West Dean is a village and
civil parish in southeast
Wiltshire, England; the Wiltshire/Hampshire border runs through the eastern part of the village. The village is on the
River Dun, about east of
Salisbury and the same distance northwest of
Romsey
Romsey ( ) is a historic market town in the county of Hampshire, England. Romsey was home to the 17th-century philosopher and economist William Petty and the 19th-century British prime minister, Lord Palmerston, whose statue has stood in the t ...
.
History
A
Roman villa site straddles the present-day Wiltshire/Hampshire border. The village was mentioned in the ''
Cartularium Saxonicum
''Cartularium Saxonicum'' is a three volume collection of Anglo-Saxon charters published from 1885 to 1893 by Walter de Gray Birch (1842-1924), then working in the Department of Manuscripts at the British Library.
The most recent edition was rele ...
'' for the year 880 as ''(æt) Deone'', and may have formed part of the inheritance of
Aethelweard, youngest son of
King Alfred. Two manors called ''Duene'' are recorded in the
Domesday Book of 1086, one in Hampshire and one in Wiltshire, both among the many holdings of
Waleran the Hunter. The name ''Westdone'' occurs in 1265, and ''Westdune'' in 1270.
In the north of the present village, overlooking the river, is a mound around 53m in diameter and up to 2.9m high, which is the remains of a Norman
motte castle
A motte-and-bailey castle is a European fortification with a wooden or stone keep situated on a raised area of ground called a motte, accompanied by a walled courtyard, or bailey, surrounded by a protective ditch and palisade. Relatively easy to ...
. Dean House, which straddles the border with Hampshire, is a Grade II* listed former rectory from the late 17th century, enlarged in the 18th. A large 17th-century barn at Church Farm is also Grade II* listed.
The two manors became separate church parishes. The late 19th century saw the Wiltshire parish become West Dean civil parish, while the Hampshire parish became part of
West Tytherley parish.
The
Salisbury and Southampton Canal was opened through the parish in 1802 or 1803 but was never completed as far as Salisbury; it closed in 1806. The
Wessex Main Line
The Wessex Main Line is the railway line from Bristol Temple Meads to Southampton Central. Diverging from this route is the Heart of Wessex Line from Westbury to Weymouth. The Wessex Main Line intersects the Reading to Taunton Line at and th ...
railway was built through the village in 1847, with
Dean station where it crosses the road at a
level crossing. The station is still in use.
From 1941 to 2003, chalk caverns under Dean Hill to the south of the village were used as a
Royal Naval Armaments Depot for munitions storage and maintenance.
The northern part of the village, extending south beyond the railway to Moody's Hill, was designated as a
Conservation Area
Protected areas or conservation areas are locations which receive protection because of their recognized natural, ecological or cultural values. There are several kinds of protected areas, which vary by level of protection depending on the ena ...
in 1990.
Religious sites
The two ancient parishes each had a church. The parishes were united in 1474, with the Hampshire church of All Saints becoming a
chapelry
A chapelry was a subdivision of an ecclesiastical parish in England and parts of Lowland Scotland up to the mid 19th century.
Status
It had a similar status to a township but was so named as it had a chapel of ease (chapel) which was the communi ...
; it was demolished at an unknown date, well before the 19th century.
Borbach Chantry
An early church stood to the northwest of the present village. Most of it was demolished in 1868, leaving only the
chantry chapel known as
Borbach Chantry
Borbach Chantry, West Dean, in south-east Wiltshire, England, was built in 1333. It is recorded in the National Heritage List for England as a Grade I listed building, and is now a redundant church in the care of the Churches Conservation Tr ...
, built in 1333 for Robert de Borbach. A
Grade I listed
In the United Kingdom, a listed building or listed structure is one that has been placed on one of the four statutory lists maintained by Historic England in England, Historic Environment Scotland in Scotland, in Wales, and the Northern Irel ...
building, in 1973 it was placed into the care of the Redundant Churches Fund which is now the
Churches Conservation Trust.
Parish church
The church of St Mary the Virgin was built in 1866
as a replacement for the earlier church. Its site, provided by
Thomas Baring,
is 250 metres to the southeast and more central to the present village. In flint with red brick decoration and some Bath stone, it has a nave and
apsidal chancel, and at the west end a timber bell-turret below a tiled spire.
Items transferred from the old church include three bells
and the font bowl (probably 12th-century).
Two 12th-century capitals form part of the support of the lectern.
There is an
aumbrey
An ambry (or ''almery'', ''aumbry''; from the medieval form ''almarium'', cf. Lat. ''armārium'', "a place for keeping tools"; cf. O. Fr. ''aumoire'' and mod. armoire) is a recessed cabinet in the wall of a Christian church for storing sacred vesse ...
from the 13th or 14th centuries, and a
piscina of similar age.
Six windows by
Morris & Co. were made in 1916–17. The church was designated as Grade II listed in 1987.
Holy Trinity church at
East Grimstead
East Grimstead is a village in Grimstead civil parish, on the River Dun in Wiltshire, England, about east of Salisbury. The village has about 70 households and no shops, public houses or schools.
History
The site of a Roman villa is a shor ...
was anciently a chapelry of West Dean. The benefices of West Dean and
Alderbury were united in 1971, and in 1983 the benefice of West Dean with East Grimstead was combined with that of
Farley with
Pitton
Pitton is a village in Wiltshire, England, about east of Salisbury, just off the A30 London Road.
History
A Roman road (now a bridleway) forms the northern boundary of the parish and is a scheduled monument.
Local government
The civil paris ...
. Today the parish is part of the Clarendon group of churches, alongside nine others in this rural part of Wiltshire.
Methodism
A
Wesleyan Methodist chapel was built c.1870 and closed in 1971.
Woodland
Much of the northern half of the parish is woodland, including
Bentley Wood
Bentley Wood (), together with the adjacent Blackmoor Copse, form one of the largest contiguous areas of woodland in Wiltshire, England. The wood is about east of Salisbury, north of the village of West Dean, and is largely within West Dean par ...
which contains a biological Site of Special Scientific Interest.
Notable people
Dean House was bought in 1618 by
John Evelyn (1601–1685), later a Member of Parliament; the property descended by marriage to the Pierreponts, including
Evelyn Pierrepont, 1st Duke of Kingston-upon-Hull (1665–1726).
Later owners include (from 1823)
Charles Baring Wall
Charles Baring Wall (1795 – 14 October 1853) was at various times the Member of Parliament for Guildford, Wareham, Weymouth and Salisbury. Wall was initially a Conservative but shifted to the Whigs as an MP for Guildford. He then belonged to t ...
, also an MP, and son of a partner in
Barings Bank. He also owned the Norman Court Estate,
a large area of woodland and farmland on both sides of the county border and centred on Norman Court House, an 18th-century country house just over the border in Hampshire.
Thomas Baring (1826–1904) sold the estate in 1903 to
Washington Singer (1866–1934), from the American sewing machine family but brought up in England; in 1945 the estate was sold and broken up, allowing some West Dean villagers to buy their houses.
Notable rectors include
William Tooker, from 1588, who was chaplain to
Elizabeth I and later
dean of Lichfield.
References
*
External links
*
Village Design Statement West Dean parish council, February 2009
West Dean village and parish council
{{authority control
Villages in Wiltshire
Civil parishes in Wiltshire