The Earl of Buckinghamshire at the Society's 20th anniversary service in Great Hampden Church

The Ship Money monument at Prestwood

The Palace of Westminster in the 17th century

Pyrton Manor, home of John Hampden's first wife

The former Lord Williams's Grammar School, Thame

The Earl of Buckinghamshire at the 350th anniversary ceremony in Thame

St Mary Magdalene church, Great Hampden

Charles I tries to arrest the Five Members in the House of Commons

John Hampden's funeral in 1643

Arthur Goodwin, Hampden's lifelong friend
Devonshire Collection, Chatsworth. Reproduced by permission of Chatsworth Settlement Trustees.

The Great Hall at Hampden House

St Mary Magdalene church and Hampden House

Hampden's regiment marching through Thame

Portrait of John Hampden by William Dobson

Hampden Statue in The Palace of Westminster
Cromwell, Hampden and Hobart in the Old Church at The Lee

Society AGM at Great Hampden

Members walking the Chalgrove battlefield

Magdalene College Oxford

The John Hampden engaging the

The John Hampden Monument at Chalgrove

1972 – John Hampden Video (The High Wycombe Film Society)

Click on this link to see the video available on You Tube. You will need to skip the annoying advert. John Hampden Film

The director John Smithson went on to have a successful career in documentary film making.

John Smithson (born in March 1952) is an Oscar Best Picture nominee and BAFTA, Emmy, Peabody, and Grierson award-winning producer and executive in non-scripted film and television based in London, England.[1]

His most notable works include originating and producing the Oscar and BAFTA-nominated film 127 Hours,[2] the BAFTA-winning landmark documentary Touching the Void, as well as the BAFTA and London Film Festival-winning documentary.