Holdenhurst

Holdenhurst

Infobox UK place
official_name= Holdenhurst
latitude= 50.756667
longitude= -1.819167
map_type= Dorset
os_grid_reference= SZ128952
unitary_england= Bournemouth
lieutenancy_england= Dorset
region= South West England
country= England
population=
post_town= BOURNEMOUTH
postcode_area= BH
postcode_district= BH8
dial_code= 01202
constituency_westminster= Bournemouth East
london_distance=
website= [http://www.holdenhurstvillage.co.uk/ www.holdenhurstvillage.co.uk]

Holdenhurst is a small isolated village situated in green belt land in the north-east suburbs of Bournemouth, England. The village comprises fewer than 30 dwellings, two farms and the parish church. There are no shops and few local facilities in the village.

The village has only been accessible via a single narrow lane since the through route was cut off in the late 1960s by the building of the Bournemouth Spur Road (A338). There is no public transport.

Although the village itself has always been small, the civil parish at one time included the greater part of what is now Bournemouth. The civil parish no longer exists (having been subsumed into Bournemouth County Borough in 1931). However, the ecclesiastical parish still exists; it encompasses Hurn, East Parley and Bournemouth International Airport, as well as the Townsend and adjacent areas of Bournemouth. [ [http://www.acny.org.uk/parish.php?p=41/190 Map of Holdenhurst parish] ]

Etymology

Holdenhurst is recorded in the Domesday Book as "Holeest" suggesting an etymology of Old English "holegn" meaning "holly "and "hyrst" meaning "grove, wood", giving a meaning of "wood where holly ("Ilex aquifolium") grows. In succeeding centuries it was spelt Holeherst (12th century), Holhurst (13th century), Hollehurst (14th century), Holnehurst (15th century), Holnest (16th century) and Holnirst (17th century). [http://www.british-history.ac.uk/report.asp?compid=42061 'The liberty of Westover: with Holdenhurst and Bournemouth', A History of the County of Hampshire: Volume 5 (1912), pp. 133-37. Date accessed: 17 March 2007.] ] Holly trees still abound in the lanes around the village.

Early history

The location of Holdenhurst on the edge of the flood plain of the lower Stour valley made it an ideal location for early farmers. There have been a large number of archaelogical finds in the area including coins of the Durotriges tribe of Celtic Britain, and Roman coins have also been discovered making it likely that the Romans also settled in the area. [ [http://www.1kpl.com/holdenhurst/location.htm History of the Saxon Village of Holdenhurst - Location and Settlers] ]

The hundred of Holdenhurst existed in 1176, but was soon extended and became known as the hundred of Christchurch; with that part west of the Stour (the original hundred of Holdenhurst) being known as the district of West Stour, or Westover. [http://www.british-history.ac.uk/report.asp?compid=42061. 'The liberty of Westover: with Holdenhurst and Bournemouth', A History of the County of Hampshire: Volume 5 (1912), pp. 133-37. Date accessed: 17 March 2007.] ] By 1263, however, the hundred of Christchurch with Westover had again become known as the hundred of Holdenhurst. [ [http://www.british-history.ac.uk/report.asp?compid=42054. 'The hundred of Christchurch: Introduction', A History of the County of Hampshire: Volume 5 (1912), pp. 81-2. Date accessed: 17 March 2007.] ]

19th and 20th centuries

Although there were many boundary and name changes over the years, even by the start of the 19th century the parish of Holdenhurst (also known as the Liberty of West Stour) encompassed the whole area between Christchurch in the east and Poole in the west. The area was still a remote and barren heathland, and much of it was common land used by the inhabitants for livestock and by the poor for wood and turves. [http://www.talbotandbranksomewoods.co.uk/inclosure_act.html The 1802 Inclosure of The Liberty of West Stour] ]

In 1802, however, the Christchurch Inclosure Act, entitled "An Act for dividing, allotting and inclosing certain Commonable Lands and Waste Grounds within the Parish or Chapelry of Holdenhurst in the County of Southampton" was passed in Parliament. Commissioners were appointed to divide up the land and allot it according to an individual's entitlement, and to set out the roads and to sell plots of land in order to pay for their work. [http://www.talbotandbranksomewoods.co.uk/inclosure_act.html The 1802 Inclosure of The Liberty of West Stour] ]

In 1870-72, John Marius Wilson's "Imperial Gazetteer of England and Wales" described Holdenhurst like this:

:"HOLDENHURST, a village and a parish in Christchurch district, Hants. The village stands on the river Stour, 3 miles NW of Christchurch r. station. The parish contains the tythings of Redhall. Moordown, Charminster, Stronden, Great Dean and Little Down, Muccleshell, Muscliffe, and Throop; extends to the coast: and is all included in Christchurch borough." [ [http://www.visionofbritain.org.uk/place/place_page.jsp?p_id=2323 A Vision of Britain Through Time: Holdenhurst Hampshire.] ]

Up until 1894 the parish comprised convert|7390|acre|km2. In that year part of it was formed into a separate parish of Winton, and that part lying on the coast was transferred to the new parish of Bournemouth. Further portions of the parish were later transferred to Bournemouth and to Southbourne, and by 1912 the parish of Holdenhurst comprised an area of convert|3080|acre|km2. [http://www.british-history.ac.uk/report.asp?compid=42061. 'The liberty of Westover: with Holdenhurst and Bournemouth', A History of the County of Hampshire: Volume 5 (1912), pp. 133-37. Date accessed: 17 March 2007.] ]

In 1931, the whole of the remaining part of the parish was subsumed into the County Borough of Bournemouth, later to be transferred from the county of Hampshire to Dorset, and in 1997 to become a unitary authority.

References

External links

* http://www.holdenhurstvillage.co.uk/
* http://www.ruttergadd.co.uk/westover/


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