Longbridge Deverill: Difference between revisions

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Land at Longbridge and Crockerton belonged to [[Glastonbury Abbey]] from the 10th century.<ref name="wch">{{cite web|url=https://history.wiltshire.gov.uk/community/getcom.php?id=143|title=Longbridge Deverill|website=Wiltshire Community History|publisher=Wiltshire Council|accessdate=18 March 2018}}</ref> Two estates were recorded in the 1086 Domesday Book at ''Devrel'', with altogether 24 households.<ref>{{OpenDomesday|ST8640|hill-deverill|Hill Deverill}}</ref>
Land at Longbridge and Crockerton belonged to [[Glastonbury Abbey]] from the 10th century.<ref name="wch">{{cite web|url=https://history.wiltshire.gov.uk/community/getcom.php?id=143|title=Longbridge Deverill|website=Wiltshire Community History|publisher=Wiltshire Council|accessdate=18 March 2018}}</ref> Two estates were recorded in the 1086 Domesday Book at ''Devrel'', with altogether 24 households.<ref>{{OpenDomesday|ST8640|hill-deverill|Hill Deverill}}</ref>


The manor house at Hill Deverill dates from the 16th century and is Grade-II* listed.<ref>{{NHLE|num=1200745|desc=Manor House, Hill Deverill|accessdate=28 February 2015|fewer-links=yes}}</ref> The medieval village of Hill Deverill was to the west of the house. A hollow way, field boundaries and house platforms survive.<ref>{{National Heritage List for England|num=1017295|desc=Hill Deverill mediæval settlement|accessdate=18 March 2018|fewer-links=yes}}</ref>
The manor house at Hill Deverill dates from the 16th century and is Grade-II* listed.<ref>{{NHLE|num=1200745|desc=Manor House, Hill Deverill|accessdate=28 February 2015|fewer-links=yes}}</ref> The mediæval village of Hill Deverill was to the west of the house. A hollow way, field boundaries and house platforms survive.<ref>{{National Heritage List for England|num=1017295|desc=Hill Deverill mediæval settlement|accessdate=18 March 2018|fewer-links=yes}}</ref>


[[File:James Thynne House, Longbridge Deverill - geograph.org.uk - 1570969.jpg|thumb|250px|James Thynne House]]
[[File:James Thynne House, Longbridge Deverill - geograph.org.uk - 1570969.jpg|thumb|250px|James Thynne House]]

Latest revision as of 12:33, 30 January 2021

Longbridge Deverill
Wiltshire

St Peter and St Paul parish church
Location
Grid reference: ST869409
Location: 51°9’54"N, 2°11’13"W
Data
Population: 821  (2011[1])
Post town: Warminster
Postcode: BA12
Dialling code: 01985
Local Government
Council: Wiltshire
Parliamentary
constituency:
South West Wiltshire
Website: Parish site

Longbridge Deverill is a village and parish in the South Damerham Hundred of Wiltshire, about 2½ miles south of Warminster. It is on the A350 primary route which connects the M4 motorway and west Wiltshire with Poole, Dorset.

The civil parish incorporates the ancient parish of Hill Deverill. It is in the Deverill valley which carries the upper waters of the River Wylye. It also includes the small village of Crockerton and the hamlets of Crockerton Green and Fox Holes. Longbridge Deverill and Hill Deverill are collectively known as the Lower Deverills (the Upper Deverills being the upstream villages of Brixton Deverill, Monkton Deverill and Kingston Deverill). Additionally, the ancient parish has a detached part which takes in the northern part of Longleat Park and most of Longleat House itself, except the southernmost wing.

An unnamed tributary of the Wylye rises in the north-west of the parish, forms the man-made Shearwater lake, and flows east through the valley below Crockerton to join the Wylye.[2]

History

Evidence of Neolithic settlement includes a henge near Long Ivor Farm in the northeast of the parish.[3] A Bronze Age bell barrow stands on a slope of Rook Hill in the southeast.[4] Iron Age settlements include a site on high ground at Cow Down in the east of the parish, where there are foundations of a large circular hut.[5]

Two Roman roads crossed at Kingston Deverill. A short length of north-south road, probably a section of the route from Bath to Poole, survives on Brimsdown Hill and became part of the boundary with Maiden Bradley parish.[6]

Land at Longbridge and Crockerton belonged to Glastonbury Abbey from the 10th century.[7] Two estates were recorded in the 1086 Domesday Book at Devrel, with altogether 24 households.[8]

The manor house at Hill Deverill dates from the 16th century and is Grade-II* listed.[9] The mediæval village of Hill Deverill was to the west of the house. A hollow way, field boundaries and house platforms survive.[10]

