125 Years Of Education At St. John’s School, Warminster

Paul Macdonald writing in The Warminster Digest, May 1997:

“This school was opened today with an attendance off 44 morning and 48 afternoon. Miss Young from St. Denys’ House came to assist in instructing the children who appeared both neat and clean. Found some difficulty in arranging them in standards as many of them had never been to school before and others irregular in their attendance at other Parish schools from the distance they had to walk. Many mothers brought their children and expressed much pleasure at the opening,’ were the words that made up the first ever entry in Warminster’s St. John’s Church of England School Log Book on 15th April 1872.

One hundred and twenty five years later the school is still using the original school house as well as extensions and mobile classrooms, and the School Log Book is like a social history of the area. In November 1883 the log records that the school received new slates, while in 1903 Clara K. left school as her mother “wished her to go out to service.’ On the 3rd November 1914 the school was “closed indefinitely by order of the Urban Council as there are a number of cases of Fever and Diphtheria in the Town.’

The school played its part in the First World War when it was recorded on the 13th September 1915 that the “Registers were not marked until 2.20 this afternoon as a Division of Soldiers halted outside and the children were busy getting water for them.’ In 1916 the school closed for a day for the King’s visit to Warminster, whilst in 1918 it closed for a day in September for blackberrying! Other royalty mentioned in the school’s records include children staying behind late one day to watch the King and Queen of Afghanistan go by. In fact, with the school having been on the main trunk road from Bristol to Salisbury and Southampton until the by-pass, it witnessed many famous people go by.

The school played a major role in the Second World War, as it was recorded that the school term which was due to start on 18th September 1939 was delayed for two weeks to give time for the settlement of the evacuated children. During that war the children’s designated air raid shelter was the neighbouring St. John’s Church following an air raid warning on 4th July 1940.

The school’s connectionn with the army is well-recorded and linked to the history of the country. On the 13th April 1962 it is recorded “All Green Jacket pupils now left for Malaya’ (which was connected to the terrorist insurgency there and first made the SAS famous) to be replaced on 30th April, after the Easter holidays, by children from the Black Watch regiment.

It was in 1962 that the school roll exceeded 200. Throughout the early sixties the main entries in the log book were concerned with the weather affecting the ability of the school to function. In 1964 government changes meant that the school was no longer Church of England controlled but the school decided to keep the link with the church in its title. Today, the school’s headmaster is Richard Light and he is one of five teaching staff at Warminster’s smallest Junior and Infants’ School.

A Teenager’s View Of Clothes Shopping In Warminster

By Polly Few; first published in The Warminster Digest, May 1997:

Mostly, I have to go to Bath for my clothes. New Look and Dorothy Perkins are quite good. Now and then the shops in the [Three Horseshoes] Mall are good. Sometimes I can find things in Encore at prices that I can afford. There is nothing for young men in Warminster. It is a complete waste of time for them. It would be nice if there was a Top Shop in town.

West Wiltshire District Council ~ Recycling Update

From West Wilts Matters magazine, Issue No.9, March 1997, published by West Wiltshire District Council:

Recycling Update

Listed below are details of new and deleted recycling sites which updates the details in the last issue. For a full list ring 01225 770325.

Warminster area:

Add sites:
Conservative Club, Boreham Road – G.N.;
Kingdown School – G.T.;

Add facilities:
Bishopstrow House Hotel – N.;
Hollybush Close – F.;
Codford Village Hall (side of hall) – T.;
Sutton Veny School – T.

Delete facilities:
Horningsham Village Hall – P.

Key to facilities:
G – glass.
N – newspapers.
C – cans.
P – plastic.
T – textile.

Cambridge House School For Girls, Sambourne Road, Warminster

Notes by Danny Howell, first published in A Selection Of Warminster Ephemera, in November 1996:

Cambridge House, a two storey brick building, on the east side of Sambourne Road, Warminster, was built about 1800. From 1842 onwards it was one of the most successful ladies’ boarding schools in the district, the senior principal being Miss Emily Lindley Haskew and the under principal being Miss Mary Ann Cruse. Emily Haskew was the daughter of Charles Haskew of Pimlico, London. Mary Cruse, who was born at Horningsham, was the sister of Thomas Cruse who was for many years the Town Surveyor for the Local Board. Emily Haskew died at Highfield, Isle of Wight, on 6th August 1876, after which Mary Cruse continued to run the school as sole principal.

An advertisement for the school in Kelly’s Directory For Wiltshire 1880 notes “Cambridge House, Warminster, Wiltshire. Church School for Girls. Healthy situation; half a mile from the Town and Railway Station, with bracing breezes from the Downs. Careful supervision. Pupils prepared for Cambridge Local Examinations. Resident French and other Governesses. Professors attend. Terms: Inclusive of Board, Laundress, English, French, Music, and Drawing (or Dancing), 40 guineas per annum. Singing, German and Dancing on usual terms. References to Clergy, and to Parents of former or present pupils. Further particulars on application to the Principal – Miss Cruse.”

By 1881 Mary Cruse was being assisted at the school by her niece Sarah Cruse as an English governess, and another niece, Louisa Cruse joined them as a governess by 1891. Mary Cruse retired in 1896, living at Luxfield Cottage, Sambourne. The school was then taken over by Miss E.M. Ripley and Miss F.M. Ripley, the daughters of the Rev. Frederick William Ripley, M.A., who all resided at Cambridge House. The Misses Ripley only carried on the school until about the turn of the century.

Mary Ann Cruse died at Luxfield Cottage on the morning of Friday 17th March 1905. She was in her 87th year. Her funeral, held at St. Denys’ Church, was officiated by the Rev. J.S. Stuart, Vicar of Christ Church, and the Rev. R.L.A. Westlake, Vicar of Sutton Benger.

Miss Cruse’s boarding pupils, over the years, included Fanny Baily, Mary Blake, Anne Brain, Mary Clutterbuck, Ethel Cockell, Isabella Cox, Annie Cruse, Ethel Currie, Louisa Ellison, Bessie Giles, Annie Harding, Ellen Harding, Emily Harding, Mary Haskins, Clarissa Hayden, Alice Hitchcock, Rosalie Hitchcock, Alice Holloway, Edith Holloway, Ethel Hunt, Kate Hunt, Ethel Jefferies, Elizabeth King, Alice Langford, Ethel Leonard, Anna Lush, Ann Mace, Fanny Matthews, Eliza Mines, Eliza Parfitt, Emily Parfitt, Eliza Parsons, Catherine Powell, Mary Powell, Edith Reeves, Mary Reeves, Ada Rudderforth, Alice Rudderforth, Dorothy Rudderforth Edith Rudderforth, Kate Rudderforth, Louisa Ruddle, Annie Shearman, Harriett Smith, Alice Style, Elizabeth Ward, and Ann Wilkins.

