Hartley Mauditt, Alton

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Hartley Mauditt, Alton SPIRITED ADVENTURE LTD. Wick Hill Farm, “The Oast House”, Hartley Mauditt, Alton. Hampshire. GU34 3BP Mobile 07767 688 336 – James Hehir Directions to Spirited Adventure ltd. Please follow directions and maps provided. **Note postcode (GU34 3BP) on Satnav’s sometimes doesn’t direct you to the correct location** From Farnham/Guildford/London A31 to Alton Take B3006 towards Selborne & Liss – 2.2km Note single lane roads from here – please drive slowly & take care. Take 3rd left turn at crossroad to West Worldham - 0.7km Take First right to Hartley Mauditt Passing the church on your right and the pond on your left. Carry on up the hill – 0.9km Take first right (dead end road) to Wick Hill Farm. Carry on down the tree covered steep banked hill. Continue left up a slight hill passing Lower Wick Hill Farm on your right. Pull in to the right where we will meet you. Welcome to Spirited Adventure. From Winchester/southampton A31 to Alton Take A339 towards Alton – You need to make a U-Turn at the first roundabout. Head back down the way you have just come, under the A31 which becomes the B3006. Take B3006 towards Selborne & Liss – 2.2km Note single lane roads from here – please drive slowly & take care. Take 3rd left turn at crossroad to West Worldham - 0.7km Take First right to Hartley Mauditt Passing the church on your right and the pond on your left. Carry on up the hill – 0.9km Take first right (dead end road) to Wick Hill Farm. Carry on down the tree covered steep banked hill. Continue left up a slight hill passing Lower Wick Hill Farm on your right. Pull in to the right where we will meet you. Welcome to Spirited Adventure. From A3 to Alton T . .A$ S+&& ,(@/*%F( @. .%C$ .A$ '+ ,&. $Y+. ;9DDE 6"$.$,&'+$ #* Z*< .()%, *& =$#F(, /$ J [3[C0 7 ( .A,(@ IA =$#F(,/ $W &.%? (/ .A$ ;9DD E3 "%&&+/I \/I#+&A O%0 1&A+,$ S% 2$/*$, (/ ?(@, #$'.3 Q( /.+/@$ '(, D3[C0 B@,/ ,+IA. %. -,(&&,( %*& .() %,*& K$&. K(,#* A%0 -L - D3MC0 B%C$ N+,&. ,+IA. .( O% ,.#$? P%@ *+.. Passing the church on your right and the pond on your left. Carry on up the hill – 0.9km Take first right (dead end road) to Wick Hill Farm. Carry on down the tree covered steep banked hill. Continue left up a slight hill passing Lower Wick Hill Farm on your right. Pull in to the right where we will meet you. Welcome to Spirited Adventure. .
Recommended publications
  • Flash Flood History Southeast and Coast Date and Sources
    Flash flood history Southeast and coast Hydrometric Rivers Tributaries Towns and Cities area 40 Cray Darent Medway Eden, Teise, Beult, Bourne Stour Gt Stour, Little Stour Rother Dudwell 41 Cuckmere Ouse Berern Stream, Uck, Shell Brook Adur Rother Arun, Kird, Lod Lavant Ems 42 Meon, Hamble Itchen Arle Test Dever, Anton, Wallop Brook, Blackwater Lymington 101 Median Yar Date and Rainfall Description sources Sept 1271 <Canterbury>: A violent rain fell suddenly on Canterbury so that the greater part of the city was suddenly Doe (2016) inundated and there was such swelling of the water that the crypt of the church and the cloisters of the (Hamilton monastery were filled with water’. ‘Trees and hedges were overthrown whereby to proceed was not possible 1848-49) either to men or horses and many were imperilled by the force of waters flowing in the streets and in the houses of citizens’. 20 May 1739 <Cobham>, Surrey: The greatest storm of thunder rain and hail ever known with hail larger than the biggest Derby marbles. Incredible damage done. Mercury 8 Aug 1877 3 Jun 1747 <Midhurst> Sussex: In a thunderstorm a bridge on the <<Arun>> was carried away. Water was several feet deep Gentlemans in the church and churchyard. Sheep were drowned and two men were killed by lightning. Mag 12 Jun 1748 <Addington Place> Surrey: A thunderstorm with hail affected Surrey (and <Chelmsford> Essex and Warwick). Gentlemans Hail was 7 inches in circumference. Great damage was done to windows and gardens. Mag 10 Jun 1750 <Sittingbourne>, Kent: Thunderstorm killed 17 sheep in one place and several others.
