Roughdown Common
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| Site of Special Scientific Interest | |
Sign at the entrance to Roughdown Common nature reserve, Hemel Hempstead, UK. | |
| Location | Hertfordshire |
|---|---|
| Grid reference | TL047057 |
| Interest | Biological |
| Area | 3.6 hectares |
| Notification | 1985 |
| Location map | Magic Map |
Roughdown Common is a 3.6-hectare (8.9-acre) biological Site of Special Scientific Interest in Hemel Hempstead in Hertfordshire. The planning authority is Dacorum Borough Council.[1][2] The site is Common land,[3] and it is owned by the Box Moor Trust having been officially bought by the trust in April 1886 from the Dean and Chapter of St Paul's.[4] It is part of the Chilterns Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty.[5] The Common is a steeply sloping chalk hill in south Hemel Hempstead.
It was formerly the site of a large chalk quarry featuring a pillar and stall mine,[6] an entrance to which still exists, however, it is sealed off for human entry.
During the construction of the Grand Union Canal where it flows through Boxmoor, the navvies who carried out the work lived on an encampment at Roughdown Common.[7] The navvies where not the only group that made use of the Common; in 1809 a Good Friday funfair was held in the chalk pit,[8] while 1939 saw the first recorded football match on the site, played by young evacuees from London.[9] The war theme continued in 1946 when prisoners of war - who were based in a P.O.W. camp at nearby Howes Retreat - cleared scrub at the site.[10]