The teaching staff, during the school’s history, included Miss Fanny Bayly (governess); Miss Alice Flux (governess); Miss Jane Gratton (nurse/governess); Miss Maria Sandoy, born at Neuchatel, Switzerland (French governess); Miss Emily Satzmaun (music teacher); Miss Lydia Schelpe, born at Lille, in Flanders, France (French governess); Miss Emma Rosetta Sheppard (music teacher); Miss Ada Twenlow, born in Dublin (governess); and Miss Anna Vollmer, who was born at Perleberg, Prussia (German and French teacher).

Other employees at the school, over the years, included Ann Burrows (housemaid); Miss Couzens (cook); Emily Francis (cook); Martha Knee (domestic servant); Eliza Pictor (cook); and Charlotte Scammell (cook).

Cambridge House has in more recent years been converted into two properties and these, by 1971, were numbered 54 and 55 Sambourne Road. Number 55, which is now numbered 43, has been known as Greenaways for much of this century. Viscount Weymouth, M.P., (Henry Frederick Thynne, later the 6th Marquess of Bath) lived here during the early 1930s following his marriage to his first wife Daphne, one of the daughters of Lord Vivian, but it was afterwards the home of Mr. and Mrs. William Thomas Wall. (Mr. Wall, a well known garage proprietor in Warminster, who hailed from Frome, had previously lived at Windyridge, Weymouth Street).

The handbill, shown below, publicising Cambridge House School, was first issued in 1869. The roof line of the property today [November 1996] differs from that shown in the illustration; no doubt this was altered when the building was converted into two residences. The property no longer has such an open aspect from the street because the ground floor is now hidden from view by a yew hedge behind the low brick wall. The wrought iron gate to Greenaways features an ornate vase with tall sprouting flowers.

Introducing Rosie Noorlander

Paul Macdonald, in The Warminster Packet, issue six, 28 October 1996, wrote:

THE WARMINSTER PACKET INTRODUCES ROSIE NOORLANDER

We heard a lovely voice on our travels. Singing one of our editor’s old favourites – Knock, Knock, Knocking on Heaven’s Door – (he is 40 after all and a classic in his own right) was 19 year old Rosie Noorlander of Longbridge Deverill.

Even without any backing music Rosie sounded so good that we would like to help Rosie and others like her to have their first live public appearance.

Perhaps not yet up to jamming at the Mason’s Arms or appearing live in front of large audiences, we want you to try performing in a relaxed atmosphere more or less for fun.

If you would like to come along and join in an evening playing a musical instrument or singing we would like to hear from you.

Perhaps you could join Rosie without the hassle of the costs of booking a venue, transporting sound and light equipment, having a full evening’s performance list, advertising, plug sockets and so on.

These evenings could not run to space for a full band but music can be good without drum kits, amplifiers and synthesizers.

We will use our contacts to find those venues suitable.

Meanwhile, Rosie and her friends practice hard as a new band that is coming together. We will do our best to keep you informed of how this and other local bands are getting on.

St. George’s RC Church, Warminster ~ Farewell To Father David

Tuesday 2nd July 1996:

St. Georges RC Church, Warminster
Farewell To Father David

The Reverend Denis Brett spoke both as Chairman of Churches Together In Warminster and as Vicar of the neighbouring Anglican parish of St. John’s, Boreham, at Father David’s farewell.

He began by saying that he was looking for something original to say, and used the little story of Sir Walter Bromley-Davenport, MP, 1945-70, who, at a farewell speech of a priest said:

“Y’ve asked me to write something original,
Some brain wave from within.
But I’ve nothing original in me
Excepting original sin.”

On a more serious note he expressed his sense of gratitude for all that Father David had, over his eight years, contributed to the development of Christian unity in the town. Denis also thanked him on behalf of St. John’s Church for the great friendship he had shown over the years. Much had been shared – in pilgrimage, fellowship, worship and love – and even buildings, during the refurbishment of St. George’s!

Denis said that Father David would be greatly missed but was sent on his way with every blessing in the knowledge that he would enrich the lives of those to whom he is now ministering.

Gifts of a bottle and a book token were presented by St. John’s.

Abbeyfield Society 40th Anniversary ~ Warminster Celebration In Song

Tuesday 2nd July 1996:

John Chillingworth writes ~

On 20th June 1996, the occasion of the Abbeyfield Society’s 40th Anniversary, a concert was arranged by the Warminster Committee. The ladies and gentlemen of the Warminster Singers, one of whom is our own St. John’s Choir member, David Miles, brought great pleasure to some thirty residents and guests.

The Singers’ enthusiasm and joy was infectious as they performed for an audience that included Abbeyfield resident Mrs Faith Edwards, a regular attender at St. John’s Church.

Amongst the feast of ‘memory lane’ songs, Maisy’s amusing soubrette performance of ‘My Little Alice Blue Gown’ received spirited audience participation. The Singers interlaced their renditions of old popular ballads with amusing monologues, which included Beryl’s recitation of ‘When Father Laid The Carpet On The Stairs’.

When Bella, with her wonderful Wiltshire accent, delivered ‘The Day Me Old Cows Got Drunk’, there were many chuckles from the appreciative residents and guests.

Warminster’s former Mayor, Mrs Ann Coventry, once a member of St. John’s Church Choir, narrowly avoided being ‘dragged’ from the audience to give an impromptu solo!

At the reception after the concert, guests learned that the Abbeyfield is a world-wide society, under the patronage of HRH The Prince of Wales. It is a voluntary, caring organisation that accommodates older people in friendly, non-institutional ‘family’ homes.

Highbury Football Club

Some notes compiled by Danny Howell in 1996:

No one travelling along Woodcock Road, Warminster, today can fail to notice the pitch of the former Highbury Football Club – its green open space surrounded by residential development.

Situated on the south side of Woodcock Road, between Woodcock Gardens and Highbury Park, it was formerly part of the Highbury Estate. Prior to 1959 the land now occupied by the football pitch was let by the Teichman family during the summer months to farmer Bert Dowding of Smallbrook Farm. During the winter months Major Teichman allowed Highbury Football Club to use the field for playing football.

