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Water Eaton, Milton Keynes

Coordinates: 51°59′20″N 0°43′18″W / 51.9888°N 0.7218°W / 51.9888; -0.7218
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Water Eaton is an area of Milton Keynes, Buckinghamshire, England and in the civil parish of Bletchley and Fenny Stratford. It is to the south of Fenny Stratford, and is one of the ancient villages of Buckinghamshire that became incorporated as part of Milton Keynes in 1967.

By the date of designation of Milton Keynes, it had already been virtually absorbed by the 1960s Greater London Council-built London overspill district known as the Lakes Estate.[1] The GLC was very proud of the Lakes Estate, declaring it to be the finest in modern architecture for a working class estate, based on the Radburn design concept pioneered in Radburn, New Jersey.[2]

The village name 'Eaton' is Old English language word referring to a farming settlement, and the whole means 'farm by a river'. It is first mentioned in the 1086 Domesday Book (as simply Eaton); when it was held by Geoffrey de Montbray, and was listed as having a Mill.[3]

See also

References

  1. ^ So called because its streets are named after British lakes.
  2. ^ Bendixson; Platt (1992). Milton Keynes, Image and Reality. Granta. ISBN 0-906782-72-4.
  3. ^ "Buckinghamshire N-Z". The Domesday Book Online.

51°59′20″N 0°43′18″W / 51.9888°N 0.7218°W / 51.9888; -0.7218