Speen, Berkshire


Speen is a village and civil parish in West Berkshire, England. Centred north west of the largest town in the district, Newbury, Speen has clustered settlements, the largest of which is Speen village and the others are buffered from the town by the A34 road and named Bagnor, Stockcross, Woodspeen and Marsh Benham.
Its other land is an approximately even mixture of woodland and agricultural fields and varies greatly in elevation, having the Reading to Taunton Line alongside the north bank of the River Kennet as its southern boundary and both banks of the Lambourn in its north with elevated ground in between.
Benham Park in the south-west of the area is a listed landscape garden and house under the national statutory scheme.

History

Speen has the frequently broken-up footpath marking the Ermin Street/Ermin way, the main Roman road from Corinium Dobunnorum to Calleva Atrebatum.
The English Civil War Second Battle of Newbury was fought at Speen on 27 October 1644. Speenhamland in the parish, now part of Newbury, was the eponymous home of the Speenhamland system of outdoor relief.

Landmarks

Parish church

The Church of England parish church of Saint Mary the Virgin is late Saxon and is the oldest church in Berkshire. It is the burial place of Giovanni Battista Castiglione, Queen Elizabeth I's Italian tutor and servant, who was given nearby Benham Valence house and park in 1572.

The Ladywell or lady well

The church, as stated to Our Lady was built near one of the holy wells of Christendom, which is as with many wells, an enlarged spring. Tenuous local tradition says its water is able to cure eye diseases and other ills, and there have been reports it is haunted. Some of the village people have seen an old woman with white hair and wearing a blue rain mac wandering around the grave yard and up the path the well is situated on. The Ladywell was fenced off in the Victorian era.

Speen House

Next to the above sites are ramparts around elevated Speen House, the latest incarnation of Speen manor house, which is mostly late 18th century, but incorporates a minority of building materials from its 17th century precursor. Early historians have dated a few stones among the foundations to the Roman village of Spinae, but it is more likely that these oldest stones were sourced and hewn for the late medieval manor house, nothing else of which survives.

Benham Park

Benham Park or Benham Valence Manor is a landscape garden centred on its house built by Henry Holland and Capability Brown for William, 6th Baron Craven in 1775. It was later the home of his widow, Elizabeth, and her second husband, the Margrave of Anspach. The building is Grade II* listed and park is Grade II listed, One of its pairs of grand and ornate gate piers is separately Grade I listed.

Demography

Geography

Speen has clustered settlements, the largest of which is Speen village and the others are buffered from the town by the A34 road and named Bagnor, Stockcross, Woodspeen and Marsh Benham.
Its other land is an approximately even mixture of woodland and agricultural fields and varies greatly in elevation, having the Reading to Taunton Line alongside the north bank of the River Kennet as its southern boundary and both banks of the Lambourn in its north with elevated ground in between.

Transport

;Buses
;Rail
Speen railway station served the parish until it was closed in 1960. The nearest railway station now is which is connected by bus.
;Roads
A trunk route dual carriageway cuts through the middle of the parish in a roughly straight line north-south: the A34 road it has the nucleus of the village to its east closest to one of the three Newbury junctions and the roads proceeds to a full intersection with the M4 corridor at Chieveley, Berkshire before passing Didcot and Oxford.