Haydon Henge is a historical landmark in Swindon, Wiltshire created in the early 21st century. The landmark is believed to have been built in around 2001 when the A4198 (Thamesdown Drive) was built. Haydon Henge was eventually lost to nature until it was rediscovered and cleared by Haydon Wick Council back in 2019. The site then received official signage marking its rediscovery and thereby naming it Haydon Henge after the parish of Haydon Wick of which it's located in. Haydon Henge is split into two sites. One is located adjacent to the former Moredon Power Station now the Pembroke Park housing estate and the other across the road backs onto Mouldon Hill Country Park, an area rich in natural beauty and wildlife.
The 'Haydon Henge', I am led to believe, 'appeared' in 2001. Researchers S. Kubrick and D. Bowman (of Odyssey University, CA) noted that the major keystone aligns with the sun during the night of the summer solstice. No further information is known...
This site has no historical merit and is a random collection of stones put there by developers to protect the route for the extension of Thamesdown Drive.
Some stones that were put in when the main road was expanded. Spent a few decades over grown until the parish council "rediscovered" it and now it is maintained. Nothing special really.
FAKE !!! This is NOT a historical landmark. It is bolders to mark possible junctions for future road construction. Not a henge!! Just PR scam.
Nice it's there and kept preserved but an information board would be nice
Got stoned
Wheelchair-accessible entrance
Assistive hearing loop
Wheelchair-accessible seating
Wheelchair-accessible toilet
LGBTQ+ friendly
Transgender safe space
Good for kids
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The 'Haydon Henge', I am led to believe, 'appeared' in 2001. Researchers S. Kubrick and D. Bowman (of Odyssey University, CA) noted that the major keystone aligns with the sun during the night of the summer solstice. No further information is known...
This site has no historical merit and is a random collection of stones put there by developers to protect the route for the extension of Thamesdown Drive.
Some stones that were put in when the main road was expanded. Spent a few decades over grown until the parish council "rediscovered" it and now it is maintained. Nothing special really.
FAKE !!! This is NOT a historical landmark. It is bolders to mark possible junctions for future road construction. Not a henge!! Just PR scam.
Nice it's there and kept preserved but an information board would be nice
Got stoned