Shalbourne is a village and
civil parish in the
English county of
Wiltshire, about 3 miles (4.8 km) southwest of
Hungerford,
Berkshire. The parish has a number of widely spaced small settlements including Bagshot and Stype, to the north, and Rivar and Oxenwood to the south. Before 1895, about half of the parish of Shalbourne (including its church)
lay in Berkshire.
Domesday Book of 1086 recorded a settlement of 48 households at Saldeborne or Scaldeburne.[3]
Under the
Counties (Detached Parts) Act 1844, Oxenwood tithing was transferred from Berkshire to Wiltshire. Bagshot tithing was transferred in 1895, to complete the consolidation of the parish within Wiltshire.[4]
Parish church
The
Anglican Church of St Michael and All Angels is
Grade II* listed. Built in flint and stone with tiled roofs, it dates from the 12th or 13th century and was partly rebuilt and extended by
G.F. Bodley in 1873.[5][6]
The nave is either 12th century or a 13th-century rebuilding; reconstruction of the south aisle in the 19th century reused two 12th-century doorways.[7] The chancel was rebuilt around 1300, and the tower added in the 15th century.[4]
Three of the six bells in the tower are from the 17th century.[8] The east chancel window has 1871 stained glass by
Kempe.[6] A window by
Henry Haig was added in 1995, from designs of
Karl Parsons, who lived at Shalbourne from 1930 until the onset of ill health in 1933.[9][10]
The benefice was united with that of
Ham with Buttermere in 1956.[11] Today the parish is part of the Savernake Team, a group of eleven village parishes.[12]
Other buildings
Also Grade II* listed are West Court farmhouse (15th and 17th centuries) and Shalbourne Manor farmhouse (16th century).[13][14]
Geography
The Shalbourne Stream flows northeast from its spring-fed source near Shalbourne village, to join the
River Dun above
Hungerford.[15][16]
Shalbourne has a primary school,[18] and a village hall which was built in 1843 as a schoolroom.[19][20] It has a cricket pitch and pavilion with a bar. At the centre of the village, near the village green, are the pub (The Plough) and a small post office and shop which sells a variety of products and refreshments. The shop stocks organic vegetables from Shalbourne's community project, a small allotment that sells vegetable boxes to the village and surroundings.
From 1608 until late 1637, tenants of the parish's Westcourt Manor included William Carpenter and his namesake son, both of whom emigrated to
Weymouth, Massachusetts in 1638 on the Bevis from
Southampton. The younger William was a founder of
Rehoboth, Massachusetts. The
Rehoboth Carpenter family's descendants number in the tens of thousands, among whom are two U.S. presidents and a
Project Mercury astronaut. William Carpenter [Jr.] married at Shalbourne in 1625 Abigail Briant, whose family had resided in the parish since at least the late 16th century.[22]
Jethro Tull (1674–1741), agricultural pioneer, from 1709 owned Prosperous farm, close to the northeast boundary of the present parish.[23]
Marguerite de Beaumont (1899–1989), founding member of Girl Guides, biographer of Lord Baden-Powell, and recipient of the
Silver Fish Award, Girl Guiding's highest adult honour.
See also
Botley Down, a biological Site of Special Scientific Interest near Oxenwood