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TOLPUDDLE St. John the Evangelist |
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Not very long ago the village street of Tolpuddle was the main road from Wimborne to Dorchester and daily carried a huge number of vehicles. However, since the arrival of the magnificent dual carriageway to the north, the road has returned to its original purpose and is now a relatively quiet byway. The stone and flint church is mainly C12 and stands in a generous churchyard to the south of the road. It has a plain Norman south doorway and the lower parts of the somewhat slender tower are C13. The chancel is late C13, but was altered by T.H.Wyatt in 1855. The very impressive tie-beam roof of the nave is thought to be C14. The
village will for ever be associated with the Tolpuddle Martyrs who lived
here. In 1834, after
a series of poor harvests, it was the reduction from the barely survivable
wage of seven shillings a week to the starvation level of six shillings
that propelled a group of Friendly Society labourers into forming the
first trade union. Not in
itself an offense, but the thoroughly rattled landowners, led by James
Frampton of Moreton House, saw to it that they were illegally convicted
of a naval regulation forbidding secret oaths and had them transported
to |
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