    [Show full text]
  • Hartley Mauditt Hartley Mauditt
    Hartley Mauditt Hartley Mauditt 1.0 PARISH Worldham, formerly Hartley Mauditt 2.0 HUNDRED Alton 3.0 NGR 474300 136100 4.0 GEOLOGY Upper Greensand 5.0 SITE CONTEXT (Map 2) Hartley Mauditt was formerly the central place of its own parish. It is now classed as a deserted medieval settlement (DMS), the principal earthworks of which can be seen in the fields immediately north-west and south of the surviving parish church. The other principal feature of the settlement is a large spring-fed lake that is situated to the east of the church and is separated from it by a narrow road, the former route to Selborne Priory and onwards to Selborne. The lake supplies a stream that passes through settlement earthworks south of the church. The parish has been absorbed into Worldham CP and West Worldham is 1km north. 6.0 PLAN TYPE & DESCRIPTION (Maps 3, 4 & 5) Church & manor house + associated settlement 6.1 Church & manor house Hartley Mauditt church is the only surviving building of the Medieval settlement. At 148.32 AOD it stands above ground to the west that drops to 134.0 AOD within 0.5km. The former manor house is well documented. Its traditional site is now occupied by a copse within 30m west of the church (Paragraph 11.0 No. 1). A new manor house was built in the early C18. It is thought to have been demolished c. 1798. 6.2.1 Associated settlement The presence of other settlement buildings north, west and south of the church is attested by the numerous earthworks.
    [Show full text]
  • Diocesan Prayer Cycle 1St October - 31St December
    Diocesan Prayer Cycle 1st October - 31st December What is a Diocese and how do we work together within it? At its simplest, a Diocese is a geographical area; a region; a collection of parishes, benefices, deaneries, archdeaconries. But it is more than that – it is a gathering of all our communities in mutual support for each other. And as the Diocese of Winchester, we each play our part in the growth of God’s Kingdom committed to our vision of ‘living the mission of Jesus’. This prayer diary helps us to get to know each other better, to find out what is happening across the area and to see how God is working and using us all in his mission across the region. The early church shared good news of what was happening across a wide area, as churches grew, and more people came to know Christ. In their commitment to love and care for one another, prayer lay at the heart of their lives. As we use this Prayer Diary, let’s seek to share that love and care for each other and to rejoice in what God is doing amongst us. This month... how might you pray for young people? For example, you might focus on school leavers, students, youth workers, community centres, young people in trouble... How might you be part of the answer to your prayers? For example, you might make a point of smiling at young people in the street; volunteer for a helpline; get involved with your local Further Education College; support parents you know whose young adult children are struggling..
    [Show full text]
  • Northanger Benefice Profile for an Assistant Priest (House for Duty)
    Northanger Benefice Profile For an Assistant Priest (House for Duty) Including: St Nicholas, Chawton, St Peter ad Vincula, Colemore St James, East Tisted, St Leonard, Hartley Mauditt, St Mary the Virgin, East Worldham All Saints, Farringdon, All Saints Kingsley, St Mary the Virgin, Newton Valence, St Mary Magdalene, Oakhanger, St Mary the virgin, Selborne St Nicholas, West Worldham Benefice Profile The Northanger Benefice has 8 parishes: Chawton, East Tisted, East Worldham, Farringdon, Kingsley with Oakhanger, Newton Valence, Selborne and West Worldham with Hartley Mauditt. Each has its own Churchwardens and Parochial Church Council. The Churches are: St Nicholas Chawton St James East Tisted with St Peter ad Vincula, Colemore St Mary the Virgin, East Worldham All Saints, Farringdon All Saints Kingsley with St Mary Magdalene, Oakhanger St Mary the Virgin, Newton Valence St Mary the Virgin, Selborne St Nicholas, West Worldham with St Leonard, Hartley Mauditt Insert map 2 All eight rural Hampshire parishes are close together geographically covering a combined area of approximately 60 square miles to the south of the market town of Alton within the boundary of the newly formed South Downs National Park. The parishes have much in common socially with a high proportion of professionals and retired professionals, but also a strong farming tradition; the total population is around four thousand. The congregations range widely in age from children to those in their nineties, many have lived in the area all their lives. Each parish has its own individual foci for mission, but two areas are shared, the first is to maintain a visible Christian presence in the community.
