About Swanbourne
Swanbourne is a village and also a civil parish within Aylesbury Vale district in Buckinghamshire its post code is MK17 and the village population is around 480 residents. It is located about two miles east of Winslow, three miles west of Stewkley, on the secondary road B4032. The village name is Anglo Saxon in origin, and possibly means 'swan stream'. In the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle in 792 the village was recorded as Suanaburna.
Swanbourne is an area that many of our outstanding Swanbourne escorts know well, as they visit many of their regular clients in and around this area. Whatever your reasons for looking for some female company, we can offer the perfect companion. You may be enjoying a relaxing break, taking in some of the spectacular Buckinghamshire countryside, whatever you are doing or wish to do, any one of our beautiful and sexy escorts will be happy to keep you company. A quick and simple phone call will bring one of our luscious beauties direct to your home or hotel room within the hour.
The manor of Swanbourne once belonged to Woburn Abbey. Swanbourne House was bought in 1798 by Thomas Fremantle (17651819), for his wife Elizabeth, known as Betsey, for 900 guineas. The Fremantle family, originally from Aston Abbotts, had strong naval connections. Their eldest son Sir Thomas Francis Fremantle (17981890) became a prominent Tory politician. Their second son Charles (18001869) followed his father into the British Royal Navy and was instrumental in founding the Swan River Colony in Western Australia. This accounts for the place names Fremantle, Swanbourne and Cottesloe in the Perth area of Western Australia.
Swanbourne House is still owned by the Fremantle family trust, but let out. The present head of the family is Commander John Tapling Fremantle, 5th Baron Cottesloe. A former Lord Lieutenant of Buckinghamshire, he lives in the village, as does his daughter Elizabeth, the Hon. Mrs. Duncan Smith, with her husband Iain Duncan Smith, the Conservative politician.
A new public house and restaurant opened in the village at the end of July 2006. It is called "The Betsey Wynne" after the diarist ancestor of the Fremantles. Situated in Mursley Road, it specializes in English food and drink and self-grown produce.
From 1851 to 1967, Swanbourne had its own railway station on the Varsity Line, about 1.5 miles from the village and half way to Little Horwood. It was also about the same distance from Mursley. The nearest train station today is at Bletchley. The only public transport remaining from the village is a limited weekday bus services between Swanbourne and Winslow, Bletchley or Milton Keynes.
St Swithun's Church, a Grade II listed historic building, stands at the east end of the village, opposite Swanbourne House. The nave, chancel and tower date from the first half of the 13th century. The north aisle was added in the second half of the 15th century and the tower rebuilt half a century later. The church is in remarkably good repair, and contains some charming stained glass and a fine wooden ceiling, both probably dating from the 19th century. There are also some medieval carvings and the remains of three remarkable medieval murals in the north aisle. The tower contains six bells and a sanctus.


