Saturday 31st October 2025

Sandy Tracey went full-on Halloween in her front garden at Masefield Road, Warminster. It looked fantastic!
Topics about organisations and activities in Warminster.
Saturday 31st October 2025

Sandy Tracey went full-on Halloween in her front garden at Masefield Road, Warminster. It looked fantastic!
Friday 31st October 2025

A flyer is being distributed by EBBRAG (the East Boreham Business And Residents Action Group) alerting the public of Warminster of the threat of housing development (large scale) on Home Farm.
Bellway Homes have submitted a planning pre-application for houses on Home Farm, Boreham, to Wiltshire Council. (The public are not allowed to see this).
A planning inspector turned down a previous application for Home Farm in 2019.
The Warminster Neighbourhood Plan is seriously flawed.
If you are against unwanted and unsuitable development on Home Farm and want to support EBBRAG in their campaign to stop this planning disaster, please go to their website and register your name for updates and further information.
email: info@ebbrag.com
Friday 31st October 2025
Warminster Town Council at Odds with Residents Over New Housing Plans ~ Warminster Neighbourhood Plan is deeply flawed and written by an unaccountable consultant paid for by public funds.
Latest news from the East Boreham Business And Residents Action Group (EBBRAG):
Warminster Council at Odds with Residents Over New Housing Plans
Warminster Town Council (TC) looks increasingly out of step with its residents over proposals to open up yet more land for housing development.
A recent council survey revealed deep public concern about the strain on local services and the loss of the town’s cherished landscape. Yet, despite 61% of respondents in the recent council survey opposing development on Home Farm Land, the council has chosen to include this very site as a key area for future expansion in its draft Warminster Neighbourhood Plan.
The decision has sparked frustration among locals — especially given that the land’s controlling owners live overseas and have no direct stake in the wellbeing or character of the town. These owners have previously sought planning permission to build on the site, even though it lies outside Wiltshire’s Strategic Housing Plan to 2038 and the official town settlement boundary. On previous occasions, the most recent in 2019, a Government Planning Inspector concluded the land unsuitable for housing development.
Strong opposition to the proposal has also come from Bishopstrow House Hotel, one of the town’s largest employer, and from local Wiltshire MP Andrew Murrison, both of whom argue that such expansion risks undermining the very qualities that make Warminster distinctive. To develop Home Farm Land severely undermines the hotel’s future, as the proposed development will be in eyesight of the hotel and its gardens, thereby affecting the great economic benefit it currently brings to Warminster as a whole.
Critics say the current draft Neighbourhood Plan is deeply flawed and written by an unaccountable consultant paid for by public funds, rather than for or by residents. Warminster’s unique identity stems from its people, its historic buildings, and its remarkable setting within the surrounding landscape. Many of the town’s most valued heritage and natural assets lie precisely on its eastern edge — the very area now being targeted for development.
As the debate continues, one question looms large: will the council listen to its community and protect the town’s character, or push ahead with plans that could irreversibly alter it?
www.ebbrag.com/www.ebbrag.com/

Danny Howell writes: My photograph shows a view of Boreham. The green field near the centre of the pic, adjacent The Dene, is part of Home Farm and is under consideration for housing by Bellway Homes. They have a pre-application for planning put before Wiltshire Council (which the public are not allowed to see). And Warminster Town Council recently held a meeting with some Boreham and Bishopstrow residents asking them to agree that Home Farm should be developed, despite the fact it has previously been turned down by a planning inspector and is against the will of a large number of Warminster’s residents.
Friday 30th October 2025
Warminster Town Council And Civic Centre
Jð¨ð› ð€ðð¯ðžð«ð: ð“ð¨ð°ð§ ðƒðžð¯ðžð¥ð¨ð©ð¦ðžð§ð ðŽðŸðŸð¢ðœðžð«
Do you want to work as part of a friendly, growing team which will help deliver our vision for Warminster? If so, then we are looking to recruit a: ð“ð¨ð°ð§ ðƒðžð¯ðžð¥ð¨ð©ð¦ðžð§ð ðŽðŸðŸð¢ðœðžð«
• 30 hours per week
• Salary on the Local Government Pay Scale SCP18 – 23 (£31,537 to £34,434 per annum pro rata) £16.35 – £17.85 per hour
• The post includes entry into the Local Government Pension Scheme
You will be working on issues such as Town Centre Regeneration and vitality, the Neighbourhood Plan, the Climate Change Action Plan, and others. A full job description and person specification is available with the application form.
If you are interested in applying for this challenging and exciting opportunity, please contact the Deputy Town Clerk, for an application form and job description:
Warminster Town Council, Warminster Civic Centre, Sambourne Road BA12 8LB
Email: jhalls@warminster-tc.gov.uk
Telephone: 01985 214847
or they can be downloaded from www.warminster-tc.gov.uk
Closing date for all applications is: Friday 21st November at Midday.
Thursday 30th October 2025

