Ashington, Dorset

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Ashington
Ashington, Lady Wimborne Cottages - geograph.org.uk - 1923188.jpg
View down Ashington Lane
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Ashington
Location within Dorset
OS grid reference SZ0098
Unitary authority
Ceremonial county
Region
Country England
Sovereign state United Kingdom
Post town WIMBORNE
Postcode district BH21
Dialling code 01202
Police Dorset
Fire Dorset and Wiltshire
Ambulance South Western
UK Parliament
List of places
UK
England
Dorset
50°47′03″N2°00′00″W / 50.7843°N 02.0000°W / 50.7843; -02.0000

Ashington is a hamlet in Dorset, England. It is in the unitary authority of Bournemouth, Christchurch and Poole, between the villages of Corfe Mullen and Wimborne Minster.

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Named by the Saxons, 'Ashington' comes from the words aesc - ash, and tun - homestead or village. The timber of ash was commonly used by the Saxons for construction, as well as for tools and weapons in the same ways metal was more widely used by later generations. The leaves of ash trees also provided fodder for cattle and horses, and the tree was thought to have medicinal qualities, slitting an ash trunk was looked upon an answer to hernia in infants and a touch of an ash leaf was thought to cure cramp. [1]

Due to its close proximity to the South East Dorset conurbation urban area, Ashington is protected as part of the South East Dorset Green Belt. It contains parts of the Corfe Barrows Nature Park.

Ashington Mission Church

1947 Aerial Photograph of Ashington, featuring Broadstone to Corfe Mullen section of the Somerset and Dorset Joint Railway 1947 Aerial Photograph of Ashington.jpg
1947 Aerial Photograph of Ashington, featuring Broadstone to Corfe Mullen section of the Somerset and Dorset Joint Railway

Constructed in 1900, Ashington Mission church was given to the parish by Mr C. Paterson, the estate agent of the Canford Estate. [2] Upon the death of his widow Ellen Paterson, a bequest of £500 was left to the vicar, (the Reverend G.F. Richardson) and churchwardens for the maintenance of the church. [3]

After over a decade of disuse, the church was eventually sold and converted into a three bedroom house, which featured in an episode of Escape to the Country.

Ashington Mission Church as it appeared in 1993 Ashington, Methodist church - geograph.org.uk - 451844.jpg
Ashington Mission Church as it appeared in 1993

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References

  1. Palmer, Ronald K. (1973). What's in a Name?. Southampton: Southern Newspapers Ltd.
  2. "Retirement of Lord Wimborne's Estate Agent". Western Gazette . p. 5.
  3. "Handsome Bequest for Ashington Mission Church". Western Gazette .

Commons-logo.svg Media related to Ashington, Dorset at Wikimedia Commons