At the A.G.M. of Highbury Football Club, held in the Billeric Cafe, High Street, Warminster, on Monday 22 June 1959, Mr Terry Davies, the Club’s Honorary Secretary, referred to the fact that the Club had purchased the field which the Teichman family had allowed them to use as a pitch for a number of years.

Thanks to the careful budget policy of the Honorary Treasurer, Don Spratt; appeals for wise spending by Terry Davies, and Chairman Des Bishop; with “the backing of a fine committee,” Highbury Football Club managed to purchase the ground within two seasons. (Warminster Journal, 17 August 1962).

Having purchased the Woodcock ground, the Club turned their attention to the provision of a building containing dressing rooms. The cost was anticipated at about £300. The site chosen was in the north-west corner of the ground, parallel with Woodcock Road. In late July 1962 members of Highbury Football Club began work on their new 30 feet by 14 feet dressing room building. Working voluntarily on Sundays and weekday evenings, they dug the foundations and connected the drainage arrangements. John Wallis Titt & Co. loaned them a concrete mixer to put down the base. The work was supervised by Terry Davies. Among the volunteers who gave up their leisure time to do the work, including several members of the building trade, were Terry Davies, D. Bishop, D. Spratt, G. Marsh, R. Foreman, D. Clews, H. Foreman, D. Noble, G. Lapham, T. Lapham, I. Pearce, P. Goddard, K. McGuckian, T. Gooding, D. Hinton, R. Lees, B. Collier, Roy York, and Jim Randall. By mid-August 1962 the foundations were complete and work started on the erection of the building above ground level.

The Vly Be On The Turmuts

Compiled and written by Danny Howell, this article was first published in The Illustrated Warminster And District Miscellany, Volume One (Bedeguar Books, May 1996):

“The vly be on the turmuts, but there bain’t no vlies on I,” was once (and still is for some) the proud boast of every born and bred Moonraker. It is, of course, a line from the chorus of the signature tune of the Wiltshire Regiment. The Vly Be On The Turmuts, which was one of the regimental marches of the county’s soldiers, assumed the elevated status of being the “Wiltshire Anthem.” The song was often heard in Warminster, particularly in earshot of Stationmaster John Robert Lane, but why? A delve into his past and his wife’s family history reveals an interesting connection.

John Robert Lane was born in Quetta, India, when his father was an N.C.O. in the Wiltshire Regiment stationed there. The family lived at Heytesbury, where Mr. Lane senior is buried in the churchyard of St. Peter’s and St. Paul’s.

John Lane was employed on the railway since leaving school. He started at Warminster Station as a booking clerk but was later employed in the Railways Section of the Royal Naval Dockyard at Weymouth. He subsequently worked at Warminster, Trowbridge and other stations, becoming a relief stationmaster for the Warminster district prior to his appointment as Stationmaster at Heytesbury. After a period as Stationmaster at Martock in Somerset he took up the position of Stationmaster at Warminster on 1 November 1953, succeeding Mr. W.H. Gray.

John Lane was an expert in the automatic traffic control system relating to the rail network and spent many years making a close study of problems which had to be overcome with the system. He attended a number of significant conferences, in London, which dealt with the subject. During the Second World War he was a stalwart member of the Home Guard. A member of the local Chamber Of Trade he was keenly interested in suggestions for attracting tourism to the town.

It was while he he was employed at Trowbridge that he met his wife to be, who was formerly a Miss Hilda King. Her father was killed on active service during the First World War and her mother eventually re-married and emigrated to Australia. Hilda was brought up by her grandparents who lived at Adcroft Villa, Trowbridge. Hilda’s grandfather, John King, was a woollen manufacturer and his wife ran a drapery business, known as King’s Varieties, which was situated at the corner of Fore Street, near the entrance to the Park and almost opposite Trowbridge Town Hall.

John King had a reputation as a pleasing singer and concert performer. He found fame locally as the composer of the Wiltshire Regiment’s most rousing military march The Vly Be On The Turmuts. It was originally intended as a a country folk song but became popular with Wiltshire’s fighting men after the Bandmaster of the Wiltshire Regiment, who was at the time a great friend of John King’s, heard it, liked it and asked permission to orchestrate it as a march.

Hilda Lane was widely known because of her dancing classes, with students throughout Wiltshire. She had many friends at Westbury, Trowbridge, Chippenham and Bath, as well as at Warminster. She worked as chief clerk for Warminster solicitors Messrs. Wakeman & Bain for many years. She was a trustee of the Warren Almshouses at Portway and gave help to the local youth movement in its early days. Unfortunately she became ill for some time and had to undergo treatment at Southampton Hospital and Harnwood Hospital, Salisbury. She died at Harnwood Hospital on 19 January 1959. She was 58. She willed her body to Dr. Graham Campbell for transmission to the Medical Research Unit at Bristol. A memorial service for Hilda Lane was held at St. John’s Church, Boreham Road, Warminster, on Saturday 24 January 1959.

John Lane, who lived at Fieldview, 2 Chancery Lane, Warminster, was in the habit of taking an evening constitutional, sometimes stopping to enjoy a glass of ale with friends at the Rose & Crown pub, East Street. It was in the yard of the Rose & Crown that he collapsed on the evening of Thursday 31 August 1961. Medical aid was summoned but he died the following morning. He was 57. His funeral was held at St. John’s and was followed by cremation at Salisbury. He was survived by two sons: Michael, who lived at Silver Street and farmed in the district; and David, who was at the Castle Garage, Nunney.

John Lane never ceased to be proud and pleased at the honour shown to him and his wife with regard The Vly Be On The Turmuts. The Wiltshire Regimental Band never forgot the composer of the lyrics and the haunting melody and they loved to play it for his family and in-laws. Whenever the band had to parade on the platform of Warminster Station they always broke into the famous march especially for Mr. Lane. Likewise, on occasions such as when Mrs. Lane was in the audience at a keep-fit demonstration at Warminster Town football ground the band played the march in her honour.

The tune was published by Henry Millington, a bearded gentleman, of Trowbridge. Millington, who was born at Bath in 1840, was the eldest son of William Millington, a landscape and architectural artist who did much towards the development of lithography. The family included many musicians and was connected for a century with Chester Cathedral as vicars choral or lay vicars.

Henry Millington was “a musician through and through….. a leader of all things that pertained to the love and culture of music…” and “…. a performer of great ability.” As a pianist and organist he excelled but his repertoire included numerous other instruments including the side drum. At one time he was in the Trowbridge saxhorn band. He also founded and ran a musical union.

