Steeple Ashton

Not to be confused with Steeple Aston.
Steeple Ashton

The village, as seen from across a field
Steeple Ashton
 Steeple Ashton shown within Wiltshire
Population 935 (in 2011)[1]
OS grid referenceST9056
Shire countyWiltshire
RegionSouth West
CountryEngland
Sovereign stateUnited Kingdom
Post town TROWBRIDGE
Postcode district BA14
Police Wiltshire
Fire Wiltshire
Ambulance South Western
EU Parliament South West England
List of places
UK
England
Wiltshire

Coordinates: 51°19′N 2°08′W / 51.32°N 02.14°W

Steeple Ashton is a village and a civil parish in Wiltshire, England.

Description

Steeple Ashton today is a busy village. It has an award-winning local shop run by a small army of volunteers, a thriving pub, a football team, an active Trust supporting the Church which organises events, a day nursery, a 'screen in the sticks' cinema and a village magazine published monthly, not to mention a number of special interest groups. The school closed about five years ago and children are now educated at nearby Keevil school.

The village abuts Keevil Airfield, an active military aerodrome which served throughout World War Two as home to squadrons of Bomber Command, and also as a launch site for gliders taking part in Operation Market Garden, made famous in A Bridge Too Far. These days there is a well-attended Gliding club (Bannerdown Gliding Club) at the airfield, and the army and air force regularly train there, too.

The parish had 931 inhabitants in 2001. It had twice as many in 1981.[2] This is due to the parish boundary of Trowbridge being moved to include some new housing estates which had been built at the edge of the town but within the parish of Steeple Ashton.

Steeple Ashton is the location of a 26.5 hectare geological Site of Special Scientific Interest (grid reference ST914558), notified in 1998.[3]

Name and history

St Mary's Church, Steeple Ashton

Until the Dissolution of the Monasteries, Steeple Ashton was a manor of Romsey Abbey. It was also part of the hundred of Whorwellsdown.

The first element of the village's name may represent the steeple of the church, which is claimed to have been struck by lightning in the 17th century and the steeple rebuilt, only to be struck by lightning a second time. It was not rebuilt again, and the present day church has only a square tower. Some locals have it that a third spire was abandoned on the basis that the first two lightning strikes intimated divine disapproval of the steeple.

However, the prefix ' Staple -' or 'Steeple- sometimes indicates the privilege of holding a market, with a stapol or pole being set up to advertise its location to all passing through.[4] Steeple Ashton was indeed once a market town, holding a weekly market, the market cross for which still stands on the village green.

A great fire destroyed the textile mills within the small town, and when it came to rebuilding they moved to the nearby town of Trowbridge, where the River Biss provided better power. The business of the market then moved to neighbouring towns, such as Market Lavington.

Steeple Ashton is home to a small green village pump manufactured by Lee Howl,[5] a 1679 market cross in the form of a tuscan column,[6] a village lock-up[7] a war memorial in the form of a cross,[8] and three disused 1930s gas petrol pumps remaining from a George Moore petrol station.[9][10] A further, more skeletal gas pump is located in a gated area behind the former petrol station.[11][12]

References

External links

Wikimedia Commons has media related to Steeple Ashton.