Skip to content
Surf Wiki
Save to docs
general/villages-in-hampshire

From Surf Wiki (app.surf) — the open knowledge base

Cowplain

Village in Hampshire, England


Village in Hampshire, England

FieldValue
countryEngland
official_nameCowplain
coordinates
population9,353
population_ref(2011.ward)
shire_districtHavant
shire_countyHampshire
regionSouth East England
constituency_westminsterFareham and Waterlooville
post_townWATERLOOVILLE
postcode_districtPO8
postcode_areaPO
dial_code023
os_grid_referenceSU695118

Cowplain is a village located north of Waterlooville, Hampshire, in South East England. According to the 2011 United Kingdom census, Cowplain is reported to have a population of 9,353, which constitutes 7% of the total population of the Borough of Havant. The village is spread along the A3 road connecting London to Portsmouth.

Geography

In 1810, the area which would become the village site was recorded as part of the formerly uninterrupted Forest of Bere. The only existing building at the time was Padnell Brick Kiln (later renamed Padnell Farm, then Padnell Grange). The village is located in a partially forested area, of which The Queen's Inclosure, Padnell Cuts Woods, Idlewood, Hurstwood, and Park Woods are portions. The village was founded at the foot of the nearby hill, where The Spotted Cow Pub was originally built (c. 1860), from which the village's name is believed to have originated. Villages situated in close proximity of Cowplain are Lovedean, Rowland's Castle, Denmead and Horndean. Wecock Farm, a 1970s Portsmouth City Council housing estate, is located west of Cowplain.

Services

Cowplain has several schools, including Cowplain School, Padnell Infant and Junior Schools, Hartplain Infant and Junior Schools, and Queen's Inclosure Primary School, which is adjacent to The Queen's Inclosure. Cowsplain is also home to St. Wilfrid's Church, Cowplain Evangelical Church, the Waterlooville Golf Course, and a supermarket, formerly a Fine Fare store until its closure in 1988, which itself replaced the Harcourt stores at the Fernwood house development.

Transport

The construction of the Portsdown & Horndean Light Railway in 1903 accelerated the village's growth. The former tramline followed the route of the main A3 road and traversed Cowplain, where the main tram depot was built, before the line closed in 1935.

Subsequently, the tramline was replaced by the No. 42 Southdown bus, which was recently renumbered as No. 8. Cowplain is also served by the No. 37 bus passing from Havant to Clanfield and from Petersfield and Liss, the National Express No. 030 from Cowsplain to London, the No. 39 passing through Wecock Farm, and the First Group service 8 which follows the A3 from Clanfield to Gunwharf Quays in Portsmouth.

Train stations in close proximity of Cowplain include Havant Railway Station and Cosham Railway Station.

Notable people

  • Mark Wingett, an English actor known for playing Police Constable Jim Carver in The Bill, who attended Padnell Junior School
  • Brett Fancy, an English actor known for playing detective Steve Hood in Rockliffe's Babies and with several subsequent film roles, who attended Padnell Junior School
  • Jill Ellis, an English-American football coach, who attended Padnell Junior School and Cowplain School
  • Peter Lynn, a social statistician and Professor at the University of Essex, who attended Padnell Infant and Junior schools
  • Gareth Southgate, an English footballer and team manager, who lived on the Hazleton Estate and briefly attended Padnell Infant school
  • Reuben Brampton Corkrey, a Paymaster Lieutenant in the Royal Navy, who lived in Cowplain and was appointed Member of the Order of the British Empire (MBE) in the King's 1944 Birthday Honours

References

References

  1. "Cowplain Ward (as of 2011)".
  2. Trust, Woodland. "The Queen's Inclosure".
  3. Lambert, Tim. (2021-03-14). "A History of Waterlooville".
  4. "Cowplain School".
  5. "Home".
  6. "Home".
  7. "Hart Plain Infant School".
  8. "Home".
  9. "Home".
  10. "Home".
  11. "St Wilfrid's Cowplain".
  12. "Cowplain Church".
  13. Lambert, Tim. (2021-03-14). "A History of Waterlooville".
  14. Hays, Graham. (10 June 2015). "How Jill Ellis became the highest-profile women's coach in the world". ESPN.
  15. (15 December 2025). "All Awards & Decorations of Honour results for corkrey".
Info: Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

Want to explore this topic further?

Ask Mako anything about Cowplain — get instant answers, deeper analysis, and related topics.

Research with Mako

Free with your Surf account

Content sourced from Wikipedia, available under CC BY-SA 4.0.

This content may have been generated or modified by AI. CloudSurf Software LLC is not responsible for the accuracy, completeness, or reliability of AI-generated content. Always verify important information from primary sources.

Report