Christchurch Hampshire Family History Guide

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Christchurch is an Ancient Parish and a market town in the county of Hampshire. Holdenhurst is a chapelry of Christchurch.

Other places in the parish include: Winkton, Tuckton, Street, Pokesdown, Parley, Old Borough, Iver, Iford, Hurn, Highcliffe, Burton, and Burse.

Alternative names:

Parish church: Holy Trinity

Parish registers begin:

Christchurch

  • Parish registers: 1576
  • Bishop’s Transcripts: 1780

Highcliffe

  • Parish registers: 1843
  • Bishop’s Transcripts: 1843

Nonconformists include: Baptist, Independent/Congregational, Primitive Methodist, Roman Catholic, and Wesleyan Methodist.

Adjacent Parishes

Parish History

Christchurch

The Imperial Gazetteer of England & Wales 1870

CHRISTCHURCH, a town, a parish, a sub-district, a district, and a hundred in Hants. The town stands on the peninsula at the confluence of the rivers Avon and Stour, and at the terminus of a branch-line from the Southampton and Dorchester railway, 1¾ mile from the sea, 10 miles NW by W of the Needles, and 21 SW by W of Southampton.

It possibly was founded by the ancient British, or more probably by the Romans; and it has yielded traces of a Roman temple to Mars. It was known to the Saxons as Tweonea or Tweoxnea; and it is mentioned in the Saxon chronicle, in connexion with the contest for the crown, in 901, between Edward the Elder and his kinsman Ethelwald.

The manor of it belonged, at Domesday, to the Crown, and bore then the name of Thuinam or Twineham; and it was given by Henry I. to Richard de Redvers, and passed to the Montacutes and the Nevilles. A monastery was founded at it by King Athelstan; rebuilt, as a collegiate church, by Flambard, the architect of Durham cathedral; and converted into an Augustinian priory, in 1150, by Baldwin de Redvers; and this occasioned the name to be changed into Christchurch, at first Christchurch-Twineham. Town-walls and a castle were erected by either Richard or Baldwin de Redvers.

The shell of the castle-keep, in many parts 12 feet thick, still stands on a mound; and a house of late Norman character, about 70 feet long and 24 wide, supposed to have been the residence of the governor, stands about 100 yards to the east.

The priory church continues in good condition; has undergone recent extensive restorations; is partly used as the parish church; and ranks, in size and grandeur, with some of the cathedrals. It consists of nave and choir with aisles; a transept, with two eastern chapels in each wing; a Lady chapel, a western tower, and a north porch.

The nave is 118¾ feet long, 58½ wide, and 58 high; the choir 70 feet long, 21¼ wide, and 63 high; the transept, 101 feet long and 24¼ wide; the Lady chapel, 36¼ feet long and 21 wide; the western tower, 120 feet high; the entire edifice, 311¼ feet long.

The nave is of seven bays, Norman to the top of the triforium, and early English in the clerestory; the choir stands on a Norman crypt, consists mainly of perpendicular architecture, and is separated from the nave by a superb rood-screen, restored in 1848; the south transepts has two apsidal Norman chapels, the one above the other; the north transept has two early decorated ones; the Lady chapel is very rich perpendicular, with a fan vault.

The western tower forms the west front, and is pierced with a great door and a six-light window; and the north porch is early English, projects more than 40 feet, and is approached through an avenue of elms.

The chief monuments in the church are a sculpture, by Weeks, to the poet Shelley; a memorial window to Mr. Ferrey; a statue, by Flaxman, to Viscountess Fitzharris; a chantry, of Caen stone, to the Countess of Salisbury, mother of Cardinal Pole; and chantries, altar-tombs, or other monuments to the fourth Earl of Devon, Bishop Draper, Robert Harys, John Barnes, Robert White, Sir John Chidioke, and Sir Thomas West.

Some fragments of the domestic conventual buildings are on the south; the convent garden is on the south-east; and a shaded walk, which bore the name of Paradise, and still bears that name, is adjacent.

The town consists of two principal streets, and a few minor ones. It has a head post office, a railway station, two banking offices, one principal and several smaller inns, a recently erected town-hall, two bridges, an Independent chapel of 1867, in the Italian style, with a spire, a Wesleyan chapel, several good schools, a work-house, and some charities.

