Volume 20

Chippenham area

The town mill photographed around 1905 with piles of coal outside. It was demolished in 1958. In its place is the Rivo Lounge, The Bridge (next to the town bridge) and a row of 1960s shops. Photo courtesy of Chippenham Museum Collection

The town mill photographed around 1905 with piles of coal outside. It was demolished in 1958. In its place is the Rivo Lounge, The Bridge (next to the town bridge) and a row of 1960s shops. Photo courtesy of Chippenham Museum Collection

The Market Place next to the town war memorial, thought to have been taken in the 1930s. Photo courtesy of Chippenham Museum Collection

The Market Place next to the town war memorial, thought to have been taken in the 1930s. Photo courtesy of Chippenham Museum Collection

 

Chippenham is the last large urban Wiltshire area to be covered and forms the major part of volume 20. Research is now complete, and the volume is being edited prior to preparation for publication.

The volume includes chapters on different aspects of the history of the town and the surrounding villages of Bremhill, Christian Malford, Hardenhuish, Kington St Michael and Kington Langley, Langley Burrell, Pewsham, Tytherton Lucas and Tytherton Kellaways, all of which lay within the Chippenham hundred in earlier times.

The town history particularly covers boundaries, communications and population; origins and development from prehistoric times through to the modern period; land ownership; local government; and economic, social and religious history. The work on outer Chippenham and the parishes also deals with the original manors, their owners and their estates.

The distinguishing quality of the VCH is authoritative history using local and national sources and fully referenced. The full Chippenham volume will contain about 120,000 words about the town and its parish, and about a further 70,000 words about the surrounding villages.

Although this is necessarily concise, it is the essential starting point for anyone interested in local history and for those who wish to study particular topics more fully. In order to achieve the high standards set by the VCH nationally, we employ professional historians who have experience of this type of research.

Draft chapters for the entire volume are available online at the Insitute of Historical Research.

Chippenham research