Thursday 1st February 2007
Doggystyle
Pet grooming services.
Grooming, clipping, hand stripping.
Crockerton Shopping Centre,
Warminster, Wiltshire, BA12 8AP.
Telephone 01985 216777.
Thursday 1st February 2007
Doggystyle
Pet grooming services.
Grooming, clipping, hand stripping.
Crockerton Shopping Centre,
Warminster, Wiltshire, BA12 8AP.
Telephone 01985 216777.
Wednesday 15th July 1998
Norman’s, the out-of-town store, off the A350 at Crockerton, closes down for good on Sunday 25th July 1998.
The Trowbridge branch of Norman’s is also closing down for good, on Sunday 19th July 1998.
Thursday 19th March 1998
Elevated Site. A former vicarage, built circa 1924, is for sale. The property is on an elevated position on the southern slopes of the village of Crockerton.
The property has a sitting room, dining room, family room/study, cloakroom, breakfast room, kitchen, utility room, five bedrooms, shower room and bathroom. There is a detached cedar double garage and gardens to side and front.
Adjacent to the property the current owners have obtained outline planning permission to construct a detached dwelling. This would suit a family who wish to house a dependent relative. In total the garden and building plot amount to around half an acre.
For further details contact David Bell & Company, Warminster.
A true story from 1976, by Mae Harry, from ‘Now, Then And In Between,’ A Miscellany Of Writing, produced by Warminster W.I., 1994:
The Well
It was the hot dry summer of ’76, and one late evening I was out in the garden, putting the precious bath water round some of the shrubs, as hosepipes had been banned for many weeks. We had bought this cottage, formerly part of the Longleat estate, some four years before. It was over two hundred years old, and had been just a “one up – one down’ but a previous owner had added to it, and we had spent a busy couple of years improving the inside. Once this was done we were able to begin replanting much of the garden, laying out areas of shrubs and small trees. However, there were still some parts we hadn’t tackled, but I said they were our bit for nature conservation.
As I came out with the second bucketful, I noticed an old man standing by the gate. He was sucking a clay pipe, and despite the hot weather he was wearing old brown corduroys and a striped, collarless shirt. He nodded, so I stopped and said “Good evening.” He touched his cap, and said “Good evening to you ma’am,” so I commented on the heat and the lack of rain. He endeared himself to me by admiring the changes we had made to the garden, and mentioned two or three plants which would do well in our soil. I asked him if he knew the area well.
“I’ve been around these parts a long time,” he said.
“We’ve only been here four years,” I told him. “We came from Bristol. It’s so different here, beautiful surroundings, and it’s so quiet and peaceful.”
“Aye, tis that,” he said, “Even now.”
I suddenly realised it was nearly dark, and said I must get on with the watering, explaining I was using up the bath water.
“Don’t ee use the well now?” he asked. “It hasn’t run dry, surely?”
“What well?” I said. “We don’t have a well.”
“There’s a well down at the bottom there.” He pointed to a corner just beyond the driveway to the garage. “It always has at least a couple of feet of water in it. You have a look, my lass.”
I said I certainly would, and he would be welcome to call in for a cup of tea any time he was passing. I gave him our name, and he said “I be John Horseman, and thank ee kindly, ma’am.” He went off down the lane, and I finished my task, pondering the possibility of another water supply.
The next morning, while it was still cool, my husband and I decided to see if there really was a well. We hacked away at some brambles and nettles, and found there were a couple of big stones, holding an old, thick wooden lid in place. With some difficulty we levered it aside, and there was indeed a well, and I could see the glimmer of water at the bottom. When my husband came back with a bucket and rope we found it was deep enough to nearly fill the bucket, despite the drought, and he soon constructed a pulley to help raise the precious liquid.
We cleared the area properly, and for the rest of the summer we were glad to use it to augment our spare domestic water. Some of the annual flowers shrivelled and died, but the shrubs survived and so did the trees, even if they did shed their leaves early.
Although the houses were fairly scattered, I asked around the neighbourhood to see if anyone knew the old man, but nobody knew the name or recognised the description. I hoped he might call in again and kept a frequent lookout when I was watering the garden, but I never saw him. I even checked the telephone directory to see if there were any Horsemans in my area. I drew a blank – still some old people don’t bother with a phone.
The garden established itself over the next couple of years, and we often used the well if we wanted water that end of the garden, to save carrying from the house. My husband made an ornamental feature of the well, and put a seat for me nearby where I sheltered from the east wind.
