The Heritage Trail

The historic centre of Hungerford is delightfully compact and contains some fascinating buildings. The street plan you see today, with a north-south High Street, was laid out in the 13th century on on the footprint of an older village. Which was centered on The Croft, where you will find the Parish Church of St. Lawrence.

Some of the most interesting buildings are shown on the map below. Just click a marker to find out more about them. You can zoom in and out and move the map around using two fingers. You can then use the “Next” and “Previous” buttons to progress around the trail. You can visit them in any order.

More detailed walks can be found on the Town Walks page of the Hungerford Virtual Museum website.

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The Heritage Trail

The Town Hall and Corn Exchange.

The Town Hall and Corn Exchange were built in 1871. There had been three earlier town halls dating from the 13th century. All had been in the middle of the marketplace.
A new town clock was given to the town in 1862 and the cupola of the 1786 town hall was much altered to accommodate the clock. However, the changes made the building unstable, and it was decided to build a new town hall, including a large and impressive clock tower.

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The Tri-Service Station.

On the land between the old Ebenezer Wesleyan Chapel (on your left) and the Hungerford Hub (Library, on your right) a huge animal feed mill was built in 1932 – the Great Western Mill. It was a big employer in the town.

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The Jubilee Bridge.

The brick bridge over the Kennet and Avon canal was designed by John Rennie and built in 1799. For the first 100 years of its life, it carried nothing heavier than horses and wagons. Through the 20th century and onwards, however, it has had to support increasingly heavy vehicles.

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The Three Swans

The Three Swans is one of Hungerford’s great old coaching inns – evidenced by the milestone mounted on its front wall showing it lies midway between Oxford and Salisbury.
Today the earliest surviving record of an inn on the site is from a document of 1645.

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