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{{Short description|Village and parish in Hampshire, England}}
{{Cleanup bare URLs|date=September 2022}} {{Cleanup bare URLs|date=September 2022}}
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First mentioned within the c. 1550 ''Perambulation of the Manor of Alresford'' (a ] being a detailed description of the boundaries of land) as '' 'Fowremarkes' ''. The relevant excerpt details; First mentioned within the c. 1550 ''Perambulation of the Manor of Alresford'' (a ] being a detailed description of the boundaries of land) as '' 'Fowremarkes' ''. The relevant excerpt details;


<blockquote> ''"a certain empty piece of land called Fowremarkes near Bookemere and named thus because four tithings abut there mutually, that is to say, the tithings of Medsted Ropley Faryngdon & Chawton"''.<ref>Hampshire Record Office (HRO), 11M59/A1/2/4, p.117.</ref> </blockquote> <blockquote> ''"a certain empty piece of land called Fowremarkes near Bookemere and named thus because four tithings abut there mutually, that is to say, the tithings of ] ] ] & ]"''.<ref>Hampshire Record Office (HRO), 11M59/A1/2/4, p.117.</ref> </blockquote>


The 'Marks' element comes from Old English '' 'mark(e)' '' <ref>{{cite web | url=https://quod.lib.umich.edu/m/middle-english-dictionary/dictionary/MED26927/track?counter=1&search_id=12965886 | title=Mark and marke - Middle English Compendium }}</ref> meaning boundary, or border, so, Four Marks directly translates as ''Four Borders''. The 'Marks' element comes from Old English '' 'mark(e)' '' <ref>{{cite web | url=https://quod.lib.umich.edu/m/middle-english-dictionary/dictionary/MED26927/track?counter=1&search_id=12965886 | title=Mark and marke - Middle English Compendium }}</ref> meaning boundary, or border, so, Four Marks directly translates as ''Four Borders''.
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=== Prehistory=== === Prehistory===


In the ] there seems to be significant evidence of activity and settlement spread about the parish, which includes several Neolithic ] found near Headmore Farm,<ref>https://www.british-history.ac.uk/vch/hants/vol3/pp24-30</ref> and others found near Swelling Hill pond and Brislands Lane. Several arrowheads and other flint tools have been found scattered within the parish too suggesting not insignificant amounts of settlement. In the later ] three ] were constructed as graves for important members of the local community- these sit just South of Barn Lane.<ref>Hampshire Historical Environmental Records, ID: 72544</ref> Additionally some individual finds from this period have been found by hobby archaeologists near to the parish. In the ] there seems to be significant evidence of activity and settlement spread about the parish, which includes several Neolithic ] found near Headmore Farm,<ref>{{cite web | url=https://www.british-history.ac.uk/vch/hants/vol3/pp24-30 | title=Parishes: Newton Valence {{pipe}} British History Online }}</ref> and others found near Swelling Hill pond and Brislands Lane. Several arrowheads and other flint tools have been found scattered within the parish too, suggesting not insignificant amounts of settlement. In the later ] three ] were constructed as graves for important members of the local community. These sit just South of Barn Lane.<ref>Hampshire Historical Environmental Records, ID: 72544</ref> Some additional individual finds from this period have been found by hobby archaeologists near to the parish.


A pre-Roman ridgeway from the Old Sarum area, the ], crosses through Four Marks from the north following the drier southern side of the ridge and is itself crossed near the old Windmill Inn (now the Co-op store) by a summerway from Alresford and its river following the quickest, driest, ‘up-and-over’ route to the River Wey.<ref>Lorents Rathbone,Chronicle of Medstead, HRO, 32M 94/1/71</ref> A pre-Roman ridgeway from the Old Sarum area, the ], crosses through Four Marks from the north following the drier southern side of the ridge. It is itself crossed near the old Windmill Inn (now the Co-op store) by a summerway from Alresford and its river, following the quickest, driest, 'up-and-over' route to the River Wey.<ref>Lorents Rathbone,Chronicle of Medstead, HRO, 32M 94/1/71</ref>


Several features and finds dating to the ] have been found in the village over the decades- which show a densely settled and worked landscape. Evidence of settlement was uncovered by pre-construction works near to Brislands Lane, this has been reinforced by finds of pottery, loom weights and coins around Four Marks and neighbouring villages over the years. In the roman period a road built from ] then known as Venta Belgarum to ]- Londinium likely crossed through Four Marks- although this theory is not without controversy. The area around Four Marks was very active in this time with villas, farmsteads although little is known of within Four Marks except for the occasional coin. Several features and finds dating to the ] have been found in the village over the decades; these show a densely settled and worked landscape. Evidence of settlement was uncovered by pre-construction works near to Brislands Lane. This has been reinforced by finds of pottery, loom weights and coins around Four Marks and neighbouring villages over the years. In the Roman period a road was built from ], then known as Venta Belgarum, to ] (Londinium likely crossed through Four Marks), although this theory is not without controversy. The area around Four Marks was very active in this time, with villas and farmsteads, although little is known of within Four Marks except for the occasional coin.{{what|date=June 2024}}


=== Early History === === Early history ===


The area was given by King ] of the West Saxons to the bishopric at Winchester starting a chain of ecclesiastical management through to the current day. The commitment was confirmed in writing by a successor, King Ine, in A.D. 701 in a disputed charter.<ref>British Library, London, Codex Wintoniensis, Additional Manuscript 15350, folios 20v-21r, Numbers 56 and 57 (s. xii).</ref> The charter listed many local gates and watering places, mostly identifiable today, showing that the area contained important Saxon husbandry.<ref>George Beardoe Grundy, ‘The Saxon Land Charters of Hampshire with Notes on Place and Field Names’, The Archaeological Journal, No. 1, Vol. 83, 1921, pp. 55-173.</ref> In the following centuries Four Marks seems to be quite empty as the soil was not attractive enough for farmsteads and the problem of water access- the village lying on a ridge. It was because of this fact that Four Marks became the site of the commons of various neighbouring parishes- especially Ropley whose commons expanded over most of the current settlement of the village. The area was given by King ] of the West Saxons to the bishopric at Winchester, starting a chain of ecclesiastical management through to the current day. The commitment was confirmed in writing by a successor, King Ine, in A.D. 701 in a disputed charter.<ref>British Library, London, Codex Wintoniensis, Additional Manuscript 15350, folios 20v-21r, Numbers 56 and 57 (s. xii).</ref> The charter listed many local gates and watering places, mostly identifiable today, showing that the area contained important Saxon husbandry.<ref>George Beardoe Grundy, 'The Saxon Land Charters of Hampshire with Notes on Place and Field Names', The Archaeological Journal, No. 1, Vol. 83, 1921, pp. 55-173.</ref> In the following centuries Four Marks seems to be quite empty as the soil was not attractive enough for farmsteads and water access was an issue as the village lies on a ridge. It was because of this fact that Four Marks became the site of the commons of various neighbouring parishes, especially Ropley, whose commons expanded over most of the current settlement of the village.


The earliest medieval settlement in Four Marks was Lymington- likely a small farmstead which stood halfway between the railway bridge and Five Ash Pond on Lymington Bottom Road. First recorded in 1307 as ''Lenynton'' meaning the farmstead by the lime trees. This settlement disappeared by the 15th century and survives only in the lane name Lymington Bottom Road. The earliest medieval settlement in Four Marks was Lymington, likely a small farmstead, which stood halfway between the railway bridge and Five Ash Pond on Lymington Bottom Road. This was first recorded in 1307 as ''Lenynton'' meaning the farmstead by the lime trees. This settlement disappeared by the 15th century and survives only in the lane name Lymington Bottom Road.


