Warminster Highbury Youth F.C. – Club Rules/Constitution

Warminster Highbury Youth Football Club
Rules/Constitution.

1. Name
The club shall be called Warminster Highbury Youth FC.

2. Obejectives
The objectives of Warminster Highbury YFC shall be to arrange association football matches and social activities for its members.

3. Status of Rules
These rules (the Club Rules) form a binding agreement between each member of Warminster Highbury YFC.

4. Rules & Regulations

a) Warminster Highbury YFC shall have the status of an affiliated member club of The Football Association by virtue of its affiliation to Wiltshire F.A. The Rules and Regulations of The Football Association and Wiltshire F.A. shall be deemed to be incorporated into the rules.

b) No alteration to the club rules shall be affected without prior written approval by Wiltshire F.A.

c) Warminster Highbury YFC will also abide The F.A.’s Safeguarding Children Policies and Procedures, Respect Codes of Conduct, Equal Opportunities and Anti-Discrimination Policy.

5. Club Membership

a) The members of the club shall be those persons listed in the register of members; this shall be maintained by the club secretary.

b) Any person who wishes to be a member must apply on a membership application form and submit it to the club secretary. Election to membership shall be at the sole discretion of the club committee. Membership shall be effective upon an applicant’s name being entered in the membership register.

c) In the event of a member’s resignation or expulsion his or her name shall be removed from the membership register.

d) The F.A. and Wiltshire F.A. shall be given access to the membership register on request.

6. Annual Membership Fee

a) An annual fee payable by each member shall be determined from time to time by the club committee. Any fee shall be payable on a successful application for membership and annually by each member. Fees shall not be repayable.

b) The club committee has the authority to levy further subscriptions from the members as are reasonably necessary to fulfil the objects of the club.

7. Resignation and Expulsion

a) A member shall cease to be a member of Warminster Highbury YFC if, and on the date of which, he/she gives notice to the Club Committee of their resignation.

b) The Club Committee shall have the power to expel a member when, in their opinion, it would not be in the interests of the club for them to remain a member.

c) A member who resigns or is expelled shall not be entitled to claim any of the club’s property.

d) Any members deemed to be bringing the club into disrepute can be subjected to an independent panel, set up by the Chairman, to investigate the matter. If the claim is substantiated the committee reserves the right to remove members from the club.

8. Club Committee

a) The Club Committee shall consist of the following club officers: Chairperson, Treasurer, Secretary, Club Welfare Officer.

b) The remainder of the Club committee shall consist of no less than 5 and no more than 8 persons, which will include Committee members and ex-officials (ex-officials will not be eligible to vote)

c) Each Club Officer and Committee Member shall hold office from the date of appointment until the next Annual General Meeting unless otherwise resolved at a Special General Meeting. One person may not hold any more than two positions of Club officer at any one time. The Club Committee shall be responsible for the management of all the Club affairs. Decisions of the Club Committee shall be made by a simple majority of those attending the Club Committee Meeting. The Chairperson of the Club Committee meeting shall have the casting vote in the event of a tie. Meetings of the club committee shall be chaired by the Chairperson or in their absence the Vice Chairperson. The quorum for the transaction of business of the club committee shall be 5.

d) Should a committee member be absent from 3 or more meetings during one season, the Committee will be obligated to discuss their future in the Committee.

e) Decisions of the Club Committee of meetings shall be entered into the Clubs minute book which will be maintained by the Club Secretary or Treasurer.

f) Any member of the Club Committee may call a meeting of the Club Committee by giving no less than 7 days notice to all members of the Club Committee. The Club Committee shall hold no less than 4 meetings per year.

g) An out-going member of the Club Committee may be re-elected. A member proposed by one and seconded by another of the remaining Club Committee members and approved by a simple majority of the remaining Committee members shall fill any vacancy on the Club Committee, which arises between Annual General Meetings.

h) Save as provided for in the Rules & Regulations of the Football Association and the Wiltshire F.A. to which Warminster Highbury Youth F.C. is affiliated; the Club Committee shall have the power to decide all questions and disputes arising in respect of any issues concerning the Club rules.

i) The position of a Club Officer shall be vacated if such person is subject to a decision of The F.A. that such person be suspended from holding office or from taking part in any football activity relating to the administration or management of a football club.

j) The Club Welfare Officer will sit on the committee as a standing member.

9. Annual and Special General Meeting

a) An Annual General Meeting (AGM) shall be held in each year to:
1. Receive a report of the activities of the club over the previous year.
2. Receive a report of the club’s finances over the previous year.
3. Elect the members of the Club Committee.
4. Consider any other business.

b) Nominations for election of members as Club Officers or as members of the Club Committee shall be made in writing by the proposer and seconder, both who must be existing members of the Club, to the Club Secretary no less than 21 days before the AGM. Notice of any resolution to be proposed at the AGM shall be given to the Club Secretary no less than 21 days before the meeting.

c) A Special General Meeting (SGM) may be called at any time by the committee and shall be called within 21 days of the receipt by the Club Secretary of a requisition in writing signed by no less than five members stating the purpose for which the meeting is required and the resolutions proposed. Business at an SGM may be any business transacted at an AGM.

d) The Secretary shall send to each member written notice of the date of a General Meeting together with resolutions to be proposed at least 14 days before the meeting.

e) The quorum for a General Meeting shall be 5.

f) The Chairperson or in their absence a member selected by the Club Committee shall take the Chair. Each member present shall have one vote (see 8 b) and a simple majority shall pass resolutions. In the event of an equality of votes the Chairperson of the meeting shall have the casting vote.

g) The Club Secretary or Minutes Secretary or in their absence a member of the Committee, shall enter minutes of General Meetings into the minute book of the Club.

10. At its first meeting following each AGM the club committee shall appoint a club member to be responsible for each of the club’s football teams. The appointed members shall be responsible for managing the affairs of the team. The appointed members shall present a written report of the activities of the team at club meetings.

