Bloxworth |
Photograph of St Andrews courtesy of Alison Lavine ©. Old postcard below shows the Post Office circa 1910-1920 |
Bloxworth [or Blocksworth] is a parish situated about 6 miles north-by-west from Wareham. The church of St Andrew is a small ancient structure, with chancel, nave [the former was rebuilt and restored by the rector in 1870] and square tower containing 2 bells, one of which is of the 14th century and around the rim is a very curious inscription; it contains several memorials to the Trenchard and Pickering families, and the manorial pew has fresco armorial designs belonging to the Savages, lords of the manor previous to the year 1700; this is one of the very few churches where the original hour glass and stand, by which, after the Reformation, the length of the sermon was regulated, still exists. |
The registers date from the year
1579. The parish comprises a long strip of land about 3½ miles by 1¼
between the parishes of Morden and Bere Regis running north and south;
the soil of the northern portion is chalk, of the middle clay and of the
southern part gravel and sand. The chief crops are wheat and barley; the
extent is 2776 acres of cultivated wood and heath lands. The population
in 1871 was 270. William Russell is postmaster. The school was built in
1874 and the mistress is Miss Mary Coles |
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Census |
1841,
1851,
1861,
1871 &
1891 [Julia Chaplin] 1881 [Terry Smith] |
Parish Registers | Marriages 1581-1837 [Kim Parker] |
Postal Directories | |
Monumental Inscriptions | St Andrew's Monumental Inscriptions index [Jan Hibberd] |
Maps | |
For a 1920s map click on the thumbnail opposite | |
View Larger Map |
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Records held at the Dorset History Centre [Ref PE-BLX] |
Registers Christenings 1579-1970. Marriages 1581-2011. Burials 1591-1830, 1847-1879. |
Registration District
(for the purpose of civil registration births, marriages & deaths) |
1 Jul 1837-31 Mar 1937: Wareham 1 Apr 1937-31 Mar 1997: Poole 1 Apr 1997-30 Sep 2001: South Dorset 1 Oct 2001-17 Oct 2005: South & West Dorset |
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