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Idmiston

Village in Wiltshire, England


Summary

Village in Wiltshire, England

FieldValue
static_image_nameIdmiston - The Old School House - geograph.org.uk - 782863.jpg
static_image_captionThe Old School House
countryEngland
official_nameIdmiston
label_positionleft
population2130
population_ref(in 2011)
civil_parishIdmiston
unitary_englandWiltshire
lieutenancy_englandWiltshire
regionSouth West England
constituency_westminsterSalisbury
post_townSALISBURY
postcode_districtSP4
postcode_areaSP
dial_code01980
os_grid_referenceSU197373
coordinates
website

Idmiston is a village and civil parish in Wiltshire, England. The village is about 3 mi southeast of Amesbury and 6 mi northeast of Salisbury. The parish includes the villages of Porton and Gomeldon; all three villages are on the River Bourne and are linked by the A338 road.

Porton Down military science park is in the parish, separated from Idmiston by a railway line. It is home to the Defence Science and Technology Laboratory and related businesses.

History

The Port Way, a Roman road towards Sorviodunum (Old Sarum), followed the Bourne valley and passed close to the present settlements.

The Domesday survey in 1086 recorded 15 households at Eunestetone (Idmiston), on land held by Glastonbury Abbey; and eight at Poertone or Portone, on land held by Edward of Salisbury and Wulfric the hunter.

Idmiston Manor is a house from c. 1600 with 17th-century interior features and an arched gateway from the same period; both house and gateway are Grade II* listed. The Old Rectory, opposite the church, also dates from the early 17th century and is also Grade II*.

A small grass-runway aerodrome was opened in 1917 on farmland at Boscombe Down in the north of the parish for the Royal Flying Corps, and continued in use until 1920. The site was reopened and enlarged to form RAF Boscombe Down in 1930, then repurposed in 1939 as an aircraft research and testing station. The first hard runway was built in 1945. Now called MoD Boscombe Down and extending into Amesbury and Allington parishes, its research and testing role continues.

Religious sites

The Grade I listed All Saints Church, Idmiston was built in the 12th century as the parish church. In 1977 it was declared redundant, and St Nicholas' at Porton became the parish church;{{London Gazette

In 1977, the name of the ecclesiastical parish was 'Idmiston with Porton and Gomeldon'. Today the parish of 'St Nicholas Porton and District' is within the area of the Bourne Valley benefice, a group of six rural parishes.

Railway

In 1857, the London and South Western Railway company opened its line from Andover to Milford station at Salisbury, following the Bourne valley through the parish. There was a station at Porton from the beginning; between 1943 and 1968 a halt at Idmiston served Porton Down military camp. The railway remains in use as part of the West of England Main Line but there are no local stations.

Amenities

There are two primary schools in the parish. St Nicholas' CofE (VA) Primary School was built in 1972 between Idmiston and Porton. Idmiston village had its own school from 1833, replaced by a new building in 1869, opposite the church; it closed after the new school was opened to cater for the increased local population. The second school is at Gomeldon, built in 1912 and later extended, then modernised in 1972.

Notable people

John Bowle (1725–1788), known for his scholarly annotated edition of Don Quixote, was vicar of Idmiston for some years until his death.

References

References

  1. "Wiltshire Community History - Census". Wiltshire Council.
  2. (1903). "Roman Roads in Britain". The Society for Promoting Christian Knowledge.
  3. {{OpenDomesday. SU1937. idmiston. Idmiston
  4. {{OpenDomesday. SU1936. porton. Porton
  5. {{National Heritage List for England
  6. {{National Heritage List for England
  7. {{National Heritage List for England
  8. (2011-04-28). "MoD Boscombe Down: 1917–2007".
  9. {{National Heritage List for England
  10. "All Saints, Idmiston". Churches Conservation Trust.
  11. "Bourne Valley Churches".
  12. "Porton: St Nicholas". The Archbishops' Council.
  13. (2004). "Wiltshire Railway Stations". The Dovecote Press.
  14. "Idmiston C. of E. Aided Primary School". Wiltshire Council.
  15. "Gomeldon Primary School, Idmiston". Wiltshire Council.
  16. "Bowle, John (1)".
Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

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