11. Club Finances

a) A bank account shall be opened and maintained in the name of Warminster Highbury Youth F.C. Designated account signatories shall be Chairperson, and the Club Treasurer. No sum shall be drawn from the Club account except by prior consent of the Chairperson and Treasurer. All monies payable to Warminster Highbury Youth F.C. shall be received by the Treasurer and deposited in the Club account.

b) The income and assets of the Club shall be applied only in furtherance of the objects of the Club.

c) The Club Committee shall have the power to authorise the payment of remuneration and expenses to any member of the Club and to any other person or persons for services rendered to the Club.

d) The Club shall prepare an annual Financial Statement in such form as shall be published by the F.A. from time to time.

e) The Club Property, other than the Club account shall be vested in no less than two and no more than four custodians, who shall deal with the Club Property as directed by decisions of the Club Committee and entry in the minute book shall be conclusive evidence of such decision.

f) The Custodians shall be appointed by the club in a General Meeting and shall hold office until death or resignation unless removed by resolution passed at a General Meeting.

g) On their removal or resignation, a custodian shall execute a conveyance in such form as is published by the F.A. from time to time to a newly elected custodian or the existing custodians as directed by the Club Committee. On the death of a custodian, any Club property vested in them shall vest automatically in the surviving custodians. If there is only one surviving custodian, a Special General Meeting shall be convened as soon as possible to appoint another custodian.

h) The custodians shall be entitled to an indemnity out of the Club property for all expenses and other liabilities reasonably incurred by them carrying out their duties.

12. Dissolution

a) A resolution to dissolve the club shall only be proposed at a General Meeting and shall be carried by a majority of at least three-quarters of the members present.

b) The dissolution shall take effect from the date of the resolution and the members of the club committee shall be responsible for the winding up of the assets and liabilities of the club.

c) Any surplus assets remaining after the discharge of the debts and liabilities of the club shall be transferred to the parent Association who shall determine how the assets shall be utilised for the benefit of the game. Alternatively, such assets may be disposed of in such other manner as the members of the club with the consent of the parent Association shall determine.

Meeting House Plan, Warminster

A letter to the Editor, Warminster & District Archive magazine, issue No.1, Winter 1988:

Dear Danny Howell,
First of all I would like to congratulate you on your achievements so far in bringing so much of interest to the local community through the medium of your writings, particularly about the history of our town and the people who were part of it. Now that you are about to launch a quarterly magazine it seems timely to thank you for past endeavours and at the same time wish you every success in this latest venture.

I understand that your magazine is to be called Warminster & District Archive, which moves me to offer to you a bit of archivistic material which came to my notice quite recently. Whilst referring to some notes of the late Harold Dewey, I came across a small piece of paper on which had been drawn a floor plan of “Old Meeting”, the Non-Conformist Chapel which was built in North Row, Warminster, in the late 18th century and what is now known as Dewey House (the home of the Parish Council). The plan had been very carefully drawn and was virtually to scale. The layout of the ground floor showed the location of the box pews and they were numbered from 1 to 33. Also shown are the two great wooden pillars, still a feature of the building, leaving no doubt as to the authenticity of the plan. Alongside the drawing is the key to the users of the pews and a note to the effect that this applied in the year 1828. This was in Mr. Dewey’s handwriting. Which I am very familiar with. Also noted is the fact that this information was copied from the diary of Miss Ellen Wansey, the fifth child of Henry Wansey, who built Sambourne House in 1800. Ellen Wansey was born in 1807, remained a spinster and died in Bridport, Dorset, in 1889.

I have now made a fair reproduction of Harold Dewey’s copy and am passing it over to the Town Council, to go on display in Dewey House, in order to provide another little bit of information for all to share. A photostat for your own archive accompanies this letter.

With every good wish, yours sincerely,
Mr. J. Field, Hon. Curator of the Dewey Museum, Trinity Cottage, 16 Vicarage Street, Warminster, Wiltshire.

1 Mr. Thomas Buckler.
2 Mrs. Lye.
3 Mr. H. Wansey Sen.
4 Mrs. P. Warren.
5 Mrs. G. Wansey.
6 Mrs. Wansey Sen.
7 E. Wansey late Mrs. A. Wansey.
8 Mrs. Noyle
9
10 Susan Bunting.
11 Mrs. G. Wansey’s Servants.
12 Mrs. H. Warren’s Servants.
13 Samuel Haines.
14 William Dredge.
15 Mrs. Lye’s Servants.
16 Sally Opens.
17 B. Debnam & Wife.
18 Mr. G. Warren.
19 Mrs. Kemp & Family.
20 Mrs. T. Hinton.
21 Mrs. & Mrs. H. Wansey.
22 Mrs. Turner.
23 Mr. Garrett (Mrs. Smith).
24 Strangers Seat.
25 Mr. Buckler (Mr. & Mrs. U.)
26 Ourselves (occasionally)
27 Mr. Middlecott.
28 Mr. Halliday.
29 Strangers.
30 Mrs. U. Buckler Sen.
31 Charlotte Brown (B. Hayward).
32 Whatley.
33 Stricklands.

Following Cobbett ~ Along A Wiltshire River

On location in the Wylye Valley with HTV West.

Danny Howell, writing in Warminster & District Archive magazine, No.1, Winter 1988, reported:

Many Archive readers, particularly those who live in Warminster and the Wylye Valley, will have seen a HTV West film crew filming in the area last summer. So, what was it all about? Why were the cameras focusing on our part of the world? Was it the return of unidentified flying objects? Was something out of the ordinary happening in our midst? As one who was partly involved in the media activity, allow me to satisfy your curiosity.

HTV were filming a series of half-hour documentaries for screening in 1989. Clive Gunnell, who needs no introduction, having walked many miles for television in recent years, including Along The Cotswold Way and Through The Forest Of Dean, has now completed a stroll through the Wylye Valley from Salisbury to Warminster, following as closely as possible the route taken by the great William Cobbett in 1826.

Cobbett (1763-1835), who made his journey on horseback, wrote a series of evocative essays about this and other travels for his book Rural Rides. He has recently been described as “the most powerful and eloquent political writer of his day.” Born a farmer’s son, at Farnham in Surrey, he began work for his father after leaving school but aspiring to better things he left when he was 20 and became a solicitor’s clerk. He wasn’t really suited to this and in 1784 he enlisted in the army, where he soon became a sergeant-major, travelling with the 54th Regiment to New Brunswick. In 1791 he was discharged, and set about exposing the corruption he had seen amongst the officers. He soon found himself in trouble and was forced to flee to France for a while and later to the USA. Here, he put his talents to good use, writing and publishing pamphlets defending the British Monarchy. His publications included Observations on Priestly’s Emigration (1794), and the Porcupine Gazette (1797-99). He became well-known for this and his fame spread back to England where the pamphlets were re-printed.