It is a sub-port to Southampton, and a coast-guard station; is famous for its salmon fishery; and publishes a weekly newspaper. Fairs are held on Trinity-Thursday and 17 Oct.; and the manufacture of fusee chains for clocks and watches, the brewing of ale, and a trade in knit and silk stockings are carried on.

The town is a borough by prescription; it sent two members to parliament from the time of Elizabeth till the act of 1832, and now sends one; and it is nominally governed by a mayor, a clerk, and a body of burgesses. The old borough was conterminate with one of eight tythings of the parish; but the new borough includes other tythings, and also the parish of Holdenhurst. Real property in 1860, £6, 153. Direct taxes in 1857, £4, 791. Electors in 1868, 419. Pop. of the old borough in 1841, 1, 922. Pop. of the new borough in 1851, 7, 475; in 1861, 9, 368. Houses, 1,832. Edward VI. visited the town in 1522.

Bingley, the naturalist, was curate here; and Warner, the topographer, and Admiral Sir Harry Neale, were educated in the public school.

The parish includes the hamlet of Hinton-Admiral, and the tythings of Burse, Burton, Street, Winkton, Hurn, Iford, Parley, and Tuckton. Acres, 24, 9855; of which 345 are water. Real property, £32, 436. Pop., 7, 042. Houses, 1, 444. The property is much subdivided.

Heron Court is the seat of the Earl of Malmsbury; Boscombe-Lodge, of Sir Percy Shelley, Esq., Bart.; and Belvidere, of J. Griffiths, Esq. St. Catherine’s Hill, about 1¾ mile NW of the town, consists of rolled gravel; has, on the SW side, remains of an ancient small square camp; and is crowned, at various points, by circular mounds, which may have been watch-towers.

Hengistbury-Head or Christchurch-Head, projecting into the sea, 2 miles SE of the town, consists of ironstone, which supplied the material for the Castle and the Priory, and is now quarried for exportation to Wales; and it is cut off from the sea by an ancient broad trench, with a single lofty vallum, flanked by some irregular mounds.

An incurvature on the coast, commencing at Hengistbury-Head, extending 7½ miles to the east, and measuring at the furthest 2 miles northward, bears the name of Christ-church bay; and, in consequence of its peculiar position with reference to the Isle of Wight and to neighbouring headlands, has high-water twice every tide.

The mouth of the Avon enters the west side of the bay, immediately within Hengistbury-Head; but, though expanding inwardly into a capacious harbour, is rendered of small value to navigation by narrowness of entrance and a bar.

The living is a vicarage, united with the p. curacy of Holdenhurst, in the diocese of Winchester. Value, £166. Patrons, the Dean and Chapter of Winchester.

The p. curacics of Bransgore, Hinton-Admiral, Bournemouth-St. Peter, Bournemouth-Holy Trinity, Highcliffe, and Pokesdown are separate benefices.

The sub-district and the district are co-extensive; and consist of the parishes of Christchurch, Holdenhurst, and Sopley. Acres, 36, 775. Poor-rates, in 1862, £4, 291. Pop. in 1841, 7, 838; in 1861, 10, 438. Houses, 2, 064. Marriages, in 1860, 71; births, 285, of which 23 were illegitimate; deaths, 175, of which 47 were at ages under 5 years, and 6 at ages above 85. Marriages in the ten years 1851-60, 641; births, 2, 795; deaths, 1, 741.

The places of worship in 1851, were 8 of the Church of England, with 2, 950 sittings; 8 of Independents, with 2, 082 s.; 1 of Baptists, with 200 s.; 2 of Wesleyan Methodists, with 256 s.; and 1 of Roman Catholics, with 50 s.

The schools were 21 public day schools, with 1, 118 scholars; 29 private day schools, with 468 s.; and 20 Sunday schools, with 1, 445 s.

The hundred is cut into lower half and upper half; the former in Ringwood division, and comprising Sopley and Christchurch parishes, exclusive of Christchurch old borough; the latter in Lymington division, and comprising three parishes and part of another. Acres of the l. half, 29, 385; of the u. half, 24, 862. Pop. of the l. half, 5, 275; of the u. half, 4, 063. Houses, 1, 108 and 821.