His first appointment was as organist at the Conigre Chapel, Trowbridge, which he held for several years but at the request of the Rector the Rev. J.D. Hastings he transferred to Trowbridge Parish Church where he was organist and choirmaster for 43 years. He performed his duties with great zeal and ability, resigning from the post in 1906.

As a bandmaster and conductor his record was a notable one. To begin with he took charge of the Trowbridge Rifle Corps Band but was soon appointed to the 1st Wiltshire V.R.C. and later became bandmaster of the Western Counties’ Volunteer Brigade. The band once played at a garden party for the Duke Of Albany during the time when he had taken up temporary residence at Boyton Manor. Millington also played for the Kaiser, Frederick William, at the Jubilee Review at Windsor. On that occasion he played a selection from Rossini.

A former pupil of Chevalier Lemmens, Millington was a brilliant performer on the Mustel organ and later possessed the original instrument which Lemmens entertained the public with. Millington had also been, in the early 1860s, a pianoforte student of Mr. Julius – later Sir Julius Benedict – and through him came into contact not only with composers but also many famous celebrities including Charles Dickens and Thackeray.

Millington was a prominent freemason and was appointed on six occasions to the position of Provincial Grand Organist for the Province of Wilts. He was the local examiner for the Royal College Of Music and the composer of many pieces, particularly for military bands. He certainly provided the Volunteers with a marching tune which lived on and was later associated with the 4th Wilts T.A. (as the former Volunteers became).

Henry Millington died at Avon View, Trowbridge, on the morning of Sunday 3 September 1911. He was 70.

Let’s end this article with a final word about Hilda Lane’s grandfather, John King. Although he is said to have written the words and composed the tune of The Vly Be On The Turmuts, it is more probable that he adapted a traditional song and tune rather than it being a truly original composition, as shown by the words and music which are reproduced here:

St. George’s Church, Warminster ~ A Guide For Visitors

A Guide For Visitors (And Some Background For Those Who Have Come To Stay)St. George’s Church, Warminster

First published in 1996:

This Guide to St. George’s Church and Parish was written and compiled by Terence Howes to fill a perceived gap in readily available information for visitors and newcomers to Warminster.

Church and Presbytery, August 1986.

Presbytery bay window rebuilt October 1988.

The new Church porch built to commemorate
the visit to England by
Pope John Paul II in 1982.

As we go to press we learn that Bishop Mervyn has asked Fr. David to take over the parish of the Immaculate Conception at Stroud, Gloucestershire, during Easter Week 1996. We welcome Fr. David’s successor, Fr. Paul Brandon, ordained in June 1992, who came to us from Stroud to take up his first appointment as parish priest on 12 April to lead us into the twenty-first century. Ad Multos Annos.

Fr. Paul Brandon 1996.
Photo courtesy of Brian Hobson, LRPS, BIPP.

Outlying Villages In The Roman Catholic Parish Of Warminster

Bishopstrow
Boyton
Brixton Deverill
Chapmanslade
Chitterne
Codford St. Mary
Codford St. Peter
Corsley
Corton
Crockerton
Heytesbury
Hill Deverill
Horningsham
Kilmington
Kingston Deverill
Longbridge Deverill
Maiden Bradley
Monkton Deverill
Norton Bavant
Sherrington
Stourton
Sutton Veny
Tytherington
Upton Lovell
Upton Scudamore
Witham Friary

Map of Villages

Preface
Warminster is a busy town and it is constantly changing. As in many towns today, a few shops and businesses can proclaim “Established 18 . . something or other” on their letterheads and if shop fronts are not permanently boarded up their occupants come and go almost with the regularity of the seasons, in this cold economic climate.

So it is with our people. We have some who are long established in the town; some who come with the Army regiments, and two or four years later leave, to be replaced; and some who have recently come to occupy the many new houses which seem constantly to be springing up in every nook and cranny.

We are not a tourist town on the scale of the Cathedral cities of Bath and Salisbury – although we do have Stonehenge and Longleaf – but many visitors pass our way and we are continually seeing new faces and saying goodbye to old friends.

This short booklet is intended for all who have an interest, passing or permanent, in Warminster. If you are here for a fleeting weekend we hope it will give you the flavour of the town and of our parish. If you have come to live here then hopefully it will give you some background information and help you get the feel of St. George’s. If having done so you feel inclined to join the active crew of Peter’s barque, you will find a list of activities – and contact phone numbers – on the inside front cover of our monthly magazine.

Whichever and whoever you are, welcome to Warminster, and especially to St. George’s Church.

Introduction
Our town is situated more or less in the centre of twenty six villages which comprise our parish, which is some fifteen miles across from east to west and about ten miles from north to south – not far short in area of the Isle of Wight. Our parish priest is also Catholic Chaplain to the Army Barracks, a mile or so from the town centre, and additionally we have a Catholic Primary School, a hospital, two recently built blocks of sheltered housing, and many nursing homes. Center Parcs, at Longleat, opened in July 1994, and pending a possible future interdenominational Chapel on the site, where Sunday Mass might be celebrated, we are happy to welcome holiday-makers from Center Parcs to our services.

The town of Warminster has been very extensively researched by a one-time curate at St. John’s Anglican Church, Rev. John J. Daniell (The History of Warminster – 1879). The history of the Catholic Church in Warminster has been meticulously chronicled by a former parish priest, Rev. Dr. J.A. Harding, M.Litt. Ph.D. (1971-1978) in 1300 Years (1980); and many informative and illustrated books about Warminster from the 1880s onwards have been written and produced by a local historian, Danny Howell, commencing with Yesterday’s Warminster (1987). Other informative books are listed in an Appendix. Few places can boast of such a rich harvest of information about their past. In this booklet you will find our story very thinly spread, but you might discover why we who live here have grown to love our town and parish; few of us would willingly leave.

We, the Catholic community of Warminster, like to think that we play a constructive part in the life of the town. From Parents against Drugs to stage productions at the Athenaeum, from participating in area schools’ sports to joining the campaign against a threatened closure of our hospital, our people are working with others to further the good of the town and to maintain the fabric of society. Long may that partnership continue.

On a more international level we have a strong branch of Amnesty International in Warminster – two of our parishioners are officers – and at any given time the parish is sustaining a project in a Third World country. We have a very special link with Burma where the democratic leader, Aung San Suu Kyi, is related to a parishioner. St. George’s is by no means asleep!

