All Saints Church
The Church of All Saints, East Lockinge, South Oxfordshire, UK, dates from the mid-12th century though has been much altered in subsequent centuries. The small village it still serves was developed around a substantial mansion that once dominated the parish; demolished after World War II, its grounds remain as parkland containing All Saints Church. In the foreground is the chalk stream of Lockinge Brook (whose trout are very popular with fly fishermen) that emerges below the Berkshire Downs in the village of West Lockinge before eventually, via multiple brooks and ponds, joining the River Ock near Abingdon.
All Saints Church
The Church of All Saints, East Lockinge, South Oxfordshire, UK, dates from the mid-12th century though has been much altered in subsequent centuries. The small village it still serves was developed around a substantial mansion that once dominated the parish; demolished after World War II, its grounds remain as parkland containing All Saints Church. In the foreground is the chalk stream of Lockinge Brook (whose trout are very popular with fly fishermen) that emerges below the Berkshire Downs in the village of West Lockinge before eventually, via multiple brooks and ponds, joining the River Ock near Abingdon.