Tincleton
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Tincleton is a small village surrounded
by meadows in the flat open valley of the River Frome, five miles east
of Dorchester. The name Tincleton is a corruption of the Old English
"Tin la Ton", which means "farm in a valley". In the Domesday Book it
was valued at twenty shillings. The population of Tincleton was 142 in
2001, compared to 145 in 1901. |
Tudor-style Clyffe House, half a mile to the northeast of the church, was also designed by Benjamin Ferrey. Built in 1842 for Charles Porcher, it replaced an older manor house, which had been the birthplace of the controversial seventeenth century lawyer and politician, Clement Walker. He was a Member of Parliament and, under the pseudonym Theodorus Verax ("lover of truth"), author of books such as, "Anarchia Anglicana" and "The History of Independency", the third volume of which was entitled: "High Court of Justice or Cromwell's New Slaughter House". Walker's open criticism of Oliver Cromwell on the one hand, and his willingness to come to terms with King Charles I on the other, lead to his expulsion from Parliament through "Pride's Purge" in 1648 and his imprisonment in the Tower of London, where he died in 1651 without ever having been brought to trial. Paradoxically, this man who appears to have availed himself of every opportunity to publicly express his opinion, terrorised his wife and forbade her to speak with her friends unless he was present. |
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Census |
1841 Census [Alan House] 1851 Census [Alan House] 1861 Census [Alan House] 1871 Census [Alan House] 1881 Census [Alan House] 1891 Census [Alan House] 1901 Census [Keith Searson] |
Parish Registers |
Baptisms 1625-1812,
1813-1885 [Kim Parker] Marriages 1579-1836 [Kim Parker] Burials 1625-1812, 1813-1920 [Kim Parker] |
Postal Directories | |
Photographs | Further photographs of Tincleton Church |
Monumental Inscriptions | |
Other Records | |
Maps | |
Records held at the Dorset History Centre |
Registers Christenings 1576-1996. Marriages 1576-1993. Burials 1576-1998. Banns 1806-1997 |
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