Mill End Mill End is the southern small hamlet in the
civil parish on the main
A4155 road between
Henley-on-Thames and
Marlow, by the
River Thames. Mill End consists of 32 houses, some on the river bank and others on the northern side of the main road. The largest historic home is at the heart of its cluster of buildings, Yewden Manor, listed grade II for architecture. The name clearly comes from the mill that is situated near the lock, on the fast-flowing, narrow, high-sided Hambleden Bourne, which discharges here. Mill End Farm, which has been run by the Bowden family since at least 1965, is opposite the lock and has farmed most of the land in and around the southern Hambleden area. This part of the Thames is characterised by
willow trees and a large
biodiversity of wildlife including mute swans, great crested grebes, ducks, grey herons, common terns and
kingfishers. The footpath next to
Hambleden Lock, the public towpath, provides a significant amenity to Mill End. Anne Petrie, daughter of the famous Egyptian archaeologist
Flinders Petrie lived in Mill End; she is buried in Hambleden church-yard.
Landmarks In the Mill End part of the village are a watermill, lock and villa. Adjacent to the converted barns and the ordinary home named Mill House, which had served for centuries as home to the moderately wealthy miller of the district, is the much larger, often-photographed
Hambleden Mill, which has been converted into flats; this is downstream of a pedestrianised weir from
Hambleden Lock. The site of an unusually immediately Thameside
Roman villa adjoins the east of the development. In Ridge Wood atop the hill opposite the village is a large avenue of giant sequoia and tall pine trees.
Nearby by the Thames Henley Management College lies west and is also on the
Thames.
Danesfield House, a hotel and spa is east of the village on a hillside of the same relatively steep bank. ==In popular culture==