Corfe Castle Dorset Family History Guide

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Corfe Castle is an Ancient Parish and a market town in the county of Dorset. Kingston is a chapelry of Corfe Castle.

Other places in the parish include: Ower, Rempstone Heath, Rempstone, Rollington, Bushey, Blaskenwell, and Afflington.

Parish registers begin:

  • Parish registers: 1653
  • Bishop’s Transcripts: 1813

Nonconformists include: Baptist, Independent/Congregational, Primitive Methodist, Protestant Dissenters, Society of Friends/Quaker, and Wesleyan Methodist.

Adjacent Parishes

Corfe Castle Parish Records

Corfe Castle Poor Law Apprenticeship Records, 1623-1898

Historical Directory Transcriptions

An Address from the County of Dorset on the Elementary Education Bill, May 9 1870

To the Right Honourable The EARL de GREY and RIPON President of Her Majesty’s Privy Council and To the Right Honourable W. E. FORSTER MP Vice President

We the undersigned Clergy and Laity of the Archdeaconry and County of Dorset, accepting the principle of the Elementary Education Bill now before Parliament, by which in existing Schools perfect liberty of Religious Teaching is guaranteed to the Managers, together with perfect liberty of withdrawal from such Teaching to the Parents of the Children, do earnestly deprecate any Alteration in the Bill which may affect such principle.

At the same time we are prepared to concede, if necessary, the substitution for the so-called Conscience Clause, of an Enactment which shall confine the Teaching of the Formularies of any Denomination to the first part of the School Hours.

CORFE CASTLE

Eldon, Encombe
J. H. Calcraft, magistrate, Rempstone
Eldon S. Bankes, rector
T.F. Bourke, curate
Robert Taylor, gent
W.E. Humble, M.D.
W. Pinney, curate
James T. Kent, churchwarden
John Johnson, church warden
James Kent, church warden
James Hibbs, scboolmaster
James Tucker, schoolmaster
Ricbard E. Pinney
W.J. Stevens, baker and grocer
James Stevens, baker and grocer
Edward Smith, saddler
Joseph Goringe, saddler
Henry Hibbs, shoemaker
Charles Kent, yeoman
Joseph Herlock, yeoman
R.G. Gilman, grocer
C.W. Desallioud, overseer
Edward Groves, yeoman
Robert Nineham, yeoman
Henry James Vye, overseer
William F. Kent, farmer, Afflington

Source: An Address from the County of Dorset on the Elementary Education Bill, May 9 1870 by Dorset. Published by H. Spicer, Dorset County Chronicle Office, 1870.

Parish History

The Imperial Gazetteer of England & Wales 1870

CORFE-CASTLE, a small town, a parish, and a sub-district in Wareham district, Dorset. The town stands adjacent to the central gap of the Isle of Purbeck range of hills, 4 miles SE of Wareham r. station.

A famous castle here dates from the Saxon times; and was, for many centuries, one of the strongest fortresses in the kingdom. It belonged to the Crown; was given, in the time of Elizabeth, to Sir Christopher Hatton; passed, in 1635, to Sir John Bankes, attorney-general to Charles I.; and belongs now to the Bankeses of Kingston-Lacy.

Edward the Martyr was murdered here by his stepmother; Peter the hermit was incarcerated here; twenty-two noblemen were starved in the dungeons by King John; Edward II. was imprisoned here some time before his murder; Lady Bankes, with slight assistance, defended the castle, for Charles I., against a siege of six weeks, in 1643; and Fairfax besieged, captured, and dismantled it in 1646. The ruins crown a steep rocky knoll; are approached by a four-arched bridge across a chasm; present a butting, massive, picturesque appearance; include a keep, a chapel, and several towers; and present features of architecture of almost every date and transition from the time of Edgar till that of Henry VII.

The town consists of one long street of picturesque stone cottages; and has a post office under Wareham, a market-cross, a parish church, two dissenting chapels, and charities £70. The church is early English, with a large tower; and excepting the tower, was rebuilt in 1860. The chief trade is connected with the exporting of potter’s clay from neighbouring pits; and fairs are held on 12 May and 29 Oct. The town is corporate, but not regulated by the municipal act; and it sent two members to parliament till dis-franchised by the act of 1832.

The parish includes also the village of Kingston, and the tythings of Afflington, Blaskenwell, Ower, Rempstone, and Rollington. Acres, 9, 884; of which 1, 075are water. Real property, £13, 174; of which £7, 350 are in mines. Pop., 1, 900. Houses, 337. The property is divided among a few.

Nine Barrow Down, extending eastward from the town, is 642 feet high; and commands a very brilliant view. Creech Barrow, extending north-westward, is 369 feet high; and also commands a noble prospect. Potter’s clay, to the amount of upwards of 60,000 tons a year, is dug and exported; and a railway for conveying it, goes from the pits to Wareham harbour. The grey and variegated fine limestone, known as Purbeck marble, also was, till very recently, quarried and exported on a large scale.

The living is a rectory in the diocese of Salisbury. Value, £685. Patron, the Bankes family. There are chapels of ease at Kingston and Bushey. The sub-district contains likewise Church Knowle parish. Acres, 12, 804. Pop., 2, 411. Houses, 449.

Source: The Imperial Gazetteer of England & Wales [Wilson, John M]. A. Fullarton & Co. N. d. c. [1870-72].

Administration

  • County: Dorset
  • Civil Registration District: Wareham
  • Probate Court: Court of the Peculiar of Corfe Castle
  • Diocese: Salisbury
  • Rural Deanery: Pre-1847 – None, Post-1846 – Dorchester
  • Poor Law Union: Wareham and Purbeck
  • Hundred: Corfe Castle
  • Province: Canterbury