Skip to main content

Another week, another walk Pt II

In which I continue my Swindon pilgrimage ...

I cross busy Bath Road at the traffic lights by the Monkey Puzzle tree and begin my descent down the hill.

Today the former market town has a number of routes down the hill, but back in the day shopping in Old Swindon involved a trek across muddy fields up Eastcott Hill for the housewives in New Swindon.

My regular route is Kingshill Road, considerably easier walking down than climbing up. The Kingshill area is named after the medieval, landowning King family.

The earliest surviving registers for Holy Rood, the original parish church in Old Swindon, contain numerous references to the King family.

'Elinour King widdow' was buried in the churchyard at Holy Rood on March 24, 1681 and her will was published the following year.

Elianour's husband Stephen died in 1667 and at the time of her death 14 years later the couple had four surviving children, sons Henry, Stephen and Bartholomew and a daughter, Mary.

Elinour divided her money between her sons and grandsons but it was her daughter who received the more personal items.

She leaves Mary Coventrie - the wife of Joseph Coventrie - 'one little kittle and one skillatt, one little table board and frame, one pewter platter, three pewter plates and all my waring apparell,' along with seven pounds of good and lawful money. Mary and Elizabeth Tyler, Mary's daughters by her first husband, receive 50 shillings each in their grandmother's will.

What is immediately obvious as you walk along Kingshill Road is the variety of property styles where new building continues until the present day.

Susannah Phillips, a builder and quarry owner, built a property in 1877, although whether it survives today is unknown. A short terrace of houses at the top of the hill with the distinctive terracotta face in the brickwork above the doors and windows are probably the work of Thomas Turner who was in business between 1869 until about 1904 when he left Swindon.

A.J. Colborne submitted an estate plan in 1907 and between 1908 and 1911 built 55 properties. Other building projects were less extensive. In 1912 E Hill built a traphouse and in 1930 Edwin Blake built a shop.

Meet me tomorrow along Wootton Bassett Road which once marked the end of the building to the west of Swindon.









Comments

Popular posts from this blog

My neck of the woods

Did you know that our neck of the woods was once just that - part of a wood, a very big wood? And not just any old wood but a Royal forest no less - Braydon Forest. The origins of Braydon Forest date back to the 9th century and a belt of woodland stretching from the Thame Valley to the Vale of Blackmore and known to the Saxons as Sealwudu. The Saxon lords were pretty easy going, it would appear, and then along came the Normans with their system of forest law, courts and officialdom. Braydon became a royal forest by 1135 and in the 13th century it contained an area of some 46 square miles. The forest bounds included not only woodland but fields of arable, meadow and pasture and even villages such as those of Lydiard Tregoze, Lydiard Millicent and Purton. In 1256, during the reign of Henry III the king gave Robert Tregoze 3 bucks and 8 does from Braydon to restock his park at Lydiard Tregoze and in 1270 John Tregoze obtained a royal licence to 'inclose and impark' his woo...

Commercial Road

What a difference a few months make.  For too long the dark empty windows of number 66-68 have stared out forlornly at the busy traffic along Commercial Road, but not any more.   Today the windows shine brightly with the arrival of the Prospect Charity Shop selling a wide range of good quality items from books to comfy sofas to curl up on and lamps to read them by. For more than thirty years the Prospect Hospice in Wroughton has provided specialist end of life care.  Today this service is also available at the Great Western Hospital and to people in their own homes. The Prospect Hospice is close to the hearts of the people of Swindon, particularly Swindon Society member Martin Vandervelde who has cycled many thousands of miles, raising more than £90,000 for the charity. Construction along Commercial Road dates from around 1890 with local builders Joseph Ponting, James Hinton, Charles Williams and Joseph Williams quickly getting in on the act. Today Co...

Edith New - Swindon Suffragette

In 1906 the suffragette campaign entered its most violent phase. Over 500 women had been imprisoned by 1909 and right up there among the militant activists was a Swindon schoolteacher. Edith Bessie New was born 17th March, 1877 at 24 North Street, Swindon, the fourth of Frederic and Isabelle New's five children. Frederic worked as a railway clerk at the GWR Works and Isabelle was a music teacher. An assistant mistress at Queenstown Infant School from 1899-1901, Edith subsequently left her Swindon home to teach in the deprived areas of Deptford and Lewisham. It was after hearing the charismatic Emmeline Pankhurst speak at a meeting in Trafalgar Square that Edith joined the Women's Social and Political Union. In February 1907 a deputation of suffragettes marched on the House of Commons in protest at the omission of votes for women from the King's speech. What had begun as a peaceful demonstration ended in a violent confrontation with police. Edith was among those arr...