Hurst is a village in the civil parish of St Nicholas Hurst in the Borough of Wokingham, Berkshire, England. The village lies between Twyford and Wokingham, about 1.5 miles (2.4 km) north of the M4 motorway.
Geography
The parish of St Nicholas Hurst is about 4 miles (6.4 km) north of Wokingham and 2 miles (3 km) south of Twyford in the county of Berkshire. It covers about 2.5 square miles (6.5 km2) and is the largest civil parish in the Borough of Wokingham. The village is on the A321 Twyford – Wokingham road. There are a number of other smaller areas of sporadic development, the main ones being along Davis Street on the B3030 Twyford – Winnersh road, along the B3034 Forest Road, from Bill Hill to Binfield and on Broadcommon Road.
The River Loddon flows north along the western side of the parish and a substantial proportion of the parish lies within the alluvialflood plain of this river and its tributaries. The most important exceptions to this are Church Hill just to the west of the village centre, and Ashridge to the south-east. The M4 motorway crosses the southern half of the parish but does not have any direct access within the parish. The A329(M) forms the south-west boundary, separating Hurst from Wokingham and Winnersh. The main London to Bristolrailway line runs along the northern boundary, and Twyford station in the neighbouring parish of Twyford serves Hurst. Dinton Pastures Country Park is a country park within Hurst.[2]
Notable buildings
Parish church
The Church of Englandparish church is dedicated to St Nicholas. The Grade I listed[3] building is partly Norman and partly later medieval.[4] The tower is of brick and was built in 1612. It contains eight bells, the largest six of which were cast in the 17th century; the two lightest bells were added in 1911. The church was restored in the 19th century by W. Fellows Prynne.[3] There are many monuments of the 17th and 18th centuries, and much 17th-century woodwork.[5] Burial monuments include those of Lady Margaret Savile (d. 1631), widow of Sir Henry Savile, Provost of Eton College.[3]
Haineshill (Haines Hill House), on the B3018 east of Hurst, is a substantial Grade II* listed house built in c. 1630–1635 for Sir Francis Windebank[8] and extended by James Edward Colleton in 1760.[9] The house was later owned by Thomas Colleton Garth, who founded the Garth Hunt, first meeting there in 1852.[10]
Hinton House, on Hinton Road, also Grade II* listed, was built c. 1600–1620 in red brick for William Hide.[11] It was most recently part of the Dolphin School.[4] The house incorporates an innovative 'triple pile' plan, where the hall and parlour are placed next to each other, with the service rooms to the rear, and separated by a corridor containing the staircase. This layout was a "radical departure from conventional domestic planning", anticipating later architectural developments.[8] Land around the house was anciently a liberty known as Broad Hinton, and was a detached part of Wiltshire until the Counties (Detached Parts) Act 1844 transferred the liberty to Berkshire.[12]
Hurst House, northwest of the church, was built in 1847 for Archibald Cameron, vicar of Hurst, and incorporates an older house built in 1530 by Richard Warde, who was sub-Treasurer of Henry VIII and later a member of Parliament for Berkshire and Windsor.[8][13]
Hurst Lodge, on Broadcommon Road, is a Grade II* listed 17th-century house built for the Barker family,[14] and later the property of the Countess of Buchan.[9] Barkers almshouses on Church Hill were erected and founded in 1664 by William Barker of Hurst Lodge.[9]
Stanlake Park, just northwest of Hinton House, is a large gabled brick house that was probably built by Richard Aldworth, a grocer from London, beginning in c. 1610.[8][15]