A photograph I took 9 years ago, on 30th October 2016, of a witch on the wall of the Anchor, Market Place, Warminster.
Danny Howell writes:
Writing in the 1920s, Victor Strode Manley, who not only was a teacher at Sambourne School, but was also a keen local historian, mentioned a possible witch in Warminster. In his ‘Regional Survey Of Warminster And District’ (unpublished) he made a reference to a woman who lived in a little thatched cottage on West Street. He noted that her name was Tilly Flaherty and that she was a reputed witch. He gave no other details and we are left to wonder at what time period Tilly Flaherty lived and as to why she was thought of by others as a witch.
But we do have some historical information regarding witchcraft in Warminster in the 17th century – information re-published in the early 1970s by Wilfred Middlebrook, another of Warminster’s amateur local historians.
He wrote: In days gone by, witchcraft was as prevalent in Warminster as in any other part of the country, and there are several cases of witchcraft or complaints of witchcraft in the records of the county of Wilts., the Great Rolls of the seventeenth century Quarter Sessions.
In 1650 a Warminster woman complained to the Justices that a neighbour called her a “bun’ or witch.
And some 37 years previously: In 1613, at Marlborough Quarter Sessions, Margaret Pilton of Warminster was accused of being a witch by Avis Glasier. During Lent the two women met at the house of William Mathew at “Borom,” [Boreham, on the east side of Warminster], where Avis had gone to take a breakfast to her betrothed husband. As the two women walked back to the town of Warminster – probably along Smallbrook Lane, or across the neighbouring fields [on which the Prestbury housing estate was built in the 1960s] – “Margrett did desire the said Avyes to gyve her her soule or spirit,” promising that Avis would live twenty years the longer and recover her health. Avis refused but the witch “drew her home to her house and made her drinck [drink] some of her drinck,” and said if Avis told her friends she should live longer in her pains, and made her promise to send for her before she departed this world.
Some weeks later, in July, Avis sent for the alleged witch Margaret Pilton. Margaret ordered everyone out of the house and asked Avis whether she had told anyone. “And then she said Margrett departed from the sayed Avyes and after her departure she said Avyes fell into a mervellouse Traunces as thoughe ye should have departed strayghte.”
It sounds as if the marvelous “traunce” was some sort of trance that put Avis into a death-like state.
The story was sufficient for Margaret Pilton to appear in court, on a charge of witchcraft.
Margaret Pilton’s version of events when she was examined by Edward Ludlowe on 27th July 1613 was that she was being kind enough to treat Avis for an abscess. Margaret explained that as she and Avis walked home from Boreham, Margaret asked Avis the cause of her sickness which proved to be an abscess or “imposthume,’ and “it was impossible for Avis to recover from it.” At her house in Warminster Margaret gave her friend a medicinal drink “as shee did drincke of herselfe”; on departing, Avis entreated her to come if she should send for her.” In other words, Avis was ill and sent for her. Margaret denied asking Avis for her soul.
There doesn’t seem to be any record of whether Margaret Pilton was found guilty of being a witch or not. No mention is made of any sentence in the published report of the court, though at that time most towns were equipped with a ducking stool (also called a cucking stool or a cooking stoole) for dealing with witches. Ducking stools were also used to punish women who were considered “scolds” or spreaders of untrue gossip. Basically, the punishment was really about including humiliation.