His criticism of the pro-French party in the USA got him “into hot water” and, with his career apparently ruined, he returned to England in 1800 after losing a libel suit to Dr. Benjamin Rush. He was immediately taken under the wing of the Tory leaders, who provided him with the funds to start the Political Register in 1802 (this was published on a weekly basis until his death). In 1804 he also began an unofficial record of parliamentary debates – this was later taken on by Hansard, the printing firm, and became the official record of Parliament. Cobbett, always on the side of the oppressed and moved by the suffering of the poor, reverted to radicalism and he was prosecuted in 1804 for an article he wrote on Ireland. He constantly criticised those in charge of the administration and they too prosecuted him for his remarks in 1810. He was sent to Newgate Prison for two years. In trouble again in 1817, he absconded to America, not wanting to go behind bars again. Although he was an active politician and was elected to Parliament in 1832, leading the agitation for parliamentary reform, he never really achieved any marked success. He did find time to write several books: Cottage Economy (1822), The English Gardener (1829), and Advice To Young Men (1830). Rural Rides was also published in 1830.

Some of you will be familiar with what Cobbett said in Rural Rides about Warminster – “I must once more observe that Warminster is a very nice town: everything belonging to it is solid and good. There are no villainous gingerbread houses running up, and no nasty shabby-genteel people, no women trapseing around with showy gowns and dirty necks; no Jew-looking fellows with dandy coats, dirty shirts and half-heels to their shoes. A really nice and good town.”

Cobbett was also impressed with the upper reaches of the Wylye Valley – “From Heytesbury to Warminster is a part of the country singularly bright and beautiful. From Salisbury up to very near Heytesbury, you have the valley . . . Meadows next the water; then arable land; then the downs; but, when you come to Heytesbury, and indeed, a little before, in looking forward you see the vale stretch out, from about three miles wide to ten miles wide, from high land to high land. From a hill before you come down to Heytesbury, you see through this wide opening into Somersetshire. You see a round hill rising in the middle of the opening; but all the rest a flat enclosed country, and apparently full of wood . . . all the way from Salisbury to Warminster . . . the country is the most pleasant that can be imagined. Here is water, here are meadows; plenty of fresh-water fish; hares and partridges in abundance, and it is next to impossible to destroy them. Here are shooting, coursing, hunting; hills of every height, size and form; valleys, the same; lofty trees and rookeries in every mile; roads always solid and good; always pleasant for exercise; and the air must be of the best in the world . . . It is impossible for the eyes of man to be fixed on a finer country than that between the village of Codford and the town of Warminster . . . There are two villages, one called Norton Bavant, and the other Bishopstrow, which I think firm, together, one of the prettiest spots that my eyes ever beheld.”

I think we can take this as quite a compliment – for Cobbett, as I mentioned earlier, had travelled both in this country and abroad, seeing many forms of landscape, and he was certainly not a man to mince his words. Most of his remarks were critical and scathing – yet he said these wonderful things about our patch. What better reason could there be for making some films about the Wylye Valley?

And so to Clive Gunnell. I think that he, like Cobbett, having seen many varying types of landscape and panoramas, was also suitably impressed with the Wylye Valley. Not only that, the film crew commented, more than once, either on location or over lunch, how they had not realised before how outstanding the countryside round Warminster is. In conversation between takes I came to know Clive and his way of thinking and I found him instantly likeable and easy to talk to. He does not describe himself as a journalist or a writer (even though he has contributed articles to magazines), nor does he like the tag “historian” and he shudders at the thought of being “a television star” despite his TV walks and appearances on West Country Farming and The Weekend Starts Here. When confronted with all this, he told me he considered himself “an entertainer” right from his youth when he appeared with his father as a music-hall duo. His programmes do entertain, and he does have the knack of putting his interviewees at ease – what’s more he appears to know what they’re talking about!

It was my pleasure to help Clive plan his route between Wylye and Warminster, and I introduced him to some of the Valley’s characters who soon found themselves talking in front of the cameras. Among them were Roy Bryant of the Stores at Bapton; Mrs. Beagley, who keeps the Ram Park flock of Jacob sheep at Sherrington, spinning the wool into attractive garments; Mr. Green, whose ducks and trout in the old watercress beds at Sherrington have until recently attracted tourists for miles around; Mr. and Mrs. Bill Robbins at Heytesbury; and Fred Stickland, a resident of St. John’s Hospital, also at Heytesbury. The rapport was simple, logical, no-nonsense stuff – concentrating on how things had changed in the villages, over the years, for better or for worse. I’m pleased to say that the interviewees were the ordinary folk (and I don’t mean that insultingly) who live and work in the Valley. I even found myself casting modesty aside to wax lyrical for the small screen!

Between interviews Clive drew attention to much of the area’s historical past, including Seigfried Sassoon’s association with Heytesbury; St. James’ Church at Tytherington; Cobbett’s generosity to nut-gatherers in the Angel Inn, Heytesbury; the impressive Iron Age hill fort of Scratchbury; and the deserted village of Middleton, to name but a few examples. In Warminster, once a great corn market and trade centre for malt and cloth, Clive had some outspoken things to say about the more recent street architecture (will his comments, true as they are, survive the cutting room?) and he visited Carson’s Yard, for a chat about the demise of the Wiltshire Foundry. Also on his schedule was a chin-wag with David Pollard who maintains many of Warminster’s clocks. Television viewers will be able to see at close quarters the faceless clock of St. Laurence’s Church striking 3 pm. Before leaving Warminster Clive had time for a windswept natter on Arn Hill with Mr. Jack Field, Chairman of the Warminster History Society and Honorary Curator of the Dewey Museum. Mr. Field extolled the virtues of living in Warminster, and the lofty summit of Arn Hill allowed the cameraman to record some views of the busy town below.

