R. Butcher & Son, 1989

Adrian Phillips, in the book The Warminster Trail, compiled for the Warminster Festival 1989, and published by Aris & Phillips Ltd., wrote:

On the north side [of George Street], Nos.39/40 are the premises of R. Butcher & Son.

This business, with Corden’s and Coates & Parker, is one of the three, still in existence, about to celebrate their second centenary.

A timber frame building existed on the site in about 1600.

In 1800 the back area was a stone yard and in about 1815 the two houses were extended forwards into George Street, with an ashlar façade.

The rear became a timber mill in about 1880 and was still used as such in 1910, when Robert Butcher moved in.

All the original buildings in the yard have been replaced except for a malthouse which is used as a store.

The United Church At George Street

Adrian Phillips, in the book The Warminster Trail, compiled for the Warminster Festival 1989, and published by Aris & Phillips Ltd., wrote:

The United Church came into being in 1984, when the Methodist and United Reform Churches joined in a physical and spiritual union; this building having formerly belonged to the Methodists.

There has been a church on this site for several centuries, with some evidence that an earlier meeting place was disbanded in 1776 because of persecution of the Methodists.

A new church was built in 1804 and the present building erected in 1861.

The roots of Methodism in the town stretch back before 1753, when Warminster was first visited by travelling preachers, probably drawn by the evil reputation of Warminster “Common”, for it was there that they preached. Today that area is a pleasant residential district on the Southern outskirts of the town, but in those days was renowned throughout the West Country and beyond as a hot-bed of vice and crime.

After three years the preachers moved their meetings into the town, but suffered persecution. They begged John Wesley to visit Warminster, and on October 3rd 1758 he preached in the Tanyard, situated just off George Street, up Portway, near the present Portway Surgery. Even so, meetings were discontinued.

But in 1770 Warminster is mentioned as “a new place with 14 members’. More persecution followed, which included breaking the pulpit and stools, turning a fire hose on the preacher, and throwing a viper at him. So once again, in 1776, services were abandoned.

But the Methodists did not give up and resumed normal service again, in 1780, which led to the building of the church. This was modernised in 1976 with the addition of a new porch, and more recently the stained glass window of “The Good Shepherd’ was brought from the abandoned United Reform Church in The Close and installed here. It is fitting that it should figure in this volume as it is exactly 100 years old in this Warminster Festival year.

George Street, Warminster

From the Wylye Valley Life magazine, 1988:

George Street is named after George Wansey, a clothier who once lived at Byne House in nearby Church Street. He died on 19th March 1807 and in his will he left £1,000 for town improvements on condition a similar sum could be raised from other sources for the same purpose. (He also left another £1,000 sum in his will to make annual charity payments of £1 each to aged widows). Following the formation of a committee, all the houses on the south side of what is now George Street were bought and demolished, making the road wider. Land on the north side which had been gardens was let and a row of three-storey houses was built about 1825. The street which was formerly known as Chain Street was then re-named George Street.

The former name of Chain Street originated from the fact that both ends of this piece of road were closed off with chains, making it accessible to foot passengers only. Horsedrawn traffic passed behind the houses on the south side of the street along a way known as Shallow Water, so named because it was often flooded in winter-time.

An open stream once ran across the road (between what is now Butcher’s Yard and the Golden Kitchen take-away) and was crossed by a footbridge known as Almshouse Bridge. The almshouses which gave the bridge its name once stood near the lower end of the High Street. They were first occupied in 1561 but had fallen into a state of decay by the middle of the 18th century. They were demolished about 1750. When Chain Street was widened as part of the Wansey improvements, the stream was covered over and the footbridge disappeared from the scene prior to 1832. The stream, which rises near Cley Hill, where it is joined by another stream called the Rocky Daddy, winds its way via Churchfields and passes virtually unnoticed under the road at the same spot today. Known locally as the Swan River, the stream continues underground, under the Western Car Park to greet the light of day once more before passing under Weymouth Street, emerging once again in the Lake Pleasure Grounds. From there it flows to Calveswater where it joins the River Wylye. 

