Bentworth
Bentworth | |
---|---|
St Mary's Church, Bentworth | |
Population | 466 (2001) |
OS grid reference | SU664401 |
Civil parish |
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District | |
Shire county | |
Region | |
Country | England |
Sovereign state | United Kingdom |
Post town | Alton |
Postcode district | GU34 |
Dialling code | 01420 |
Police | Hampshire and Isle of Wight |
Fire | Hampshire and Isle of Wight |
Ambulance | South Central |
UK Parliament | |
Bentworth is a village and large civil parish in the East Hampshire district of Hampshire, England. It lies about 4 miles (6.4 km) northwest of the town of Alton, just west of the A339 road, from which it lies 9.4 miles south of Basingstoke and 32 miles north of Portsmouth on the south coast. The parish covers an area of 3,763 acres (15.23 km2), of which about 280 acres (1.1 km2) are woodland. Bentworth is topographically one of the highest points of Hampshire, with its highest point at over 700 feet. According to the 2001 census, Bentworth has a population of 466 people.
The history of the village can be traced to Saxon times, and Roman remains have been found in the area. After the Norman conquest in 1066, the manor of Bentworth was not named in the Domesday Survey of 1086 but was part of the Odiham Hundred. The village of Bentworth has grown in recent years, with several new houses being built, as well as the post-Second World War development in Glebe Fields.
The parish contains several large houses, such as the post-1832 Bentworth Hall, Burkham House, Gaston Grange and Thedden Grange. The 500-acre estate of Bentworth Manor was split up as a result of various sales in the 1930s, 1940s and 1950s. St Mary's Church is in the centre of the village; dated to around 1260.
The village has two public houses – the Star Inn and the Sun Inn – and a primary school, established in 1848. It was formerly served by the Bentworth and Lasham railway station on the Basingstoke and Alton Light Railway, until the railway's closure in 1932. The nearest railway station is now 3.6 miles (5.8 km) east of the village, at Alton.
Etymology
The village name has been spelt in different ways, including: Bentewurda or Bintewurda (as it was known in about 1100) and Bynteworth (about 1400).[1] The original meaning of the name Bent-worth may have been a place of cultivated land, or a way through land such as woodland.[2]
History
Prehistoric and Roman times
The route between the Roman town of Silchester to the north of Basing, and the Roman settlement of Vindomis, just east of the modern town of Alton, passed through the Bentworth and Lasham area, the road today being the A339. [3][4]
Prehistoric remains found in the parish of Bentworth include a Stone Age implement discovered in 1942 in a field near Childer Hill, east of the village centre on the way to Thedden. The implement is now in Newbury Museum. A Bronze Age cremation urn was found in 1955 just north of Nancole Copse, about 4km north of St Mary's church.[5] The urn is now in the Curtis Museum in Alton, together with a bronze Roman coin of Valentinian I that was found in a garden about 1km south of St Mary's near Tinker's Lane.[5] Belgic pottery and animal bones were found in 1954 at Holt End between Bentworth and Medstead.[5] Pottery, bone objects, spindle-whorls (stone discs with a hole in the middle used in spinning thread) and fragments of Roman roofing tiles were found at Wivelrod House between Bentworth and the village of Beech.[5]
Medieval times
Bentworth is not mentioned by name in the Domesday Survey that was ordered by the first Norman king, William the Conqueror. However, the Domesday entry for the Hundred of Odiham mentions that it had a number of outlying parishes.[6] Soon after Domesday, Bentworth became an independent manor in its own right. In about 1111 it was given by King Henry I "Beauclerc", the youngest son of William the Conqueror, together with four other English manors, to the diocese of Rouen and Geoffrey, Count of Anjou.[7] When King John began losing his possessions in Normandy he took back the ownership of many manors, including Bentworth. He then temporarily ceded the manor of Bentworth in 1207–8 to the Bishop of Winchester, Peter des Roches.[8] It was John who signed Magna Carta in June 1215 at Runnymede, staying at Odiham castle 10km north-east of Bentworth the night before.[9] However, the manor was returned to the Archbishops of Rouen, who successively held the manor until 1316, when Edward II appointed Peter de Galicien custodian of the manor in that year.[10]
Some time after 1280 a new stone hall-house was built in Bentworth, possibly by the constable of Farnham castle, William de Aula.[11] It is a typical medieval hall-house and has been variously called Bentworth Hall (until 1832) and Bentworth Manor House. Today it is known as Hall Place. In 1330 Matilda de Aula was given permission to have a private chapel at Bentworth Hall. In 1336 ownership of the manor of Bentworth passed to William Melton, Archbishop of York.[10] Upon his death in 1340 he left his possessions to his nephew William de Melton, son of his brother Henry. In 1348, William de Melton obtained the king's permission to give his manor to William Edendon, Bishop of Winchester, and then ownership of the manor of Bentworth passed by marriage to the Windsor family, who had been constables of Windsor Castle. However, Bentworth Hall was evidently returned to the Melton family, as it is mentioned among his possessions in an inquisition taken in 1362–3, and descended to his son, Sir William de Melton.[10] Sir William de Melton's son, John de Melton, inherited the house in 1399 and was still being recorded as owner of Bentworth in 1431.[10][12] He died in 1455, and was succeeded by his son (d.1474), then his grandson John Melton.[13] The manor of Bentworth itself was said to have remained in possession of the Windsor family for at least one hundred and fifty years.[10]
