Wootton Bassett

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Wootton Bassett
Wootton Bassett (Wiltshire)
Wootton Bassett

Wootton Bassett shown within Wiltshire
Population 11,043
OS grid reference SU066825
District North Wiltshire
Shire county Wiltshire
Region South West
Constituent country England
Sovereign state United Kingdom
Post town SWINDON
Postcode district SN4
Dialling code 01793
Police Wiltshire
Fire Wiltshire
Ambulance Great Western
UK Parliament North Wiltshire
European Parliament South West England
List of places: UKEnglandWiltshire

Coordinates: 51°31′60″N 1°54′00″W / 51.5333, -1.9

Wootton Bassett is a small market town located in northern Wiltshire, UK. At the 2001 census its population was 11,043, indicating that the town has virtually tripled in size over the last 50 years.

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The year 681AD is usually taken as the starting point for recorded history of Wootton Bassett, then known as Wodeton, it being referred to in that year in a Malmesbury Abbey charter granting land to the Abbot. It is a very ancient town which lies 6 miles southwest of Swindon and 10 miles to the northwest of Marlborough.

Archaeological discoveries in the area tend to confirm the tradition that the original "Wodeton" (Settlement in the wood - i.e. in Bradon Forest) was near the present Dunnington Road. Allegedly under continuous occupation throughout the Celtic and Romano British times, the land was granted in 681 AD to Malmesbury Abbey. Further grants of land nearby appear in the records from time to time, but of Wodeton itself we hear no more until it was sacked by the marauding Danes in 1015, whereupon the survivors decided to move uphill to the site of the present High Street.

Wootton Bassett is mentioned in the Domesday Book[1] where is wan noted that Miles Crispin held the rights and these included "land for 12 ploughs... a mill..and 24 acres of meadow...33 acres of pasture and woodland which is two leagues by a league". It was said to be worth nine pounds.

The right was first gained to send two representatives to Parliament as early as 1446 and prior to the Reform Act 1832 Wootton Bassett was known as a Rotten Borough, due to the way in which elections were conducted there, which were the antithesis of modern democratic elections. Voters were required to state their preferences in public before representatives of each side, and were openly bribed. In 1754 the accounts of a successful candidate[citation needed] show that his supporters were paid £30 each for their vote, and in the run up to the election the candidates secured the allegiance of public houses in the town, where voters were plied with free refreshments. Free beer was also provided by men who carried containers about the town. The same accounts show that £1,077 was paid out to 12 'pubs' for the refreshments.

The town's curious Town Hall, which is an upper storey supported on 15 pillars, was built at the end of the 17th century, a gift from the Hyde family (Earls of Clarendon). Edward Hyde, Earl of Clarendon, was elected to Parliament as MP for Wootton Bassett in 1640, which was also the year he became adviser and secretary to Charles I. He helped run Charles I's Government in Oxford during the Civil War and shared exile with Charles II throughout the 1650s. This loyalty won him high office, as Chancellor of the Exchequer in 1643 and Lord Chancellor in 1658. He became Earl of Clarendon in 1661 and dominated Charles II's administration until pushed by the ungrateful monarch into exile in 1667. Clarendon improved his last years by completing the history of his own times, which has become his enduring literary legacy. But his legacy to the nation, and that of his wife Ellen, neé Forsythe, is that through their daughter Anne Hyde, Duchess of York, Edward Hyde was grandfather to both Queen Mary and Queen Anne.

Wootton Bassett's other royal connection is that Katherine Parr, VIth wife of Henry VIII, owned Vastern Manor and lived there until her death in 1548. It is said that Henry VIII kept a mistress at the manor, and that he personally ordered that all the town's births were registered at the parish church. Nearby Bradenstoke Abbey (demolished in the 1920s by American newspaper magnate William Randolph Hearst) was frequently visited by Prince John in the 12th century, who suppoted its hospital.

Henry Pinner, 1670 - c1721

Map of Wootton Bassett 1773

The town is within close proximity of Junction 16 of the M4 allowing easy access to other towns and cities of the M4 corridor as well as London, located roughly 80 miles east of the town. Since the construction of the M4 the town has become attractive to commuters, many traveling to the towns and cities of Swindon, Chippenham, Bath and Bristol. The town also has a significant RAF population due to the nearby RAF Lyneham.

The main Bristol to London railway line passes through Wootton Bassett as well as an important junction linking Gloucester to the capital. Despite this there is no railway station in the town due to its closure in 1966.

A section of the Wilts and Berks Canal runs past the south of the town and is currently in the process of being restored.

  1. ^ Domesday Book: A Complete Transliteration. London: Penguin, 2003. ISBN 0-14-143994-7 p.183

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