Latest News About Frampton On Severn

Updated 2026-05-19 23:03

I can share a quick update on Frampton on Severn, but I don’t have live feeds here. If you want the very latest, I can pull current news sources if you’d like me to fetch them.

Recent context about Frampton on Severn (background)

If you’d like, I can search for the latest news updates specifically about Frampton on Severn and summarize them with citations. I can also tailor the search to focus on:

What would you prefer? If you want the latest, tell me to pull current news and I’ll compile a concise briefing with sources.

Sources

Frampton on Severn

There is a need to retain this delicate balance with appropriate development in the future, as well as a requirement for long overdue infrastructure to support current and future needs: • A footpath and cycle way along the Perryway, • Improved junction from the Perryway onto the A38, • Improved parking in Frampton village, • More open children’s play space and equipment, • Safer pathways from the outskirts of Frampton and Oatfield hamlet, • Improved fibre connections and mobile phone reception...

www.stroud.gov.uk

[PDF] Conservation Area No7: FRAMPTON ON SEVERN

Extraction continues in the area, although on a much reduced scale. The railway that once took the gravel for shipment to Sharpness has long been dismantled and the gravel pits have flooded; some are now in use for boating and fishing and have been designated as Sites of Special Scientific Interest. A major employer came to Frampton in 1916, with the establishment of the Cadbury’s factory by the … contrast, over 40 hectares of the former gravel works have now been flooded into lakes, looking...

www.stroud.gov.uk

Frampton On Severn

are also where some of the most extensive gravel extraction has taken place. The extraction process has destroyed much of the known archaeological remains. Luckily some rescue archaeology was undertaken and the aerial photographic record has provided the means to accurately map the archaeological features. The archaeological cropmarks of possible Iron Age to Roman settlements north and

www.gloucestershire.gov.uk