Sunday, 25 September 2016

The Tunnels, Ashley Combe, Porlock Weir

As you climb up the South West Coast Path from Porlock Weir to Culbone Church, you pass through two short tunnels.  These were once part of the grand Italian garden at Ashley Combe House.  The house was originally built in 1799 as a hunting lodge.

Lord Byron the poet and his wife Annabella Milbanke had a daughter called Augusta Ada (known as Ada) who was born in 1815.  In 1816 Annabella left Lord Byron and Ada was brought up solely by her mother, who was particularly interested in mathematics.  She ensured that Ada was schooled in maths and science.  In 1833 Ada was introduced to Charles Babbage, who was Professor of Mathematics at Cambridge University.  He showed her his calculating machine, the 'Difference Engine'.

In 1835 Ada married William King, who was later created the 1st Earl Lovelace.  He owned Ashley Combe House and using some of the considerable fortune that Ada brought with her, he enlarged and improved Ashley Combe House and developed the gardens, both in the Italian style.  The tunnels were constructed so that tradesmen could approach the tradesmen's entrance of the house without being seen by the residents of the house.  A clocktower was added to the house in 1837.

The gardens were a series of terraces linked by spiral staircases.  A large number of trees were planted and a woodland walk was developed with a series of steps leading down to the sea where a bath house was built into the cliff, so that Ada could bathe in private.  The terraces were known by the family as the 'Philosophers' Walk' because it was here that Ada and Charles Babbage are reputed to have walked while discussing the mathematical principles behind the 'Difference Engine'. 

Although the 'Difference Engine' was not finished. Babbage began work on another calculating machine, which he called an 'Analytical Engine'.  He gave an account of his work on it at a seminar in Turin in 1840.  In 1841 the Italian Louis Meanbrea published a report on the 'Analytical Engine' in French, which Babbage asked Ada to translate into English.  Ada added her own extensive notes to the translation and it is for these notes that Ada is best known.  Her notes included what is regarded to be the world's first computer program.

Ada and William had three children: Byron, Annabella and Ralph Gordon.  Their main home was at Ockham Park in Surrey but they used Ashley Combe House as their summer retreat.  In 1852 Ada died of cancer.  She was buried next to her father in the parish church at Hucknall in Nottinghamshire.  The youngest son Ralph inherited Ashley Combe House.  His wife Mary (nee Wortley), who was a trained architect,  planted more trees and redesigned the gardens, the main house and the estate cottages with the assistance of her friend Charles Voysey, who was an architect in the Arts and Crafts style.

In 1939 Ashley Combe House was leased to Dr Barnardo's and they used it as a nursery during the Second World War.  In 1950 it became a Country Club but it developed a dubious reputation and was closed after a few years.  The house fell into a state of disrepair and was demolished in 1974.

Short tunnel on the South West Coast Path
 
Longer tunnel on the SW Coast Path
 
Tunnel with collapsed roof?

Ashley Combe Lodge, now the Toll House for the Worthy Toll Road
It was built in the late 19th century in the Arts and Crafts picturesque style.

Thursday, 22 September 2016

Thankful Villages

Thankful Villages are those places where all the people, who left their homes to serve their country in the armed forces during the First World War, returned alive.  The term "Thankful Villages" was coined and popularised by the author Arthur Mee in his series of books published in the 1930s about every English county, called The King's England

There are 53 Thankful Villages in England.  14 of these are doubly thankful, as all their residents, who left them to serve their country in the Second World War, also returned home safely.  The term "Blessed Villages" is sometimes used as an alternative to thankful

There are 8 Thankful Villages in the current county of Somerset: Rodney Stoke, Shapwick, Tellisford, Chantry, Aisholt, Stocklinch, Holywell Lake (Thorne St Margaret) and Lamyatt (added to the official list in 2022).  There are two more in Bath and North East Somerset: Woolley and Chelwood.  Stocklinch and Woolley are doubly thankful villages.  This is a higher number than in any other English county.

Rodney Stoke - proud to be a Thankful Village
 
St Leonard's Church, Rodney Stoke

Thanksgiving Window, Rodney Stoke

Rodney Stoke's Roll of Honour, listing the names of the residents of the village who served in the First World War and who all returned home safely
 
  St Mary's Church, Shapwick

 Shapwick's Roll of Honour and Thankful Village Plaque

 Stocklinch Church

 Stocklinch's Rolls of Service

 Stocklinch's Thankful Village Plaque

All Saints Church, Tellisford

Holy Trinity Church, Chantry
 
 Chantry's Thankful Village Plaque

St Margaret's Church, Holywell Lake
 
All Saints Church, Aisholt

Aisholt's Roll of Honour

Wednesday, 21 September 2016

Gawbridge Mill's Hole in the Wall

One of the buildings at Gawbridge Mill, which is located on the River Parrett and on the road between Coat and East Lambrook, has a round hole about 4 feet of the ground, which was built into the brick wall when it was originally constructed.  According to the book Curious Somerset by Derek Warren, it is an access hole for cats, so that they could get inside the mill and kill any rats or mice: the rodents were unable to climb up the wall to get in through the hole.  However the current owners of the mill have confirmed that it is in fact a "pay hole" into the pay office.  Mill workers were handed their wages through the hole up until the 1950s.  

The current Gawbridge Mill, which was powered by water from the River Parrett, dates from the 18th century.  It was in use as a mill until the 1960s.

The pay hole is clearly visible from the public road.  I zoomed in with my camera to take the photograph from the road.   Grid reference: ST 443 196

 Pay hole
 Pay hole in context
Gawbridge Mill

Village Signs

Almost all Norfolk villages and many in Suffolk, Essex, Sussex, Kent and Cambridgeshire have signs which depict aspects of the history of the village. The tradition was reputedly started by King Edward VII, who suggested them to encourage village residents to appreciate and take an interest in their villages.  The first signs were erected in the villages on the Sandringham Estate in West Norfolk.  The tradition was continued by Kings George V and VI.  Since then the Queen's Coronation, Silver, Gold and Diamond Jubilees and the millennium have been reasons for many more villages to commission their own signs. Older signs were often carved from wood or made of iron.  Some more modern signs are made from polyurethane, glass reinforced plastic or aluminium.  Most are painted in bright colours.

There are now about 4,000 village signs across the country. However in Somerset interesting village signs are extremely thin on the ground.  These are the only ones I have found so far:

Rode
Rode's village sign is closest in style to those in East Anglia

 Chew Stoke
Chew Stoke is in Bath & North East Somerset

 Long Ashton
Long Ashton is in North Somerset

 Shipham

 Shipham

North Newton's lock gate village sign
The Bridgwater and Taunton Canal runs to the east of the village

West Camel

Norton-sub-Hamdon
 Sign made from local Ham Stone and depicting the village's dovecote

Milborne Port

Othery's millennium village sign

Some recently replaced council town and village signs now include images of notable local landmarks e.g. the market cross on Cheddar's sign

Brent Knoll - it was also previously known as the Mount of Frogs, hence the frogs on the sign

Stoke St Mary's village sign has a small stained glass window incorporated into it
It was erected to commemorate the Queen's Golden Jubilee in 2002.

Porlock

Cannington

West Monkton 
This has a picture of a heron or an egret and a swingbridge on the Bridgwater and Taunton Canal on it

These are some examples of some typical Norfolk village signs:

Bodham

Little Snoring 

Great Snoring