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

A Topographical Dictionary of England 1848

CHRISTCHURCH (Holy Trinity), a borough, sea-port, market-town, and parish, and the head of a union, in the hundred of Christchurch, Ringwood and S. divisions of the county of Southampton, 21½ miles (S. W. by W.) from Southampton, and 100 (S. W. by W.) from London; containing 5994 inhabitants, and comprising the tythings of Bure, Burton, Street, Winkton, Hurn, Iford, Parley, and Tuckton, and the chapelry of Hinton-Admiral.

This place is of great antiquity, and, from some relics discovered in the church, is supposed to have been of Roman origin; by the Saxons it was called Twyneham-Bourne, and Tweon-ea, from its situation between two rivers.

The earliest historical notice of it occurs in the Saxon Chronicles, which record its occupation by Ethelwold, during his revolt against his kinsman, Edward the Elder. In Domesday book it is mentioned, under the appellation of Thuinam, as a burgh and royal manor, containing 31 messuages. The present name is derived from a priory, founded before the Conquest for a dean and twenty-four Secular canons, and dedicated to the Holy Trinity, and which was rebuilt in the reign of William Rufus, and dedicated to Our Saviour Christ, by Ralph Flambard, Bishop of Durham, and originally dean of the priory.

It was largely endowed by Richard de Redvers, Earl of Devon, to whom Henry I. gave the manor. Earl Baldwin, son and successor to Earl Richard, placed Canons regular of the order of St. Augustine in the priory, which flourished till the Dissolution, when its revenue was £544. 6.: it was granted by Henry VIII. to the inhabitants for their parochial church. Some portions of the walls that inclosed the conventual buildings still remain; the ancient lodge is occupied as a dwelling-house, and the site of the refectory may be traced by the remnants of its wall.

The town was fortified by Richard de Redvers, who either erected or rebuilt the castle, of which there are some remains to the north of the priory. These consist chiefly of the ruins of the keep on the summit of an artificial mount (the walls of which are more than ten feet in thickness), and part of the range that comprised the state apartments; the Norman style prevails, and the arches of some remaining windows are divided by pillars of that character.

Christchurch is situated on the borders of the New Forest, and between the rivers Avon and Stour, which, uniting their streams at a short distance below, expand into a broad sheet of water and fall into Christchurch bay, in connexion with which they form a harbour. The current of the Avon, to the east of the town, is intercepted and divided into two parts by an island, from each side of which a bridge to the opposite bank of the river forms the continuation of the road to Lymington.

The harbour is accessible only at high tides to vessels drawing not more than from five to six feet of water, the entrance being obstructed by a bar, or ledge of sand, extending from Henigsbury Head, on the Hampshire side (where Hengist, King of the Saxons, landed), to St. Catherine’s Cliffe, in the Isle of Wight. The quay is about two miles from the mouth of the harbour.

In this harbour, as in the neighbouring port of Poole, there is high water twice at every tide, a peculiarity arising from the situation of the coast with respect to the Isle of Wight, and from the projection of the point of land on which Hurst Castle is situated. The river Avon was made navigable to Salisbury in 1680, but the accumulation of sand has rendered the navigation useless. Some of the labouring class have for years past been employed in drawing their nets for salmon at the mouth of the haven; the rivers are royalties, the property of the Rt. Hon. Sir G. H. Rose.

The town is partly lighted, and amply supplied with water; it is much frequented during the summer months as a place of pleasant resort, and the lofty cliffs in the vicinity afford delightful views. Several of the female inhabitants were formerly employed in the knitting of stockings, but this branch of industry has declined. There are two breweries; also two manufactories for watch fusee chains, at each of which about 50 persons are employed, chiefly women and girls; and almost every cottager is engaged in preparing the work connected with this branch of manufacture.

The market is on Monday; fairs are held on Trinity-Thursday and October 17th, for cattle and horses, and for pleasure. The government is vested in a mayor, recorder, and an indefinite number of free burgesses, assisted by a town-clerk and others; but the officers do not exercise magisterial authority, the town being wholly within the jurisdiction of the county justices.

The borough was summoned in the 35th of Edward I. and the 2nd of Edward II., but made no subsequent return till the 13th of Elizabeth, from which time it regularly sent two members to parliament, until the 2nd of William IV., when, by the Reform act, it was destined thenceforward to send only one.

The right of election was exercised by the mayor and free burgesses; but by the act above named, the non-resident electors, except within seven miles, were disfranchised, and the privilege was extended to the £10 householders of an enlarged district of 5332 acres, including the parish of Holdenhurst, which was for elective purposes incorporated with the former borough of Christchurch, which comprised only 123 acres. The mayor is returning officer.

