Most of the houses in the village date from the 17th and 18th centuries, with a few additions from the 19th century. All the signs of classic Cotswold buildings are here. Most, if not all the houses are roofed in either Cotswold stone tiles or occasionally in Welsh slate and are built of what is called Rubble Cotswold stone, (this derogatory sounding description simply means un-cut stone, differentiating it from the Ashlar, or cut stone, from which the grand houses in the region tend to be built.)
As I mentioned earlier the village has neither spring or river in its close vicinity, so in the 19th century a few houses had water piped from the springs above the village, and eventually, in the early 20th century, water was piped to a fountain tap on the green. It wasn’t until 1954 that mains water was finally provided.
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