Winterbourne Gunner
Winterbourne Gunner | |
Wiltshire | |
---|---|
Post Office, Winterbourne Gunner | |
Location | |
Location: | 51°6’58"N, 1°44’35"W |
Data | |
Post town: | Salisbury |
Postcode: | SP4 |
Dialling code: | 01980 |
Local Government | |
Council: | Wiltshire |
Parliamentary constituency: |
Salisbury |
Website: | The Winterbournes |
Winterbourne Gunner is a village in and ancient parish in the Alderbury Hundred of Wiltshire, about four miles north-east of Salisbury. The village is near the River Bourne and the A338 road and is close to Winterbourne Dauntsey. It is part of the civil parish of Winterbourne, formed in 1934, imcorporating the three ancient parishes of Winterbourne Earls, Dauntsey and Gunner.[1]
The Defence CBRN Centre, providing training for chemical, biological, radiological and nuclear events, is to the southeast of the village, beyond the West of England Main Line railway.[2]
Archaeology
Winterbourne Gunner has considerable archaeological interest. In 1960 workmen digging a pipeline came across a series of early Saxon graves. A subsequent excavation showed them to be particularly rich in grave goods.[3]
A 1994 dig in a nearby building plot owned by villager, David Buckland by television programme Time Team (series 2, "The Saxon Graves") found several more early 6th-century Saxon graves near Salt Lane, and discovered a series of Bronze Age features including a pond barrow and associated round barrows and urn burials, which the Saxons appear to have respected when selecting their burial sites. These show up as circular crop marks, with a diameter of 20 to 30 feet, indicating barrows. The Bronze Age features were designated as Scheduled Monuments in July 1994.[4]
In 1999 a house at Winterbourne Gunner was the subject of a Series 2 episode of the BBC television series Meet the Ancestors.[5]
Parish church
The Church of England parish church of St Mary was designated as a Grade-I listed building on 18 February 1958. It has twelfth and thirteenth century origins with additions in 1687 and 1810, and a restoration in 1886. It is constructed of flint with limestone dressings. The twelfth century tower is at the west end and is rendered and whitewashed, and topped with a pyramidal tiled roof. The nave is short and a porch was added on the south side at the time the south aisle was removed. The interior has a fourteenth century roof over the nave with arch-braced trussed rafters with a moulded central tie beam. The font is late twelfth- or early thirteenth-century while the panelled limestone pulpit is nineteenth-century.[6][7]
References
("Wikimedia Commons" has material about Winterbourne Gunner) |
- ↑ "Winterbourne". Wiltshire Council. http://history.wiltshire.gov.uk/community/getcom.php?id=249. Retrieved 26 July 2015.
- ↑ "Defence Chemical Biological Radiological and Nuclear Centre". GOV.UK. 12 December 2012. https://www.gov.uk/defence-chemical-biological-radiological-and-nuclear-centre. Retrieved 3 September 2016.
- ↑ Musty, J.; Stratton, J. E. D. (1964). "A Saxon cemetery at Winterbourne Gunner, Near Salisbury". WANHM 59: 86–109. https://archive.org/stream/wiltshirearchaeo59hage#page/86/mode/2up.
- ↑ Pastscape Scheduled Monument 966594 (A pond barrow and a bowl barrow 200 metres to the southeast of St Mary's Church, Winterbourne Gunner). 51°6’57"N, 1°44’26"W
- ↑ "Meet the Ancestors". Series 5: Episode 3 of 6. BBC2. http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b0074jgx. Retrieved 3 September 2016.
- ↑ National Heritage List 1184486: Church of St Mary the Virgin, Winterbourne Gunner
- ↑ "Church of St. Mary, Winterbourne Gunner". Wiltshire Council. http://history.wiltshire.gov.uk/community/getchurch.php?id=1089. Retrieved 3 September 2016.