The oldest still inhabited part of the village is the hamlet of Hawthorn, first recorded in 1424 as ''Horethornes'' <ref>Winchester College Archives, Ropley Court Rolls, 211377f4</ref> which sits north of Hawthorn Road. It saw a great deal of activity from as early as the 15th Century and has been continuously settled since the 1500s- here are also the oldest houses in Four Marks (see below) .<ref>La O Kirchner, A History of Hawthorn, Four Marks</ref> The oldest still inhabited part of the village is the hamlet of Hawthorn, first recorded in 1424 as ''Horethornes'',<ref>Winchester College Archives, Ropley Court Rolls, 211377f4</ref> which sits north of Hawthorn Road. It saw a great deal of activity from as early as the 15th century, and has been continuously settled since the 1500s. Here are also the oldest houses in Four Marks (see below).<ref>La O Kirchner, A History of Hawthorn, Four Marks</ref>


As mentioned, Four Marks referred to the meeting point of four parishes, it was, therefore, not a place, but a four-way boundary point known as a ] near the current Boundaries surgery (SU6715635272). It was marked by a ‘large white stone’ in 1759 which was reported destroyed by workmen during road construction in the 1960s. An old photograph notes its site tucked into a roadside hedge.<ref>Mills, Four Marks. Cornick, Early Memories, p. 37.</ref> As mentioned, Four Marks referred to the meeting point of four parishes. It was, therefore, not a place, but a four-way boundary point known as a ] near the current Boundaries surgery (SU6715635272). It was marked by a large white stone in 1759, which was reported destroyed by workmen during road construction in the 1960s. An old photograph notes its site tucked into a roadside hedge.<ref>Mills, Four Marks. Cornick, Early Memories, p. 37.</ref>


Apart from the accident of boundaries, 'Four Marks' for almost all its history and most of its modern times was an empty, but busy, place. People passed through, or near by, without great notice using the Roman Road, then later the King's Highway through Chawton Park Wood and beginning in the 18th century the Alton to Winchester turnpike (now the A31).<ref>26 Geo2 c.51 (1753) for ‘amending’ (repairing and widening) the roads leading from Basingstone, near Bagshot, through Frimley, Farnham and ‘from thence through Bentley, Holybourne, Alton, Chawton, Ropley, Bishop's Sutton, New Alresford and Mattingley, otherwise Mattingley Lane, to the City of Winchester (Alton Lower District)'. This Act was renewed, at least, in 1768 and 1817.</ref> The high point of the roads at about 215 metres was a chalk ridge, capped with clay and flints, lying between Telegraph Lane and the centre of Medstead.<ref>Heal, Ropley's Legacy, Chapter 11, 'The Making of Four Marks'.</ref> Rainwater flows to the north to the River Thames and, to the south, to The Solent. Under fifty inhabitants clustered away from the through road around small farms dotted along the old river bed called Lymington Bottom and, for instance, at Hawthorn, Kitfield and Kitwood.<ref>Holly Fletcher, Bournemouth University, Population Study, 2018, based on 1801-1921 Censuses</ref> Apart from the accident of boundaries, 'Four Marks' for almost all its history and most of its modern times was an empty, but busy, place. People passed through, or near by, without great notice using the Roman Road, then later the King's Highway through Chawton Park Wood, and, beginning in the 18th century the Alton to Winchester turnpike (now the A31).<ref>Act ]. c. 51 (1753) for 'amending' (repairing and widening) the roads leading from Basingstone (the ]), near Bagshot, through Frimley, Farnham and 'from thence through Bentley, Holybourne, Alton, Chawton, Ropley, Bishop's Sutton, New Alresford and Mattingley, otherwise Mattingley Lane, to the City of Winchester (Alton Lower District)'. This act was renewed, at least, in 1768 and 1817.</ref> The high point of the roads at about 215 metres was a chalk ridge, capped with clay and flints, lying between Telegraph Lane and the centre of Medstead.<ref>Heal, Ropley's Legacy, Chapter 11, 'The Making of Four Marks'.</ref> Rainwater flows to the north to the River Thames and, to the south, to the Solent. Under 50 inhabitants clustered away from the through road around small farms dotted along the old river bed called Lymington Bottom and, for instance, at Hawthorn, Kitfield and Kitwood.<ref>Holly Fletcher, Bournemouth University, Population Study, 2018, based on 1801-1921 Censuses</ref>


===Historic buildings=== ===Historic buildings===
By the 18th century Four Marks was home to several Farmsteads many of which still stand today. Below is a list of properties built prior to the 1830s: By the 18th century Four Marks was home to several farmsteads, many of which still stand today. Below is a list of properties built prior to the 1830s:

===Historic buildings===
By the 18th century Four Marks had grown in size and was home to several farmsteads, many of which still stand today. Despite the ] of some historic buildings, several have gone unlisted. Below is a list of properties built prior to the 1830s:


{| class="wikitable" {| class="wikitable"
!Name!!Date of construction!!State !Name!!Date of construction!!State
|- |-
|'''Headmore Farm''' |Headmore Farm
|1500s |1500s
|Well preserved & grade II listed <ref>Historic England List Entry Number: 1179402 https://historicengland.org.uk/listing/the-list/list-entry/1179402</ref>
|Well Preserved
|- |-
|'''Jayswood Cottage''' |Jayswood Cottage
|Circa 1680 |Circa 1680
|Well preserved & grade II listed <ref>Historic England List Entry Number: 1093956 https://historicengland.org.uk/listing/the-list/list-entry/1093956</ref>
|Well Preserved
|- |-
|'''Beech farm''' |Beech farm
|1730s |1730s
|Well Preserved |Well preserved
|- |-
|'''Keepsake cottage''' |Keepsake cottage
|1700s |1700s
|Well Preserved |Well preserved
|- |-
|'''Kitwood Farm''' |] Farm
|1700s |1700s
|Disappeared (not modern Kitwood Farm which was built in the later 1800s) |Disappeared (not modern Kitwood Farm, which was built in the later 1800s)
|- |-
|'''Brislands Farm''' |Brislands Farm
|1700s |1700s
|Disappeared |Disappeared
|- |-
|'''Windmill Inn''' |Windmill Inn
|1790s |1790s
|Burnt down and rebuilt in 1920s |Burnt down and rebuilt in 1920s
|- |-
|'''Willis Farm''' |Willis Farm
|Early 1800s |Early 1800s
|Well Preserved |Well preserved
|- |-
|'''Cobb Farm''' |Cobb Farm
|Early 1800s |Early 1800s
|Well Preserved |Well preserved
|- |-
|'''Semaphore Farm''' |Semaphore Farm
|1827 |1827
|Well preserved & grade II listed <ref>Historic England List Entry Number: 1093957 https://historicengland.org.uk/listing/the-list/list-entry/1093957</ref>
|Well Preserved
|- |-
|} |}


=== Modern History === === Modern history ===


The birth of the new village came in the years between 1894 and World War I. At least five major developers, one unidentified, descended on Four Marks intent on social improvement or plain commercial gain. Winchester College Estate conducted at least two major sales: 350 acres in Medstead and Soldridge offered in April 1894 and, in May 1912, around the main road in Four Marks.<ref>Winchester College Archives, L14/49/9, 'Copy and draft deeds and other papers relating to property in Medstead, 1864-1912.</ref> The Land Company of London held two auctions at Lymington Park Estate in 1896, offering over 140 plots with a hotel and shops on a farm bought from Charles Frederick Hemming.<ref>For example: Southend Standard and Essex Weekly Advertiser, 22/2/1894; Barking, East Ham & Ilford Advertiser, Upton Park and Dagenham Gazette, 10/8/1895; Daily Telegraph and Courier, 2/6/1896; London Evening Standard, 2/6/1896; Westminster Gazette, 10/7/1901; London Daily News, 13/7/1901; Daily Mirror, 17/5/1907, 4/11/1907; East London Observer, 3/8/1907; Tower Hamlets Independent and East End Local Advertiser, 17/8/1907; West London Observer, 18/10/1907.</ref> Lymington Park Estate surrounded Lymington Farm, a substantial set of buildings on the corner of Brislands Lane, grandly renamed Lymington Park Road for the auction, and Lymington Bottom, called Medstead Main Road. At almost the same time, William Carter, owner of Herbert Park, offered large opportunities in Alton and Kitwood Lanes. A local man, Frank Gotelee, who in 1901 had acquired much of the land in Medstead which had been accumulated in the 1850s and 60s by William Ivey, tried to sell freehold plots for development, although with less success.
The birth of the new village came in the years between 1894 and World War I. At least five major developers, one unidentified, descended on Four
Marks intent on social improvement or plain commercial gain. Winchester College Estate conducted at least two major sales: 350 acres in Medstead and Soldridge offered in April 1894 and, in May 1912, around the main road in Four Marks.<ref>Winchester College Archives, L14/49/9, ‘Copy and draft deeds and other papers relating to property in Medstead, 1864-1912.</ref> The Land Company of London held two auctions at Lymington Park Estate in 1896 offering over 140 plots with a hotel and shops on a farm bought from Charles Frederick Hemming.<ref>For example: Southend Standard and Essex Weekly Advertiser, 22/2/1894; Barking, East Ham & Ilford Advertiser, Upton Park and Dagenham Gazette, 10/8/1895; Daily Telegraph and Courier, 2/6/1896; London Evening Standard, 2/6/1896; Westminster Gazette, 10/7/1901; London Daily News, 13/7/1901; Daily Mirror, 17/5/1907, 4/11/1907; East London Observer, 3/8/1907; Tower Hamlets Independent and East End Local Advertiser, 17/8/1907; West London Observer, 18/10/1907.</ref> Lymington Park Estate surrounded Lymington Farm, a substantial set of buildings on the corner of Brislands Lane, grandly renamed Lymington Park Road for the auction, and Lymington Bottom, called Medstead Main Road. At almost the same time, William Carter, owner of Herbert Park, offered large opportunities in Alton and Kitwood Lanes. A local man, Frank Gotelee, who in 1901 acquired much of the land in Medstead which had been accumulated in the 1850s and 60s by William Ivey, tried to sell freehold plots for development although with less success.


