sonning

{{For|the prize|Sonning Prize}}

{{Use British English|date=October 2013}}

{{Use dmy dates|date=July 2024}}

{{Infobox UK place

|country = England

|type = Village and civil parish

|static_image_name = The River Thames, Sonning - geograph.org.uk - 578606.jpg

|static_image_caption = The River Thames, Sonning

|coordinates = {{coord|51.473|-0.911|format=dms|display=inline,title}}

|official_name = Sonning

|population = 1,612

|population_ref = (Parish, 2021){{cite web |title=2021 Census Parish Profiles |url=https://www.nomisweb.co.uk/sources/census_2021_pp |website=NOMIS |publisher=Office for National Statistics |access-date=31 March 2025}} (To get individual community data, use the query function on table PP002.)

|civil_parish= Sonning

|shire_district = Wokingham

|shire_county = Berkshire

|region = South East England

|constituency_westminster = Earley and Woodley

|post_town = READING

|postcode_district = RG4

|postcode_area = RG

|dial_code = 0118

|os_grid_reference = SU757755

}}

Sonning (traditional: {{IPAc-en|ˈ|s|ʌ|n|ɪ|ŋ}};{{cite book |last1=Myres |first1=J.N.L. |title=The English Settlements |publisher=Oxford University Press |isbn=978-0198217190}} modern: {{IPAc-en|ˈ|s|ɒ|n|ɪ|ŋ}}) is a village and civil parish in Berkshire, England, on the River Thames, east of Reading. The village was described by Jerome K. Jerome in his book Three Men in a Boat as "the most fairy-like little nook on the whole river".{{cite book |last1=Jerome |first1=Jerome K |title=Three Men in a Boat |date=1889 |publisher=Folio Society |location=London |page=141 |edition=1964}}

Toponymy

The place-name Sonning seems to contain an Old English personal name, Sunna, + ingas (Old English), 'The village of the people of . . .' ; 'the village of the people called after . . .', so probably, 'homestead/village of Sunna's people',M. Gelling The Place Names of Berkshire, 3 parts (Cambridge, 1973-6), i. pp.132-4, iii. pp.843-4; A.D.Mills, Dictionary of English Place-Names (Oxford, 2002), p.428; E.Ekwall, Concise Oxford Dictionary of English Place-names (Oxford, 1960), p.431; V.Watts, Cambridge dictionary of English place-names, (Cambridge,2004), p.560 the Sunningas. Sonning appears in the Domesday Book of 1086 as Soninges.National Archives: E 31/2/1/1677

Geography

The north-western boundary is formed by the River Thames before passing through the middle of the Thames Valley Park. The southern border follows the railway line. The north-eastern boundary travels over Charvil Hill and follows the edge of the housing at Charvil itself until it reaches the confluence of St Patrick's Stream with the Thames, near St Patrick's Bridge. The northern corner of the parish consists of very low-lying land adjoining the river.

The Sonning Golf Course sits in the southeast corner, with Holme Park, Sonning Hill and the business park in the southwest, and the village roughly in the middle. Sonning village is at a crossing point of the River Thames, where the narrow arched Sonning Bridge on the B478 crosses the river to the hamlet of Sonning Eye on the Oxfordshire bank. Just upstream of the bridge is Sonning Lock. The old village is now joined to further housing along Pound Lane and the A4 Bath Road. It lies some {{convert|4|mi}} east of the major town of Reading. In other directions, this would put it within the Reading suburban sprawl, but Sonning remains a clearly delineated small village. Most of the village together with the grounds of Reading Blue Coat School forms a Conservation Area.{{cite web| url=http://www.sonning.org.uk/docs/SonningCAA2017.pdf | title=Sonning Conservation Area Appraisal 2017 | date=2017 | location=UK | publisher=Wokingham Borough Council | access-date=6 June 2017 }}

History

In Anglo-Saxon times, the village was of considerable importance as the lesser centre of the bishopric of Ramsbury, sometimes called the see of Ramsbury and Sonning. The church was a secondary cathedral and the present structure, St Andrew's Church, contains reused Anglo-Saxon carvings. By the 12th century Sonning church had eight dependent churches, four of which had become independent parishes by the 15th century.{{cite book|first=Nigel|last=Pounds|title=A history of the English parish|url=https://archive.org/details/historyenglishpa00poun|url-access=limited|page=[https://archive.org/details/historyenglishpa00poun/page/n49 22]|publisher=Cambridge University Press|year=2000}} This is an example of the organisation of the Anglo-Saxon church into minsters with their own parochially known as the minster system.