All of this will be transmitted in the coming year. If possible, Archive will give you advance notification herein of the dates and times when the films are to be shown. Meanwhile, we will all have to wait patiently to see some of our friends and surroundings immortalised on celluloid, or should I say video? William Cobbett (for the past) and Clive Gunnell (for the present) equally promote the Wylye Valley as a pleasant and attractive place – let’s hope the makers of these documentaries, combing the words of both these commentators with the thoughts and recollections of some of the locals, have been successful in capturing something of the essence of the beautiful Wylye Valley.

Warminster Cricket Club ~ The Early Years: 1838 – 1900

A History Of Warminster Cricket Club
by
Andrew J. Pinnell
(first published in 1988)

The Early Years: 1838 ~ 1900

The earliest known reference to Warminster Cricket Club dates back to 1838 and can be found in A History Of Wiltshire, Vol. IV on page 378. The same source also notes that a cricket match took place in the town as early as 1800 when eleven of the town’s gentlemen played a team of the same from Salisbury. This match took place on Cockerall’s new ground and was played for a purse of 500 guineas. Since these pioneering days cricket has, of course, changed a great deal but Warminster was always at the forefront of cricketing activities in the locality.

It is virtually impossible to trace any reports of the first matches played by Warminster but they were certainly low-scoring affairs because of poor pitches and the long grass which was such a feature of the outfield. It is also worth remembering that matches consisted of two innings per side and were completed inside a day. Individual batting scores over twenty were exceptional while bowlers often took fifteen or more wickets in a match.

Warminster initially played its cricket on a field in Boreham, probably moving to Sambourne Road in the 1850s. At its new home the club grew steadily and by the next decade boasted a comparitively full fixture card playing the likes of Selwood Foresters (Frome), Warminster Mission College, Heytesbury and Codford, Lansdown, Horningsham and Lord Weymouth’s Grammar School.

Exceptional talents tended to be few and far between so the better players in the area would often play for a variety of sides. It is no coincidence, therefore, that they tended to come from the upper classes or had an ecclesiastical background (only such people could afford to spend countless days on the field of play during the summer months). Indeed, three particularly proficient scorers for early Warminster sides were the Rev. H.C. De St Croix, T. Waters and F.J. Williams.

Little changed at Warminster Cricket Club until the 1880s for three reasons: the lack of members, the difficulty in securing new fixtures and the problem of travel to away matches. However, in 1881, Warminster became one of the founder members of the Wiltshire Cricket Association and two years later the club captain, Robert Blake, became the first player from the club to represent the county. He played against Surrey Club and Ground and had the misfortune to score a “duck”.

An extraordinary match also took place at Sambourne Road in 1881 between seven members of the Coates family, B.W. Coates and his six sons, and seven of the Deverill club. The family side won by an innings and 89 runs as all were reasonable cricketers. The event was revealed in a letter to the Daily Mail and was printed in August 1936.

Warminster cricket continued to prosper with Blake, B.W. Coates and W. Powell being the mainstay of the club’s batting. These three often scored half-centuries which was a considerable feat over a century ago. In 1883 W.J. Rushton took a hat-trick whilst playing against Shaftesbury. This is the first recorded feat of its kind that I have found and in recognition of his achievement Rushton was presented with a cap from his fellow players.

By 1884 the Club had many new fixtures playing, among others, Bruton School, Westbury, Trowbridge and Stourhead Park. Steps were taken to improve facilities at the ground and a new pavilion was built which replaced the “wooden tent” that had stood since 1868. In view of the amount spent on the latest pavilion it should be noted that the total cost of the one erected in 1884 was £104!

At the 1855 AGM the ever-expanding club decided to engage the services of a professional named Mr E. Syson – the proposal was later rejected on the advice of Blake. No doubt he was aware of his “star” status in the town and saw the arrival of a ‘pro’ as a threat to his own position. As if to underline Blake’s influence over club affairs he was appointed treasurer, secretary and club captain in 1887.

In the same year the team scored over 200 for the first time, making 265 against Frome. Blake scored 69 and went on to score 70 against Wilton later in the year. Not surprisingly it was Blake who scored the first individual century making 117 against Trowbridge before leaving both the club and the town. Despite this loss the club continued to thrive and in 1890 A.H. Coates registered another century, making 141 against Codford.

In 1883 Coates again batted well along with C.F. Gerrish who made 104 in a match played between two teams selected from the club’s ranks. In 1894 Blake had returned to the town and chaired that year’s AGM at the Athenaeum. The meeting discussed proposals to build a cinder cycling track around the ground’s perimeter and contemplated sharing Sambourne Road with the football club. Both ideas were later dismissed, the former as “pure folly”. The club did, however, finally employ a “pro”, Mr F. Butler, justifying his fee of £2 per week by taking 120 wickets in the season at an average of 6.83.

In 1895 the club was sufficiently strong to field a second eleven which was captained in its inaugural season by W.J. Lee. Blake was again selected to play for the County against the Colts, A.H. Coates being chosen to play for the latter. Blake was the most powerful figure at the club and this was illustrated when he married Miss Ripley from Windsor. A wedding breakfast was held in the pavilion which was followed by a tennis tournament. The town band was present and games of football and cricket were arranged to entertain the assembled multitudes.

Towards the end of the century Warminster’s batting was strengthened still further by the arrival of G.H. Aitken who made 110 against Trowbridge in 1898. A year after he made probably the highest score of a Warminster batsmen by hitting 169 against Westbury. The team scored 265 in a little over 70 minutes and the report in the Wiltshire Times read: “The cheering of the spectators and the excitement was immense, as on average three or four balls from every over were hit to the boundary”.

The club could look forward to the Edwardian era with optimism; the standard of play was high and the team could field two strong sides and had an improving youth policy. Off the field the ground was in good condition and the new pavilion had already been paid for. Prospects were good as the club entered the twentieth century.

Of Special Interest At Warminster Dewey Museum

Friday 27th May 1988

Of great interest. Joy West has put the finishing touches to a Victorian working girl’s wedding dress which is part of a special exhibition of local items of interest at Warminster Dewey Museum this month [May 1988].

Marie Freer, Danny Howell, Howard Freer and Reg Cundick, who are all members of the Warminster History Society, have mounted the display which continues to the end of the month.

Among the exhibits are pieces of equipment from the old Stiles Bros., and Wilson & Kennard shops which are usually too large to put on show, and a couple of prints of the staff at the former Alfred Jefferies’ gloving factory taken in the 1920s. The museum’s curator Jack Field would be delighted to discover the names of those who appear in the photographs.

