The Blackmore Vale logo
Home Blog Page 410

The Milborne Martyrs | Looking back

0

This historic picture, dating from April 1874, provides a rare photographic glimpse of the agricultural turmoil and early trade unionism that played such a big part in Dorset’s nineteenth century history.

It was taken at Milborne St Andrew, just a few miles from Tolpuddle, whose Martyrs were famously transported to Australia forty years earlier for swearing an oath of loyalty.

The picture shows about 100 villagers gathered to watch the ‘evictions of agricultural labourers, members of the union’, from their tied cottages.

Milborne St Andrew was home to the first Dorset branch of the Agricultural Workers’ Union, formed two years earlier, and its members were striking for more money.

Contemporary newspaper reports tell of Milborne St Andrew families being ‘forcibly ejected’ in 1874 and ‘their goods and chattels put into the road’.

‘As there is a general strike of labourers in the village, there was a good muster of men, women and children, attracted thither by the “novel and interesting” spectacle,’ reported the Dorset Free Press.

An eyewitness said: ‘I never saw such a scene in all the days of my life.

‘There was the farmer and his two sons carrying out the poor people’s goods into the ditch by the road – two families with lots of little children, one a baby very ill in the cradle.

‘Two more families are to be ejected tomorrow, and eight of the squire’s tenants have received notice to quit from his agents.’

In a scene reminiscent of the annual Tolpuddle march that is held to this day, another report describes a procession through the village, led by a band.

Men, women and children carried flags and banners and the strikers themselves wore blue ribbons and rosettes in their hats.

A closer look at the photograph reveals three musicians in the centre, one with a fiddle, another holding an accordion, a third carrying a drum or tambourine.

At least two men appear to be drawing attention to the ribbons on their jackets.

The strikers were demanding a wage increase above their current 12 shillings (60p) a week.

One sympathiser described the treatment by their employer, Mr Fowler, as ‘brutal’.

‘Unfortunately, a very large portion of the cottages of Dorsetshire are held by the labourers as part and parcel of their wages,’ he added. ‘The occupants therefore can be ejected at almost a moment’s notice, without the trouble of going through any legal process.’

The evicted labourers included Alfred Martin, whose great-great grandson, Graham Baldwin, and his wife, Bridget, were living in Bournemouth in the 1990s and told me more about Graham’s ancestor.

‘I think Alfred was one of those that stirred them all up to strike for higher wages,’ said Bridget, who had researched the background.

‘After being evicted, he went to Yorkshire with his 21-year-old daughter, Charlotte, and his son, George, who was two years younger.

‘Later they went on to Bolton, Lancashire, where according to one of his grand-daughters he became manager of a slate works.’

Charlotte Martin eventually left Lancashire in 1879 and went to London to marry James Cox Stroud, whom she had known at Milborne St Andrew.

‘He was born in the Weymouth Workhouse, taught himself to read and write and joined the Metropolitan Police,’ Bridget told me.

‘He ended up conducting the police band. He and Charlotte had six children, all of whom lived to a great age.’

By: Roger Guttridge

A tale of two number plates | Then & Now

0

My 1904 picture of Gillingham High Street is historically interesting on several fronts, not least because it features the town’s first car and its rather significant number plate.

The dark green and black Humberette is seen parked outside E R Stickland’s cycle shop and ironmonger’s.

It appears to be of great interest to Gillingham’s Edwardian residents, judging by the large crowd gathered on the other side of the road.

Stickland’s ironmonger’s shop (now Crocker’s) and Gillingham’s first car in 1904

The car belonged to Mr Stickland and carried the registration number BF 89.

It was registered on January 4, 1904, very soon after the introduction of vehicle registration the previous month.

The allocation of BF numbers to Dorset did not go down well in some quarters due to the inference that the county’s early motorists were ‘bloody fools’.

By the time the sequence had reached BF 162, Dorset had been issued with an alternative and vehicle owners could apply to the county council to switch from BF to FX.

Many did but Mr Stickland stuck with his BF number.

The other striking thing about these pictures is how little the shop has changed in 117 years.

The original balcony survives complete with pillars and ironwork and even the shop windows appear the same.