Three years later we had an unexpected windfall when my husband’s godmother died, and left him ten thousand pounds. After pondering the merits of a new car or a special long holiday, common sense prevailed and we decided to pay off the mortgage. In due course we received the deeds, and we studied the faded copperplate writing with interest. One entry stood out.
From 1873 to 1902 the house was owned by John Edward Horseman, estate worker.
I never really knew who the old man was who told me about the well. My husband insisted he must have been the son or nephew of the original John Horseman, but if he knew the area so well, why did nobody know him? Personally, I think that John Edward, who had once lived there is still around, keeping an eye on his beloved garden.
Danny Howell adds: The house that Mae Harry and her husband lived in, in 1976, was at Dry Hill, Crockerton.
Friday 1st December 1989
Crockerton could be revelling again for the first time in 50 years, if plans to resurrect the village’s medieval festival go ahead.
The Crockerton Revels, which date back to the time of Thomas a Becket, were a regular event until the 1930s.
Now, Warminster historian Danny Howell and Warminster Arts Centre director Shona Powell want to revive them.
Local history has it that Thomas a Becket was on his way to Glastonbury when he stopped off at Crockerton. The Revels were in full swing and the ‘turbulent priest’ had such a good time he never quite got round to going to Glastonbury.
The Crockerton Revels, which went hand-in-hand with the Gooseberry Fayre, were a very popular annual event, bringing music and dancing to the village.
Danny Howell said: “I have been toying with this idea for a long time. It seems to me this is something that could be brought back to the Warminster district calendar as a regular event.”
Shona Powell, who is setting up a folk club at Warminster Arts Centre, said: “I think it sounds like a marvellous idea.”
The pair are hoping enough interest will be generated in the folk club, which starts in February, to support an afternoon of singing and dancing in Crockerton, held on the traditional first Sunday after July 7th.
The folk club will meet every second Sunday for informal singing and established folk groups are already booked to play. In the future Shona hopes to organise a ceilidh.
Anybody interested in the folk club or Crockerton Revels should contact Shona Powell at Warminster Arts Centre, telephone 218519.
Ron Fear (born 22 July 1912), in a tape-recorded interview made by Danny Howell, on 4th April 1986 (transcribed extracts of which were published inĀ Remember Warminster Volume Three, by Danny Howell), said:
“When you used to go along the Crockerton road you would come to a very sharp turn on the right. My uncle George Titford used to go out there every spring to see a white blackbird. He would make a point of doing that. He went out there every year. This is 50 years ago. Once he’d seen that white blackbird he’d be happy until the next year. Somebody would say “Where’s going then George?’ He’d say “I’m going out to Emmet Lane.’ That’s what they called it, Emmet Lane. Why it’s called that I don’t know. It’s past the farm, what was Mr Greening’s farm, about a hundred yards further on and you go round a sharp corner. I think it’s all been altered now. They’ve done the new A350 road.”
A note in the leaflet Crockerton, Wiltshire, written by Bruce Watkin, published by Warminster Civic Trust in 1984:
“Potters Hill was originally ‘Chain Lugs’ and had a concentration of 18th century potters (hence the new name) and some weavers. No traces of mediaeval pottery have been found here.”
A note in ‘Crockerton, Wiltshire,’ a leaflet written by Bruce Watkin, published by Warminster Civic Trust in 1984:
“Jersey Hill, Crockerton. A group of old cottages occupied by 18th and 19th century weavers and at least one 18th century potter.”
January 1981
Advertisement:
T.H. Tool Hire And Sales
The Country Warehouse. Crockerton
Telephone 212353
Keen rates for daily or weekly hire of
rotovators, mowers, brushcutters, chain saws, hedge trimmers, electric saws, planers, jigsaws, sanders, angle grinders, drills, Kango hammers and drills, petrol disc cutters, concrete mixers (petrol and electric), cartridge fixing tools and nails, extension ladders, lightweight scaffold towers, decorators’ trestles, paint sprayers, industrial vacuum cleaner, trolley jacks, engine cranes, axle stands, socket sets, torque wrenches, pressure washers, 140 amp welders.
Escort carpet cleaners.
Tuesday 30th May 1978
Advertisement:
John Collier for all your paints, wall coverings, and sundries.
Competitive prices at all times.
At the Country Warehouse, Crockerton.
Warminster 214939.
Also at Three Horseshoes Mall, Warminster.