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Lyneham, Wiltshire

Village in Wiltshire, England

Lyneham, Wiltshire

Summary

Village in Wiltshire, England

FieldValue
official_nameLyneham
static_image_nameLyneham Library and shops (geograph 4728038).jpg
static_image_captionShops and library, Lyneham, 2015
label_positionbottom
coordinates
os_grid_referenceSU025787
population6,192
population_ref(2021 Census)
civil_parishLyneham and Bradenstoke
unitary_englandWiltshire
lieutenancy_englandWiltshire
regionSouth West England
countryEngland
constituency_westminsterChippenham
post_townChippenham
postcode_districtSN15
postcode_areaSN
dial_code01249
website

Lyneham is a large village in north Wiltshire, England, within the civil parish of Lyneham and Bradenstoke, and situated 4 mi southwest of Royal Wootton Bassett, 5.5 mi north of Calne and 11 mi southwest of Swindon. The village is on the A3102 road between Calne and Wootton Bassett.

The part of Lyneham village close to the parish church is known as Church End. The civil parish includes the village of Bradenstoke and the hamlets of Preston and The Banks.

History

In 1086, Domesday Book recorded 42 households at Stoche in the northwest of the modern parish. Earthworks in this area known as Clack Mount, including a mound 20 metres in diameter, could be from a Norman motte-and-bailey castle, although the early history is uncertain. Bradenstoke Priory was founded nearby in 1142, possibly on the site of an earlier chapel. The hamlet on both sides of the road leading to the priory was called Clack from the 14th century, as shown on Andrews' and Dury's map of 1773; in the 20th century the name Bradenstoke was applied to the whole of this area.

Lyneham, about a mile east of Bradenstoke, was first mentioned in 1224.

Preston hamlet, about a mile southeast of Lyneham, has two farmhouses from the 17th and 18th centuries.

In 1940, much farmland became an RAF station, extending close to the western edge of Lyneham village.

A National School was built opposite St Michael's church in 1861, replacing an earlier school; average attendance in 1902 was 103. A new primary school was built on adjoining land in 1953, and an infants' school nearby in 1965. The Victorian building continued in use for a while but by 2017 housed commercial offices. In 2018, Wiltshire Council proposed to enlarge Lyneham Primary School to have 630 places, to cater for Army relocations to MoD Lyneham and the leasing of surplus service family houses.

The parish boundary in the northeast ran along the lane through Tockenham village, thus the manorial estates known as West Tockenham were within Lyneham parish. In 1969 the boundary was redrawn closer to Lyneham, uniting Tockenham Court Farm with the rest of Tockenham.

Churches

Church of St Michael

A church at Lyneham is first mentioned in 1182, belonging to Bradenstoke Priory. Restoration by William Butterfield in 1862–5 included the rebuilding of the chancel and the re-roofing of the nave.

In the 14th-century tower are six bells: one dated c.1450 and two from the 17th century. Stained glass in the east window is by Alexander Gibbs. A 1990 window in the south aisle by Henry Haig commemorates the 50th anniversary of RAF Lyneham.

As the settlement at Clack was distant from the parish church, a church dedicated to St Mary the Virgin was built there in 1866. In the same year an ecclesiastical parish called Bradenstoke-cum-Clack was created for it, from parts of the parishes of Lyneham and Christian Malford. In 1924 the chapelry of Bradenstoke-cum-Clack, the vicarage of Lyneham, and the rectory of Tockenham were united to form one benefice, although the parishes remained separate. In 1954, Tockenham became a separate parish and the parish of Lyneham with Bradenstoke was created.

A Methodist church was built in 1934 at The Green, Lyneham.

RAF Lyneham

Main article: RAF Lyneham

The former RAF Lyneham station, now MoD Lyneham, is adjacent to Lyneham village, to the south and east. The RAF's C-130 Hercules fleet was based here until June 2011 and C-17 Globemasters from RAF Brize Norton made frequent visits. In 2012 all operations were transferred to Brize Norton in west Oxfordshire, 35 mi to the north. The site is now home to the Defence Technical Training College, which became operational in September 2015.

Local government

The civil parish elects a parish council called Lyneham and Bradenstoke Parish Council. The parish is in the area of Wiltshire Council unitary authority, which is responsible for all significant local government functions.

An electoral division of Wiltshire Council called Lyneham stretches south east from the Lyneham and Bradenstoke to take in Clyffe Pypard parish. The total population at the time of the 2011 census was 5,460.

Climate

References

References

  1. "Lyneham".
  2. "Lyneham". Wiltshire Council.
  3. {{OpenDomesday. SU0079. bradenstoke. Bradenstoke
  4. {{National Heritage List for England
  5. {{cite PastScape
  6. (1956). "Victoria County History: Wiltshire: Vol 3 pp 275-288 - Houses of Augustinian canons: Priory of Bradenstoke". University of London.
  7. (1970). "Victoria County History: Wiltshire: Vol 9 pp90-104 - Parishes: Lyneham". University of London.
  8. In the east of the parish there was a medieval settlement at Littlecott, on the border with [[Hilmarton]]; by 1773 this had shrunk to two farms.{{National Heritage List for England
  9. {{National Heritage List for England
  10. {{National Heritage List for England
  11. (30 April 2018). "Statutory Notice for the enlargement of Lyneham Primary School".
  12. (1959). "Ordnance Survey 1:25,000 maps of Great Britain, sheet SU07".
  13. {{National Heritage List for England
  14. "Lyneham".
  15. "Stained Glass Windows at St. Michael, Lyneham". www.stainedglassrecords.org.
  16. {{National Heritage List for England
  17. {{London Gazette. (29 June 1866)
  18. {{London Gazette. (12 August 1924)
  19. {{London Gazette. (27 April 1954)
  20. "Lyneham".
  21. Cork, Tristan. (13 September 2015). "Blow for Lyneham as Navy and RAF pull out of military training centre plan". Somerset Live.
  22. "The Parish Council".
  23. "Ward population 2011".
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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