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Everyone
who has heard of Goring associates it with the attractive gap between
the Berkshire Downs and the Chilterns known as the Goring Gap. Here the
villages of Goring and Streatley stand on opposite sides of the River
Thames, Oxfordshire on one side and West Berkshire on the other, linked
by a fine bridge which was built in 1923. The beautiful riverside setting
and the attractive views of the hills on either side make Goring an extremely
attractive village.
The river was first forded by the Romans who built a causeway. The first
bridge over the river, a toll bridge, was built upstream of the ferry
in 1837. This lasted until the present bridge was built in 1923 and from
it you can look down on Goring lock and the weir. The present lock was
built in 1921 and was then unusual in that it had an extra pair of lock
gates, creating two chambers.This enabled boats to travel faster through
the lock and use less water each time the lock was used.
There is also an old mill but this is no longer in use. It is thought
that Goring Lock was build by the local miller in the C16 to provide a
head of water to drive the water wheel. In Saxon times Goring had a corn
mill. Later the mill was used to generate electricity, but now it is now
a residence.
Much of the village between the river and the railway line is a conservation
area and there are in total 26 listed buildings.
The church of St Thomas of Canterbury is late C11. The church has one
of the oldest bells in the country which was cast about 1290 but is no
longer rung. At one time there was an Augustinian priory, which was built
adjoining the church, sharing the church with the parishioners. Later
the nuns built their own church adjacent to the parish church. The priory
was dissolved in 1536. T
A barn belonging to the Old Farm House in Station Road is reputed to be
C15 and it is thought that parts of the Old Vicarage may be C16. There
were, of course, many old buildings in the village but many were demolished
in the C20 and small housing estates built where they stood.
There was also a village brewery but this declined and was sold in 1940.
The oldest inn is now the Catherine Wheel in Station Road, which may date
back to Elizabethan times.
Goring Station was opened in 1840 and this provides the village with easy
access by rail to Reading, Oxford and London and is perhaps one of the
reasons for the amount of new building that took place during the last
century.
Goring Gap has a very active boat club, The Goring Gap Boat Club, which
is one of the largest recreational boating clubs in the Thames valley.
Goring Gap Boat Club holds the extremely popular annual Goring and Streatley
Regatta, which combines fun racing, live entertainment, a fun fair, food,
and craft fairs etc.
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Images
of Goring
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(Click
to view)
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