Cranborne, Dorset

Description
Cranborne, a small town and a parish in Dorsetshire. The town stands in Cranborne Chase, near the boundary with Wilts, 3 1/2 miles from Verwood station on the L. & S.W.R., and 10 from Wimborne Minster. It dates from ancient times, is well built, has a post, money order, and telegraph office under Salisbury, a church, a Primitive Methodist chapel, and an almshouse, and gives the title of Viscount to the Marquis of Salisbury. The church belonged to a Benedictine priory, is partly Norman, and has a carved pulpit, and monuments to the Hoopers. It was enlarged in 1875. The priory was founded in 980, and had originally an abbey status, but became subject in 1102 to Tewkesbury. The priory-house continued to stand till 1703. There is a fair on 6 Dec. The parish is the largest in the county, and includes Alderholt, Holwell, Blagdon, Boveridge, Verwood, and Moncton-up-Wimborne. Acreage, 11,870; population of the civil parish, 2395; of the ecclesiastical, 824. The manor belonged about 950 to Aylward de Meau, went sometime afterwards to the Crown, was given by William Rufus to Robert Fitz-Hamon, passed to the Earl of Gloucester and the Earls of March, and belongs now to the Marquis of Salisbury. Remains of a circular double-ditched ancient camp of 6 acres are on Castle Hill. Much of the parish is hilly and of small value. The living is a vicarage, united with the perpetual curacy of Boveridge, in the diocese of Salisbury; joint net value, £143 with residence. Patron, the Marquis of Salisbury. The vicarage of Alderholt, a seperate benefice, is a vicarage in the diocese of Salisbury; value, £123. Patron, the Vicar of Cranborne. Bishop Stillingfleet was a native.

Transcribed from The Comprehensive Gazetteer of England and Wales, 1894-5

Parish Church
The church of SS. Mary and Bartholomew (once attached to a monastery, founded about the year 980), rebuilt in 1252 in the Perpendicular and Early English styles, the fine specimen of a Saxon arch which forms the main entrance to the north porch being the only bit of the previous church incorporated in the present building, consists of chancel (rebuilt, in 1875), nave, aisles of six bays, north porch and an embattled western tower containing a clock and 8 bells, 2 of which were added in 1890: the church has a very fine warren roof, and the pulpit is a good specimen of rude oak carving reputed to be the work of Abbot Parker (ob. 1421) : the wbole of the oak screen, with the figures and all the other carvings in the church, except the pulpit, was done by the late Rev. F. H. Fisher, vicar here from 1888 to 1910, to whose memory a window was placed near the side altar in the year 1910: the west window is a memorial to Edward Stillingfleet, bishop of Worcester 1689-1700, who was born here in 1635, and there are other memorial windows to the late John Tregonwell esq. d. Oct. 12th, 1885, and the late Henry Francis Brouncker esq. 1897; and in the north aisle is a fine monument (repaired by the Earl of Malmesbury in 1817) to Sir Edward Hooper and family: three frescoes were discovered in the cburch in 1898; the church has been restored at a cost of £700, and affords 450 sittings.

The register dates from the year 1602.


Villages, Hamlets, &c.

Alderholt, a tithing and a chapelry in Cranborne parish, Dorset. The tithing lies on the verge of the county, 4 1/2 miles E of Cranborne, and 5 1/2 N of Ringwood railway station, and has a post office under Salisbury; money order office, Fordingbridge; telegraph office, Daggens Road (R.S.) Population, 696. The chapelry includes the tithing, but is larger, and was constituted in 1849. The living is a vicarage in the diocese of Salisbury; net value, £123. The church was built by the Marquis of Salisbury.

Holwell, a tithing in Cranborne parish, Dorsetshire, 1-mile SW of Cranborne.

Newtown, a hamlet in the NE of Dorsetshire, 7 1/4 miles WNW of Cranborne.

Oakley, a hamlet in Cranborne parish, Dorsetshire, near Cranborne.