EDITORIAL NOTE
This is the first volume of the Victoria History of Wiltshire to be published. It
is also the first volume for any county to be published under the co-operative
system described below. Its appearance therefore is a landmark not only in the
history of Wiltshire but in the history of the patronage of culture.
In the summer of 1947 the Wiltshire County Council, the Swindon Borough
Council, the Victoria County History Committee of the Institute of Historical
Research of the University of London, the Wiltshire Archaeological and
Natural History Society, together with its Records Branch, and representatives
of the Bishops of Salisbury and Bristol came together to form the 'Wiltshire
Victoria County History Committee'. A number of scholars accepted invita-
tions to join the Committee forthwith, and a few months later the Salisbury
City Council became a constituent member of it. The aim of the Committee
was to promote the publication of a Victoria History of Wiltshire and the three
local authorities named granted annual subsidies to enable this to be done, the
grant to run initially for five years. The grants were applied wholly to the costs
of compiling and editing a long range of general and topographical volumes. On
the understanding that the work of compilation met with the General Editor's
approval, the University of London undertook to publish the material in volume
form. So was cemented a partnership between a group of local authorities and
the University of London which has proved most beneficent in Wiltshire and
has been imitated in several other parts of England.
The Wiltshire Victoria County History Committee appointed an Hon.
Editor for Wiltshire, Dr. G. M. Young, C. B., and a salaried Assistant Editor,
Miss Elizabeth Crittall, M.A. In 1949 the present General Editor (though
not then holding that position) was appointed a joint Hon. Editor with Dr.
Young and continued to hold the position after he had assumed his present
office later in the same year. The Wiltshire Committee counts it a privilege
that Dr. Young's name should have been associated with its work from the
beginning.
In collaboration with the central Victoria County History Committee the
Wiltshire Committee has worked out a scheme for the Wiltshire History
which is more ambitious than any previously attempted in this series. Five
general volumes have been planned, instead of the customary two or three,
even though the articles on natural history, with which users of the History
have grown familiar, have been excluded. It has also been resolved to index
each volume.
As the present volume testifies, there are also innovations in the detailed treatment of the topographical articles. Since the Royal Commission on Historical
Monuments is expected shortly to report upon Wiltshire it has been possible to
deal much more summarily than in the past with the architecture of the county.
The method of treatment employed in the present volume may be slightly
expanded in later ones, but it is not likely that in the Wiltshire History any
return will be made to the elaborate methods of the past. Secondly, owing to
difficulties, which, it is believed, have now been removed, it has not been
possible to describe modern developments in the history of the charities. A
somewhat fuller account than is customary has however been given of their
earlier history. The volume also contains two entirely new features: the history of
each Nonconformist place of worship and the history of each primary school.
Efforts have also been made to deal more fully with the industrial and
agrarian history of the places described, and, in the case of urban settlements,
with their government and public services. Some of these innovations should
be regarded as experimental and may be modified in succeeding volumes.
The names of the members of the Wiltshire Victoria County History Committee are printed below. A sincere debt of gratitude is due to all of them for
their sage counsel, and notably to Alderman W. R. Robins, O.B.E., who has
presided over the Committee from the start. Nor will those whose memories
go back to the early days of the Committee soon forget the enthusiasm of the
late Colonel R. W. Awdry, C.B.E., then Chairman of the Wiltshire County
Council, and the skill with which he negotiated with the different interests
involved. But most particularly thanks are due to the three local authorities
named above for their generous contributions, without which, it is fair to
say, this noble enterprise could not have been undertaken. While gratitude
must be evenly distributed among them all, a special tribute is due to the
Corporation of Swindon, which initiated the scheme, not only in Wiltshire
but in England, and has ever since borne the burden and some of the costs of
administration.
Much material was collected and first drafts written for the histories of the
parishes in Bradford and Melksham hundreds by Miss O. M. Moger, a member
of the staff of the History under Dr. Page more than forty years ago. For this
careful work, Miss Moger's successors in the task of compiling the Wiltshire
History are much indebted. The compilers have also benefited from the co-operation of a number of persons living and working in Wiltshire. Thus thanks are
due to Mr. H. Ross, B.A., of the department of Adult Education, University
of Bristol, who, with a class of students, made abstracts of the Inclosure Awards
in the County Record Office for the parishes included in this volume; to
Major C. J. Jacobs, who, by personal visits to the churches concerned, checked
and brought up to date the information already printed elsewhere about church
bells and plate; to Mr. F. C. Pitt, who made valuable comments on the history
of Trowbridge. The Revd. M. W. Powell kindly gave access to certain Methodist church records in his keeping as Superintendent Minister, the Wiltshire
Mission. The assistance in many forms received from Mr. C. W. Pugh, M.B.E.,
as Hon. Librarian and former Hon. Secretary of the Wiltshire Archaeological
and Natural History Society, and from the County Archivist (Mr. M. G. Rathbone) and the Diocesan Registrar (Mr. A. M. Barker) and their staffs is also
gratefully acknowledged. Nor must the kindness of many Wiltshire incumbents
be forgotten.
Unless otherwise stated the photographs reproduced in this volume have been
specially taken by Mrs. Margaret Tomlinson, M.A., who also drew the street
plans of Bradford-on-Avon, Melksham, and Trowbridge. These plans are based
upon the Ordnance Survey Map with the sanction of the Controller of H.M.
Stationery Office, Crown Copyright reserved. The maps of the three hundreds
were drawn by Mr. H. A. James, F.S.A., A.R.I.B.A. Thanks are returned to
all those who gave permission for their photographs to be reproduced, in many
cases without fee, and particularly to Mrs. Awdry, who has permitted three
photographs by her late husband, Colonel R. W. Awdry, to be reproduced. Finally
the Editor and Assistant Editor are under many obligations to the Director and
Staff of the National Buildings Record for allowing the use of photographs from
their collection and for other assistance.
The presence in the volume of a coloured frontispiece is entirely due to the
generosity of Messrs. Spencer, Moulton & Co. Ltd., rubber manufacturers of
Bradford-on-Avon, who made a grant towards the cost of making the blocks.