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Local Towns and Villages - Index - Devizes

Devizes is an old market town, sitting at the geographic centre of Wiltshire on the edge of the Marlborough Downs. The name Devizes, possibly came from a medieval Latin reference to the castle ad divisas ("at the boundaries").

The town first became important when the Normans built a castle here. This was destroyed by Oliver Cromwell's Parliamentary troops during the English Civil War, and a 19th century crenellated manor house now occupies the site. In 1643, at the height of the Civil War, Royalist Ralph, Lord Ralph, was marching an army from Somerset to Oxford where Charles I had his headquarters.

The Parliamentarian general Sir William Waller tried to stop him at Bath. Although the Royalists won the Battle of Lansdown Hill on July 5th, Hopton was injured by an exploding ammunition cart, and his army, short of supplies, withdrew to Devizes. Waller followed and was threatening to besiege the Royalists in the town. Hopton ordered his cavalry to make a run for it to Oxford, while he would hold the town and wait for relief.

 

Devizes was besieged and bombarded for three days, but on July 13th a relief force arrived, and Waller marched out to face it at Roundway Down. The Roundhead army was smashed, Hopton's force was relieved, and King Charles was so encouraged by the success he launched a new campaign in the West Country to take Bristol.

In the large market place stands the market cross, erected in 1814 and famous for a moral tale inscribed on it. The story goes that one Ruth Pierce, caught up in an argument over money, called on Heaven to strike her dead if she was lying. At that moment she fell down dead. A street market takes over the market place every Thursday, and the rest of the week it is a central car park.

Probably the two most notable features of the town are Wadworths Brewery, and the Kennet and Avon Canal. Wadworth's is home to 6X beer, delivered locally by the brewery's horse-drawn drays which make a popular sight around town - unless you're caught in the traffic jam behind them! The canal, linking Bristol with the River Thames at Reading, is looked after by the British Waterways Board and by the Kennet and Avon Canal Trust; the trust has its headquarters in Devizes and a canalside museum.

Most spectacular of all is the Caen Hill flight of 29 locks which lift the canal up to Devizes. Every year, at Easter, the town is the start point for the Devizes-Westminster Canoe Race. Hundreds of canoeists, from the superfit to the out-to-enjoy-themselves, set off up the canal heading for London. The Kennet and Avon joins the Thames near Reading, in Berkshire. During the rest of the year the waterway is used at a far more leisurely pace by canal boats gently puttering up and down, and by a host of wildlife.

Home of Moonrakers
Devizes also lays claim to being the home of the Moonraker legend, a story which gave Wiltshire folk the nickname of Moonrakers. The legend has it that a gang of 17th century smugglers had hidden their cargo of brandy in the town pond, and had returned under cover of darkness to recover it. As they were dragging the pond with long farm rakes, the excisemen appeared and challenged them.

The smugglers claimed the moon's reflection in the pond was a round cheese, and they were trying to rake it in. The excise officers rode off laughing at the daft "moonrakers" - who promptly gathered in their haul and made good their escape.

Whatever the truth of the story, it must be said that a number of the surrounding villages also lay claim to being the birthplace of the legend.

Crop Circles
A newer legend, if that's the right word, is that of the crop circles. Whatever they are, and whatever causes them, the high downland of Wiltshire around Devizes seems to be the world centre for them.

Strange and often elaborate shapes appear in the wheat fields shortly before harvest, and bring crowds of sightseers, UFOlogists, meterologists and photographers crowding the area.

Olivers Castle, viewed from near Bromham

Military Background
For many years the town was home to the Wiltshire Regiment, a proud name in the country's military history. As one of the garrison towns on the edge of the Salisbury Plain military training area, it was also an important staging post for the various units travelling to and from exercises.

The regiment's presence in the town is still marked by street names that bear the names of battles fought by the Wiltshires around the world.

More recent regimental mergers and changes in organisation meant the military presence gradually faded away. The barracks and depots were bulldozed into industrial estates, and the final presence - the county's territorial until housed in the former regimental HQ - was ended in 1999.

It would be wrong to view Devizes purely from the historical context.

Today it is a living, breathing town with modern factories and businesses as well as its mellow old brickwork. It is home to the county police headquarters and the police helicopter, still has its own cinema (a rarity in small country towns) and boasts an annual music festival as good as any.


Devizes Town Council
www.devizes-tc.gov.uk
Moonraker
www.moonrakers.org.uk
Crop Circles
www.cropcircleconnector.com
Wiltshire Pictures
www.wiltshirepictures.co.uk

 
 


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