CALNE

Calne (West) and Bowood 1843
Calne is a small town 8 km. east of
Chippenham and 10 km. north of Devizes. (fn. 70) It
was an early borough and market town and
from the 16th century to the 20th derived its
prosperity from cloth making and food processing. (fn. 71)
Early medieval settlement. In the 10th century and possibly earlier Calne was a locally prominent settlement. (fn. 72) It stood on a large estate of the king and had an early church. (fn. 73) The dependence of their churches on Calne church,
vestiges of such dependence, or other evidence suggests that the king's estate called Calne extended east to include Berwick Bassett, Cherhill, Compton Bassett, and Yatesbury, and
on the south it perhaps included Heddington. On the west it may have been bounded by the
watercourse which came to be called the Whetham stream and, between its confluences
with the Whetham stream and Cowage brook,
by the river Marden. From before the Conquest to the 12th century the king apparently
granted away his estate in portions and,
whether before or after each grant was made,
those five villages, each with its own open
fields and common pastures, were planted or
reorganized, (fn. 74) as, nearer to Calne, were Calstone village, the settlement called Eastman
Street, and probably the settlement called
Whitley. On other land near to Calne, that at
Quemerford, Stock, and Stockley, and between
the town and the roughly north–south line of
the Whetham stream and the Marden, all of
which was almost certainly part of the king's
estate, settlement was or remained dispersed.
On the north Beversbrook was probably part of
the estate and had become the site of settlement
by 1086. West of the line of the Whetham
stream and the Marden, Studley and Whetham
were settlements which were probably planted
on assarts on the edge of the woodland called
Chippenham forest. (fn. 75)
Composition of Calne parish
The king's estate, Calne hundred, and the parish of Calne
church may have been conterminous (fn. 76) until
some parts of the estate which were granted
away became the sites of independent churches
or were added to another parish, and until land
probably west of the estate was added to Calne
parish. Compton Bassett, Heddington, and
Yatesbury, if each had been part of the estate,
had been granted away by 1086, and their
churches, which were or became independent,
had been built by the 12th century or the 13th;
the history of those places is related elsewhere. (fn. 77)
Beversbrook, if it had been part of the estate,
had been granted away by 1086, and it was later
in Hilmarton parish. (fn. 78) Three estates at Calstone
had been granted away by 1086 and a fourth,
the black land of Calstone, later Blackland, had
been granted away by the 12th century. A
church was built on one of the estates at
Calstone and a church was built at Blackland;
each was in the gift of the owner of the estate on
which it was built, was served by a rector who
received the tithes from his patron's estate, and
was a parish church. (fn. 79) Churches built at
Berwick Bassett and Cherhill remained daughters of Calne church. By the 16th century
inhabitants of those places had all rights of baptism, marriage, and burial in their churches,
and Berwick Bassett and Cherhill came to be
reputed parishes and became civil parishes.
This article excludes both places, and the history of each appears under its own heading. (fn. 80)
The history of the whole of Blackland, where
the land was shared between Calne and Blackland parishes, and of the whole of Calstone, the
land of which was shared by Calne and Calstone Wellington parishes, is related under the
headings Blackland and Calstone Wellington, (fn. 81)
and therefore this article also excludes accounts
of those parts of them which lay in Calne parish. Studley had been added to Calne parish by
the 13th century, (fn. 82) and Whetham was later part
of the parish.
Between Studley and Whetham the woodland later called Bowood, with other land west
of Calne, was part of Chippenham forest in the
13th century. A new boundary adopted for the
forest in 1300 and confirmed in 1330 included
Bowood and excluded the land between it and
the town, (fn. 83) and later it was debated whether
Bowood, which was imparked c. 1618, (fn. 84) was
part of Calne parish. Parishioners of Calne perambulated it in the later 16th century and
earlier 17th and the vicar of Calne claimed
tithes from the park. (fn. 85) The vicar's right to the
tithes was successfully contested in the mid
17th century, and from then those living in the
park and in certain hamlets on the edge of it
relieved their own poor. In 1709 the justices at
quarter sessions found the park and those hamlets to be an extra-parochial liberty. (fn. 86) In the
earlier 19th century Bowood liberty consisted
of only the park and one of the hamlets, Buck
Hill. (fn. 87) This article includes Bowood liberty,
dealing with most aspects of it in a sub-article
under its own name.
