Eton has been a settlement since at least Saxon times, though Roman and Celtic urns suggest even earlier. It derives its name from Eyot-tun, meaning ‘settlement on an island’. It was originally bounded by the Thames and several streams, and thus relatively safe from attack. Traces of the Saxon settlement survive. There are two commons and large areas of Lammas lands where householders were allowed to graze two beasts between August and October.
At the time of Domesday (1086), ‘Ettone’ was listed as having two mills, a meadow, woodland and fisheries. The settlement first concentrated on the higher land and quickly spread along the present High Street during the Middle Ages in response to the growth of Windsor.
In 1826 the decision was taken to reject a plan to enclose the parish land. This parish is one of the few still containing Lammas land, one reason why a rail connection to the town was delayed. However the Windsor Branch rail viaduct was completed in 1849, running through the College land. These Lammas lands also served to protect the town from encroaching Slough industrialism.
The Thames has always been more of a link than a barrier. Eton flourished due to fish farming. The stones used for Eton College Chapel were conveyed here by barge. The first bridge was built in about 1170, while the present bridge opened in 1822. It was freed from tolls in 1898, and closed to traffic in 1970.
Eton High Street leads from the bridge through both the town and the College. Many royal processions have made their way along the High Street, most notably the funeral procession of Jane Seymour, Henry VIII’s third wife, in 1537.
Henry VI founded Eton College by charter in 1440. He was a shy and peace loving man, then aged 18. He loved Windsor and so converted the parish church on the other side of the Thames into a Collegiate Church, a corporate body with the right to hold land and collect revenues. He endowed the Provost and Fellows with considerable estates spread across England. The King founded not only the school but also created a centre of pilgrimage, modeling the new college on Winchester, founded by William of Wykeham.
Under a decree of the Founder, there were to be 70 King’s Scholars, who were educated for free and housed in College. Outside College itself, so-called Oppidans were lodged in houses in the town and received the same education. Originally these houses were run by Dames, but more recently by House Masters. Today there are 24 Oppidan boarding houses for Oppidans and over 1300 boys in all.
1.9 miles / 3 kilometres
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Points of Interest
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Heritage & Monuments
1 - Kings Stables
The King’s Stables were first mentioned in 1480 in the short street leading east near Windsor Bridge. However, the stables may have existed even earlier ...
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Landmark & Views
2 - The Cock Pit
The Cockpit stands at 47-49 High Street, on the edge of the old medieval market square, with a front dating from about 1440. It was ...
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Landmark & Views
3 - Eton Porny School
Eton Porny School is named after Mark Antony Porny, a French Master at Eton College, who died in 1802. Under the terms of his will, ...
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Heritage & Monuments
4 - Baldwins Bridge
Baldwin’s Bridge is maintained by The Baldwin Bridge Trust whose patent was warranted by Queen Elizabeth I in 1592. It is one of the oldest ...
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Places of Worship
5 - College Chapel
Eton College occupies most of the town North of Barnes Pool Bridge. Founded by Henry VI in 1440 and dedicated to the Virgin Mary. There ...
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Heritage & Monuments
6 - The Burning Bush
The Burning Bush is a listed Victorian lamp post outside the Memorial Buildings (School Hall and School Library). It was designed by Henry Woodyer, an ...
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Landmark & Views
7 - Eton Wall Game
The Wall Game is a unique game, involving many scrums against the Wall, in College Field. A soiled and soggy ball is placed along the ...
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Landmark & Views
8 - Skinners Bridge
Skinner’s Bridge is named after two Eton boys, John Skinner and Edward Steuart Skinner who both lost their lives in the Second World War. The ...
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Landmark & Views
9 - Sir William Herschel
The Herschel Observatory is named after Sir William Herschel (1738- 1822), King George III’s Astronomer (the first such appointment) and probably the most famous astronomer ...
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Heritage & Monuments
10 - Gormley Statue The Edge
Sir Antony Gormley’s Edge II Statue has been attached high up on Common Lane House since 2002. It was commissioned by the College in 2001 ...
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Landmark & Views
11 - Headmaster John Keate
Keate House was mainly built in 1788. It is named after Dr John Keate (1773-1852) who was Headmaster of Eton from 1809 to 1834. He ...
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Museum & Galleries
12 - Eton Natural History Museum
Eton College Museum entrance to The Natural History Museum was originally financed by subscription from Eton’s Science Masters in 1875. It then became part of ...
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Museum & Galleries
13 - Eton Museum of Antiquities
Eton Museum of Antiquities is housed in the Jafar Gallery and is part of the Bekynton Field Development (named after Thomas Bekynton (1390-1465), Bishop of ...
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Places of Worship
14 - St John’s Church
The Church of St John the Evangelist was consecrated in 1854. It was built on the site of an earlier church dating from 1769. The ...
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Landmark & Views
15 - Christopher Inn
The Christopher Inn is a former 18th century coaching inn. It was originally situated next to the College on Baldwin’s Bridge and was first mentioned ...
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Landmark & Views
16 - Jubilee Square
Jubilee Square was a joint venture by The Baldwin Bridge Trust and Eton Town Council in 2012 to mark the centenary of the Baldwin’s Bridge ...
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Landmark & Views
17 - The Brocas
The Brocas is a large meadow adjacent to the River Thames and part of the floodplain. It belongs to Eton College. It affords magnificent views ...
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Landmark & Views
18 - The Boat House
Eton Boat House, known as ‘Rafts’ is where the whiffs and elite boats were built and kept for many years. Rowing has been a feature ...
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Landmark & Views
56 - Windsor and Eton Bridge
Windsor Bridge. Windsor and Eton have been linked by wooden bridges since at least 1236. The current bridge was built in 1822 and opened in ...
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