File:Sonning Bridge - 1799.jpg (1799) with the tower of St Andrew's Church, Sonning, in the background.]]

Sonning prospered as an important stopping post for travellers, both by road and by boat. There were a number of ancient hostelries where they could have stayed, notably the Great House on the site of the original ferryman's cottage. The Bull Inn had the added bonus of being near the church where pilgrims could venerate a relic of Saint Cyriacus. The Bishops of Salisbury succeeded those of Ramsbury and Sonning and had a bishop's palace in the village until the 16th century. King Richard II's young bride, Queen Isabella of Valois, was kept captive here during his imprisonment and deposition. Aberlash House is a Grade II listed house situated on an island in the River Thames at Sonning. It was originally built in the 17th century and, like much of the village, was formerly owned by the Rich family, Lords of the Manor of Sonning, although they did not live there.

The Great Western Railway passes about {{convert|0.5|mi|0}} south of the village, in a {{convert|2|mi|adj=on}} long cutting, Sonning Cutting. It was opened in 1840, and was the scene of one of the first railway disasters in 1841, when a mixed passenger and goods train ran into a landslip. Nine passengers died in the accident, being thrown from the open trucks just behind the engine. Many were stonemasons working on the Houses of Parliament, and the disaster led to changes in the Railways Act, which required that third-class passengers be carried in stoutly constructed carriages rather than open trucks. The Act also created Parliamentary trains for third-class passengers.

Just outside the village, above Sonning Lock, is the independent secondary school, Reading Blue Coat School, in the 19th century manor house, Holme Park. Built in the home park of the old palace, it replaced a Georgian mansion erected for the Lords of the Manor who eventually superseded the bishops. The first of these was Laurence Halstead, partner to the Reading cloth merchant, John Kendrick. In the early 20th century, a second country house was built in the village, the Deanery Garden. It provides a fine example of an Edwin Lutyens house with a Gertrude Jekyll garden, originally designed as a show house for the founder of Country Life magazine.

Governance

File:Pearson Hall, Sonning - geograph.org.uk - 6145178.jpg

There are two tiers of local government covering Sonning, at parish and unitary authority level: Sonning Parish Council and Wokingham Borough Council. The parish council has an office in the village hall, called Pearson Hall,{{cite web |title=Contact us |url=https://www.sonning-pc.gov.uk/contactSection.php |website=Sonning Parish Council |access-date=28 April 2025}} and holds its meetings at the pavilion at the King George V Playing Field on Pound Lane.{{cite web |title=Full Council Meetings |url=https://www.sonning-pc.gov.uk/cwgCouncilMeetings.php |website=Sonning Parish Council |access-date=28 April 2025}}

=Administrative history=

Sonning was an ancient parish, which historically straddled Berkshire and Oxfordshire, and also included some exclaves of Wiltshire at Hurst and Wokingham. The parish was large, and had numerous chapelries with their own chapels of ease, several of which subsequently became separate parishes, including Arborfield (became a separate parish in the 16th century), Sandhurst (separate 1756), Wokingham (separate 1812), Hurst (separate 1831), and Ruscombe (separate by 1835).{{cite book |last1=Youngs |first1=Frederic |title=Guide to the Local Administrative Units of England: Volume I |date=1979 |publisher=Royal Historical Society |location=London |isbn=0 901050 67 9 |page=23}}

By the mid 19th century, the remaining area of Sonning parish was subdivided into four townships: Earley, Eye and Dunsden, Woodley and Sandford, and a Sonning or 'Sonning Town' township covering the central part of the parish around the village itself. The Eye and Dunsden township was in Oxfordshire, and the other three townships were in Berkshire.{{cite web |title=Berkshire Sheet XXX |url=https://maps.nls.uk/view/102339971 |website=National Library of Scotland |publisher=Ordnance Survey |access-date=28 April 2025 |date=1883}} Each of those four townships had taken on civil functions under the poor laws from the 17th century onwards, and as such also became civil parishes in 1866 when the legal definition of 'parish' was changed to be the areas used for administering the poor laws. The ecclesiastical and civil definitions of the parish therefore diverged after 1866.{{cite book |last1=Youngs |first1=Frederic |title=Guide to the Local Administrative Units of England: Volume I |date=1979 |publisher=Royal Historical Society |location=London |isbn=0 901050 67 9 |page=xvi}} Further civil parishes from the area of the ancient parish were subsequently created for Sonning Common (from Eye and Dunsden) in 1952,{{cite web |last1=Langston |first1=Brett |title=Henley Registration District |url=https://www.ukbmd.org.uk/reg/districts/henley.html |website=UK BMD |access-date=28 April 2025}} and Charvil (from Woodley and Sandford) in 1970.{{cite web |last1=Langston |first1=Brett |title=Wokingham Registration District |url=https://www.ukbmd.org.uk/reg/districts/wokingham.html |website=UK BMD |access-date=28 April 2025}}