    [Show full text]
  • The Mediaeval Paving Tiles of the Alton Area of N. E. Hampshire
    PAPERS AND PROCEEDINGS 289 THE MEDIAEVAL PAVING TILES OF THE ALTON AREA OF N.E. HAMPSHIRE. By THE REV. G. E. C. KNAPP. HE interest of the writer in the study of Mediaeval Paving Tiles was aroused by the paper on the Tiles of Titchfield TAbbey in the Proceedings of the Hampshire Archaeological Society, Vol. XVII, Part I, and by Dr. and Mrs. A. R. Green, without whose help and encouragement the writer would not have embarked on the task of recording the tiles found in this part of the County, and to whom any value which the paper may have is due. The writer found ready assistance in this local research in a group of young people in whom, as part of their preparation for Confirmation, he was trying to arouse an interest in the inheritance which is ours in our ancient churches. The writer would record his appreciation of the help of the Misses Diana and Jennifer French, who traced many of the tiles and prepared the drawings for the illustration of this paper. Starting with our own church at Hartley Mauditt, the tiles there were recorded, and then, going further afield, Selborne was the objective. But the interest and enthusiasm of the young tile hunters was heightened by the discovery of further tiles in the churches of Faringdon and Binsted, which, Dr. Green assured us, had not been recorded in any of the books or reports on the Church treasures of Hampshire. The following churches in the Alton area have been inspected, those containing mediaeval tiles being shown in block letters : New Alresford, Old Alresford, ALTON ST.
    [Show full text]
  • Worldham Village Design Statement 2015 Contents
    Agenda Item 11 Report PC69/15 Appendix 1 Worldham Village Design Statement 2015 Contents Page No Page No. Introduction 3 Section 1.0 Village Context 5 Section 5.0 Streets and Lanes 25 1.1 Geography`` 5 5.1 Roads 25 1.2 History 6 5.2 Street Furniture 26 1.3 Worldham Parish Today 6 5.3 Parking 26 1.4 Other Parish Features 7 Planning Guidelines 27 Section 2.0 Character of the Landscape Setting 9 Appendix 1 Summary of Planning Guidelines i 2.1 General Overview 9 2.2 The Western Upper Greensand Terrace 10 Appendix 2 Statistics and Demographic Information iii 2.3 The Eastern Upper Greensand Terrace 10 2.4 Low Lying Clay Vale 11 Appendix 3 Worldham Settlement Policy Boundary v 2.5 Biodiversity and Wildlife 12 2.6 Watercourses, Streams and Flooding 12 Appendix 4 Principal Listed Buildings in Planning Guidelines 12 Worldham Parish vi Section 3.0 Settlement Patterns 13 Appendix 5 Planning Policy Framework vii 3.1 East Worldham 13 3.2 West Worldham & Hartley Mauditt 13 Appendix 6 References, Credits and Planning Guidelines 14 Acknowledgements ix Section 4.0 Building and Spaces 15 Appendix 7 Survey Results x 4.1 Context 15 4.2 Historical Development 15 4.3 The Character of distinct areas of buildings 18 4.4 The Height, Scale & Density of Buildings 19 4.5 The Mix of Sizes, Styles & Types of Buildings 20 4.6 Hedges Walls and Fences 22 4.7 Distinctive Village Features, Materials and Building Details 23 Planning Guidelines 24 Introduction Worldham Parish in a Nutshell Feature Confirmed What is a Village Design Statement? figure Area of parish 1,566 ha A Village Design Statement (VDS) seeks to record the features of the built and natural environments Area within SDNP 60% of a village that are valued by its residents for the purpose of producing an advisory document for Main settlements 3 formal adoption by Local Planning Authorities for use as a Supplementary Planning Guidance.
    [Show full text]
  • The London Gazette, Mabch 24, 1863, 1703
    THE LONDON GAZETTE, MABCH 24, 1863, 1703 Southampton to Wit. he powers vested in it by the said Act, doth pro- isionally order, that the said county of South- T the General Sessions of the Peace of our mpton, so far as it is affected by the said recited Sovereign Lady the Queen, holden at the Act, be divided into Highway Districts, for the Castle of Winchester, in and for the said county more convenient management of the highways in of Southampton, on Saturday, the fourteenth day each of the said districts, and that the following of March, in the twenty-sixth year of the reign of >arishe3 and places, viz.: — our Sovereign. Lady Victoria, by the Grace of God of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Bramdean, Beauworth, Bishop's Sutton, Brown Ireland, Queen, Defender of the Faith, and in the Candover, Bighton, Chilton Candover, Cheri- year of our Lord one thousand eight hundred and ton, Godsfield, H in ton Amptner, Itchen Stoke, sixty-three, before the Right Honourable Charles Kilmiston, New Alresford, Northington, Old Shaw Viscount Eversley, Chairman, Sir William Alresford, Ovington, Ropley, Swarraton, Tich- Heathcote, Baronet, M.P., John Bonham-Carter, borne, and West Tisted Esquire, M.P., and others their Fellows, Justices be united, and do constitute a- district, to be called of our). said Lady the Queen, assigned to " The Alresford District}" and that two Way- keep the Peace of our said Lady the Queen, in wardens be elected for the parish of New Aires-. the county aforesaid, and also to hear and deter- ford, and one Waywarden for each of the remain- mine divers felonies, trespasses, and .other mis- ing parishes or places within the said district.
