Durrington
is a village and civil parish in the district of Salisbury,
Wiltshire, United Kingdom. It is situated in the east of
the Salisbury Plain, about 10 miles (16km) north of Salisbury,
30 miles (48km) south of Swindon and 2 miles (3km) north-east
of Stonehenge. The name means "the farm of Deor's people",
from the Old English words "Deor" (proper noun),
"ing" (people/tribe) and "tun" (farm/settlement).
The
area has been occupied since Neolithic times, though not
necessarily continuously. The parish contains two important
Neolithic sites: Durrington Walls and Woodhenge.
Durrington
Walls is between 1,500 and 1,700 feet in diameter and encloses
some 30 acres. It was constructed as a ceremonial centre
around 2,400 BC and includes two circular timber structures
that were probably buildings. Both this site and the smaller
Woodhenge have an outer bank with internal ditch. There
was an oval wooden building at Woodhenge. People lived here
throughout the Neolithic period growing cereals, mainly
barley, and keeping pigs and other animals. Trial flint
workings have been found to the north-east of Durrington
Walls. Settlement and structures here were all part of the
much larger Stonehenge landscape.
Recently
(2007) a major prehistoric village has been unearthed in
Durrington. Experts believe the settlement likely housed
the builders of Stonehenge and was an important ceremonial
site in its own right, hosting great "feasts and parties".
The
find also offers evidence that a wood circle and an earthwork
where the village once stood were linked to Stonehenge —
via road, river, and ritual. Archaeologists believe that
the sites were part of a much larger religious complex.
To read more about this find click here: http://news.nationalgeographic.com/news/2007/01/070130-stonehenge.html
Bronze
Age boundary ditches and a small farmstead to the south
of Woodhenge have been found, while during the Iron Age
Durrington Walls was occupied by a small settlement. Pottery,
a brooch, ring, knife, and chalk loom weights have been
found here. South west of here, on the site of a Neolithic
settlement, was a Romano – British village of the
late 3rd or early 4th century.
There
does not seem to be archaeological evidence of Saxon occupation
but this is not unusual as buildings and utensils of this
period were made of wood and little survives. That there
was a small settlement here we know from the Doomsday Book
(1086), which says that in the reign of Edward the Confessor
the estate paid tax on 1½ hides of land. There were
two estates in 1086, having land for one plough team and
with five acres of meadow. The chalklands were not ploughed
at this time but there was a larger amount of arable land
(the gravels and alluvium) than in most settlements in the
Avon Valley. The population at this time was probably only
about 20 to 25 people from five families.
West
End manor was part of the King’s estate of Amesbury
until 1120 but East End manor had different origins, being
privately owned by Patrick de Salisbury. At this time each
manor was using the open field system, but over time this
system evolved into a two, and then a three, field system.
The population also began increasing and in 1377 there were
139 poll tax payers making Durrington one of the most populous
villages in the hundred of Amesbury.
In
1399 the West End manor was given as an endowment of the
newly created Winchester College, and an excellent collection
of documents on its management and usage has been preserved
by the College. They have also provided the name for College
Road.
The
village remained a prosperous and fairly popular farming
community although, apart from the church, there is little
visual evidence before the 17th century. In 1610 East End
Manor was extended with an east-west range, changing it
into an L – shaped building. This new extension was
used to shelter Catholic priests during the reformation,
with a number of priest holes being found here. There are
17th century houses of timber and cob, with thatched roofs,
surviving in College Road, High Street and Church Street.
In 1676 the population was said to be 334 people. Despite
evidence of a substantial amount of building work, mainly
farmhouses, in the18th century the village did not really
increase in size and remained concentrated around its two
main streets.
By
1773 settlement had expanded eastwards along Church Street
and on College Road, the dog leg road linking Church Street
with Bulford Road but there was no other settlement in the
parish. Around 1800 Durrington Manor was built, possibly
on the site of an older house; this became a hotel after
the Second World War and was later converted to flats. Another
farmhouse, Collin’s was built in the early 19th century
and in 1823 the open fields and common pastureland were
enclosed. The land continued to be worked from 11 farmhouses
in the village however and the amount of arable land increased.
By the late 19th century there was slightly more arable
than pasture with barley being the chief crop. There were
around 3,000 sheep in the parish on the downland. By the
1880s barns had been erected on these downs.
In
the 19th century the junction of High Street, Church Street
and, to the west, Hackthorne Road became the centre of the
village and the base of a medieval cross was moved into
the centre of this junction, to become a traffic hazard
in the 20th century. There would seem to have been a certain
amount of unemployment in agriculture as in 1838 the parish
vestry collected a rate to raise money to enable paupers
to emigrate. Around the middle of the 19th century Durrington
House was built (it was demolished soon after 1961) while
by 1851 the Plough Inn had opened; it had possibly had a
beer only licence before this. There seems to have been
little building in the village in the second half of the
19th century and the village only slightly increased in
size.