Warminster – Its History
A town bearing the word Minster usually does so because there was once a monastery in the area, but not so with Warminster. Historians have vied as to how we acquired our present name. In a document dated c.900 (Canterbury MSS. – Codex Dup. Vol. II p.328 (A.D. c900) we are referred to as WORGEMYNSTER; in the Domesday Book (1086) the reference is to GUERMINSTER; and various spellings occur in the 15th and 16th centuries. It is conjecture that GUERMIN (guerre – French for war) was the name of an ancient Wiltshire Chief, but no one is sure.

Daniell’s History of Warminster records the lives and conditions of slaves in Wiltshire. On Warminster Manor, he tells us, there were twenty-four serfs, native Britons, held in bondage. “They received two loaves a day besides meals at morn and noon, and were free from sunset on Saturday till sunset on Sunday”. Warminster Manor then was Crown property, so other serfs outside the royal household will not have fared so well. As a royal manor, Daniell explains, Warminster was exempt from “assessments’, but it was obliged to furnish the king and his attendants with board and lodging whenever the royal household came. Charles II did so in 1663, as did George III in 1789. “A large flag floated over Cley Hill whenever the royal household stayed at Longleat” – when the whole entourage numbered about forty-five persons.

Travelling in the area was not easy. “The roads had become so ruinous in winter (that) many roads were impassable for wagons, coaches and for laden horses” (1726). Tolls became payable as roads were improved; typical tolls were one shilling (5p) for a coach and six horses, sixpence (2½p) for a wagon with three oxen. Today we have a bypass, opened in 1988, and traffic through the town, although considerable, is much less than it would otherwise have been. Andrew Houghton, in his book Before The Warminster Bypass (1988) gives a detailed description of roads and tracks in this part of the world dating back to Roman times.

The railway came to Warminster in 1851 – from Westbury; by June 1856 the line had been extended south-east to Salisbury, with five intermediate stations (in order: Heytesbury, Codford, Wylye, Wishford, Wilton) – today there are none. But today there are two trains a day direct to Waterloo to connect with the Eurostar for Paris and Brussels. One step forward and two steps back.

Warminster – Its Catholic History
Rev. Dr. Harding acknowledges in the Preface to his book, 1300 Years, that it was a single sentence in John Daniell’s book that encouraged him to embark on his own researches. That sentence described the finding of a leaden seal behind Portway House (near Warminster’s town centre) bearing the heads of SS. Peter and Paul on one side and of Pope Boniface IX (1389-1404) on the other. Dr. Harding writes “For me the seal was a symbol – a symbol of a living link which had existed for hundreds of years between our town and the eternal city”; and from there he went on to explore the significance of that symbol and what lay behind it.

The Chapter headings of 1300 Years range from “Saxon Beginnings’ to “And A Priest Of Our Own’ (1938), and the book tells the fascinating story of the Faith in Wessex through the ages. It tells, for example, how the Minster Church on the western edge of the town – Catholic of course when it was built – was originally dedicated to SS. Simon and Jude, but in the twelfth century changed its dedication to St. Denys, a missionary bishop sent to France in the third century, and the patron saint of Paris.

Dr. Harding takes his readers cantering down the centuries, detailing Wiltshire sites where Mass was celebrated both in the Sarum rite and in the Latin, and narrating customs such as the suspension of the Blessed Sacrament in a Pyx above the altar rather than in a Tabernacle – (this still occurs today at Quarr Abbey on the Isle of Wight) – and of marriages taking place in the Church porch before the couple entered for the Nuptial Mass.

Dr. Harding takes his story up to 1978 when St. George’s Church was consecrated by Bishop Mervyn Alexander. He concludes “Our History ends but the Story continues”. That was almost twenty years ago and in that time a new generation has arrived on the scene. The children of the seventies are the parents of the nineties; we hope that they in turn will inspire their children with the same spirit and zeal which encouraged our forefathers to keep the Faith alive in Wessex, to carry it over the threshold of the millenium.

Warminster Yesterday
In “Yesterday’s Warminster” (limited edition 1987) Danny Howell, with photographs and prose, paints a graphic picture of life in the town and villages between 1880 and 1940. The story of the first fifty of those sixty years is one of steady decline; the population of five thousand in 1931 had barely grown in hundred and thirty years, and the economic prosperity of the town had declined considerably year by year. It was only the establishment of the army garrison in 1937 that halted that decline and reversed the downward trend in Warminster’s economy.

Because the Catholic community shares in the fortunes of every town and city those upsz and downs in Warminster are of legitimate interest to the parishioners of St. George’s. It is interesting to note that the prosperity which the garrison began to bring to the town in 1937 – more families to spend more money in local shops – virtually co-incided with the establishment of the parish in 1938 and the arrival of the first parish priest. For the next eighteen months, despite the gathering war clouds, the future seemed assured; and by the time the second world war was well under way in the 1940s the American garrison at Sutton Veny brought even more prosperity – though at a price in suffering and death that no one willingly would have paid.

Danny Howell’s book is replete with anecdotes of a bygone age; of butchers walking their cattle from the station to the slaughter-house; of eccentric characters, like the man who regularly took a Gladstone bag to the butchers to purchase a piece of fat shaped exactly to fit his bag; of hardworking thrifty labourers bringing up often large families on around £2 a week; of village fetes which attracted all manner of freak sideshows, such as displaying the world’s largest man and the world’s smallest woman; of club concerts which sported bizarre entertainment, like the presentation of an 18 carat gold watch to whoever could tell the biggest lie; and numerous other oddities.

Amateur operatics came into being in the 1920s when many Gilbert and Sullivan comic operas were performed at the Athenaeum, pioneered by a Rev. Dudley Lee who also re-activated the town’s Cricket Club. Thus “the Church’ was able to show a presence other than its customary one.

The general overall picture of the people of Warminster is that of a happy and contented community, far from wealthy, but enjoying the rhythm of a more leisurely life-style, and accepting with stoicism the inevitable accidents in factories and on farms that interrupted their lives.

In recent times the people of Warminster have been relieved at the shelving of plans by the Local Government Commission in 1994 to abolish the County Council and to merge Warminster with Salisbury in a new Unitary Authority. A public outcry caused the Commission to change its mind, and Warminster remains with a Town Council and a District Council (West Wilts) within the overall County of Wiltshire. Peace at last, but for how long?