Demography

At the 2021 census, the population of the parish was 1,612. The population had been 1,445 in 2001, and 1,631 in 2011.{{cite web|url=http://www.neighbourhood.statistics.gov.uk/dissemination/LeadKeyFigures.do?a=7&b=11128639&c=Sonning&d=16&e=62&g=6398984&i=1001x1003x1032x1004&m=0&r=1&s=1480592241939&enc=1|title=Civil Parish population 2011|access-date=1 December 2016|publisher=Office for National Statistics |work=Neighbourhood Statistics}}

Transport

The main road through Sonning is the B478, running from the Bridge to the Charvil roundabout on the A4. The B4446 runs north from the A4 to the village. The A4 itself passes through the south of the parish, as does the Great Western Main Line, though there is no station. On the Thames, there are moorings both above and below Sonning Lock, as well as in the weir stream.

=Twinning=

Sonning is twinned with Ligugé, France.{{cite web|url=http://www.completefrance.com/language-culture/twin-towns|title=British towns twinned with French towns|access-date = 11 July 2013|work=Archant Community Media Ltd}} The village has an active twinning association and the lane to the village primary school is called Ligugé Way.

Media

Sonning Parish Magazine,{{cite web| url=http://sonningparish.org.uk/parish-magazine/ | title=Sonning Parish Magazine | publisher=Sonning Parish | location=UK | access-date=24 January 2017 }} established in 1869, serves Sonning and the neighbouring village of Charvil.

Sport and leisure

Sonning has a King George's Field in memorial to George V, where Sonning Cricket Club{{cite web| url=http://www.sonningcc.co.uk/ | title=Sonning Cricket Club }} plays. There are playing fields between Sonning and the main A4 road, including hockey and rugby fields. Sonning Hockey Club,{{cite web| url=http://www.sonninghockeyclub.co.uk/ | title=Sonning Hockey Club }} Reading Hockey Club, Reading R.F.C., and Berkshire Shire Hall R.F.C.{{cite web| url=http://shirehallrugby.co.uk/ | title=Berkshire Shire Hall R.F.C. }} can all be found on Sonning Lane. Sonning Hockey Club was the first club in the county of Berkshire to be awarded Club 1st National Hockey Accreditation for junior coaching and development. The club also has squash courts and tennis courts.

Rams RFC is nearby, off the Old Bath Road. Sonning Golf Club{{cite web| url=http://www.sonning-golf-club.co.uk/ | title=Sonning Golf Club }} is on the other side of the A4 road. Sonning Regatta restarted in 2000 and is held every two years just upstream from Sonning Lock. There is sailing and waterskiing on the Caversham Lakes across the Thames and the Redgrave Pinsent Rowing Lake has recently been created there as well.

The Sonning Village Show, started in the 1960s by the local Women's Institute, is held every September at the village primary school.{{cite web |title=Sonning Village Events – Sonning Show |url=https://www.sonning-pc.gov.uk/veSonningShow.php |website=Sonning Parish Council |access-date=10 October 2023}}

Notable residents

{{more citations needed|section|date=October 2023}}

File:Sir Terence Rattigan Allan Warren.jpg, who lived at The Red House in Sonning, 1945–47.]]

