New Shop And Restaurant At East Street, Warminster

January 1981

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The Isis Gallery of fine art and quality crafts.

Welcome to our new shop at 40 East Street, Warminster. Telephone 216815.

Original paintings, prints and drawings.
Hand-made soft toys and handicrafts.
Expert picture framing.
Athena posters, cards and prints.
And much, much more.

Plus, try our new restaurant for the best in American home cooking.
Pizzas, Pancakes, Mexican Food, Hamburgers, Thick Shakes, Sandwiches and more. Dishes too numerous to mention.

The Old Bell Hotel, Warminster

January 1981

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The Old Bell Hotel, Market Place, Warminster.

Front Bar
Hot home-made bar snacks served with a choice of fresh vegetables, from £1.00.

Chimes Bar (entry from courtyard)
Choose from a selection of cold snacks and salads on our cold table.

Restaurant
Open every day for lunch and dinner. Great steaks for around £5.00.

Party Room
A cosy atmosphere for weddings, parties and dinners, catering for up to 150 people.

Hotel
Comfortable 2-star hotel with tv, radio and tea-making facilities in all rooms. Full English breakfast served from 7.30. Non-residents welcome.

The Nave Altar At Christ Church, Warminster

In Christ Church, Warminster, The First 150 Years, a booklet published in October 1980, to celebrate the 150th birthday of Christ Church, the Rev. John C. Day (Vicar) wrote:

The Nave Altar

Mention should be made of this new feature which was finally brought to a completion in its present form in 1978. The fully portable altar, platform and rails enable the church to celebrate the eucharist in the body of the church and among the assembled congregation. Also the whole area can be quickly transformed into an open space and the church brought back almost to what it was originally intended to look like. There is too the added advantage of being able to have a spacious area at the front of the church for drama, choirs, orchestra, etc.

The carpentry work was executed by an old parishioner, Eric Payne, and the iron work by the Motcombe blacksmiths, Wing & Staples. The total cost was met from private gifts and donations, and the altar dedicated by the Bishop of Salisbury in October 1978.

The Church Plate At Christ Church, Warminster

In Christ Church, Warminster, The First 150 Years, a booklet published in October 1980, to celebrate the 150th birthday of Christ Church, the Rev. John C. Day (Vicar) wrote:

The Church Plate

The ancient churches of England lost all or much of their old Communion plate at the Reformation, when the agents of King Henry VIII took most of the valuable heirlooms of the church for the crown.

Christ Church, while not on existence in those troublous times, does have some interesting pieces of old silver. Notable are a Georgian silver gilt Porringer and a silver dish inscribed with the words ‘Robert Moody, Esq., presented to Christ Church on his decease, Oct. 1830.’ Another beautifully chased silver dish which had originally been given to the Rev. R.R. and Mrs. Hutton on their departure from the parish in 1866, was returned for the use of the church after their deaths.

The Church has two large silver chalices, the earlier given by the Rev. W. Walsh on the opening of the church in 1831 and the other dating from 1918 and given in memory of Hannah Greenland.

Several other pieces have been given over the years, the latest being a silver ciborium in memory of Stanley Woodman who for several years was a churchwarden here.

Folly Lane, Warminster

In Christ Church, Warminster, The First 150 Years, a booklet published in October 1980, to celebrate the 150th birthday of Christ Church, the Rev. John C. Day (Vicar) wrote:

The south western border of the parish is Folly Lane which takes us up to the new town burial ground known as Pine Lawns, opened when Christ Church burial ground became full in the early seventies.

Tascroft, Warminster

In Christ Church, Warminster, The First 150 Years, a booklet published in October 1980, to celebrate the 150th birthday of Christ Church, the Rev. John C. Day (Vicar) wrote:

A little farther on [from Folly Lane and Pine Lawns] is Tascroft, now a group of pleasant homes, but once a Reform School for boys. This was opened in 1856. Young lads committed there by the magistrates worked 20 acres of farm land. They would spend some 10 to 15 hours a week in normal school work and the rest of the time on the land. A parishioner tells me that he once met an old inmate of Tascroft who spent four years in the place without seeing home or family. He came from Swindon and was sentenced for stealing a loaf of bread. Another sad story is of a lad who killed himself with a pair of scissors in the cobbler’s shop at Tascroft. For many years afterwards the area of the old workshop was reputed to have been haunted by the spirit of the dead boy. Tascroft [Reformatory School] was closed in 1925.

Greenaways, Sambourne Road, Warminster

In Christ Church, Warminster, The First 150 Years, a booklet published in October 1980, to celebrate the 150th birthday of Christ Church, the Rev. John C. Day (Vicar) wrote:

Another educational establishment flourished in the parish during Victorian times. Christ Church School for young ladies was a private boarding establishment situated in Greenaways in Sambourne Road. It was run by a Miss Haskew and Miss Cruse and provided full boarding and schooling for young ladies at £28 per annum.

It thrived until the end of the last century when it was purchased by the Longleat Estate. For a time it was the home of the present Lord Bath. Now again in private hands, this lovely old house is the home of two families.

Warminster Common

In Christ Church, Warminster, The First 150 Years, a booklet published in October 1980, to celebrate the 150th birthday of Christ Church, the Rev. John C. Day (Vicar) wrote:

Why was Christ Church built way back in 1831?