    [Show full text]
  • Dogmersfield and Hartley Mauditt: Two Deserted Villages
    DOGMERSFIELD AND HARTLEY MAUDITT: TWO DESERTED VILLAGES By GWYN I. MEIRION-JONES, B.SC, M.PHIL. A NUMBER of Hampshire parishes are shown by the one inch to one mile of the Ordnance Survey (Seventh Series) to have anomalous features. They are frequently sparsely inhabited, having few dwellings many of which are well removed from a medieval church and bearing no clear relationship one to the other. Such parishes arouse curiosity and stimulate enquiry. The deserted village, as a feature of the English landscape, has long been known, some counties having a large number, but the history of only a few is recorded in detail. Destruction of villages took place throughout the Middle Ages and continued into the 17th and 18th centuries.1 The causes were many and various. Depopulation, sometimes over a period of time, occasioned by greater opportunities elsewhere, by disease, fire, or some other catastrophe, was often followed by the evacuation of a few remaining survivors. Agrarian change, the laying down of arable land to grass and the consequent need for less labour brought about partial or complete depopulation in some areas. Great landowners were known to evict whole villages as a preliminary to the creation of a park, whilst monastic communities absorbed villages or replaced them with granges, perhaps partly to gain greater solitude and partly for agrarian purposes. Known deserted villages are largely confined to arable England and most of these formerly contained some common open arable field. Field evidence may be available to supplement that of maps and documents. The identification of ridge and furrow in the present landscape in a parish now largely devoid of settlement is one factor which may indicate the former existence of a larger community.
    [Show full text]
  • 37X Bus Time Schedule & Line Route
    37X bus time schedule & line map 37X Cowplain - Alton View In Website Mode The 37X bus line (Cowplain - Alton) has 2 routes. For regular weekdays, their operation hours are: (1) Cowplain: 12:40 PM - 4:25 PM (2) Holybourne: 8:33 AM - 11:23 AM Use the Moovit App to ƒnd the closest 37X bus station near you and ƒnd out when is the next 37X bus arriving. Direction: Cowplain 37X bus Time Schedule 50 stops Cowplain Route Timetable: VIEW LINE SCHEDULE Sunday Not Operational Monday 12:40 PM - 4:25 PM Alton College, Holybourne Tuesday 12:40 PM - 4:25 PM High Street, Alton 49 High Street, Alton Civil Parish Wednesday 12:40 PM - 4:25 PM Sainsburys, Alton Thursday 12:40 PM - 4:25 PM Draymans Way, Alton Civil Parish Friday 12:40 PM - 4:25 PM Borovere Gardens, the Butts Saturday Not Operational Lincoln Green, the Butts The Butts, Alton Civil Parish Round House, West Worldham 37X bus Info Direction: Cowplain Hartley Park Farm, Hartley Mauditt Stops: 50 Trip Duration: 59 min Norton Farm, Selborne Line Summary: Alton College, Holybourne, High Selborne Road, Selborne Civil Parish Street, Alton, Sainsburys, Alton, Borovere Gardens, the Butts, Lincoln Green, the Butts, Round House, Goslings Croft, Selborne West Worldham, Hartley Park Farm, Hartley Mauditt, New Road Cottages, Selborne Civil Parish Norton Farm, Selborne, Goslings Croft, Selborne, The Selborne Arms, Selborne, Ketchers Field, Selborne, The Selborne Arms, Selborne Temple Turning, Selborne, Bradshott Turn, Empshott, Church Lane, Empshott, Churchers College, Ketchers Field, Selborne Petersƒeld,
    [Show full text]
  • Memorials of Old Hampshire
    ;LT> = 00 [ E h bo iCO CD i [ ! OO Memorials of Old Hampshire J131>^ MEMORIALS OF OLD HAMPSHIRE EDITED BY G. E. JEANS, MA, F.SA Vicar of Shorwell and Rector of Mottiston, Isle of Wight Fellow of Hertford College, Oxford Author and Editor of " Murray's Handbooks for Lincolnshire, Hampshire " and the Isle of Wight With many Illustrations X " 7 LONDON Bemrose and Sons Limited, 4 Snow Hill, E.C. AND DERBY 1906 [All Rights Reserved} TO THE MOST NOBLE The Duke of Wellington, k.g. THIS BOOK IS DEDICATED BY HIS GRACE'S KIND PERMISSION PREFACE may claim in a certain sense to be HAMPSHIREthe premier county of England, since though not quite so ancient a kingdom as Kent or Sussex, it " is, as Grant Allen calls it, the real original nucleus of the British Empire." It is also one of the most interesting of the counties, from the importance in early English history of its charming capital, the architectural value of its Cathedral and three of its other churches, its beautiful combinations of woodland and sea, its possession of more genuine forest than all the rest of England put together, and its chief place in the naval position of England, owing to the two great harbours afforded by its fortunate coast-line. To an editor of Memorials of Old Hampshire the first difficulty, therefore, is clearly of selection. It would not be difficult to imagine another volume of the present size made up only of those subjects that—for one reason or another—I have been obliged to pass over.
