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Encyclopedia > Hindon, Wiltshire

Hindon is a medium-sized village in Wiltshire, United Kingdom, 16 miles west of Salisbury and 7 miles south of Warminster. It lies within the Cranborne Chase and West Wiltshire Downs Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty (AONB). Formerly a thriving small town with its own market, Hindon is now a quiet country village, favoured by commuters, retirees and weekenders. Its current population is around 500 people. Wiltshire (abbreviated Wilts) is a large southern English county. ... An Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty (AONB) is an area of countryside with significant landscape value in England, Wales or Northern Ireland, that has been specially designated by the Countryside Agency on behalf of the United Kingdom government. ...

St. John the Baptist Church in Hindon, Wiltshire, England
St. John the Baptist Church in Hindon, Wiltshire, England

Contents

Image File history File links Download high-resolution version (1614x1196, 367 KB) St. ... Image File history File links Download high-resolution version (1614x1196, 367 KB) St. ...

History of Hindon

Hindon appears to be an example of a planned settlement, unlike most English villages which have evolved piecemeal over the millennia. If previous settlement in the area was present, no evidence within the village itself has yet been discovered. There are prehistoric field systems and Bronze Age round barrows on the downs nearby. The Bronze Age is a period in a civilizations development when the most advanced metalworking has developed the techniques of smelting copper from natural outcroppings and alloys it to cast bronze. ... A downland is an area of open chalk upland. ...


According to the Estates' Account Rolls of the Bishop of Winchester, Bishop des Roches of Winchester planted the borough as a centre for markets and fairs in AD 1218. The main period of building was between 1218 and 1220 and even today, the medieval settlement pattern can be seen: the main tenements flanked either side of the High Street, with narrow burgage plots running behind the buildings. By c.1250 there were some 150 houses in the village. There were 77 poll-tax payers in 1377. Hindon became a parliamentary borough in the later Middle Ages, and continued to return two members until it was disenfranchised in 1832 (it was reckoned to be an exceptionally corrupt borough even by the standards of the time). Its central position in south-west Wiltshire made it a centre of local government: between 1530 and 1660 it was sometimes a venue for quarter sessions and in 1786 was made the centre of a petty sessional division. Winchester is a historic city in southern England, with a population of around 40,000 within a 3 mile radius of its centre. ... a tenure under which property in England and Scotland was held under the king or a lord of a town was maintained for a yearly rent or for rendering a service such as watching and warding This article is a stub. ... Parliamentary boroughs are boroughs that are entitled to representation in a Parliament. ... The Courts of Quarter Sessions or Quarter Sessions were periodic courts held in each county and county borough in England and Wales until 1972, when together with the Assize courts they were abolished by the Courts Act 1971 and replaced by a single permanent Crown Court of England and Wales. ...


Hindon's prosperity was due to its markets and fairs, and its position on and near main roads. Almost immediately after the foundation of the village in 1218 a weekly market was held and this continued for centuries: Hindon was noted for its market in the mid and late 16th century. As a corn market it was rated by John Aubrey as second only to Warminster in c1650, and in c1707 it was coupled with Chippenham as a great Wiltshire market. In the 1800s the sale of pigs and sheep comprised a sizeable share of the market business, but by the later 19th century the market declined rapidly, and finally ceased in the early 1880s. John Aubrey. ... This article is about the English town. ... Chippenham is the name of more than one place: Chippenham, Cambridgeshire, England Chippenham, Wiltshire, England This is a disambiguation page — a navigational aid which lists other pages that might otherwise share the same title. ...


Coaching was probably the major industry in the village in the 18th and early 19th centuries. The main London-Exeter road ran across the downs, and in 1754 there were fourteen inns and public houses in the village, plus associated stabling for the horses. Such was the vitality of Hindon that it quickly recovered after the disastrous fire of 1754. In 1801 the population was 793. In 1830 London coaches from Exeter left daily from the Swan and from Barnstaple nightly from the Lamb Inn, and there were corresponding services westwards. Stabling can still be seen at the Angel Inn (formerly the Grosvenor Arms). The population of the village reached a peak of 921 in 1831 when there were some 190 houses. For the river named Inn, check Inn River Inns are establishments where travellers can procure food, drink, and lodging. ... A public house, usually known as a pub, is a drinking establishment found mainly in the Great Britain, Ireland, Canada, Australia, New Zealand and other countries influenced by British cultural heritage. ...


Other trades undertaken in the village over the centuries include weaving, linen and tick-weaving, silk twist manufacture, inn-keeping, baking, brewing, clock-making, gunpowder manufacture, and wood, metal and leather working.


