Sarratt
Template:For multi Template:Use dmy dates Template:Use British English Template:Short descriptionScript error: No such module "Infobox".Template:Template otherScript error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". Sarratt is both a village and a civil parish in Three Rivers District, Hertfordshire, England. It is situated Script error: No such module "convert". north of Rickmansworth on high ground near the county boundary with Buckinghamshire. The chalk stream, the River Chess, rising just north of Chesham in the Chiltern Hills, passes through Sarratt Bottom in the valley to the west of the village to join the River Colne in Rickmansworth. The conditions offered by the river are perfect for the cultivation of watercress. Sarratt has the only commercially operating watercress farm in Hertfordshire.[1] The valley to the east of Sarratt is dry.
Church and chapel
The parish church of Sarratt is the Church of the Holy Cross. Founded c. Template:TrimScript error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters"., construction is flint-and-brick built with, reputedly, reused Roman tiles.[2][3]
From the 17th century a large linear village developed nearly Script error: No such module "convert". away. Nowadays, this area is referred to as Sarratt Green and the area around the church is known as Church End. The village also included a Baptist Chapel and an independent Providence Mission Hall; both closed and converted into private residences.
Motorway
When the M25 London orbital motorwayTemplate:Spaced ndashwidened in 2011 to eight lanes (four each way)Template:Spaced ndash. Where it passes Sarratt, it is less than Script error: No such module "convert". distant at its nearest point, the bridge carrying Sarratt Road.
Junction 18 (M25) is on the Chorleywood Road (the A404) only Script error: No such module "convert". by road from the village.
Schools
Sarratt's Church of England school, situated near the junction of Church Lane and The Green, is the village's primary school with 160Template:Spaced ndash170 pupils. In December 2015 Ofsted inspected the school and judged it to be good across the board,[4] having been rated inadequate since December 2014.[5]
Sarratt Ducklings, an independent pre-school for children aged from 2 to 4, located in the grounds of Sarratt Primary School, is a registered charity. It was judged outstanding by Ofsted in 2015.[6][7]
Fiction and filming
In some of the early novels of John le Carré, Sarratt is the location of a fictional agent-training school and interrogation centre for the British foreign intelligence service, which is nicknamed 'the Nursery'.[8] Le Carré and Mikhail Lyubimov, a former KGB colonel, contributed to a book published by Village Books in 1999 as a fund-raiser for village charities titled, Sarratt and the Draper of Watford.[9]
Sarratt has been used as a location in television and film productions, including:[10]
- Murder Most Foul (1964 film) with Margaret Rutherford as Miss Marple
- Tightrope (ATV, 1971) children's espionage series written by Victor Pemberton
- Four Weddings and a Funeral (1994 film)
- The Demon Headmaster (BBC TV) second series of children's drama series
- Just William (BBC TV) children's drama series
- The Woman In Black (1989 film)
- Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy (2011 film)
- Pudsey the Dog: The Movie (2014 film)
- All the Money in the World (2017 film)
Notable people
- Sydney Valentine, actor, lived at Pear Tree Cottage, Sarratt.[11]
Freedom of the Parish
People and military units who have received the Freedom of the Parish of Sarratt.
References
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- ↑ Sydney Paxton, "An Appreciation", quoted in Edward Rollinson, Sydney Valentine 1865-1919: An Actor's Actor (Sarratt, 1996), Template:ISBN, at pp. 1-5
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External links
- 'Parishes: Sarratt', A History of the County of Hertford Date accessed: 29 December 2006.
- Holy Cross Church Website