Elizabethan to Georgian times
In 1590, Henry Windsor (1562–1605), the 5th Lord Windsor, sold the "sub-manor of Bentworth" to the Hunt family who had been tenants since the beginning of that century.[10] Ownership passed in 1610 to Sir James Woolveridge of Odiham and in 1651 to Thomas Turgis, a wealthy London merchant.[10] His son, also Thomas, was described as one of the richest commoners in England and in 1705 he left the manor of Bentworth to his relative William Urry, of Sheat Manor, Isle of Wight.[10]
In 1777 the Urry descendants were daughters Mary and Elizabeth, who married two Catholic brothers, Basil and William Fitzherbert of Swynnerton Hall, Staffordshire.[10] Their sister-in-law was Maria Fitzherbert, the secret wife of the Prince Regent, later King George IV.[14] In about 1800, Mary Fitzherbert (who had 11 children), became owner of Bentworth Manor and Manor Farm (now Hall Place).[10]
19th century to the Second World War
In 1852 the London and South Western Railway (LSWR) opened a railway station in Alton, connecting to London via Farnham and Woking.[15] In 1901 the Basingstoke and Alton Light Railway opened with Bentworth and Lasham station to the north of Bentworth village.[16] In 1870-72, the Imperial Gazetteer of England and Wales by John Marius Wilson described Bentworth as follows:
"Bentworth is a village and parish in Alton district, Hants. The village stands 3½ miles WNW of Alton r. station, and has a post office under Alton. The parish comprises 3,688 acres. Real property, £4,091. Pop., 647. Houses, 123. George Withers, the poet; sold property in Bentworth at the outbreak of the civil war (1642), to raise a troop of horse. The living is a rectory in the diocese of Winchester. Value, £760, Patron, the Rev. Mr. Mathews. There is a dissenting Chapel."[17]
In 1897, Emma Ives died and ownership of the Bentworth Hall estate passed to her son Colonel Gordon Maynard Gordon-Ives who had in 1890 built and lived in Gaston Grange. After his mother died he continued to live there, leasing Bentworth Hall to W. G. Nicholson, a Member of Parliament. Colonel Gordon-Ives died 8 September 1907 and the estate passed to his son, Cecil Maynard Gordon-Ives, a Captain in the Scots Guards in the Great War", who occupied it until his death on 23 July 1923.[18] In 1905 a telegraph office was operated by a W. Payne in what was then called Telegraph Lane, now Burkham Lane, close to the present A339, east of Burkham village which was formerly the track of the old railway.[9] The Bentworth Hall Estate of 479 acres was then offered for sale by John D Wood & Co in 1924 and again by them in 26 June 1930, when an A. Willis purchased it,[9] and after this, Major John Arthur Pryor lived at Bentworth Hall until the estate was taken over by the military during the Second World War.[19]
The villages of Bentworth and Lasham both had roles in the war. In late 1940, a children's home was built in Drury Lane for those who had been evacuated from London during the Blitz.[20] In Bentworth parish, the large houses of Bentworth Hall, Gaston Grange and Thedden Grange were requisitioned for use by the military.[21] To meet the war demand for more airfields in the south of England, Lasham Airfield was built in 1942 between Lasham and a historic avenue of trees ("The Avenue") planted in about 1810 by the Jervoise family (who own the Herriard Estate today).[22] Later in 1942, Thedden Grange was used as a prisoner of war camp until 1944, and was known as 'Fisher's Camp'.
Post-Second World War
After the war, there was a need for more houses and the council estates of Glebe Fields and Glebe Close were built in early 1946. The name "Glebe" is because the land was originally owned by the church. [23]
In 1947, the Bentworth Hall estate was bought by Major Herbert Cecil Benyon Berens, who was a director of Hambros bank in London from 1968.[24] In 1950, Major Berens built two new lodge houses at the junction of the drive to Bentworth Hall with the main road through the village towards Medstead. In 1951, the Moon Inn on Drury Lane was destroyed by a fire along with the children's home.[25] Later, parts of the Bentworth Hall estate were sold to local farms, and some clearing of trees and hedges produced larger fields that were easier to crop.
Major Berens died at Bentworth Hall on 27 October 1981 and after this the remaining estate was put up for sale.[26] It was first offered as a single property and then as several, Bentworth Hall and its outbuildings being divided into a number of separate dwelling units, which is the position today.
