Steeple Ashton
Steeple Ashton is a village and civil parish in Wiltshire, England, east of Trowbridge.
In the north of the parish are the hamlets of Ashton Common and Bullenhill.
Name and history
Until the Dissolution of the Monasteries, Steeple Ashton was a manor of Romsey Abbey, at the centre of the abbey's large estates in the area. It was also part of the hundred of Whorwellsdown, and was the site of the hundred's courts.The first element of the village's name may represent a former steeple of the church. However the prefix "Staple" or "Steeple-" sometimes indicates the privilege of holding a market, with a stapol or pole being set up to advertise its location to all passing through. Steeple Ashton was indeed once a market town, having been granted a weekly market in 1266; a market cross still stands on the village green.
In the early 16th century, possibly in 1503, a great fire affected the cloth industry within the small town, and when it came to rebuilding they moved to the nearby town of Trowbridge, where the River Biss provided power for fulling mills. The business of the market then moved to neighbouring towns such as Market Lavington.
The road through the village, connecting Edington in the southeast to Trowbridge in the northwest, formed part of a route from Salisbury which fell out of use in the later 18th century.
In 1818 the parish extended north and west to include Great Hinton, Semington, and West Ashton. In the late 19th century separate civil parishes were created for each of those three areas, greatly reducing the area of Steeple Ashton parish.
The parish had 955 inhabitants in 1991, half the number it had in 1981. This is due to the parish boundary of Trowbridge being moved to include new housing estates which had been built at the edge of the town but within the parish of Steeple Ashton. The estimated population as of mid 2018 was 1,403.
Religious sites
Parish church
describe the parish church of St Mary as "One of the finest Perpendicular churches in the country, its wealth coming from Steeple Ashton's woollen industry." Pevsner writes that the church "fairly bristles with pinnacles – a gay and fantastical sight".There was already a longstanding church at Steeple Ashton in 1252, held by Romsey Abbey, a link which remained in place until the dissolution. The present church, in limestone ashlar with a four-stage west tower, is a rebuilding in the late 15th century; the north aisle at the cost of Robert Long and the south at the cost of Walter Lucas, both clothiers. The tower – which may have been built in the early 15th century – was surmounted by a stone spire, high, making a total height of about, the second highest in Wiltshire after Salisbury Cathedral. The spire was struck by lightning in July 1670, repaired, then struck again in October, damaging the nave and aisles as it fell; it was not replaced. The chancel of the pre-15th century church was retained until it was rebuilt in 1853, taller and slightly longer, by Henry Clutton.
On the south side of the tower is a 19th-century clock face, driven by an earlier clock, which may be the one recorded in 1543. All six bells were recast in 1959.
Inside, the nave has an unusual wooded lierne vault roof, although its supports indicate an intention to build in stone, as was done in the aisle roofs. Fittings, including the font, are from the 19th century. Windows of the aisles and Lady Chapel incorporate fragments of medieval glass, from windows said to have been broken in the Civil War.
Notable vicars
- 1605 – 1636: George Webb, author of The Practice of Quietness, later Bishop of Limerick
- 1636 – 1660: Henry Carpenter, later a Canon of Windsor
Parish
St George's church at Semington was anciently a chapelry of Steeple Ashton, and the parish name was Steeple Ashton with Semington until 2000, when Semington became an independent parish.
Today Steeple Ashton parish is part of the benefice of North Bradley, Southwick and Heywood.
Chapels
met from 1825, and in 1864 a house on the green was taken over as a chapel, which closed around 1940.Mormonism flourished after 1844, and by 1851 a congregation of about 50 were meeting at a house. Several groups emigrated to America in that century.
A Primitive Methodist chapel was built in the village in 1854 and refurbished in 1991. It remains in use as a Methodist church.
Amenities
There is a village hall and a village shop staffed by volunteers.The Longs Arms public house in the centre of the village was built c.1700 and extended in the late 19th century. It is named for the Long family of West Ashton who owned much of Steeple Ashton until 1930.
A National School was provided in 1828 by the Long family. In 1941 senior pupils were transferred to schools in Trowbridge and the school continued as St. Mary's Church of England VA Primary School. The school closed in 2003 and most children transferred to Keevil school.
Buildings and landmarks
The manor house, northeast of the church, was built in 1647 for the Bennett family, in brick with a three-gabled limestone ashlar front. The house and its estate was bought in 1799 by Richard Long of Rood Ashton, and remained in the Long family until the 1970s, the last owners being Richard Long, 4th Viscount Long and his first wife Margaret. In 1968 the house and its late-17th century former granary were recorded as Grade II* listed.The Listing indicated that many modifications were made to the manor in the 20th century. The manor was offered for sale in mid 2020, after being upgraded over the previous decade; for example, an atrium was added, "linking the main body of the house to an adjoining courtyard", according to Country Life. Amenities included three reception rooms, six bedrooms and two bath/shower rooms.
Five other houses in the parish are Grade II* listed, including Ashton House and Black Barn Cottage.
On the small village green are a 1679 market cross in the form of a Tuscan column carrying a sundial and a ball finial, and an 18th-century village lock-up.
A war memorial in the form of a cross stands on the High Street, and in the churchyard is a small green village pump manufactured by Lee Howl. Elsewhere, three 1930s gas petrol pumps remain at a disused George Moore petrol station, with a further, more skeletal gas pump in a gated area behind.
Keevil Airfield
The village abuts Keevil Airfield, a former Royal Air Force station which served during World War Two as home to squadrons of the United States Army Air Forces, and later as a launch site for gliders taking part in the Normandy invasion of France and Operation Market Garden. As of 2018, the airfield was still used occasionally "for military purposes and large training exercises" according to the Royal Air Force.These days, there is a Gliding club at the airfield. The club is affiliated with RAF Brize Norton.