Chilton
             Like many 
              of the local villages, Chilton has been in existence 
              since before the Domesday survey and its present church 
              since a few years after that time. Also like many other 
              villages, many changes have taken place over the centuries, 
              most of them probably within the last 100 years.
            
            Chilton once boasted racehorse training establishments. 
              But unlike in some other villages, these are now gone.
              
              The unofficial emblem of Chilton has been the rook since 
              the beginning of time, perhaps because they nested in 
              the elms that used to be round the churchyard. Now what 
              is thought to be one of the largest colonies of rooks 
              in South Oxfordshire still nests in sycamores on the nearby 
              former airfield, now owned by the UKAERA. The atomic research 
              establishment has been decommissioned but Chilton is now 
              the home of the Rutherford 
                Appleton Laboratory, whose scientists use their spectacular 
              microwave dish to gather information on outer space, the 
              Harwell International Business Park and the new Diamond 
                synchrotron light source, a new scientific facility 
              housed in a futuristic doughnut-shaped building which 
              covers the area of 5 football pitches. Right next to the 
              
              The 
              Parish Church of All Saints' has a C12 nave with a 
              13th century south aisle and a C14 chancel. The 6 bells 
              date from 1633 to 1892 with a tenor weighing in at 8 cwt. 
              They have recently been restored after having been silent 
              for many years due to structural problems.
            Chilton is in the Berkshire Downs 
              just off the A34 about 4 miles south of Didcot.