
The pretty villages of Upper Slaughter and Lower Slaughter are about a mile
apart. Their names come from the old name for a stream or "Slough", rather than
referring to any great massacres.

Upper Slaughter is the less touched by tourism. It has an open square, bordered
by cottages that were re-modeled in 1906 in keeping with Cotswold style. Little
bridges, wild flowers and serenity point up perhaps what the visitor imagines
the ideal village to be like

Lower Sla
ughter, is
as the name implies, downstream of Upper Slaughter, and the river is a feature
of the village as it flows between neatly mo
wn
grass banks. The red brick built corn mill, with its tall chimney and water
wheel, contrast with the rest of the village, and its traditional Cotswold stone
cottages.