SynonymsBot
Synonyms for steppingley or Related words with steppingley
souldrop
pulloxhill
felmersham
pertenhall
hogsthorpe
tebworth
meppershall
woodsetts
walesby
farnsfield
tilsworth
yielden
wrestlingworth
hauxton
fryerning
ashcott
greencroft
thurlstone
gislingham
staploe
wistaston
longcot
queniborough
earsham
pavenham
studham
haddenham
burghill
cowlinge
swavesey
bramfield
sproughton
ruscombe
fringford
laxfield
hundleby
farcet
silpho
osgodby
whittlesford
pineham
kettleburgh
milwich
tibberton
wicklewood
flaunden
oxenton
hulcott
medbourne
pirton
Examples of "steppingley"
The
Steppingley
Parish website provides additional information relating to the village:
Ampthill, Maulden, Clophill, Flitton, Greenfield,
Steppingley
, Pulloxhill, Westoning, Harlington, Barton le Clay, Tingrith, Eversholt, Millbrook
Steppingley
is a sought after village to live in, with a strong and active sense of community and excellent schools nearby.
Flitwick Town Council own and operate from The Rufus Centre on the outskirts of the town on
Steppingley
Road. The Centre is also a busy conference and special event venue with office space to lease.
McLeod, a widower, died on 5 September 2016 at the age of 83; he was survived by one daughter and four brothers. Two of his relatives also became footballers - Alisdair Sutherland and John McLeod (Buckie Thistle). After his retirement from football, McLeod became a publican in
Steppingley
and Wootton. After his death his ashes were scattered in the River Brora.
There are two entrances to the station: one into the ticket office from
Steppingley
Road and the other directly onto the footbridge from Dunstable Road, which in 2016 had gates installed restricting access to the now manned ticket office through the night.
Steppingley
is a rural village and civil parish in Bedfordshire, England. It stands on high ground in the centre of a small parish of about 562 ha on the Greensand Ridge and is mentioned in the "Domesday Book". It is located close to the nearby towns of Ampthill, Flitwick and Woburn, Bedfordshire.
Woburn was chosen by Center Parcs as the named location for its fifth holiday village at a cost of £250 million. The actual location is away between Millbrook and
Steppingley
; Center Parcs Woburn Forest sits on an ancient wood called Millbrook Warren. It opened to guests in spring 2014. Notable people who live in Woburn include; the Duke of Bedford, and, the family of Sir Jackie Stewart, the 3 time world F1 champion.
The original endowment of the priory was, as already stated, the lordship of the manor and town of Dunstable; to which was added under Henry II. the lordship of Houghton Regis, (fn. 84) and under John, the king's house and gardens at Dunstable. The manors of Stoke and Catesby, and of Ballidon in the Peak, are mentioned in the annals as the property of the priory during the thirteenth century. In 1291 the tithes of St. Peter and St. Cuthbert, Bedford, Dunstable, Studham, Totternhoe, Chalgrave, Husborne Crawley, Segenhoe, Flitwick, Pulloxhill,
Steppingley
, Harlington, Higham Ferrers, Newbottle, Cublington, a moiety of Great Brickhill, Pattishall and Bradbourne belonged to Dunstable Priory, with pensions in other churches. The temporalities at this time were only valued at a little more than £50; the annals of the house state the total income in 1273 as £107. The knight's fees attributed to Dunstable in 1316 were half a fee in Husborne Crawley and Flitwick, and another half in Pulloxhill, with some small fractions besides; they are practically the same in 1346 and 1428.
The preceptory received at its foundation the manor and church of Melchbourne, and the churches of Dean, Riseley, Souldrop, Eaton Socon, with Hargrave (Northants), and Eakring, Ossington and Winkbourn (Notts), as well as parcels of land and wood in Riseley, Souldrop, Blakesley (Northants), Ossington and Winkbourn (Notts). The prior of the hospital held in Bedfordshire in 1302 one knight's fee and a half in Clifton, and one hide in Pulloxhill; in 1316 the vill of Melchbourne, half a fee in Podington, one fee in Clifton, and small portions in Souldrop, Sharnbrook and Sandy; in 1346 Melchbourne, half a fee in Ickwell, Clifton and Harrold, and one quarter in Souldrop,
Steppingley
and Sharnbrook, with a smaller portion in Stanford; in 1428 the vill of Melchbourne, half a fee in Sharnbrook, Harrold, Ickwell and Clifton, and a quarter in Souldrop. At the dissolution the property of the preceptory was worth £241 9s. 10½d., including the manors of Melchbourne, Ickwell, Eaton, Langford and Blakesley, and rectories of Melchbourne, Eaton, Riseley, Langford, Blakesley, and lands called the Temple in Sharnbrook.