The village of Wambrook is tucked away in the Blackdown Hills 2 miles southwest of the town of Chard in South Somerset. To find the village you have to explore the narrow tree-lined country lanes off the A30 – the main road which climbs steadily out of Chard into the foothills of the Blackdowns.
My wife and I, after visiting The Barleymow
Farm Shop on the A30, took several wrong turns before finding the village. It seemed to consist of scattered homes
straggling along an undulating country lane, and we could find nowhere
convenient to stop until we came to its Church of St. Mary.
The Church of St. Mary in the South Somerset village of Wambrook. |
Arthur Mee in his The King’s England, Somerset (Hodder and Stoughton Ltd., 1968) informs us that: “In 1896 this village was transferred from Dorset to Somerset. The little medieval church has rounded doorways and a font of the thirteenth century, bench ends carved 400 years ago, an Elizabethan chalice engraved with its price of 35 shillings, and a gallery at the back for the ringers of three ancient bells.” However, the Wambrook parish church website states there are 5 bells in the tower! The Church is built of Ham stone rubble and ashlar dressing, and it is thought the original roof was thatched.*
On entering the churchyard the first thing
which caught our eye was the seventeenth century set of stocks beside the wall
of the church. We followed the footpath
through the churchyard and into a field.
We didn’t venture further as the going become steeper, but we could look
down toward a brook and across the wooded valley. On the opposite side of the wooded
valley we could see a large building which we later discovered to be the Cotley
Inn.
Seventeenth century stocks beside the Church of St. Mary in Wambrook, South Somerset. |
Retracing our steps through the churchyard we
noticed the Commonwealth War Grave of Private W. J. Larcombe who was serving in
the Royal Army Veterinary Corps when he died on 10 July 1944 aged 24. He was the son of Charles Victor and Emily
Caroline Larcombe, and husband of Louisa Elizabeth Larcombe of Islington,
London.
Nearby was another headstone, that of Walter
George Pidgeon. The headstone also commemorated the passing of “our dear
boys”. One of them, Sidney John Pidgeon,
died at the early age of 16. The other,
Walter Frank Pidgeon, died of wounds on 24 February 1945 in Myanmar (formerly
Burma) while serving as a private in the Second Battalion, King’s Own Scottish
Borderers. It seems he may have been
wounded when the KOSB took part in the successful assault on Japanese positions
on the Irrawaddy line in early 1945. He
is at rest in the Commonwealth War Graves Commission’s Tuakkyan War Cemetery in Myanmar. His wife, Viola
Beatrice Rosalind Pidgeon was from Chard, Somerset.
Gravestone commemorating members of the Pidgeon family in the Church of St. Mary in Wambrook, South Somerset. |
The tower of St. Mary's Church in the village of Wambrook, South Somerset. |
We returned to the car and drove on into the
valley and up the other side past the Cotley Inn. After more twists and turns we reached the
top of the hill where there was a fine view toward Chard. We carried on down the other side enjoying
the scenery and eventually re-joined the A30.
I hope to go back with my camera to the hill above the Cotley Inn and
take some landscape pictures of the Somerset countryside south of Chard.
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