About Boxford
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Boxford is a village and civil parish in the unitary authority of West Berkshire, part of Berkshire. The village has a population of approximately 466 residents and has the post code of RG20. The village is on the east bank of the River Lambourn, about 4 miles northwest of Newbury but south of the M4 motorway. The associated hamlet of Westbrook is on the opposite bank of the river.
The Parish of Boxford is attractively situated in the North Wessex Downs Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty. The village of Boxford itself sits naturally protected by the surrounding woods and hills which were once covered with Box from which the village takes its name. The River Lambourn, a fine trout stream, meanders through the village and thence south-east to Newbury, where it joins the River Kennet. Nearly all the water meadows at the heart of the village are classified as a Site of Special Scientific Interest.
Part of the village of Boxford is in a Conservation Area. There are approximately 190 households in the parish as a whole, and a church, village hall, public house, recreation ground and pavilion are to be found in the village itself. Boxford's own Heritage Centre in a small new building at the rear of the churchyard.
A number of Bronze Age features have been recorded near Boxford and an urn of this period has been found. A hearth and pottery fragments from the Iron Age, including a La Tne pot, have been found near the north end of Boxford Common. Iron Age pottery fragments and a possible earthwork have also been found near Borough Hill.
The Church of England parish church of Saint Andrew consists of a chancel, nave, north aisle, north-west vestry, south porch and a west tower. The chancel may be Saxon, and a Saxon window was discovered in a wall of the church in 2011. The Jacobean pulpit dates from 1618, the font from about 1662 and the west tower from about 1692.
Much of the church was rebuilt in the Victorian era and in 1841 the north aisle was added. However, the arcade between the nave and north aisle was probably by John Oldrid Scott and Sons in 1908.


