Dymock

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Dymock
Gloucestershire

Dymock church and War Memorial
Location
Grid reference: SO700312
Location: 51°58’43"N, 2°26’16"W
Data
Population: 1,214
Post town: Dymock
Postcode: GL18
Local Government
Council: Forest of Dean
Parliamentary
constituency:
Forest of Dean

Dymock is a village and parish in the Botloe hundred of Gloucestershire, about four miles south of Ledbury. The parish had a recorded population of 1,214 at the United Kingdom Census 2011.[1]

It was the eponymous home of the Dymock poets from the period 1911-1914. The homes of Wilfrid Wilson Gibson and the American-born Robert Frost can still be seen there. Dymock is renowned for its wild daffodils in the spring, and these were probably the inspiration for the line "Two roads diverged in a yellow wood" in Frost's poem The Road Not Taken, which was a gentle satire on his great friend, and fellow Dymock Poet, Edward Thomas. In 2011 the village featured on Countryfile, where the Dymock poets were looked into in more detail.

Dymock is the origin of the Dymock Red, a cider apple, and Stinking Bishop cheese.

In the village of Dymock there are several interesting buildings which include cruck beam cottages; "The White House", which was the birthplace of John Kyrle - the "Man of Ross" in 1637, Ann Cam School of 1825 and St Mary's Church, a patchwork history in brick and stone with Anglo-Norman origins. Nearby stands the only remaining village pub, which was purchased by Parish Council to help preserve a thriving village. The pub is rented and run by a landlord and supported by a local fundraising and social committee "Friends of the Beauchamp Arms" (FOBA).

The Beauchamp Arms, Dymock

Dymock was served by the Herefordshire and Gloucestershire Canal, opened in 1845; this closed in 1881 and the section between Ledbury and Gloucester converted into a railway line, a branch line of the Great Western Railway, though a stretch between Dymock and Newent was by-passed as it was decided not to take the line through the 2,192-yard Oxenhall Tunnel. Dymock railway station was on this line which closed in 1959, but the canal (including the tunnel), is now being restored.

Dymock gave its name to a school of Romanesque sculpture first described in the book The Dymock School of Sculpture by Eric Gethin Jones (1979). The school is noted for its use of stepped volute capitals and its stylised "tree of life" motif on tympana. A lead tablet inscribed with an elaborate 17th-century curse against a woman called Sarah Ellis was found in a home in Wilton Place. It is preserved in Gloucester's museum collection as "The Dymock Curse".[2]

Dymock is the ancestral home of the Dymoke family who are the Royal Champions of England. It is thought that the Dymokes first lived at Knight's Green, an area just outside the village of Dymock.

References

Bibliography
  • Jones, Eric Gethin (1979). The Dymock School of Sculpture. 
  • Hinde, Thomas (1985). The Domesday Book, England’s Heritage, Then & Now. 
  • Verey, David; Brooks, Alan (2002). The Buildings of England: Gloucestershire 2: The Vale and Forest of Dean. New Haven and London. pp. 344–347. ISBN 978-0-300-09733-7. 

Outside links

("Wikimedia Commons" has material
about Dymock)