Monkton Wyld |
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Evocatively named Monkton Wyld lies less than
3 miles due North of Lyme Regis as the crow flies, but over 5 miles by
the steep, winding roads that climb from sea level up into the lush hills
and woodland on the border between Dorset and Devon. 'Monkton' means 'of
the monks', a reference to past ownership of land here by Forde Abbey.
'Wyld', which seems to allude to the landscape, is in reality derived from
the Old English 'wil' for 'a wile, or a trick' - probably 'a snare, or a trap'
in this case as the woodlands here would have been ideal for poaching – with
the final 'd' added sometime in the reign of Mary Tudor. The arrival in August
2010 of a postcard from South Africa after 53 years in transit could be seen
as a metaphor for Monkton Wyld being of another era. It feels like a secret
place, remote and hidden |
Richard Cromwell Carpenter (1812-1855), an adept of the
Gothic Revival style and a member of the Cambridge Movement, was commissioned
to build both the church and the rectory. His was an age of dogmatism. At the
same time that the Pre-Raphaelite Brotherhood was dismissing all Art from the
time of Raphael onwards as 'corrupted' and advocating a return to the purity
of Quattrocento principles, the Cambridge Movement labelled church architecture
prior to 1300 as 'primitive' and that after 1348 as 'decadent', claiming that
only the decorated Gothic style prevailing between those two dates was suited
to the worship of God. Their theories became known as 'Ecclesiology'.
Carpenter's church at Monkton Wyld, dedicated to St Andrew, is a perfect
example of an ecclesiological church, emphasising as it does the beauty of
holiness, a proper reverence for the saints and religious symbolism.
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Mrs Dodson's daughter, Frances, happened to be married to a clergyman, Rev. Robert Sparke Hutchings, and it was he she had invested as the first incumbent of Monkton Wyld. Fifteen years later Hutchings was succeeded by the curiously named Lester Lester, a man who, as the Dorset legend goes, was left a legacy on condition that he changed his name to Lester, and not knowing which of his names this referred to, changed both to be sure to qualify. It is to the third incumbent, Rev. John Brook Maher Camm, and his wife, Caroline Arden, that we owe the further embellishment of the chancel, including the decorated rood screen, the brass altar rails and the oaken traceried choir stalls |
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Census |
1851 Census [Terry Pine/Beverly Roth] 1861 Census [Sue Reynolds] 1871 Census [Jacqui Bowen] 1881 Census [Sue Reynolds] 1891 Census [Sue Reynolds] 1901 Census [Sue Reynolds] |
Parish Registers | Marriages 1851-1921 [Kim Parker] |
Trade & Postal Directories | |
Other Records |
Monkton Wyld Rectors [Kim Parker] Monkton Wyld Roll of Honour [Kim Parker] |
Photographs | |
Monumental Inscriptions | Memorial Inscriptions at Monkton Wyld Church [Brian Webber] |
Maps | |
View Larger Map |
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Records held at the Dorset History Centre (formerly part of Whitechurch Canonicorum & Uplyme, Devon) |
Registers Baptisms [None]. Marriages 1851-1983. Burials 1952-1981. Banns 1852-1981 |
Registration District
(for the purpose of civil registration births, marriages & deaths) |
1 Jul 1837-31 Mar 1997: Bridport 1 Apr 1997-30 Sep 2001: West Dorset 1 Oct 2001-17 Oct 2005: South & West Dorset |
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