Notable buildings The
Church of St Mary the Virgin is in the
Church of England diocese of Oxford. The church is a Grade I
listed building and houses the
Kedermister Library, given by Sir John Kedermister (or Kederminster), who also endowed the surviving almshouses of 1617 in the village. Other surviving almshouses include the Seymour Almshouses (1679–1688), given by Sir Edward Seymour who was a
Speaker of the House of Commons, and those founded in 1839 by William Wild in Horsemoor Green. The courtier
Henry Norris owned a house, "Parlaunt" or "Leving", at Langley Marish. The property was forfeited to the crown when he was executed in May 1536. When Henry married
Anne of Cleves in 1540, furnishings from Parlaunt were taken to
Oatlands Palace. There are no remains of this manor house. Sir John Kedermister's house,
Langley Park (bought by
Charles Spencer, 3rd Duke of Marlborough) was demolished and rebuilt to designs by
Stiff Leadbetter, starting in 1756 and completed in the year of his death, 1758. The
Langley Academy secondary school opened in 2008 and was designed by architects
Foster + Partners.
Langley Airfield The
Hawker Aircraft Company bought Parlaunt Farm at Langley in 1938 and built a major factory and airfield there. Over 9,000 military aircraft were manufactured at the site especially the
Hurricane during
World War II and also the
Tempest and
Sea Fury. The final Hurricane built (a MkIIC serialled PZ865, which still flies today with the
Battle of Britain Memorial Flight) was completed here on 27 July 1944 and named 'Last of The Many' in a special ceremony. Retiring Chief Test Pilot
P W S 'George' Bulman made the first flight of this the aeroplane on this occasion – he having made the first flight of the prototype from
Brooklands almost nine years earlier. The
Hawker Tornado (1940),
Typhoon (1940),
Tempest (1942),
Fury (1944),
Sea Fury (1945), and the
General Aircraft Hamilcar X tank-carrying glider (1945) all made their first flights from Langley. Postwar, the aerodrome was also used by
Airwork Services,
British South American Airways and
Airflight for aircraft maintenance work. The Hawker factory closed in 1958 having also manufactured
Hawker Hunter fighters and earlier jet prototypes. Production and staff were transferred to the flight test airfield at
Dunsfold Aerodrome and the parent Hawker factory in
Kingston-on-Thames (now
Kingston upon Thames), both in Surrey. Little of the factory or airfield remain today although the area's aviation past is remembered in street-names such as
Spitfire Close and
Hurricane Way. A marker stone was unveiled by the
Airfields of Britain Conservation Trust on 5 October 2019.
Ford factory The
Ford Motor Company opened a commercial vehicle component factory at Langley Airfield in 1949, and then bought the entire site from Hawker Siddeley in 1959. The former aircraft factory was re-used for commercial vehicle manufacture and the
Ford Transit was built here until production was transferred to
Ford's Southampton plant at
Swaythling,
Southampton, and later the
Ford Cargo. The Langley factory became part of
Iveco in 1986 but finally closed in September 1997. Demolished a year later by Gregory Demolition, the site is now redeveloped with new housing, offices and warehousing (including
Royal Mail's
Heathrow Worldwide Distribution Centre, which services nearby
Heathrow Airport).
Miscellaneous Langley Carnival is held annually on the second Saturday in July at the Langley Park Memorial Recreation Ground. The Cable Corporation, based at Langley, was the first cable company in the world to offer voice, video and data services to business and residential users. Langley is reputed to be haunted by a ghost in a yellow coat. ==Transport==