Book Winners

From the West Wiltshire Advertiser, Thursday 21st April 1988:

Historic Victory For Four
Heading off down memory lane are four lucky winners in the Advertiser’s nostalgia competition.

The winners will each receive a copy of the new book by history writer Danny Howell, called Smallbrook Farm 1905-1965.

The winners are: K. Balch, Firwood Road, Frome; R. Evans, Whitestone Road, Frome; J. Harding, Elm Grove, Corsham; P. Rix, Boreham Road, Warminster.

And the answers were: 1. Danny Howell is 32 years old. 2. The housing estate is called Prestbury Park. 3. The Dowding family kept 25 cows.

Smallbrook Farm ~ Gone But Not Forgotten

Book. Smallbrook Farm, Warminster, 1905-1965. Review.

GONE BUT NOT FORGOTTEN

Sixty years of a Warminster farm are chronicled in the latest book by town historian Danny Howell. The research and writing of Warminster’s chequered past has become Mr Howell’s trade mark and his fifth book – Smallbrook Farm, Warminster, 1905-1965 records for posterity part of the town which no longer exists.

Released today [1st April 1988], the paperback comprises the edited transcripts of tape-recorded interviews with Bert Dowding, the last to farm at Smallbrook, whose site is now occupied by the Prestbury Park residential estate. Also included is Bert’s sister Mrs Beatrice Young, and in their own words they tell the story of life both on and away from the land.

Bert, born at the farm in 1915, now lives at nearby Rock Lane. He took the farm over from his father, who came to Warminster in 1905. Beatrice, who was born at Smallbrook, spent the early part of her working life as a secretary and lives now at Willow Crescent, just 50 yards from her childhood home.

The book is more than just an account of Smallbrook Farm and the Dowding family because Mr Howell has added further information to the story, making it an even more enjoyable read, nostalgic and informative.

“I am sure the older Warminster residents will be stirred by the contents of this book, and younger ones and newcomers will certainly be able to glimpse what is now another part of the town’s history,” said Mr Howell. “I am pleased to know that I have, once again, been able to publish something “new’ about the town’s past, and I am glad to have had the chance to meet Bert Dowding and Beatrice Young, to record in print an account of Smallbrook Farm for all to enjoy and read.”

The 92-page book, which is a limited edition of only 400 copies, has 65 photos and illustrations, many of which have been loaned from the Dowding family’s personal collection. Among other aspects of Warminster’s past highlighted in the book are the heydays of the Warminster Cattle Market, which is now defunct; the coming of Clark’s shoe factory to the town; the building of Beckford Lodge and recollections of St. John’s School.

The farmhouse itself, demolished soon after 1964, was situated near today’s junction of Prestbury Drive and Southleigh View. Mr Howell said it was probably built in the 1830s and its site was on or near that of Olwey, the manor house of Smallbrook, a small manor mentioned in the Domesday Book.

More than 300 copies were ordered by subscribers and retailers before the book was despatched to the printers, an indication of the success of Mr Howell’s publications on local history. Smallbrook Farm, Warminster, 1905-1965 is published by Wylye Valley Publications at £3.50.

Wiltshire Times And News, Friday 1 April 1988.

Smallbrook Farm ~ Book Introduction

SMALLBROOK FARM, 1905-1965, WARMINSTER by Danny Howell.

BOOK INTRODUCTION

Smallbrook Farm no longer exists; it is just a memory to those who are old enough to recall what formerly occupied the area now taken up with the “Prestbury Park” residential estate – Prestbury Drive, St. John’s Road, Southleigh View and Willow Crescent.

Smallbrook Farmhouse, demolished soon after 1964, was situated very near today’s junction of Prestbury Drive and Southleigh View. It was probably built in the 1830s. Its site was on or near that of Olwey, the Manor House of Smallbrook, a small manor (mentioned in the Domesday Book) which also included additional parcels of land at Sambourne, Bugley, Chedlanger and Upton Scudamore. The Reverend John J. Daniell in his History Of Warminster, first published in 1879, gives an account of the lords of the Manor of Smallbrook, and he adds “The mansion of Olwey, ‘a fair country house, with a small park overlooking a fine valley,’ was pulled down within the last fifty years: the site is occupied by a small farmhouse; two pillars of the old gateway still remain, and the private road from the Warminster Highway, guarded by a chain.” The “private road” referred to by Daniell still exists today, though it is now modernised and used as a public thoroughfare, connecting Boreham Road (opposite Chancery Lane) with the junction of Smallbrook Road, Gipsy Lane, Southleigh View and Sandy Hollow. It is currently known as Chain Lane; its name reminds us of the means that made it private in Daniell’s time and before.

Smallbrook Farm could be approached by several ways: the aforementioned Chain Lane; Smallbrook Road (formerly known as Dutch’s Lane), which runs south-east from Boreham Road near the junction with Imber Road; via Sandy Hollow, the steep incline from Calveswater and Henford Marsh; and by Smallbrook Lane and a footpath, both running west from Boreham. The farm comprised nearly 60 acres of mostly good dairying pasture, reaching from Boreham to Wheeler’s Nurseries, and those who worked the land here were able to enjoy the relatively unspoilt view over the Marsh and the River Wylye to Eastleigh and Southleigh Woods. The last to farm at Smallbrook was Bert Dowding (born 1915), who followed in the footsteps of his father, Albert Dowding (1875-1959). The latter commenced farming at Smallbrook in 1905, taking over the holding from his brother-in-law, George Baker.

During the spring of 1986 I had the good fortune and pleasure to make a tape-recorded interview with Bert Dowding, whose Wiltshire brogue and sense of humour, coupled with an accurate recall of times past, made for a most enjoyable conversation lasting over three hours. In December 1987 I was likewise able to record an interview with Bert’s sister, Mrs Beatrice Young (born 1909), who also supplied me with several pages of written notes. Beatrice also kindly loaned to me many of the photographs and pictures for reproduction within the following pages.