Carter's development was initially called The Homestead Movement. Its defining characteristics were cheap, rural or semirural land suitable for market gardening or self-sufficiency, and the option of a basic house, usually single-storey ‘colonial’ style bungalows in a ‘do-it-yourself’ community. ‘Colonial’ was a trade name with the several standard designs, mostly one, two or three bedrooms with a living room and kitchen costing from £100 upwards. The higher prices also brought tile roofs instead of corrugated iron.<ref>Examples of the designs are held at the HRO, 38M48/5 with early pictures of the serried developments.</ref> Homestead's developments were sold without utilities: no clean water (use of a water tank or a well to be dug), no electricity (generator, solid fuel stoves and fireplaces, kerosene or gas lamps) and no sewerage (outside earth closet toilet). Carter's development was initially called the Homestead Movement. Its defining characteristics were cheap, rural or semirural land suitable for market gardening or self-sufficiency, and the option of a basic house, usually single-storey 'colonial' style bungalows in a 'do-it-yourself' community. 'Colonial' was a trade name with the several standard designs, mostly one, two or three bedrooms with a living room and kitchen costing from £100 upwards. The higher prices also brought tile roofs instead of corrugated iron.<ref>Examples of the designs are held at the HRO, 38M48/5 with early pictures of the serried developments.</ref> Homestead's developments were sold without utilities: no clean water (use of a water tank or a well to be dug), no electricity (generator, solid fuel stoves and fireplaces, kerosene or gas lamps) and no sewerage (outside earth closet toilet).


In the ten years to 1901, the settlement around Four Marks doubled: inhabitants to 279 and dwellings to sixty-seven, and by 1911, a further increase to 334 people and to eighty-seven homes.<ref name="Fletcher">Fletcher, Population Study.</ref> Three maps of the sales survive for Winchester College, The Land Company and for Carter's Herbert Park.<ref>Sale map, 10/6/1896, courtesy of Norman Read. HRO, 38M48/5, Herbert Park.</ref> Together, they contain 242 plots comprising an estimated 251 acres, about half the total acreage enclosed in the 1709 Ropley enclosure and on approximately the same land. The maps also cover almost every nook and cranny of the early Four Marks developments with the exception of the early bungalows on the southern side of Blackberry Lane; about twenty-three according to the 1912 map of Winchester College.<ref>Hilaire Belloc, The Road. Heal, Ropley's Legacy, Chapter 11.</ref> In the ten years to 1901, the settlement around Four Marks doubled: inhabitants to 279 and dwellings to 67, and by 1911, a further increase to 334 people and 87 homes.<ref name="Fletcher">Fletcher, Population Study.</ref> Three maps of the sales survive for Winchester College, The Land Company and for Carter's Herbert Park.<ref>Sale map, 10/6/1896, courtesy of Norman Read. HRO, 38M48/5, Herbert Park.</ref> Together, they contain 242 plots comprising an estimated 251 acres, about half the total acreage enclosed in the 1709 Ropley enclosure and on approximately the same land. The maps also cover almost every nook and cranny of the early Four Marks developments, with the exception of the early bungalows on the southern side of Blackberry Lane; about 23 according to the 1912 map of Winchester College.<ref>Hilaire Belloc, The Road. Heal, Ropley's Legacy, Chapter 11.</ref>


Within five years, the population of this small area to the south and east of the London to Winchester road had almost trebled to close to 250 people with over thirty new homes. Many new inhabitants, noted in later censuses, came from ‘London’: Battersea, Bloomsbury, Bow, Bowes Park, Camberwell, Chiswick, Ealing, Holborn, Hornsey, Islington, Kilburn, Kingston-upon-Thames, Leyton, Old Bailey, Paddington, St Pancras, Stamford Hill, Tooting, Tottenham, Tower Hamlets, Walworth, Westminster Within five years, the population of this small area to the south and east of the London to Winchester road had almost trebled to close to 250 people with over 30 new homes. Many new inhabitants, noted in later censuses, came from 'London': Battersea, Bloomsbury, Bow, Bowes Park, Camberwell, Chiswick, Ealing, Holborn, Hornsey, Islington, Kilburn, Kingston-upon-Thames, Leyton, Old Bailey, Paddington, St Pancras, Stamford Hill, Tooting, Tottenham, Tower Hamlets, Walworth, Westminster and Windsor.
and Windsor.


The modern village of Four Marks was founded at the end of the nineteenth century on little developed old commons and wastes mostly left from the 1709 Ropley enclosure. Four Marks became a parish in 1932 under Alton Rural District Council when parts of six parishes were annexed: ] (1%), ] (2%), ] (17%), ] (4%), ] (13%) and ] (64%).<ref>The Local Government Act of 1929.</ref> According to Bartholomew's Gazetteer, the village of Four Marks is the only so named place in the United Kingdom. The modern village of Four Marks was founded at the end of the nineteenth century on little developed old commons and wastes mostly left from the 1709 Ropley enclosure. Four Marks became a parish in 1932 under Alton Rural District Council when parts of six parishes were annexed: ] (1%), ] (2%), ] (17%), ] (4%), ] (13%) and ] (64%).<ref>The Local Government Act of 1929.</ref> According to ''Bartholomew's Gazetteer'', the village of Four Marks is the only so named place in the United Kingdom.


A separate development, which began slowly shortly after the turn of the century, was an entirely different example of social change. The invention of two new popular forms of transport, bicycles and motor vehicles, transformed Winchester Road along its length.<ref>Mills, Four Marks. Cornick, Early Memories.</ref> This single-carriageway was eventually dotted with flowering cherry and ornamental apple trees. In a steady growth from between the wars and into the 1950s, businesses catered for a 'mobile, fine evening and weekend pleasure pursuing population' heading for the country. Premises 'sprouted like mushrooms' providing fuel and mechanical assistance for motorists and cyclists and, with the townies who came by railway, for sustenance with general stores, road houses, wholesome refreshment rooms, small shops, cafés, the Windmill Inn, and even The Blinking Owl, a good class restaurant with a dance floor. Those smaller shops, which might otherwise have spread around the side streets with the bungalows, instead congregated prominently on Winchester Road taking best advantage of the needs of both visitors and locals. Many of the shops were made of rickety ex-Canadian Army huts.
A separate development, which began slowly shortly after the turn of the century, was an entirely different example of social change. The invention of
two new popular forms of transport, bicycles and motor vehicles, transformed Winchester Road along its length.<ref>Mills, Four Marks. Cornick, Early Memories.</ref> This single-carriageway was eventually dotted with flowering cherry and ornamental apple trees. In a steady growth from between the wars and into the 1950s, businesses catered for a ‘mobile, fine evening and weekend pleasure pursuing population’ heading for the country. Premises ‘sprouted like mushrooms’ providing fuel and mechanical assistance for motorists and cyclists and, with the townies who came by railway, for sustenance with general stores, road houses, wholesome refreshment rooms, small shops, cafés, the Windmill Inn and, even, The Blinking Owl, a good class restaurant with a
dance floor. Those smaller shops, which might otherwise have spread around the side streets with the bungalows, instead congregated prominently on Winchester Road taking best advantage of the needs of both visitors and locals. Many of the shops were made of rickety ex-Canadian Army huts.