When excavations were made in 1904 concerning gas mains, several large pieces of wood were found at regular intervals between George Street and High Street. These were believed to be the last surviving remnants of a fence which once stood at the side of the pedestrian walkway. The fence, no doubt, prevented those on foot from falling into the Chain Street stream. The depth of these discoveries seemed to indicate that the road must once have been deep with ruts, so much so that walkers could probably have stepped off the footpath directly on to the tops of any loaded wagons that were passing by. Further excavations in 1949 revealed more of these posts and their accompanying chains beneath the middle of George Street, immediately opposite Butcher’s Yard.

The three-storey block of houses on the north side of George Street, which were constructed with some of the money left by George Wansey, have since been converted on their ground floor levels, and also some of their first floors, to commercial use.

George Street today is the home of about thirty businesses, including shops, restaurants and offices, but this commercial aspect is not a new one. In 1860 a printer called Yockney was based here and so too was a timber merchant called Mr. Biass who died in 1842. Number 2 George Street was once the premises of a chemist called Henry Siminson. In 1877 he advertised for sale circular spring trusses at 2 shillings and 6 pence, and a more exclusive model of the same device made by Salmon and Ody for two shillings more. He also offered a “teeth carefully extracted’ service. Unfortunately for the victims of toothache who went to him, his carefulness did not include the use of an anaesthetic, only a tap on the head with a wooden mallet!

By 1879 there were several traders at George Street. They included James Phillips (tailor), John Henry Neat (painter), Thomas Maidment (currier), Thomas Cornish (grocer), John Festing Goodman (solicitor), John Atkin (auctioneer and valuer), George Streadman (hairdresser), Richard Sly (grocer), William Scammell (builder), Charles Young (bootmaker), and George White (mealman). George White’s shop was at Number 7 George Street, premises currently occupied by the Baby Shop. Mr. White stocked his shop with sacks of open corn and animal feeds, much to the delight of children who used to look through the window to see the mice running over the top of the sacks!

Among the other tradespeople at George Street in the 19th Century were the Provis family, who the local historian W. Middlebrook tells us have a connection with the novelist Charles Dickens. In “The Changing Face of Warminster’ (1971) Mr. Middlebrook noted: “The Provis family were trades people too and they provide an interesting link with Charles Dickens. In “The Times’ of September 17th 1853, the famous novelist found a report on the trial at Gloucester Assizes of Tom Provis of Warminster, on a charge of attempting to prove that he was Sir Richard Smythe of Ashton Court. Inspector Field, who often accompanied Dickens when visiting the haunts of the underworld in London, had the job of tracking down imposter Provis, and at Warminster he found an old woman who was related to Provis and took lodgings with her. Dickens contemplated writing a “life of Inspector Field’ and drew him as Inspector Bucket in “Bleak House’. Later, when he wrote “Great Expectations’ Dickens used the name Provis for the old convict, one of the principal characters in the story.”

Ebenezer Place is a name no longer found in the current Warminster street directory. It was once a group of three terraced-cottages tucked away behind the south side of George Street.

Another yard at George Street, on the north side, was that of the Castle Inn, which has long since disappeared. An old malthouse in the yard, named appropriately the Castle Malthouse, was taken over in 1902 for use by a steam laundry. The Castle Steam Laundry, as it was called, served both Warminster and the Wylye Valley, with a collection and delivery service the same week. Other offices covered the Westbury, Trowbridge, Bradford on Avon and Frome areas. The Warminster receiving office of the laundry, based in the last house at the western end of the three-storey terrace, advertised in the 1920s with slogans such as “It saves your linen to have it washed in soft water. Town waters are usually hard. Warminster water is Abnormally Soft. Go to a laundry that uses soft water,” and “In all England you cannot get a collar better finished or starched than at the Castle Steam Laundry.” The proprietor of the Laundry during the 1920s was Captain Geoffrey Wilmot Morrice who lived at Tullos on the Boreham Road. He was a leading member of the Warmnster Operatic Society during the 1920s and 1930s and also produced many of their successful productions. The Laundry eventually moved from George Street to new premises built in 1948 behind the Regal Cinema car park in Weymouth Street. Here it traded as the Warminster Laundry until its closure in 1969.

