architecture—All Saints' Church, Boyne Hill The antiquary
John Leland claimed that the area around Maidenhead's present town centre was a small Roman settlement called Alaunodunum. He stated that it had all but disappeared by the end of the Roman occupation. Although his source is unknown, there is documented and physical evidence of Roman settlement in the town. There are two well known villa sites in the town, one being in the suburb of
Cox Green, and the other just west of the town centre on Castle Hill. This villa sat on the route of the
Camlet Way which was a Roman road linking
Silchester (
Calleva Atrebatum) and
Colchester (
Camulodunum) via
St Albans (
Verulamium) and passes through the present town centre. Remnants of the road have been unearthed at various locations nearby, but its exact route is unclear. Maidenhead's name stems from the riverside area where the first "New
wharf" or "Maiden Hythe" was built, as early as
Saxon times. In the year 870, an army of Danes invaded the kingdom of
Wessex. They disembarked from their longboats by the wharf and ferry crossing at Maidenhead and fought their way overland to
Reading where they set up camp and made it their regional power base. The area of the present town centre was originally a small Anglo-Saxon town known as "South Ellington". The town would have likely developed on the Camlet Way on the site of Alaunodunum as the Bath Road was not re-routed until the 13th century. Maidenhead is recorded in the
Domesday Book as the settlement of Ellington in the hundred of Beynhurst. A wooden bridge was erected across the river in about 1280 to replace the ferry in South Ellington. The
Great West Road to
Reading,
Gloucester and
Bristol was diverted over the new bridge. Previously, it had kept to the north bank and crossed the Thames by
ford at
Cookham, and the
medieval town, later to become Maidenhead grew up on the site of Alaunodunum and South Ellington, between the new bridge and the bottom of Castle Hill. Within a few years a new wharf was constructed next to the bridge to replace the old Saxon wharf which needed replacing. At this time, the South Ellington name was dropped with the town becoming known as Maidenhythe. The earliest record of this name change is in the Bray Court manorial rolls of 1296. on the High Street, the site of which is now a branch of the
NatWest Bank. A plaque commemorates their meeting. When the
Great Western Railway came to the town, it began to expand. Muddy roads were replaced and public services were installed. The High Street began to change again, and substantial
Victorian red brick architecture began to appear throughout the town. Maidenhead Citadel Corps of the
Salvation Army was first opened in the town in the mid-1880s.
Maidenhead Citadel Band was soon founded in 1886 by Bandmaster William Thomas, who later became mayor of the town. By
Edwardian times, nearby
Boulter's Lock became a favoured resort, especially on
Ascot Sunday, and
Skindles Hotel developed a reputation for illicit liaisons. Although there are attractive residential and green areas in and around Maidenhead, the historic heart of the town has been redeveloped, primarily with office space, high technology company headquarters and apartments, making it one of the key business and commuter towns of the
Silicon Corridor. This has happened in piecemeal fashion over the last forty years and Maidenhead town centre has lost most many historic buildings and much of its traditional English market town character. The High Street and Bridge Street areas only possess one heavily restored Medieval building and a handful of Georgian buildings in the Chapel Arches area. Research by the New Economics Foundation in 2005 rated Maidenhead as an example of a
clone town and the town centre is regarded as in need of improvement. In December 2007, the Royal Borough of Windsor and Maidenhead set up the Partnership for the Regeneration of Maidenhead (PRoM), which in October 2008 launched a comprehensive 20 Year Vision and Action Plan for rejuvenating the town centre. Launch of the plan coincided with confirmation by central government that Maidenhead will be part of the new
Crossrail project. ==Governance==