The ducking stool consisted of a wooden chair attached to a see-saw like beam. The alleged witch was held in the chair by an iron band so that she could not get out. A magistrate could say how many times a suspected witch could be ducked into the water. If she drowned she was proclaimed not guilty, but she was of course then dead. If she didn’t drown, but “floated” then she was deemed to be at work with the devil and proven guilty. If found guilty a witch could be executed in various ways, including hanging, or being strangled or crushed and then burnt. The destruction of the body was to ensure a witch couldn’t come back to life.
A man called Simon Sloper was responsible for providing and keeping in good repair a ducking stool in Warminster. Simon Sloper was the owner of Black Dog Wood and he lived in a house along the narrow road we now call Ash Walk. In the first half of the 17th century, the present Ash Walk was called Sloper’s Walk.
Wilfred Middlebrook wrote: There are several references to the Sloper family in the 17th century Quarter Sessions records. For example, in July 1607, it was recorded that a “cooking stoole’ [ducking stool] was needed in the town of Warminster, to be made and maintained by Simon Sloper. Thirty years later, in 1637, the Jury at Warminster present “that they have neither a cucking stool nor pillory in Warminster, and that William Sloper must maintain and put them up.” It seems as though the present century has no monopoly in procrastination, for in 1647 comes: “We present that we have noe stocks in the towne of Warminster in default of William Sloper” (ordered to be provided before August under penalty of 40/-). In 1650 the presentment to the Jury states “that their church is mightily in decay insomuch that the pishoners (parishioners) are afraid to assemble there,” and in 1669 we find “Simon Sloper Junior presented for not setting up a Pillory and Cookinge Stoole in Warminster.”
Wilfred Middlebrook concluded: “They must have been a kind-hearted lot, those Slopers of Ash Walk.”
I suppose the question we must ask ourselves now, if Warminster had a ducking stool for dealing with alleged witches, where was it used? On the River Wylye perhaps? Or some pond in Warminster? It is known that ducking stools were not always permanent features but were often on wheels so they could be taken to the bank of any chosen river or pond.
Tuesday 28th October 2028
Sheelagh Wurr writes:
Hi Danny,
I have often wondered about the name Holly Cooper on the WW1 memorial in St John’s Church, Warminster, as it sounds like a woman which would be unusual. I can’t find anybody listed other than a George Holly Cooper who was in the navy. He was born in Hampshire and I am not sure how he could come to be in Warminster. Have you any information?
Danny Howell replies:
Hello Sheelagh,
Re: George Holly Cooper.
Yes he was in the Navy and he was from Hampshire – born at Broughton in 1885.
His naval career lists him at various times as a stoker and a petty officer, and as a mechanician when he died.
His official number was 300648 (Po).
He served on HMS Invincible and died on 31st May 1916. He was buried at sea.
He certainly had a Warminster connection.
He married Mildred Alvina Doel at St. John’s Church, Boreham, Warminster, on 1st July 1911.
George Holly Cooper was then aged 26 and he gave his occupation as a stoker in His Majesty’s Navy.
His bride was aged 27, and was the daughter of a gardener called John Doel who lived at East Street.
George Holly Cooper and Mildred Alvina Doel gave their addresses on the marriage certificate as Boreham, Warminster.
At the time of the 1921 Census Mildred is living at 40 Hollam Road, Milton (Southsea area of Portsmouth – another naval place).
I presume on marriage Mildred went to live near naval ports, with George away serving.
The 1921 Census records she has an 8 year old daughter called Kathleen Joan Holly Cooper (she was born at Gillingham, Kent – another naval place I presume).
As far as I know Mildred Alvina Cooper died in 1957. Her death was registered in Warminster.
Hope this solves why a man born in Hampshire is recorded on the war memorial at St. John’s Church, Warminster.
Regards, Danny.
Monday 27th October 2024

