The small Parish of STOKE GOLDINGTON is situated in the northernmost tip of  Bucks, 4 miles from Newport Pagnell and 10 miles from the centre of Milton Keynes. Eakley is a separate part of the Parish located to the north near the Northamptonshire County border.

The population was 593 in the 2021 Census .

The B526 road, between Newport Pagnell & Northampton, runs along the High Street and was Turnpiked in the 18th Century. It became an important coaching route in the 19th Century.

 

 

Prior to the building of Milton Keynes, development had been strictly controlled in the area by the rules laid down in the 1950s  in the North Buckinghamshire Structure Plan.

Later, the 1973 Village Plan  designated Stoke Goldington as a “Conservation Area“.

This was intended to preserve its inherent character and no building could take place outside the ‘Village Envelope’ with only sympathetic in-filling allowed inside.

Currently the High Street features a number of thatched cottages and many of the buildings are Grade II listed.

War Memorial on the Village Green 

Other  prominent buildings are the Primary School,  the Village Hall,  and the  Reading Rooms

St Peter’s church, is located at a distance up the hill to the north. The Manor and village used to be clustered around the church but moved down into the valley to be nearer the road from Northampton to Newport Pagnell, possibly in the late 18th Century

The original Manor and Estate of Stoke Goldington were purchased in 1707 by the Busby Trustees.       (read more )

St Peters Church Stoke Goldington

Until recently there were 2 public houses: the White Hart and the Lamb


The White Hart PH

 

 

The Lamb PH

 

 

 

Both are unfortunately now closed, although there is now a group attempting to buy the Lamb and  re-instate it as a social centre.

The building of the large new city of Milton Keynes, with its fast road and rail commuter links, has inevitably brought change to the area and to the mix of people who now live here.

Change is not a new phenomenon in this part of the world however: –

ln 1830 Stoke Goldington was an important staging post on the north/south mail routes having          7 coaching inns in the Parish

By 1845  this business had all disappeared, with the development of railways and canals; the Inns then became farms.

In the 1841 census there were  247 lace makers recorded.

By 1891 there were only 27.

For a full History of Stoke Goldington and the surrounding North Bucks area click here…

 

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The 1930 Kitchener Collection Photographs courtesy of City Discovery Centre, Bradwell Abbey, Milton Keynes.

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