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Village History
Click on the links above for further information. Pictorial history
offers a glimpse of some of Stan Woodford's photographic collection,
Knowle Cemetery provides a detailed history of the cemetery that once
served Knowle Hospital; Listed buildings provides a schedule of
Wickham's historic buildings and Archaeology details historic finds in
the Parish.
Contributions to these
pages would be welcomed!
The Early
History of Wickham
This extract is based on a talk given by
local historian, the late BruceTappenden
Perhaps Wickham has Stone Age origins with the first settlers attracted to the
site as a ford across the River Meon. The Romans established a military post at
Wickham and probably built the first bridge over the river, the village being on
the road from Roman centres at Chichester & Winchester. Moving forward to
Saxon Britain when the first written mention of the village appears in a Royal
Charter of 826. The Saxon settlement is thought to have been to the east of the Meon and would have consisted of wooden houses with a brush roof, there may have
been a church & manor house too but no remains have been found.
After the Norman Conquest King William granted the Manor of Wickham to Hugo de
Port and the village appeared in the Doomsday Book as part of the Titchfield
Hundred. The present church of St Nicholas dates from 1126 and was run by the
Canons of Titchfield.
 In 1269 King Henry III granted a charter to Roger de Scures for fairs and
markets to be held on a Thursday, all the other local markets being on a
Wednesday. It is from this time that the layout of the village as we now know it
began to emerge. The increasing population of skilled craftsmen and merchants
had sufficient wealth to build themselves substantial houses and the new
developments took place away from the old houses and the church on the west bank
of the Meon.
Mention should be made of Wickham's most illustrious 'son' - although not born
in Wickham his father, John Long, moved there with his young family and it was
then that the Lord of the Manor, John de Scures, noticed the clever boy and sent
him to Winchester to be educated. John de Scures knew a bright lad when he saw
one - the boy was William of Wykeham, who became Bishop of Winchester, twice
Lord Chancellor of England and founder of Winchester College and New College
Oxford!
Later years saw plague, pestilence, butchers shops, coaching inns, the arrival
of the railway and the building of the Chesapeake Mill from the timbers of an
American frigate captured in 1813.
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