In 1657 parliament ordered that Calne and
Blackland parishes should be united. The order
was not to prejudice the interest and title of the
rector of Blackland, who lived until 1669, (fn. 88) and
was apparently void. (fn. 89)
In the earlier 19th century Calne's boundaries with several parishes, besides those with
Blackland and Calstone Wellington, were complex. To the north a tongue of Hilmarton
extended into Calne, and three islands of Calne,
a total of 22 a., lay in the tongue; to the east
islands of Calne, of 149 a., 12 a., and ½ a., were
surrounded by Cherhill and Compton Bassett
parishes, and a 3-a. island of Cherhill was surrounded by Calne; to the west a 50-a. peninsula
of Bremhill extended into Calne. (fn. 90) In 1883 the
peninsula of Bremhill and the 3 a. of Cherhill
were transferred to Calne, the detached 161½ a.
of Calne to the east was transferred to Cherhill
and Compton Bassett, lands in the tongue were
exchanged between Calne and Hilmarton, and
the boundaries between Calne, Blackland, and
Calstone Wellington were simplified. Calne
gave c. 198 a. to Blackland and 11 a. to Calstone
Wellington and received c. 98 a. from Blackland
and 32 a. from Calstone Wellington. In 1885
Calne parish, including its land at Blackland
and its part of Calstone's land and excluding
Bowood liberty, measured 8,058 a. (3,261 ha.). (fn. 91)
In 1835 a municipal borough of Calne was
formed and in 1851 a board of health. The area
served by the board of health was altered in
1852, and the new area became Calne urban
sanitary district. In 1889 the boundary of the
sanitary district was adopted as that of the
municipal borough and in 1890 as that of a new
parish, Calne Within, 356 a. (144 ha.). Also in
1890 the rest of Calne parish, the whole of
Blackland and Calstone Wellington parishes
and of Bowood liberty, and a small part of
Bremhill parish, were formed into Calne Without parish, 9,895 a. (4,004 ha.). (fn. 92) In 1934 Calne
Without parish was reduced to 8,759 a. (3,545
ha.) by transfers to Calne Within parish, thereafter 516 ha. (1,276 a.), and to Cherhill. (fn. 93) In
1984 Calne Without parish was increased to
4,326 ha. (10,690 a.) by transfers to it of part of
the tongue of Hilmarton parish and a large part
of Pewsham parish. (fn. 94)
Parish boundary
The boundary on the south
followed the course of a Roman road and was
marked by a prehistoric ditch. (fn. 95) On the northwest it followed a river, and there and in several
places on the north-east it followed streams. On
the north-east a pasture called Penn was probably shared by the men of Calne, Cherhill, and
Compton Bassett; a boundary across it dividing
Calne and Cherhill parishes had apparently
been drawn by 1628. Cherhill's part of Penn
remained commonable, and the boundary, a
series of straight lines at right angles to each
other, was presumably drawn around new
closes in Calne's part at the time of the division. (fn. 96) South of Penn a pasture called Low was
shared by the men of Calstone and the men of
Cherhill and a straight line separating
Calstone's and Cherhill's pasture, and thus
Calne and Cherhill parishes, was drawn across
it between 1616 and 1728. (fn. 97) South of Low strips
in the open fields of Blackland and Calstone
were divided among Blackland, Calne, and
Calstone Wellington parishes, and between
Penn and Low the parcels in a common
meadow called Abberd mead were divided between Calne, Calstone Wellington, and
Cherhill parishes; (fn. 98) the parish boundaries in
those places were simplified at inclosure in the
earlier 19th century. (fn. 99) North-west of Calstone
village the closes were divided between Blackland and Calne parishes, (fn. 1) and there the
boundary remained complex until the exchanges
in 1883. (fn. 2)
Geology and relief
Calne lies at the western
edge of the Marlborough Downs, where the
scarp of the downs runs north-east and southwest. Calstone's land, south-east of the town, is
almost entirely chalk, includes much downland,
and reaches 262 m. North-west of the scarp the
land continues to fall north-westwards, and
Upper Greensand, Gault, Lower Greensand,
Kimmeridge Clay, Upper Calcareous Grit,
Coral Rag, and Lower Calcareous Grit outcrop
in roughly north-east and south-west bands.
The river Marden rises below the scarp, flows
north-westwards, and is joined by River's
brook and Abberd brook from the east, Cowage
brook and Fisher's brook from the north, and a
stream from the south. It leaves the parish at c.
