Country: | England |
Static Image Name: | Puddletown 2015 (b).jpg |
Static Image Caption: | The Square, Puddletown |
Coordinates: | 50.7475°N -2.3444°W |
Official Name: | Puddletown |
Map Type: | Dorset |
Population: | 1,452 |
Population Ref: | (2014 estimate) |
Civil Parish: | Athelhampton and Puddletown |
Unitary England: | Dorset |
Shire County: | Dorset |
Region: | South West England |
Constituency Westminster: | West Dorset |
Post Town: | DORCHESTER |
Postcode District: | DT2 |
Postcode Area: | DT |
Dial Code: | 01305 |
Os Grid Reference: | SY758943 |
Puddletown is a village in the civil parish of Athelhampton and Puddletown, in Dorset, England. It is situated by the River Piddle, from which it derives its name, about 4.5miles northeast of the county town Dorchester. Its earlier name Piddletown fell out of favour, probably because of connotations of the word "piddle". The name Puddletown was officially sanctioned in the late 1950s. Puddletown's civil parish covers 7185acres and extends to the River Frome to the south. In 2013, the estimated population of the civil parish was 1450.
Puddletown's parish church has significant architectural interest, particularly its furnishings and monuments. It has a 12th-century font and well-preserved woodwork, including 17th-century box pews. Thomas Hardy took an interest in the church, and the village provided the inspiration for the fictional settlement of Weatherbury in his novel Far from the Madding Crowd; Weatherbury Farm, the home of principal character Bathsheba Everdene, is based on a manor house within the parish.
The name Puddletown means 'farmstead on the River Piddle'. It derives from the Old English English, Old (ca.450-1100);: pidele, a river-name meaning 'fen' or 'marsh', and English, Old (ca.450-1100);: tūn, meaning 'farmstead'.[1] Several settlements along the river derive their names from it. In the upper reaches, Piddletrenthide and Piddlehinton retain the Piddle river name, whereas downstream Puddletown, Tolpuddle, Affpuddle, Briantspuddle and Turners Puddle use Puddle. In the Domesday Book of 1086 it was recorded as Pitretone, and in 1212 it was Pideleton.[1] John Speed used Puddletown for his county map of 1610.[2] In 1848 Samuel Lewis used Piddletown in A Topographical Dictionary of England.[3] In 1906 Sir Frederick Treves used Puddletown in Highways & Byways in Dorset—describing it as "the Town on the River Puddle" and a "curiously named place".[4] In 1946 Piddletown was the name on voters lists. One explanation for the preference of Puddletown over Piddletown is that Major-General Charles William Thompson, who lived at Ilsington Lodge after returning from the Great War, pushed through the puddle variant because piddle had other connotations in army circles. The broadcaster and writer Ralph Wightman (1901–71), a native of the Piddle Valley and one-time Puddletown resident,[5] believed it was due to Victorian "refinement", as he recalled that in his youth elderly aunts referred to Piddletrenthide as just "Trenthide". Roland Gant in Dorset Villages stated more explicitly that the Victorians used puddle because piddle "became a euphemism for 'piss'". The use of Puddletown rather than Piddletown was officially preserved in the late 1950s, when, according to Wightman, "a long County Council debate solemnly decided Piddletown should be Puddletown".
