Woodyates Explained

Country:England
Static Image Name:Woodyates village - geograph.org.uk - 690881.jpg
Static Image Caption:Woodyates
Official Name:Woodyates
Label Position:left
Civil Parish:Sixpenny Handley and Pentridge
Unitary England:Dorset
Lieutenancy England:Dorset
Region:South West England
Constituency Westminster:North Dorset
Post Town:SALISBURY
Postcode Area:SP
Postcode District:SP5
Dial Code:01725
Coordinates:50.973°N -1.96°W
Os Grid Reference:SU029193

Woodyates is a hamlet, sometimes considered a village, in the civil parish of Sixpenny Handley and Pentridge, in the county of Dorset, near its border with Wiltshire, in the west of England.

History

The name means "wood gates" and is believed to refer to the position of Woodyates at the entrance to the wooded area of Cranborne Chase.[1]

The topographer James Bell described it thus in 1835:

The Roman road (Ackling Dyke) is especially well preserved. In Highways and Byways in Dorset (1935), Sir Frederick Treves notes that "In no part of Dorset can the actual undisturbed Roman road be seen at greater advantage or for greater extent than about Woodyates."[2]

A Romano-British defensive ditch called Bokerley Dyke also runs near the village.

In the 18th century, Woodyates was a property of Thomas Pitt. It changed hands in the late 19th century and in the 1950s was the scene of many parties held by Margaret Chubham and her circle.

Woodyates was the site of the training establishment of William Day, who sent out the winners of many important horse races including Foxhall, winner of the Grand Prix de Paris, Cesarewitch and Cambridgeshire in 1881.

The Trafalgar Way

The Pitt estate contained an important coaching inn, once called the Woodyates Inn, later renamed the Shaftesbury Arms.[1] This was a staging point of the Trafalgar Way (a modern confection), celebrating the 1805 journey by John Richards Lapenotière to bring the news to King George III of Nelson's victory and death at the Battle of Trafalgar. A commemorative plaque is now displayed.

Notes and References

  1. Charles George Harper, The Exeter Road: the Story of the West of England Highway (reprinted 2009), p. 96
  2. Sir Frederick Treves, Highways and byways in Dorset (1935), p. 84