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Waddesdon and is
the Buckinghamshire Railway Centre are negotiating for a reconnection of the link between their sidings and the line through the station to allow their locomotives to run to Aylesbury when the line is not in use by freight trains, and to rebuild part of the Brill Tramway between Quainton Road and Waddesdon Road.
Haddenham is policed by the Haddenham and District Neighbourhood Policing team based at the police station in Waddesdon.
Originally called the Buckinghamshire Infirmary, it is thought that it became " Royal " after the future Edward VII received treatment there after breaking a limb during a visit to the Rothschilds at Waddesdon Manor.
A portion of his art collection was bequeathed to his son James A. de Rothschild and is now part of the National Trust collection at Waddesdon Manor.
Waddesdon Manor is a country house in the village of Waddesdon, in Buckinghamshire, England.
Waddesdon was often referred to as Black Waddesdon and was notorious for being one of the most dangerous stops on what is now the A41.
Waddesdon Village Primary School is a mixed, community, primary school, which has approximately 200 pupils from the age of four through to the age of eleven.
The village is also home to Waddesdon Church of England School, a secondary school.
Waddesdon is a closed station that served the village of Waddesdon and its manor, to the north of Aylesbury in Buckinghamshire, England.
The station is not to be confused with Waddesdon Road railway station at the other end of the Waddesdon Manor estate on the Brill Tramway.
Eythrope ( previously Ethorp ) is a hamlet and country house in the parish of Waddesdon, in Buckinghamshire, England.
It is located to the south east of the main village of Waddesdon.
If she advised over the designs for Waddesdon, it is doubtful he heeded them.
Eythrope was something of a deviation from his usual style, it is a mixture of his usual Jacobean coupled with French renaissance in a low style of Waddesdon, especially noticeable on the concave roof to the round tower, and the gable on the garden facade which are particularly reminiscent of Waddesdon.
An example of this unusual style is the ( more accessible to the public ) Five Arrows Hotel at Waddesdon.
It is located about five miles north of Waddesdon, seven miles south east of Buckingham.
Kingswood is a hamlet of 30 dwellings on the South side of the A41 from Waddesdon to Bicester and between the villages of Ludgershall and Grendon Underwood in Buckinghamshire, England.
However, as at nearby Waddesdon Manor, the Rothschild family retain a very close control over Ascott, and the present resident of the house is the son of the donor, Sir Evelyn de Rothschild.
It is near the boundary with Oxfordshire, about south-east of Bicester and west of Waddesdon.

Waddesdon and village
The house, set in formal gardens and an English landscape park, was built on a barren hilltop overlooking Waddesdon village.
Between 1897 and 1936, Waddesdon had train services on the Aylesbury and Buckingham Railway ( later part of the Metropolitan ) at Waddesdon Manor railway station, two miles from the village.
In 1874, Baron Ferdinand de Rothschild bought a large estate in the area and built the mansion of Waddesdon Manor on a hill-top above the village.
He transformed Waddesdon into an estate village, with new houses for employees and tenants, a school, a public house, cricket pavilion and village hall.
In 1874 he bought an estate near the village of Waddesdon in Buckinghamshire and between 1874 and 1889 built Waddesdon Manor, designed by Gabriel-Hippolyte Destailleur in an eclectic style based on 16th century French châteaux.

Waddesdon and Aylesbury
It then meets a roundabout with access for the new Berryfields development as well as Aylesbury Vale Parkway before passing under a railway line, then through Waddesdon, then passes close to Westcott near the former airfield of RAF Westcott.
The family seat was established at Waddesdon Manor, near to the market town of Aylesbury, and the Rothschilds also purchased the historic King's Head Inn in Aylesbury.
The main A41 between Aylesbury and Waddesdon runs through the middle of the parish.
FLEET-MARSTON, in the hundred of Ashendon and deanery of Waddesdon, lies about three miles from Aylesbury, on the road to Bicester.
Mentmore was the first of what was to become a virtual Rothschild enclave in the Vale of Aylesbury, as later, other members of the family built houses at Tring in Hertfordshire, Ascott, Aston Clinton, Waddesdon and Halton.
It is near the border of Oxfordshire, about five miles west of Aylesbury and three miles south of Waddesdon.
: PITCHCOTE, in the hundred of Ashendon and deanery of Waddesdon, lies about seven miles km north-west of Aylesbury.
It is located about a mile south of Waddesdon, three and a half miles west of Aylesbury.
In front of the monument is a rectangular concrete pillar that is the trig point and it is topped with a metal plaque donated in 1988 that points to true north and to the following distant features: The Cotswolds ( 53 miles ), Brill Hill ( 13 miles ), Waddesdon Manor ( 10 miles ), Calvert Chimneys ( 15 miles ), Aylesbury Church ( 5 miles ), Mursley Water Tower ( 15 miles ), Wingrave Church ( 8 miles ), Leighton Buzzard ( 12 miles ), Mentmore ( 9 miles ), Edlesborough Church ( 11 miles ) and Ivinghoe Beacon ( 9 miles ).
Returning to England, he was made Colonel of the 6th ( 1st Warwickshire ) Regiment of Foot on 26 May 1806, elected Member of Parliament ( MP ) for Aylesbury on 3 November and created a baronet, of Waddesdon in the county of Buckinghamshire, on 28 November.
*( from Aylesbury Vale district ) Bierton, Brill, Buckingham North, Buckingham South, Cheddington, Edlesborough, Great Brickhill, Great Horwood, Haddenham, Long Crendon, Luffield Abbey, Marsh Gibbon, Newton Longville, Pitstone, Quainton, Steeple Claydon, Stewkley, Tingewick, Waddesdon, Weedon, Wing, Wingrave, Winslow ;

Waddesdon and Buckinghamshire
A Rothschild house, Waddesdon Manor in Waddesdon, Buckinghamshire, donated to charity by the family in 1957.
Other Rothschild houses in Buckinghamshire were all designed in the more formal styles of architecture, either the classical renaissance such as Mentmore or that of a French chateau as at Waddesdon Manor.
Danby became a Deacon in 1913, and worked as Curate of the Parish of Waddesdon, Buckinghamshire.
Other mansions were built in the new and innovative styles of the new era such as the arts and crafts style: The Breakers is a pastiche of an Italian Renaissance Palazzo ; Waddesdon Manor in Buckinghamshire is a faithful mixture of various French châteaux.
The result was the Eythrope Water Pavilion, one of the smaller of the Rothschild houses of Buckinghamshire, its design is an unostentatious complement to the great faux-chateau four miles away of Waddesdon Manor.
Wormstone ( also Warmstone ) is a hamlet in the parish of Waddesdon, in Buckinghamshire, England.

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