The bicycles have gone but the shop’s use as a ‘traditional ironmonger’s’ is retained.

This rare example of shop front conservation owes much to former ironmonger and local historian Peter Crocker, who still owns the property and organised its authentic restoration in 2012.

Peter, now aged 77, tells me the building dates from the 1870s and the ironmonger’s business was founded by Edwin Roberts Stickland, his great-grandfather, in 1882.

The shop has changed remarkably little in 117 years

It later passed to Peter’s grandfather Jack Stickland.

Peter himself worked in the shop as a schoolboy, became manager in the 1960s and bought the business in 1972.

Although he retired in 1996, it is still called Crocker’s.

By: Roger Guttridge

Burfitt & Garrett | Various Postions in the Building Trade Available

0

Established in the early 1980’s Burfitt & Garrett are proud to provide high quality personalised local building services.

With over 40 tradesmen we have earned a reputation for our reliable, efficient and personal building services. Many members of our team have been with us for over a decade and students of our apprenticeship schemes tend to stay with us after they qualify.

We are able to take on jobs of all sizes and are proud to be recommended by local estate agents, and to have undertaken projects for clients including the National Trust, land agents, local architects and surveyors, and, importantly, private clients.

We now seek the following personnel to join our team:

Bricklayers / General Builder

We are looking for experienced Bricklayers/General Builders for varied and interesting projects.

Van could be available for suitable applicant.

Experienced Carpenter

We are looking for an experienced carpenter for varied and interesting projects.

Van could be available for suitable applicant.

Labourer preferably with roofing experience

We are looking for a labourer, preferably with roofing experience, for a variety of interesting local projects.

Must have a clean driving licence

Phone 01747 830635 or send cv to [email protected]

Carer Wanted

0

Immediate Start!

Experienced Carer required to join fantastic team providing 1:1 personal care 24/7 to 96 yr old gentleman in Cranborne Chase area.

Must be comfortable with increasingly advanced dementia. Shifts available both week days and weekends.

Please contact 07866 044871

Voice of the Books | September 2021

0

“As we move effortlessly into Autumn there are some excellent titles coming into paperback that didn’t get a fair shake due to the stop-start 18 months we have just had, so I thought I would bring them to your attention again. William Boyd is one our best loved novelists, and has written a fascinating book set in the sixties. James Rebanks (barrister-turned-farmer) continues to write about the challenges of balancing modern farming and sustainable husbandry in the wild and beautiful Yorkshire countryside.” – Wayne

Trio by William Boyd – £8.99

A producer. A novelist. An actress. It is summer in 1968, the year of the assassinations of Martin Luther King and Robert Kennedy. There are riots in Paris and the Vietnam War is out of control. While the world is reeling our three characters are involved in making a Swingin’ Sixties movie in sunny Brighton. All are leading secret lives. Elfrida is drowning her writer’s block in vodka; Talbot, coping with the daily dysfunction of making a film, is hiding something in a secret apartment; and the glamorous Anny is wondering why the CIA is suddenly so interested in her. But the show must go on and, as it does, the trio’s private worlds begin to take over their public ones. Pressures build inexorably – someone’s going to crack. Or maybe they all will.

English Pastoral An Inheritance by James Rebanks £9.99

As a boy, James Rebanks’s grandfather taught him to work the land the old way. Their family farm in the Lake District hills was part of an ancient agricultural landscape. And yet, by the time James inherited the farm, it was barely recognisable. The men and women had vanished from the fields; the old stone barns had crumbled; the skies had emptied of birds and their wind-blown song. English Pastoral tells of how rural landscapes around the world were brought close to collapse, and the age-old rhythms of work, weather, community and wild things were lost. And yet this elegy from the northern fells is also a song of hope. Of how, guided by the past, one farmer began to salvage a tiny corner of England that was now his, doing his best to restore the life that had vanished and to leave a legacy for the future.

Sherborne’s independent bookshop Winstone’s has won the ‘British Book Awards South West Bookseller of the Year’ four times and was winner of the ‘Independent Bookseller of the Year’ national award in 2016.
Owner Wayne Winstone is one of the three judges for this year’s Costa Prize for Fiction. This year Wayne was selected as one of the top 100 people in the Book Trade’s Most Influential Figures listing.

