence: 31 Jan 1966
Date Of Release:
Place: Colden Common, Hampshire
Place: Colden Common, Hampshire

Source: http://www.nationalarchives.gov.uk/
Source: http://www.nationalarchives.gov.uk/

JAKUBOWSKI, Wladyslaw: murder of Eleaner LONG, on 31 January 1966 at Colden Common, Hampshire by stabbing. Convicted of manslaughter on grounds of diminished responsibility [[User:Bettybutt|Betty Butt]] ([[User talk:Bettybutt|talk]]) 07:03, 24 March 2013 (UTC)
JAKUBOWSKI, Wladyslaw: murder of Eleaner LONG, on 31 January 1966 at Colden Common, Hampshire by stabbing. Convicted of manslaughter on grounds of diminished responsibility [[User:Bettybutt|Betty Butt]] ([[User talk:Bettybutt|talk]]) 07:03, 24 March 2013 (UTC)



Revision as of 07:08, 24 March 2013

Colden Common
Population3,681 (2001 census)
OS grid referenceSU475225
District
Shire county
Region
CountryEngland
Sovereign stateUnited Kingdom
Postcode districtSO24
Dialling code01962
PoliceHampshire and Isle of Wight
FireHampshire and Isle of Wight
AmbulanceSouth Central
UK Parliament
WebsiteColden Common Parish Council
List of places
UK
England
Hampshire

Colden Common is a village and civil parish in Hampshire, England, lying just east of the M3 motorway between Winchester and Southampton. The nearest town is Eastleigh to the south west. Colden Common is in the Winchester District. To the east are the South Downs and to the west is the River Itchen. The village lies north of the hamlet of Fisher's Pond and the village of Fair Oak, and south of the village and parish of Twyford.

History

Colden Common became an independent civil parish (the lowest tier of local government) as recently as 1932 having initially been part of the parishes of Twyford and Owslebury. The Ecclesiastical Parish of Colden Common was formed in 1843 [citation needed] with Holy Trinity Church built the following year and situated on the southern boundary of the parish.

In the sixteenth century the hamlet of Brambridge, then in Owslebury Parish, was granted by Bishop Fox to the newly-founded Corpus Christi College, Oxford. In 1609-10 Brambridge was granted to John Pierson, together with lands belonging to three recusants, Ursula Uvedale, Richard Bruning and Thomas Welles. Gilbert Welles was granted Brambridge by Charles I in 1636 and the property remained in the Welles family until the late eighteenth century, when it passed to a cousin, Walter Smythe. Walter Smythe's eldest daughter, Maria, became Mrs. Fitzherbert, and spent her childhood at Brambridge House. Maria is said to have lived for a while in a cottage at Colden Common when her first husband, Edward Weld, died. One of the rooms in the old Brambridge House was consecrated as a Roman Catholic chapel, but after the Catholic Relief Act a small chapel was built in the village and endowed by Mrs. Fitzherbert in about 1782 [citation needed] v

Since the year 2000, Colden Common has grown significantly with the addition of new housing stock.

Sport and leisure

Colden Common has a Non-League football club Colden Common F.C. who play at Colden Common Recreation Ground.


Amenities

Colden Common has both Anglican and Methodist churches. There is a community centre located at the centre of the village. Colden Common used to have a Parish Hall until it was demolished in 2006, now there is a housing development on the site of the Parish Hall. Colden Common primary school is also at the heart of the village and is in the catchment area for Kings' School in Winchester.

The pubs within the boundaries of the village are: The Rising Sun, The Black Horse, The Queens Head, The Fishers Pond, and The Dog and Crook.

There are several shops in the parish including The Co-operative (brand).

Marwell Wildlife is situated just outside the parish boundaries, in the parish of Owslebury, though the main entrance is on the parish boundary, where the parishes meet.

Transport and road network

  • There are two major roads in Colden Common—the B3354 and the B3335. The B3354 is known as the Main Road whilst it passes through the village, and the B3335 is called Highbridge Road. These two roads meet at a fork, just north of the village, outside the parish boundary. Within the parish boundary, the two roads are joined by Church Lane/Brambridge to the south and Spring Lane to the north.
  • Southampton Airport is 5 miles south of the village.
  • The M3 Motorway is 3 miles west of the village. Junction 11, which is north of the village, down the B3354 and B3335 roads, is in Twyford Down which is south of Winchester. The other junction, which is closer to the village, is Junction 12, which is west of the village, north of Eastleigh and near Allbrook; the junction is down the B3335 and A335 (Highbridge Road, Allbrook Hill (B3335) and Allbrook Way (A335)) (Tall vehicles can't go this way because there is a relatively low bridge in Allbrook, under the railway line to London); an alternative route to Junction 12 from Colden Common, but again for light and short vehicles only, is down Kiln Lane, Otterbourne Hill and Winchester Road through Otterbourne, There is a weak bridge over the River Itchen over Kiln Lane and also low bridge so heavy and tall vehicles can't go this way either, the only way for heavy or tall vehicles to get the M3 from Colden Common is via Junction 11.

Colden Common in the news

"Crime of passion in Colden Common"

Wladyslaw Jakubowski (Jail) Age: unknown Sex: male Crime: manslaughter Date Of Sentence: 31 Jan 1966 Place: Colden Common, Hampshire Source: http://www.nationalarchives.gov.uk/ JAKUBOWSKI, Wladyslaw: murder of Eleaner LONG, on 31 January 1966 at Colden Common, Hampshire by stabbing. Convicted of manslaughter on grounds of diminished responsibility Betty Butt (talk) 07:03, 24 March 2013 (UTC)

"The Tyre Pyre"

Colden Common hit the headlines when on 12 February 1974 a tyre depot (in a disused claypit in Vears Lane) caught fire. At 9:43 in the evening the local fire brigade received the first call. An estimated 65,000 to 70,000 tons of tyres were alight. The event was dubbed the "Tyre Pyre".[1]

Victor the Giraffe

In Marwell Zoological Park, on 20 September 1977, a giraffe called Victor did the splits and could not get up again. Despite desperate attempts to help Victor, he later died of a heart attack.[citation needed]

References