In its current and ongoing phase from 1961, the population of Four Marks more than tripled in the next fifty years, the number of dwellings quadrupling. There were 3,893 inhabitants in 2011.<ref>Fletcher, Population Study</ref> There has been an explosion in piecemeal and large estate development in the last ten years. In its current and ongoing phase from 1961, the population of Four Marks more than tripled in the next 50 years, the number of dwellings quadrupling. There were 3,893 inhabitants in 2011.<ref>Fletcher, Population Study</ref> There has been an explosion in piecemeal and large estate development in the last ten years.{{when|date=June 2024}}


=== Crimean myth === === Crimean myth ===
Claims have been made in Misplaced Pages based on a local history that Four Marks was initially settled by returning soldiers of the Crimean War, 1853–56. The idea that a grateful government would give out land it did not own for a tiny selection of ordinary veterans uniquely in Four Marks is dubious. No supporting evidence has been found in government papers or in histories of the Crimean War. In the ten years to 1871, the population in Four Marks increased unremarkably to 139.<ref name="Fletcher" /> If the small increase had been the result of the war, it would have happened before 1861 and not ten years later. A close examination of the occupants in 1861 shows no war-weary from Sevastopol, but a less exciting handful of fertile local families who worked the land on scattered existing farms: leaseholders, agricultural labourers, carters and a shepherd. The attractive Crimean story is a myth.<ref>Jane Hurst, letter "Four Marks News", 10/2020. Heal, Ropley's Legacy, p. 197.</ref> Claims have been made based on a local history that Four Marks was initially settled by returning soldiers of the Crimean War, 1853–56. The idea that a grateful government would give out land it did not own for a tiny selection of ordinary veterans uniquely in Four Marks is dubious. No supporting evidence has been found in government papers or in histories of the Crimean War. In the ten years to 1871, the population in Four Marks increased unremarkably to 139.<ref name="Fletcher" /> If the small increase had been the result of the war, it would have happened before 1861 and not ten years later. A close examination of the occupants in 1861 shows no war-weary from Sevastopol, but a less exciting handful of fertile local families who worked the land on scattered existing farms: leaseholders, agricultural labourers, carters and a shepherd. The attractive Crimean story is a myth.<ref>Jane Hurst, letter "Four Marks News", 10/2020. Heal, Ropley's Legacy, p. 197.</ref>


== Local amenities and points of interest ==
==Four Marks School==
Prior to being made its own parish the growing population of the then hamlet; Four Marks required its own school. This was compounded by the fact that the main village school on Church Street in Ropley was far away from Four Marks. The school was largely a gift of two benefactors. Marianna Hagen of Ropley was the driving force, she bought the plot of land, part of Homestead Farm on Hawthorn Road, in 1902 from John Joseph Tomlinson, a London-based Wholesale Stationer.<ref>Hampshire Records Office, 2M85/PJ2, Conveyance of piece of land near Kitfield Farm in the parish of Ropley</ref> Tomlinson, in turn, gave the purchase price towards the cost of construction. At first, church services were held in the school until in 1908, when Hagen moved the ‘Iron Room’, a corrugated iron and timber hut from Ropley Soke to opposite Belford House where it became the mission. This chapel is still visible now and lies in a very dilapidated state. Around 1910, a social and multi-purpose Institute was formed which met in borrowed premises. A permanent building arrived in 1913 and this has since been incorporated into today's Village Hall in Lymington Bottom.


Four Marks has a large recreation ground including football, cricket, tennis courts, local bowls club and BMX ramps. The village centre has been recently refurbished, and includes a restful area surrounded by flowerbeds under the village clock. The local amenities include a chemist, a bakers with cafe, a fish and chip shop, a Chinese takeaway, an Indian restaurant, an off licence, a fine wine shop, both female and male hairdressers, Tesco and Co-op outlets, a filling station and limited free parking. The Co-op also houses the post office. There are two residential homes, a doctor's surgery,<ref>https://www.boundaries-surgery.com/</ref> a veterinary surgery<ref>https://www.cedarvet.com/</ref> and a golf course.<ref>https://www.fourmarksgolfclub.com/</ref>
== Local amenities ==
The village has its own restored ] on the ], services from which connect with the nearest national rail station {{convert|4.4|mi|km}} to the northeast, at {{stnlnk|Alton}}, although being a heritage railway it does not run commuter services.


=== Four Marks School ===
The village has a large recreation ground including football, cricket, tennis courts, local bowls club and BMX ramps. The village Centre has been recently refurbished, and includes a restful area surrounded by flowerbeds under the village clock. The local amenities include a chemist, a bakers with cafe, a fish and chip shop, a Chinese takeaway, an Indian restaurant, an off licence, a fine wine shop, both female and male hairdressers, Tesco and Co-op outlets, a filling station and limited free parking. The Co-op also houses the post office. The ] (Four Marks Primary School), is a ] school bearing the highest possible rank of "Outstanding" by OFSTED.<ref></ref> There are two residential homes, a doctor's surgery,<ref>https://www.boundaries-surgery.com/</ref> a veterinary surgery<ref>https://www.cedarvet.com/</ref> and a golf course.<ref>https://www.fourmarksgolfclub.com/</ref> The village has a historic railway station forming part of the ].
Prior to being made its own parish, the growing population of the then-hamlet of Four Marks required its own school. This was compounded by the fact that the main village school on Church Street in Ropley was far away from Four Marks.


The school was largely a gift of two benefactors. Marianna Hagen of Ropley was the driving force; she bought the plot of land, part of Homestead Farm on Hawthorn Road in 1902 from John Joseph Tomlinson, a London-based wholesale stationer.<ref>Hampshire Records Office, 2M85/PJ2, Conveyance of piece of land near Kitfield Farm in the parish of Ropley</ref> Tomlinson, in turn, gave the purchase price towards the cost of construction. At first, church services were held in the school until in 1908, when Hagen moved the 'Iron Room', a corrugated iron and timber hut, from Ropley Soke to opposite Belford House where it became the mission. This chapel is still visible now and lies in a dilapidated state.
Four Marks is situated in some of the finest unspoilt Hampshire countryside. It is about half way along the historic ] passing through the south-western fringe of the village, which links the ] at Winchester, the capital of Saxon England; to the ] at ].


Since construction the school has been expanded, including a large block built to the southeast of the old school building in the 1970s. It is a ] school, and bears the highest possible rank of "Outstanding" by OFSTED.<ref></ref>
=== Local interest ===
Steam Locomotives, restored and operated by the heritage ], run regular services between {{stnlnk|Alton}} and {{stnlnk|Alresford (Hampshire)}}, stopping at ] and ] railway stations. The line was opened in 1865 joining Alton to Winchester.<ref>Alan C Butcher, Mid-Hants railway in colour, 1996, ISBN 0-7110-2465-0.</ref> The railway company twice investigated tunnels to cut through the Four Marks ridge, but these plans were discarded because of cost. The solution was to cut a great gouge through the top of the hill at the bridge in Boyneswood Road. Medstead station was opened in 1868 with its name changing in 1937 to Medstead and Four Marks. The line provided an alternative route between London and Southampton and, besides transporting locally produced watercress, was particularly important for military traffic between the army town of Aldershot and the military embarkation port at Southampton. The line was axed in 1973 and bought by a local preservation society two years later .


=== Village hall ===
Four Marks is the home of a small brewery with its own bar ] whose beer can be found in pubs in the region.
The first village hall was built around 1910, intended as a social and multi-purpose institute was formed which met in borrowed premises.{{what|date=June 2024}} A permanent building arrived in 1913 and this has since been incorporated into today's Village Hall in Lymington Bottom.


