Theft Of Power Tools From Farm Buildings At Corton

Friday 31st January 2014

Police Rural Crime Team Report ~

POL-54140010440 31/01/2014
Theft of Power Tools in the Corton Warminster area overnight between 5.00 p.m. 30th – 8.30 a.m. 31st January 2014.
Offenders broke padlocks off and entered farm outbuildings.
Items removed –
1 X STIHL MS200 CHAINSAW ORANGE AND WHITE IN COLOUR. SERIAL NUMBER 168 960 391
1 X STIHL FS130 STRIMMER S/N unknown at this time
2 X 18V DEWALT COMBINATION DRILLS, IN ITS CARRY CASE WITH POWER LEADS AND DRILL BITS
1 X 18V DEWALT IMPACT DRIVER DRILL – ALSO IN ITS CARRY CASE WITH LEADS AND DRILL BITS
1 X PAIR OF 18 INCH BLUE BOLT CROPPERS
1 X PAIR OF 1FT LONG RED BOLT CROPPERS
Information to Wiltshire Police on 101 or Crimestoppers 0800 555 111

Being Human ~ At Warminster Library ~ A Free Talk About Hanging And Gibbeting In The West Country, Plus Poetry And Art Recreating The Public Hanging On Arn Hill, Warminster, In 1813, Of The Murderers George Ruddock And George Carpenter

Romancing the Gibbet

Public punishment and local memory in the Georgian West Country

A free event presented by the University Of The West Of England, taking place at Warminster Library, Three Horseshoes Walk, Warminster, BA12 9BT, on Saturday 22nd November 2013, 11.00 a.m. to 1.30 p.m.

The occasional, and extraordinary, 18th-century practice of hanging and/or gibbeting some felons (exhibiting their bodies to public view in iron cages) at the scene of their crime, was intended to leave an indelible and exemplary impression on disorderly peripheral villages and small towns. They were often staged in remote locations before very large crowds and were spectacular, processional events. In 1813, one such execution was carried out upon two convicted murderers, George Ruddock and George Carpenter, on the brow of Arn Hill, overlooking Warminster. For this Being Human event, historian Steve Poole will give an illustrated talk on this and other west country crime scene hangings, explaining their rationale and placing the Arn Hill events into a broader historical context. Then, poet Ralph Hoyte and artist Michael Fairfax will create a public performance related to the events of 1813, involving poetry, sculpture, music, and sound installation. This event gets to the very heart of what it is to ‘be human’ in extraordinary circumstances.

Free admission.

Booking required. You book your free ticket by simply registering your name and email address online.

Click here to book

For further details, contact Steve Poole
email: Steve.Poole@uwe.ac.uk

Being Human Festival Website, click here.

Callous Thieves Rob 82 Year Old Champion Ploughman

Monday 5th July 2004

Valuable horse harnesses and treasured rosettes stolen.

Report by Danny Howell:

Well-known horse ploughing champion Jack House, of Wilton, at the eastern end of the Wylye Valley, is heartbroken following the theft of valuable horse gear and prize-winning mementos from his farm at Quidhampton.

82 year-old Jack has been involved with horses all his life and is known nationwide for his immaculate ploughing at matches and shows. Now, following a robbery between 11 am and 2 pm on Wednesday 23rd June, Jack and his shire horses Captain and Punch are virtually redundant, despite a diary full of up and coming ploughing events.

He’s hoping he will still be able to go to an event in Wilton Park, this month, and he always likes to go to the Great Dorset Steam Fair. Also, in the autumn, is the National Championships. Jack said “The National is held at a different location each year. I’ve travelled all over the country to take part in it. I’ve been as far as Lincolnshire and Cumbria. This year, in October, it’s at Reading, which is much closer and I really want to go to that one, but we’ll have to see now.”

Jack added “The horses will be wondering what has happened. When they hear the lorry start up they immediately know they’re going off to a match. They get very excited. They love it as much as me.”

The callous thieves broke into a padlocked shed, by wrenching a clasp from a door, before removing ancient items of harness and ransacking a trunk full of colourful rosettes and certificates. Ironically, on the shed wall above the trunk, hangs an old framed picture with the words “The Lord Is My Shepherd, I Shall Not Want.’

Among the missing items are a whole set of plough harness and all its decorations including horse brasses, and three big collars plus one or two little ones. The stolen rosettes include the first one Jack ever won – for ploughing at a match at Rockbourne in 1938, and a special one gained for showing horses at the Royal Show in 1970. There were over 1,000 rosettes and certificates taken.

Jack said “I can’t see what they would want the rosettes for. They’re of no interest to anyone except me. I don’t know why they would want to take them.”

Jack is more concerned about the harnesses and collars. He said “I’ve been using those for years and years. They’re very old. I would estimate the value of all the horse items to be at least £4,000, probably more, because when things like that are offered at auctions the price goes up and up because they’re so hard to come by. You’ve got a job to get them.”

On discovering the theft, Jack’s initial reaction concerning those responsible, was to say “I feel like pitch-forking them.” A friend said “That shows how bad he feels about what has happened. He’s very upset inside. He told us he felt like giving up but we’ve persuaded him not to. You can’t give up when you’re down.”

Friends and others are rallying around Jack though. He said “People are stopping me in the street and talking about it. Other ploughmen have contacted me, showing their sympathy and wondering what they can do to help. A good friend, Ken Selway, from near Frome has offered to loan me some of his harness and tack so I can carry on. It’s nice to know that people care but I don’t know if I shall see my things again.”

People in the ploughing match fraternity are just as keen as Jack to discover who carried out the theft and to locate the whereabouts of the stolen items. A Quidhampton resident remembers seeing two men loitering near the end of the farm lane, about a week before the theft, but it’s not known if they are connected.

Members of the public are being asked to keep their eyes and ears open too. Anyone with any information is asked to contact PC Pete Jung of Wilton Police, telephone 01722 742101 or they can phone their nearest police station.

Warminster Teenager To Serve A Two-Year Conditional Discharge For Possession Of Drugs

Friday 20th July 2001

Ryan Lee Coath admitted possessing six-and-a- half tablets of ecstasy and a small quantity of cannabis when he recently appeared before Trowbridge magistrates.

Coath, 19, of Daniell Crest, Warminster, represented himself in court, where magistrates heard how police officers had found drugs on him while he was hiding from them in a supermarket car park. He said, in his defence, that the drugs were for his own personal use.

Magistrates sentenced Coath to serve a two-year conditional discharge and fined him £60 costs.

The Black Bull, Warminster ~ Scene Of A Murder In 1820

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

An inn known as The Bull or The Black Bull, recorded in the 1801 Survey of Warminster, was situated at West End; the tenant being A. Whittock. West End in 1801 stretched from the Obelisk to Bleeck’s Buildings at West Street. The eastern part of it is known as Vicarage Street today, the other part being West Street.

An entry in Book 13 of The Parish Registers of St. Denys’ Church, Warminster, reads: “Patrick McKey (an Irishman) barberously [sic] murdered at the Bull Inn, West End, August 30th 1820, aged 49.”

The inn was still called The Bull in 1822 but by 1830 the name had changed to The Star.