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Grove
lies about 2 miles north of Wantage, skirted by the A338 Wantage to Oxford
road where
the Thames Valley meets the Berkshire Downs. There
is little left of the original hamlet; since
the war the village has grown from a small
hamlet with a population of about 500 to the
largest village in the Vale of White Horse. It is now a
dormitary village with a population of almost 10,000.
Early
in the 1800’s the Wilts and Berks Canal cut its way through the village.
Parts of the canal are still visible, providing some very pleasant local
walks. Then in 1840 the Great Western Railway opened the Wantage Road
Station on the northern boundary of Grove. To connect this with Wantage
the Wantage Tramway Company was formed. In 1875 a single track was laid
alongside the turnpike road and provided England’s first steam-powered
passenger and goods service.
In
1942 the Royal Air Force occupied a
large area of agricultural land to the west of Grove.
They were followed by the US Air Force in 1943 when the 45th Air Depot
Group established one of the largest and busiest supply airfields in Europe.
Its chequered history came to a close when in 1960 the last of its buildings
and fittings were auctioned off and soon present day Grove began to appear.
Today,
little is to be found of the self supporting village which had its own
bakery and bacon factory, clockmaker, wheelwright, smith and forge. However,
there is still a village green, annual fairs visit and May Day celebrations
are kept alive.
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Images
of Grove
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(Click
to view)
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