Notable former and current village inhabitants include:

  • Nigel Broackes, the managing director of Trafalgar House
  • George Clooney, American film star and his wife, human rights lawyer Amal Clooney{{cite news| url=https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/celebritynews/11154328/Welcome-to-Sonning-Mr-and-Mrs-Clooney.html | title=Welcome to Sonning, Mr & Mrs Clooney | newspaper=The Daily Telegraph|location=London | first=Patrick | last=Sawer | date=10 October 2014 | access-date=11 October 2014 }}{{cite news| url=https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/celebritynews/11152701/George-Clooney-snaps-up-10-million-manor-house-in-Sonning-Berkshire.html | title=George Clooney snaps up £10 million manor house in Sonning, Berkshire | newspaper=The Daily Telegraph|location=London | first=Patrick | last=Sawer | date=9 October 2014 | access-date=11 October 2014 }}
  • US General Dwight D. Eisenhower, before D-Day, in The Grove{{cite web| url=https://www.onthemarket.com/details/4252481/ | title=6 bedroom house for sale – Pearson Road, Sonning, Berkshire, RG4 | website=OnTheMarket.com | access-date=24 January 2018 }}{{cite web| url=http://www.sonning-pc.gov.uk/svHistory.php | title=A History of Sonning | first=Peter | last=van Went | publisher=Sonning Parish Council | access-date=24 January 2018 }}
  • Anthony Farindon, 17th-century Royalist preacher{{cite DNB|wstitle=Farindon, Anthony}}
  • Uri Geller, Israeli illusionist, magician, television personality, and self-proclaimed psychic
  • Laurence Halstead, 17th-century cloth merchant and partner of philanthropist, John Kendrick{{cite book | title=A History of the County of Berkshire: Volume 3 | publisher=Victoria County History | year=1923 | pages=210–225 | url=http://www.british-history.ac.uk/report.aspx?compid=43208 | editor1=Ditchfield, P. H. |editor2=Page, William | chapter=Sonning with Earley, Woodley and Sandford | access-date=5 September 2011}}
  • Neil Hamilton Fairley, Australian physician and soldier
  • Glenn Hoddle, football manager and former footballer
  • William Holman Hunt, the Pre-Raphaelite artist, in his later life at The Acre
  • Isabella of Valois, Queen consort of Richard II
  • Ric Lee, drummer for the 1970s group Ten Years After
  • Jon Lord, composer and founder member of the 1970s group Deep Purple{{cite web| url=http://www.thehighwaystar.com/specials/zill/book.html | title=Didi Zill photo book | website=thehighwaystar.com }}
  • Philip May, investment relationship manager and the husband of former Prime Minister Theresa May
  • Theresa May, British Prime Minister 2016–2019, was the former local Member of parliament; she and her husband live in the village.{{cite news | title = Theresa May's private entourage goes the wrong way around a roundabout | newspaper = Reading Chronicle | location = Reading, Berkshire | date = 27 November 2017 | url = http://www.readingchronicle.co.uk/news/15686533.WATCH__Theresa_May_s_private_entourage_goes_the_WRONG_WAY_around_a_roundabout/ | access-date = 5 July 2018}}
  • Jimmy Page, lead guitarist of the rock group Led Zeppelin{{cite web | url=http://www.josaka.com/forum/viewtopic.php?f=6&t=14049 | title=Jimmy Page now lives in Sonning | work=Berkshire Live | date=19 July 2006 | url-status=dead | archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120331182206/http://www.josaka.com/forum/viewtopic.php?f=6&t=14049 | archive-date=31 March 2012 }}{{cite web | url=https://www.bbc.co.uk/berkshire/content/image_galleries/scarecrow_trail_sonning_gallery.shtml?2 | title=Superstar among Sonning Scarecrows | publisher=BBC Berkshire | access-date=5 September 2011}}
  • Hugh Pearson, Victorian vicar of Sonning, later a Canon at Windsor Castle
  • Terence Rattigan, dramatist, briefly at The Red House during 1945-47 – there is a blue plaque
  • Thomas Rich, 17th-century merchant, money-lender to the King and benefactor to both Sonning and Gloucester
  • Dick Turpin, reputedly, at his aunt's house, now called Turpins
  • Admiral Villeneuve, subsequent to his capture at the Battle of Trafalgar, at The Grove
  • Robert Wright, 17th-century Bishop of Lichfield & Coventry and vicar of Sonning

The following recipients of the Victoria Cross are buried in the churchyard of St Andrew's Church:

Bibliography

{{refbegin}}

  • Angel Perkins, [https://web.archive.org/web/20070926235515/http://archive.museophile.org/sonning/book.html The Book of Sonning], Barracuda Books, 1977. {{ISBN|0-86023-051-1}}. 2nd edition, Baron Buckingham, 1999. {{ISBN|0-86023-051-1}}.

{{refend}}

References

{{reflist}}