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Jealott's Hill

Coordinates:51°27′11″N0°45′04″W/ 51.453°N 0.751°W/51.453; -0.751
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Jealott's Hill
Jealott's Hill is located in Berkshire
Jealott's Hill
Jealott's Hill
Location withinBerkshire
OS grid referenceSU871735
Metropolitan borough
Metropolitan county
Region
CountryEngland
Sovereign stateUnited Kingdom
Post townBracknell
Postcode districtRG42
Dialling code01344
PoliceThames Valley
FireRoyal Berkshire
AmbulanceSouth Central
UK Parliament
List of places
UK
England
Berkshire
51°27′11″N0°45′04″W/ 51.453°N 0.751°W/51.453; -0.751

Jealott's Hillis a village in the county ofBerkshire,England,[1]within thecivil parishofWarfield.[2]The settlement is on the A3095 road approximately 3 miles (5 km) north ofBracknell.The nearest railway station is inBracknell. The name of the hill is reported[3]to have derived from the surname of a 14th-century landowner, Roger Jolyl. This name evolved into "Joyliff's Hill" and then, on Henry Walter'sMap of Windsor Forest, 1823,[4]became "Jealous Hill". This changed again to "Jealot's Hill" onJohn Snare's 1846 map[5]and by the 1920s the modern spelling was established.[3]

Syngenta research site

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Jealott's Hill is home toSyngenta's largestresearch and developmentsite which includes a large agricultural research greenhouse at 4,000 square metres (43,000 sq ft) and a 260 ha (640-acre) farm. As of 2018,Syngenta employed around 800 people there.[6]The site was formed in 1927 by the amalgamation of three farms, Hawthorndale, Nuptown and Jealott's Hill itself. Jealott's Hill House was built in 1928 and officially opened on 28 June 1929 as the offices, laboratory and library ofImperial Chemical Industries'sAgricultural Research Station;initially the research focused onnitrogenfertilizersin grassland management.

In 1936, the Hawthorndale Biological Laboratories were opened in the convertedmansionbuilding of the former farm. Research there involved the biological evaluation of chemicals as potentialpesticides.[3]The site is now called Jealott's Hill International Research Centre.[6][7]In 2007, the site was recognised by theRoyal Society of Chemistryas aNational Chemistry Landmarkand awarded ablue plaquein recognition of 80 years of scientific research which led to global developments in agriculture.[8]

Jealott's Hill House
Hawthorndale House

References

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  1. ^Ordnance Survey: Landranger map sheet 175Reading & Windsor (Henley-on-Thames & Bracknell)(Map). Ordnance Survey. 2012.ISBN9780319232149.
  2. ^"Ordnance Survey Election Maps".www.ordnancesurvey.co.uk.Ordnance Survey.Retrieved3 April2016.
  3. ^abcPeacock, F.C. (1978). "Chapter 1: Introduction". In Peacock, F.C. (ed.).Jealott's Hill: Fifty years of Agricultural Research 1928-1978.Imperial Chemical Industries Ltd. pp.1–9.ISBN0901747017.
  4. ^Walter, Henry (1823)."A Map Of Windsor Forest And Its Vicinity".Retrieved18 May2018.
  5. ^Snare, John (1846).Snare's Map of the Country ten miles round Reading.OCLC557234239.
  6. ^abSyngenta."Jealott's Hill".www.syngenta.co.uk.Retrieved7 April2018.
  7. ^"Syngenta: Celebrating 75 years of scientific excellence at Jealott's Hill International Research Centre"(PDF).Archived fromthe original(PDF)on 11 October 2007.Retrieved23 January2020.
  8. ^"RSC Landmark Awards in the Thames Valley".Retrieved25 January2020.