Dodford, Worcestershire

Dodford, Worcestershire

Coordinates: 52°21′N 2°06′W / 52.35°N 2.10°W / 52.35; -2.10

Dodford
Holy Trinity and St Mary's church, Dodford.jpg
Holy Trinity and St Mary's church
Dodford is located in Worcestershire
Dodford

 Dodford shown within Worcestershire
    - London  122 miles (196 km) 
Parish Dodford with Grafton
District Bromsgrove
Shire county Worcestershire
Region West Midlands
Country England
Sovereign state United Kingdom
Post town BROMSGROVE
Postcode district B61
Dialling code 01527
Police West Mercia
Fire Hereford and Worcester
Ambulance West Midlands
EU Parliament West Midlands
UK Parliament Bromsgrove (UK Parliament constituency)
List of places: UK • England • Worcestershire

Dodford is a village in the Bromsgrove district of Worcestershire, England, approximately 3 miles (4.8 km) west of Bromsgrove, officially founded on 2 July 1849 by members of the Chartist movement.[1] It was one of five settlements created in the land scheme and retains a characteristic grid street plan, along with narrow lanes and many plum and pear trees from its market gardening past.[2] The civil parish of Dodford with Grafton has a population of 731.[3]

Contents

Medieval and early modern Dodford

Dodford was the site of Dodford Priory.[4] Dodford for a time fell within Feckenham Forest, when its boundaries were extended hugely by Henry II, to encompass much of North Worcestershire, including Dodford and Chaddesley Corbett. The area was removed from forest law in 1301 in the reign of Henry III, when the boundaries were moved back.[5]

Etymology

Place-name scholars argue that it is derived from Old English Dodda’s Ford, although there is no evidence of pre-Norman settlement in the area.[6]

Dodford Priory

Dodford Priory was a small Augustine monastery founded in 1184, probably by King Henry II, and held lands around Bromsgrove.[7] It is recorded as owning an advowson (right of appointment) at a Chantry at St. Nicholas Chapel, Elmley Lovett in 1327.[8]

It was not wealthy,earning £4 17s in 1291 according to tax records.[9] By 1464 it was “so near dissolution that for a long time only one canon has remained there” so was ordered by Edward IV to be absorbed into the Premonstratensian monastery of Halesowen.[10]

Revenues increased to be worth £7 from demesne lands and £17 13s. 1d. from rents and woodlands in 1535.[7] It was dissolved in 1536 or 1538.[4][7]

The site was triangular, measuring 240 by 180 metres, and a moat – or more likely, series of fishponds[11] – is still visible and waterlogged today. Some of the remains are also visible and the listed building on the site may include part of the refectory, in particular “a chamfered pointed doorway” on its south west side.[4][12]

Chartist Dodford

The Chartist movement set up the Chartist Co-operative Land Society in 1845 to settle working class families on four, three and two acre plots, where it was hoped they would be able to make a reasonable income. Around 70,000 members paid subscriptions in the hope of gaining a plot, which were allocated by the drawing of ballots.[13] Five settlements were made, at Herringsgate, Minster Lovell, Snig's End, Lowbands and lastly, Great Dodford.

Chartist leader Feargus O'Connor bought the site of Dodford Priory and 273 adjacent acres from a wealthy local farmer Benjamin Bomford[2] for £10,546 (2011: £825,000) in January 1848, hoping to settle 70 families. Equipment and horses were moved from Snig’s End to prepare the site that summer. 5,000 Midlands Chartists met at Dodford in July, where O'Connor assured them that the settlement would be completed, despite interference from a Parliamentary select committee and a “lying and slandering press”.[14]

The Select Committee ruled that allocating plots by ballot was a violation of the Lottery Acts, so allocation of plots at Dodford was made to those who paid the largest advance deposits:

members would in effect have to outbid each other to gain plots. O'Connor proposed this system reluctantly and really wanted one that would be legal and at the same time would not rule out the acquisition of plots by the "blistered hands, fustian jackets, and un-shorn chins."[1]

