POSTPONED - Historic Dorset Circular

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Lowland and Hill Walks
May 02
2020

29 people attending

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£12.50
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Distance is 23 km (14 miles); total ascent is 236 m; terrain is undulating with a few steep but short ascents; surfaces are dirt, grass and tarmac. Some terrain may be boggy if there has been prolonged wet weather.

Dorset is a small county with frequently big scenery. 'It is a landscape of hills and combes that seem to roll in waves towards the sea, greeting it in giant cliffs of chalk and limestone.' On this walk, the richness of its scenery becomes rather a supporting act to the history that played out within it. Simon Jenkins continues: 'there are few better counties in which to study 16th and 17th-century architecture. A 1907 guidebook said that Dorset is rich above all in the art of the old manor, "a dewdrop from the past, pure, pellucid, peaceful...seeming to breathe the air of Chaucer"'.

The most prized jewel amongst the architectural riches on this walk is Athelhampton House. 'Its Tudor windows and generous gables, its Ham stone walls, and gardens like something from Alice in Wonderland suggest an age of galleons and furbelows'. Built by a wealthy merchant who had prospered after the Battle of Bosworth in 1485, it was divided up between four daughters in 1595, left to decay gently until being saved in 1891, only to be demolished in make-believe by a giant, itinerant, sentient, malevolent alien plant in Doctor Who in 1976.

The most wonderful history lesson continues. Woodsford Castle is a fortified manor house dating from 1335, which became the only thatched castle in the land when it was adapted for use as a farmhouse in the mid-17th century. Puddletown is the biggest settlement on the walk, a tight-knit market town on the River Puddle (or Piddle) which Thomas Hardy reworked as Weatherbury in Far From the Madding Crowd. St Mary's Church may be as early as the 12th century, but is unremarkable, yet it does contain a fine set of medieval and Tudor monuments to the Martyn family of Athelhampton. The Old Manor is from 1680. The best part of the tiny town is the row of cob and thatch cottages facing the green.

More recent and democratic history comes at Tolpuddle which is from where the six Tolpuddle Martyrs were tried in 1834 in Dorchester and transported to Australia for forming a friendly society (union) in protest at poor wages and living conditions. A museum from a century later and a memorial sculpture of 2000 are at the centre of the annual Martyrs' Festival that highlights the privations of working people globally. 

The route (click the link) starts at Moreton Station and proceeds northwest to Woodsford, then west to West Stafford along lanes before crossing the Rover Frome, having veered north, to Puddletown. Lanes and a footpath will head east past Athelhampton and on to Tolpuddle after a further crossing of the Frome. A path heading south and southwest over Southover Heath will lead to Tincleton and then back to the lane to Woodsford upon which the walk started.

The write-up hasn't mentioned much about the landscape and scenery. The River Frome is lined with meadows with arable fields further away, but long stretches of the walk will be through pine forest such as Puddletown Forest, and over patches of heath, which collectively became Egdon Heath in Thomas Hardy's brooding, fatalistic novels.

Dogs are welcome to join us on this event but we do ask that you adhere to the Countryside Code at all times (see Keeping Dogs Under Effective Control). If your dog is uncontrolled and strays in open land frightening other animals or livestock, the leader is supported by the OutdoorLads board of trustees to ask you to leave the event as this is not acceptable behaviour.

Photo credits: all photos licensed under CC BY-SA2.0; photos by Chris GunnsMike LisMark ChambersMike SearleJonathan BillingerNeil MacNeillRobin WebsterEugene BirchallMike SearleRob PurvisMaigheach-gheal; and Neil Mykura.

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