Country: | England |
Official Name: | Kingston Deverill |
Static Image Name: | 2012 - B3095 near the bottom of Kings Hill into Kingston Deverill (geograph 2868748).jpg |
Static Image Caption: | Approach to the village and St Mary's church; Whitepits in background |
Coordinates: | 51.133°N -2.221°W |
Population: | 248 |
Population Ref: | (in 2011)[1] |
Region: | South West England |
Unitary England: | Wiltshire |
Lieutenancy England: | Wiltshire |
Dial Code: | 01985 |
Postcode District: | BA12 |
Postcode Area: | BA |
Post Town: | WARMINSTER |
Constituency Westminster: | South West Wiltshire |
Os Grid Reference: | ST846371 |
Website: | Parish Council |
Kingston Deverill is a village and civil parish in Wiltshire, England. Its nearest towns are Mere, about NaNmiles to the southwest, and Warminster, about 5miles to the northeast. The parish and its demographic figures include the village of Monkton Deverill.
To the north of the village, under the slope of Cold Kitchen Hill, is the hamlet of Whitepits. The parish is in the Deverill Valley which carries the upper waters of the River Wylye. The six villages of the valley – Kingston, Monkton, Brixton Deverill, Hill Deverill, Longbridge Deverill and Crockerton – are known as the Deverills.
The area has many bowl barrows, from the Bronze Age or earlier, including one close to the present church. On Whitepits Down is a long linear earthwork from a similar era.
The site of a Romano-Celtic temple on Whitecliff Down in the north of the parish is surrounded by evidence of occupation in the Iron Age and earlier. Two Roman roads crossed at the ford at Kingston Deverill.[2] Near one of those roads, a 1st-century copper alloy pan was discovered by a metal detectorist in 2005. Subsequent excavation by Wessex Archaeology uncovered a pit with two more pans and two copper alloy wine strainers.[3]
A small settlement of nine households was recorded in the Domesday Book of 1086, when the land was held by the canons of Lisieux. Ownership was then taken by the Crown, hence the Kingston prefix. The population of the parish reached 420 at the census of 1841, then declined to 176 in 1901 as mechanisation of agriculture reduced employment.
Until 1934, Monkton Deverill was a separate parish.[4]
The parish elects the Upper Deverills Parish Council jointly with neighbouring Brixton Deverill.[5] It falls within the area of the Wiltshire Council unitary authority, which is responsible for all significant local government functions.
The Church of England parish church of St Mary is from the 15th century. Restoration in 1846 included the rebuilding of the nave, south aisle and chancel. The font is 12th-century.[6]
The church was designated as Grade II* listed in 1968. The tower has six bells, cast in 1731 by William Cockey, but they are at present unringable.[7]
The chapelry of Monkton Deverill was transferred to Kingston from Longbridge Deverill in 1892. The small church of King Alfred at Monkton Deverill was made redundant in 1971.
From December 1954 the benefice was held in plurality with that of Brixton Deverill. In 1972 the parish of The Deverills and Horningsham was formed by uniting the parishes of Brixton Deverill, Kingston Deverill with Monkton Deverill, and Longbridge Deverill with Crockerton and Hill Deverill. Today the parish, together with the parish of Corsley and Chapmanslade, is part of the Cley Hill Churches benefice.[8]
Besides the parish church, there is a second Grade II* listed building: a timer-framed barn at Manor Farm, formerly thatched, for which tree-ring dating has given a date of 1408–1409.[9] Manor farmhouse is a late 18th-century rebuilding, extended in the 19th century.
Kingston House, just below the church, is the former rectory. The 18th-century house was extensively altered in 1858 by the Bath architect G. P. Manners, giving it a ten-window front with many gables. North of the river, Pope's farmhouse was begun in the 16th century.
John Howe (1754–1804) was a son of Thomas Howe, rector of Great Wishford and Kingston Deverill. In 1781 he succeeded his uncle Henry as 4th Baron Chedworth. He lived in Suffolk and Norfolk, and seldom visited his extensive landholdings in Gloucestershire and Wiltshire.[10]
The writer, lyricist and ceramicist Lancelot Cayley Shadwell (1882–1963), and his second wife the artist Mary Shadwell, retired to Kingston Deverill[11] in 1937 and lived there until 1957.