Several reasons for Hindon's decline have been put forward: its disenfranchisement in 1832; the railway connection of London to Taunton and Exeter in the 1840s which reduced coach traffic significantly (coupled with the opening of the station at Tisbury, two miles southeast of Hindon, in 1859); and a general decrease in road traffic. By 1875 all but two of Hindon's inns were closed down. The two remaining, the Lamb Inn and The Angel still stand today. The small town of Tisbury lies approximately 13 miles west of Salisbury in the county of Wiltshire. ... 1875 (MDCCCLXXV) was a common year starting on Friday (see link for calendar). ...


The High Street was lined with trees in 1863. These still remain, mostly lime but with a few oak trees. The trees are pollarded annually, giving the wide straight village street an almost French look. Pollarding is a woodland management method of encouraging lateral branches by cutting off a tree stem two metres or so above ground level. ...


Hindon is mentioned in A Shepherd's Life: Impressions of the South Wiltshire Downs by W. H. Hudson, published in 1910. Hudson stayed in the Lamb Inn in the spring and summer of 1909. Chapter 16 of the book concerns Hindon, in which Hudson describes the village thus: 'Hindon is a delightful little village, so rustic and pretty amidst its green, swelling downs ... its last state, sober and purified, is very much better than the old. For although sober, it is contented and even merry, and exhibits such a sweet friendliness toward the stranger within its gates as to make him remember it with pleasure and gratitude.' He relates stories about Hindon's social and natural history. William Henry Hudson (August 4, 1841 - August 18, 1922) was an Argentinan-British author, naturalist and ornithologist. ...


Religion in Hindon

A chapel was built when Hindon was founded, but was almost certainly closed by the later 14th century. In 1405 it was refounded and partially rebuilt. In 1650 it was recommended that Hindon should become a parish, but it remained a chapelry and until 1869 there was still no right of marriage in the chapel, although inhabitants could be baptised and buried there.


In 1804 the church (known as the Free Chapel) comprised a nave and chancel with a south tower, the lower part of which served as a porch. The tower and possibly part of the nave and chancel dated from the 12th century, while the west doorway and window and a south window of the nave were later medieval. In 1836 the church was enlarged: a north aisle was added, as well as a window in the nave; by 1864 marriages were being performed in the church. However, this incarnation of the church was short-lived. Parish status was assigned in 1869 and in November of that same year the Free Chapel was demolished, along with a few adjacent buildings, to make way for a new church. By July of 1871, construction was completed, and the current church, the Church of St. John the Baptist, was consecrated.


There is a strong tradition of non-conformity in the West Country, and Hindon was no exception to this. In 1787 a dwelling-house was certified for Independents, and in 1810 a Congregational church was built at Fonthill Gifford near Hindon. In 1836 a room in Hindon was certified for Primitive Methodists and five years later the Providence Chapel was built for them behind the south side of the High Street. In 1896 that chapel was replaced by one on the north side of the street, where it still stands (now a private dwelling). In English history, a non-conformist is any member of a Protestant congregation not affiliated with the Church of England. ... The West Country is an informal term for the area of south-western England encompasing the counties of Devon, Cornwall, Somerset, and Dorset, Gloucestershire and Wiltshire. ... Congregational churches are Protestant Christian churches practicing congregationalist church governance, in which each congregation indepedently and autonomously runs its own affairs. ... Primitive Methodism was a major movement in English Methodism from about 1810 until the Methodist Union in 1932. ...


The Great Fire of Hindon

On July 2, 1754, a large fire swept through the village, burning 144 houses and buildings to the ground. Charitable donations from across the south of England helped in the process of rebuilding. July 2 is the 183rd day of the year (184th in leap years) in the Gregorian Calendar, with 182 days remaining. ... 1754 was a common year starting on Tuesday (see link for calendar). ...


Present-day Hindon

In 2001 Hindon parish had a population of 509 (census return information). As well as two pubs, the village has a pre-school nursery and primary school, a doctor's surgery, post office and stores and the Hindon Fellowship Club. In 2004 Hindon won the Best Medium-sized Village in Wiltshire Award and in 2006 the Laurence Kitching Award for Best Kept Village in Wiltshire. Both awards are judged by the Campaign to Protect Rural England (CPRE). The Campaign to Protect Rural England (CPRE, formerly Council for the Preservation of Rural England ) is a voluntary anti-urbanist, pro-nature organisation. ...


References

  • Victoria County History of Wiltshire Volume XI, 98-103
  • Beresford M W, 'Six New Towns of the Bishop of Winchester' Medieval Archaeology 3, 200-2
  • Sheard Norah, The History of Hindon, Printed by The Shaston Printers Ltd, Shaftesbury, Dorset, UK.

External links


Coordinates: 51°06′N 2°08′W Map of Earth showing lines of latitude (horizontally) and longitude (vertically), Eckert VI projection; large version (pdf, 1. ...



 

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