Nuffield, Oxfordshire

Nuffield is a village and civil parish in the Chiltern Hills in South Oxfordshire, England, just over 4 miles (6 km) east of Wallingford.

The ecclesiastical valuation prepared in 1254 by Walter Suffield, Bishop of Norwich for Pope Innocent IV records it as Todfeld.

The name comes from Old English, possibly hōh-feld meaning "field by a spur of hill".

[5] The road between Henley-on-Thames and Wallingford passes through the parish just north of Nuffield.

Huntercombe Place is an Edwardian Tudor-style house designed by Oswald Milne, a former assistant to the Arts and Crafts Movement architect Edwin Lutyens and completed in 1910.

[7][8] There was a 17th-century pub in the parish, The Crown,[9] on the A4130 main road at Nuffield Common.

Thames Travel bus route X38 links Nuffield with Wallingford and Oxford in one direction and Henley and Reading, Berkshire in the other.