Owermoigne |
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Owermoigne is a quaint village, ancient parish and formerly a liberty
situated 7 miles South-East of Dorchester and 8 miles East of Weymouth.
Settled since Roman times, the first part of this enigmatic place-name
suggests a remoter past, 'Ower' being a corruption of the Celtic word
'ogrodrust', referring to gaps in the chalk hills funnelling winds off
the sea. The second part of the name is manorial, from the Le Moigne
family who were Lords of the Manor here for three centuries after the
Normal Conquest. Within the boundaries of the parish are the hamlets
of Southdown, or Sudden as it was once known, Galton famous for its
market gardens and Holworth on the cliffs above beautiful Ringstead Bay,
which until 1882 was an extra parochial area belonging to the Abbot of
Milton Abbey..
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After a brief period of ownership by Archbishop of
Canterbury William Wake who had purchased it from the Stourtons in 1703,
Owermoigne was acquired by French-born Theodore Janssen, the fabulously
wealthy son of a Dutch baron who was later knighted by Queen Anne. He
was hated by the villagers who earned only 7 or 8 shillings a week,
not least because of the role he had played in the South Sea Bubble
of 1720-1. Being a director of the South Sea Company, when the bubble
burst, Janssen was forced to
return £250,000 to the British Treasury - a massive sum at the time.
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Generations of ancestors of the writer Thomas Hardy lived in Owermoigne and their christenings, weddings and burials are recorded in the parish registers, which date from 1569. They must have handed down their smugglers' tales to him, inspiring him to write "The Desperate Preacher", set in 'Nether-Moynton' and relating the misadventures of a Wesleyan Minister who gets caught up with a gang of smugglers lead by his alluring landlady and condoned by the local clergyman, who even permits the contraband to be hidden in the Church tower. Ironically, despite its strong associations with smuggling and the fact that it today boasts a cider museum on the site of an old mill mentioned in the Domesday book, the village of Owermoigne has never had a pub. |
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The OPC for Owermoigne is Kim Parker |
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Census | 1841 Census
1851 Census 1861 Census 1871 Census 1881 Census 1891 Census 1901 Census 1911 Census |
Parish Registers | Christenings
1569-1660
1661-1751
1752-1812
1813-1880 Marriages 1569-1751 1752-1837 1838-1860 Burials 1570-1660 1661-1751 1752-1812 1813-1885 |
Church Data | St Michael's
Memorial Inscription index [Jan Hibberd] Holworth, St Catherine's Memorial Inscription index [Jan Hibberd] Church Memorial 1914 - 1918 and 1939 - 1945, Last will and testament of Adam Jones, Grave & Will for Garland Brief History and selected Hardy baptisms Register Extracts 1569 to 1749 from Hutchins Rectors of St Michael's Parish Church [Dorinda Miles] St Catherine's Church, Holworth |
Directories | Transcription of trade Directory Entries for 1841, 1848, 1855, 1859, 1865, 1867, 1875, 1880, 1885, 1889, 1895, 1911, 1915 |
Poll Book | Extract from the 1807 Poll Book |
Wills and Grants of Administration | Index of Wills for Owermoigne residents |
Other Records | Holworth, Beresford's Lost Villages [External Link] |
Maps | Click on the map opposite for an enlarged view Ordnance Survey maps of the parish can be seen at the old-maps site, just enter 'Owermoigne' under place search. For modern location maps visit: www.multimap.com |
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