Little Linford
Little Linford is a village in the civil parish of Haversham-cum-Little Linford, in the City of Milton Keynes, Buckinghamshire, England. Located near the M1 motorway, the village is about north-west of Newport Pagnell and north of Central Milton Keynes. The village is separated from its neighbour and namesake Great Linford by the floodplain of the River Great Ouse.
'Linford' is an Old English word that means 'ford where maple trees grow'. In the Domesday Book of 1086 it was recorded as Linforde.
Little Linford was initially a hamlet in the manor of Linford. The manor straddled the Great Ouse. The larger part of the manor south of the river became the parish of Great Linford. The part of the manor north of the river became known as Little Linford, and formed part of the ancient parish of Newport Pagnell. A chapel of ease dedicated to St Leonard and St Andrew was built to serve Little Linford, with the oldest part of the current building dating back to the 13th century. Little Linford was subsequently made a separate parish from Newport Pagnell in 1735.
In 1934, the parish of Little Linford was merged with the neighbouring parish of Haversham to become a new civil parish called Haversham-cum-Little Linford. At the 1931 census, Little Linford had a population of 45.