Our Church
The twentieth century, now nearing its end, opened with great potential for the small Catholic community, though they could not have foreseen what was in store. Until 1900 the nearest place for Mass had been Frome, but in that year a Mr. and Mrs. William Tisseman – who has moved here from Bath in 1898 – made their house, “Torwood’, 24 Boreham Road, available for a monthly celebration of Mass. Dr. Harding comments (1300 Years) “The Mass had returned. The long night of winter was over, and for the handful of local Catholics the first signs of Newman’s “Second Spring’ were beginning to appear”. This arrangement seems to have continued until the arrival of the Ursuline Sisters in 1907. (See next Chapter).

Following the departure of those Sisters in 1919 Catholics were able for a short period to attend Mass at Sutton Veny (about two and a half miles away) where large numbers of Anzac (Australian and New Zealand) troops were still stationed. That was fine for the short time it lasted, but by then Warminster’s Catholics were used to the maxim “all good things come to an end’; they were prepared for anything.

When the Sutton Veny army camp closed Canon Lee (later Bishop Lee) obtained the use of an old army hut near the railway station – where the supermarket Lidl stands today – as a Mass Centre, but realising that this could only be temporary, he sought a site for a permanent Church. Mr. Tisseman eventually found the site on which the Church stands today, and the Diocesan authorities acquired it together with the adjacent cottage, No.33, which is still Church property although rented out. The original Church, built 1921/2, consisted of only the nave of the present Church, exactly oblong, and with no additions. While it was under construction Mass was said in the tiny cottage next door – in the upstairs room, with the overflow congregation on the staircase.

On 13th April 1922 Bishop Burton opened the new Church, but for sixteen years it remained without a priest of presbytery, being served from Frome, nine miles away. In 1938 the Church was enlarged by the addition of the two transepts, – the Sanctuary being “pushed back’ to its present position. The presbytery was also built that year, and Fr. Donal O’Connell was inducted as the first parish priest. That was on 24th September.

Mention must surely be made at this point that Fr. (later the Rt. Rev. Mgr.) Sutton, parish priest during the war, and a stand-in Chaplain to the United States Air Force base at Sutton Veny, liked to recall that immediately prior to D-Day (6th June 1944) some thirty Masses were offered in and around Warminster, mostly by US Air Force Chaplains for the men who, he said, “were nearer death and so always ready to go to the Sacraments”.

After Fr. Donal’s induction in 1938 forty years were to elapse before the debt-free Church could be consecrated; (the original “1922′ Church had been given debt-free to Warminster by the diocese, but it had later incurred much expense in the building of the extension). St. George’s was eventually consecrated on its patronal feast, 23rd April 1978; by then the Church Hall had been built (1957) and the Church had a new altar – facing the people – with a matching Lectern and Font, all on the Sanctuary. The altar contains the relics of St. Oliver Plunkett (1629-1681) and of Pope St. Pius X (1903-1914).

The next major addition to the Church was the building of the present narthex, or porch. That was in 1982, in commemoration of the visit to Great Britain of Pope John Paul II. One wonders today how we ever managed without it; the present glass doors, then of course wood, opened virtually on to the street. In that year too, the Lady Chapel acquired its new carved wood statue of the Mother and Child, and the plinth supporting the Book of the Gospels which is inscribed around its four sides “The Word was made Flesh” (John 1.14).

In 1988, the year of the parish’s golden jubilee, the Church was re-roofed, decorated, and re-furnished with new matching pews. (The old carpet was replaced in 1995, when the interior was again repainted.)

In 1989 Warminster’s first ordination to the priesthood took place in St. George’s Church when Fr. Vincent Curtis, born in Bradford-on-Avon but brought up in Warminster, was ordained by Bishop Mervyn Alexander; (years earlier, on Whit Sunday 1976, Rev. Wallis Hardy, a former Anglican priest, had been ordained to the diaconate in St. George’s Church). Almost ninety years from the first Mass to the first priest! – as the psalmist says (89.4) “A thousand years in thy sight are as yesterday”. A melancholy thought for those who look forward to quick results.

As the twenty-first century looms upon us we wonder what changes the next hundred years will bring; grandiose plans are already afoot, as indeed they should be, for not to change is to stagnate. Certainly our predecessors in 1900 could not have forgotten the fruits of their endeavours, but their grain of wheat has already “yielded a rich harvest”. (John 12.14).

Our Convent
Persecution of Catholics in France at the turn of the last century drove many priests and Sisters across the Channel; Brittany’s loss was Warminster’s gain. Dr. Harding relates (1300 Years) how the Warminster and Westbury Journal (8th December 1906) first brought to parishioners the news that the mansion in East Street (now Yard Court) was to be “taken’ – that is, on lease – by “ladies of the Urusuline Order’. Soon the Sisters’ Convent Chapel, a separate corrugated iron building in the grounds, was made available for morning Mass and evening Benediction on Sundays and Holy Days. A succession of Chaplains – at least seven – served the Convent for the next twelve years. Local Catholics, remarks Dr. Harding, “like the Wise Men of old, must have rejoiced with exceeding great joy”. The Sisters called their House “St. George’s Convent” in order to associate themselves with England’s patron saint and to underline their allegiance to the host country.

But life for the Sisters was not easy; there was much bigotry and intolerance in the town, despite the fact that throughout their years here – which included those of the First World War (1914-1918) – they gave local girls an excellent education. However, eight of the twelve Ursuline Sisters died without being replaced, and the remaining four returned to France in 1919. Fifty-four years were to elapse before Sisters returned to Warminster, and in 1973 Salvatorian Sisters (SDS – Sisters of the Divine Saviour) opened a Convent at 37 Boreham Road, three doors from the Church. The Sisters provided much needed help at the then fairly recently opened Catholic Primary School. Unfortunately after only nine years the Sisters had to depart – in 1982 – but happily they returned in the autumn of 1990 and established a Convent at 9c Boreham Road. The Sisters continue to give sterling service to the parish; although not now on the teaching staff of the School one of the Sisters is Vice-Chairman on the Board of Governors, and they give much help with preparing the children for the Sacraments. The Sisters undertake much pastoral work in the parish, and also lead and guide preparation for the liturgy on Sundays and for festive occasions in the Church’s calendar. We hope and pray that this time they have come to stay.

The official opening and blessing of the school
on 23 April 1970 by Mgr. T.J. Hughes.

