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There has recently become available at the Help Desk a partial index of those men who served in the Wiltshire Militia during the Napoleonic Wars 1793-1815. A brief description of the creation and function of the Militia will explain how and why this could be of use to researchers, together with the five unique features that set them apart from other military forces of the period.

 

The Infantry drilling, 1807

The first of these features was that the Militia Act of 1758 introduced the idea of conscription. The Regular Army before this date and up to the First World War was officially a volunteer army, but it was felt that volunteering would not raise enough men to serve the purpose of the new force, which was to defend the country in the face of an invasion threat and replace the Regular Army at home during a time of war. Each county was ordered to raise a certain number of infantry men (800 for Wiltshire); each parish was allotted its quota of this total, which was to be selected by ballot from a list drawn up by the parish constables containing the names of all males between the ages of 18-50 (later reduced to 45) with a number of exceptions, including peers, parish officials, clergymen, teachers, preachers, articled clerks, apprentices and members of the regular army. The term of service was for 3 years (later 5) after which time the whole process began again, although men could re-enlist and were encouraged to do so by means of a bounty.






Snow, Glorious Snow!?

Posted by: Blog Administrator

Tagged in: Yatesbury , winters , Winterbourne Monkton , Wiltshire. Herbert Spackham , weather , wagonnette , valley , trunks , tree roots , train , tornado , three feet deep , thaw , snowy winter , snowing , snowfalls , snowfall , snowdrifts , Slade’s Mill , skating , Shrewton , severe snowstorm , school , Salisbury Plain , roads , River Till , River Thames , riding , reveal , relief fund , Quemerford Villa , pond , poems , north Wiltshire , Mr Tanner , melt waters , Market Lavington , March 1891 , mail , Maiden Bradley , Lydiard Millicent , lost , log book , lives , letters , Landford , Lacock , kitchen garden , Kington Langley , July , January 25th , January 20th , January 1881 , January 11th , impassable , icicles , hunt , houses , homeless , History Centre , hedge , hailstones , Great Storm , Great Somerford , frozen , frost fairs , Ferne House , February , farm , Duke of Beaufort , drifted , downhill , Donhead St. Mary , Donhead St. Mary , Disruption , diaries , December 30th , dance , daily papers , cut glass , cow , cottages , Corsham. , Christmas , Chippenham , Cherhill Mill , Charlote Grove , cattle , cart horse , Calne , Burbage , Bristol Post , Bremhill , Bowood Park , Berwick Bassett , Belcher , 1908 , 1888 , 1881 , 1814 , 1813/14

After all the disruption caused by the recent snowfalls, here at the History Centre we were interested to find out how often similar events occurred in our County in the past.

 

We’ve all heard about the terrible winters of 1813/14 when the River Thames froze and frost fairs were held. Charlote Grove lived at Ferne House, in Donhead St. Mary, and began writing diaries at the age of 18. Her entry for January 11th, 1814 states ‘It snowed very hard. Charles contrived to walk down to Mrs Cooke’s. January 20th - ‘A very deep snow. The mail prevented from coming’. January 25th – ‘I walked with my father to the sheep fold. The icicles on the hedge look like the most beautiful cut glass’.
Men digging out a locomotive stuck near Newton Tony, 1927
Men digging out a locomotive stuck near Newton Tony, 1927
To find out about other snowy winters of the 19th century, please 'read more'.







Just lately my work has taken me to Manor Farm, a mixed farm at Broadchalke, one of those tiny, out-of-the-way places in the south of Wiltshire that you wouldn’t go through unless you had business there. It nestles in the Ebble Valley roughly between Salisbury and Shaftesbury. Manor Farmhouse is one of those long, low, rambling buildings that started at one end and carried on ad infinitum until stopped by a tall, square dovecote; a sort of punctuation mark in stone.  Additional charm is supplied by the weathered grey church of All Saints nearby presiding with quiet dignity over the centre of the village.


 Manor Farm, Broadchalke
Manor Farm, Broadchalke


Every building I see that is of any age has had alterations made, almost as a matter of course, for the varying needs of successive tenants and owners. Looking at Manor Farmhouse it is possible to see its origins in the core of the building at the front. This core consists of a heated hall, then a general living room where the occupants cooked and slept and gathered for warmth, and an unheated parlour; a posh but cold room with a fine quadripartite ceiling (divided into quarters by chamfered beams) which showed off its status as the main secular building of importance or capital messuage of the estate. From digging in the records it seems that in the early 17th century the parlour was too cold for comfort. A big external chimney stack was added onto the side of the parlour probably by Richard Aubrey, father of the celebrated Wiltshire diarist John Aubrey, who was to succeed him as the tenant of the Earls of Pembroke at the farm. Richard had married Deborah, the daughter of Isaac Lyte of Easton Piercey in the north of Wiltshire, where John was born on March 12th 1625. John was removed from Trinity College, Oxford in 1643 because of the Civil War and brought home to Broadchalke where he later carried on the farm after his father died. 'Read more' to find out about his time at the farm....