Geography and climate
Bentworth village and parish lies on high downland about 4 miles (6.4 km) northwest of the town of Alton and about 8 miles south of Basingstoke, just west of the A339 road. By road, Bentworth lies 9.4 miles south of Basingstoke, 16.7 miles northeast of Winchester and 32 miles north of Portsmouth.[27] The parish covers an area of 3,763 acres (15.23 km2), of which about 280 acres (1.1 km2) are woodland.[10] The elevation of the ground at Bentworth church is 574 feet (175 m) and the highest point in the parish is 2.5 km to the south at Wivelrod is over 700 feet (210 m), making it one of the highest points in Hampshire.[28] The soil is clay and loam, the subsoil chalk; the chief crops are wheat, oats, and turnips.[10]
The lower ground to the South and East of the Bentworth and to the south of the nearby villages of Lasham and Shalden drains towards the River Wey which rises to the surface on the west side of Alton.[29] Down the road to Medstead near Hall Place (the pre-1832 Bentworth Manor or Hall) is the village duckpond and the cottages opposite have a date of 1733. Such names as Colliers Wood and Nancole Copse in the parish point to the early operations of the charcoal burners, the colliers of the Middle Ages.[10] Other woods in the area include Gaston Wood, Childer Hill Copse, Miller's Wood, Thedden Copse, Well Copse, Binster Hill Wood, North Wood, Binney Copse, Wadgett's Copse, Bylander's Copse, Redens Copse, Nancole Copse, Weasel Wood, Widgell Copse, South Lease Copse, Stubbins Copse and Mayhew's Wood.[27] The names of Windmill Field and Mill Piece indicate the site of one or more ancient mills.[10]
Because Bentworth lies on higher ground, its temperatures are therefore lower than in the valleys and on the coast. Due to the proximity to the sea, in winds with a southerly component, humidity is higher and cloud bases are lower than further inland. In summer when cumulus (convection) cloud is present, in the late afternoon the sea breeze occasionally reaches the area with a consequent change of wind to south and an increase in humidity. The annual average (mean) temperature is approximately 19 °C (66.2 °F) and shows the usual seasonal and diurnal variation. January is the coldest month with mean minimum temperatures between 0.5 °C (32.9 °F) and 2 °C (35.6 °F). June and July are the warmest months with average daily maxima around 25.5 °C (77.9 °F).[30]
Administration
The Civil Parish of Bentworth (Bentworth CP), starting to the north and working clockwise, extends from north of Burkham House, then runs south east along the A339, turns south to Thedden Grange and the hamlet of Wivelrod, then west to north of Medstead and north again to Ashley Farm and back to the Burkham area. Historically, Bentworth's parish was considerably larger than it is today, with nearby settlements like Bradley, Beech, Moundsmere, Medstead and Lower Wield incorporated under the parish of Bentworth. Even though the parish of Bentworth has lost a lot of land over the years, the parish gained a further 95 acres (38 ha) in 1991 along with and regained Home Farm from the parish of Bradley.[31]
Bentworth was the largest parish within the Hundred of Odiham, after Odiham itself. The Hundred of Odiham once contained the modern parishes of; Bentworth, Dogmersfield, Elvetham, Greywell, Hartley Wintney, Lasham, Liss, Odiham, Rotherwick, Shalden, Sherfield-on-Loddon, Weston Patrick, and Winchfield. At the time of the Domesday Survey the area of the later Hundred of Odiham were included in two separate hundreds, Odiham and Hefedele (also known as Edefele and Efedele). The former comprised Lasham and Shalden and half a hide which had been taken from the nearby village Preston Candover,[32] and the latter included Odiham, Winchfield, Elvetham, Dogmersfield, and a former parish named Berchelei.[33] For the manors of Bentworth, Greywell, Hartley Wintney, Liss, Sherfield-upon-Loddon, and Weston Patrick, there are no entries in the Survey, but they were all probably included in the large manor of Odiham.[34]
Villages and hamlets
Within the Bentworth parish there are several hamlets; the largest being Burkham to the north of Bentworth Village. Other hamlets include Wivelrod to the southeast, Holt End to the south on the road to Medstead, Thedden to the east and Ashley to the west.
Ashley
Ashley (51°9′25″N 1°4′28″W / 51.15694°N 1.07444°W) is a small hamlet and farm at the western corner of the Civil Parish of Bentworth, towards the village of Lower Wield. Before border changes in 1994, Ashley was in the Civil Parish of Wield and part of the Winchester City Council area.[35] In is now in the area of the East Hampshire District Council (EHDC).
Burkham
Burkham (also written as Brocham (14th century); Barkham (16th century); Berkham and Burcum (18th century) (51°10′44″N 1°4′15″W / 51.17889°N 1.07083°W) is a hamlet on the north side of the parish of Bentworth about 3 kilometres northwest of Bentworth church. It was first mentioned as part of the Manor of Bentworth in documents of the Archbishop of Rouen around 1115, in which it is described as a 'berewite' (an outlying estate) of Bentworth Manor.[10] In returns dated 1316, John Daleron held 'Brocham'. In 1590 Robert Hunt acquired the manor of Bentworth from Henry Lord Windsor, and this included the Burkham area. Later, Robert Magewick purchased Burkham for £160.[12] and George Magewick (1647-1736) was described as the owner of Burkham Farm in 1684. In 1748 James Magewick Battin, presumably a descendant, held the manor, and he is given as the owner in a 1778 Survey of Hampshire.[10]
At the north end of the hamlet is the Georgian building of Burkham House.[36] This was first recorded in a document dated 1784 in which there was a reference to a "Manor or Mansion House of Burkham", owned by Thomas Coulthard (1756-1811).[10] Burkham House was acquired in 1882 by Arthur Frederick Jeffreys, later Member of Parliament for Basingstoke.[10] Ownership was retained by the Jefferys family until 1965 when the estate was put up for sale.
