Shiplake


Shiplake consists of 3 settlements: Shiplake, Shiplake Cross and Lower Shiplake. Together these villages form a civil parish situated beside the River Thames south of Henley-on-Thames, Oxfordshire, England. The river forms the parish boundary to the east and south, and also the county boundary between Oxfordshire and Berkshire.
The villages have two discrete centres separated by agricultural land. The largest is Lower Shiplake, centred around Shiplake railway station on the Henley Branch Line. It is the economic centre of the parish and contains a store & post office, butcher shop, The Baskerville pub as well as most of the homes in the parish. southwest of Lower Shiplake are the older, contiguous settlements of Shiplake and Shiplake Cross. Shiplake village is the historic and religious centre of the parish and contains Shiplake Farm, the Parish church of SS Peter & Paul on Church Lane, Shiplake House, Plowden Arms pub and Shiplake College independent boarding school. The College occupies the building and site of the historic Shiplake Court. Shiplake village contains numerous Grade II* and II listed buildings and monuments. Shiplake Cross is the sporting and community centre of the parish. It consists of just five roads: Memorial Avenue, Orchard Close, Plough Lane, Plowden Way and Schoolfields. It contains the Shiplake Memorial Hall, Shiplake Village Bowling Club and Shiplake Tennis & Social Club as well as Shiplake CE Primary School and Nursery.
Historically, the parish also included Binfield Heath, west of the historic Shiplake village. Since 2003 it has been a separate civil parish.
The 2011 Census records the parish population as 1,954 and containing 679 homes.
The A4155 main road linking Henley with Reading, Berkshire passes through the parish.

Toponym

The earliest known surviving records of the toponym "Shiplake" are from the 13th century. The Book of Fees records Sciplak in 1236 and the Taxatio Ecclesiastica records Schipelak in 1292. It is derived from Old English and means "stream where sheep were washed". The other supposed origin is a mix of Saxon and Danish 'lack of ships' and may relate to a Viking practice of sinking boats as a cache. Vikings raided the Thames and attacked Reading in 871. The Viking option was preferred by Emily J Climenson in her 1894 tome, 'The History of Shiplake'.

Parish church

The Church of England parish church of SS Peter and Paul dates from at least the 13th century and is the centre of the Church of England parish of Shiplake. In 1869 the church was restored and enlarged to designs by the Gothic Revival architect GE Street. The chancel, north aisle and parts of the south aisle were rebuilt and the tracery of all its windows were replaced. The church is a Grade II* listed building.
The church tower has a ring of eight bells, all recast by the Whitechapel Bell Foundry in 2009. Shiplake Church also has a Sanctus bell cast by Gillett & Johnston of Croydon in 1929. The earliest reference to Shiplake’s bells is in an inventory dating from the reign of Edward VI : "Item – Three belles in ye steeple". The church bells were rung for Alfred Lord Tennyson's wedding on 13 June 1850. The ceremony was performed by the Reverend Robert Rawnsley who was Vicar from 1849-62. Tennyson gave the vicar a poem in lieu of payment for the ceremony:
Vicar of that pleasant spot, Where it was my chance to marry, Happy, happy be your lot, In the vicarage by the quarry: You were he that knit the knot.
in the parish churchyard
In the churchyard is a Gothic Revival shaft cross. It was erected in 1908 as a monument to a member of the Phillimore family. It is Grade II listed.

Economic and social history

In 1773 the Thames Navigation Commission built Shiplake Lock on the River Thames about downriver from the main village.
About 1830 Shiplake House was built. It is a three-storey early 19th-century Regency house just east of what is now Shiplake College. Part of the rear and side has a decorative wrought iron verandah.
In 1857 the Great Western Railway opened the Henley branch line between and, crossing the Thames on Shiplake Railway Bridge, about downstream from Shiplake Lock. The GWR built Shiplake railway station at Lower Shiplake, northeast of the older part of the village. Lower Shiplake has since grown into the largest settlement within the parish.
The original railway bridge was of timber. In 1897 the GWR replaced it with the present iron bridge.
In 1889 the author Jerome K. Jerome featured Shiplake in his novel Three Men in a Boat.
Most homes in Shiplake were built or rebuilt after the railway arrived. These include Shiplake Court, an historic estate and country house beside the parish church that overlooks the Thames. Shiplake Court was re-built between 1890 and about 1905. In 1959 it became Shiplake College, an independent boarding school. Some of the college buildings are Grade II listed, including its "extraordinary" water tower.
In 2003 the village of Binfield Heath and hamlet of Crowsley were separated from Shiplake civil parish to form the new civil parish of Binfield Heath. Binfield Heath and Crowsley remain part of the Church of England parish of Shiplake, as does Eye and Dunsden to the south.

Amenities

Shiplake has a villages website where news and information is exchanged. The website address is http://www.shiplakevillages.com/index.php?pid=58. This website also contains vital information. In 2020 the villages' Covid-19 response and numbers to contact was driven from this site http://www.shiplakevillages.com/forum-thread.php?thread=941#.
Shiplake has two pubs: the Plowden Arms and The Baskerville. The Plowden Arms in Shiplake village shut 'suddenly' on New Year's Day 2019. It is widely hoped it will re-open. The Baskerville is located in Lower Shiplake, near the railway station.
Shiplake has a village hall, Women's Institute, amateur dramatic society, bowls club and lawn tennis club and many other clubs such as the art and history societies and various fitness groups.
Shiplake has a small number of industrial, storage, retail, distribution and office units.
Primary schooling takes place at Shiplake CE Primary School on Memorial Avenue, a Voluntary Aided Church of England school with a school role of 178. Older children attend nearby Gillotts School in Henley. Shiplake College is an independent day and boarding school for boys aged 11– 18 and girls aged 16–18, located just off the main A4155 Henley to Reading road by SS Peter and Paul parish church.

Public transport

Shiplake railway station is on the Henley Branch Line. All trains terminate at, where they connect with Great Western main line trains to London Paddington and.
Two bus routes serve Shiplake.
Arriva the Shires route 800 links Shiplake with Reading in one direction and Henley and High Wycombe, Buckinghamshire in the other. Buses run twice an hour on weekdays, and once an hour on Saturdays and Sundays.
Thames Travel route X38 links Shiplake with Reading in one direction and Henley, Wallingford and Oxford in the other. Buses run once an hour from Mondays to Saturdays. There is no Sunday service.

Wargrave & Shiplake Regatta

The Wargrave & Shiplake Regatta was founded in 1867 and is held over an August weekend for non-racing shells. It receives the most entries for skiffing and dongolas racing on the Thames. The regatta attracts a comparable number of entries to the largest shell-racing regattas on the Thames such as Kingston Regatta and Molesey Regatta.

Notable residents