'Marlow' (previously 'Great Marlow' or 'Chipping Marlow') is a
town on the very southern tip of
Buckinghamshire,
England. It is located on the
River Thames, four miles south-south-west of
High Wycombe, and four miles north west of
Maidenhead.

Overlooking the River Thames and Marlow
History

A map of Marlow from 1945
The town name is
Anglo Saxon in origin, and means 'land remaining after the draining of a pool'. In the
Domesday Book in
1086 it was recorded as ''Merlaue'', though previously it was known as ''Merelafan''.
Marlow has been an important town for many years. This is because of its location on the River Thames, a major trade route from
London. It has had its own
market charter since
1324 at the latest but ownership of the charter has been lost and no market has been held since at least 1940. As early as
1299 the town had its own
Member of Parliament.
Regatta
Main articles: Marlow Town Regatta and Festival
Marlow hosts a regular regatta, and is the location of one of the Thames's
locks, originating by the 14th century.
Nearby villages
Marlow is adjoined by
Marlow Bottom (1 mile to the north),
Little Marlow via the Little Marlow Road and to
Bourne End by the same road. Nearby, in Berkshire, to the south are
Bisham (home of
Bisham Abbey) and
Cookham Dean.
Bridge
There has been a
bridge over the Thames at Marlow since the reign of
King Edward III. The current bridge is a suspension bridge, designed by
William Tierney Clark in
1832, and was a prototype for the nearly identical but larger
Széchenyi Chain Bridge across the
River Danube in
Budapest.
Notable residents
The
Royal Military College, now based at
Sandhurst in
Surrey was also once located in this town. Notable residents of the town have included
Mary Shelley (who wrote ''
Frankenstein'' there),
Percy Bysshe Shelley,
T. S. Eliot,
Jerome K. Jerome and General
George Higginson.
More recently the town (actually Marlow Bottom) has been the home of quintuple Olympic gold medallist rower
Steve Redgrave, the greatest Olympian Britain has produced in recent times. After striking gold at Sydney 2000, he became Britain's only athlete ever to have won Gold Medals at five consecutive Olympic Games. The Marlow Town Park, Higginson Park, features a bronze statue of Sir Steven looking across the river towards the location of the finishing line of the Marlow Town
Regatta. There is also a road, ''Redgrave Place'', adjoining from Newtown road to commemorate the Olympic medallist.
The pop singer
Robbie Williams has recently bought a house on the river in
Bisham.
Transport
Marlow has a
railway station which is the terminus of a branch line from
Maidenhead, by way of
Bourne End. The service is known as the
Marlow Donkey, the nickname given to the steam locomotives based at Marlow.
Commuting to
London by train is simple as there are two peak-time trains an hour and one off-peak, going from Marlow to Maidenhead (during rush hour commuters must change trains at Bourne End). There is an occasional train that goes from Bourne End to London without the need to change. Tickets can be purchased at
Cookham or Bourne End during peak hours, or on the train, or at Maidenhead station at other times. The train service is now run by
First Great Western, who took over the franchise from
Thames Trains in 2003.
Twinning
Marlow is
twinned with the
French town of
Marly-le-Roi and has recently twinned with a district in
Budapest adjoining the
River Danube with the
William Tierney Clark suspension bridge.
Trivia
★ ''
Fusarium venenatum'' which is used to produce
Quorn was discovered in the soil of a farm near Marlow in the 1960s.
★ Since 1786 a shrivelled hand, believed to be that of St James was discovered during building work at
Reading Abbey and has been located at St Peter's Roman Catholic Church, Marlow, ever since.
See also
★
Marlow railway station
★
Great Marlow School
★
Sir William Borlase's Grammar School
External links
★
Marlow: A Buckinghamshire town on the River Thames
★
Marlow Methodist Church
★
OutInMarlow.com: A guide to living in and visiting Marlow
★
Images of Marlow on Odd-stuff