English Heritage sites near Berrick Salome Parish

Abingdon County Hall Museum

ABINGDON COUNTY HALL MUSEUM

8 miles from Berrick Salome Parish

This splendid 17th century Baroque building housed a courtroom for assizes, raised on arches over a market space. It now houses the Abingdon Museum.

North Hinksey Conduit House

NORTH HINKSEY CONDUIT HOUSE

10 miles from Berrick Salome Parish

Roofed conduit for Oxford's first water mains, constructed during the early 17th century.

Donnington Castle

DONNINGTON CASTLE

18 miles from Berrick Salome Parish

The striking twin-towered 14th-century gatehouse of this castle, later the focus of a Civil War siege and battle, survives amid impressive earthworks.

North Leigh Roman Villa

NORTH LEIGH ROMAN VILLA

19 miles from Berrick Salome Parish

The remains of a large, well built Roman courtyard villa. The most important feature is a nearly complete mosaic tile floor, patterned in reds and browns.

Silchester Roman City Walls and Amphitheatre

SILCHESTER ROMAN CITY WALLS AND AMPHITHEATRE

20 miles from Berrick Salome Parish

Originally a tribal centre of the Iron Age Atrebates, Silchester became the large and important Roman town of Calleva Atrebatum.

Uffington Castle - White Horse and Dragon Hill

UFFINGTON CASTLE - WHITE HORSE AND DRAGON HILL

21 miles from Berrick Salome Parish

Three atmospheric sites lie along the Ridgeway. Uffington 'Castle' is a large Iron Age hillfort, Dragon Hill a natural mound associated in legend with St George.


Churches in Berrick Salome Parish

Welcome to St Helen's Church, Berrick Salome

Church Lane Berrick Salome Wallingford Oxfordshire
(01865) 890392

Welcome to St Helen's Church!

Saint Helen was the mother of the Emperor Constantine, the first Christian emperor.

Berrick Salome, together with Berrick Prior, Roke and Rokemarsh, forms a community of some 250 villagers lying to the south west of the Chiltern Hills, and about 12 miles south east of Oxford. The small church at Berrick Salome, originally built as a "chapelry", or subdivision, of St. Mary's, in Chalgrove (see History), is in the Deanery of Aston and Cuddesdon, in the Diocese of Oxford.

When it was built, St. Helen's was in the centre of housing that has since disappeared, so the church building that you see now appears to be rather isolated from the village. Nevertheless, the church plays an important part in the life of the community today, just as it has done over the centuries. 

Whereas official records date back to 1087, the site of the Church of St Helen (the mother of the Roman Emperor Constantine and a favourite saint of King Ethelbald who ruled the area after he had annexed this area of Wessex into his kingdom of Mercia in about 800AD) has probably been sacred since the 8th century. 

One of the oldest features of the Church is the decorated Saxon font but the whole building is of great interest. Around 1615 the original roof was replaced with one of a queen-post type with a complex timber truss. This resulted in the present vaulted roof of great functional beauty. The wooden gallery at the west end of the nave was built in 1676 and a dormer widow at each end provides light at this height. 

The Church itself is only about 65 feet long including the bell tower. For those who search there are many small corners of interest including some randomly repositioned mediaeval floor tiles at the east end of the nave and chancel, sculptures of fishes and doves (associated with the position of the font) and the 13th century "bee" window.

St Helen's Church and the Community

St. Helen's is an ancient Grade 2* listed building, needing periodic restoration as well as constant general maintenance, and so we have a calendar of social fund-raising events to top up both the Restoration Fund and the General Fund. Most villagers enjoy taking part in these events - not only are they fun, but they also help to embed the church firmly within the life of our small rural community.

The community also boasts a Village Hall and two pubs, The Chequers in Berrick and The Home Sweet Home in Roke (though the Post Office and shop that used to operate from The Chequers have long since ceased to function). There is also a Band Hut in Roke.


Pubs in Berrick Salome Parish

Chequers

Berrick Salome, OX10 6JN
(01865) 891118
chequersberricksalome.co.uk

A brick and cotswold stone pub and restaurant dating from the 15th or 16th century. The premises were refurbished in 2013 to a high standard which extended the bar and dining area.
Home Sweet Home

Roke, OX10 6JD
(01491) 838249
hshroke.pub

Large 17th Century rambling listed building featuring oak beams and open wood fires with several eating and drinking areas. Garden with tables to the front facing a quiet road - ideal summer drinking spot.