Our School
Cardinal Basil Hume once reminded Head Teachers “There is a great and urgent task to hand on to the next generation the truths of our Catholic Faith revealed to us by Our Lord, as taught us by the Church down the ages. We must help our young people to learn the Faith, love the Faith, live the Faith. There is so much to teach, so much to learn. That is a task and a responsibility for our families, our schools, religious communities, and parishes.” (Briefing 30.9.88 Vol.18 No.19 and 5.8.88 p.337/8). We like to boast that here in Warminster St. George’s School is fully alive to this ideal.

In many parishes, especially in cities, the history of the last hundred and fifty years shows that the Catholic school was the first to be built, and the parish Church second; this order reflected the priority of the bishops. Hand on the Faith to the children first; Mass can always be celebrated in the school while the church is being built, probably many years later. But this order presupposes a preponderance of Catholic children; this is not usually the case in rural and semi-urban areas.

In Warminster the parish was thirty years old when the prospect of a Catholic School became a real possibility. In September 1969, after many years of lobbying by his predecessors, Fr. Nicholas McCarthy, then parish priest, was able to assemble two or thee people to plan the details of a school on a site in Woodcock Road, about a mile from the Church. The Working Party must have worked extraordinarily hard because in only five months St. George’s School was opened – on 2nd February 1970 – with fifty-two pupils. Two months later, on the feast of St. George, the School was blessed by Mgr. T.J. Hughes, deputising for Bishop Rudderham who was unable to arrive until the evening.

A heavy blow struck on the night of 13th/14th March 1974, when the classrooms were destroyed by fire; only the administrative block was spared. Arson was suspected but never proved. The tragedy, however, brought the townspeople together; far from the bigotry which sixty years earlier had beset the Ursuline Sisters, now the whole town rallied with sympathy and fund-raising; and eight months later rebuilding commenced. Bishop Mervyn Alexander blessed and rededicated the new School on 24th August 1975. A new Hall and two replacement classrooms were added in 1990.

The School fire on the night of 13/14 March 1974.

In 1985 the Board of Governors, to comply with legislation, increased their number from six to fourteen to include representatives of Town and County Councils, and of parents and teachers. The additional numbers, however, meant much more than lengthier meetings and a proliferation of papers. Governors were expected to attend training courses to perfect their art, and more modern ideas emerged and evolved. Annual Reports by Governors to Parents became mandatory “to stimulate interest in the school’ as the statute put it.

Marquee at St. George’s School, Warminster,
for Mass on the occasion
of celebrations for the School’s
SILVER JUBILEE,
18th June 1995

In April 1993 the school “went LMS’, in the jargon then prevailing. The Education Reform Act of 1988 had required local Education Authorities to prepare plans for all schools to become “locally managed’; this the County’s schools did in batches, and St. George’s turn came five years later. In retrospect this proved to be a twelve months’ state of limbo, because on 1st April 1994 the School “opted out’ (of LEA control) and became “Grant Maintained’. St. George’s is now a Grant Maintained School – a GMS – with all that that entails. An influx of parents to the new Governing Body replaced the departing Town and County Governors.

The School’s very attractive brochure proclaims “Our aim is to provide for all our children the best possible standards of education in a caring atmosphere”. Usually about half the children are from the current local military community, and are therefore liable to leave, and to be replaced, following military requirements at the barracks. These children are not therefore as a rule able to follow our indigenous children to St. Augustine’s Catholic Secondary School at Trowbridge when they reach eleven.

The School’s silver jubilee was celebrated in great style in June 1995 when Bishop Mervyn celebrated Mass in a huge specially erected marquee, preceded by a Festival of Music to which the Regiment of Yorkshire contributed a Drum Display, and followed by entertainment by the School’s Singing Club. Our School is well-placed to move into the twenty-first century.

The Ecumenical Scene
After several false and faltering starts the inaugural meeting of what was then known as the Warminster Council of Churches took place at The Rectory, under Anglican auspices, on 26th June 1986. The Minutes record that the meeting “began with a splendid buffet” – alas, never since repeated – provided by Rev. Alan Elkins and his wife. The programme for the future was ambitious, but still within the limits of what was realistic and attainable: combined monthly Sunday Evening Services, Lenten and Advent Weekday Services, and open-air gatherings on suitable occasions. After ten years, which included a change of title to the present Churches Together In Warminster – a national change in fact when the former British Council of Churches was replaced with Churches Together in England (on 1st September 1990) (and similarly for the other component countries of the United Kingdom) – it can be said that Churches Together In Warminster (CTW) has met with modest success. CTW is still flourishing and receives occasional publicity in the local press.

However, ecumenical bonds were given a great boost in the late summer of 1988 when St. George’s Church was completely closed for several weeks for redecoration and refurbishing. We were given hospitality for weekend Masses at the nearby Anglican Church of St. John, where their Sunday Morning Services were re-timed to accommodate St. George’s Masses. Thus the nineteenth century St. John’s Churchyard – where incidentally some of our own parishioners are buried – witnessed a steady stream of worshippers passing each other throughout Sunday mornings.

But it was the weekday Masses in the old Anglican Churches in the outlying villages which really thrilled. Many of those Churches were pre-Reformation and until now Mass had not been celebrated within their walls for over four hundred years. Among these was the Church of SS. Peter and Paul at Longbridge Deverill, where the altar stone was used by St. Thomas a Becket when he came to consecrate the Church in 1167. Then there was St. Peter’s at Codford, dating back to the thirteenth century, still with the original East Wall. Also from the same period, St. Margaret’s at Corsley, where, in 1377, “there were 177 poll-tax payers”; and SS. Peter and Paul at Heytesbury, rebuilt in the twelfth century from a former Saxon Church, as Collegiate Church for four Canons.

We also took the Mass to All Saints Parish Church at Norton Bavant, a twelfth century Church, partly rebuilt in the nineteenth, but still with the priest’s room and fireplace in the original west tower, and to St. Leonard’s at Sutton Veny, where the roofless nave and transepts of the fourteenth century Church have been left as picturesque ruins in the grounds now owned by parishioners of St. John’s.

On Saturday mornings Mass was celebrated in the unique Chapel of St. Lawrence which stands in Warminster’s busy High Street. The Church was built in the early thirteenth century in what was then a graveyard, as a Chapel of Ease for those who could not get to the Minster Church of St. Denys because of floods in the Portway area. St. Lawrence’s had a resident priest/school-master, the last incumbent being paid a pension of £5 a year in 1549. St. Lawrence’s Church is now non-denominational; it belongs to the townspeople and is run by “twelve, ten or eight of the principal honest and discreet men of the parish of Warminster”. They are known as “feoffees’, a feoffee being “one who receives a fief’, that is, a trustee of land being held by feudal tenure.