PA required for Company Chairman

0

THIS POSITION HAS NOW BEEN FILLED. THANK YOU FOR YOUR INTEREST.

Senior, Part-Time, Self-Employed PA required for Company Chairman/Director of multiple businesses

I am looking for a part-time, self-employed PA to work approximately 15/20 hours a week, Monday to Friday, to start as soon as possible.

This is a varied role with a great deal of responsibility and good communication skills are essential.   Ideally, this person will live relatively close to Sherborne/Dorchester as weekly one-to-one meetings are required.

Should you be interested in applying, please email Emma Elliott (my current PA) at [email protected] for the job specification and any further information.

PART-TIME HELP NEEDED WITH HORSES

0

Help needed with the B&SV hunt horses.

Yard management and for the right person occasional riding. 

Approximately 25 hours a week (Monday – Saturday). 

For more info please contact Stacy Hodges (07792 833297)

PART-TIME HELP NEEDED FOR FRIENDLY FAMILY EQUESTRIAN YARD

0

Help needed in an equestrian yard based near Hazelbury Bryan.

Circa 20 hours a week could be more if required. Essentially yard management required. Fun vibrant set up with friendly team.

Competitive hourly rate.

Please call 01258 817604 / 07771 518258.

Are House Prices beginning to fall? Insider’s Tip To Find Out…

0

House prices, and whether they will rise or fall from now on, is a very hot topic for general discussion across all sectors of society.

Rightmove statistical analysis says that the ‘upper end’  of the housing market is starting to cool down, whilst the first-time buyers and second-time movers market is still showing record highs in prices coming to market.

To be precise and to quote our Rightmove colleagues: 

  • New record highs in price of property coming to market in the mass-market sectors, made up of first-time buyer properties, up by £1,328 (+0.6%) in the month, and second-stepper properties, up by £975 (+0.3%) in the month
  • Cooling of the upper-end four-bedroom-plus sector, down by £4,699 (-0.8%) in the month, with buyers no longer making larger stamp duty savings 
  • Overall result is that the national average falls £1,076 (-0.3%) this month, the first price drop recorded in 2021 

Buyer demand remains strong, suggesting an autumn bounce in prices and seller activity:

  • Demand stats for the first week in August are up 56% on the same period in 2019, and down just 17% on frenzied post-lockdown 2020
  • With homes selling faster than ever, there’s a strong incentive for owners to come to market, with “sell before you buy” proving the best tactic for many to secure their next home in this fast-moving market


The above seems complex and is based on extensive Rightmove data. If you really want to know what is happening to the local market in general and work it out for yourself, here is a little insider tip from Meyers:

Get Figure A:

  • Go onto Rightmove.co.uk and type in your chosen Town in the search bar
  • Click on a price range you might be interested in i.e £400,000-£600,000
  • Click on type of property; Houses or Bungalows etc 
  • Click on the box to include those ‘Under Offer or Sold STC ‘

The above gives you the total amount of houses seen as available in that price range; make a note of the number. 

Get Figure B:

  • Now un-tick ‘Under Offer or Sold STC’ whilst keeping the rest of the search criteria the same. 

This will give you the total number of houses that are still available ‘for sale’ within that price range and of that type. Make a note of this number too.

Finally:

  • Now divide B by A and times by 100 – you will see whether or not we are still in a buyers or sellers market. 

For example if there are 91 houses on the market at a certain price range, and 22 are still available for sale (making the sum 22/91 x 100) then 24% of houses are still for sale. 

0-35% availability = a sellers market

35%-65% availability = a flat market

65%-100% = a falling market 

In other words, right now we are still in a ‘sellers market’. By having a play with the above across different house types you can see for yourself which market we are currently sitting in, regardless of whether or not house prices are beginning to re-adjust themselves on a weekly or monthly basis. You can use this calculation to see for yourself when might be a good time to try to sell your home.

Curious what your house is worth? Whether you’re ready to sell or just plain curious, the next step is to get a local estate agent to give you an accurate valuation. 

Click the form to send your details: