DINTON
THE parish of Dinton lies in and to the north of
the valley of the Nadder. It contains 3,403 a. and
extends about 3 miles from north to south and
2 miles from east to west. The River Nadder forms
the southern boundary and the Grovely Grim's
Ditch the northern. (fn. 1) Until the 19th century Teffont
Magna, adjoining on the west, was a chapelry of
Dinton, and ecclesiastically it remained a chapelry
until 1922. In 1934 the Dinton parish boundary was
extended on the east to take in the entire ancient
parish of Baverstock (836 a.). (fn. 2)
About two-thirds of the parish lie on the southern slope of the chalk downs which divide the
valleys of the Nadder and the Wylye. On the top
of the downs, in the extreme north of the parish,
the land rises to over 600 ft. It then drops southwards towards the Nadder, but where the chalk
gives way to the sands and clays of the valley, it
rises steeply again to form a sandy ridge or escarpment. (fn. 3) Between this ridge and the river lies the
village at a height of about 300 ft. The western end
of Grovely Wood, a part of the former Grovely
Forest, occupies the northernmost part of the
parish. In the mid-16th century the part of Grovely
in Dinton was known as Rigly Wood and covered
about 180 a. Nearer the village, Marshwood comprised, at the same date, about 100 a. (fn. 4) The parish
was still well wooded in 1962 with a belt of trees
along the southern slope of the sandy ridge and
the finely-wooded park of Dinton House, as well
as Grovely Wood.
Neolithic and Bronze Age implements have been
found on the downs north of the village and at
Dinton Beeches. Wick Ball Camp, on the sandy
ridge behind Dinton House, is a univallate Iron
Age hill-fort. (fn. 5) Until the 20th century the chalk
lands of the parish were used almost exclusively
for corn and sheep farming. After the practice of
floating water-meadows was begun in the 17th
century, there was more fodder for dairy cattle and
in the 20th century there has been large-scale
mixed farming on the downlands. (fn. 6) Nearly all the
meadows along the river are scored with traces of
early irrigation channels, and some meadows were
still being artificially flooded in 1962. Between
down and water-meadow the strip of greensand
provides a soil pre-eminently suited to market
gardening, and in the 18th and 19th centuries
there were numerous orchards strung out along
this part of the parish. (fn. 7)
The presence of two burgesses at Dinton in 1086
may imply some degree of urbanization, but it is
likely that they were in fact appurtenant to Warminster. (fn. 8) Little can be said about the size or importance of Dinton in the Middle Ages. John
Britton claimed that Shaftesbury Abbey had a cell
for six nuns there. (fn. 9) No evidence for this has been
found, although it is known that the abbess's
capital messuage had a chapel attached to it. (fn. 10) In
1334 Dinton's contribution to the 15ths was the
fifth highest out of the 21 places separately assessed
to the tax in the hundred of Warminster, (fn. 11) and
in 1377 the number of poll-tax payers was second
only to that of Warminster. (fn. 12) To the benevolence
of 1545 Dinton had the third largest number of
contributors in the hundred, and to the subsidy
of 1576 the fourth. (fn. 13) Between 1801 and 1841 the
population rose from 421 to 565. After 1841 it
declined, except for a slight rise in 1911, until 1931,
when it was 389. In 1951, after the addition of the ancient parish of Baverstock, the population was 458. (fn. 14)
The Roman road from the Mendip lead mines to
Old Salisbury ran through Grovely Wood in the
north of the parish. Just south of the wood the Ox
Drove crosses the parish about a mile north of the
village. This green track, probably of great antiquity, was used for driving cattle to Wilton and
Salisbury markets. Two of the milestones placed
along it in 1750 lie within the parish. In 1773 there
was an inn called the New Inn beside the track
just before it left the parish on the east. (fn. 15) This disappeared early in the 19th century. Its site was excavated in 1962. (fn. 16) Until the beginning of the 19th
century the main road from Salisbury to Hindon
followed the course of the road which runs along
the top of the sandy ridge behind the village to
Teffont Magna. This was turnpiked in c. 1760. (fn. 17) By
1837 this had become the 'old turnpike road' and
the present (1962) main road had become the 'new
turnpike road'. (fn. 18) By 1746 the western part of the
present main road was called Ranger's Lane and
was gated where it left Dinton for Teffont Magna.
The road leading south from the church to join
Ranger's Lane was called Forster's Lane, and the
continuation of Ranger's Lane east beyond this
junction was called Rosemary Lane. The junction
was called Four Corners. Except for a footbridge
by the mill, (fn. 19) the Nadder is crossed by only one
bridge in the parish. This is Catherine Bridge,
built of faced blocks of Chilmark stone, and carrying
the road from Dinton to Fovant. (fn. 20) The railway line
from Salisbury to Exeter, opened in 1859, (fn. 21) runs
through the south of the parish between the Nadder
and the main road. Dinton station is about ½ mile
from the centre of the village.
The oldest part of the village lies along the
road that branches off from the present main road
and runs north past the church. Most of the houses
in this part of the village are built of local stone,
and a number still in 1962 retained their thatched
roofs. There are a notable number of small farmhouses of 17th-century date in the village, all built
of stone. Speargate Cottage, Cotterells, Jesse's Farm,
and Lawes Cottage afford good examples of these.
Lawes Cottage was given to the National Trust
by the widow of George Engleheart in 1940. (fn. 22)
Little Clarendon, a rather larger house adjoining
Lawes Cottage, probably dates from c. 1500 and
is also National Trust property. (fn. 23) The Manor
Farm, the farmhouse of Lord Pembroke's manor,
and presumably standing on or near the site of the
abbess's capital messuage, (fn. 24) lies in the extreme east
of the parish nearly ¾ mile from the church. Dinton
Park and House lie behind the church and Rectory
on the opposite side of the parish. (fn. 25)
About ¾ mile north of the church, in a valley
running east and west between the sandy escarpment and the chalk downs, stands Marshwood
House. The central part of the present house is
thought to have been built by a Mr. Gwynne
early in the 18th century. Edward Whatmore (d.
