Grove, Oxfordshire

Grove is a village and civil parish in Oxfordshire, England. It was part of Berkshire until it was transferred in the 1974 boundary changes.

The village is on Letcombe Brook, about 1+1/2 mi north of Wantage and 14 mi south-west of Oxford. The 2011 Census recorded the parish's population as 7,178. It is also home to Formula One constructor Williams Racing.

History
In 1622 Thomas Grove had a watermill at Grove. Grove Farmhouse is dated 1684. It is a chequer brick building of three bays and its doorway has bolection moulding. The common lands of Wantage and Grove were enclosed by an Act of Parliament passed in 1803. The land awards under the Act seem to have been made in 1806. In 1770 the turnpike road was built as a more direct route between Wantage and Oxford. Between 1796 and 1810 the Wilts & Berks Canal was built. Its main route passed through the village and a branch of the canal was built between Grove and Wantage.

In 1840 the Great Western Railway opened Wantage Road railway station on the northern boundary of Grove. In 1875, the Wantage Tramway was built. This was a single track laid alongside the turnpike road linking Wantage Road Station and Wantage. It was operated by steam tram locomotives which pulled both a passenger tramcar and a goods wagons. Competition from the railway and tramway reduced canal traffic, and the Wilts and Berks fell into disuse in 1901. Increasing competition from road transport reduced traffic on the tram, and passenger tram services were ended in 1925. Parts of the Wilts and Berks Canal around Grove are still visible, providing some local walks. The Wilts & Berks Canal Trust is working to reopen the entire canal, and several small sections around Grove have already been restored. In 1965 British Rail closed Wantage Road station. Oxfordshire County Council has a policy to seek a new station to be built to serve Wantage and Grove.

In 1942 RAF Grove was opened as a Bomber Command training base. In 1943 it was transferred to the United States Army Air Forces and the 45th Air Depot Group established one of the largest and busiest supply airfields in Europe. In 1946 the USAAF returned the airfield to the RAF, who relegated it for non-flying operations. In 1955 the station was transferred to the United Kingdom Atomic Energy Authority, which used it until the 1960s. The site was then sold off and private housing was built on part of the former airfield.

In 1945 the Wantage Tramway closed to freight traffic. One of its steam tram engines is preserved at Didcot Railway Centre. Grove has lately been a site of extensive housing development, greatly increasing its size and almost merging with the nearby town of Wantage. Grove is now the largest village in the Vale of White Horse.

A De Havilland Venom fighter-bomber used to be displayed on a pylon outside Grove Technology Park. In February 2022 Storm Eunice broke the pylon, and the aircraft was destroyed when it hit the ground.

Parish churches
King Stephen granted land at Grove to the Benedictine Abbey of Bermondsey in 1142. Grove is said to have had a chapel of St. John the Baptist until it was destroyed in 1733. It would have been a chapelry of the ecclesiastical parish of Wantage, of which Grove was a part until the 1830s. The font is an 18th-century wooden one brought from All Saints' parish church, Pusey. A new Church of England parish church was built in 1832 and Grove was made into a separate ecclesiastical parish in 1835.

The 1832 building was replaced by a new parish church of St. James the Great built in 1900 or 1901. St. James' was a Gothic Revival building in an Early English Gothic style with six bays and a south aisle. It was designed by P.A. Robson, son of the architect Edward Robert Robson. In the 1960s Sir Nikolaus Pevsner found St. James' to be derelict. In the 1960s a new parish church of St. John the Baptist was built to replace St. James'. The foundation stone is dated 1965. It incorporates items from St. James' including the font, a stained glass window depicting St. James and a panel listing successive vicars of the parish.

Transport
The A338 road passes through the parish, along the east side of the village. To the north, the A338 links Grove with the A420 road at Besselsleigh, west of Oxford. To the south, the A338 links Grove to Wantage, Hungerford, and junction 14 of the M4 motorway.

Several bus services link Grove with local towns and villages. Stagecoach West and Oxford Bus Company both provide frequent daily services from Grove to Oxford, Abingdon and Wantage. Night buses between Oxford and Wantage also operate on Friday and Saturday nights, with services running as late as 3am on these days. Thames Travel provide frequent Monday to Saturday services to Didcot and Milton Park (a business park near Didcot). There is also a local Wantage and Grove service that operates Monday to Saturday.

The nearest railway station is Didcot Parkway, about 8 mi east of Grove. The station can be reached by road, and bus services provide a direct link to the station.

Amenities
Grove has two primary schools:
 * Millbrook Primary School.
 * Grove Church of England Primary School.

Grove has three public houses:
 * The Baytree, Denchworth Road
 * The Bell, Main Street
 * The Volunteer Inn, Station Road (closed in 2012 but re-opened in 2016)

Sports and leisure
Since 1996, Grove has been the home to Formula One team and constructor Williams Racing, after relocating from their original factory in Didcot. Williams then went on to win the World Constructors’ Championship in the 1996 and 1997 seasons with Damon Hill winning the World Drivers’ Championship in 1996 and Jacques Villeneuve in 1997. As well as the factory, the Williams base also features an Experience Centre which includes tours, a museum and hands on activities. The centre also hosts race day hospitality for fans.

Grove rugby union and association football clubs play at the Cane Lane parish recreation ground on the outskirts of the village. Grove Rugby Football Club was founded in 1971 and plays in the Southern League North division. The Club fields four senior sides, including veterans. Grove RFC has a youth section, across twelve mini (mixed, under–7 to under–12) and junior groups (under–13 to under–18; including two girls' — under–15 and under–18). One of its alumni is Jon Dunbar, who captained Grove in the early 2000s before moving to Newcastle Falcons and then Leeds Tykes/Leeds Carnegie on a professional contract. Grove Challengers FC, the local association football junior side, was founded in 1971. The club is open to children between the ages of 5-17 and teams play in the Oxford Youth Football League.

A free weekly 5K Parkrun takes place in Grove. Every Saturday morning the event is held on a multi-lap course of the Grove fields and recreation grounds.

Twinning
Grove is twinned with:


 * 🇫🇷 Mably in France since 1990