Halliday Commonplace Book

Danny Howell writes:

In November 1993, Warminster Dewey Museum received notification from Nancy Lunden (who grew up in Warminster in the 1930s, her father being W.R. Marshall of the firm of solicitors Ponting & Marshall) of Sweden that she was to dispose of her book collection by auction at Sotheby’s in December 1993.

Of particular interest was a commonplace book kept by Edmund Halliday of East Street, Warminster. Halliday, a member of one of Warminster’s oldest families, was sent to Spain as a young man to learn the wine trade. In the book, handwritten in small but clear writing, were accounts of local items including the finding of a live newt in a fossil at Warminster, the corn and flour trade at Bishopstrow Mill, and the falling in of his mother’s grave at the Minster Churchyard.

The Museum passed details of the book and the auction to Steve Hobbs, County Archivist at the Wilshire Record Office, Trowbridge, who was successful in purchasing the book for £200. It is to be added to many other items regarding the Halliday family which are already deposited at the Record Office. Steve says the book is in excellent condition and a typical example of Halliday’s avid quest for facts and information. Steve is happy for Warminster History Society members and other interested persons to call at the Record Office if they wish to see the book.

Phase Three Of The Three Year Plan For Warminster Dewey Museum

Monday 22nd November 1993

Danny Howell writes –

Decision made at Warminster History Society Executive Committee Meeting.

Our suggested idea for phase three was to acquire two fossil cabinets and video equipment for visual displays. At an executive committee meeting of the Warminster History Society (the governing body of the Dewey Museum), held on 22 November 1993, it was agreed that we divide these acquisitions over two years, not one, from the cost point of view. We have therefore decided to purchase the fossil cabinets in 1994 and the video equipment in 1995.

On the recommendation of Danny Howell, Jack Field went to the Red House Museum at Christchurch to see their fossil cabinets which are of a special design – they feature spring loaded draws to take the weight of the contents, security proof covers, and binders for holding laminated pages of information.

Warminster History Society member Roger Hammond has offered to make the cabinets for us, based on the Red House design but amended for our own purposes, using elm as recommended by the Conservation Laboratory.

The cost of these cabinets has been estimated at about £3,000, and grant aid of 45% from the Area Museum Council has been applied for.

The cabinets will be situated in the display area of the museum, allowing the public free access to the Victor Manley collection of Warminster fossils – something the History Society has been hoping to do for some time.

Warminster Dewey Museum Represented At Sheldon Manor Visit

Friday 12 November 1993

Glenn Head and Danny Howell attended the autumn meeting of the Wiltshire Museums’ Association, which was held at Sheldon Manor, near Chippenham, on 12 November 1993.

There was no formal business but a guided tour of the Manor by the owners Major and Mrs. Gibbs.

Warminster Dewey Museum Represented At A Trade Fair

Monday 18th October 1993:

Jack Field, Glenn Head, Danny Howell, and Graham Zebedee, represented Warminster Dewey Museum when they attended a trade fair organised by Wiltshire Library & Museum Service, at Bradford On Avon, on Monday 18th October 1993.

Held at the White Hart Hotel, Bradford-on-Avon, it was a very informative day.

As well as visiting the various stalls, a video seminar was enjoyed.

The refreshments, both in quantity and quality, were excellent.

Thanks and congratulations were given to the County Museums Officer, Lorna Marvell, and her colleagues, for organising a very successful event.

In Search Of Ceawlin

Tuesday 12th October 1993

Danny Howell writes:

The efforts of Ceawlin, a long forgotten king, to unite the aristocratic forces in Southern England during the latter part of the Sixth Century, was the subject of the October 1993 lecture to the Warminster History Society.

Sounds dull and long winded? Definitely not when the speaker is Somerset born Martyn Whittock, head of humanities at Kingdown School and successful author of school textbooks (The Origins of England AD 410 – 600 and The Roman Empire) and historical novels (including The Dice In Flight and The Moon In The Morning).

Martyn’s fast and audible delivery (as he bounced up and down like a dervish on hot coals) probing the annals of the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle and interpreting the evidence on the ground in the countryside both sides of the West Wansdyke, made for a most intriguing glimpse into Wessex nearly 1,500 years ago.

Amusing too, even when it comes to basics (“slaughtering people with swords is a naughty business” said Martyn), but his analogy comparing today’s Renault car drivers with the Saxons who commandeered the barrow mounds for burying great men was spot on.

“Here,” he said, “was a minority signifying their dominance but not being in any great control.”

The ancient burial mounds, including King Barrow on the outskirts of Warminster at Boreham, were venerated with folklore in the local landscape; they had native sanctity and came with an already existing culture. Martyn was quick, however, to point out that there is no evidence to tell us what Iron Age or Saxon man (or woman) thought.

And who was Ceawlin? According to Martyn’s researches, he was an overlord of the Southern English. Although he was never described as a king in any of the varying manuscripts of the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle, he was known as a king locally, albeit a member of a powerful ruling family.

The first reference to him was in 556 AD, when, with the help of Cynric, he fought against the Britons at Beranburgh (Barbury Castle on the Ridgway now south of modern Swindon), and so began a turbulent period after 50 years of inactivity in Wessex.

After his triumph at Barbury, Ceawlin went from strength to strength, taking the kingdom of Wessex and making an excursion into Kent (an up and coming kingdom on account of its links with a European trading network).

Then he came back west to kill three other “kings’, namely Coinmail, Condidan and Farinmail at Dyrham, eight miles north of Bath. The battle site is unknown, but could be associated with the promontory hill fort of Hinton Camp.

In 577, Ceawlin (plus Cuthwine) captured Gloucester, Cirencester and Bath, but they were not the places we immediately think of.

Around Bath were people proud of tradition and clinging to an imperial past, while at Cirencester (Corinium) was an old Roman amphitheatre occupied by somebody with pretensions (he had time and ability to organise labour to construct fortifications).

In the year 584,Ceawlin captured many villages, with a small band of followers who offered their services in return for a share of the spoils but he was suddenly angered.

Perhaps the cause of his wrath was Ceol, the new “king’ in Wessex in 591. A year later Ceawlin attempted to regain the initiative at Adam’s Grave, the so-called burial mound of Woden, in the Vale of Pewsey; but the tide had turned, for the Chronicle says “there was great slaughter this year”.

Ceawlin perished in 592, and the end of the Sixth Century saw Wessex as a south coast power. Ceawlin had achieved much, uniting the scattered English population centres by successful military campaigns.

Martyn Whittock’s handling of the evidence, bearing in mind that the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle is a biased report (it ignores, for instance, the Jutes who resided on the Isle of Wight and in the New Forest), was a worthy example of scholarly detective work.

Warminster History Society members were much impressed, and asked many questions after the lecture.

A vote of thanks for a unique foray into the area’s Dark Ages past was given by Society Chairman Mike Ednay.

Warminster Dewey Museum Represented At The Autumn Meeting Of The South Western Federation Of Museums

Friday 1st October 1993

Glenn Head and Danny Howell represented Warminster Dewey Museum at the Autumn meeting of the South Western Federation of Museums, held at Wells, on Friday 1st October 1993.

The subject matter Local Government Reform in the wake of the abolishment of County Councils, was “heavy going’ but a matter of concern for those involved with museums. Wiltshire is likely to be reorganised soon. People are being asked to make their views known with regard how important museums are and how they should be safeguarded financially.

Warminster Dewey Museum had been the subject of a visit in the summer of 1992 by Clive Grenyer, the Chairman of the County Councils’ Association, to determine the support that was given to museums in the county.

The morning session at Wells was followed by visits to the Glastonbury Tribune, the Glastonbury Abbey Museum and the Rural Life Museum at the Tithe Barn, also in Glastonbury.

Return Of The Heytesbury-Knook Parish Boundary Marker

September 1993

Danny Howell writes:

The Heytesbury/Knook parish boundary marker which was given to the Warminster Dewey Museum in 1993 by the Highways Department of Wiltshire County Council has been returned to them.

The Warminster History Society, which oversees the Warminster Dewey Museum, had not accessioned it but Graham Zebedee had given it an undercoat as the first stage of conservation.

It transpired that the marker is a Grade II listed monument and should have remained in situ.

Danny Howell had received phone calls about it from the County Council and the Department of the Environment requesting its return.

The Highways Department have reinstated the marker, where it was before, adjacent the road outside Bunter’s Cottage, on the brow of Unicorn Hill at Heytesbury.

Wiltshire Museums Education Pack For Schools

September 1993

Danny Howell writes:

Warminster Dewey Museum has received its copy of the Wiltshire Museums Education Pack for Schools.