1787) added the two flanking wings. (fn. 26) The house
was part of Lord Pembroke's manor, but was leased
to members of the Wyndham family after Whatmore's death. (fn. 27) By the Inclosure Award of 1837
Lord Pembroke exchanged the house and grounds
with William Wyndham for property elsewhere
in Dinton. (fn. 28)
There was no piped water in the village until
1904 when Lord Pembroke built a reservoir to
supply his tenants with water. (fn. 29) This was the only
piped water supply until 1958 when mains water
was installed. (fn. 30) Most of the 20th-century building
has taken place along the present main road which
virtually by-passes the older part of the village.
Since the Second World War blocks of Council
houses have been built along the road leading south
from the church, and others, of slightly earlier
date, lie on both sides of the road leading to the
station. Since the Second World War an Admiralty
Gunnery Equipment sub-depot has occupied a
site between the railway and the main road.
Edward Hyde, future Lord Chancellor, and first
Earl of Clarendon, was born at Dinton in 1609 and
was baptized in the church there. (fn. 31) His father,
Henry Hyde, had apparently leased the rectory
and advowson of Dinton from his brother Sir
Lawrence Hyde, the lay rector. (fn. 32) Edward and
eight other children of Henry Hyde and his wife,
Mary Langford, were born at Dinton, (fn. 33) presumably in a house on or near the site of the present
Rectory House. (fn. 34) Until he went to Oxford at the
age of 13, Edward Hyde was educated by the Vicar
of Dinton. (fn. 35) Some time between 1623 and 1625
Henry Hyde left Dinton for Purton. (fn. 36) The mother
of the musicians William and Henry Lawes came
from Dinton and Henry, the younger brother, was
baptized there in 1596. (fn. 37) Henry (d. 1662) wrote
the music for 'Comus' and composed the anthem
'Zadok the Priest' for the coronation of Charles II. (fn. 38)
Roger Ludlow, the deputy-governor of Connecticut in 1639, who helped to draft the constitution
of Connecticut, was the son of Thomas Ludlow of
Dinton. (fn. 39) His younger brother, George, who
became a prominent member of the council in
Massachusetts, was baptized at Dinton in 1596. (fn. 40)
Edward Whatmore of Marshwood House (d. 1787)
patented a movable fire-escape which could also
be used for picking fruit. (fn. 41) George Herbert Engleheart (d. 1936) was universally known among
horticulturists for the work he did in his garden at
Little Clarendon on the cultivation of daffodils. (fn. 42)
MANOR.
By the time of the Domesday Survey
DINTON belonged to Shaftesbury Abbey. (fn. 43) The
20 hides at which it was assessed almost certainly
included the whole of Teffont Magna, another
Shaftesbury manor, and not separately mentioned
in the survey. (fn. 44) Later evidence shows that the two
manors were jointly administered by the abbey,
and for some time after the Dissolution, by Lord
Pembroke. How and when Shaftesbury acquired
Dinton is unknown, but there are two charters of
the 8th and 9th centuries respectively in the abbey's
cartulary relating to land in Teffont. (fn. 45) In 1086 there
was also a two-hide estate in Dinton held by
Gunfrid, whose predecessor in the time of King
Edward had been unable to detach it from the
abbey. (fn. 46) If Gunfrid is Gunfrid Maldoith, who held
land elsewhere in Wiltshire in 1086, and from
whom a branch of the Mauduit family is thought to
have descended, (fn. 47) then these 2 hides could represent the freehold estate held by the Mauduits in
Dinton in the 12th and 13th centuries.
Dinton remained among the possessions of
Shaftesbury Abbey until the Dissolution. (fn. 48) In 1540
the site with the chief messuage of the manor was
granted to Sir Thomas Arundell (d. 1552), (fn. 49) who
immediately obtained licence to alienate it to
Matthew Colthurst. (fn. 50) Colthurst in turn obtained
licence to convey it to William Green of Heale, in
Woodford. (fn. 51) What these transactions achieved, if
anything, is not known, and in 1547 the entire
manor was granted to Sir William Herbert, later
Earl of Pembroke (d. 1570). (fn. 52) Thenceforward
Dinton descended with the Pembroke title until
1918 when, as an outlying part of the Wilton estate,
it was sold in lots. (fn. 53)
In 1552 the demesne farm including the demesne
lands of Teffont Magna was leased to William
Mellowes for 21 years and before then it had been
occupied by John Reave. (fn. 54) In 1610 Roger Earth was
the lessee, (fn. 55) and in 1634 the lessees were Prudence
and Joseph Earth. (fn. 56) In 1649, for the first time, the
Dinton demesne farm was leased without the lands
in Teffont Magna, which from this date formed a
separate estate. (fn. 57) The lease of 1649 of the Dinton
farm was to John Low. In 1658 the lessee was
Nicholas Daniels, and the farm continued to be
leased by members of the Daniels family until 1717
when the lease was acquired by Wadham Wyndham
(d. 1736), a younger brother of William Wyndham,
of Dinton Park. (fn. 58) The demesne farm was leased
under Lord Pembroke by Wadham's son, Henry
(d. 1788), and by his grandson, Henry Penruddock
Wyndham. (fn. 59) But, on the death of Henry Penruddock Wyndham in 1819, Lord Pembroke granted
the lease to Walter Baily who held it until c. 1850. (fn. 60)
The manor farm was then leased by a number of
persons until 1902 when D. Coombes became the
lessee, and on the sale of Lord Pembroke's lands
in Dinton in 1918 Mr. Coombes bought the farm. (fn. 61)
In 1567 the demesne farmhouse was tiled and
contained a hall, parlour, kitchen, and other rooms
necessary for occupation by a tenant farmer. There
was also a chapel, and, among the farm buildings,
a large barn of 15 bays with 2 porches, and a
dovecot. (fn. 62) All these were stone-tiled. In 1963 Manor
Farm had an early 19th-century front range, with
an older range behind. This had been much
altered in the 19th and 20th centuries and contained no features which could be accurately dated.
In 1952 it was alleged that a dovecot still existed
on this farm, (fn. 63) and this is perhaps to be identified
with the rectangular stone outbuilding standing to
the north of the farmhouse. Across the road from
the farm is a range of three cottages which may
originally have formed a single house dating from
the 16th century or earlier. The two central bays
at least have a roof with raised cruck trusses and curved wind-braces, and the walls, now mainly of stone,
were formerly timber-framed on a high stone base.
LESSER ESTATES.
In the 14th century the
family of Cole had an estate in Dinton. In 1316
Robert Cole acquired land there from Walter of
Langford, (fn. 64) and about ten years later he, or another
of the same name, was deprived of his estate in
Dinton for his adherence to the Lancastrian cause. (fn. 65)
From an agreement made in the second quarter
of the same century it appears that the Coles held
their land in return for keeping the abbess's woods
of Rigly and Marshwood, both within her manor
of Dinton. (fn. 66) This duty and presumably the land
that went with it, passed at an unknown date to
the family of Lambert. (fn. 67) Edmund Lambert died
in 1493 holding the same amount of land as the
Cole family had held. (fn. 68) This passed to Edmund's
son, William, who died in 1504 and was succeeded
by his brother Thomas. (fn. 69) Thomas was followed in
1510 by his son William. (fn. 70) In 1567 William Lambert
was a freeholder on Lord Pembroke's manor of
Dinton holding his lands in return for his services
as keeper of Rigly and Marshwood. (fn. 71) No subsequent reference to the Lambert family in Dinton
has been found and it is not known to whom their
estate passed.
Another freehold estate was held by Henry
Mayhew in 1567. (fn. 72) This had presumably come to
him from John Mayhew, a free tenant on the
manor. (fn. 73) Henry, a recusant, died excommunicate
in 1587. (fn. 74) His sons, Henry and Edward, went into
exile overseas and the estate was conveyed in 1591
by Henry Mayhew, the younger, to his uncle, John
Mayhew. (fn. 75) In 1616 John Mayhew settled the
property upon himself for life with remainder to
his daughter Dorothy, then about to marry Thomas
Blake. (fn. 76) John Mayhew and Thomas Blake sold the
estate in 1625, described as 'their manor, lordship, and capital messuage of Dinton and Teffont'
to William Rolfe and five years later Rolfe sold it to
Richard South, who already had a freehold estate
in Dinton and Teffont. (fn. 77)
The estate of the South family may originate in
the holding of the Mauduits in Dinton. In the mid-12th century Ancelin Mauduit, who may have been
a descendant of the Gunfrid of the Domesday
Survey, held 2 hides on the manor, (fn. 78) and in 1242
three mesne tenants held land in Dinton of Joanna
Mauduit, who held of the Abbess of Shaftesbury. (fn. 79)
In 1567 the freehold estate of Thomas South included lands called Mauduits, Wick, Gerrards,
and Uptons, then occupied by William Dunne. (fn. 80)
Ten years later Thomas South settled 'the manor
or farm of Dinton called Mauduit's' upon Thomas
his son on his marriage with Martha Goldston. (fn. 81)
The younger Thomas died in 1606 and the 'manor
of Dinton Mauduits' passed to his son Edward. (fn. 82)
Edward was succeeded by Richard South, probably
his son, who in 1630 acquired from William Rolfe
the property which Rolfe had acquired five years
earlier from John Mayhew and Thomas Blake. (fn. 83)
In 1689 George South, grandson of Richard, sold
his estate to William Wyndham, second surviving
son of Sir Wadham Wyndham of Norrington and
Salisbury. (fn. 84) Thus the estate acquired by the
Wyndhams, later called the Dinton Park estate,
included the freehold estate of the Souths, situated
in Dinton and Teffont, (fn. 85) and that of the Mayhews
which had passed to the Souths in 1630 (see above).
The Dinton Park estate was much enlarged in
the 18th and early 19th centuries by acquisitions of
land in Dinton and Teffont Magna. (fn. 86) Among these
acquisitions, was the estate known as Dalwood,
which Lord Pembroke conveyed to William
Wyndham in 1802 in exchange for land elsewhere
in the parish. (fn. 87) The Dinton Park estate descended
from father to eldest son in the Wyndham family
until 1916 when William Wyndham sold it to
Bertram Erasmus Philipps. (fn. 88) In c. 1940 B. E.
Philipps let the house on a long lease to the
Y.W.C.A. as a holiday home, and in 1943 he gave
the house and park, comprising some 200 a., to
the National Trust. (fn. 89)
Dinton House (also called since 1943 Philipps
House) was designed by Jeffry Wyatt (later Sir
Jeffry Wyatville) at the beginning of the 19th
century to replace the earlier house on almost the
same site, which until then had been the home of
the Wyndhams. The new house was completed in
1816. Built of Chilmark stone, it is a two-storied
house with symmetrically set chimney stacks and
central lantern. The south front has nine bays with
an Ionic portico. The architect is believed to have
based his design upon Pythouse, Tisbury, some
seven miles away. Inside the house, the rooms are
planned round a spacious square hall. It was one
of the earliest houses to have a central heating
system installed. This was achieved by pumping
hot air from a boiler in the basement into the stair
well. (fn. 90)
Another freehold estate in Dinton at the time
of the Inclosure Award was one of about 30 a.
belonging to William Maslem Barnes and known
as Hayters. (fn. 91) The early history of this has not been
traced. It was acquired by Henry Hayter of
Clarendon Park in 1697 and from the Hayters
passed to John Barnes in 1797. It passed to John's
brother, William Maslem Barnes, in 1822. During
the 19th century the property changed hands a
number of times, and in 1901 was bought by George
Engleheart. (fn. 92) Engleheart died in 1936 (fn. 93) and in
1940 his widow gave the former farmhouse of the
estate, by then called Little Clarendon, to the
National Trust. (fn. 94)
Little Clarendon (fn. 95) is a stone farmhouse probably
dating from the late 15th or early 16th century.
The two-storied porch and mullioned windows are
of slightly later date. The gable front of the south-east wing appears to have been added, or re-built,
in c. 1900. In the angle between this wing and the
main block is a stair turret containing a stone
newel staircase. The house was completely restored
by George Engleheart at the time that he bought it
when it was sometimes called Steps. (fn. 96)
The rectors of Dinton held a small estate in the
parish. This passed with the rectory upon the
Dissolution to Sir Thomas Arundell and thenceforth descended like the rectory and advowson (fn. 97)
until the 1920's when it was sold. In 1567 the rectorial estate included 14 a. of arable divided between
three fields on the east side of the manor and 16 a.
of arable divided between three fields on the west
side of the manor. There was also some 2 a. of
meadow and grazing rights for 60 sheep and other
beasts. (fn. 98) A parsonage house existed at least as early
as 1249. (fn. 99) In 1567 the house belonging to the rectory
estate had a tiled roof, a dovecot, outhouses, and
about 2 a. of garden and orchard. (fn. 1) The land
belonging to the rector was assessed at 49 a. in
1837. (fn. 2) It was sold in lots during the 1920's. (fn. 3) The
Rectory House was sold to B. E. Philipps in 1924, (fn. 4)
and was re-named Hyde's House. It was given by
Mr. Philipps in 1943 with Dinton House to the
National Trust. (fn. 5)
The Rectory House has some walls and windows
of Tudor date, but it was re-fronted on the south
side early in the 18th century. This front, built
of Chilmark stone, is of 5 bays, the central 3 projecting slightly and being surmounted by a pediment. The central door is also pedimented. Edward
Hyde, first Earl Clarendon (d. 1674), who was
born in Dinton in 1609 was probably born in what
was then the Rectory House. (fn. 6) Detached from the
house, is a large dovecot dating from the 15th
century. (fn. 7)
ECONOMIC HISTORY.
Domesday Book records
20 a. of meadowland, the same of woodland, and
pasture a league long by half a league broad. Of
the 20 hides making up the manor, undoubtedly
including Teffont Magna, 7 were in demesne, and
2 held by Gunfrid, leaving 11 hides for tenant
farming. There were 2 ploughs and 4 serfs on the
demesne, and on the rest of the manor there were
21 villeins, and 10 bordars with 11 ploughs. (fn. 8) A
survey of the manor, which has been dated c.
1160, (fn. 9) reckons Dinton at only 10 hides, an estimation which possibly excluded the demesne lands.
This survey, which again includes Teffont as
but a part of Dinton, begins with a list of some
50 tenant holdings. Of these, 29 were holdings of
1 virgate. The rest, except for one of 1½ virgate, were
all smaller, many of only one acre. The rents and
services due from holders of a virgate are meticulously set out, and included, besides ploughing,
reaping, and harvesting, thatching houses, and
making malt and carrying it to Shaftesbury. After
these 50 holdings and their tenants, 15 cotsetlers
are named, often with holdings of 4 acres, and all
owing rent and services. Among them were a
shepherd, an oxherd, and a smith, who held their
few acres in return for special services. (fn. 10) Finally
there were 9 franklins, most of whom had holdings
larger than one virgate. They owed rent only, and
in some cases, suit at the shire and hundred courts,
as well as at the manor court. The parson of Dinton appears in the list of franklins. Almost nothing
is known about the agrarian economy of the manor
during the next 400 years. As on the other Wiltshire
estates of Shaftesbury Abbey, both the abbess and
her tenants had sheep on the downland of the
parish. At the beginning of the 13th century the
number of sheep kept by 36 tenants from Dinton
and Teffont Magna outnumbered the flock belonging to the abbey. (fn. 11)
From at least as early as 1535 the demesne lands
were leased out for an annual rent. (fn. 12) In 1535 the
perquisites of the manorial court were worth £2
and rents nearly £29. (fn. 13) Immediately after the Dissolution these rents were made up of £3 from the
free-tenants and some £26 from customary tenants. (fn. 14)
A survey made in 1567, 20 years after the manor
had passed into William Herbert's hands, shows
that Dinton and Teffont Magna were still farmed as
one estate but that the two places had their own sets
of common fields. Of the demesne arable 129 a. lay
in the three open fields of Dinton, and 82 a. in Teffont's three fields. (fn. 15) There were some 44 a. of
pasture mostly inclosed in small meadows, but
there were also 5 a. in the common meadow. On
Dinton Downs there were 120 a. of inclosed grazing
for the demesne flock of 400 sheep, and on Teffont
Downs there was common pasture for another
300 sheep. On the rest of the manor there were
11 freeholders, some with land in both Dinton
and Teffont, and 32 customary tenants holding by
copy of court roll. Nearly all tenants had pasture
rights which, if exercised, would have allowed for
a combined flock of about 1,300 sheep on the downs.
Inclosure of common for arable was evidently in
progress at this date, and, to offset the consequent
loss of common grazing, tenants were permitted
for every yardland they held to inclose 12 a. of
pasture. (fn. 16) Much of the grassland along the river
was thus divided up into small inclosed meadows.
