|
|
Harwell
lies just off the A417 at the foot of the Berkshire Downs about 2 miles
west of Didcot. It is bypassed by the busy A34. Look at any description
of Harwell and you will see a reference to its cherry orchards. In fact
records show them selling the famous Harwell cherries in Abingdon in
the 1610s, and the area is still full or orchards today!
Cromwell
is thought to have held a Council of War in the village
After the Second Battle of Newbury
during
the English Civil War and
Parliamentary troops were billeted in the village at
that time. In 1852 a
disastrous fire swept through the village and much
of the village was destroyed. It is believed the fire was started when
a discharged labourer set fire to a hay rick and the result was the
loss of nine
farms and twenty-three
cottages. Despite the fire many medieval buildings remain, some dating
from the 13th & 14th century.
The
atomic research establishment, which
used to occupy the
nearby former airfield, has been decommissioned but this is now the
home of the Rutherford
Appleton Laboratory, whose scientists use their spectacular microwave
dish to gather information on outer space, the Harwell International
Business Park and the new Diamond
synchrotron light source, a new scientific facility housed in a
futuristic doughnut-shaped building which covers the area of 5 football
pitches. Right next to the A34 on the edge of the village is a large
garden centre.
|
|
Images
of Harwell
|
|
(Click
to view)
|
|
|
|
|
|
|