A court leet for the manor is held twice a year by the steward. The powers of the county-debt court of Christchurch, established in 1847, extend over the registration-district of Christchurch.

The parish comprises by computation 30,000 acres, of which the surface is in general flat, and the soil in the vicinity of the rivers particularly fertile. The living is a vicarage, with that of Holdenhurst annexed, valued in the king’s books at £16; patrons, the Dean and Chapter of Winchester; impropriator, the Earl of Malmesbury, whose mansion of Heron Court is within the parish. The great tithes of the two parishes have been commuted for £3200.

The church is a magnificent cruciform structure, partly Norman, and partly in the early and later English styles, with a finely-proportioned and embattled tower at the west end, which was erected by the Montacutes, earls of Salisbury, in the fifteenth century. The piers and arches of the nave, which is of Norman character, are bold and simple; the clerestory is of later date; the northern entrance is a fine specimen of the early, and the chancel of the later, English style.

The altar is decorated with a rude, but interesting, representation of the genealogy of Christ, carved in the style of the age in which the church was founded: to the north of it is a beautiful sepulchral chapel, built in the reign of Henry VII., by the celebrated Countess of Salisbury, who, in the 70th year of her age, was beheaded by Henry VIII.; and at the east is a spacious chapel dedicated to the Virgin Mary, erected in the fourteenth century by the ancestor of Lord Delawarr. There are some other chapels of fine execution, chiefly later English.

The west front, principally in the early style, in which a large and handsome window has been lately inserted, is ornamented with a figure of Christ in a canopied niche. The length of the church is 311 feet, and its breadth at the western extremity 60 feet, and along the transepts 104 feet; the height of the vaulted roof is 57 feet. It was repaired in 1841.

There are, an endowed chapel at Hinton, built about half a century ago; a chapel at Bransgore, a neat modern edifice; one erected in 1834, at High Cliffe; a fourth at Burton, erected in 1836; a chapel in the later English style, at Hightown, built at the expense of Lord Stuart de Rothesay and others; and a chapel at Bournemouth.

The Independents and Wesleyans have places of worship, and at Burton is a Roman Catholic chapel.

The union of Christchurch comprises 3 parishes, and contains a population of 7828.

An intrenchment, 630 yards in length, extends across the isthmus that connects Hengistbury Head with the main land; and near its northern extremity is a large barrow, in which human bones and an urn have been found.

On Catherine Hill, about a mile and a half to the north of the town, and a mile to the west of the Avon, are traces of an exploratory camp, 55 yards square, round which are six small tumuli; and near the base of the hill are ten large barrows, whereof one has been discovered to contain human bones. To the north of the camp is an elliptical earthwork, of which the greater diameter is 35, and the less 25, yards; and the remains of other intrenchments may be traced in the vicinity.

Somerford Grange, about two miles to the east of the town, belonged to the priory: part of the ancient buildings remained until about 25 years since, including the chapel, a stone edifice with a handsome arched roof of carved oak. Hordwell Cliff, between Christchurch and Milford, is famous for the fossil remains of tropical shells, sharks’ teeth, &c. &c. Tutter’s Well, at Stanpit, is celebrated for the purity of its water, and for its efficacy in weakness of sight.

Source: A Topographical Dictionary of England by Samuel Lewis 1848

Parish Records

FamilySearch

England, Hampshire, Christchurch – Business records and commerce ( 1 )
The chain gang
Author: Newman, Sue

England, Hampshire, Christchurch – Cemeteries ( 1 )
Monumental inscriptions, Christchurch, Hampshire, England

England, Hampshire, Christchurch – Census ( 1 )
Census returns for Christchurch, 1841-1891
Author: Great Britain. Census Office

England, Hampshire, Christchurch – Census – 1901 ( 1 )
Family tree magazine (Huntingdon, England) – v. 21, no. 8 (July 2005) supplemental CD

England, Hampshire, Christchurch – Church records ( 16 )
Births, baptisms and burials, 1780-1837
Author: Independent Church (Christchurch, Hampshire)

Bishop’s transcripts for Bransgore, 1872-1873
Author: Church of England. Chapelry of Bransgore (Hampshire)

Bishop’s transcripts for Christchurch, 1780-1889
Author: Church of England. Parish Church of Christchurch (Hampshire)

The Christchurch Priory cartulary
Author: Hanna, Katharine A.