There are frequent references in the 1567 survey
to these recently made closes, and the manor court
at about the same date was dealing with tenants
who failed to maintain the hedges just planted
between their lands in 'the marsh'. (fn. 17)
Another survey made in 1631 reveals the progress at Dinton of the current changes in husbandry
which were taking place throughout the region. (fn. 18)
All the demesne arable situated in Dinton had
been consolidated into a single field of some 120 a.,
although the demesne arable lying in Teffont was
still distributed among the three fields there. All
the demesne meadow lay in small closes. Dinton
Down was said to be so barren that down and fields
together could only support about 300 sheep in
spite of the provision of 20 loads of hay as extra
fodder. The number of sheep which could be
maintained at Teffont had similarly declined, and
here the reason was specifically attributed to inclosure. The number of freeholders on the manor
at this date is not given. Two of the customary
tenants held by lease from Lord Pembroke and
the remaining 33 were copyholders. By this date
nearly all tenants, in addition to their inclosed
meadows, had closes of arable as well as their
holdings in the common arable fields, and it is clear
that in many cases these arable closes had been
made from the formerly open downland. The
pattern of the three common arable fields was also
undergoing some modification at this time. New
fields had either been created, or the old ones
subdivided into more convenient units. The
encroachment of arable upon the downs may not,
however, have resulted in any drastic reduction in
the numbers of sheep on the manor. The sheep
grazing rights of the tenants were in fact slightly
higher in 1631 than they were in 1576, and the
loss of downland to the plough may have been
offset by the greatly increased feeding provided
by the water-meadows which began to be made at
Dinton in the first quarter of the 17th century. (fn. 19)
In 1650, for the first time, the demesne lands
lying in Teffont were leased as a separate estate (fn. 20)
and thenceforward the Dinton demesne farm lands
lay in Dinton only. A map of 1800 shows the
demesne arable as a compact block of land extending
along the east side of the parish, north of the Manor
Farm. Two common arable fields divided into
strips are discernible above the village but the
process of consolidation was advancing here too,
and three or four farmers held compact blocks of
land within these fields. (fn. 21) This process of consolidation was completed by an Inclosure Award of
1837. After the early 17th century nearly all the
fields along the river were floated as water-meadows,
and the earlier grazing and bigger hay-crop thus
afforded resulted in an increase in dairy farming in
the parish. At the end of the 19th century considerable flocks of sheep were still kept on the downs, (fn. 22)
but in the 20th century much of the chalkland was
converted into arable, and since the Second World
War chicken farming has been carried on on a
large scale in this part of the parish. In 1903 there
were four farms in Dinton. (fn. 23) In 1919 Manor Farm
comprised 564 a., East Farm 377 a., Jesse's Farm
132 a., and Fitz's Farm 84 a. All were mixed farms
and all had their fields lying partly on the downs
to the north of the village, and partly on the clay
and loam land to the south. (fn. 24) In 1931 there were
three farms farming over 150 a., (fn. 25) and in 1962
there were two.
In spite of being an entirely agricultural community and lying in a region where there was much
unrest, Dinton remained peaceful throughout the
disturbances of the 1830's. Agricultural machinery
was broken at Wilton, Barford St. Martin, and
Tisbury, all close by, but no incidents occurred
at Dinton. (fn. 26) This has been attributed to the firm
action taken by William Wyndham of Dinton
Park, (fn. 27) who by that date owned, or farmed, nearly
half the parish. Several of the Wyndhams played
important parts in the economic history of the
parish. William Wyndham (d. 1785) was a pioneer
in agricultural improvement, (fn. 28) and his greatgrandson, another William Wyndham, installed
an extensive land drainage system. (fn. 29) The foxhunting activities of the family also provided a
certain amount of employment in the 19th century,
for the kennels of the South and West Wilts.
Hunt were at Dinton Park for a time. (fn. 30)
The greensand strip running through the parish
between the chalk and clay provides a soil particularly well suited to market gardening. At the end
of the 18th century there were extensive orchards in
and around the village and a traveller remarked
that when these were in bloom a stranger might
suppose he were in Devon or Herefordshire. (fn. 31)
Early 20th-century directories include apples among
the chief crops of the parish, but in 1962 there
was no large-scale market gardening and there were
no commercial orchards. In 1910 a successful
tobacco-crop was grown in the parish probably for
one of the Salisbury tobacco manufacturers. (fn. 32)
Agriculture has always been predominant in the
economic life of the parish. In 1831 of the 111
families in Dinton 76 were employed in agriculture.
Of the 131 men over 20 years of age 9 were farmers
employing labourers, and 73 were agricultura
workers. (fn. 33) Besides occupations ancillary to agriculture, and positions as servants at Dinton Park,
there was almost no employment, other than agricultural, available in the parish. The coming of the
railway in 1859 brought some new opportunities. (fn. 34)
Dinton station was used extensively by farmers
from neighbouring parishes who came there to
complete their journey to Salisbury market by
train. The nearby 'Wyndham (later Nadder) Arms'
had to make special stabling arrangements for their
horses. (fn. 35) There was a post office in the village by
1842 and at the turn of the century the village shop
was rebuilt by the lord of the manor. (fn. 36) In the first
half of the 20th century there was a brick, tile, and
pottery works south-east of the village where
there is a bed of suitable clay. In 1918 this included,
besides the pottery works, three large brick kilns. (fn. 37)
The Admiralty Gunnery Equipment Depot established just south of the village since the Second
World War has provided but little civilian employment. In 1963 a smithy was still operating in the
village. Since the Second World War many
retired people have made their homes in Dinton.
MILLS.