In recent years a tradition has grown that the Churches Together in Warminster hold a combined open-air service in the grounds of St. Lawrence’s Church on the morning of Good Friday. Loud-speakers are used, and leaflets distributed, hopefully so that onlookers will know, and appreciate, the solemnity of the day.

A pleasing development has been the periodic holding of “Clergy Fraternals’ when ministers of the various Churches get together to discuss matters within their spheres of interest.

Our Association With St. George
The association of our parish with St. George is fortuitous rather than planned. It has already been observed that the Ursuline Sisters, driven from France by religious persecution in 1906, sought refuge in this country – no Asylum or Immigration Laws in those days – and in gratitude for a haven in Warminster dedicated their Convent to England’s patron saint. Despite the three year gap between the Sisters’ leaving in 1919 and the building of the Church in 1922 it was decided, as Dr. Harding explains, “to call the Church St. George’, thus continuing the already popular dedication chosen by the Ursuline Sisters”. Taunton in Somerset is the only other parish in this diocese dedicated to St. George.

Whenever possible during the past seventy years major events have been held on St. George’s feast day, 23rd April. Thus in 1970 St. George’s School was officially opened and blessed on that day. In recent years the rotating ecumenical service has contrived to arrive at “the RC Church’ on or near St. George’s Day; in 1994 this occasion was enhanced by the release of some two hundred red and white balloons (colours of the cross of St. George) with goodwill labels to wherever the winds could carry them. (One, we later heard, had landed in a school playground in Yorkshire.)

It is rather sad that St. George today has rather a low profile in the hearts of most English people by comparison, say, with St. Patrick in Ireland or St. David in Wales. Yet it was not always so. In the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries St. George’s Day was a “Holiday of Obligation’, and before the reform of the Church’s Calendar of Saints in this century the feast even had an “octave’ (eight days of commemoration) in Churches and Cathedrals dedicated to the saint.

St. George’s Chapel, in the grounds of Windsor Castle, built in 1347 or thereabouts, is still very much alive to the significance of St. George; the Chapel is used whenever the Sovereign bestows the Order of the Garter on one of her subjects. However, as a recent letter to The Times somewhat cynically suggested, St. George will once again be invoked by the English when they come to realise that they are being ruled by Brussels!

Great St. George, our patron, help us,
In the conflict be thou nigh;
Help us in that daily battle
Where each one must live or die.

Conclusion
What more can be said in a pocket-sized booklet? As a parish we feel that we in Warminster are an integral part of the family of our diocese of Clifton which itself, together with that of Plymouth and the dioceses of Wales, formed The Western District, established in 1688. In that year, the Hierarchies of England and Wales having been eliminated by Elizabeth I and her successors (plus of course Oliver Cromwell), Rome divided the two countries into four Districts, or Vicariates, each administered by a Vicar Apostolic. Ours was The Western District, and its colourful history is recorded in “Fathers In Faith’, edited by Dom Aidan Bellenger OSB MA PhD FR Hist S FRSA of Downside Abbey. Clifton was created in 1850.

So we have a historic lineage, and we are justly proud of our heritage. We hope and pray that this “sensus fidei’, feel for the Faith, will rub off on all who come this way.

St. George, Patron of England,
and Patron of our Parish of Warminster,
Pray for us.

Parish Priests Who Have Served Warminster
Fr. Donal O’Connell 1938-39
Fr. Joseph Sutton 1939-51
Canon Joseph Renehan 1951-65
Fr. Nicholas McCarthy 1965-71
Fr. John Harding 1971-78
Fr. Michael Larkin 1978-81
Fr. Michael House 1981-87
Fr. David Ryan 1987-96
Fr. Paul Brandon 1996-

Assistant Priests At Warminster
Fr. Edmond Murphy with Fr. Sutton.
Fr. (now Canon) William Roche with Canon Renehan.
Fr. Michael O’Sullivan with Canon Renehan.
Fr. Bruno Bradley with Fr. McCarthy.
Fr. Edwin Gordon with Fr. McCarthy.

There have been no curates at St. George’s since 1971.

Rev. Wallis Hardy, ordained Deacon in 1976, worked in the parish from then until 1983, and gave invaluable help to Fr. Harding, Fr. Larkin, and Fr. House. He now lives in retirement at Walton-on-Thames, Surrey.

The Ordination of Father Vincent Curtis by
The Rt. Rev. Bishop Mervyn Alexander D.D.
Bishop of Clifton
Saturday 10th June 1989.
Photo B.A. Tunbridge & Co. Bristol.

Acknowledgements & Bibliography
For source material for the compilation of these notes I am deeply grateful to Rev. J.J. Daniell (The History of Warminster), to Rev. Dr. J.A. Harding (1300 Years – A History of the Catholic Church in Warminster), to Mr. A. Houghton (Before The Warminster Bypass), to Mr. Danny Howell (Yesterday’s Warminster), and to Mr. Kevin Robertson (Wiltshire Railways In Old Photographs).

I am also grateful to Mr. Cliff Topping for the sketch of St. George’s statue on the front of the Church and to B.A. Tunbridge & Co. of Bristol for the photograph taken on the occasion of the ordination of Fr. Vincent Curtis.

I am indebted to Eileen Knowles for guiding me on historical facts; without her assistance these notes would have contained historical innacuracies.

Finally I would like to thank Fr. David Ryan, parish priest 1987-1996, for asking me to write this Guide, and for encouraging me whilst doing so.

Baker (1990) With All Hopes Dashed In The Human Zoo.
Bellenger (1991) Fathers In Faith (edited).
Cundick (1987) The Inns And Taverns Of Warminster.
Daniell (1879) The History Of Warminster.
Dawkins (1989) When Warm Milk Was Fresh Milk.
Harding (1980) 1300 Years – A History Of The Catholic Church In Warminster.
Houghton (1988) Before The Warminster Bypass.
Howell (1987) Yesterday’s Warminster.
Howell (1988) Smallbrook Farm Warminster.
Howell (1989) Warminster In Old Photographs.
Howell (1990) Five Connected Lives.
Howes (1988) St. George’s Catholic Church In Warminster 1938-1988.
Phillips (1988) The Warminster Trail.
Robertson (1988) Wiltshire Railways In Old Photographs.

St. George’s Church, A Guide For Visitors. Copyright Terence Howes.

error: Content is protected !!