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1880 - Amersham Fair opposite Whielden Street (9075)

Amersham Fair opposite Whielden Street in 1880.

1883 - Houses opposite the old Waterworks in London Road (9129)

Houses opposite the old Waterworks in London Road in 1883.

1885 - Amersham from Coleshill Fields (9065)

Amersham from Coleshill Fields in 1885.

1888 - St Mary's Church during restoration (9055)

St Mary's Church in Amersham during restoration in 1888.

1889 - Amersham with St Mary's Church during restoration (9056)

View of Amersham with St Mary's Church during restoration in 1889.

1889 - Bright's shoe shop in Whielden Street (9109)

Bright's shoe shop, Whielden Street, in 1889.

Amersham (previously Agmondesham) is a market town 27 miles north west of London, in the Chiltern Hills, England. It is part of the London commuter belt.

Amersham is widely known because of a multinational pharmaceutical company, Amersham plc (previously known as Amersham International and originally known as The Radiochemical Centre, and acquired in 2004 by the American company General Electric), that took its name from the town.

Amersham is split into two distinct areas: Amersham on the Hill, which is close to the railway station, and Old Amersham, which contains St. Mary's, a 13th century church, and several old inns.

History[]

Records of Amersham date back to pre-Saxon times, when it was known as Agmondesham, and by the time that the Domesday book was written at around 1086 it became known as Elmodesham. The Domesday entry is as follows:

Geoffrey de Mandeville holds Amersham. It answers for 7½ hides. Land for 16 ploughs; in lordship 2 hides; 3 ploughs there. 14 villagers with 4 smallholders have 9 ploughs; a further 4 possible. 7 slaves; meadow for 16 ploughs; woodland 400 pigs. The total value is and was £9; before 1066 £16. Queen Edith held this manor.

Queen Edith was the wife of Edward the Confessor and sister of king Harold, and after her death in 1075 the land passed to William the Conqueror who granted it to Geoffrey de Mandeville. Amersham is linked to London by the Metropolitan Line of London Underground and is the last station on its branch of this line. Much of this line is shared with the mainline railway service, which runs from Marylebone to Aylesbury.

Amersham sent two MPs to the Wikipedia:unreformed House of Commons from 1625, and was considered a rotten borough until the Reform Act 1832 stripped it of its representation. See Amersham (UK Parliament constituency) for more details.

Education[]

Primary Schools in the town include Chestnut Lane Primary, Elangeni School, Chesham Bois Church of England School, St. Mary's Church of England School, St. George's Church of England School and Woodside Junior School.

Secondary schools in the town include Dr Challoner's Grammar School (a grammar school, as the name suggests) and the Amersham School.

Amersham & Wycombe College is the only Further Education establishment in Amersham.

Sport[]

Amersham has a King George's Field in memorial to King George V.

See also[]

External links[]

References[]

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