56 m. The stream joining the Marden from the
south may have been called the Sambourne in
the 13th century and was later called the
Whetham stream. It has cut a deeper valley
than the other streams and has exposed Oxford
Clay. The Marden and all the streams have deposited strips of alluvium. (fn. 3) To the west
Bowood's land is undulating and reaches 166
m. on its west boundary. Elsewhere the land is
lower and, although some of the ridges between
the streams are pronounced, is generally flat;
the flattest land lies at c. 90 m. south and east of
the town and at a similar height in the extreme
north.
Land use
There were open fields in all parts
of the parish except the west. (fn. 4) In the 19th and
20th centuries there was usually more grassland
than arable. (fn. 5) There was woodland in the west
part of the parish, mainly west of the Whetham
stream and especially in Bowood liberty, little
in the centre and east parts. (fn. 6) South of Bowood
park, a park was made near Whetham House;
the Whetham stream was dammed to make
lakes in both parks. (fn. 7) The west end of the detached 149 a. of Calne parish lying near
Compton Bassett became part of the park of
Compton Bassett House. (fn. 8) The Marden, which
falls 50 m. in c. 8 km. across the parish, was a
much used source of power for mills, and in the
19th and 20th centuries sand was extracted
commercially from the Lower Greensand on
sites east of the town. (fn. 9)
About 100 a. of Calne parish east of
Quemerford, with adjoining land in Cherhill,
was the site of R.A.F. Compton Bassett, open
from 1940 to 1964. Part of a hutted camp and
married quarters were built in Calne parish. (fn. 10)

Calne (East) 1843
Population
In the Middle Ages there were in
Calne parish, besides the town, Blackland, and
Calstone, the villages or areas of loosely
grouped settlement called Eastman Street,
Quemerford, Stock, Stockley, Studley, Whetham, and Whitley. (fn. 11) In the 18th century there
were hamlets called Broad's Green, Mannings
Hill, Ratford, Sandy Lane, and Cuff's Corner,
other pockets of settlement, and many isolated
farmsteads. (fn. 12) In the 19th century lines of settlement on the north-west edge of Bowood park
coalesced as Derry Hill village, (fn. 13) and in the 20th
century the town expanded in all directions. (fn. 14)
Including those living at Blackland and
Calstone the parish had c. 550 poll-tax payers in
1377. (fn. 15) It was said in 1548 to have an adult
population of 860 (fn. 16) and in 1657 c. 667 families. (fn. 17)
It had 3,767 inhabitants in 1801, 3,547 in 1811.
The population had risen to 5,128 by 1841,
when 2,483 of that number lived in the borough, and it remained roughly constant until
1881, when of the parish's 5,194 inhabitants
2,474 lived in the borough. (fn. 18) The population of
Calne Within parish, which did not have the
same boundaries as the borough as it was from
1835 to 1889, was 3,495 in 1891, and it
fluctuated little between then and 1931, when it
was 3,463. (fn. 19) By the boundary changes of 1934
houses on the edge of the town were brought
into the parish, which had 5,553 inhabitants in
1951. (fn. 20) Thereafter the number of houses in the
town and the population both increased, and in
1991 Calne Within parish had 11,792 inhabitants. (fn. 21) The population of Calne Without parish,
including Bowood and the whole of Calstone
village and of Blackland, was roughly constant
between 1891, when it had 2,023 inhabitants,
and 1921, when it had 1,987. By 1931 it had
risen to 2,360, mainly because new houses on
the north edge of the town had been built in the
parish; in 1934 those houses were transferred to
Calne Within parish and others to Cherhill, and
in 1951 Calne Without had 1,310 inhabitants. (fn. 22)
The population of Calne Without increased
from 1,310 in 1961 to 1,871 in 1981; the boundary changes of 1984 caused it to increase, and it
was 2,150 in 1991. (fn. 23)
Roads
The Roman road from London to
Bath is that of which the course marks the parish boundary on the south. (fn. 24) Calne stands on
what from the 14th century or earlier to 1971
was the main London–Bristol road, running via
Marlborough to the east and Chippenham to
the west. In 1971 the road was superseded in
importance by the London and south Wales
motorway. East of the town, and west to where
it crossed the Marden, its course across the parish apparently changed little between the 14th
century and the 20th. West of the town
Sambourne bridge may have carried the road
across the Marden in the 14th century, as
Studley bridge, possibly on the same site, did