Other previous businesses at George Street have included Foreman & Worthington’s (house furnishings); Miss Alice Francis (cobbler’s shop); Walter Dodge (boots and shoes); Miss Lily Dodge (confectionery); John Arthur Gingell (grocer); John Everett (grocer); Miss Matilda White (fancy goods); Payne & Son’s (bakers, grocers and pork butchers); Maurice Cruse (motor dealer and charabanc proprietor); Bowden and Spender (fishmongers); Eastmans Ltd. (butchers); and Robert Bass (grocer). A speciality at Robert Bass’s shop was packs of broken biscuits he used to sell at cheap prices, a popular buy with many of Warminster’s residents.

A stroll along George Street today reveals a continuation of the commercial scene. Among the present businesses are: The Baby Shop; Tony’s Carpets; Roy’s, gents hairdressers; Lee’s Takeaway; David Wiltshire Photography; Sew “n’ Sew, fabrics; J. & J. Linens and Lingerie; Edward Moore, solicitor; Peter Gough, menswear; Warminster Automobiles; and the Wylye Valley Life, local community magazine. 

The Plough, Beerhouse, Warminster

Reg Cundick and Danny Howell in the book The Inns And Taverns Of Warminster, published in November 1987, stated:

The Plough, Warminster
The Plough was a beerhouse on the south side of George Street, east of the Were Walk. In the 1838 Survey of Warminster it is recorded as Plot No.828, with the landlord James Bristow. He was still there in 1844 but was unheard of after the late 1850s.

The Plough only had a beerhouse licence, which prohibited the sale of spirits. A beerhouse licence, issued under the rules of the Beerhouse Act of 1830, cost £2 per annum and allowed a householder assessed at the poor rate to retail beer from his own house.

George Street, Warminster

George Street, Warminster

Bruce Watkin, in 1985, wrote ~

George Street, west of Portway, is an early 19th century improvement initiated after a bequest by clothier George Wansey (died 1807). The brick terrace was begun in 1815, and Portway Corner rebuilt in about 1825. George Street was given its present width after tiny houses on the south side, part of the ancient Chain Street, were cleared away. The Methodist chapel was designed by Stent, 1861. Thomas Provis, transported for fraud in 1853 (cf. the Provis of “Great Expectations”) was one of a family of George Street carpenters.

23, 24 And 25 George Street, Warminster

Mr. A.C. Halliday in his notes on Warminster and the surrounding villages, penned in the 1980s, in a hard-bound notebook (now in the possession of Danny Howell), wrote:

Reminiscences of Mrs. Webb of West Parade, our “Mrs. Mopp’ for years. Her mother and father (a miner in Somerset and Wales) injured and moved in 1940 to No.25 George Street. Now the end house of the brick terrace on the north side. After World War II, circa. 1947/48, Nos.24 and 23 (identical with hers) were pulled down, as was a very large lodging, ex-private house, all to make way for the Octagon Garage.

J. &. J. Sports, Warminster

January 1981:

Advertisement –

J. & J. Sports,
17 George Street, Warminster.
Telephone 212095.

Training Shoes and Football Boots
by Puma and Addidas.

Tennis Raquets by Slazenger,
Grays and Dunlop.

Speedo Swimming Gear.

Tracksuits.

Accessories for badminton, squash,
table tennis, hockey, darts, etc.

Camping Gear.

Game Angling and Coarse Angling.

Good discounts for clubs.

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