Butchery Green. (See [Hertford].)
Bygrave (1¾ mile N.E. from Baldock Station, G.N.R.) has a small church built of clunch from the Ashwell pits near by. It dates from perhaps 1320. Note (1) octagonal font (about 1420-40), (2) slab on floor to a former rector, a Huguenot (d. 1725), and (3) the piscina in chancel. Close by, at the Manor House, are the remains of some moats constructed five centuries ago by the resident knight, Sir John Thornbury, because of the many marauders that infested the neighbourhood. The place was once a market-town; the market, granted by Henry III., was held each Monday. The village lies on high ground, a few minutes’ walk N. from the Icknield Way.
Caldecote (about 3 miles N.N.E. from Baldock Station, G.N.R.) has a Perp. church of rubble, containing a few memorials, a very finely canopied holy water basin, and a font dating from, say, 1480.
Caldicot Hill is 1 mile E. from Bushey Heath, on the Middlesex border.
Cassiobury Park. (See [Watford].)
Catlip is a hamlet near Chorley Wood Station, Met.R.
Chandler’s Cross (2½ miles S.W. from King’s Langley Station, L.&N.W.R.) is a small hamlet.
Chapmore End is 2½ miles N. from Hertford.
Chelsing is near the river Rib, 3 miles N. from Ware.
Cherry Green (1 mile S.W. from West Mill Station, G.E.R.) is a small hamlet.