    [Show full text]
  • Long Candovers and Candovers Kiln Hartley Mauditt, Hampshire Long Candovers and Candovers Kiln, Hartley Mauditt, Alton, Hampshire GU34 3BP
    Long Candovers and Candovers Kiln Hartley Mauditt, Hampshire Long Candovers and Candovers Kiln, Hartley Mauditt, Alton, Hampshire GU34 3BP A charming period house and a detached two/ three bedroom cottage standing in a tranquil rural setting. Mileages (Distances are approximate) Alton – 5 miles; Petersfield – 12 miles; Farnham – 14.2 miles. Accommodation Long Candovers: Reception hall, drawing room, sitting room, dining room, kitchen / breakfast room, 5 bedrooms, 3 bath / shower rooms (1 en suite) Candovers Kiln: Hall, vaulted sitting room, kitchen / dining room, study / ground floor bedroom, 2 / 3 bedrooms, bathroom, cloakroom, former stable, barn store In all gardens and grounds of about 0.75 of an acre, double garage Description Long Candovers is a delightful Grade II Listed attached house of great history and character occupying a truly tranquil setting surrounded by unspoilt undulating countryside and nearby woodland. Long Candovers is originally believed to date from the 17th Century and is complemented by Candovers Kiln which provides characterful and spacious detached ancillary accommodation. Long Candovers retains all of the inherent character of a building of this period. The generous and comfortable accommodation includes a very welcoming entrance hall with exposed beams, flagstone floor and fireplace, triple aspect drawing room with a fireplace, stunning sitting room with an Inglenook fireplace and wood burning stove, dining room with a beautiful exposed stone wall, farmhouse kitchen with a dual plate Aga, five bedrooms and three bath/shower rooms. Candovers Kiln stands detached from Long Candovers with its own area of garden and driveway. The careful conversion of the original farm building reflects the history of the building with a magnificent double height sitting room with a wood burning stove and attractive arches to each of the windows.
    [Show full text]
  • Ancestors of Mary Ellen Bone
    Ancestors of Mary Ellen Bone Generation 1 1. Mary Ellen Bone, daughter of Edward Bone and Alice May Richards, was born on 05 Dec 1923 in East Meon, Hampshire, England. She died in 2013 in New Zealand. She married Ernest Arthur Moody on 25 May 1942 in All Saints, East Meon (2408 74 25-May 1942 Ernest Arthur Moody Mary Ellen Bone Married by a NZ chaplain 22 18 Bachelor Spinster Sapper, New Zealand Engineers NAAFI Bereleigh House, East Meon Hambledon Lodge, Leydene, East Meon Arthur Ernest Moody (decease). He was born in New Zealand. More About Mary Ellen Bone: Occupation: May 1942 in East Meon, Hampshire, England; Domestic Servant, NAAFI Generation 2 2. Edward Bone, son of Benjamin Bone and Sarah Knight, was born on 01 Mar 1891 in East Worldham, Hampshire, England. He died about 1950 in Portsmouth, Hampshire, England. He married Alice May Richards. 3. Alice May Richards, daughter of William Walter Richards and Ellen Bridle, was born on 02 Jun 1895 in Sidlesham, Sussex, England. She died in Mar 1971 in Petersfield, Hampshire, England. More About Edward Bone: Military Service: Bet. 1914-1920 Military Service: 30 Sep 1918 in Geluwe, West-Vlaanderen, Belgium; Action Leaading to Distinguished Conduct Medal Occupation: 25 May 1942 in East Meon, Hampshire, England; Lorry Driver Alice May Richards and Edward Bone had the following children: i. Maisie V Bone was born in 1918 in Liss, Hampshire, England. ii. Phyllis Margaret Bone was born on 03 Apr 1920 in East Meon, Hampshire, England. She died in Oct 1989 in Petersfield, Hampshire, England.
    [Show full text]