Burton, Wiltshire

Burton

The Church of St Mary the Virgin
Burton
 Burton shown within Wiltshire
OS grid referenceST816795
Civil parishNettleton
Unitary authorityWiltshire
Ceremonial countyWiltshire
RegionSouth West
CountryEngland
Sovereign stateUnited Kingdom
Post town Chippenham
Postcode district SN14
Dialling code 01454
Police Wiltshire
Fire Dorset and Wiltshire
Ambulance South Western
EU Parliament South West England
UK ParliamentNorth Wiltshire
WebsiteBurton, Wiltshire
List of places
UK
England
Wiltshire

Coordinates: 51°30′50″N 2°16′01″W / 51.514°N 2.267°W / 51.514; -2.267

Burton is a small village with 103 households (2014) in the Cotswolds Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty in England. Kelly's Directory of Wiltshire of 1915[1] identifies Burton as the most important part of the parish of Nettleton. It is about 8 miles (13 km) west of Chippenham.

There is a record of Burton dating back to AD 1204,[2] and more recently in Book 44 - Wiltshire, of the Topographical Collections of John Aubrey 1659-70.[3]

The modern community has an active Anglican church, St Mary's; the Burton Community Association, formed in 2014; and a public house, The Old House at Home. It is served by two nearby Church schools, Bybrook Valley CofE School in Yatton Keynell (4 miles) and Trinity CofE School in Acton Turville (1 mile), as well as Grittleton House private school (3 miles).

St Mary's Church

The Church of St Mary the Virgin, which stands on the hill above the hamlet of Burton, is the oldest and most important building in the village, and is a Grade I listed building.[4] The oldest parts of the Church date from about 1290 although little remains from that period. The Register of Incumbents dates back to 1305 when the Abbot of Glastonbury presented Johannes de Montacute to the living. The Manor and Advowson of Netlington belonged, until the Dissolution, to Glastonbury Abbey. The Church is now in the ByBrook Benefice in the rural deanery of Chippenham, archdeaconry of Malmesbury, and the present patron is the Bishop of Bristol.

The National Association of Decorative and Fine Arts Society has published a Church Record [5] for St Mary's, providing an extensive and detailed formal record of the contents of the church, and many aspects of the building.

The external walls of the nave and aisle date from the 14th century and in 1460 a general re-modelling of the church took place which included re-roofing the church, the building of the chancel and the erection of the north and south porches.

The 15th-century tower is one of a superb group to be found in this area, and has a western doorway over which is a quaint stone hood forming a shallow porch.

The north porch is richly vaulted within, and is surmounted externally by a panelled and battlemented parapet. On the cornice beneath are a number of grotesques to carry off the roof water : two at each side. A much-worn stoup for holy water is against the inner doorway. The door itself is the original one and still retains a large handle and escutcheon of the original ironwork. The door is fitted with a Banbury lock, which is the earliest form of church lock. This type of lock is one in which the lock's metal components are separately fitted into a block of wood which forms the frame. There are two keys - the smaller, possibly the older, is 230 mm long, and weighs 483 gm; The larger is 317mm long, weighing 858gm.

The south doorway is an early example of Early English work and has a curious canopied niche over the apex with flanking buttresses in which are carved two small human figures.

The priest's door is in the north wall of the chancel chapel, as the rectory is on this side of the church, and has over it externally a curious little projecting hood. Above the chancel arch is a picturesque stone sanctus bell-turret with panelled sides surmounted by a short broach spirelet with foliated finial. The ceiled wagon roof is tiled in Cotswold stone.

Inside the Church

The earliest feature of the church is the circular Norman font, the lower part of which is formed like a scallop-capital with fish-scale ornamentation above.

The north aisle, which has three Georgian box pews, is a 14th-century copy of Norman work. The arches of the nave rest on the round columns which have sculptured capitals, all of them different. Here is a fine array of thirty or forty figures and faces below the roof and on the arches. Most are human, with a few grotesques. Some of them are corbels holding up the roof. The bench table (stone bench) on the inside of the north wall is of particular interest and probably dates from the 13th century.