James Thynne House

In 1655, Sir James Thynne provided a terrace of three two-storey almshouses south-east of Longbridge Deverill church, built in rubble stone with slate roofs. A wooden clock face projects from the gable facing the main road.[11]

In the 19th century a shortage of employment led to emigration to America, Canada or Australia; 181 people left from Longbridge. Pottery was made at Crockerton from locally-dug clay, until the industry declined in the 19th century. Crockerton also had a cloth mill, later a silk mill, which closed in 1894.[7]

Religious sites

The Church of England parish church of Saints Peter and Paul is partly Norman: the three-bay north arcade is from the first half of the 12th century, and the font is from the same period.[12] The church was consecrated by Thomas Becket. The tower and south arcade were built in the 14th century. There was partial rebuilding in the mid-nineteenth century, with various restorations between 1847 and 1860.[13]

It has memorials to the Thynne family including John Thynne (1515–1580) who built Longleat House.[14] The tower has eight bells, the oldest dated 1614.[15] Today the church is a Grade-II* listed building[13] and forms part of the Cley Hill benefice.[16]

Holy Trinity Church at Crockerton was built in 1843 as a chapel of ease at the expense of the Dowager Marchioness of Bath, to designs of Wyatt and Brandon. The church was declared redundant in 1973 and is in residential use.[17]

There was a stone church at Hill Deverill in the twelfth century, dedicated to the Blessed Virgin Mary. The church was almost entirely rebuilt in 1842, financed by public subscription. It became redundant and was in residential use by 1985.[18][19]

Education

There was a National School at Longbridge Deverill in the 1840s, and a new building of 1851 accommodated 100 pupils. Owing to falling pupil numbers, the school was closed in March 1970 and pupils transferred to the school at Sutton Veny.[20] The building remains in use as the village hall.

A school was built at Crockerton in 1845 at the expense of the Marquess of Bath, with capacity for 95 pupils. From 1930, children aged 11 and over went to the secondary school at Warminster. The school continues as Crockerton C of E Primary School.[21]

References

  1. "Wiltshire Community History - Census". Wiltshire Council. http://history.wiltshire.gov.uk/community/getcensus.php?item=Longbridge%20Deverill. Retrieved 28 February 2015. 
  2. "Wylye (Headwaters)". http://environment.data.gov.uk/catchment-planning/WaterBody/GB108043022520. Retrieved 18 March 2018. 
  3. National Heritage List 1010471: Henge monument 350m north-east of Long Ivor Farm
  4. National Heritage List 1010470: Bell barrow on Rook Hill
  5. National Heritage List 1016676: Iron Age settlement on Cow Down
  6. National Heritage List 1016906: Section of Roman road 760m south west of Lower Barn Farm
  7. 7.0 7.1 "Longbridge Deverill". Wiltshire Council. https://history.wiltshire.gov.uk/community/getcom.php?id=143. Retrieved 18 March 2018. 
  8. Hill Deverill in the Domesday Book
  9. National Heritage List 1200745: Manor House, Hill Deverill
  10. National Heritage List 1017295: Hill Deverill mediæval settlement
  11. National Heritage List 1300662: Sir James Thynne House
  12. "St Peter and St Paul, Longbridge Deverill, Wiltshire". King's College London. http://www.crsbi.ac.uk/site/3477/. Retrieved 19 March 2018. 
  13. 13.0 13.1 National Heritage List 1200661: Church of St Peter and St Paul and lych gate
  14. "Church of St. Peter and St. Paul, Longbridge Deverill". Wiltshire Council. http://history.wiltshire.gov.uk/community/getchurch.php?id=779. Retrieved 28 February 2015. 
  15. "Longbridge Deverill". http://dove.cccbr.org.uk/detail.php?DoveID=LONGBRIDGE. Retrieved 19 March 2018. 
  16. "Cley Hill Churches". http://www.cleyhillchurches.org/findus.htm. Retrieved 19 March 2018. 
  17. National Heritage List 1300605: Wylye Hall
  18. National Heritage List 1364334: Church of The Assumption and St Mary
  19. "Church of the Assumption of the Virgin Mary, Hill Deverill". Wiltshire Council. https://history.wiltshire.gov.uk/community/getchurch.php?id=780. Retrieved 19 March 2018. 
  20. "Church of England Controlled School, Longbridge Deverill". Wiltshire Council. https://history.wiltshire.gov.uk/community/getschool.php?id=910. Retrieved 19 March 2018. 
  21. "Crockerton C. of E. Primary School". Wiltshire Council. https://history.wiltshire.gov.uk/community/getschool.php?id=912. Retrieved 19 March 2018. 

Outside links

("Wikimedia Commons" has material
about Longbridge Deverill)