=== Watercress Line ===
Blackberry Lane was host to an important twin-dome observatory built in 1913 by James Worthington, precocious, ‘filthy rich’ and the epitome of a new-style of aggressive amateur astronomer.<ref>Allan Chapman, The Victorian Amateur Astronomer, 'Independent Astronomical Research in Britain 1820–1920' (Gracewing, Leominster 2017)</ref><ref>R. Mosely, R.L. Waterfield and Four Marks Observatory’, BAA Journal, Vol. 98, No. 33, 1988, pp. 164–165</ref> Worthington agreed with Percival Lovell, the owner of the now revered Lowell Observatory in Flagstaff, Arizona, that there were canals on Mars built by intelligent beings.<ref>Lowell, Mars, 1896; Mars and its Canals, 1906; and Mars as the Abode of Life, 1908</ref> The observatory was sold in 1919 when the theory was disproved to great embarrassment and pulled down about 1939. The circular ground works of the buildings can be found in the back garden of the original home now called 'Observatory'.<ref>Heal, Four Marks Murders, Chapter 3, 'Pathways to Heaven'.</ref>
The village has its own restored ] on the ], services from which connect with the nearest national rail station {{convert|4.4|mi|km}} to the northeast, at {{stnlnk|Alton}}. Although being a heritage railway it does not run commuter services. Steam locomotives, restored and operated by the Watercress Line, run regular services between {{stnlnk|Alton}} and {{stnlnk|Alresford (Hampshire)}}, stopping at ] and ] railway stations. The line was opened in 1865, joining Alton to Winchester.<ref>Alan C Butcher, Mid-Hants railway in colour, 1996, ISBN 0-7110-2465-0.</ref>


The railway company twice investigated tunnels to cut through the Four Marks ridge, but these plans were discarded because of cost. The solution was to cut a great gouge through the top of the hill at the bridge in Boyneswood Road.
Telegraph Farm in Telegraph Lane was once part of an unfinished chain of semaphore stations intended to link The Admiralty in London to Plymouth to combat the threat of a French invasion. It was built in 1826 between River Hill House in Binsted and Merryfield in West Tisted. The semaphore was never used in anger and the station was made redundant in 1847. The semaphore technology was eventually replaced by a telegraph wire along the track of the railway from Alton to Alresford.<ref>Holmes, Semaphore. Cornick, Early Memories. Mills, Four Marks, pp. 25–26. Heal, Four Marks Murders, Chapter 7, 'Sending a Message'. Wyeth, Four Marks School Boy's Memories</ref>


Medstead station was opened in 1868, with its name changing in 1937 to Medstead and Four Marks. The line provided an alternative route between London and Southampton. Besides transporting locally produced watercress, it was particularly important for military traffic between the Army town of Aldershot and the military embarkation port at Southampton.
The Honourable Mrs ] was a British racing motorist and aviator, the first woman to fly around the world solo over land. Bruce
used to land her wooden, single-seat aerobatic biplane, the only ] ever built, in the field across the road from her home at Pooks Hill in Alton Lane. She was visited here, at least once, by Amy Johnson, the first woman to fly solo to Australia. Johnson and other aviator visitors all landed in the same field.<ref>The Hon. Mrs Victor, Bruce, Nine Lives Plus, Record-breaking on Land, Sea, and in the Air (Pelham, London 1977). Nancy R. Wilson, Queen of Speed, The Racy Life of Mary Petre Bruce (ELSP, Bradford on Avon 2017)</ref>


The line was axed in 1973 and bought by a local preservation society two years later.
== Literary associations ==
A surprising number of authors and others with literary associations wrote in Four Marks. Here is a current list of books known to have been written in the village:


=== Observatory ===
*David Cornick, "Early Memories of Four Marks"
Blackberry Lane was host to an important twin-dome observatory built in 1913 by James Worthington, precocious, wealthy, and the epitome of a new style of aggressive amateur astronomer.<ref>Allan Chapman, The Victorian Amateur Astronomer, 'Independent Astronomical Research in Britain 1820–1920' (Gracewing, Leominster 2017)</ref><ref>R. Mosely, R.L. Waterfield and Four Marks Observatory', BAA Journal, Vol. 98, No. 33, 1988, pp. 164–165</ref> Worthington agreed with Percival Lovell, the owner of the now revered Lowell Observatory in Flagstaff, Arizona, that there were canals on Mars built by intelligent beings.<ref>Lowell, Mars, 1896; Mars and its Canals, 1906; and Mars as the Abode of Life, 1908</ref> The observatory was sold in 1919 when the theory was disproved to great embarrassment, and was pulled down about 1939. The circular ground works of the buildings can be found in the back garden of the original home now called 'Observatory'.<ref>Heal, Four Marks Murders, Chapter 3, 'Pathways to Heaven'.</ref>
*], world best selling author of books on mathematics including "School Certificate Algebra" (1958)
*Chris Heal, "Sound of Hunger" (2018), "Disappearing" (2019), "Reappearing" (2020), "The Four Marks Murders" (2020), "Ropley's Legacy" (2021) <ref>https://www.candspublishing.org.uk/</ref>
*], "Murder by Night" (1939) among some forty light comedy and detective novels
*W. C. H. Hudson, "Myself When Young, Memoirs of a Tea Planter" (2001)
*Emmanuel La O Kirchner, A History of Hawthorn Four Marks (2023)
*Betty Mills, "Four Marks, its Life and Origins" (1995)
*], "The Vatican and the War in Europe" (1940) among dozens of books on Irish political figures
*], illustrator of many books like children's author ]’s "The Flying Submarine" (1912)
*Gerald Wyeth, "Four Marks School Boy's Memories"


== Media == === Semaphore ===
Telegraph Farm in Telegraph Lane was once part of an unfinished chain of ] stations intended to link the Admiralty in London to Plymouth to combat the threat of a French invasion in the wake of the ]. It was built in 1826 between River Hill House in ] and Merryfield in ]. The semaphore was never used in anger and the station was made redundant in 1847. The semaphore technology was eventually replaced by a telegraph wire along the track of the railway from Alton to Alresford.<ref>Holmes, Semaphore. Cornick, Early Memories. Mills, Four Marks, pp. 25–26. Heal, Four Marks Murders, Chapter 7, 'Sending a Message'. Wyeth, Four Marks School Boy's Memories</ref> Its name comes from the fact that the semaphore technology was also known as telegraph at the time.
The local newspapers are the Alton Herald and the ]. Both are published weekly. The Alton Herald regularly features articles about Four Marks.


=== Mildred Bruce ===
The village has a volunteer-produced monthly magazine, the Four Marks News.
The Honourable Mrs ] was a British racing motorist and aviator, the first woman to fly around the world solo over land. Bruce used to land her wooden, single-seat aerobatic biplane, the only ] ever built, in the field across the road from her home at Pooks Hill in Alton Lane. She was visited here, at least once, by ], the first woman to fly solo to Australia. Johnson and other aviator visitors all landed in the same field.<ref>The Hon. Mrs Victor, Bruce, Nine Lives Plus, Record-breaking on Land, Sea, and in the Air (Pelham, London 1977). Nancy R. Wilson, Queen of Speed, The Racy Life of Mary Petre Bruce (ELSP, Bradford on Avon 2017)</ref>


=== Triple fff ===
] is the local Radio station on 101.6FM with a transmitter based in Four Marks, the service is relayed from the Southampton area.
Four Marks is the home of a small brewery with its own bar, ], whose beer can be found in pubs in the region.


==Notable people==
] is the local BBC service and ] is the local ITV service. The BBC Local Radio service for the area is ]. All services are broadcasting from the Southampton area.
*], aviator, lived in Four Marks on Alton Lane
*], mathematician, lived in Four Marks
*], creator of ], frequently visited ''The Boynes'' near Four Marks Station in ]. <ref>Meynell, V. (1947) Letters of J. M. Barrie. New York: Charles Scribner's Sons. Available at: https://archive.org/details/lettersofjamemba0000barr</ref> According to local belief he was supposedly inspired to create ] by a small pond in the back garden of this property.
*], political journalist and historian
*], author, lived in Four Marks
*], award winning illustrator, lives on lymington bottom in Four Marks


=== References === == Literary associations ==
A surprising number of authors and others with literary associations wrote in Four Marks. Here is a current list of books known to have been written in the village:
{{reflist}}


*David Cornick, ''Early Memories of Four Marks''
=== Further reading ===
*], world best selling author of books on mathematics including ''School Certificate Algebra'' (1958)
Cornick, David, ''Early Memories of Four Marks'' (No publisher, undated).
*Chris Heal, ''Sound of Hunger'' (2018), ''Disappearing'' (2019), ''Reappearing'' (2020), ''The Four Marks Murders'' (2020), ''Ropley's Legacy'' (2021) <ref>https://www.candspublishing.org.uk/</ref>
*], ''Murder by Night'' (1939), among some 40 light comedy and detective novels
*W. C. H. Hudson, ''Myself When Young, Memoirs of a Tea Planter'' (2001)
*Emmanuel La O Kirchner, ''A History of Hawthorn Four Marks'' (2023)
*Betty Mills, ''Four Marks, its Life and Origins'' (1995)
*], ''The Vatican and the War in Europe'' (1940), among dozens of books on Irish political figures
*John De Walton, illustrator of many books, such as children's author ]'s ''The Flying Submarine'' (1912)
*Gerald Wyeth, ''Four Marks School Boy's Memories''


== Media ==
Heal, Chris, ''The Four Marks Murders'', {{ISBN|978-1-9161944-2-7}} (Chattaway and Spottiswood, 2020, 2nd edition 2021).
The village has a volunteer-produced monthly magazine, the ''Four Marks News'' which has been active since 1973.<ref>{{cite web | url=https://www.fourmarksnews.co.uk/aboutus.php | title=Four Marks News &#124; About Us }}</ref>


The local newspapers are the ''Alton Herald'' and the '']''. Both are published weekly. The ''Herald'' regularly features articles about Four Marks.
Heal, Chris, ''Ropley's Legacy'', {{ISBN|978-1-9161944-3-4}} (Chattaway and Spottiswood, 2021).