The other rivers of the parish have names that derive from Celtic river-names: the Frome, which forms the parish's southern boundary, means 'fair, fine or brisk',[6] and the Devil's Brook, which forms the north-eastern boundary, means 'dark stream'.[7]
Evidence of prehistoric human occupation in the parish exists in the form of 30 round barrows, about half of which are sited over chalk and half over Reading Beds. Many of the barrows have been damaged by more recent activities. The remains of strip lynchets of 'Celtic' fields have been found near a few of the barrows. One of the three 'Rainbarrows' on Duddle Heath has been excavated; bucket urns containing cremations from the site were taken to the Dorset Museum.[8]
The Roman road between Durnovaria (now Dorchester) and Badbury Rings passed through the area of the civil parish; it cut a WSW-ENE route through Puddletown Heath, between the village and the River Frome.[8] In the 21st century a section of the road, which is 26metre wide, was discovered in Puddletown Forest.[9]
Part of the arm of a 9th- or 10th-century stone cross was discovered when a house in the village—Styles House, near the River Piddle—was demolished. The cross might have been connected with a meeting place.[10] The fragment was incorporated into the parish church's new chancel when it was rebuilt in 1911.[11] At the time of the Domesday Book in 1086, Puddletown was a large and important manor that contained several villages, with 1,600 sheep recorded.[12] In the 13th century, during the reign of Henry III, the manor of 'Pidele Bardolfeston town' was owned by John of Monmouth, and leased to Sir Alfred Lincoln: on Monmouth's death, it was inherited by Lady Albretha Boterell and Lady Joan Nevill.[13]
Except for Puddletown village, the several small settlements within Puddletown parish have all either diminished or disappeared. The other settlements were Cheselbourne Ford (beside the Devil's Brook in the northeast of the parish), Bardolfeston (about half a mile northeast of Puddletown village, just north of the River Piddle), Hyde (now Druce Farm), Waterston, South Louvard (now Higher Waterston), Little Piddle (now Little Puddle Farm in neighbouring Piddlehinton parish) and Ilsington (in the south of the parish, by the River Frome). Cheselbourne Ford and Bardolfeston are abandoned. Cheselbourne Ford had a population of six in 1086, four in 1327, and by the mid-seventeenth century was just one ruinous house. In 1970 its remains covered about 14acres and consisted of ten closes bounded by low banks, though the site is not shown on modern Ordnance Survey maps. Records indicate that Bardolfeston was declining by the 13th century and, though still occupied in the 16th, it was completely deserted by the 17th century. Its site covers about 15acres and is well-preserved, revealing a 40feet-wide hollow way aligned southwest–northeast, with the sites of at least eleven houses alongside, though the southern end of the site was destroyed when watermeadows were later created along the river.[8] [14] The site at Waterston consists of earthworks covering about 2ha on a terrace on the south side of the River Piddle. Its medieval population was relatively stable, and ten households were recorded in 1662. The site was probably abandoned gradually.[15]
In the early 17th century Puddletown was one of the first places in Dorset where the use of watermeadows developed; the practice occurred at least as early as 1620, and in 1629 the manorial court decided to allow some tenants to continue making the necessary watercourses that would enable "the watering and Improvinge of theire groundes".[16] Watermeadows are generally no longer used in southern England, though their physical remnants have persisted in many places;[17] in Puddletown civil parish, several areas of watermeadow were shown by the Ordnance Survey as late as 1978, though none was shown in 2010.[14] [18]
Records from 1801 show that at that time agriculture was the main component of Puddletown's economy, though cottage industry and artisan crafts were also an important element: 596 people in the parish were primarily employed in agriculture, with 221 employed in handicrafts, manufacture and trade. Cottage industry, often undertaken by women and children, was used to supplement agricultural income, though there were fewer opportunities for this after the French Revolution.[19]
In 1830, Puddletown was one of the places in Dorset where agricultural labourers took part in the Captain Swing riots of southern England, protesting against very low wages and long working hours. Threshing machines were damaged and ricks burned. Wages were raised from about six or seven shillings per week to ten as a result.[20]
To the east of the church is Ilsington House, also known as the Old Manor, which was built in the late 17th to early 18th century.[21] It was originally owned by the 3rd Earl of Huntingdon and in 1724 by Robert Walpole. Between 1780 and 1830 it was leased to General Thomas Garth, principal equerry to King George III. The General adopted King George III's illegitimate grandson by Princess Sophia, and brought him up at the manor.[5] In 1861 the house was acquired by John Brymer and remained in the possession of the Brymer family for the next century.[5] [22] The family built new cottages and a reading room in the village, and a new manor next to the church, which they restored.
In local government, Puddletown is governed by Dorset Council at the highest tier, and Puddletown Area Parish Council at the lowest tier.[23] Puddletown is part of the Puddletown and Lower Winterborne ward which elects 1 member to Dorset Council.[24]
In the UK national parliament, Puddletown is within the West Dorset parliamentary constituency.