The Home Farm area consists of 339 acres (137 ha) of farmland, copse and uncultivated land. Part of this area between Burkham and Bentworth was bought by the Woodland Trust and opened to the public in 1991.[37] The Trust planted new trees between Wigdell Copse and Nancole Copse, and the area is well used by walkers and those exercising dogs.
Holt End and New Copse
Holt End (51°8′30″N 1°3′50″W / 51.14167°N 1.06389°W) is an area of Bentworth to the south towards Medstead. The word Holt means "a small grove of trees, copse, or wood",[38] and Holt End thus means the end of a wood. Further down the road to Medstead is "New Copse" (named after the wood between here and Medstead).[39] Here, a road called Jennie Green Lane branches off the main Bentworth-Medstead road and runs east towards the east end of Medstead and Beech.
Thedden
Thedden (51°8′48″N 1°1′26″W / 51.14667°N 1.02389°W) is part of the parish of Bentworth between the villages of Bentworth and Beech. Thedden Grange is about 2.5 kilometres southeast of Bentworth church and is a country house that in the past was part of the Bentworth Manor estate. During the Second World War, Thedden Grange was a prisoner of war camp.[40]
Wivelrod
Wivelrod (51°8′28″N 1°2′9″W / 51.14111°N 1.03583°W) is a hamlet in the south-east corner of the parish of Bentworth. It is mentioned in documents dating 1259 and there are tumuli and burial mounds around Wivelrod Hill, near the present-day Alton Abbey.[41] In the 18th century Wivelrod was part of the Bentworth Hall estate and a part was sold in 1832 when the estate was bought by Roger Staples Horman Fisher.[42] A spot height of 217m (712ft) between Wivelrod and Medstead is one of the highest points in Hampshire and is at the top of Beech hill just west of Alton Abbey on the road to Medstead.
Notable landmarks
The following are the listed buildings in the Parish of Bentworth. The listings are graded:[43]
- Barn 20 Metres South East of Parsonage Farmhouse (II)
- Barn 45 Metres North East of Weller's Place Farmhouse (II)
- Barn 55 Metres South West of Summerley (II)
- Bentworth Blackmeadow (II)
- Cartshed 35 Metres North of Hall Farmhouse (DL)
- Chapel Immediately West of Hall Farmhouse (II*)
- Church of St Mary (II*)
- Granary 20 Metres North West of Manor Lodge (II)
- Greensleeves (II)
- Half Barn 30 Metres North of Weller's Place Farmhouse (II)
- Hall Farmhouse (II*)
- Hankin Family Tomb in Churchyard of St Mary's Church (II)
- Holt Cottage (II)
- Hooker's Place (II)
- Hunt's Cottage (II)
- Ivall's (II)
- Ivall's Cottage (II)
- Ivall's Farmhouse (II)
- Linzey Cottage (II)
- Manor Lodge (II)
- Mulberry House (II)
- Penton Cottage (II)
- Service Block Attached to Manor Lodge (II)
- Stable Block 40 Metres North of Weller's Place Farmhouse (II)
- Strawtop (II)
- War Memorial in Churchyard of St Mary's Church (II)
- Wardies (II)
- Wivelrod Farmhouse (DL)
St Mary's Church and war memorial
The Church of St Mary is at the centre of the village immediately east of the school at 51°9′29″N 1°3′0″W / 51.15806°N 1.05000°W. It is located about 150 metres north east of the Star Inn and the small roundabout on the main road through the village between the A339 and Medstead. There is evidence to suggest that a Saxon church was located here and was rebuilt.[10] The present church has a chancel (the space around the altar for the clergy and choir) that is 27 feet (8.2 m) by 17 feet 4 inches (5.28 m), with a north vestry 48 feet 7 inches (14.81 m) by 17 feet (5.2 m).[10] The nave roof and chancel arch probably dates from the late 1100s and the chancel itself was built in about 1260 together with the lower part of the tower.[44][10] However, in 1608 the church suffered a "fire happening by lightening from heaven" and some of the earlier structure was damaged.[45] The present church has flint walls with stone dressings and stepped buttresses, a plinth, and corbelled tracer lights in the nave.[10] The west tower was rebuilt in 1890 and has diagonal buttresses with an elaborate arrangement of steps (some with gabled ornamentation), and at the top is a timber turret, surmounted by a broach spire.[10] A small mural monument at the south-east of the chancel is to Nicholas Holdip, "pastor of the parish" 1606, and his wife Alicia (Gilbert).[10] In the north aisle wall is another mural tablet to "Robert Hunt of Hall Place in this Parish", 1671, with the arms, Azure a bend between two water bougets or with three leopards' heads gules on the bend.[10] The crest is a talbot sitting chained to a halberd. There are four bells; the treble and second by Joseph Carter, 1601, the third by Henry Knight, 1615, and the tenor by Joseph Carter, 1607.[10] The church became a Grade: II* listed building on 31 July 1963.[44]
Memorials
In Elizabethan/Stuart times, the poet and writer George Wither (1588-1667) was born in Bentworth and baptised in this church.[5] In Victorian times, George Cecil Ives lived at the post-1832 Bentworth Hall with his mother Emma Gordon-Ives. A memorial to the Ives family is in the churchyard close to the school and has a stone slab for George Ives reads "George Cecil Ives MA, Author, 1867-1950, Late of Bentworth Hall." The stone slab for his mother reads "The Honourable Emma, wife of J.R. Ives, Daughter of Viscount Maynard Lord Lieutenant of Essex, died March 14th 1896 aged 84."