] is the local Radio station on 101.6FM with a transmitter based in Four Marks. The service is relayed from the Southampton area.
Holmes, T.W., ''The Semaphore, The Story of the Admiralty-to-Portsmouth Shutter Telegraph and Semaphore Lines 1796 to 1847'' (Stockwell 1983).


] is the local BBC service, and ] is the local ITV service. The BBC Local Radio service for the area is ]. All services are broadcast from the Southampton area.
Mills, Betty, ''Four Marks: Its Life and Origins'', 1995, {{ISBN|978-0-9526603-0-9}}.


=== References ===
Scotland, Campbell E., ''Exploring Four Marks and the surrounding Countryside'' (Four Marks News, second edition 2013).
{{reflist}}


=== Further reading ===
Wyeth, Gerald, ''Four Marks School Boy's Memories'' (No publisher, undated).
* Cornick, David, ''Early Memories of Four Marks'' (no publisher, undated).
* Heal, Chris, ''The Four Marks Murders'', {{ISBN|978-1-9161944-2-7}} (Chattaway and Spottiswood, 2020, 2nd edition 2021).
* Heal, Chris, ''Ropley's Legacy'', {{ISBN|978-1-9161944-3-4}} (Chattaway and Spottiswood, 2021).
* Holmes, T.W., ''The Semaphore, The Story of the Admiralty-to-Portsmouth Shutter Telegraph and Semaphore Lines 1796 to 1847'' (Stockwell 1983).
* Mills, Betty, ''Four Marks: Its Life and Origins'', 1995, {{ISBN|978-0-9526603-0-9}}.
* Scotland, Campbell E., ''Exploring Four Marks and the surrounding Countryside'' (Four Marks News, second edition 2013).
* Wyeth, Gerald, ''Four Marks School Boy's Memories'' (no publisher, undated).


=== External links === === External links ===
{{Commons category|Four Marks}} {{Commons category|Four Marks}}
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{{Geographic location {{Geographic location
|title = '''Nearest Settlements''' |title = '''Nearest settlements'''
|Centre = Four Marks |Centre = Four Marks
|North = ] |North = ]

Latest revision as of 05:42, 13 December 2024

Village and parish in Hampshire, England
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Human settlement in England
Four Marks
Medstead & Four Marks Station
Four Marks is located in HampshireFour MarksFour MarksLocation within Hampshire
Population4,799 
OS grid referenceSU669351
Civil parish
  • Four Marks
District
Shire county
Region
CountryEngland
Sovereign stateUnited Kingdom
Post townALTON
Postcode districtGU34
Dialling code01420
PoliceHampshire and Isle of Wight
FireHampshire and Isle of Wight
AmbulanceSouth Central
UK Parliament
List of places
UK
England
Hampshire
51°06′40″N 1°02′38″W / 51.111°N 1.044°W / 51.111; -1.044

Four Marks is a village and civil parish in the East Hampshire district of Hampshire, England. It is 4.4 miles (7.1 km) southwest of Alton, on the A31 road. It is situated on the borders of the South Downs National Park on the Pilgrims' Way that leads from Winchester to Canterbury. It contains within it the medieval hamlets of Kitwood, Hawthorn and Lymington, although now the whole parish is relatively closely settled.

Etymology

First mentioned within the c. 1550 Perambulation of the Manor of Alresford (a Perambulation being a detailed description of the boundaries of land) as 'Fowremarkes' . The relevant excerpt details;

"a certain empty piece of land called Fowremarkes near Bookemere and named thus because four tithings abut there mutually, that is to say, the tithings of Medsted Ropley Faryngdon & Chawton".

The 'Marks' element comes from Old English 'mark(e)' meaning boundary, or border, so, Four Marks directly translates as Four Borders.

History

Prehistory

In the New Stone Age there seems to be significant evidence of activity and settlement spread about the parish, which includes several Neolithic polished axeheads found near Headmore Farm, and others found near Swelling Hill pond and Brislands Lane. Several arrowheads and other flint tools have been found scattered within the parish too, suggesting not insignificant amounts of settlement. In the later Bronze Age three barrows were constructed as graves for important members of the local community. These sit just South of Barn Lane. Some additional individual finds from this period have been found by hobby archaeologists near to the parish.

A pre-Roman ridgeway from the Old Sarum area, the Lunway, crosses through Four Marks from the north following the drier southern side of the ridge. It is itself crossed near the old Windmill Inn (now the Co-op store) by a summerway from Alresford and its river, following the quickest, driest, 'up-and-over' route to the River Wey.

Several features and finds dating to the Iron Age have been found in the village over the decades; these show a densely settled and worked landscape. Evidence of settlement was uncovered by pre-construction works near to Brislands Lane. This has been reinforced by finds of pottery, loom weights and coins around Four Marks and neighbouring villages over the years. In the Roman period a road was built from Winchester, then known as Venta Belgarum, to London (Londinium likely crossed through Four Marks), although this theory is not without controversy. The area around Four Marks was very active in this time, with villas and farmsteads, although little is known of within Four Marks except for the occasional coin.

Early history

The area was given by King Cenwalh of the West Saxons to the bishopric at Winchester, starting a chain of ecclesiastical management through to the current day. The commitment was confirmed in writing by a successor, King Ine, in A.D. 701 in a disputed charter. The charter listed many local gates and watering places, mostly identifiable today, showing that the area contained important Saxon husbandry. In the following centuries Four Marks seems to be quite empty as the soil was not attractive enough for farmsteads and water access was an issue as the village lies on a ridge. It was because of this fact that Four Marks became the site of the commons of various neighbouring parishes, especially Ropley, whose commons expanded over most of the current settlement of the village.

The earliest medieval settlement in Four Marks was Lymington, likely a small farmstead, which stood halfway between the railway bridge and Five Ash Pond on Lymington Bottom Road. This was first recorded in 1307 as Lenynton meaning the farmstead by the lime trees. This settlement disappeared by the 15th century and survives only in the lane name Lymington Bottom Road.

The oldest still inhabited part of the village is the hamlet of Hawthorn, first recorded in 1424 as Horethornes, which sits north of Hawthorn Road. It saw a great deal of activity from as early as the 15th century, and has been continuously settled since the 1500s. Here are also the oldest houses in Four Marks (see below).

As mentioned, Four Marks referred to the meeting point of four parishes. It was, therefore, not a place, but a four-way boundary point known as a quadripoint near the current Boundaries surgery (SU6715635272). It was marked by a large white stone in 1759, which was reported destroyed by workmen during road construction in the 1960s. An old photograph notes its site tucked into a roadside hedge.

Apart from the accident of boundaries, 'Four Marks' for almost all its history and most of its modern times was an empty, but busy, place. People passed through, or near by, without great notice using the Roman Road, then later the King's Highway through Chawton Park Wood, and, beginning in the 18th century the Alton to Winchester turnpike (now the A31). The high point of the roads at about 215 metres was a chalk ridge, capped with clay and flints, lying between Telegraph Lane and the centre of Medstead. Rainwater flows to the north to the River Thames and, to the south, to the Solent. Under 50 inhabitants clustered away from the through road around small farms dotted along the old river bed called Lymington Bottom and, for instance, at Hawthorn, Kitfield and Kitwood.

