The history of the Church of England parish church of Saint Mary begins in about the end of the 12th century.[3] An old print of the original building shows that it had some 13th century lancet windows and a 16th-century window.[3] In 1794 the church was struck by lightning and burnt down[4] and was replaced with a Georgian building of brick.[3][4] In 1859 the nave was demolished and replaced by one in the Gothic Revival style[3] designed by the architect Henry Woodyer.[4] The 1794 brick bell tower was retained and has a peal of six bells.[3] The church is a Grade II* listed building.[5]
19th century summary
The following is an extract from the 1870s gazetteer of the British Isles.
"Beenham, or Beenham-Vallence, a parish...adjacent to the Kennet and Avon canal and to the Berks and Hants Railway, 1 ¼. mile N of Aldermaston station, and 8½ WSW of Reading. It has a post office...Acres, 1,890. Real property, £2,548. Pop., 505. Houses, 105. The property is much subdivided. Beenham House and Beenham Lodge are chief residences. The living is a vicarage in the diocese of Oxford. Value, £250. Patron, Mrs. Bushnell. The church was chiefly rebuilt in 1860. There are a Primitive Methodistchapel and a National School. Stackhouse, the author of the "History of the Bible," was [its] vicar."[6]
However, the suffix, Valence, is erroneous and was mistakenly transferred from the manor surrounding Benham Park.[citation needed]
In October 1966 children's nanny Yolande Waddington, age 17, was found dead having been stabbed and strangled in Beenham. Less than six months later, two nine-year-old girls, Jeanette Wigmore and Jacqueline Williams, were found murdered at a local gravel pit. David Burgess, of Beenham, was jailed for life in 1967 for the murder of the two girls and spent more than 25 years behind bars. Waddington's killer was not identified at the time. Burgess subsequently admitted to the crime but challenged the police to "prove it". Following advances in DNA profiling, in November 2011 the 64-year-old Burgess was re-arrested, and subsequently tried and convicted of her murder. He received his third life sentence with a minimum term of 27 years.[7][8][9]
Amenities
Beenham has a primary school catering for approximately 100 pupils aged 4 to 11.[10][11] There is one pub in the village, the Six Bells. The UK Wolf Conservation Trust is based at Butlers Farm, Beenham, the wolves can be heard howling within a three-mile radius.[12]
Transport
Bus routes 41 and 44 connect the village with Thatcham and Calcot.
Demography
2011 Published Statistics: Population, home ownership and extracts from Physical Environment, surveyed in 2005[1]