Whitcombe(Extra Parochial) |
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The tiny village of Whitcombe, lies alongside
the main A352 to the South-East of Dorchester, nestled between the
parishes of West Knighton and Broadmayne to the East, West Stafford to
the North and Winterbourne Came to the West. Recorded in a 10th century
Saxon charter as well as in the 11th century Domesday Book as
'Widecome', the name means 'wide valley' in Old English. Lower
Palaeolithic handaxes found in the area and an Iron Age burial of a male
with a long slashing sword at his side, the so-called 'Whitcombe
Warrior', testify to settlement here from the earliest times. Whitcombe
was donated to Abbey Milton by King Athelstan in 966 and remained
extra-parochial from then on. Whitcombe maintained its own registers,
although sadly they were destroyed in a fire in the 18th century, so
that all records prior to 1762 (with the exception of some Bishops
Transcripts from 1731) have been lost. |
The dedication of the now redundant Norman chapel peeping through its own coppice of well foliaged trees has been lost. It stands on the site of a much older church, and fragments of two Saxon crosses can be found in the interior. Surrounded by a limestone wall carefully built around a prehistoric standing stone, the chapel has a 16th century tower completed in 1596, a 15th century chancel with steps that formerly lead up to a rood loft and a 12th century nave partly rebuilt in the 18th century. Inside, there is a fine 13th century Purbeck marble font and impressive medieval wall paintings on the East wall, one of St. Christopher carrying Christ and another of early 14th century arcading. The pulpit has been left exactly as it was on the morning in 1885 when the Reverend William Barnes of Winterbourne Came gave his last sermon. This was especially poignant as he had also given his first sermon at Whitcombe in 1847. Celebrated for his poetry in the Dorset dialect, Barnes also had a tremendous sense of humour. He nicknamed one of the Whitcombe parish clerks 'the Archbishop of York', so fond was he of declaiming, "Now you got to mind I: I be the second man in the church I be". Barnes died in 1886 and the chapel has been restored in his memory. |
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Census |
1841 Census [Ron Adams] 1851 Census [Ron Adams] 1861 Census [Ron Adams] 1871 Census [Jennifer Dando] 1881 Census [Terry Smith] 1891 Census [Ron Adams] 1901 Census [Keith Searson] 1911 Census [Jon Baker] |
Church Registers |
Baptisms
1731-1780 [BT]
1774-1850 [PR] [Kim Parker] Marriages 1733-1870 [BT/PR] [Kim Parker] Burials 1731-1780 [BT] 1774-1837 [PR] [Kim Parker] |
Trade & Postal Directories | |
Other Records |
Whitcombe PCC Wills index [Kim Parker] Weymouth Local & Family History site |
Photographs | |
Monumental Inscriptions | Whitcombe Monumental Inscriptions |
Maps | |
View Larger Map |
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Records held at the Dorset History Centre [Ref PE-WCB] |
Registers Christenings 1762-1967. Marriages 1780-1819, 1826-1923, 1935-1962. Burials 1774-1968. Banns 1860-1977 |
Registration District
(for the purpose of civil registration births, marriages & deaths) |
1 Jul 1837-30 Jun 1949: Dorchester 1 Jul 1949-31 Mar 1997: Weymouth 1 Apr 1997-30 Sep 2001: South Dorset 1 Oct 2001-17 Oct 2005: South & West Dorset |
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