Historic buildings

By the 18th century Four Marks was home to several farmsteads, many of which still stand today. Below is a list of properties built prior to the 1830s:

Historic buildings

By the 18th century Four Marks had grown in size and was home to several farmsteads, many of which still stand today. Despite the listing of some historic buildings, several have gone unlisted. Below is a list of properties built prior to the 1830s:

Name Date of construction State
Headmore Farm 1500s Well preserved & grade II listed
Jayswood Cottage Circa 1680 Well preserved & grade II listed
Beech farm 1730s Well preserved
Keepsake cottage 1700s Well preserved
Kitwood Farm 1700s Disappeared (not modern Kitwood Farm, which was built in the later 1800s)
Brislands Farm 1700s Disappeared
Windmill Inn 1790s Burnt down and rebuilt in 1920s
Willis Farm Early 1800s Well preserved
Cobb Farm Early 1800s Well preserved
Semaphore Farm 1827 Well preserved & grade II listed

Modern history

The birth of the new village came in the years between 1894 and World War I. At least five major developers, one unidentified, descended on Four Marks intent on social improvement or plain commercial gain. Winchester College Estate conducted at least two major sales: 350 acres in Medstead and Soldridge offered in April 1894 and, in May 1912, around the main road in Four Marks. The Land Company of London held two auctions at Lymington Park Estate in 1896, offering over 140 plots with a hotel and shops on a farm bought from Charles Frederick Hemming. Lymington Park Estate surrounded Lymington Farm, a substantial set of buildings on the corner of Brislands Lane, grandly renamed Lymington Park Road for the auction, and Lymington Bottom, called Medstead Main Road. At almost the same time, William Carter, owner of Herbert Park, offered large opportunities in Alton and Kitwood Lanes. A local man, Frank Gotelee, who in 1901 had acquired much of the land in Medstead which had been accumulated in the 1850s and 60s by William Ivey, tried to sell freehold plots for development, although with less success.

Carter's development was initially called the Homestead Movement. Its defining characteristics were cheap, rural or semirural land suitable for market gardening or self-sufficiency, and the option of a basic house, usually single-storey 'colonial' style bungalows in a 'do-it-yourself' community. 'Colonial' was a trade name with the several standard designs, mostly one, two or three bedrooms with a living room and kitchen costing from £100 upwards. The higher prices also brought tile roofs instead of corrugated iron. Homestead's developments were sold without utilities: no clean water (use of a water tank or a well to be dug), no electricity (generator, solid fuel stoves and fireplaces, kerosene or gas lamps) and no sewerage (outside earth closet toilet).

In the ten years to 1901, the settlement around Four Marks doubled: inhabitants to 279 and dwellings to 67, and by 1911, a further increase to 334 people and 87 homes. Three maps of the sales survive for Winchester College, The Land Company and for Carter's Herbert Park. Together, they contain 242 plots comprising an estimated 251 acres, about half the total acreage enclosed in the 1709 Ropley enclosure and on approximately the same land. The maps also cover almost every nook and cranny of the early Four Marks developments, with the exception of the early bungalows on the southern side of Blackberry Lane; about 23 according to the 1912 map of Winchester College.

Within five years, the population of this small area to the south and east of the London to Winchester road had almost trebled to close to 250 people with over 30 new homes. Many new inhabitants, noted in later censuses, came from 'London': Battersea, Bloomsbury, Bow, Bowes Park, Camberwell, Chiswick, Ealing, Holborn, Hornsey, Islington, Kilburn, Kingston-upon-Thames, Leyton, Old Bailey, Paddington, St Pancras, Stamford Hill, Tooting, Tottenham, Tower Hamlets, Walworth, Westminster and Windsor.

The modern village of Four Marks was founded at the end of the nineteenth century on little developed old commons and wastes mostly left from the 1709 Ropley enclosure. Four Marks became a parish in 1932 under Alton Rural District Council when parts of six parishes were annexed: Chawton (1%), East Tisted (2%), Farringdon (17%), Medstead (4%), Newton Valence (13%) and Ropley (64%). According to Bartholomew's Gazetteer, the village of Four Marks is the only so named place in the United Kingdom.

A separate development, which began slowly shortly after the turn of the century, was an entirely different example of social change. The invention of two new popular forms of transport, bicycles and motor vehicles, transformed Winchester Road along its length. This single-carriageway was eventually dotted with flowering cherry and ornamental apple trees. In a steady growth from between the wars and into the 1950s, businesses catered for a 'mobile, fine evening and weekend pleasure pursuing population' heading for the country. Premises 'sprouted like mushrooms' providing fuel and mechanical assistance for motorists and cyclists and, with the townies who came by railway, for sustenance with general stores, road houses, wholesome refreshment rooms, small shops, cafés, the Windmill Inn, and even The Blinking Owl, a good class restaurant with a dance floor. Those smaller shops, which might otherwise have spread around the side streets with the bungalows, instead congregated prominently on Winchester Road taking best advantage of the needs of both visitors and locals. Many of the shops were made of rickety ex-Canadian Army huts.

In its current and ongoing phase from 1961, the population of Four Marks more than tripled in the next 50 years, the number of dwellings quadrupling. There were 3,893 inhabitants in 2011. There has been an explosion in piecemeal and large estate development in the last ten years.

Crimean myth

Claims have been made based on a local history that Four Marks was initially settled by returning soldiers of the Crimean War, 1853–56. The idea that a grateful government would give out land it did not own for a tiny selection of ordinary veterans uniquely in Four Marks is dubious. No supporting evidence has been found in government papers or in histories of the Crimean War. In the ten years to 1871, the population in Four Marks increased unremarkably to 139. If the small increase had been the result of the war, it would have happened before 1861 and not ten years later. A close examination of the occupants in 1861 shows no war-weary from Sevastopol, but a less exciting handful of fertile local families who worked the land on scattered existing farms: leaseholders, agricultural labourers, carters and a shepherd. The attractive Crimean story is a myth.

Local amenities and points of interest

Four Marks has a large recreation ground including football, cricket, tennis courts, local bowls club and BMX ramps. The village centre has been recently refurbished, and includes a restful area surrounded by flowerbeds under the village clock. The local amenities include a chemist, a bakers with cafe, a fish and chip shop, a Chinese takeaway, an Indian restaurant, an off licence, a fine wine shop, both female and male hairdressers, Tesco and Co-op outlets, a filling station and limited free parking. The Co-op also houses the post office. There are two residential homes, a doctor's surgery, a veterinary surgery and a golf course.

Four Marks School

Prior to being made its own parish, the growing population of the then-hamlet of Four Marks required its own school. This was compounded by the fact that the main village school on Church Street in Ropley was far away from Four Marks.

The school was largely a gift of two benefactors. Marianna Hagen of Ropley was the driving force; she bought the plot of land, part of Homestead Farm on Hawthorn Road in 1902 from John Joseph Tomlinson, a London-based wholesale stationer. Tomlinson, in turn, gave the purchase price towards the cost of construction. At first, church services were held in the school until in 1908, when Hagen moved the 'Iron Room', a corrugated iron and timber hut, from Ropley Soke to opposite Belford House where it became the mission. This chapel is still visible now and lies in a dilapidated state.

Since construction the school has been expanded, including a large block built to the southeast of the old school building in the 1970s. It is a Church of England school, and bears the highest possible rank of "Outstanding" by OFSTED.

Village hall

The first village hall was built around 1910, intended as a social and multi-purpose institute was formed which met in borrowed premises. A permanent building arrived in 1913 and this has since been incorporated into today's Village Hall in Lymington Bottom.

Watercress Line

The village has its own restored railway station on the Watercress Line, services from which connect with the nearest national rail station 4.4 miles (7.1 km) to the northeast, at Alton. Although being a heritage railway it does not run commuter services. Steam locomotives, restored and operated by the Watercress Line, run regular services between Alton and Alresford (Hampshire), stopping at Medstead and Four Marks and Ropley railway stations. The line was opened in 1865, joining Alton to Winchester.

The railway company twice investigated tunnels to cut through the Four Marks ridge, but these plans were discarded because of cost. The solution was to cut a great gouge through the top of the hill at the bridge in Boyneswood Road.

Medstead station was opened in 1868, with its name changing in 1937 to Medstead and Four Marks. The line provided an alternative route between London and Southampton. Besides transporting locally produced watercress, it was particularly important for military traffic between the Army town of Aldershot and the military embarkation port at Southampton.

The line was axed in 1973 and bought by a local preservation society two years later.

Observatory

Blackberry Lane was host to an important twin-dome observatory built in 1913 by James Worthington, precocious, wealthy, and the epitome of a new style of aggressive amateur astronomer. Worthington agreed with Percival Lovell, the owner of the now revered Lowell Observatory in Flagstaff, Arizona, that there were canals on Mars built by intelligent beings. The observatory was sold in 1919 when the theory was disproved to great embarrassment, and was pulled down about 1939. The circular ground works of the buildings can be found in the back garden of the original home now called 'Observatory'.

Semaphore

Telegraph Farm in Telegraph Lane was once part of an unfinished chain of semaphore telegraph stations intended to link the Admiralty in London to Plymouth to combat the threat of a French invasion in the wake of the Napoleonic Wars. It was built in 1826 between River Hill House in Binsted and Merryfield in West Tisted. The semaphore was never used in anger and the station was made redundant in 1847. The semaphore technology was eventually replaced by a telegraph wire along the track of the railway from Alton to Alresford. Its name comes from the fact that the semaphore technology was also known as telegraph at the time.