I have, for the purposes of publication, mixed the words of Bert and Beatrice, as transcribed from the tapes of the interviews, to form the bulk of the text of this book. For those readers who always want to know more I have also included other information concerning some of the people, places and events mentioned by my two interviewees. This broadens the scope of the book and makes it much more than just an account of the Dowding family and their lives on and away from the farm. These extra items appear within the text in ‘boxes’ and readers may decide for themselves whether they only want to enjoy Bert’s and Beatrice’s personal recollections, or whether they want to read everything including details of my avid researches.

Either way, I hope that you will find this form of presentation acceptable. I am sure that older Warminster residents will be stirred by the contents of this book, and younger ones and newcomers will certainly be able to glimpse what is now another part of Warminster’s history. I am pleased to know that I have, once again, been able to publish something ‘new’ about Warminster’s past; and I am glad to have had both the chance to meet Bert Dowding and Beatrice Young (charming people) and to record in print an account of Smallbrook Farm for all to read and enjoy.

Danny Howell, April 1988.

The Warminster Workhouses

By Bruce Watkin:

In 1757, using the powers of a Workhouse Act of 1723, the parish of Warminster raised £500 for building a workhouse, by selling rights to inclose common land at Winehill and Daffords Wood to Lord Weymouth for £300 and borrowing another £200. It was built by Simon Coles of Warminster on a small plot of common land south of the present Brook Street and parts are still incorporated in the present Snooty Fox inn and restaurant (formerly the Globe Inn).

In January 1760 Mr and Mrs Thomas Oldfield were appointed to “take care” of the workhouse at an annual salary of £30 which was raised to £40 in the same November, but for some reason they were dismissed in 1766 and succeeded, in 1767, by Mr Evans at £28, in 1768 by Mr and Mrs Dowell at £20, and in 1776 by Mr and Mrs Coombs at an unnamed salary. The Reverend Dart (Master of the Grammar School) was paid £5 per annum for saying prayers there once a week from 1772.

It seems to have been a genuine workhouse, for both William Daniell (1850) and J.J. Daniell (1879) claim that no poor relief was paid to any able-bodied labourer at home after its foundation, while J.J. Daniell adds that “large quantities of cloth passed out of the workhouse” but gives no details. It was, as well, an asylum for orphans and the aged as is testified in a rare account of life therein by Harold Price writing 50 years later. He speaks well of its informal life, the kindness of the Master and the pleasure of the large garden (a 25 acre field inclosed for the workhouse in 1792). William Daniell, Assistant Overseer of the Poor and a champion of the local poor, says the area was hideously insanitary (which is very likely) and that the workhouse with its “90 to 100 paupers” was a “grievous concentration of every species of vice” (probably exaggeration). He adds that the weekly cost of supporting paupers was two shillings in the workhouse and one shilling in their own homes. The national ratio was about four to one.

At the end of the 18th century, due largely to the French wars, the cost of poor relief rose sharply in Warminster as elsewhere in southern England. The annual cost to Warminster went on rising even after the end of the war to reach a peak of over £6,000 in 1819. To most people in the early 19th century it appeared that the cost of such relief was now out of control and that it was also undermining the morale of agricultural and industrial workers. Ways were therefore sought of making the system more cost-effective and the days of the old workhouse were numbered.

Following other Government intervention in social reform, the Poor Law Amendment Act of 1834, which created the great Victorian workhouses, was devised and passed with little opposition. Its chief authors, Edwin Chadwick of Manchester and Nassau Senior, son of the vicar of Dunford, Wiltshire, were sincere liberal do-gooders. It was approved at a time when the poor had, by the “Swing” and other riots, shown some “ingratitude” to their “betters” (in Warminster they had destroyed the remnants of its cloth industry), but it was based largely on the authors’ misreading of some effects of the Elizabethan Poor Law. It was harsh in its attitude to the able-bodied unemployed though not to children, the sick and the aged.

The condemnation which it soon received was due to its common mal-administration by mean or brutal farmers and to its inadequate inspection by central authority. The new Act took power from the individual parishes and formed them into groups called Unions, each based on a market town. Guardians were elected by rate-payers to manage each Union and their work was to be standardised and overseen by three Poor Law Commissioners sitting in London – the “three kings of Somerset House”.

Outdoor relief (i.e. payment at home) to able-bodied paupers was to be discontinued immediately and a central workhouse for each Union was to be provided, harsh enough to deter all but the desperate from claiming relief. The arbitrary powers of the Poor Law Commissioners were later taken over by Boards responsible to Parliament and then by the Ministry of Health, but most of the system survived until 1930 and in parts till 1948.

Warminster and 20 nearby parishes were made into a new Union by the County’s Assistant Commissioner, Col. Charles a’Court of the Heytesbury family and was the basis of the later Urban and Rural Districts of Warminster. John Ravenhill, J.P., banker, of Warminster Manor House was chosen by a’Court as Chairman and from the new Board of some 33, which first met on 4th November 1835, Thomas Davis, agent of the Longleat Estate, was chosen as Vice-Chairman. There was of course a preponderance of farmers but the Warminster Board proved effective in keeping down Poor Law costs without any of the great public scandals that affected many other Unions. Their first action was to survey the cost of the former system and to note the diversion of Poor Rate funds to the making of Weymouth Street; their next was a decision to build a central workhouse for the Union. They invited Sampson Kempthorne, a founder of the Royal Institute of British Architects, and advisory architect to the Parliamentary Poor Law Commission, to design such a building. After considering a seven acre site at the junction of Hillwood Lane and Deverill Road they bought the three acre “Boot Field”, at the rear of the Boot Inn and the National School at Sambourne.

Kempthorne had a series of standard plans available and here a scaled down version of his Y plan was adopted. Work started in the spring of 1836 and was completed by December though, due to the death of the contractor John Ralphs, at the end of the year, it was not handed over till late January.

Carson and Miller provided heating stoves and kitchen equipment and were severely criticised for delays in completing their contract but the whole works, including alterations and additions to the original design were carried out remarkably quickly. The main wards and day rooms, to accommodate 130 paupers, were provided in a three storey Y-shaped block with a hexagonal ring of stores and workshops, which also incorporated a Classical-style two-storey building housing the official entrance and screening the end of the Ward block at the rear. The adjoining Ward block housed the chapel and dining room on its ground floor; the kitchen and Master’s rooms were in the hub of the Y, women and girls were housed in the left wing of the Y, men in the right and boys over the chapel. The total cost was about £7,000 which was higher than the average of such new houses. It is noticeable that the other Wiltshire Unions all adopted more conventional cruciform plans such as that at Semington.