The Hankin Family Tomb in the churchyard, which has been listed as a Grade II listed building in its own right since 8 December 2005.[46] The Hankin tomb is a classical chest tomb, made in 1816 of Portland stone. It is a "rectangular chest tomb on a moulded base, with a two-part cover consisting of a low hipped top slab and lower moulded cornice."[46] The octagonal fielded panels at the sides contain various inscriptions including the one on the south panel which reads: "Sacred to the memory of John Hankin who departed this life January 12th 1816, aged 55 years", and the one on the north side which reads: "Sacred to the memory of Elizabeth, widow of John Hankin, who departed this life September 13th 1831, aged 67 years."[46]
War Memorial
The War Memorial in Churchyard of St Mary's Church, made of Doulting limestone, was erected by Messrs. Noon and Company of Guildford in 1920 to commemorate the local men who had lost their lives in World War I.[47] The decision to build a memorial at the church was decided during a parish meeting on 7 February 1920 and it was formally dedicated on the 28 November 1920 by the Reverend A.G. Bather and unveiled by Major General Jeffreys of Burkham, officer in command of the London District.[47] The war memorial has a four step base, with a "tapering octagonal shaft on a small square plinth block" placed upon it and a Latin cross at the top of the shaft.[47] The dedication inscription on the top west facing step of the base reads: 'Sacred to the men of Bentworth who fell in the Great War 1914-1918 leaving to us who pass where they passed an undying example of faithfulness and willing service.'[47] There are also four names inscribed on the top step panel facing south including the name of Lieutenant Colonel Neville Elliot-Cooper of the Royal Fusiliers and several names on other steps.[47] On the third step facing west, is the inscription: "1939-1945. And in second dedication to the memory of those others who passing later also fell leaving no less glorious name."[47] The memorial was listed as a Grade II listed building on 8 December 2005.[47]
Houses
A wealthy village, Bentworth is characterised by its large houses, several of which are listed buildings.
Hall Farm and Bentworth Hall
Hall Place, formerly the Bentworth Hall or Manor, is a Grade II* listed medieval manor house, located along the main road of Bentworth at 51°9′19″N 1°3′11″W / 51.15528°N 1.05306°W. It was built in the early 14th century with extensive additions in the 17th and 19th centuries.[48] The hall is believed to have been constructed by either the constable of Farnham Castle, William de Aula, or John of Bynteworth (Bentworth), and served for some time as the manor court.[11][48] The de Aula family, however, are documented as being the first owners, followed by the de Meltons.[11] It has an extensive history which cannot be detached from the main history of the manor and parish of Bentworth, which has already been documented above.
The hall has thick flint walls, gabled cross wings,[49] with a Gothic stone arch and 20th century boarded door and two-storey porch. [48] The west wing of the house has a stone-framed upper window and very large attached tapered stack.[48] The east wing has sashes dated to the early 19th century.[48] The old fireplace remains in the north-facing room with it roll moulding and steeply pitched head.[11] A chapel in the grounds was part of the house complex and was added soon after building in 1330 under the request of Matilda de Aula.[11]
In 1832, Bentworth Hall was sold at auction at Garraway’s Coffee House in London by the Fitzherberts to Roger Staples Horman Fisher for about £6000. Almost immediately he started building the present Bentworth Hall.[45] The post-1832 Bentworth Hall is located about a kilometre south of the old hall at 51°8′52″N 1°3′0″W / 51.14778°N 1.05000°W, some 500 metres east of the Bentworth-Medstead road and the hamlet of Holt End at the end of a 800 metre private drive and is now split into several private dwellings. In 1848 the Bentworth Hall estate was sold to Jeremiah Robert Ives, including the Old Manor House and the new hall.[50] The Ives family later included George Cecil Ives who lived for a time at Bentworth Hall with his widowed mother, Emma.[51]
Gaston Grange
Gaston Grange (51°8′50″N 1°4′15″W / 51.14722°N 1.07083°W) is west of the Bentworth-Medstead road towards Upper Wield, south of Gaston Wood. This area was part of the Bentworth Hall estate and is now privately owned. In the late 19th century, Emma Gordon-Ives owned Bentworth Hall and in 1890[52] her son Colonel Gordon Maynard Gordon-Ives built Gaston Grange 1500 metres to the east of Bentworth Hall. In 1914, his son Lieutenant Colonel Alexander Gordon lived in Gaston Grange. He served in the First World War and was also a politician dealing with Northern Ireland matters, dying in July 1923.[53] After his death, in July 1924 the Bentworth Hall Estate was offered for sale by Messrs John D Wood & Co, 6 Mount St., W1. and at this time consisted of 479 acres. The house once had a grand ballroom which was removed in the 1920s.[52] The white painted house has masonry walls, a timber pitched roof with what is likely Welsh blue grey slate, and a wooden staircase made by the Devon-based firm Dart & Francis.[52] Gaston Grange has been extensively renovated in recent times.[52]
