Herald - Issue 420

Page 14 • The HERALD • 10th March 2022 v READ THE HERALD ONLINE: www.herald-publishing.co.uk v REFURBISHERS ALWAYS TRY TO MEET YOUR BUDGET RELIABLE! EXCELLENT REFERENCES! INSURED! Catalogue of previous works to view Plaster work • Floor & Wall Tiling • Wall removal • Bathroom Design & Fit • Laminate/Wood Flooring • Painting • Insulation • Decking • PVCu Gutter & Fascia OUR HANDYMAN SERVICES • Rubbish clearance • Gutters • Jet washing conservatories, paths and patios • Flat pack assembly • Van removals • NO JOB TOO SMALL • FIXED PRICES • WRITTEN QUOTATIONS P Strus 07414 779083 Email: p.strus7@gmail.com Acorn Building Contracts Ltd u Reliable, local builders offering affordable, quality workmanship u Our employees are fully qualified and fully insured u All aspects of building undertaken including extensions, structural alterations, roofing, ground works, kitchens, bathrooms, carpentry and plastering u Drawings arranged u Insurance work undertaken u Local Authority Approved Contractor For free quotations and friendly advice please call Office: 023 8024 3336 Mobile: 07786 656865 Email: acornbuilding@gmail.com or visit our website: www.acorn-builders.co.uk You will not be disappointed Chris Hopkins Painting, Decorating, Carpentry, Tiling Free Estimates Photographs & references available on request Telephone: 023 8081 5210 Mobile: 07986 806277 Your Local Professional Electrician • Complete Rewires • Periodic Inspection Reports • Fault Finding & Repair • New Consumer Units • New Circuits • Central Heating Wiring • Extra Sockets/Lights • PAT Testing • No Job Too Small • Part P Registered • Fast & Efficient Service • Free Estimates Telephone Gary on 07788 865081 forestelectrical@gmail.com The Fawley Tithe Map - Badminston Plantation by Robin Somes, Fawley & Blackfield Memories e closer we look at the past, the more we wonder about the everyday people of the time. One document that may help us is the Fawley Tithe Map of 1838. Its beauty is that it records the name of almost every piece of land in the area, along with its size, usage, owners and occupiers. Tithes were originally a tax requiring one tenth of all agricultural produce to be given to support the church and clergy. is became increasingly unpopular, and an 1836 Act of Parliament required that the agricultural produce be converted to its monetary value instead. Surveys across England and Wales recorded every parcel of land, and calculated its equivalent value. Maps accompanied the records, showing the location of each piece of land. While the history of modern-day land boundaries is interesting, the real prize is their names. Some locations are still familiar today, such as Butts Ash, Frost Lane, Badminston Plantation and the Jolly Sailor at Ashlett, and some still appear on modern Ordnance Survey maps. Others are commemorated in local road names; Lytton Road, Sandilands Way, Broomy Close and Shoblands Way in Hythe, for instance, are named a er commons and woodland around Frost Lane. Some might record an owner or occupier (Chambers’ Copse, Webster’s Field and Kitcher’s Copse), while others - Primrose Copse, Nightingale Wood, Rookery Copse and Heron Copse - note some feature of the wildlife. ere are plenty whose origin is straightforward and obvious – Great Marsh, Upper Meadow, Eight Acres and West Field – and plenty more which leave questions unanswered: Prig’s Close, Israel’s Marsh and Hungry Hill. Perhaps the latter was so-named because of the poor quality of the soil? Was someone’s surname really “Prig”? Although evidence of many remains, more are long gone, covered by developments, the re nery and power station, or subsumed into larger elds and woodlands. Among the owners, we see the major landowners – Andrew Drummond and the Earl of Cavan. Meanwhile, the tenants form a roll-call of familiar local surnames; Musselwhite, So e, Harding, Nicholas, Osman, Cotton and many more. We see, too, the frequency of common land; Hardley Common, Lyne Common, Rew Common, all now gone. ere are somewhere over 900 entries on the tithe map. Looking at these, we inevitably start to wonder who was Mr Wakeford, who grazed his cattle on Wakeford’s Marsh? Whose house was burned in Burnt House Wood? What was so horrid about the owner of Horrid’s Paddock? We’ll probably never know, but with luck some memory of the places themselves will remain alive in these maps. Badminston Plantation A er a short break at the beginning of the year, members of Romsey Country Market are once again busy making, growing, and cooking for their regular markets at Romsey Town Hall 2nd and 4th Fridays of the month (11th and 25th March) from 11am–12.30pm and in the Cornmarket 1st and last Saturdays of the month (26th March and 2nd April) from 8.30am–3pm. If you haven’t yet discovered the delights on o er, then why not make a visit - you are bound to nd something special for Mother’s Day and Easter. Orders can be made at any of the markets, or on Facebook via: romseycountrymarket Romsey Country Market

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