Overview
Until 1866, Sonning Eye formed part of the Oxfordshire section of Sonning civil parish. It is about 3 miles (4.8 km) northeast of Reading, Berkshire. Sonning Eye is opposite the village of Sonning, Berkshire, to which it is linked by the historic brick-arched Sonning Bridge and the more modern Sonning Backwater Bridges.
The toponym "Sonning" is derived from the Viking name Sunna and "Eye" meaning island (cf. eyot) since it is a small gravel mound surrounded by the river's flood plain. There is also a true islet at Sonning Eye between two branches of the Thames.
The heart of Sonning Eye is a conservation area and there are a number of notable Grade II listed buildings including several historic barns that have now been converted for modern use. One house has some excellent William De Morgan tiles.
Aberlash House is a Grade II listed house situated on a 5 acres island in the River Thames near Sonning Eye. It was originally built in the 17th Century and once owned by the well known Rich family, Lords of the Manor of Sonning.
Sonning Eye is surrounded by the alluvial floodplain of the River Thames, much of which has been extracted for gravel, forming a number of lakes. In particular, a rowing lake has now been formed, named the Redgrave Pinsent Rowing Lake, after Olympic oarsmen Steve Redgrave and Matthew Pinsent. Other local sports include sailing and water skiing. Berry Brook runs through the floodplain west and north of Sonning Eye, joining the Thames at Hallsmead Ait to the northeast.
On the riverside near the Sonning Backwater Bridges is the French Horn, a luxury hotel and restaurant. There is a small public car park here, a place to launch small boats, and a grass area by the river bank that is popular with fishermen.
On the islet is The Mill at Sonning, an 18th century watermill now a converted dinner theatre. The millrace runs through what is now the theatre bar, and powers a small turbine powering an 18.5 KW hydroelectric generator that supplies the National Grid.
The area has been a favourite location for artists, especially views of the old brick bridge from the river bank just downstream of the bridge. George Price Boyce, the Victorian watercolour painter associated with the Pre-Raphaelite art movement, visited and painted in the area.
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