Catherston Leweston |
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Catherston Leweston is a tiny parish situated on
the decline of a hill by the River Char, three miles North-East of Lyme Regis
and six miles West of Bridport. The name comes from the combination of two
adjacent manors, Catherston meaning 'estate of the Charteray family' and
Leweston meaning 'estate of the Lester family', from proper names plus the
Old English 'tun' for estate. Neither manor is mentioned in the 1086 Domesday
Survey, so they probably formed part of another manor at that time. The manor
house itself is faux-Tudor, built in 1887, although it retains a 16th century
tower and, inside, an early 18th century staircase.
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In 1870-72, John Marius Wilson's 'Imperial Gazetteer of
England and Wales' claimed that Catherston Leweston was the seat of the notorious
Judge Jeffreys and that his judge's cap was preserved in the church. George
Jeffreys (1645 -1689), 1st Baron Jeffreys of Wem, was the most corrupt judge
in British History. After the Monmouth Rebellion, whose focal point was in
Devon, Dorset, Somerset and Wiltshire, Jeffreys was in charge of bringing the
rebels 'to justice'. He was ruthless, flaunting even the few rights that
defendants held in those days, such as refusing to hear evidence and taunting
the prisoners. At first his preferred sentence was hanging, but after receiving
an offer he could not refuse from slave traders, he began to favour
transportation instead. The court session over which he presided in Dorchester
and other western towns came to be known as the 'Bloody Assizes'. In all,
about 320 people were hanged and over 800 sentenced to be transported to
the West Indies.
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Census |
1841 Census [Mari Viertel] 1851 Census [Peter Anderson] 1861 Census [Ron Adams] 1871 Census [Ron Adams] 1881 Census [Jon Baker] 1891 Census [Jon Baker] 1901 Census [Jon Baker] 1911 Census [Jon Baker] |
Parish Registers |
Baptisms 1837-1902 [Kim
Parker] Marriages 1839-1912 [Kim Parker] Burials |
Trade & Postal Directories | |
Other Records | |
Photographs | |
Monumental Inscriptions | Monumental Inscriptions [Brian Webber] |
Maps | |
Records held at the Dorset History Centre |
Registers Christenings 1837-1943. Marriages 1839-1979. Burials None. |
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