Posted by: Blog Administrator
on Mar 31, 2012
Tagged in:
Yeoman ,
Wayte ,
vernacular ,
Swindon ,
superstition ,
Nick Hill ,
Moredon ,
Highworth ,
Haydon Wick ,
farmhouse ,
English Heritage ,
cruck ,
Clyffe Pypard ,
Cleeve Piper ,
charity school ,
Catherine Evans ,
Bushton Lodge ,
Bushton
A little while back Wiltshire Buildings Record carried out a group-effort recording at Bushton, Clyffe Pypard. This was a day where members who are interested in picking up recording skills and recognising Wiltshire features in vernacular houses can go along and learn informally, whilst gathering information for the Record.

Cruck apex
The exterior of the main house is of 2 storeys of whitewashed brick and rubble with a netted thatched roof. Nothing was discerned of the medieval origins of this house from outside. Inside the old hall was a bacon smoking chamber, the lower part still accessible. There may have been access at first floor level to hang the meat for curing. The hearth there was of chalkstone and brick. What is curious is that in the centre are a group of taper burn marks, or hot poker marks alongside the initials ‘TP’. In the world of vernacular architecture debate has long ranged about how these marks came about and why. They are found in many farmhouses and cottages, not only in Wiltshire, but nationally. At last, with determined study by Nick Hill and others at English Heritage it is now thought that these singe marks were done deliberately to ward off accidental fires in the same way that we inoculate our children with a weakened disease agent to guard against a more virulent form taking hold later on. This may be difficult for us to comprehend in our largely secular, scientifically-run society, but in the not so very distant past people were superstitious, and as well as believing in witches they thoroughly believed in magic. It is instances like this that make our interpretation of the past so tricky as we instinctively judge with our own modern values until we learn better.
Posted by: Blog Administrator
on Sep 27, 2011
Tagged in:
Wiltshire Buildings Record ,
Ushers ,
The Tollgate Inn ,
The Barley Mow ,
Temperance ,
Swindon Advertiser ,
Swindon & District Temperance Council ,
Swindon ,
survey ,
Salisbury ,
Rodbourne Arms Hotel ,
Rodbourne Arms ,
pub ,
Moredon ,
Margaret Parrott ,
license ,
Justice Minute Book ,
Haydon Wick ,
GWR Temperance Uion ,
Free United Church ,
Dorothy Treasure ,
Charles Pilcher ,
British Women's Temperance Association ,
Brewery ,
architect ,
Andrew James Lydford
Did you know that pubs are closing at the rate of 12 a week? WBR has surveyed many pubs that have closed: The Tollgate Inn and The Barley Mow in Salisbury alone. Its not that we modern Brits have gone off drinking: the smoking ban and cheap booze sold by supermarkets have sounded the death knell. And so it has been for the Rodbourne Arms in Swindon, our latest job.

The Rodbourne Arms
It is interesting to find that when Swindon’s suburbs were growing there was a need perceived for a drinking place in Haydon Wick on the north side of Swindon. Although no reference has been found to the planning application which must have preceded the building of the pub, it would appear to have been built around 1903, since, on 11th February 1904, the Justice Minutes’ Book recorded the application of Andrew James Lydford for an alehouse license for the Rodbourne Arms Hotel. He met considerable opposition from the formidable Temperance Movement, in the guise of The Swindon & District Temperance Council, the Free United Church, the British Women’s Temperance Association, and the G.W.R. Temperance Union.