Doddington, Northumberland

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Doddington
Northumberland
Farm cottages, Doddington (geograph 2969422).jpg
Farm cottages in Doddington
Location
Grid reference: NT997325
Location: 55°35’11"N, 2°0’18"W
Data
Population: 195  (2011)
Post town: Wooler
Postcode: NE71
Dialling code: 01668
Local Government
Council: Northumberland
Parliamentary
constituency:
Berwick-upon-Tweed

Doddington is a little village in Northumberland, inland and on the south side of the Milfield Plain. It is to be found some two miles from Wooler, which sits at the edge of the Cheviot Hills.

Doddington has a number of noteworthy buildings, including Doddington Hall, and a fine parish church, St Mary and St Michael, which was built in the 18th century on the site of an original 12th century church.

Wooler Golf Course is also found near Doddington.

History

St Mary & St Michael

In 1734, the village was described in George Mark's Survey of a Portion of Northumberland [1] as remarkable for its largeness, the badness of its houses and low situation, and perhaps for the greatest quantities of geese of any in its neighbourhood.

Music

As Marks was remarking on the size of the village, William Dixon was recording the tune Dorrington, also known as Dorrington Lads, which is found in 'the William Dixon manuscript'.[1] It is the most complex and elaborate of the pieces in that early source for Northumbrian music. The last tune played, on his deathbed, by the celebrated piper Will Allan, who died near Rothbury in 1779, was Dorrington Lads. A rhyme has survived, which fits the tune:

Dorrington lads is bonny and Dorrington lads is canny
And I'll hae a Dorrington lad, and ride a Dorrington cuddy.

In The Denham Tracts, compiled in the mid-19th century, [2] another rhyme about the streets of the village is found:

Southgate and Sandgate and up the Cat Raw,
The Tinkler's Street, and Byegate Ha'!

The Tinkler's Street was where itinerant hawkers sold their wares. This association with travellers is not surprising, as Doddington is close to Kirk Yetholm, the main base of the Border Gypsies.

Economy

Besides farming, there was formerly a sandstone quarry in the area, and coal mines. A well known business currently in Doddington is the Doddington Dairy farm, a producer of organic cheeses and ice creams.[2]

Outside links

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References

  1. The Master Piper – Nine Notes That Shook the World, William Dixon (1733), edited Matt Seattle 1995, Dragonfly Music, ISBN 1-872277-23-3; 3rd edition, edited Matt Seattle 2011, ISBN 978-1-872277-33-2.
  2. Northumberland Communities: Doddington