Mildred Bruce

The Honourable Mrs Mildred Bruce was a British racing motorist and aviator, the first woman to fly around the world solo over land. Bruce used to land her wooden, single-seat aerobatic biplane, the only Miles Satyr ever built, in the field across the road from her home at Pooks Hill in Alton Lane. She was visited here, at least once, by Amy Johnson, the first woman to fly solo to Australia. Johnson and other aviator visitors all landed in the same field.

Triple fff

Four Marks is the home of a small brewery with its own bar, Triple fff Brewery, whose beer can be found in pubs in the region.

Notable people

Literary associations

A surprising number of authors and others with literary associations wrote in Four Marks. Here is a current list of books known to have been written in the village:

  • David Cornick, Early Memories of Four Marks
  • C. V. Durell, world best selling author of books on mathematics including School Certificate Algebra (1958)
  • Chris Heal, Sound of Hunger (2018), Disappearing (2019), Reappearing (2020), The Four Marks Murders (2020), Ropley's Legacy (2021)
  • Jessie Louisa Rickard, Murder by Night (1939), among some 40 light comedy and detective novels
  • W. C. H. Hudson, Myself When Young, Memoirs of a Tea Planter (2001)
  • Emmanuel La O Kirchner, A History of Hawthorn Four Marks (2023)
  • Betty Mills, Four Marks, its Life and Origins (1995)
  • Denis Rolleston Gwynn, The Vatican and the War in Europe (1940), among dozens of books on Irish political figures
  • John De Walton, illustrator of many books, such as children's author Percy F. Westerman's The Flying Submarine (1912)
  • Gerald Wyeth, Four Marks School Boy's Memories

Media

The village has a volunteer-produced monthly magazine, the Four Marks News which has been active since 1973.

The local newspapers are the Alton Herald and the Hampshire Chronicle. Both are published weekly. The Herald regularly features articles about Four Marks.

The Breeze is the local Radio station on 101.6FM with a transmitter based in Four Marks. The service is relayed from the Southampton area.

BBC South is the local BBC service, and ITV Meridian is the local ITV service. The BBC Local Radio service for the area is BBC Solent. All services are broadcast from the Southampton area.

References

  1. "Pilgrim's Way".
  2. Hampshire Record Office (HRO), 11M59/A1/2/4, p.117.
  3. "Mark and marke - Middle English Compendium".
  4. "Parishes: Newton Valence | British History Online".
  5. Hampshire Historical Environmental Records, ID: 72544
  6. Lorents Rathbone,Chronicle of Medstead, HRO, 32M 94/1/71
  7. British Library, London, Codex Wintoniensis, Additional Manuscript 15350, folios 20v-21r, Numbers 56 and 57 (s. xii).
  8. George Beardoe Grundy, 'The Saxon Land Charters of Hampshire with Notes on Place and Field Names', The Archaeological Journal, No. 1, Vol. 83, 1921, pp. 55-173.
  9. Winchester College Archives, Ropley Court Rolls, 211377f4
  10. La O Kirchner, A History of Hawthorn, Four Marks
  11. Mills, Four Marks. Cornick, Early Memories, p. 37.
  12. Act 26 Geo. 2. c. 51 (1753) for 'amending' (repairing and widening) the roads leading from Basingstone (the Jolly Farmer), near Bagshot, through Frimley, Farnham and 'from thence through Bentley, Holybourne, Alton, Chawton, Ropley, Bishop's Sutton, New Alresford and Mattingley, otherwise Mattingley Lane, to the City of Winchester (Alton Lower District)'. This act was renewed, at least, in 1768 and 1817.
  13. Heal, Ropley's Legacy, Chapter 11, 'The Making of Four Marks'.
  14. Holly Fletcher, Bournemouth University, Population Study, 2018, based on 1801-1921 Censuses
  15. Historic England List Entry Number: 1179402 https://historicengland.org.uk/listing/the-list/list-entry/1179402
  16. Historic England List Entry Number: 1093956 https://historicengland.org.uk/listing/the-list/list-entry/1093956
  17. Historic England List Entry Number: 1093957 https://historicengland.org.uk/listing/the-list/list-entry/1093957
  18. Winchester College Archives, L14/49/9, 'Copy and draft deeds and other papers relating to property in Medstead, 1864-1912.
  19. For example: Southend Standard and Essex Weekly Advertiser, 22/2/1894; Barking, East Ham & Ilford Advertiser, Upton Park and Dagenham Gazette, 10/8/1895; Daily Telegraph and Courier, 2/6/1896; London Evening Standard, 2/6/1896; Westminster Gazette, 10/7/1901; London Daily News, 13/7/1901; Daily Mirror, 17/5/1907, 4/11/1907; East London Observer, 3/8/1907; Tower Hamlets Independent and East End Local Advertiser, 17/8/1907; West London Observer, 18/10/1907.
  20. Examples of the designs are held at the HRO, 38M48/5 with early pictures of the serried developments.
  21. ^ Fletcher, Population Study.
  22. Sale map, 10/6/1896, courtesy of Norman Read. HRO, 38M48/5, Herbert Park.
  23. Hilaire Belloc, The Road. Heal, Ropley's Legacy, Chapter 11.
  24. The Local Government Act of 1929.
  25. Mills, Four Marks. Cornick, Early Memories.
  26. Fletcher, Population Study
  27. Jane Hurst, letter "Four Marks News", 10/2020. Heal, Ropley's Legacy, p. 197.
  28. https://www.boundaries-surgery.com/
  29. https://www.cedarvet.com/
  30. https://www.fourmarksgolfclub.com/
  31. Hampshire Records Office, 2M85/PJ2, Conveyance of piece of land near Kitfield Farm in the parish of Ropley
  32. Ofsted | Four Marks Church of England Primary School
  33. Alan C Butcher, Mid-Hants railway in colour, 1996, ISBN 0-7110-2465-0.
  34. Allan Chapman, The Victorian Amateur Astronomer, 'Independent Astronomical Research in Britain 1820–1920' (Gracewing, Leominster 2017)
  35. R. Mosely, R.L. Waterfield and Four Marks Observatory', BAA Journal, Vol. 98, No. 33, 1988, pp. 164–165
  36. Lowell, Mars, 1896; Mars and its Canals, 1906; and Mars as the Abode of Life, 1908
  37. Heal, Four Marks Murders, Chapter 3, 'Pathways to Heaven'.
  38. Holmes, Semaphore. Cornick, Early Memories. Mills, Four Marks, pp. 25–26. Heal, Four Marks Murders, Chapter 7, 'Sending a Message'. Wyeth, Four Marks School Boy's Memories
  39. The Hon. Mrs Victor, Bruce, Nine Lives Plus, Record-breaking on Land, Sea, and in the Air (Pelham, London 1977). Nancy R. Wilson, Queen of Speed, The Racy Life of Mary Petre Bruce (ELSP, Bradford on Avon 2017)
  40. Meynell, V. (1947) Letters of J. M. Barrie. New York: Charles Scribner's Sons. Available at: https://archive.org/details/lettersofjamemba0000barr
  41. https://www.candspublishing.org.uk/
  42. "Four Marks News | About Us".

Further reading

  • Cornick, David, Early Memories of Four Marks (no publisher, undated).
  • Heal, Chris, The Four Marks Murders, ISBN 978-1-9161944-2-7 (Chattaway and Spottiswood, 2020, 2nd edition 2021).
  • Heal, Chris, Ropley's Legacy, ISBN 978-1-9161944-3-4 (Chattaway and Spottiswood, 2021).
  • Holmes, T.W., The Semaphore, The Story of the Admiralty-to-Portsmouth Shutter Telegraph and Semaphore Lines 1796 to 1847 (Stockwell 1983).
  • Mills, Betty, Four Marks: Its Life and Origins, 1995, ISBN 978-0-9526603-0-9.
  • Scotland, Campbell E., Exploring Four Marks and the surrounding Countryside (Four Marks News, second edition 2013).
  • Wyeth, Gerald, Four Marks School Boy's Memories (no publisher, undated).

External links

Nearest settlements
Bighton Medstead Alton
Soldridge
New Alresford
Four Marks Lower Farringdon
Ropley West Tisted East Tisted
Towns, villages and hamlets in the East Hampshire district
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