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Bill Hill Iron Age Mound

Bronze Age to AD 942

Bracknell may be best known for being a post World War II New Town but its history stretches back to prehistoric times. The oldest ancient monument in Bracknell is a Bronze Age burial mound at Bill Hill, situated near Downshire Way and Rectory Lane. The earliest settlement in Bracknell was an Iron Age hill fort called Caesar’s Camp, near the Lookout Discovery Centre, Nine Mile Ride. It was not until AD942 that the name “Bracknell” was first recorded as “Braccan heal” in the Winkfield Boundary Charter. “Braccan heal” was probably not inhabited as it was only mentioned as a landmark on the boundary between Winkfield and Warfield.

Windsor Forest 1066

Windsor Forest - 1066 to 1714

“Braccan Heal” was in Windsor Forest which covered all of Berkshire east of the Loddon River. William I created a vast deer preserve in Windsor Forest and historically it was used by Kings and Queens for hunting. In 1350 a Royal Hunting Lodge was built at “Easthampstead Parke” for Kind Edward III. The Lodge was situated on what is now the Downshire Golf Complex. Catherine of Aragon, Henry VIII’s first wife, had connections with Easthampstead Park as she was banished there when she failed to give birth to a male heir and Henry VIII turned his attentions to Anne Boleyn. In the early eighteenth century Queen Anne hunted in Windsor Forest. She built rides through the forest to allow here to follow the hunt in her carriage being too large to follow on horseback!

Bracknell Railway Station

Victorian Bracknell

In 1847 Bracknell consisted of a long narrow street, inhabited principally by small shop keepers. It was not until the railway station opened in 1856 that Bracknell began to develop into a country town, and in 1870 a weekly cattle and poultry market started. Bracknell is well known for its Victorian brickyards and the bricks produced by Thomas Lawrence and Sons which were used in the Albert Hall, Westminster Cathedral and locally in South Hill Park and Larges Lane Cemetery chapel and lodge. Today very little of the old Bracknell remains as most of it was demolished in the 1960s to create Bracknell New Town.

Bracknell New Town 1950s

Bracknell New Town

New Towns were developed to help alleviate the housing crises after the Second World War. During the war, London was badly bombed and many houses and factories were destroyed. Rather than just rebuilding in London, Sir Patrick Abercrombie’s Great London Plan of 1944 recommended that satellite towns should be sited around London, beyond the Green Belt. Bracknell was chosen as the development would avoid encroaching on good quality farm land and the existence of a railway station was seen as an advantage. Initial Plans were made for a town of 60,000 but this was eventually scaled back to 25,000. The work was overseen by the Bracknell Development Corporation (BDC) who were given wide-ranging powers, including that of compulsory purchase. Attention was paid to housing densities, design and the provision of open space.

The BDC wanted Bracknell to be a self contained country town which incorporated the amenities of town life with the benefits of green open spaces. Initially Bracknell was going to consist of four neighbourhoods, Priestwood, Easthampstead, Bullbook and Harmans Water, both the the Western and Eastern Industrial Estates, the town centre and an area where people could buy plots of land to build their own homes (Wick Hill). The first occupants moved in to Priestwood on Christmas Eve 1951.

Point Royal

Neighbourhoods

Easthampstead is characterised by the only high-rise residential block and the 17 storey Point Royal, built by Arup Associates and now considered an icon of New Town architecture with Grade II listed status. This block together with the surrounding housing and shops was designated a conservation area in in 1996. In the late 1950s the eponymous Bull Brook was pushed into a culvert as the Bullbrook area of the new town was built. Each new area was designed to have a strong neighbourhood character., with local shops to cater for everyday needs. By 1960 work was underway on building Harmans Water the final one of these new neighbourhoods. So the vision for a country town with green open spaces and local neighbourhood areas served by shops, schools and community facilities was achieved, epitomising the New Town ideal. In 1957 it was decided to extend Bracknell, and the neighbourhoods of Wildridings, Great Hollands, Hanworth, Birch Hill and Crown Wood were built. Today Bracknell remains as the New Town concept envisaged thanks to its good position close to London, motorways and other transport links and is probably the most successful of the new towns.

Queen Elizabeth Ii Visits The Lexicon Shopping Centre, Bracknell, Berkshire, Uk 19 Oct 2018

Queen Elizabeth II's Visits to Bracknell

Our late Queen, Elizabeth II first visited Bracknell in 1962 and then in 1976 she visited ICL in the Southern Industrial Area. In 1978, the Royal Meteorological Society’s headquarters were opened by the Queen who then went on one of her famous walkabouts through Bracknell Town Centre. On another visit in 1991 Queen Elizabeth II opened the Look Out Discovery Centre. In 2018 she officially opened The Lexicon shopping centre.

Waitrose Hq

Business in Bracknell

When Bracknell New Town was first developed, industrialists showed great interest in relocating there. Early companies that relocated to Bracknell were Racal, Clark Eaton, Ferranti and Sperry Gyroscope. As well as manufacturing companies, Bracknell attracted high-tech companies such as Panasonic, Honeywell and ICL (now Fujitsu). In 1967 Daler Rowney (manufacturers of artists’ materials) opened the first factory at the Southern Industrial Estate. Service companies also moved to Bracknell and in 1972 Waitrose opened its state of the art central warehouse and head office in Bracknell. In 2010 Waitrose announced plans to open a new store. Work started in April 2011 and the store opened in November 2011. The supermarket was the first new store to be built in Bracknell town centre for more than 25 years. It has been designed as a sustainable building with wildlife friendly features, and low carbon emissions.

The Lexicon Bracknell

The Future

History has shown that Bracknell has through time developed to meet the changing needs of our society. Since Bracknell was developed as a New Town it has continued to expand and the population has increased from 5,000 to 56,000. The Waitrose store was the start of Bracknell Regeneration Partnership’s wider redevelopment of Bracknell Town Centre and The Lexicon shopping centre completed in 2017 which has been designed to serve the local and wider community for many years to come.