Historically, Puddletown was in the Dorchester Rural District from 1894 to 1974,[25] and the West Dorset district from 1974 to 2019. On 1 April 2024 the parish was abolished and merged with Athelhampton to form "Athelhampton and Puddletown".[26]
Puddletown civil parish extends between the flood plain and watermeadows of the River Frome in the south to the chalk watershed of Puddletown Down in the north.[14] [27] It covers 7185acres and is bisected by the River Piddle, which crosses it from west to east.[8] Measured directly, Puddletown village is about 4.5miles northeast of Dorchester, 16miles west of Poole and 11miles southwest of Blandford Forum.[28]
The bedrock geology of the parish comprises rocks formed in the Santonian and Campanian ages of the Cretaceous period and the Eocene age of the Palaeogene period. In places these are overlain by younger Quaternary drift material: river terrace and head deposits, clay-with-flints, and alluvium—the last found only in the valley floors of the larger watercourses.[27] On Puddletown Heath (now mostly covered by Puddletown Forest) are more than 370 solution hollows or sinkholes; these constitute the largest concentration of hollows on the heathlands in the area.[29]
The River Frome, which forms the southern boundary of the parish, is designated by Natural England as a Site of Special Scientific Interest.[30] Southwest of the village and almost wholly within the parish is Puddletown Forest, which covers 301ha and is managed by Forestry England. The forest is on the edge of the Dorset Heaths Natural Area and some of the forest is being restored to heathland; the heath flora consists of Calluna, Ulex gallii, Ulex minor and bilberry; fauna includes the rare smooth snake and sand lizard. Close to Puddletown Forest are Yellowham Wood and Ilsington Wood, which are ancient woodland sites, though Ilsington Wood has significant conifer plantings.[31]
In 2014 the estimated population of Puddletown civil parish was 1,452.[32] Figures from the 2011 census have been published for Puddletown parish combined with the small parish of Athelhampton to the east; in this area there were 663 dwellings,[33] 614 households and a population of 1,405.[34]
Excluding ancient earthworks, there are fifty-six structures within the parish that are listed by Historic England for their historic or architectural interest, including two (the parish church and Waterston Manor) that are listed as Grade I, and three (Ilsington House, The Old Vicarage, and 8 The Square) that are Grade II*.[35] [36]
Puddletown's parish church, dedicated to St Mary, has been described as being "of considerable architectural interest",[8] "of exceptional interest for its furnishings and monuments"[37] and "one of the most exciting parish churches in the county".[38] It has 12th-century origins—parts of the tower date from 1180 to 1200[38] —but was rebuilt and enlarged between the 13th and 16th centuries.[8] [37] The 12th-century font is particularly notable, being of a tapering beaker shape, with diapering depicting crossing stems and Acanthus leaves; its cover is an octagonal pyramid dating from about 1635, when the church interior was refitted.[5] [8] There is a panelled roof in the nave, and 17th-century box pews, pulpit and gallery. There are also a number of 15th- and 16th-century monumental brasses and some stained glass by Ninian Comper.[39] The South or Martyn family chapel has three 16th-century tombs with alabaster effigies. In 1910 the church was partially restored by Charles Ponting.[8] [37] Thomas Hardy led an unsuccessful campaign to prevent enlargement of the original chancel.[38]
Waterston Manor, about 1.5miles WNW of Puddletown village, is of early 17th-century origin, though it was largely rebuilt after a fire in 1863, and altered again in about 1911.[40]
Ilsington House dates from the late 17th to early 18th century, with alterations made in the late 18th to early 19th century and enlargement later in the 19th. It has plaster-covered brick walls, quoins of ashlar, and a hipped slate roof.[21] In 2000 it was presented with a "Dorset Architectural Heritage Award".[22]
The Old Vicarage, previously the east wing of the vicarage, was originally a timber-framed building built about 1600. It was clad in brick in the 18th century (after the vicarage had been extended west in 1722) and a third storey added early in the 19th century. The 1722 west-wing extension became 8 The Square and is listed separately.[8] [41] [42]
Puddletown has a village hall, which has a kitchen and bar, full disabled facilities and access, and a capacity for between 100 and 160.[43] Since 2013 it has also housed Puddletown Community Library, which is operated solely by volunteers.[44] On Athelhampton Road there is a doctor's surgery, which also treats patients who live in surrounding villages.[45] Puddletown has a recreation ground on Three Lanes Way; it has one cricket pitch and two grass football pitches (one junior, one full-size).[46]
Puddletown is the basis for the village of "Weatherbury" in Thomas Hardy's novel Far from the Madding Crowd.[5] Weatherbury Farm, the house of Bathsheba Everdene, is based on Waterston Manor, between Puddletown and Piddlehinton. Hardy's cousin, Tryphena Sparks, who was the inspiration for Hardy's poem Thoughts of Phena at News of Her Death, lived in Puddletown.[47]
Cardinal Pole, the last Roman Catholic Archbishop of Canterbury, was vicar of the parish from 1532 to 1536.[38] The author and broadcaster Ralph Wightman (1901–1971) lived in Puddletown in the later years of his life; he lived in the 16th-century Tudor Cottage in The Square.[5] [8] The writer Constantine Fitzgibbon (1919–1983) owned Waterston Manor for part of the 20th century.