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Highway, Wiltshire

Highway
St Peter's church, Highway - geograph.org.uk - 334170.jpg
Former Church of St Peter, Highway
Highway is located in Wiltshire
Highway
Highway
Highway shown within Wiltshire
OS grid reference SU043745
Civil parish
Unitary authority
Ceremonial county
Region
Country England
Sovereign state United Kingdom
Post town Calne
Postcode district SN11
Dialling code 01249
Police Wiltshire
Fire Dorset and Wiltshire
Ambulance South Western
EU Parliament South West England
UK Parliament
List of places
UK
England
Wiltshire
Coordinates: 51°28′08″N 1°56′24″W / 51.469°N 1.940°W / 51.469; -1.940

Highway is a hamlet and former civil parish in Wiltshire, England, today within Hilmarton parish. The hamlet lies about 1 12 miles (2.4 km) southeast of Hilmarton village and 3 12 miles (6 km) northeast of the town of Calne.

A settlement of 15 households was recorded in the Domesday Book of 1086, and at this time most of the land was held by Malmesbury Abbey. In 1219 the manor (together with Bremhill and Foxham) was transferred to the Bishop of Salisbury, and by this time Highway was probably a chapelry of Bremhill, northwest of Calne.

The manor passed through various hands, including (from 1628) Sir John Glanville of Broad Hinton, a member of parliament who served as Speaker and as King's Serjeant. In 1936 the estate was inherited by Raymond Anthony Addington, 6th Viscount Sidmouth, and continues today as the family seat.

Highway was a large village, with a population of 148 recorded at the 1831 census. The village declined as Calne grew, with most inhabitants having left by the early 20th century. Today Highway is a hamlet consisting of the manor house, a farm, the former church and a small number of houses.

The only listed building is Stratton Cottage, formerly two cottages and now a house, which dates from the 17th century.

Highway was a chapelry of St Martin's, Bremhill. St Peter's church was a 12th-century building but was too small for the 19th-century population, and was almost entirely rebuilt in 1866-67 to designs of William Butterfield at the expense of Archdeacon Harris, vicar of Bremhill. The new building had a simple rectangular plan with a south porch and was constructed in stone with a roof of stone slates; the western bell-turret was in timber and roofed in shingles.


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