Place names have a particular significance and are a source of considerable interest. Their primary purpose is functional. They help identify the position of a place for example, although not always precisely. At the time of Domesday three villages, Child Okeford, Okeford Schilling [Shillingstone] and Okeford Fitzpaine were all referred […]
Estimated reading time: 34 minutes
The most famous historian of Dorset was John Hutchins and his most famous work was the ‘History and Antiquities of the County of Dorset’. For anyone interested in the people and places of Dorset it essential reading. Hutchins was born in 1698 at Bradford Peverell just a few miles north […]
Estimated reading time: 10 minutes
Tithe and inclosure maps were not the only maps to be produced by surveyors and estate maps were probably more commonly produced than indicated by the number that survive or are known about. Two maps relating to Child Okeford were given to the village archivist [not me] in the parish. […]
Estimated reading time: 13 minutes
Hares were [and are] widespread in Dorset, surprisingly so when you consider what they had to suffer. Living and breeding on the surface and, being particularly swift when running, they were an obvious animal for hunting. There are broadly three ways they can be hunted. The first method mentioned in […]
Estimated reading time: 7 minutes
That the 21st March 1832 was a Wednesday is easy to determine and might lead you to suppose it was Ash Wednesday – but it wasn’t. Behind these four words is a fascinating story which writing today in 2020 has a particular resonance. The story begins not in Dorset but […]
Estimated reading time: 17 minutes
Contents. Early attitudes to illegitimacy. Bastardy and the Poor The examination Stories from the Dorset Records The warrant The affiliation order Failure to comply The Poor Law Amendment Act The subject of bastardy may seem an odd one to include in a site about the work of a land surveyor […]
Estimated reading time: 87 minutes
On the 23rd March John Martin’s world was shaken to the core, Joseph Crew Jennings was the eldest son of John Jennings; he had taken over his father’s business as a solicitor, was on the boards of a number of turnpike trusts, was a churchwarden and had rebuilt St […]
Estimated reading time: 15 minutes