‘Location Day’, when settlers were welcomed to their new plots, was 2 July 1849. Unlike other ‘Location Days’ it was not celebrated in the Chartist Northern Star, which instead began to print the complaints of settlers. The settlement’s 44 plots were ill-prepared, with open wells and no water pumps. Crops of wheat had not been planted:

The first year at Dodford was very hard for the settlers: one of them, John Wallace, said that they had had only dry bread to eat. For some years afterwards they did badly too, growing cereals and potatoes. Many supported themselves at their old trades, at home or in Bromsgrove, and hired labourers to work their plots.[15]

The company – now known as the national Land Company – was dissolved, in part because no rents were paid from Dodford residents. The tenants were given the chance to buy out the ground and avoid rent, or to continue paying it to a new owner.

Chartists from the West Midlands lent practical help with tools and regular visits in the early, difficult years.[16] A special 'Dodford digging fork' was made in Stourbridge to deal with heavy red soil.

However, unlike other Chartists settlements, which continued to do badly, largely because the plots were too small,[17] Dodford could access the growing Birmingham and Black Country markets.

John Wallace realized that with careful treatment the heavy soil was suitable for the cultivation of strawberries and other market-garden crops: early in the 1860s their growing was begun at his suggestion. From then until about 1920 strawberries were the staple crop at Dodford; 'Joseph Paxton' was the favourite variety.[1]

The small holders sold market garden products, particularly strawberries, but also flowers, peas, beans and shallots. Orchards of pears and plums were planted.[2] An annual ‘Strawberry Wake’ was held on the second Sunday of July, where visitors could eat as many as they liked for 6d, until 1922. Garlic was also sold to Lea and Perrins in Worcester. The plot holders also continued with other trades to supplement their incomes, such as nailmaking, making gunlocks and running a grocers' shop. One of the plot holders, John Ward, a butcher from Bolton, ran a pub, now the Dodford Inn.[18]

Because Dodford enjoyed success, it became used in 1880s campaigns by Jesse Collings and others, calling for land reform:

these small cultivators are only acquainted with poor rates from the fact that they have to pay them. What I want to see, and what the working classes, if they are wise, will insist on securing, is that there should be three or four thousand Great Dodfords in England.[19]

The Dodford settlements remained prosperous, and retained their radical character, until the 1890s. Ironically, the advocates of land reform successfully established allotments at Catshill which grew strawberries earlier, on lighter soils, pushing prices down. Dodford experienced a brief moment of prosperity during the First World War as strawberries were sold to Cadbury's for jam, but the tradition died post war, for a number of reasons. Plots were bought as rural retreats. Strawberries suffered lower quality due to disease and the use of artificial fertilizers. Better wages could be found in the Austin factory at Longbridge, and the cheap labour force of pickers disappeared as the Bromsgrove nailmaking industry rapidly declined.[1]

Dodford School

Dodford School was founded in 1877.[20] It is now a First School teaching children from across Bromsgrove to the age of nine.[21]

Baptist Chapel and Mission Church

Old chapel Dodford

A Baptist chapel was founded but has now closed.[22] A Mission Church was consecrated in 1863 and stood on the current site of Dodford’s village hall.[23]

Church of the Holy Trinity and St Mary

The Church was built in 1907-8 with money donated by the curate of St John’s Church Bromsgrove[24] Walter Whinfield.[25] The architect was Arthur Bartlett[26] who constructed it in the Arts and Crafts style, with decoration work created by the Bromsgrove Guild.[27] Bartlett was recommended by Walter Gilbert. Much of the woodcarving, including the pulpit, altar rails and organ case is credited to Celestino Pancheri.[25]

