Winfrith Newburgh

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Coordinates: 50°39′44″N 2°16′27″W / 50.6623°N 2.2743°W / 50.6623; -2.2743
Winfrith Newburgh
Winfrith Newburgh

 Winfrith Newburgh shown within Dorset
Population 718 (2001 Census)
OS grid reference SY800850
District Purbeck
Shire county Dorset
Region South West
Country England
Sovereign state United Kingdom
Post town Dorchester
Postcode district DT2
Police Dorset
Fire Dorset
Ambulance South Western
EU Parliament South West England
UK Parliament South Dorset
List of places
UK
England
Dorset

Winfrith Newburgh (/ˌwɪnfrɪθ ˈnjbrə/; commonly called just Winfrith) is a parish and village in the Purbeck district of the English county of Dorset. It is situated some eight miles west of Wareham and ten miles east of Dorchester. It was historically part of the Winfrith hundred. The village has a population of 718 (2001).

Description

The name Winfrith derives from the river Win, which runs through the village. It is mentioned in the Domesday Book as Winfrode.[1] In 1086 it was held by Bolla the priest. It was later granted to Robert de Neubourg, whose descendants were Lords of the Manor until the death of Sir Roger Newburgh in 1514. The Newburgh family are still commemorated in the village's full name. The Lordship then passed, along with the Newburghs' foundation of Bindon Abbey, to the Marney family, and then to the Poynings and the Howards, before being purchased by the Weld family in 1641.

The ancient road from Dorchester to Wareham ran through the centre of the village. However this was replaced by a turnpike (now the A352) in the 18th Century, and the village now lies to the south of the main road. The Red Lion Inn marks the turn to the village. North of the road lies the hamlet of East Knighton. The hamlet of East Burton, a little further to the east, was formerly part of the parish of Winfrith Newburgh, but is now part of Wool.

Also to the north of the village is the Winfrith Technology Centre, on the site of the former UKAEA Winfrith Nuclear Power station. The latter was in service from the 1950s to early 1990s, and the Steam Generating Heavy Water Reactor was developed there. The surrounding heathland is a Dorset Wildlife Trust nature reserve.

Saint Christopher's Church in Winfrith Newburgh

The church is dedicated to Saint Christopher. It was extensively restored and enlarged in 1854. At this time the north aisle was added, however some Norman architectural features still remain, the most notable being the north doorway. The parish registers date from 1585. The parish was merged with those of Chaldon Herring, East Lulworth and West Lulworth in 1979.[2]

The village has a Church of England Primary School (now merged with that at West Lulworth), a post office, a football team, a cricket team, a drama club, a swimming pool, and a basketball court. Knighton Heath, the Five Marys and Maggot Wood (Coombe Wood) are used for horse riding.

The Winfrith Riot

Winfrith was the scene of an initially peaceful protest by agricultural workers on Monday 29 November 1830 during the Swing Riots. The Riot Act was read by the local magistrate, James Frampton of Moreton, however the protesters failed to disperse and three men were arrested. The events were described by Frampton's sister, Mary Frampton, in her journal:

November 28th [1830] - Notice was received of an intended rising of the people at the adjacent villages of Winfrith, Wool, and Lulworth - the latter six miles off - which took place on the 30th [actually the 29th, the date given in the Dorchester prison registers]. My brother, Mr Frampton, was joined very early on that morning by a large body of farmers etc. from his immediate neighbourhood, as well as some from a distance, all special constables, amounting to upwards of 150, armed only with a short staff, the pattern for which had been sent by order of Government to equip what was called the Constabulary force. The numbers increased as they rode on towards Winfrith, where the clergyman [George Ingram Fisher] was unpopular, and his premises supposed to be in danger. The mob, urged on from behind hedges etc. by a number of women and children, advanced rather respectfully, and with their hats in their hands, to demand increase of wages, but would not listen to the request that they would disperse. The Riot Act was read. They still urged forwards, and came close up to Mr Frampton's horse; he then collared one man, but in giving him in charge he slipped from his captors by leaving his smock-frock in their hands. Another mob from Lulworth were said to be advancing, and as the first mob seemed to have dispersed, Mr F[rampton] was going, almost alone, to speak to them, when he was cautioned to beware, as the others had retreated only to advance again with more effect in the rear. The whole body of the constabulary then advanced with Mr Frampton, and, after an ineffectual parley, charged them, when three men were taken, and were conveyed by my brother and his son Henry, and a part of the constabulary force, to Dorchester, and committed to gaol. I was at Moreton that day with Lady Harriot F[rampton]. Our gentlemen returned about six o'clock; they described the mob they had encountered as being in general very fine-looking young men, and particularly well-dressed, as if they had put on their best clothes for the occasion.[3]

The treatment of the three men arrested was fairly lenient by the standards of the day: one was imprisoned for three months and all three were bound over to keep the peace for two years.[4] The underlying causes of the Swing Riots - low pay and increased mechanisation - remained however, and in 1832 a group of agricultural workers from Tolpuddle - eight miles north of Winfrith - formed a Friendly Society to protest against these same issues. In 1834 the same James Frampton who had read the Riot Act at Winfrith invoked an obscure law against oath-swearing to prosecute what became known as the Tolpuddle Martyrs.

References

External links


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