Sturminster Marshall, Dorset Family History Guide
Sturminster Marshall is an Ancient Parish in the county of Dorset. Lytchett Minster, Hamworthy, and Corfe Mullen are chapelries of Sturminster Marshall.
Other places in the parish include: Coombe Almer.
Alternative names:
Parish church: St. Mary
Parish registers begin:
- Parish registers: 1562
- Bishop’s Transcripts: 1813
Nonconformists include: Independent/Congregational and Presbyterian.
Table of Contents
Adjacent Parishes
- Lytchett Matravers
- Spetisbury
- Shapwick
- Wimborne Minster
- Almer
- Charborough
- Lytchett Minster
- Corfe Mullen
Parish History
The Imperial Gazetteer of England & Wales 1870
STURMINSTER-MARSHALL, a village and a parish in Wimborne district, Dorset. The village stands on the river Stour, near Bailey-Gate r. station, 4 miles W of Wimborne-Minster; was once a market-town; and has a post-office under Wimborne, and an eight-arched bridge. The parish contains Coombe-Almer tything, and comprises 3,851 acres. Real property, £6,155. Pop., 850. Houses, 185. The property is divided among a few. The living is a vicarage in the diocese of Salisbury. Value, £303. Patron, Eton College. The church is not good. There is an endowed school with £39 a year.
Source: The Imperial Gazetteer of England & Wales [Wilson, John M]. A. Fullarton & Co. N. d. c. [1870-72].
A Topographical Dictionary of England 1848
STURMINSTER-MARSHALL (St. Mary), a parish, in the union of Wimborne and Cranborne, hundred of Cogdean, Wimborne division of Dorset, 5 miles (W.) from Wimborne-Minster; containing, with the chapelries of Lytchett-Minster, Corfe-Mullen, and Hamworthy, 2869 inhabitants, of whom 902 are in the township of Sturminster-Marshall. This place derives its name from the situation of its church on the river Stour, and its adjunct from the Earl of Pembroke, earl marshal, to whom it anciently belonged, and who, in the reign of Henry I., obtained for it the grant of a fair.
The parish comprises 11,496 acres. The township comprises 3465 acres, of which 361 are common or waste; it is bounded on the north-east by the river Stour, over which is a bridge of eight arches. In the centre of the village is an open spot still called the market-place, though no market has been held within the memory of man. The living is a vicarage, endowed with the rectorial tithes of Lytchett-Minster, Corfe-Mullen, and Hamworthy, and valued in the king’s books at £31. 5.; net income, £920; patrons and impropriators, the Provost and Fellows of Eton College. The great tithes of the township have been commuted for £469; and the vicarial for £120, with a glebe of 122 acres.
The church has an embattled tower, and a remarkably large chancel; and at the west end of the north aisle a space is partitioned off, in which the royal peculiar court of Sturminster-Marshall is held. Each of the three chapelries contains a chapel of ease. In 1799, William Mackrell endowed two schools with the interest of £1200 three per cent, consols. Upon Cogdean Elms, an eminence in the parish, where the courts of the hundred to which it gives name were formerly held, are some stately elm-trees.
Source: A Topographical Dictionary of England by Samuel Lewis 1848
Parish Registers
Marriage Allegations
The following people have been recorded in the Hampshire Allegations for Marriage Licences granted by the Bishop of Winchester 1689 to 1837.
BARNS, William, of Sturminster, co. Dorset, barber, & Mary Foddergil [ ? Fothergill ],
of Milford, w., 18 Aug., 1715. Daniel Gates, of M., gent., bondsman.
HORDLE, Harry, of Sturminster, co. Dorset, shoemaker, & Mary Read, of Holdenhurst, sp., at Ellingham, 9 Nov., 1730.
LEG, Herbert, of Sturminster Marshall, co. Dorset, 21, b., & Sarah Jeffery, of Sopley, 21, sp., at S., 13 Feb., 1837. Aff.
Parish Records
FamilySearch
Dorset Historical Directories
Administration
- County: Dorset
- Civil Registration District: Wimborne
- Probate Court: Court of the Peculiar of Sturminster Marshall
- Diocese: Salisbury
- Rural Deanery: Pre-1847 – None, Post-1846 – Whitchurch
- Poor Law Union: Wimborne and Cranborne
- Hundred: Cogdean
- Province: Canterbury