In 1086 there were two mills at Dinton. (fn. 38)
These were probably the two mills later known as
Dalwood Mill, and Cole's, or Dinton, Mill. Two
millers are named in the 12th-century survey of
the manor. One, probably at Dalwood, had to
grind the corn from Teffont Magna, and the other
was entitled to eat with the abbess's household
when the abbess visited her manor. (fn. 39) Dalwood
Mill was acquired by Sir Thomas Hungerford in
1337, (fn. 40) and in 1389 it was held with a meadow and
messuage of the Abbess of Wilton by Roger de
Karentham. (fn. 41) No more is known of Dalwood Mill,
and all trace of it is gone, although its site on the
Nadder, south of Dalwood Farm, is known.
Cole's Mill was called after the family of that
name who were presumably at one time millers
under the Abbess of Shaftesbury. (fn. 42) In 1249
Thomas Cole was killed by the inner wheel of the
mill. (fn. 43) In 1631 about 5 a. of land went with the mill
and all tenants of the manor were obliged to grind
their corn there. (fn. 44) In the later 18th century the
miller was involved in disputes over water rights
which were complicated by the many demands for
channels to irrigate the water-meadows. (fn. 45) In 1775
the reversion of the lease of the mill was granted
by Lord Pembroke to Charles Penruddock of
Compton Chamberlayne, and the mill continued
to be leased by the Penruddocks until 1930 when
Lord Pembroke sold it to Captain G. W. Penruddock. (fn. 46) The mill ceased to work in c. 1900. (fn. 47)
The present mill building probably dates from
the 18th century. The mill house which adjoins it
was a late 19th-century addition.
CHURCH.
The first reference found to a church
at Dinton is a mention of Ivo the parson there in
c. 1160 (fn. 48) , and it is likely that there was a church at
Dinton even earlier. Traces of Saxon work have
been found in the church of Teffont Magna (fn. 49) and
it is probable that from earliest times the church
there was attached to the church of Dinton.
Throughout the Middle Ages Teffont Magna was
a chapelry of Dinton and remained so until 1922
when it became instead a chapelry of Teffont
Evias. (fn. 50) In 1924 the church of Dinton was united
with that of Baverstock, but in 1952 the two
churches were disunited, and since then the livings
of Dinton and Teffont (including the chapelry of
Teffont Magna) have been held in plurality. (fn. 51)
Dinton was one of the churches attached to the
conventual church of Shaftesbury as a prebend. (fn. 52)
The rectors, or prebendaries, of Dinton, often, but
not always, canons of Salisbury, were appointed
by the abbesses of Shaftesbury for the services they
could render the abbey. (fn. 53) In return for these
services the rectors enjoyed the profits and perquisites of the rectory which was not appropriated
to Shaftesbury, and which included a small estate
with a rectory house and the patronage of the
church of Dinton. (fn. 54) The abbesses of Shaftesbury
presented to the rectory, or prebend, of Dinton
until the Dissolution, except in 1354 when the
Bishop of Salisbury presented, in 1530 when the
Abbess of Wilton presented, and in 1394 when
the king was patron during an abbatial vacancy. (fn. 55)
After the Dissolution the rectory with advowson
of the church were included in the grant of the
manor to Sir Thomas Arundell (d. 1552), and were
conveyed by him with the capital messuage to
Matthew Colthurst. (fn. 56) In 1548 they were sold 'at
the desire of Matthew Colthurst' to William
Herbert, later Earl of Pembroke (d. 1570), who had
acquired the manor the previous year. (fn. 57) In 1585
Henry, Earl of Pembroke (d. 1601), sold rectory
and advowson to Lawrence (I) Hyde of West Hatch
(d. 1590). (fn. 58) Robert (I) Hyde, eldest son of Lawrence
(I) sold them in 1594 to his brother Sir Lawrence (II)
Hyde (d. 1641). (fn. 59) From Sir Lawrence, they passed to
his son, Sir Robert (II) Hyde, Chief Justice of Common Pleas (d. 1665). Sir Robert (II) Hyde died
without surviving issue and rectory and advowson
passed to his nephew, Robert (III) Hyde, son of
Alexander Hyde, Bishop of Salisbury. (fn. 60) Robert
(III) Hyde died childless in 1722, and rectory and
advowson passed by his will to his cousin Dr.
