Online Encyclopedia

BRIDPORT

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V04, Page 561 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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BRIDPORT  , a

market
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town and municipal borough in the Western
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parliamentary division of Dorsetshire, England, 18 m . N.W. of Dorchester, on a branch of the
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Great Western railway . Pop . (1901) 5710 . It is pleasantly situated in a hilly
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district on the
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river Brit, from which it takes its name . The main
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part of the town is about a mile from the sea, with which it is connected by a winding street, ending at a quay surrounded by the fishing
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village of West
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Bay, where the railway terminates . The church of St Mary is a handsome cruciform Perpendicular
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building . The harbour is accessible only to small vessels . There is some import trade in
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flax,
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timber and
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coal . The
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principal articles of manufacture have long been
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sailcloth, cordage,
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linen and fishing-nets . The municipal borough is under a mayor, 6 aldermen and 18 councillors .
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Area, 593 acres .

Bridport was evidently of some importance before the

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Conquest, when it consisted of Ito houses rated for all the king's services and paying geld for five hides . By to86 the. number of houses had decreased to too, and of these 20 were in such a wretched condition that they could not pay geld . The town is first mentioned as a borough in the
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Pipe Roll of 1189, which states that William de Bendenges owed f9: 1os. for the ancient
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farm of Bridport, and that the men of the town owed tallage to the amount of 53s . ,od . Henry III. granted the first charter in 1252-1253, making the town a
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free borough and granting the burgesses the right to hold it at the ancient
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fee farm with an increase of 4os., and to choose two bailiffs to answer at the
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exchequer for the farm . A deed of 1381 shows that Henry III. also granted the burgesses freedom from toll . Bridport was incorporated by James I. in 1619, but Charles II. granted a new charter in 1667, and by this the town was governed until 1835 . The first existing grant of a market and fairs to Bridport is dated 1593, but it appears from the Quo Warranto Rolls that
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Edward I. possessed a market there . The town was noted for the manufacture of ropes and cables as early as 1213, and an act of parliament (21 Henry VIII.) shows that the inhabitants had " from time out of mind made the cables, ropes and hawsers for the royal
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navy and for most of the other
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ships . Bridport was represented in parliament by two members from 1395 to 1867 . In the latter
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year the number was reduced to one, and in 1885 the town was disfranchised .

End of Article: BRIDPORT
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VISCOUNT ALEXANDER HOOD BRIDPORT (1727-1814)

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