To answer that question we must begin with a long look back into the earlier history of our district.

At the beginning of the 19th century the whole area around where the church now stands would have been open country; no school, no hospital, very few homesteads and until 1830 Weymouth Street as we know it did not exist as a road. Before that date the main road through the parish was the old turnpike road running up what is now Sambourne Road, being part of the important London to Barnstaple highway.

In those days Warminster town had not begun to climb the hill and spread southwards from the present town centre. But south of the town a large separate village had grown up known by the locals as “The Common” or “Newtown”.

Warminster Common

The history of Christ Church is much bound up with the story of Warminster Common so it will be interesting to recall a little of the background of this part of the parish.

In the old days this large area of waste land south of the town and described as Warminster Heath on the old maps, was not owned privately or required by anybody. Thus anyone could build on and enclose pieces of ground for their own use without reference to authority, and by the end of the 18th century the Common had a population of well over a thousand, huddled along the stream which runs west to east along the Brook Street, Fore Street and Wylye Road valley. Alas, with road widening and new housing, the stream, which for centuries must have been both water supply, laundry and playground for the children, is now culverted underground.

In 1779, the free and easy life of the commoners took a turn for the worse. That year saw the beginning of attempts to force enclosure acts on the people; acts which were to mean the loss of any ancient rights and privileges. Among local landowners desiring to enclose land in this part of Warminster was the Viscount Weymouth of Longleat.

By an award made in 1783 the inhabitants of the Common lost all their old rights of pasturage, fuel gathering, etc. Previously in 1777 an attempt had been made to make them bow their knee to the Lord of the Manor by the voluntary payment of one penny for a dinner at the Bell inn (now known as the Bell And Crown) in the village. But being suspicious of the move, no villager rose to the bait so at least among their many misfortunes they were able to retain the freehold of the homes they lived in.

From accounts by W. Daniell and J. Daniell, the Common in the 19th century must have been a miserable place to have to live in. A description of it obtained from an eyewitness account of 1780 describes the hovels as consisting for the most part of “one ground floor and one bedroom under the thatch, walls unplastered and the floor just as nature made it. Both animals and family lived in the ground floor and the bedroom reached by a ladder doubled as hayloft.” There was no place of worship, no schooling for the children, so it followed that the populace grew up illiterate and godless.

The eyewitness goes on to say that “scarce anyone went near a church and that Sundays were spent in all sorts of games such as bull and badger baiting, cock fighting, boxing, wrestling and drunkenness, oaths and fights.”

Thus the historians give us a picture of a thoroughly squalid, miserable place that few of the residents of Warminster wished to know about. How things have changed. Now the Common has become a desirable place to live in and many of the remaining old cottages renovated and made very attractive. The whole area now has a quaint village-like flavour about it.

But to return to our tale, there can be little doubt that earlier in the last century as Daniell relates in his history of the town that “The inhabitants of the Common were at the lowest level of moral and social life, and, as a natural consequence of their deep poverty, hard drinking and unhealthy homes, typhoid fever made dreadful ravages among them; twenty eight or thirty adults died in a month and when smallpox and measles attacked them also, the mortality was frightful.”

It was this state of affairs that finally awakened the conscience of Warminster.

Towards the end of the 18th century, a blind man, Jeremiah Payne, and a John Pearce began attempting to conduct regular acts of worship on the Common, probably on their home and in the home of a James Gunning.

Mention will be made later of the original Workhouse on the Common. Suffice to say here that it was in that place that we begin to see the real beginning of what later became Christ Church. In the early part of the last century it was here that a curate of St. Denys (in whose parish the Common then was) came to conduct Church of England services and in 1826 the Rev. William Dalby, the new Vicar, conducted a regular afternoon service at a room in the Workhouse. It appears that the authorities did not go out of their way to make things comfortable for the worshippers, a situation which convinced the good Vicar that the only real answer was to set about building a new church in this part of the town.

Newtown School At Warminster Common

In Christ Church, Warminster, The First 150 Years, a booklet published in October 1980, to celebrate the 150th birthday of Christ Church, the Rev. John C. Day (Vicar) wrote:

The Common School

Alas, all that remains of this once thriving school is a derelict ruin. The Common School often referred to as “Newtown School” was in Chapel Street alongside Daniell’s Chapel.

It was opened in 1845, gradually growing until by the end of the century there were about 100 children on the roll. It remained as a Junior Mixed Infants School until 1959. Expensive necessary repairs, lack of space for expansion, dwindling numbers of pupils, all led to the closure of the school in 1959.

For many years the Salvation Army had also used the Chapel and School premises and in its hey day ran a thriving band and Sunday School on the premises. This too followed the school in closing down. Thereafter, no one used the buildings and they have fallen into disrepair. Thus ended nearly 150 years of spiritual and educational work on the Common.

Bradley Road, Warminster, 1980

In Christ Church, Warminster, The First 150 Years, a booklet published in October 1980, to celebrate the 150th birthday of Christ Church, the Rev. John C. Day (Vicar) wrote:

. . . on the far south of the parish, in Bradley Road, known by older folk as The Tynings. Here on the left hand side [south side] was the old Isolation Hospital now converted into an Ambulance Station. The locals tell me there was an even earlier Disease Hospital or ‘Pest House’ as they were once called, in Cannimore Woods.

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