Connecting the two villages for many centuries is an old Clapper Bridge. This is a type of footbridge found all over this country, usually where there was a ford in the river for vehicles and ridden horses and a dry bridge was required for people and packhorses on a leading reign. It is made of enormous slabs of stone stretched between stone pillars and is as firm and strong today as it has ever been. The nearby road bridge was built later, in the early 19th century to take carriages and eventually cars and lorries, but this Clapper Bridge is still seen by the locals as the connection between the two communities. It’s named Keble Bridge, after the family of John Keble who was curate here in 1815. His family had been lords of the manor since the 16th century.
Near Keble ridge is a heavy gothic wellhead, built in 1884, which will have provided the village with a convenient water-source, and on this hot day provided Widget with a means of cooling down.
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