Mulberry House
Mulberry House (51°9′27″N 1°2′51″W / 51.15750°N 1.04750°W) is a late Georgian building, dated to 1818, and was the former Rectory, located near to the churchyard on the southeast side.[54] The present Rectory is a more modern house on the other side of the main road through the village, opposite Mulberry House. The house has stucco walls, with painted brickwork and slate roof.[54] It is a square two-storey building, with a symmetrical front consisting of 3 windows, a doric column porch, half-glazed doors and a low-pitched hipped roof, with raised lead flat in the centre.[54] It became a Grade II listed building on 31 July 1985.[54]
Other houses
Ivalls Cottage (51°9′22″N 1°3′6″W / 51.15611°N 1.05167°W) is located opposite the post box near the village green and next to Tinker's Lane. A Grade II listed building since 31 May 1985, the cottage was originally built during the Elizabethan era 16th century, with late 18th century, early 19th century additions and 20th century extensions at the sides.[55] The cottage is built from red brick and flint in Flemish bond, with cambered openings on the ground floor with a part-thatched, part-tiled roof.[55] The roof is hipped at the west end, with lower eaves at the rear intercepted by eyebrow dormers.[55] Ivalls Farm House (51°9′22″N 1°3′0″W / 51.15611°N 1.05000°W) is on the south side of the road to Medstead near the Star Inn. It is a timber framed and cruck-built (A-frame) tiled roof building with a lobby entrance, previously a farmhouse, originally built around 1600.[56] The south end dates to the 18th century.[56] The tiled roof, with 4 small gabled dormers, half-hipped at the north west angle, was restored in the late 20th century.[56] It became a Grade II listed building on 31 July 1963.[56]
Holt Cottage (51°8′50″N 1°3′31″W / 51.14722°N 1.05861°W) is a small thatched cottage on the road to Medstead and was built in 1503. A Grade II listed building since 31 May 1985, much of the current building dates to the 17th century and early 19th century.[57] The roof is half-hipped at the south end and hipped at the north, with painted brickwork in monk bond.[57]
Public houses
Near the centre of the village are two public houses: the Star Inn (51°9′24″N 1°3′3″W / 51.15667°N 1.05083°W), which is opposite the village green, and the Sun Inn (51°9′27″N 1°2′38″W / 51.15750°N 1.04389°W).[9][58] The Star Inn was built by Giles Willis in 1841 and is just south of the church close to the road to Medstead. It is the venue for the annual Bentworth Blues Festival, held in August.[59] The Sun Inn is on the east side of the village on the road to Alton and Thedden ("Sun Hill"), and was first licensed in 1838, the building previously being part of the Bentworth Manor estate. There was also a third pub called the Moon or Half Moon Inn [45] just north of the church on Drury Lane, first licensed in 1841, the gross value being listed as £19. [60]
Demographics
As of the 2001 UK census, Bentworth had a total population of 466. For every 100 females, there were 94.2 males. The average household size was 2.50.[61] Of those aged 16–74 in Bentworth, 33.6% had no academic qualifications or one GCSE, lower than the figures for all of East Hampshire (37.1%) and England (45.5%).[62][63] According to the census, 29.9% were economically inactive and of the economically active people 1.3% were unemployed.[62] Of Bentworth's 466 residents, 18.5% were under the age of 16 and 14.2% were aged 65 and over; the mean age was 42.05. 78.8% of residents described their health as "good".[64]
The Domesday Book entry for the Hundred of Odiham surmised that the hundred in 1066 was very large with 248 households and recorded 138 villagers. 60 smallholders and 50 slaves.[6] Tax was assessed to be very large at 78.5 exemption units.[6] 56 ploughlands, 16.5 lord's plough teams and 41 men's plough teams were recorded.[6] The Lord of the hundred in 1066 was Earl Harold.[6] In 1789 the population of Bentworth was 425.[65]
Population growth in the Parish of Bentworth since 1801 | |||||||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Year | 1801 | 1811 | 1821 | 1831 | 1841 | 1851 | 1881 | 1891 | 1901 | 1911 | 1921 | 1931 | 1951 | 1961 | 2001 |
Population | 425 | 406 | 548 | 592 | 609 | 610 | 558 | 604 | 571 | 586 | 522 | 570 | 614 | 596 | 466 |
% change | – | −4.5 | +35.0 | +8.0 | +2.9 | +0.2 | −8.5 | +8.2 | −5.5 | +2.6 | −10.9 | +9.2 | +7.7 | −2.9 | −21.8 |
Source: A Vision of Britain through Time, and statistics.gov.uk |
Education and activities
