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Cholsey is a village and immediately south of Wallingford in South Oxfordshire. Its population in 2011 was 3,457. 2011 Census. Its parish boundary, some long, reaches from the edge of Wallingford into the . The village green called "The Forty" has a substantial and ancient walnut tree.

, historically the northern part of Cholsey, was absorbed into Wallingford in 2015. Winterbrook Bridge in the parish carries the Wallingford by-pass across the . The author Dame , Lady Mallowan, lived at Winterbrook House until her death. , poet laureate, lived at Lollingdon Farm in Cholsey from 1915 to 1917. Cholsey was transferred from Wallingford Rural District in to the district of South in 1974.


History
A Bronze Age site has been found beside the at Whitecross Farm in the northeast of the . A pre- road, the , crosses the at Cholsey. A find announced in 2017 was of a substantial Roman site in Celsea Place. Archaeologists discovered the best examples of corn dryers they have seen, with precision suggesting they were built by an engineer. Sites of burials and cremation pots have also been found. There is also part of a , the majority of which appeared to have extended out under the existing road and houses and will have suffered significant unrecorded damage. The section of villa remaining within the archaeologically excavated area has been preserved in situ.

The village itself was founded on an island ("Ceol's Isle") in marshy ground close to the Thames. There is evidence that the House of Wessex royal family owned land in Cholsey in the sixth and seventh centuries. At this time the town was home to a who was locally in the . A royal , , was founded in the village in 986 by Queen Dowager Ælfthryth on land given by her son, King Æthelred the Unready. The nunnery is thought to have been destroyed by invading in 1006 when they camped in Cholsey after setting nearby Wallingford ablaze.

However, Saxon still survives in the Church of England parish church of St Mary. Most of this and stone church was built in the twelfth century. The church is cruciform. Additions were made to it in the thirteenth and fourteenth centuries. In the thirteenth-century a was built in the village. It was, at the time, the largest aisled building in the world, being high, wide and over long. It was demolished in 1815. Fair Mile Hospital, a former psychiatric hospital, opened near Cholsey in 1870 and closed in 2003. In 2011–14 its Victorian buildings were converted to homes and new housing was built in its grounds.


Transport
Cholsey is served by Cholsey railway station, a calling point for Great Western Railway stopping services on the Great Western Main Line between Reading and Didcot. The station was also the junction for a branch line to , nicknamed the "Wallingford Bunk", which the Cholsey and Wallingford Railway now operates on and some weekends. From Mondays to Saturdays bus route 136 links Cholsey with Wallingford and Benson. There is no evening, Sunday or bank holiday service.


Architecture and buildings
Writer and poet lived in the parish for several years during World War I as tenant of Lollingdon Farm at the foot of the . He was from 1936 to his death in 1967 and wrote a series of poems and sonnets called . The farmhouse, on Westfield Road, has been listed grade II since 1986.

The architect Edward Prioleau Warren (1856–1937), lived at Breach House, in Halfpenny Lane, Cholsey, built in 1906, which he designed for himself. The building is grade II listed.


St Mary's churchyard
The grave of novelist Dame is in the churchyard of St Mary's. She lived with her second husband, archaeologist Sir , at Winterbrook House, formerly in the north of the parish, from about 1934 and died there in 1976. She and her husband had chosen a burial plot in the mid-1960s just under the perimeter wall of the churchyard. About twenty journalists and television reporters attended her funeral service, some having travelled from as far away as South America. Thirty wreaths adorned her grave including one from the cast of her long-running play , and another sent "on behalf of the multitude of grateful readers" from the Ulverscroft Large Print Book Publishers.


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