This has been financially supported by grants from the Museums & Galleries Commission, the Historical Association Young Historian Scheme, the Nuffield Foundation, and the Area Museum Council For The South West.

Copies will be sent to all primary schools in Wiltshire to help them use the county museums more effectively.

Warminster Branch Of Amnesty International Established

A Warminster branch of Amnesty International was established in June 1992, when a meeting was held at Teddington House, Church Street, Warminster, the home of book publisher Adrian Phillips.

The decision to start a Warminster branch came about because people in Warminster, if they wanted to attend an Amnesty group meeting, had to travel to Bath or Salisbury.

The committee, formed at the first meeting, comprised: Adrian Phillips, Tricia Rigg, Dorothea Sultana, and Rev. Fred Woods.

Fund-raising was the first aim of the Warminster branch, and Dorothea suggested holding a bring and buy sale and coffee evening at her home, 1 Boreham Road, Warminster.

A meeting was arranged for 21 September 1992, at the Athenaeum, Warminster, with the emphasis towards a campaign to highlight the dreadful plight of children in South America.

Crypts, Bartons And Ancient Graffiti

Wednesday 27th May 1992

Danny Howell writes:

Twenty members of Warminster History Society made an evening visit on Wednesday 27th May 1992 to the ancient town of Bruton, escorted by Society member Chris Bubb.

Chris showed them the church, the packhorse bridge, and Sexey’s Hospital with its chapel and boardroom.

St. Mary’s Church has two towers: the one next to the north aisle is a century older than the west tower, which dates from 1449-1456, stands 102½ feet high (a typical height for a Somerset tower) and houses a peal of six bells.

The north aisle contains the Royal Arms of Charles II, appropriately a restoration, as they were put back up after being discovered in someone’s shed.

The parish registers, which date from 1554, record both Charles I and Charles II staying and worshipping at Bruton.

The chancel was entirely rebuilt by Sir Charles Berkeley in 1743. The architect was Nathaniel Ireson of Wincanton. The plaster reredos covers the east wall and is an example of the sacramental piety of the period.

A fine tomb chest on the north side of the chancel features the recumbent effigies of Sir Maurice Berkeley, who died in 1581, and his first and second wives who died in 1559 and 1585. The tomb is one of the few in the country to feature three effigies.

The crypt below the church, which may sometimes be seen by arrangement, measures nearly 40 feet square and contains many lead coffins, some of which have burst exposing the bones of those who rest there.

Bruton was once the home of a mediaeval Augustinian Priory and Abbey. The field south of the church is still called Abbey Field. After the dissolution of the monastery in 1539, the family home of the Berkeleys stood there for 250 years.

The 15th century dove-cote on top of the hill and a long buttressed wall in the street called Plox below are visible reminders of the former abbey. A Georgian rectory now stands behind the old buttressed wall.

Bruton features many narrow walkways known as bartons. Members of the History Society made their way over the river Brue via a 15th century packhorse bridge, passing by the Victorian fire-engine house, and into Nathaniel’s Barton, which took them under the houses and into the High Street.

The river looked very shallow. Bruton used to frequently flood, but is now protected by an interesting flood relief scheme. Several signs showing the height of the flood in various years can be seen about the town.

Near the west end of the High Street stands Sexey’s Hospital. The western range dates from 1638. Hugh Sexey, auditor to Queen Elizabeth I, founded the charity which administered these almshouses, and was a vital benefactor to three schools.

The chapel and the boardroom at the Hospital contain fine woodwork. The pews and the pulpit feature some early graffiti. An Armada chest in the hall next to the boardroom has a lid with 24 locks operated by the turn of a single key.

The architecture of Bruton shows a rare continuity, through six centuries, of styles and techniques used where stone meets timber in Wessex.

Many houses survived the fire of 1647. Priory House is a late 15th century half-timbered jettied town house. The pharmacy was a gentleman’s house, and its 18th century façade hides a building dating from the 16th and 17th centuries.

Last port of call for the History Society was opposite Patwell Pump, a communal parish pump in use after 1900.

A vote of thanks was given to Mr. Bubb for a most interesting evening.

Described by the Council for British Archaeology as “of special importance as regards historic quality” Bruton was the first conservation area of East Somerset. Today, Bruton has much to offer the inquisitive visitor, retaining its special historic atmosphere and charm.

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