VS #1886 - Aspley Guise

Originally, I didn't consider signs like these to be worthy of inclusion in the VS series, alongside their fancier counterparts. However, now that I know more about them, I realise their historical significance.
As part of the 1951 Festival of Britain celebrations, Bedford County Council – as was – wanted to fund five projects and the village signs was one of them. In addition, the council created a new county coat of arms, they bought Moot Hall and the village green in Elstow, bought and restored Stevington Windmill and planted 1,951 roadside trees across the county.
The signs were offered to villages at a subsidised cost of £10 (roughly £316 in today’s money) and were manufactured in the county council’s own workshop. 138 were initially made, although some are in better repair than others. Some (including this one) have an additional ‘hump’ feature to accommodate ‘best kept village’ badges.
As for Aspley Guise...
The first record of Aspley dates from 969, when land there comprising 15 hides was granted by King Edgar (the Peaceable) to his thegn Alfwold.
By the date of the Domesday Book, 1086, the parish had 25 households, five of which were recorded as serfs. The book notes it covered a large tract of agricultural land, valued at £10 to its overlords, though rendering only £8, and was held before the conquest by Leofeva of Earl Waltheof. Its contemporary manor owner was Acard of Ivry who held of Hugh de Beauchamp, its feudal overlord.
Its church is mentioned in the records of the diocese in 1223.
During the Second World War, the community housed several secret facilities relating in some manner to code-breaking and propaganda.[
The cache is a magntic tube.
Good Luck!
About Village Sign Caches
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This cache belongs to the Village Sign Series, a series of caches based on ornate signs that depict the heritage, history and culture of the villages that put them up (generally on the village green!).
The signs can be made of different materials from fibreglass to wood, from forged steel to stone. They can depict anything from local industry to historical events. The tradition probably started in Norfolk or Suffolk and has now spread across most of the country so we thought we would base a series on them!
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More information, bookmarks and statistics can be found at the Village Signs Website
If anybody would like to expand the Village Sign Series, please do.
I would ask that you request a number for your cache first at www.villagesignseries.co.uk
so we can keep track of the Village Sign numbers and names to avoid duplication.