Like most clients the Guardians took more interest in small details. They spent considerable time on the choice of a kitchen clock, eventually bought from a Mr Saunders for £7, a price to include repairs for seven years. Meanwhile they paid Warminster parish the sum of £7 10 shillings for the use of its old workhouse and another £3 15 shillings to Corsley parish for the use of their poor-house – a thatched building at Upper Whitbourne which could house 30 paupers.

It is worth recording that both old houses are still standing. The Brook Street workhouse was almost immediately taken by George Ward of Bull Mill, Crockerton, for silk-spinning and his machinery survived there long after his business closed. The main house was converted in the later 19th century to the Globe Inn [now the Snooty Fox]. The two wings which housed the workshops were demolished in the mid 20th century. The garden at the rear was still pleasant in 1986 and its “allotment” was incorporated in the Bradley Road allotments. The poor-house at Corsley was sold in 1839 for £117 and is now three dwellings (Nos. 21, 21a and 22 Corsley).

In 1836, the last year at the old Warminster house in Brook Street, the 96 inmates were listed as coming from the following parishes: Warminster 51; Heytesbury 16; Corsley 8; Codford St Mary 6; Longbridge Deverill 5; Chitterne All Saints 3; Boyton 2; and one each from Bishopstrow, Horningsham, Norton Bavant, Sutton Veny and Upton Scudamore. Minutes show the average stay was about 70 days. The parishes shown are more likely to have been their birth-places (to show which parish had to foot the bill) than their normal place of residence, which might have given some idea of the distribution of acute poverty. In February the paupers and the Master were moved to the new workhouse where at the first Guardians’ meeting the Master complained of continued shortages of water (blamed on Carson and Miller’s plumbing) and the Guardians ordered strong oak gates to be put across the entrance. As the three acre plot was now walled round in stone its prison-like nature was complete.

Harold Price, whose diary contains reminiscences of both old and new workhouses, was committed as a boy of 16 and had been sent to the U.S.A. when 18, where he had prospered. His recollections of the old workhouse were probably softened by time when he said that “these old poor houses were very good homes,” as William Daniell tells of an old pauper found dead outside after swearing that “he would rather the Devil would fetch him than that he should die” in the workhouse. Even so, Price recalls a wall being built to keep the girls and boys apart in the last days of the old workhouse. His memories of the new house are far sharper and confirm the grim nature of life there, the issue of uniforms, the strict segregation by age and sex, so that children only saw their mothers at evening prayers, the prison-like walls cutting off views of the fields and, above all, the awful and insufficient diet. The diet was a standard one laid down by the Poor Law Commissioners and allowed few variations in providing about 178 ounces of solid food a week for an adult male. The Warminster diet consisted of gruel every day for breakfast, four bread and cheese dinners, two meat and vegetable dinners and one soup dinner a week.

But the Poor Law Commissioners were not concerned with the quality of the food and here as elsewhere the Guardians’ urge for economy resulted, even without corruption, in the poorest quality being supplied by local traders. One piece of bacon, says Price, was so tough it could not be eaten and was kicked around their yard like a dirty tennis ball. In September 1837 the male paupers refused to attend chapel, as a protest against the insufficiency of their diet. The Guardians saw no grounds for their complaint, and John Parker (presumably a ring-leader) was locked up for a day. As late as 1904 an aged tramp was sent to a month’s imprisonment for refusing to break three-quarters of a ton of stone at the workhouse because the food was so scant.

The same diet was being administered in 1867 when a Lunacy Commissioner (there were always a few “lunatics” in the Warminster Workhouse during the 19th century) said it was insufficient and the Medical Officer thought “it might be remedied by an additional allowance of tea and bread and butter.” At Amesbury the Lunacy Commissioners were told by the Guardians “that however low this dietary might be in the Visiting Commissioners’ opinion, it was higher than the able-bodied labourers in the neighbourhood were able to obtain for themselves.” Even on Christmas Day there was little change; the Poor Law Commissioners had frowned on any special favours to paupers, however provided, and may well have criticised the Amesbury Union Guardians who spent two pounds ten shillings and two and a half pence on a special dinner for inmates at their first Christmas in the new house in 1837. Warminster appears to have ignored Christmas altogether for nearly 30 years, and it was not till December 1864 that the Guardians “ordered that the paupers in the workhouse be supplied with plum pudding and ale in addition to their usual rations on Christmas Day” and this was the standard formula at Christmas time from then on.

Most of the “out-relief” to paupers in their own homes was now given in kind rather than money and was confined to the aged and the sick though occasional and increasingly frequent payments were made to all kinds of paupers on the grounds of sickness. One of the first actions of the Guardians was to authorise the distribution of loaves supplied by contract: 350 a week throughout the Union: 4 lb. loaves supplied at a cost of five and a half pence in Warminster and five and three-quarters pence in the outer parishes in 1881 and 8 lb. loaves at ten and a quarter pence for the workhouse itself.

It is difficult to say what the inmates of the workhouse did. There was a ring of workshops round the yard, and in the early days use was also made of the garden. Price records men and boys being set to pounding bones to make agricultural fertiliser, a damaging and disgusting job from which he was saved by a kindly porter. The garden seems to have been abandoned before the end of the century, but stone breaking for men and boys continued as one of the main occupations. Corn grinding was used at many workhouses and endless cleaning of floors, benches and walls was almost universal. Most of the paupers’ time was evidently spent in mindless inactivity made worse by pointless regulations, such as the one under which John Parker, in December 1837, was punished for receiving, and then hiding under his bed, a pack of cards.

The education of pauper children was certainly intended but became the biggest source of complaints reaching the Poor Law Commissioners. Price’s experience at Warminster is typical of many. He was sent for some weeks to the adjoining National School, but the parents of other children objected to paupers sitting alongside their own and the paupers were withdrawn. The Guardians then appointed what Price describes as ‘a shoemaker who could not do a rule of 3 sum’, but within a year ‘had brought disgrace on himself and ruin on another’, and ‘had to leave for Paris the other side of the world’. We have no knowledge of their competence, but a schoolmaster or mistress is recorded as resident in the Censuses for 1841, 1851, 1861 and 1871. After this the pauper children joined others at the National or British Schools in the area.

