Stockwood |
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Stockwood is a hamlet nestling in a wooded valley below the north-western slopes of Bubb Down between the villages of Chetnole and Melbury Osmond, eight miles south-west of Sherborne. The name is Old English, meaning 'wood belonging to a secondary settlement', from the words 'stoc' and 'wudu'. In medieval times it was known as Stoke St. Edwold, in reference to the Saxon saint who is thought to have had a cell here. Indeed, Stockwood's church is unique in that it is the only one in Dorset dedicated to him.
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For hundreds of years Stockwood was a parish in its own right, with a separate living and its own parish priest, until in 1888 it was united with the rectories of Melbury Sampford and Melbury Osmond. The little church of St. Edwold has the honour of being the smallest in Dorset, measuring roughly 9m x 4m, and the second smallest in England. It sits at the end of a country track next to aptly named Church Farm's red-brick Georgian farmhouse. Services are rarely held here these days but the church remains consecrated, and St. Edwold's is now in the care of The Churches Conservation Trust. |
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Census |
1841 Census [John Ridout] 1851 - 1901 [Jennifer Dando] |
Parish Registers |
Baptisms 1813-1897 [Keith Searson] Marriages 1815-1901 [Keith Searson] Burials 1815-1895 [Keith Searson] |
Trade & Postal Directories | |
Other Records | |
Photographs | |
Monumental Inscriptions | Index of Monumental Inscriptions |
Maps | |
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Records held at the Dorset History Centre [Ref PE-SKW] |
Registers Christenings 1813-1937. Marriages 1815-1901. Burials 1815-1895. Bishop's Transcripts 1585-1734, 1758-1830, 1847-1880 |
Registration District
(for the purpose of civil registration births, marriages & deaths) |
1 Jul 1837-31 Mar 1937: Sherborne 1 Apr 1937-31 Mar 1974: Sturminster 1 Apr 1974-17 Oct 2005: North Dorset |
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