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Ardington and Lockinge

Coordinates: 51°35′35″N 1°22′37″W / 51.593°N 1.377°W / 51.593; -1.377
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Millennium sundial in Ardington and Lockinge community woodland

Ardington and Lockinge are two civil parishes in the Vale of White Horse district, centred about 2 miles (3 km) east of Wantage, Oxfordshire, that share a single parish council.

The two parishes were part of Berkshire until 1974 when they were transferred to Oxfordshire. The combined parish council was created in 2012 by merging the formerly separate parish councils of Ardington and Lockinge.[1] It includes the villages of Ardington, East Lockinge and West Lockinge, the hamlet of Ardington Wick and some remnants of Betterton, a "lost", depleted small settlement.[2]

Ginge Brook and its tributary Goddard's Brook drain the parishes into the River Ock a few miles to the north. The combined area of the two parishes is about 10 square miles (26 km2). Most land and property in the area is owned and managed by the Lockinge Estate. The Great Western Main Line between Didcot and Swindon passes through the parishes.

References

  1. ^ Parish and Town Councils in Oxfordshire – February 2012[permanent dead link], Accessed 20 May 2012
  2. ^ Ford, David Nash; Beresford, MW; Hurst, JG (1962). "Royal Berkshire History". Deserted Medieval Villages from across the County. Retrieved 24 March 2010.

Further reading

51°35′35″N 1°22′37″W / 51.593°N 1.377°W / 51.593; -1.377