Wessex MS Therapy Centre, Warminster.
2 weeks today we are holding our Christmas Fair!
At the MS Centre (next to Warminster Hospital).
2-4:30pm Saturday 8th November 2025.
Please come along and support our charity and local stall holders
and get in the early Christmas spirit . . . there’s cake too! Lots of cake!
www.facebook.com/wessexms
Saturday 25th October 2025
From the Co-Chairs, Sustainable Warminster:
Dear members,
We hope Autumn has treated you well. As we transition into Winter and the darker, longer nights, we send our best wishes.
Please see below some Dates for your Diary in October, November, and December 2025. Following these events, we’ve also included some recent news items you may find of interest:
Thursday, 30 October, 9:30am, Wildflower plug planting session at Fore Street, Warminster.
Help add colour, biodiversity, and pollinator-friendly plants to Fore Street, Warminster. Duration: approx. 3 hours. Please wear suitable outdoor clothing for the weather, gardening gloves, and sturdy footwear for uneven ground. Let us know if you can make it by emailing Amy directly: press@sustainablewarminster.co.uk
Thursday, 30 October, 10:00am – 5:00pm, Practical Ways of Dealing with a Changing Climate: Sustainability & Resilience Event in Westbury.
Westbury Town Council is hosting a free event at The Laverton in Westbury to help Wiltshire residents understand the small steps they can take to improve the climate for themselves and future generations.
To take part, please register to ensure a place and get a free lunch: Sustainable, Resilient Westbury – Westbury Town Council
Friday, 31 October, Halloween Food Night at The Wellbeing Hub in Warminster, 6:00-10:00pm, 36 High Street, Warminster, BA12 0AF
Fancy dress optional. More details are in the attached flyer.
Friday, 7 November, 7:30pm, Green Drinks at The Wellbeing Hub, 36 High Street, Warminster, BA12 0AF
Join us for an informal gathering to chat about our work or simply connect. New attendees welcome!
Saturday, 8 November, 1:00-4:00pm, An Afternoon of Sustainability Projects; The Wellbeing Hub, 36 High Street, Warminster, BA12 0AF
This free event will showcase work by Dr Charity Chenga, Iain Perkins, Amy Darbyshire, and Matt Wisdom, who will discuss sustainability projects from Warminster to Africa. More details can be found here: From Warminster to Africa: A showcase of sustainability and conservation projects – Warminster Town Council
Saturday, 15 November, 10:00am – 12:30pm, Bradford on Avon’s Repair Cafe, Wallington Hall, Church Street, Bradford on Avon, BA15 1LN
This event aims to keep household items out of landfill. Bring no more than two items for repair. For general enquiries email: boa@shareandrepair.org.uk For specific questions about what can be repaired, please phone: 07963 878319. Find out more here: (6) BoA Share and Repair | Facebook or in the attached flyer.
Monday, 8 December, 7:30pm, Festive Green Drinks at The Fox & Hounds, 6 Deverill Road, Warminster BA12 9QP
Join us for a festive, informal gathering to chat or connect. Everyone is welcome.
Keep up-to-date with our regular column in the Warminster Journal. Here are some of our latest articles:
Sustainable Warminster: The scary truth about Halloween – Warminster Journal
Did you spot Warminster toad patrol in The Guardian this week? ‘The cars just turn them into mush’: can Britain’s toads be saved from traffic and terrible decline? | Conservation | The Guardian
Wiltshire Council is inviting residents to share their views on plans for a new School Streets trial to create safer, cleaner environments for children.
School Streets temporarily restrict motor vehicle access during school drop-off and pick-up times during the school term. The council will consult from Monday, 3 November to Sunday, 15 December. People’s feedback will help shape the trial. The council expects the project to begin after the Easter holidays in 2026. More information can be found here: Council to launch School Streets trial in five areas of the county – with a consultation to start next month – Wiltshire Council
New air quality planning guidance for developments in Wiltshire adopted by Wiltshire Council.
Wiltshire Council approved new Supplementary Planning Guidance to deliver air quality improvements on 21 October 2025. Developers must show their projects will not worsen air quality. If there is a risk of more pollution, developers must act or provide funding to help reduce pollution. Find out more here: New air quality planning guidance for developments in Wiltshire adopted by Wiltshire Council – Wiltshire Council
Take care,
Rebecca and Amy.
Co-Chairs, Sustainable Warminster.
Saturday 25th October 2025

Pronti Buon Appetito in the Market Place, Warminster, will be open from 5pm on the evening of Warminster Carnival, Saturday 25th October 2025. Hot dogs with fried or crispy onions. Homemade vanilla or Turkish marshmallows. Hot and cold drinks. To Pre-order phone 07858 078789.
Saturday 25th October 2025
A message from Warminster Lions Club:
Following on from the Lions PSA testing day last Saturday.
If any of you guys that were brave enough to take the test have received a concerning result, please feel free to join us at the Prostate chat cafe. We meet the 2nd and 4th Monday of the month. Our next meeting is on Monday 27th October 2025 at the Athenaeum, High Street, Warminster, 7 to 8.30 pm.
We all support each other. We have all been in the same place where you guys are now. Talking really helps.