Most of the ancient glass was destroyed by Oliver Cromwell's men in the Fanatique Tymes, as John Aubrey put it, but some fragmentary pieces remain in the north aisle windows, mainly heraldic forms. They show Royal Arms, Scrope, Badlesmere, Dunstanville and Paulet among others. The families represented were all atone time or another associated with the Manor of Castle Combe though the Paulet arms occur all over South and West England.

The 14th century aisle terminated in a line with the chancel arch. When the aisle was lengthened, the original three-light east window with reticulated tracery was reconstructed in the present 15th century east wall, and the square-headed three-light windows inserted in the north wall, and two in the south wall of the nave. Arthur Mee's description of the Church in 1939[6] describes the nave as 'filled with box pews', but these have been reconstructed at some unknown date into pews of a normal height.

The Royal Arms over the chancel arch, which by law after the Restoration had to be displayed, is interesting as it is in the form used by the Georges until 1801. These were the last of the Royal Arms to display the Arms of France in the second quarter.

The pulpit is of stone, with 15th century stone carving. The stone steps up to it are 600 years old.

The altar is crowned with a late nineteenth century reredos, which is a Doulton terracotta panel of the Last Supper by George Tinworth. The altar rails are 17th century with vertically symmetrical balusters. There is a heraldic wall monument beside the altar with marks of lightning on it, to Samuel Arnold a 19th-century rector for 40 years. Some restoration work was carried out in 1900 and again in the 1970s when a serious fire destroyed much of the work just finished. Repairs were again completed a year later.

In 2009, the pews and pew platform were removed in the west end of the church, and a new stone floor laid over the earth floor underneath. This revealed that one of the beams supporting the pew platform was very old, hand carved and part painted - possibly part of the rood screen that many churches had before the Protestant Reformation.

The church possesses several pieces of silver, including a flagon, chalice, paten and paten cover, most of which dates from the 17th and 18th century.

There is a First World War memorial[7] commemorating:

and Rolls of Honour for the Parish and for Nettleton School.

There is a Second World War Memorial, commemorating:

There are several other memorials inside the Church, mainly of the incumbents and their relatives.

The Church Bells

The tower holds six bells which were restored and rehung by John Taylor & Co of Loughborough on a new steel frame in 1982 below the old wooden frame, thus displacing the old ringing chamber. The bells are now rung from the base of the tower. The bells and their dates and makers are as follows: Treble: Lllewellins & James 1889 3cwt 1qr 19 lb 2: A Rudhall 1754 4cwt 0qr 17 lb 3: T Mears 1830 5cwt 1qr 6 lb 4: W Purdue 1652 6cwt 1qr 4 lb 5: W Purdue 1653 8cwt 3qr 7 lb Tenor: A Worcester foundry c1400 11cwt 2qr 11 lb Tenor in Gsharp. The tenor bell has an unusual border. Ornamental borders of foliage or arabesques between the words or on other parts of the bell are hardly ever found on mediaeval bells. The only other instances in an English Church are believed to be on the tenor at Hereford Cathedral (about 1450), and a bell at Bintry, Norfolk (about 1530).[8]

In the Churchyard

There are 24 listed monuments in the Churchyard. These are chest tombs with a Grade II listing. Also in the Churchyard is the war grave of Private Edwin Kent. The Wiltshire Times of 30 October 1915 published the following report concerning the death and funeral of Edwin Kent:

Died of Wounds
Great sympathy is felt in the village for Mrs E Kent and her child in the loss of their husband and father. Pte E Kent, 3rd Wilts who died of wounds received in the recent advance in Flanders Pte Edwin Kent was 32 years old when he died of wounds (shot through the spine) in hospital in Norwich. He was a native of Yatton Keynell but had lived at The Gib until he enlisted in January 1915. Before joining the Army, he had been employed by a Mr Higg, a coal merchant in Burton. Pte Kent was married and had a daughter.
Pte Edwin Kent aged 32 of the 2nd Wiltshire who was wounded whilst at the front, being shot through the spine, died in hospital in Norwich on Friday last week. He was a native of Yatton Keynell but prior to enlisting in January last, was residing at The Gibb being employed by Mr Higg, coal merchant of Burton. He leaves a widow and one little girl.
As Kent had died in hospital in England, Mrs Kent asked for the body to be buried in her local church. The local recruiting office, with the help of Lt Col Sir Audley Neeld, the Colonel steward of the Devizes depot, arranged for a military funeral.
The funeral took place on Wednesday 27 October with Rev Stafford James officiated The funeral procession from The Gibb to Burton was headed by the band of the 2nd Wilts under Bandmaster Easton. A firing party under Sgt Bridle and Cpl Ings followed the band with their rifles reversed. At the graveside, the firing party fired three volleys and Bugler Ford sounded the "Last Post".
The mourners at the church included:
The widow and deceased daughter, Mrs Humphries (Mother), Mr H Kent ASC (in khaki) and Cpl W Kent (10th Royal Hussars) brothers, Miss E Kent (sister), Mr and Mrs J Taylor (brother in law and sister) Mr J Kent and deceased sister and her son. Others who followed included Mr and Mrs Fry and Mr Brown (Gibb), Mr and Mrs H Booy, Mr and Mrs A Booy (Castle Combe), Mr and Mrs AR Dolman (Castle Combe) Mr Higgs and Mr Hill (former employers of the late Pte Kent).
Pte Kent’s daughter was a pupil at Castle Combe school. Her fellow pupils sent 2 wreaths to the funeral.

In the churchyard here are also the graves of Captain John Russell Compton Domvile (1856–1893) and Eva Kathleen Domvile (1868–1897), children of Reverend Charles Compton Domvile (1816–1898) who was Rector of St Mary's. This branch of the Domvile family[9] is descended from Charles Pocklington Esquire M.P. who succeeded his Uncle Sir Compton, and took the Name and Arms of Domville.

Listed Buildings

St Mary's Church is the only Grade 1 listed building in the parish.

Burton Farmhouse, now known as The Old Farmhouse, is situated at the bottom of Church Hill, and is a Grade 2 listed building. It is late 17th or early 18th Century. The Plume of Feathers, now known as The Old Plume, is also Grade 2 listed. It is late 17th or early 18th Century.

Other Old Buildings

Another old building is Chestnut Cottage, which used to be the old forge. Also, part of the Old Rectory, now a private house, dates from 1605, although in common with the other old buildings, it has been substantially extended and altered over the generations.

The Causeway

An evaluation excavation in 2005[10] confirmed the presence of a causeway next to the top (East-West) section of Church Hill, comprising several phases of stone surfacing approximately 2.6m wide, built on to a 4m wide bank of redeposited natural clay. Although limited dating evidence was recovered, the causeway appears to have been in use by the 17th century, and may well be Medieval in origin. The causeway seems likely to have been used until the construction of a dry-stone wall along its centre line in the 19th or 20th century. A possible early road surface extending beneath the modern lane was also identified and, although poorly dated, its construction and use appear to have been broadly contemporary with the causeway.

Travel

Road

The village is on the B4039 road, less than 15 minutes from the M4 motorway Junction 17, for travel eastward towards Reading and London, and about 5 minutes from M4 Junction 18 for travel towards Bristol and South Wales, connecting at Junction 20 north of Bristol with the M5 motorway for the South West and Birmingham.

Rail

Trains from Chippenham station serve Swindon, Didcot, Reading and London to the East; Bath and Bristol and onwards to the South West; and also South via Westbury to Southampton. Trains from Bristol Parkway railway station (17 miles) serve South Wales, the Midlands and the North of England.

Air

The nearest international airports are Bristol (28 miles), Cardiff (67 miles), London Heathrow (92 miles), Birmingham (103 miles).

References

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