The workhouse was built to accommodate 130. It is however difficult to say much about its fluctuating population as admission books have been lost and there are only sparse references in the Guardians’ Minute Books. Some spring or summer counts are available in the census figures but they show no relationships for paupers and sometimes not even names. In 1841 there were 47 male and 39 female paupers in the house; in 1851, 84 and 65 (which must have strained its capacity); in 1861, 40 and 52; in 1871, 67 and 59; and in 1881 (the last census for which such details are yet public) 47 and 49. Warminster figures are only of interest, compared with other Wiltshire Unions, for the preponderance of females at two of these five counts (the usual ratio of men to women was two to one). In 1903 the number of inmates was about 70 with an addition of about 40 ‘casuals’ during an average week.

Tantalising details of the ‘Common Charges’ have survived for one financial year, 1858 – 1859. These list all the cases of outdoor relief given in cash, eg. £12 to John Miles aged 72 of Chapel Street ‘Blind’ and 5s. 9d. to Fanny Coward aged 23 of Crockerton ‘confined of bastard and coffin’, but none of those relieved in kind. Details of 42 persons given ‘indoor relief’ i.e. lodged in the workhouse, are also listed. These include only two children (presumably orphans) maintained for the whole year and 23 ‘tramps’ who are kept for two to four days, with or without children. This is obviously not the whole story for that year.

Census returns usually list former occupations. The largest class was always that of ‘farm labourers’ which included a number of women. The next largest was ‘domestic servants’. In 1851 there were several young women who had been ‘silk throwsters’ (presumably made destitute by the collapse of George Ward’s business at Crockerton) and one old man who had been a ‘shearer’. Harold Price’s grandmother kept herself out of the workhouse by ‘spurtling [sprinkling] dung’ and spinning silk.

Colonel a’Court, Commissioner for Wiltshire, suggested that the new Act in the first two years of its operation had had a magical effect, ‘solving the unemployment problem, stiffening the character of the agricultural labourer, reducing the number of improvident marriages and improving the cultivation out of all recognition’. At least it reduced the number of marriages and the cost of poor relief, which showed a general downward trend after the 1840s (though with temporary rises). But it achieved this by increasing the poor’s horror of the workhouse system. In fact the New Poor Law and its Union Workhouse were powerful deterrents to anyone seeking public assistance in the lifetime of Queen Victoria, and the resentment caused in the poor, which the Act was ostensibly designed to help, was immense and was not eradicated, at least in towns like Warminster, until some 20 years after Ernest Bevin had claimed, in 1948, that the Poor Law had ‘at last been buried’.

The system did not die with Queen Victoria though it was, very slowly, being softened and dismantled, so that by 1910, Lord Edmund Fitzmaurice, a Wiltshire Guardian and County Councillor, was talking if the ‘enormous increase …. of what may be called the humanitarian aspect of the treatment of the poor in the workhouse’ and reflecting that it would ‘gradually become a sort of district hospital’. All this would have happened earlier, for the system was hardly popular, if Parliament could have agreed on what was to take its place. The most helpful reform was probably the National Insurance Act of 1911 which began the provision of social insurance for workers and reduced the number of potential ‘able-bodied paupers’. The next was the Local Government Act of 1929 under which County Councils took over most of the Poor Law’s functions and started on its more radical reform.

The Warminster workhouse was closed in that year, and arrangements were made with Frome to receive vagrants and with Westbury for some of the aged poor. Improved infirmary accommodation was then provided at Warminster, and also at Chippenham, Devizes, Marlborough, Salisbury, Semington and Stratton St. Margaret, and the old workhouses at Calne, Malmesbury, Tisbury and Westbury were closed. The 17 former Unions were replaced by seven new ‘Areas’. Warminster re-opened under the administration of the County Council’s Poor Assistance Committee – workhouses were now called ‘Poor Assistance Institutions’ – and of a local Committee for the Warminster and Westbury areas chaired by Thomas Rivers, then Longleat Agent and farmer at Horningsham. Some provision was still made at Warminster for vagrants but administered by the South West Vagrancy Committee at Bristol. John J. Marshall, previously Assistant Master at Marlborough and Master at Westbury workhouses, was put in charge of Warminster Poor Assistance Institution; his wife, who had been a nurse at the Poor Law Victoria Infirmary, Manchester, was appointed Matron. In 1938 a two-storey brick block to the north-west of the site was built to give separate accommodation for vagrants.

The house gardens were now used to provide fresh vegetables, but not for the poor inmates; they were still given roots and dried peas, and much of the old system continued until the National Insurance Act of 1946 and the National Assistance Act of 1948. The 1948 Act, making social insurance universal, greatly reduced the number of vagrants but Dr. Bartholomew who was appointed Medical Officer to the Warminster Institute in that year, records that vagrants were still frequent and that there were often angry scenes at the Porter’s lodge when late-comers were refused entry (intake was reduced to about nine every night), even though they were then offered travel vouchers to other vagrant wards such as Bath and Salisbury. The main Institution was then a mixed old people’s home and hospital with 102 beds, but employed only one State Registered Nurse qualified to dispense such medicines as might be prescribed by the Medical Officer.

On 5th January 1948 the Institution was re-named ‘Sambourne Hospital’ and its beds were shared, as need arose, between the County’s ‘welfare’ requirement for old people and those of the new Regional Hospital Authority, usually on a 40 to 60 basis. A few vagrants were still admitted to side wards on the old haxagonal periphery and the former vagrants’ ward was converted to hospital use and became the Physiotherapy Department. Thanks to the 1948 National Assistance Act, vagrants slowly faded away, while the welfare inmates were transferred in 1962 to the new County Council home at Woodmead in Portway and the Institution became a full hospital for the first time.

Some old attitudes still died hard. Until 1948, when the differentiation was stopped, local butchers supplied “officers’ joints” and inferior “house joints” for inmates. Turkey for inmates was first ordered for Christmas 1948 though the old Master objected that “they wouldn’t know the difference”; the Administrator retorted “Let them try.” Dr Bartholomew estimates that it was nearly 20 years before old people lost their horror of being sent to die “up the hill” in what was [in 1986] the most esteemed institution in Warminster.

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