Church records for the Congregational Church, Christchurch, 1816-1918
Author: Congregational Church (Christchurch, Hampshire)

Church records for the Congregational Church, Christchurch, 1854-1909
Author: Congregational Church (Christchurch, Hampshire); Dorset Record Office

Marriage transcripts, 1576, 1682-1689
Author: Church of England. Parish Church of Christchurch (Hampshire)

Monumental inscriptions, 1600-1720
Author: Church of England. Parish Church of Christchurch (Hampshire)

Parish register transcripts, 1576-1804 and parish registers, 1724-1734
Author: Church of England. Parish Church of Christchurch (Hampshire); Druitt, H.; White, H. L.; Pepin, H. N. P.

Parish register transcripts, 1822-1840
Author: Church of England. Chapelry of Bransgore (Hampshire)

Parish registers for Bransgore, 1822-1876
Author: Church of England. Chapelry of Bransgore (Hampshire)

Parish registers for Christchurch, 1584-1889
Author: Church of England. Parish Church of Christchurch (Hampshire)

Parish registers for Hinton Admiral, 1829-1879
Author: Church of England. Chapelry of Hinton Admiral (Hampshire)

Parish registers of Highcliffe, 1843-1877
Author: Church of England. Parish Church of Highcliffe (Hampshire)

Transcripts of Bishop’s transcripts, 1780-1812
Author: Church of England. Parish Church of Christchurch (Hampshire)

Transcripts of burials, 1780-1812
Author: Church of England. Parish Church of Christchurch (Hampshire)

England, Hampshire, Christchurch – Church records – Indexes ( 1 )
Computer printout of Christchurch, Hamps., Eng

England, Hampshire, Christchurch – Genealogy ( 1 )
The writings of George Ballard : native of Hampshire, England & pioneer in Upper Canada : Whitchurch, Uxbridge, Wellesley
Author: Ballard, George, 1796-1869; Moran, Peter

England, Hampshire, Christchurch – Land and property ( 1 )
The Christchurch Priory cartulary
Author: Hanna, Katharine A.

England, Hampshire, Christchurch – Manors ( 2 )
The Christchurch Priory cartulary
Author: Hanna, Katharine A.

Presentments, rent rolls and other manorial records of Hurn, Hampshire, 1390-1788
Author: Manor of Hurn (Hampshire)

England, Hampshire, Christchurch – Manors – Court records ( 2 )
Court records of the manors of Romsey Extra and Romsey Infra and other manors in Hampshire, 1601-1749
Author: Manor of Romsey Extra. Court (Hampshire); Manor of Winkton. Court (Hampshire); Manor of North Baddesley. Court (Hampshire)

Manorial records of Ringwood, Hampshire, 1576-1831
Author: Manor of Ringwood. Court (Hampshire)

England, Hampshire, Christchurch – Manors – History ( 1 )
Hoburne bygone days
Author: Samuel, Olive J.

England, Hampshire, Christchurch – Taxation ( 4 )
Land tax assessments for borough of Christchurch, 1800-1832
Author: Great Britain. Court of Quarter Sessions of the Peace (Hampshire)

Land tax assessments for Bure, Burton and Tuckton, 1774-1867
Author: Great Britain. Court of Quarter Sessions of the Peace (Hampshire)

Land tax assessments for Christchurch, 1775-1832
Author: Great Britain. Court of Quarter Sessions of the Peace (Hampshire)

Land tax assessments for Hinton, 1775-1830
Author: Great Britain. Court of Quarter Sessions of the Peace (Hampshire)

Bankrupts

Below is a list of people that were declared bankrupt between 1820 and 1843 extracted from The Bankrupt Directory; George Elwick; London; Simpkin, Marshall and Co.; 1843.

Jenkins William Christchurch Hants painter and glazier Nov 27 1824

Peerman John Christchurch Southampton brewer July 12 1839

Peyton John Christchurch Southampton mercer and draper Sept 7 1822

Administration

  • County: Hampshire
  • Civil Registration District: Christchurch
  • Probate Court: Courts of the Bishop (Episcopal Consistory) and Archdeaconry of Winchester
  • Diocese: Winchester
  • Rural Deanery: Fordingbridge
  • Poor Law Union: Bournemouth and Christchurch
  • Hundred: Christchurch
  • Province: Canterbury