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Cheddington sits at the foot of the Chiltern Hills, positioned where the Buckinghamshire countryside meets the edge of the Tring Gap. It is defined by its layout as a "double-node" village, centred around two distinct greens - the historic Great Green and the more central Westend - with a network of footpaths and quiet lanes connecting the local school, the 14th-century St Giles’ Church, and the two village pubs. Geographically, it is practical for those who need to travel, as it retains its own railway station on the West Coast Main Line, providing a direct link to London Euston and Milton Keynes, while the nearby Grand Union Canal offers a slower pace for walking toward Marsworth or Leighton Buzzard. While it is perhaps most famously known as the location of the 1963 Great Train Robbery at nearby Bridego Bridge, the village itself remains a grounded, community-focused place, where the landscape is dominated by the looming presence of Mentmore Towers on the horizon and the steady transition from flat vale to rolling chalk hills.