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History
of Stoke Poges
Stoke Poges is a village in Buckinghamshire,
England, located in the south of the county, about three miles north
of Slough, a mile east of Farnham Common.
The village name 'Stoke' is one of the most common in the United
Kingdom and means ' hamlet '. In the Domesday Book of 1086 the village
was recorded as Stoche. The affix 'Poges' came later, and
refers to the family that owned the manor in the village in the
Thirteenth century .
The manor in Stoke Poges was once a very grand place, and Queen
Elizabeth I was entertained here in 1601 . Later, in the middle
of the Seventeenth century the lady of the manor, Lady Purbeck caused
great national scandal when she had a love affair outside her own
marriage. In 1635 she was imprisoned for adultery but escaped from
prison to France, later returning to Stoke Poges where she died
in 1645. In 1647 the manor was the place where King Charles I was
imprisoned before his execution.
Later the manor came into the possession of William Penn, who founded
Pennsylvania, and remained in his family for at least two generations.
Thomas Gray 's Elegy Written in a Country Churchyard is believed
to have been written in the churchyard of the St Giles Church in
Stoke Poges, although there are other local claimants. Certainly,
Thomas Gray is buried at St Giles. Stoke Poges is also mentioned
in 20th century literature, in the book Brave New World
by Aldous Huxley, where it is the location of a frequently visited
golf course.
More recently, the James Bond film Goldfinger features
a golf match played between the principal characters, James Bond
and Auric Goldfinger, at Stoke Poges Golf Club.
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