in the 17th century. West of the crossing the
road may have turned north-westwards and run
through Studley village and via Stanley, in
Bremhill. (fn. 25) A road on that north-westerly
course survives: in the 17th century it was described as the plough road to Chippenham, and
in 1999 part of it was called Norley Lane. In the
17th century the Bristol road west of Studley
bridge ran south of Studley, where it made several sharp bends. (fn. 26) East of Studley bridge it was
turnpiked across the parish in 1707, west of
Studley bridge in 1727. (fn. 27) A new section of road
avoiding the bends south of Studley was built
between 1787 and 1810, probably before 1807, (fn. 28)
and was still called New Road in 1999; the old
course survives as the road through Derry Hill
village. The Bristol road was disturnpiked west
of Studley bridge in 1870, (fn. 29) east of Studley
bridge in 1871. (fn. 30)
The main London–Bath road, which in the
17th century diverged from the London–Bristol
road at Beckhampton, in Avebury, (fn. 31) crossed the
south-west corner of Calne parish. Sandy Lane
hamlet stands on its course. The section east of
and through Sandy Lane was turnpiked in
1713, that west of Sandy Lane in 1726. The
road, on which there was a steep gradient in
Lacock parish west of Sandy Lane, declined in
importance, presumably from 1744 when a road
linking the Bristol road at Chippenham to the
Bath road at Pickwick, in Corsham, was
turnpiked, and the section east of Sandy Lane
was disturnpiked in 1790; (fn. 32) from the mid 18th
century to 1971 London–Bath traffic passed
through Calne on the Bristol road. (fn. 33) In 1999 the
old Bath road across the corner of the parish
was in use as a minor road.
A road linking Chippenham and Devizes
ran, mainly outside the parish, between the old
course of the Bristol road at Derry Hill and the
Bath road at Sandy Lane. (fn. 34) It was turnpiked as
far north as Sandy Lane in 1713 and as far
north as Derry Hill in 1790, and it was
disturnpiked in 1871. (fn. 35) It was still the main
Chippenham—Devizes road in 1999.
Calne was linked to Devizes by a road leaving the south end of the town and running
southwards via Broad's Green, Heddington
Wick in Heddington, and Netherstreet in
Bromham. (fn. 36) Until the mid 18th century, when
the Bristol road began to take it, traffic between
Calne and Bath probably used one of two roads
between the town and the north end of Sandy
Lane. One left the Heddington Wick road near
the town and led via Pinhills Farm, Cuff's Corner, and the south-east boundary of Bowood
park; its course near the town survives as
Wenhill Lane. The other left the Heddington
Wick road 1 km. south of the town and ran
south of Pinhills Farm to Cuff's Corner. Both
were obstructed by a lake in the park of
Bowood House made in 1766 and were replaced
by roads running via the south end of the lake.
West of the lake the new course to Cuff's Corner was a road of which most was an existing
approach to Whetham House; east of the lake
the old roads were replaced in 1774 by a new,
more south-easterly, section of road, which diverged from the more southerly of them. (fn. 37) The
new sections, and the old section between
Cuff's Corner and Sandy Lane, went out of
public use as a road in 1790–1 when an alternative turnpiked road was built; all three sections
were public bridleways in 1999. Between the
Heddington Wick road (from 1790 the
Melksham road) and the south end of the lake
the new section remained in use as part of a
drive between the London road and Bowood
House. (fn. 38)
A north-east and south-west road across
Calne parish was turnpiked in 1790 south-west
of the town, in 1791 north-east. (fn. 39) It was built
on a new course immediately north of the town,
where it came to be called Oxford Road; further
north sections of minor roads were improved as
parts of it. South of the town the Heddington
Wick road was turnpiked from the town to a
point 2.5 km. south of it, and a road by which
Whetham House was approached from the
Chippenham–Devizes and London–Bath turnpike roads south of Sandy Lane was also
turnpiked; by 1791 a new north-east and southwest section of road, known as the Whetham
road, had been built, partly between Whetham
House and its park, to link those two sections of
road. (fn. 40) The new turnpike road gave access from
Calne to Swindon, Wootton Bassett, Melksham,
and Devizes. It was disturnpiked in 1879. (fn. 41) As a
road linking the towns of west Wiltshire to
Swindon it remained important in the 20th
century.