Robert (IV) Hyde. (fn. 61) Dr. Hyde was a Fellow of
Magdalen College, Oxford, and on his death in
1723, he devised rectory and advowson to his
college. (fn. 62) Magdalen College retained the advowson
until 1950 when it was transferred to the Bishop
of Salisbury. (fn. 63)
After the Dissolution both rectory and advowson
were occasionally leased for terms of years. Robert
Grove, who leased the rectory from the Earl of
Pembroke for 21 years in 1553, presented to the
church in 1544, 1555, and 1556. (fn. 64) William Blanchard and Giles Clutterbuck, also lessees, presented
in 1664. (fn. 65) Henry Hyde, father of the First Earl of
Clarendon, and brother of Sir Lawrence (II) Hyde,
appears also to have presented on at least one
occasion. (fn. 66)
The church of Dinton was assessed for the
taxation of Pope Nicholas in 1291 at £16 13s. 4d. (fn. 67)
In 1320 and 1428 it was valued at the same sum. (fn. 68)
In 1535 the rectory with all its appurtenances was
valued by the rector at £17 gross. Out of this he
paid 10s. 9d. in synodals, and £1 6s. 2d. to the
Vicar of Dinton. (fn. 69) The great tithes were said to
be worth only 16 marks in 1341 because, among
other reasons, of the impoverished state of the
parish. (fn. 70) In 1732 Magdalen College leased the rectorial great tithes to the vicar and thenceforth they
were farmed by him. (fn. 71) In 1835 the vicar was
unable to give a separate annual value for the
vicarage as distinct from the rectory. (fn. 72) The tithes
were commuted in 1843 for £397. (fn. 73) Magdalen
College gave permission for the tithe barn to be
pulled down in 1842. (fn. 74)
The earliest presentation found of a vicar to the
church of Dinton is in 1306. (fn. 75) In 1336 a vicarage
was ordained. (fn. 76) This was valued by the vicar in
1535 at nearly £6 including, presumably, the
allowance from the rector. (fn. 77) The vicarial tithes
were commuted in 1843 for £374 10s., (fn. 78) and after
1732 the vicar also leased the rectorial tithes. (fn. 79) Some
glebe belonged to the vicar as distinct from the
estate belonging to the rectory. This lay mainly
at Four Corners, in the angle formed by the junction of Ranger's and Foster's Lanes. (fn. 80) In 1608 the
vicar had a house which at that date had a hall,
buttery, and chamber. (fn. 81) It is mentioned again in
1661 and 1705 (fn. 82) but from time to time the vicar probably occupied the Rectory House, as he is known
to have done in 1783. (fn. 83) In 1746 the vicarage stood
north of the Rectory House, (fn. 84) but it was subsequently demolished and its foundations were uncovered
by a plough in 1951. (fn. 85)
Some time before 1291 a portion of the tithes of
Dinton, valued at £5, was allotted to the Rectory of
Iwerne Minster (Dors.), another prebend of
Shaftesbury Abbey church. (fn. 86) In 1480 the church
of Iwerne Minster was appropriated to the dean
and canons of St. George's Chapel, Windsor, who
thus acquired the portion of Dinton's tithes. (fn. 87) From
at least as early as 1537 the dean and canons leased
out these tithes, and in 1661 they were leased to
Sir Robert (II) Hyde, lay rector of Dinton. (fn. 88) Leases
continued to be made to the Hydes, and when the
rectory was devised to Magdalen College, Oxford,
in 1723, leases were made to the college. (fn. 89) When
the tithes of Dinton were commuted in 1843 those
due to the dean and canons of Windsor, still being
leased by Magdalen, were valued at £81. (fn. 90)
As prebendaries of the conventual church the
rectors of Dinton had special responsibilities
towards the community at Shaftesbury, and in this
capacity the rector was required by the bishop
in 1298 to enjoin penance upon some delinquent
nuns. (fn. 91) In the 16th century the rector had to pay
10s. a year to a chaplain celebrating mass daily in
the abbess's chapel. It is not clear which chapel
this was, but possibly it was the one in the demesne
farmhouse. (fn. 92) The abbess provided her chaplain
with some supplies in kind and a rent-free house.
The rector supplied candles for the chapel. (fn. 93) In
1535 he also made an allowance to the Vicar of
Dinton and was probably responsible for maintaining, or partly maintaining, a chaplain for
Teffont Magna although he paid no salary to one
that year. (fn. 94) It is not known how often a chaplain
was appointed for Teffont Magna, nor, until the
end of the 18th century, how often services were
held in the church there. The inhabitants of the
chapelry contributed towards the upkeep of Dinton church, and in 1674 their chapelwardens and
sidesmen were presented for not bringing their
contribution which was a third of any sum spent
upon repairs. (fn. 95) In 1783 there was no curate for
Teffont and the Vicar of Dinton held services
there every third Sunday afternoon. Morning and
evening services, with a sermon in the mornings,
were held at Dinton every Sunday. At Holy Communion, celebrated four times a year at Dinton,
there were usually 10 or 12 communicants. (fn. 96) By
1864 a curate assisted the vicar. Morning service
was held every Sunday at Teffont Magna and the
transepts of Dinton church, which had been reserved for the congregation from Teffont, were
occupied by the poor of Dinton as free-sittings.
The congregation at Dinton averaged between
150 and 200, and there were 120 communicants
in the parish. The congregation at Teffont was said
to have decreased at that date owing to the activities of the Methodists, at that time referred to as
'ranters'. (fn. 97)
Philip Pinckney, a signatory to the Presbyterian
Testimony, was Vicar of Dinton in 1608. (fn. 98) He subsequently became Rector of Fugglestone, (fn. 99) but
apparently returned to Dinton where he died c.
1661. (fn. 1) His son, John, followed him at Dinton and
was later ejected from the living at Longstock
(Hants). (fn. 2)
The church of ST. MARY THE VIRGIN is
cruciform with nave, crossing, and transepts dating
from the early 13th century. The north doorway
and square font of purbeck marble are of the same
period. The nave windows were apparently inserted
in the 14th century. Later in the same century the
chancel was rebuilt on a grand scale. It is of ashlar
masonry externally and on both north and south
sides has three uniform windows with reticulated
tracery. Two of these contain original stained glass.
The large east window has interlacing tracery of
the same date. The two upper stages of the tower
were added, or rebuilt, together with the vault above
the crossing about the middle of the 15th century.
At the same time the south wall of the south
transept was rebuilt, and the north wall of the north
transept repaired and a new window inserted. An
octagonal stair turret in the angle between the nave
and north transept is surmounted by a conical roof
below the level of the belfry and is connected to the
tower by a short passage. Much restoration was
carried out during the later 19th century under the
direction of William Butterfield. (fn. 3) The royal arms
of George II hang on the south wall of the nave.
In 1553 a chalice weighing 9½ oz. was left for the
parish and 22 oz. taken for the king's use. The
church has an Elizabethan cup with paten. (fn. 4) There
are 6 bells. Numbers 1 to 5 are all of 17th-century
date. Number 6 may have been cast in Dorset in
the 14th century. (fn. 5) There are the remains of the
steps and socket of a medieval stone cross in the
churchyard.
The registers date from 1558 and are complete.
ROMAN CATHOLICISM.
