Weyhill

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Weyhill
Hampshire
Weyhill Church - geograph.org.uk - 158807.jpg
Weyhill Church
Location
Grid reference: SU317466
Location: 51°13’5"N, 1°32’47"W
Data
Population: 794  (2011)
Post town: Andover
Postcode: SP11
Dialling code: 01264
Local Government
Council: Test Valley
Parliamentary
constituency:
North West Hampshire

Weyhill is a village in the north-west Hampshire. It stands just north of the tearing hurry of the A303 dual carriageway and , two and a half miles west of Andover town centre. The A342 Andover to Devizes road runs through the town.

The village is famous for having a mediæval fair and then later a livestock fair, with up to 100,000 sheep a day being auctioned.[1][2][3]

The fair owed its existence to Weyhill being positioned on a major route across the country, now echoes by the A303, on the course of a Roman and on eight ancient trackways, including the Harrow Way.

Church

The Church of St Michael and all the Angels dates back in part to the Norman period, with a 16th-century nave. It is on the site of an earlier Saxon church. It is a Grade II* listed building[4]

History

The fair has been held on the site since the 11th century, with the first written records from 1225.[1][5] By the mid-19th century the fair had stopped attracting large crowds, as communications and business changed, reducing the variety of items for sale. The last fair happened in 1957.[2][3] The parish council bought the fairground after it fell into disrepair and converted it into small independent craft studios and shops in 2005.[3]

Weyhill railway station was opened on 1 May 1882, by The Swindon, Marlborough and Andover Railway, and closed on 11 September 1961.

In literature

Weyhill features in a key scene in Thomas Hardy's novel The Mayor of Casterbridge, fictionalised as 'Weydon Priors'. The historic fairground is given the place where Michael Henchard sells his wife.

Pictures

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("Wikimedia Commons" has material
about Weyhill)

Outside links

References