The road turnpiked in 1790–1 superseded
some other roads in the parish besides the road
via Cuff's Corner. In the 18th century the road
from Wootton Bassett, later called Abberd
Way, approached Calne along the valley of
Abberd brook. (fn. 42) It may have been little used
after 1791; in 1999 most of it survived and part
of it was a tarmacadamed road serving a factory. South of the town the old Heddington
Wick road, apart from the section which had
been turnpiked, went out of use as a road to
Devizes, and c. 750 m. of it south of its junction
with the Whetham road has been obliterated.
The Whetham road replaced a road along the
south edge of the park of Whetham House joining the Heddington Wick road at Broad's
Green, and by 1817 a short new section of road
had been built to link it to the section of the
Heddington Wick road north of Broad's
Green; (fn. 43) those sections remained in use as minor
roads in 1999.
In the 17th century and until 1790 much
Calne–Devizes traffic probably used the London road east of Calne and, from Quemerford,
a road leading across downland to join the
Beckhampton–Devizes road at Bishop's
Cannings. (fn. 44) By 1728 a minor diversion had
been made at Quemerford to avoid Quemerford
House and a lower water mill and to take advantage of a bridge over the Marden on the
London road. (fn. 45) From 1790 the Quemerford to
Bishop's Cannings road presumably declined as
a Calne–Devizes route and, possibly in the mid
19th century after an upper water mill on the
course of the road at Quemerford had been enlarged, traffic was diverted to a north–south
road which left the London road further east; (fn. 46)
the north–south road was tarmacadamed and in
the late 20th century carried much Calne–
Devizes traffic.
Many lanes cross Calne parish, which contains no wide river and few steep hills. In the
18th century minor roads led north and south
from the town. (fn. 47) One leading north may have
been that said in the 17th century to come from
Malmesbury; (fn. 48) the route from Malmesbury to
Calne by that road is circuitous and the road,
although tarmacadamed, may never have been
more than minor. Another left the London road
at Quemerford and led south as Stockley Lane
to Heddington. In 1999 that and several other
roads in the parish remained on courses which
they followed in 1773. (fn. 49)
Canal
The Wilts. & Berks. canal, linking the
Thames at Abingdon (Berks., later Oxon.) to
the Kennet & Avon canal at Semington, was
built between 1795 and 1810; by 1800 it had
been opened between Dauntsey and Semington
and in 1802 a 31/8-mile branch from that section
to Calne was completed. Through Calne parish
the branch followed the right bank of the
Marden, passed through a tunnel under the
London–Bristol road, and terminated at a
wharf in the centre of the town. Traffic on the
Wilts. & Berks. canal ceased in 1906 and the
canal was closed by Act in 1914. (fn. 50)
Railway
A single-line broad-gauge railway
which followed the left bank of the Marden was
opened between Chippenham and Calne in
1863 by the Calne Railway Company. It
bridged the Bristol road 1.5 km. west of Calne
and had a station on the south-west edge of the
town. The line was operated by the G.W.R.,
converted to narrow-gauge in 1874, and bought
by the G.W.R. in 1892. Calne station was rebuilt in brick in 1893. Near the bridge over the
Bristol road a private siding and halt called
Black Dog was built in 1873 to serve Bowood
House; a stationmaster's house was built in
1874. Black Dog halt became a public station in
1952; it was closed and the siding removed in
1963. The Chippenham–Calne line was closed
to freight in 1963 and to passengers in 1965;
Calne station was demolished after 1965, the
bridge over the Bristol road in 1968. (fn. 51)
Prehistoric remains
There are prehistoric remains on the chalk downs of Calstone, (fn. 52) few on
the clay and sandy soils elsewhere in Calne parish.
On land transferred to Cherhill in 1934 there is a
site of Mesolithic settlement. The site was reused in the Neolithic period and, as part of
Cherhill village, in 1967. (fn. 53) A Bronze-Age grave
was found north-west of Calne church. Two sites
south-east of Sandy Lane and on or near the
course of the Roman road between London and
Bath have been identified as possibly that of
Verlucio, a Roman settlement probably important
as a trading centre or posting station. Remains of
three Roman villas have been found north-east of
Sandy Lane, one less than 1 km. north of the sites
supposed to be Verlucio's, one near Bowood
House, and one near Studley bridge. (fn. 54)
CALNE