Henry Mayhew,
holder of a freehold estate, died excommunicated
as a papist in 1587. (fn. 6) According to a nearly contemporary local report, he was buried in the churchyard at Teffont Magna, which was not normally
used as a burial ground. (fn. 7) His two sons, Henry and
Edward, left the country and entered the English
College of Douai, then at Rheims. (fn. 8) Between c. 1595
and 1613 Edward worked in England as a secular
priest, possibly in the Dinton neighbourhood. (fn. 9) He
later entered the Benedictine Order and became
prior of the monastery of St. Lawrence at Dieulouard
(Lorraine). He died in 1625. (fn. 10) The churchwardens
presented 5 persons as papists in 1668 and 6 in
1676. (fn. 11) In 1783 there was said to be none. (fn. 12)
In 1921 Maude Isabel Engleheart, wife of George
Engleheart, converted and furnished an outbuilding
at Little Clarendon, her home in Dinton, as a
Roman Catholic chapel dedicated to Our Lady
of Pity. (fn. 13) In 1962 this was served from Tisbury
and Mass was celebrated every Sunday. (fn. 14)
PROTESTANT NONCONFORMITY.
Three
families were presented as dissenters in 1668, (fn. 15)
and the following year there were said to be groups
of Anabaptists and Quakers in the parish, although
their numbers were uncertain. (fn. 16) William Bate
(1661-89), one of the few General Baptist leaders
in the country, was a Dinton labourer, and probably worked among the Anabaptists there for a
short time. (fn. 17) The Dinton Quakers may have come
under the influence of the outstanding Quaker
centre at Fovant which flourished c. 1661. (fn. 18) In
1683 and 1686 among some 15 persons presented
for not attending church, were members of the
Jesse and Sheppard families, (fn. 19) and in 1702 Sarah
Sheppard's house was licensed as a meeting-place
for Quakers. (fn. 20) There were, however, said to be no
dissenters in the parish in 1783. (fn. 21) In 1821 Alexander
Ware certified his house in Dinton as a nonconformist meeting place. (fn. 22) In 1864 a group of Primitive Methodists, who were influential in Teffont
Magna, held meetings in the summer on Sundays
outside Dinton church, and thereby interrupted
the service. (fn. 23)
A Primitive Methodist chapel was built in 1895. (fn. 24)
PARISH GOVERNMENT.
Court rolls of the
manor court survive for 1558-9, 1566-7, and
1584, (fn. 25) and there are court books for the period
1724-1899. (fn. 26) These records show that one court
for Dinton and Teffont Magna was held annually
by Lord Pembroke's steward, and at this Dinton
and Teffont were represented by separate homages.
The 16th-century courts were concerned with the
maintenance of hedges and ditches, encroachments
upon the waste, the admission of tenants, and
particularly with the payment of heriots. The
records of the 18th-century courts consist to a
large extent of a recital of manorial customs, but
tenants, were still presented for encroachments
and for other similar offences. In 1743, for example,
the tenants of Teffont Magna were required to
fill in the holes made when trees were uprooted
on the common. Dinton was apparently divided
for certain purposes into a West and an East End.
In 1749 a tenant was presented for driving his
sheep over the down belonging to the West End
tenants, and in 1760 a right of way through fields
belonging to the East End tenants was denied to
the tenant of the Manor Farm. The court also
regularly ordained an annual perambulation of
the manor boundaries. As late as 1800 the court
appointed a hayward, but no record has been noted
of the appointment of any other manorial officers.
Very little can be said about the government of
the parish in the 19th century. Apart from the
registers, a vestry book for 1834-1928 is the only
surviving parish record and this is a mere list of
small disbursements. (fn. 27) The first meeting of the
parish council took place in the old schoolroom
in 1894. (fn. 28)
SCHOOLS.
There was a public school for boys
and girls in Dinton in 1783 then said to be very
well regulated. (fn. 29) In 1818 some 80 children attended
the school kept by the parish clerk with the assistance of three women. It was claimed that at that
date nearly every child in the parish went to school
and that many were paid for by the wealthier inhabitants. (fn. 30) The children of Teffont Magna also
attended the Dinton school. (fn. 31) In 1845 the school
was conducted in some outbuildings close to the
Rectory House which had been converted into
one large schoolroom. (fn. 32) This still stood in 1962.
In 1859 about 60 children, including those from
Teffont Magna and Baverstock, were taught there
by a mistress, assisted in the mornings by a master. (fn. 33)
A bequest of £100 was made to the school in the
will of Thomas Barnes, proved in 1864. (fn. 34) By 1871
a school had been opened in Teffont Magna, (fn. 35)
and in 1872 the Dinton school moved to a new
building. This was built with financial aid from
the State, the National Society, and Magdalen
College, Oxford, on the south side of the main
Salisbury-Hindon road. (fn. 36) In 1936 the school at
Teffont Magna was closed, and the younger
children from there again attended the Dinton
school, by then a junior mixed and infants'school. (fn. 37)
The school was given controlled status in 1950,
and in 1962 there were 3 teachers and 75 children. (fn. 38)
There were two private schools in the parish in
1833, but in 1859 only one is recorded, and was
then attended by a few farmers' children. (fn. 39) This
was possibly the school which in 1865 was run by
Harriet Doughty and took boarders, and continued
under her management until 1870. (fn. 40) There was
another private school in the parish in 1893. (fn. 41)
In 1864 the vicar conducted a night school
in the parish which he reported to be fairly well
attended. (fn. 42)
CHARITY.
By his will proved in 1865 William
Maslem Barnes bequeathed £100 for the benefit of
the poor of the parish. The annual income from
this, which was about £2, was to be distributed at
the beginning of every year among the 13 oldest and
most deserving parishioners. (fn. 43) In 1958 the income
from the investment was unchanged and the sums
distributed amounted to just over 4s. (fn. 44)