Speen, Buckinghamshire
The centre of the village (depicted by the village sign) is 3 miles (5 km) south-east of Princes Risborough, and 5 miles (8.0 km) north of High Wycombe. The village is a short distance 'as the crow flies' from Hampden House, originally owned by John Hampden and a further distance from Chequers, the country residence of the Prime Minister.
The village has an annual fete which is usually held on the first weekend of July and a bi-annual arts festival which has been running for many years. The festival consists of entertainment shows, a theatre production and general activities on Speen Playing Field.
History
The village name originates from Anglo Saxon. The exact meaning is unclear, but possibly meaning 'wood-chip place'. The name of the village corresponds to the location of the hamlet in the Chiltern Forest where trees were regularly felled.
The Baptist church was built by men of the village in 1802. The flints were apparently collected in their aprons by local women from surrounding fields, helped by their children. It is a Grade II listed building.
Surrounding Lands and Population
The village is in the style of a traditional 18th century village. Its surroundings consists of a mixture of woodland and agricultural fields. Due to the geographical location of the village no railway station was built. There are approximately 165 houses in the village which has a population at the time of the 2011 census of 637 and has an estimated population of 654 in 2019.
Speen Festival
The village hosts the Speen Festival, a culture and arts festival, in the September of odd-numbered years.
The first Speen Festival, in 2001, was based on a festival called The Leaves of Time, held in 1999 to celebrate the passing of the millennium.
Notable residents
- In 1928 the artist Eric Gill moved to Pigotts at Speen, where he set up a printing press, and lettering workshop and alternative community. He is buried in the Baptist churchyard.
- The composer Edmund Rubbra lived at Valley Cottage, Highwood Bottom, Speen, for many years following his marriage in 1933.
- In the 1960s physicist Bernard Robinson bought Pigotts and in 1966 transferred his amateur Music Camp activities there. (Music Camp, an influential annual gathering of amateur musicians who tackled challenging repertoire with the aid of many professional musicians, was previously held at Bothampstead in Berkshire, from 1935).
- His son Nicholas Wheeler Robinson (1937-2022) was a teacher who continued to live at Pigotts and carried on Music Camp activities there.
References
- ^ "Discover the beautiful Chiltern Hills, just 35 miles from London". Chilterns AONB.
- ^ Historic England. "Speen Church (Baptist) (Grade II) (1158973)". National Heritage List for England.
- ^ "Speen (Buckinghamshire, South East England, United Kingdom) - Population Statistics and Location in Maps and Charts". www.citypopulation.de. Retrieved 14 July 2017.
- ^ "Speen Festival". www.speenfestival.org. Retrieved 18 August 2024.
- ^ "Font Designer - Eric Gill". Retrieved 1 January 2009.
- ^ "Pigotts Roads. GILL, (Eric)". Archived from the original on 28 September 2011.
- ^ Jenny Pery, Benedict Rubbra: Point of Balance (Halstar Publications: Wellington, 2008), 15.
- ^ Bernard Robinson: An Amateur in Music, Countryside Books (1985), reviewed by The Musical Times, Vol. 128, No. 1734 (August 1987), p. 441
- ^ Humphrey Burton. In My Own Time: An Autobiography (2021), p. 80
- ^ Charlie Wheeler Robinson. 'Nicholas Wheeler Robinson obituary', in The Guardian, 2 September, 2022
External links
Media related to Speen at Wikimedia Commons