SimplyFixIt, is one of the UK's top independent iPad repair specialists. Our head office is in Edinburgh, but we fix iPads for people all over the country, including in Great and Little Kimble cum Marsh. No matter your location, we can fix your iPad!
Why trust us with your iPad repair? Our Apple Certified Technicians deliver unrivalled quality, outshining local independent computer shops. With an impressive track record in the Great and Little Kimble cum Marsh area, we invite you to experience our top-tier service for all your iPad needs, especially iPad screen repairs.
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We understand the importance of your iPad, so we aim to return it within 48 hours of receiving it. At SimplyFixIt, we believe in precision over speed, but rest assured, your iPad will be in good hands. Once the repair, including any necessary screen repairs, is complete, we'll promptly notify you and arrange express delivery back to Great and Little Kimble cum Marsh, either your home or work.
Happy SimplyFixIt Customers near Great and Little Kimble cum Marsh
We do more than just fix iPads; our services include repairs for MacBooks, iPhones, and Windows laptops. If you're in the Great and Little Kimble cum Marsh vicinity, you're likely close to someone that we've helped in the recent past. Below is a map of the people1 near Great and Little Kimble cum Marsh who have used SimplyFixIt because of our fast, efficient, and high-quality repair service.
Ready for a seamless iPad repair experience? Choose your iPad below and follow the instructions. With SimplyFixIt, you're choosing reliability, quality, and peace of mind.
iPad Repairs for Schools in Great and Little Kimble cum Marsh 🎓
Do you have iPads in your school or college that are broken? We can help. We have partnered with hundreds of schools across the UK , including several near you - e.g. Eton College & Langley Grammar School, to provide an easy & low-cost way to get iPads back into the classroom — where they belong. There's no need to pay for insurance, or pay Apple's exorbitant prices for iPad repairs. We know that you have enough to do as a teacher, so we look after collecting, fixing and returning the iPads from your school. Click here to visit the iPad Repair site for schools, where you can download our brochure or get more information.
Map of customers near you
1Please note that for data protection reasons, we've applied "fuzziness" to the location markers. Though not exact, these markers represent the general areas of our satisfied customers.
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About Great and Little Kimble cum Marsh
Great and Little Kimble cum Marsh is a civil parish in central Buckinghamshire, England. It is located 5 miles (8 km) to the south of Aylesbury. The civil parish altogether holds the ancient ecclesiastical villages of Great Kimble, Little Kimble, Kimblewick and Marsh, and an area within Great Kimble called Smokey Row. The two separate parishes with the same name were amalgamated in 1885, but kept their separate churches, St Nicholas for Great Kimble on one part of the hillside and All Saints for Little Kimble on other side at the foot of the hill.
They fall within the Hundred of Stone, which was originally one of the Three Hundreds of Aylesbury, later amalgamated into the Aylesbury Hundred. The parishes lie between Monks Risborough and Ellesborough and, like other parishes on the north side of the Chilterns, their topography are that of long and narrow strip parishes, including a section of the scarp and extending into the vale below. In length the combined parish extends for about 4+1⁄4 miles (6.8 km) from near the Bishopstone Road beyond Marsh to the far end of Pulpit Wood near the road from Great Missenden to Chequers but it is only a mile wide at the widest point. The village of Great Kimble lies about 5.5 miles (8.9 kilometres) south of Aylesbury and about 2.5 miles (4.0 kilometres) north east from Princes Risborough on the A4010 road.
The parishes of Kimble have first and foremost been a farming community for nearly two thousand years and are something of a historical interest dating back chronologically to Celtic Ages. At the summit of Pulpit Hill in Great Kimble there is a prehistoric Hillfort. When Britain was taken over by Roman occupation a Roman villa was erected in Little Kimble and near St Nicholas's church is a tumulus or a burial mound commonly known as 'Dial Hill' from the same period. After the Norman Conquest of England the parishes were most likely considered too small for a stone fort, so they would have probably kept a motte and bailey castle that later developed into a moated site for a medieval dwellinghouse.
It was here that John Hampden refused to pay his ship-money in 1635, one of the incidents which led to the English Civil War.
The majority of the land surrounding the village and some local amenities such as the pub and the petrol station were once owned by the Russel family until they were lost many years ago to excessive gambling.