St Mary's Bentworth Primary School is immediately west of the church together with a school hall and playing field that are also used for events such as the annual summer village fete. The school was originally built in 1848 with a single classroom.[66] As of 2012, the school had 101 pupils, with pupils not only from Bentworth but also from surrounding villages.[67] St Mary's school has a refurbished library, IT and interactive whiteboard facilities, and recently an adventure playground was installed in the school grounds and the pond and wildlife area redeveloped for educational purposes.[66] The school hall is used for other village activities such as the Bentworth Garden Club,[68] performances by the Bentworth Mummers (the local amateur theatrical group), other meetings, and as the local polling station during elections. In November 2010, the Bentworth Mummers put on a performance of Hans Christian Andersen's The Snow Queen.[69] Bentworth Cricket Club is located just south of the village.[27] The village has five tennis courts, one just to the south of the church and school, one just further to the southeast along the main village street, another at Hall Farm, and two more either side of the Sun Inn along Well Lane approaching the village.[27]
Transport
The nearest railway station is 3.6 miles (5.8 km) east of the village, at Alton. Between 1901 and 1932 the Bentworth and Lasham railway station was available to passenger traffic on the Basingstoke and Alton Light Railway. It was located just north of the present A339 Alton-Basingstoke road between Bentworth and Lasham and was designed by John Wallis Titt.[70] The station opened on 1 June 1901 and closed during the First World War on 1 January 1917 because it was a minor line and difficult to keep running at the peak of the war.[71] It was reopened on 18 August 1924, until 1932 when the station was closed to passengers, being used for goods until its final closure in June 1936.[71] The problem was that it was a small rail link between Alton and Basingstoke, both having better rail connections. Meanwhile, Alton was on the line from London Waterloo to Winchester and Basingstoke.[72] In the 1960s, the connection between Alton and Winchester was broken because of railway closures and the construction of the M3 motorway east of Winchester.[73] Today, the rail line continues west of Alton to Alresford as the "Watercress Line" or Mid Hants Railway, running historic steam engines.[74] The level crossing on Lasham Hill north of the station appeared in the 1928 film The Wrecker and the line was also used in the 1937 film Oh, Mr Porter!.[75] The small station waiting room was demolished in 2003.
Notable people
In the reign of Queen Elizabeth I, the poet and satirist George Wither (1588–1667) was born in Bentworth.[76] He was baptised in the church of St Mary and later, supporting Oliver Cromwell's cause during the English Civil War, sold land in the parish to raise a troop of horses for the Roundhead (anti-Royalist) cause.[1][77] The Wither family lived in Bentworth until the 17th century.
In his earlier life, George Cecil Ives (1867–1950), an author, criminologist and gay rights campaigner, lived at the post-1832 Bentworth Hall with his mother, Emma Gordon-Ives.[51]
References
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- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z "A History of the County of Hampshire: Volume 4". accessed from British History Online. 1911. pp. 68–71.
{{cite web}}
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(help); Unknown parameter|authors=
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- ^ Inscription on the Gordon-Ives grave in Bentworth Churchyard
- ^ Burke, Sir Bernard; Pirie-Gordon, Charles Harry Clinton (1937). Genealogical and Heraldic History of the Landed Gentry: Founded by the Late Sir Bernard Burke. Shaw. Retrieved 14 February 2012.
- ^ Hampshire Field Club and Archaeological Society (1905). Proceedings. p. 15. Retrieved 14 February 2012.
- ^ Addison, Henry Robert; Oakes, Charles Henry; Lawson, William John (1906). Who's Who. A. & C. Black. Retrieved 14 February 2012.
- ^ Bowyer, Michael J. F. (1990). Action Stations: Military Airfields of the Central South and South-East. Stephens. ISBN 978-1-85260-376-2. Retrieved 14 February 2012.
- ^ Crockford's Clerical Directory. Church of England, Central Board of Finance, Church Commissioners. 1826. p. 426.
- ^ Grossman, David (1972). Who's Who in British Finance. R. R. Bowker Co. Retrieved 14 February 2012.
- ^ "The Villager Parish Magazine of Bentworth, Lasham, Medstead and Shalden". The Villager: 8, 9. April 2011.
{{cite journal}}
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- ^ Nicolson, Adam (13 June 1981). The National Trust Book of Long Walks in England, Scotland, and Wales. Harmony Books. p. 108. ISBN 978-0-517-54509-6. Retrieved 14 February 2012.
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- ^ Winchester (England : Diocese). Bishop (1367-1404 : William of Wykeham) (1899). Wykeham's Register: Official Instruments. Crown Writs and Returns. HMSO. p. 148. Retrieved 15 February 2012.
{{cite book}}
: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link) - ^ Darby, H. C.; Campbell, Eila M. J. (11 September 2008). The Domesday Geography of South-East England. Cambridge University Press. pp. 291, 450, 472, 502, 504. ISBN 978-0-521-07824-5. Retrieved 15 February 2012.
- ^ Mediaeval Academy of America (1936). Speculum. Mediaeval Academy of America. Retrieved 15 February 2012.
- ^ White, Harold J. Osborne (1910). The Geology of the Country around New Alresford. Printed for H.M. Stationery Off., by Darling & Son. p. 52. Retrieved 15 February 2012.
- ^ "Parks and Gardens UK". Parksandgardens.ac.uk. 2009-01-29. Retrieved 2012-02-15.
- ^ "Home Farm, Bentworth". Woodland Trust. Retrieved 15 February 2012.