Its listing document states: “The church is one of the best of its date in the county. Its plan form and tower are of an unusual and most effective design and the understated but thorough attention to the decorative detail of the interior is particularly interesting”.[26] Simon Jenkins relates that the ceiling ribs represent “the fruits of Dodford” and the front bench-end features “John Bungay, the first child born in the Chartist village in 1849”.[25]

Modern Dodford

Rosedene Dodford

Dodford is now a conservation area, with a number of listed buildings, including a number of Chartist cottages[28] and the Church of the Holy Trinity and St Mary.[26] Rosedene, an example of a Chartist cottage at Dodford, is owned and maintained by the National Trust and is open to visitors by appointment.[29]

See also

  • Timeline of the National Land Company

Further reading

External links

References

  1. ^ a b c d Great Dodford and the later history of the Chartist Land Scheme, P Searby, Agricultural History Review 1968 pp 32–45
  2. ^ a b c Land for the landless, and votes for the disenfranchised. The history and archaeology of Rosedene, a surviving Chartist cottage. at Dodford with Grafton, Shona Robson, in National Trust Annual Archaeological Review 1999–2000
  3. ^ Census 2001
  4. ^ a b c National Monuments Record, English Heritage
  5. ^ Humphreys FSA, John. "Forest of Feckenham". Transactions and proceedings (Birmingham and Warwickshire Archaeology Society) 44–45: 115–132.  (page 120)
  6. ^ The Place-names of Worcestershire A Mawer and FM Stenton Cambridge University Press 1927
  7. ^ a b c Houses of Premonstratensian canons: Abbey of Halesowen, A History of the County of Worcester: Volume 2 (1971), pp. 162–166. Date accessed: 27 January 2011.
  8. ^ Worc. Epis. Reg. Cobham, fol. 121. quoted in Parishes: Elmley Lovett, A History of the County of Worcester: volume 3 (1913), pp. 106–110. Date accessed: 29 January 2011.
  9. ^ [Pope Nich. Tax. (Rec. Com.), 231. quoted in Houses of Premonstratensian canons: Abbey of Halesowen, A History of the County of Worcester: Volume 2 (1971), pp. 162–166.
  10. ^ Cal. of Pat. 1461-7, 321. quoted in Houses of Premonstratensian canons: Abbey of Halesowen, A History of the County of Worcester: Volume 2 (1971), pp. 162–166.
  11. ^ Field Investigators Comments, F1 DJC 06-JAN-76 English Heritage
  12. ^ 9/96 Dodford Priory listing information
  13. ^ Great Dodford and the later history of the Chartist Land Scheme, P Searby, Agricultural History Review 1968 p32
  14. ^ Fourth Report of the S.C.: H.C.503,1847-8,XlX, p.75; Northern Star, 22 July 1848; quoted by P Searby
  15. ^ Searby, p42
  16. ^ Socialism in Birmingham and the Black Country 1850–1939 Chapter 1 Working-class Politics 1850–69 – Chartism and Secularism, George Barnsby
  17. ^ Searby, page 39
  18. ^ Dodford Inn history
  19. ^ Unknown, quoted in Searle, p44
  20. ^ http://www.visitoruk.com/historydetail.php?id=26749&cid=592&f=Halesowen
  21. ^ http://www.dodfordfirstschool.co.uk/
  22. ^ "Nonconformist Catholic Church records on Microfilm" at the Worcestershire Library & History Centre, quoted by the Worcester Branch of the Birmingham & Midland Society for Genealogy and Heraldry
  23. ^ Dodford with Grafton Parish Council
  24. ^ Holy Trinity and St.Mary, Dodford, Diana Poole, Bromsgrove Society Newsletter June 2001
  25. ^ a b c England's Thousand Best Churches, Simon Jenkins, Allen Lane, p746 ISBN 0-7139-9281-6
  26. ^ a b c BoE, p132, cited by British Listed Buildings
  27. ^ Bromsgrove Parish pamphlet
  28. ^ Bromsgrove District Council
  29. ^ Rosedene Cottage, National Trust

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