Branksome Park
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Branksome Park is a suburb of Poole, which
adjoins Branksome. The area covers approximately 360 acres, mostly
occupied by housing, and includes Branksome Chine. For centuries
Branksome Park was a vast tract of land encompassing wild heathland,
wooded ravines and high cliffs bordering the sea. Queen Elizabeth I had
a hunting lodge here called Cerne Abbas, after the picturesque Dorset
village - sadly replaced by a many-gabled mansion in Victorian times,
now demolished. Until the early 19th century, travellers between Poole
and Christchurch traversed the area as quickly as possible to avoid the
lawless gangs of smugglers infesting the chines, as the ravines are
known locally. It was in the early 1800s that the Bruce family, who then
owned the estate, laid out the pine plantations that give the area such
character today and named it Branksome Park, after the setting of Sir
Walter Scott's 1805 poem, "The Lay of the Last Minstrel". |
The estate was then acquired by Henry Bury, a
visionary northener, who kept 250 acres for his own personal use and
developed the rest, taking care to preserve the natural environment. In
September 1875 he laid the foundation stone for what would become All
Saints' Church, which he never saw, as he died a year later. The parish
was established and the church consecrated by the Bishop of Salisbury in
1877, with a member of the Bury family, Edward Bury, as the first vicar. |
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In 1905 Branksome Urban District was absorbed into Poole, while in 1930 the Parish was divided into two, with all that part of Branksome north of the Weymouth-to-Waterloo railway line forming the new parish of Branksome St. Aldhelms. |
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Census | |
Parish Registers | Baptisms 1878-1905
[Helen Jones] Burials 1877-1911 [Jill Ditum] |
Postal Directories | |
Photographs | |
Monumental Inscriptions | Branksome Park Roll of Honour [Kim Parker] |
Other Records | Rectors of All Saints [Kim Parker] |
Maps | The 1890 Ordnance Survey map of the parish can be seen at the old-maps site, just enter 'Branksome Park' under place search. |
Records held at the Dorset History Centre |
Registers Christenings 1878-1956. Marriages 1878-1987. Burials 1877-1976. Banns 1878-1972 |
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