- ^ Galfridus, Anglicus; Way, Albert (1865). Promptorium Parvulorum Sive Clericorum: Dictionarius Anglo-Latinus Princeps. sumptibus Societatis Camdenensis. p. 244. Retrieved 15 February 2012.
- ^ Hampshire Field Club and Archaeological Society (1952). Papers and Proceedings. p. 321. Retrieved 15 February 2012.
- ^ Fisher's POWs, Holybourne.com
{{citation}}
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(help) - ^ "Tumuli Burial mounds in Wivelrod". Medstead.org. Retrieved 16 February 2012.
- ^ Book of reference to the plan of the parish of ... Ordnance Survey. 1879. p. 26.
- ^ "Listed Buildings in Bentworth, Hampshire, England". British Listed Buildings.
{{cite web}}
: Text "15 February 2012" ignored (help) - ^ a b "St Mary's Church, Bentworth". British Listed Buildings. Retrieved 15 February 2012.
- ^ a b c Smith, Georgia (June 1988). Bentworth: the making of a Hampshire village. Bentworth Parochial Church Council. p. 23. ISBN 978-0-9513653-0-4. Retrieved 15 February 2012. Cite error: The named reference "smith" was defined multiple times with different content (see the help page).
- ^ a b c "Hankin Family Tomb in the Churchyard of St Mary's Church, Bentworth". British Listed Buildings. Retrieved 15 February 2012.
- ^ a b c d e f g "War Memorial in Churchyard of St Mary's Church, Bentworth". British Listed Buildings. Retrieved 15 February 2012.
- ^ a b c d e "Hall Farmhouse, Bentworth". British Listed Buildings. Retrieved 15 February 2012.
- ^ "Hall Farm, Bentworth, Alton, Hampshire" (PDF). Thames Valley Archaelogical Services. Retrieved 15 February 2012.
- ^ Burke, Bernard (1858). A Genealogical and Heraldic Dictionary of the Landed Gentry of Great Britain and Ireland. Harrison. p. 618. Retrieved 15 February 2012.
- ^ a b Who Was Who: A Companion to Who's Who : Containing The Biographies of Those Who Died During The Period. A. & C. Black. 1967. p. 591. Retrieved 14 February 2012.
- ^ a b c d "Planning Application for Gaston Grange" (PDF). Planning Development of the Government of East Hampshire. Retrieved 15 February 2012.
- ^ Papers by Command, Volume 83. House of Commons. 1947. p. 24.
- ^ a b c d "Mulberry House, Bentworth". British Listed Buildings. Retrieved 15 February 2012.
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- ^ Miller, Wendy (20 October 2007). "Hampshire Pub Guide: The Sun Inn, Bentworth". The Daily Telegraph.
{{cite web}}
: Italic or bold markup not allowed in:|publisher=
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- ^ Proceedings , Volume 4. Hampshire Field Club and Archaeological Society. 1905. p. 163.
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- ^ a b "Area: Bentworth CP (Parish) Work and Qualifications". Statistics.gov.uk. Retrieved 15 February 2012.
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- ^ a b "Our Prospectus" (PDF). St Mary's Bentworth Primary School. Retrieved 15 February 2012.
- ^ "Our School". St Mary's Bentworth Primary School. Retrieved 15 February 2012.
- ^ "Bentworth Garden Club". Bentworth.info. Retrieved 15 February 2012.
- ^ "Bentworth Mummers are performing again". Bentworth.info. 23 October 2010. Retrieved 15 February 2012.
- ^ Griffith, Edward (1982). The Basingstoke & Alton Light Railway 1901–1936. Newbury: Kingfisher Railway Publications. pp. p16.
{{cite book}}
:|pages=
has extra text (help); Cite has empty unknown parameter:|month=
(help) - ^ a b Griffith, Edward C. (1947). The Basingstoke & Alton Light Railway, 1901-1936. Langham. Retrieved 15 February 2012.
- ^ Andrews, Robert (April 2004). Rough Guide to England. Rough Guides. p. 284. ISBN 978-1-84353-249-1. Retrieved 15 February 2012.
- ^ Great Britain. Parliament. House of Commons (1973). Parliamentary debates: Official report. H.M. Stationery Off. p. 421. Retrieved 15 February 2012.
- ^ Awdry, W.; Cook, Chris (1979). A Guide to the Steam Railways of Great Britain. Pelham. ISBN 978-0-7207-1052-6. Retrieved 15 February 2012.
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- ^ Goodrich, Samuel Griswold (1832). Popular biography: embracing the most eminent characters of every age, nation, and profession, including painters, poets, philosophers, politicians, heroes, warriors, &c., &c. Leavitt & Allen. p. 517. Retrieved 14 February 2012.
- ^ A History Of The Wither Family. Reginald Fitz Hugh Bigg-Wither. 1907. p. 154.
External links
- Village of Bentworth Website
- Bentworth Conservation Area (East Hampshire District Council leaflet)
- Bentworth CP (Parish) (Office for National Statistics)
- Hampshire Treasures Volume 6 (East Hampshire) Pages 35, 37, 38, 39, 40, 41, 42
- British History Online – Bentworth
- St Mary's School Prospectus