With
an eye to the possibilities of early tourism the Stonehenge
Inn was opened at the junction of the Upavon to Amesbury
and Bulford to Shrewton roads. William Toomes was a beer
retailer here originally but by 1889 Lewis Toomes had built
the Stonehenge
Inn and advertised it as a posting house with its own
brewery and livery and bait stables. Its success was possibly
one of the reasons for the closure of the Nag’s Head
between 1889 and 1895 although the licensee had been a widow
whose son took over the Plough. An indication of changing
times to come saw the closure of Durrington Mill in the
1880’s and the establishment of racehorse training
at Durrington House, that continued into the 20th century.
The
changing epoch began in 1898 when much of the parish was
acquired by the army. From 1899 the part of Salisbury Plain
to the north west of the village was used for artillery
practice and a camp was set up on Durrington Down. By the
beginning of the First World War there were three tented
camps known as Durrington, Larkhill, and Fargo Camps. In
1914 the Larkhill light military railway was built from
Ratfyn in Amesbury to Fargo Camp and a large military hospital
was built at that camp. During the war the tents at Larkhill
Camp were replaced by huts and in 1916 the Stonehenge Inn
was rebuilt by the Portsmouth United Brewery, who had acquired
it. The war memorial was built on the base of the ancient
cross. From 1920 Larkhill Camp became the headquarters of
the School of Artillery and permanent brick building were
put up.
The
military expansion caused a decline in all types of farming
as most of the land was occupied by the army. However the
rapid rise in population, from 427 in 1901 to 3,005 in 1921
brought about the establishment of many shops and business.
Banks were opened from 1919, houses and shops sprang up
on both sides of Bulford Road, as far south as the Bulford
to Shrewton road, a tin cinema opened on Larkhill Road,
two new schools were built and housing was developed off
the main streets. A village hall was built in the High Street,
there were 18 shops, two motor engineers, two refreshment
rooms and many other business. In the 1920s many homeless
families moved into empty army huts while other huts were
taken down and re-erected elsewhere for homes.
By
1928 the light railway was shut down, but building work
at the camp was in full swing. In the late 1920s detached
houses for married officers and semi-detached houses for
soldiers were built in Strangways and Fargo Road, while
in the 1930s new barracks and houses were built in the camp.
By the late 1930s there were continuous lines of settlement
from Bulford Bridge to the Stonehenge Inn, to the south
of village, including 60 council houses on the north side
of Larkhill Road (1927-32), and private housing on Bulford
Hill. In the village itself council houses were built in
Meads Road, on the southern part of the High Street, and
there was more public and private housing in the village.
In the camp two new officers’ messes were built in
neo-Georgian style in 1938 and around that time most of
the buildings of the military hospital were removed.
After
the Second World War a large council estate was built south
of Coronation Road in the 1950s, and extended in the 1960s,
while many more houses were also built at Larkhill Camp.
Durrington continued to expand in the 1960s, after a drop
in population in the 1950s owing to fewer military personnel
being in the parish. By 1971 the population had increased
by 1,997 in 10 years with most of Larkhill Camp being rebuilt
on the original grid system of roads. Barracks and workshops
were mainly built to the north of the Packway and houses
to the south of the road. Alanbrooke Barracks were begun
in c.1960, Stirling, the headquarters of the Royal School
of Artillery, in 1966, and Roberts in 1964. Larkhill now
resembled a small town with the Packhorse Inn (1962), a
medical centre, swimming pool and NAAFI. Many trees were
planted and this is now one of the most wooded settlements
in Wiltshire. In the village more shops and a police station
opened and private bungalows were built in the grounds of
Durrington House.
Population
remained static in the 1970s although more private houses
were built in new roads to the east of Bulford Road and
west of Stonehenge Road. A branch library opened in 1971
and a sports centre and swimming pool, at the eastern end
of School Road, in 1974. In a village appraisal, conducted
by the parish council in 1975, it was found that there were
15 shops, 12 service industries, 2 banks, a library, 3 schools,
1 clinic with 2 doctors, and 3 small factories. The MOD
was by far the largest employer and it was noted that there
was no substantial industry and a lack of coherent community
pattern.
During
the 1980s and later new houses were built in the old part
of the village, with some infilling. There were a few new
houses on the Ham and some old peoples’ bungalows
in College Road. By 1992 the artillery range covered about
800 acres in the west of the parish and Durrington is still
very much an army-orientated community.
Now
we are in the 21st century and Durrington is still growing.
The population has gone from 339 in 1801 to 7,182 in 2001
with new houses being built all the time.