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WEYMOUTH

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V28, Page 568 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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WEYMOUTH  and

MELCOMBE REGIS, a seaport, watering-place, market
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town and municipal borough in the
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Southern
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parliamentary division of Dorsetshire, England, 142 M . S.W. by W. from
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London, on the London & South-Western and
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Great Western
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railways . Pop . (1891) 16,xoo; (1901) 19,843 . It is formed of Weymouth, a fishing town and seaport on the south-west of the Wey, and Melcombe Regis on the north-east of the
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river, the two towns being contiguous . The situation on Weymouth
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Bay, which is enclosed to the south by the Isle of Portland, and north by the eastward trend of the coast, is picturesque . An esplanade about 1 m. in length fronts the sea . To the south of the esplanade is a pier of stone on wooden piles, and the Alexandra and other public gardens are attractive . The harbour lies between the pier on the north and the spur of
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land called the Nothe on the south, and is protected by a concrete wall extending 500 ft. northward from the Nothe . The
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principal buildings are the old town-hall, the market house, the
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guildhall, the Royal Dorset Yacht Clubhouse, the theatre, the Royal Victoria Jubilee Hall, the Weymouth and Dorset eye infirmary, the Weymouth royal hospital and dispensary and the barracks . Of the numerous churches none
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dates from before the 19th century . Opposite the Royal Terrace is an equestrian statue of George III., erected in 1809 in
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commemoration of his jubilee .

A mile S.W. of Weymouth is Sandsfoot

Castle, a fort erected by Henry VIII. for the
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protection of the
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shipping . The principal exports are Portland stone, bricks and tiles and provisions, and the imports are
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coal,
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timber, garden and
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dairy produce and wine:
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Ship and boat
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building, rope and
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sail making, and
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brewing are carried on . The Great Western railway
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company maintains a
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regular service of passenger steamers to Guernsey and Jersey . The municipal borough is under a mayor, 8 aldermen and 24 councillors .
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Area, 1299 acres . Although its convenient harbour was probably used before Saxon times, and
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bronze weapons and
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Roman interments have been found, there is no evidence that Weymouth (Waimue, Waymuth) was a place of early settlement . The first mention of " that place called Weymouth" occurs in a charter of King /
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Ethelred (866-871), while it is again spoken of in a charter of King /Ethelstan (895-940) .
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Edward the
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Confessor gave the
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manor to the church of Winchester in 1042, and it remained with the prior and convent of St Swithin until the 13th century, when it passed by
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exchange to Gilbert de Clare,
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earl of Gloucester, though the vassals of the prior and convent remained exempt from dues and tronage in the
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port . Coming by
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marriage into the hands of the earls of March and Plantagenets, the manor was finally vested in the
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crown . The first charter was that granted by the prior and convent in 1252, by which Weymouthwas made a
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free borough and port for all merchants, the burgesses holding their burgages by the same customs as those of Ports-mouth and Southampton . The demand of six
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ships from the town by the king in 1324 shows its importance in the 14th century, but there is no mention of a mayor until 1467 . It is probable that the town suffered considerably at the hands of the French at the beginning of the 15th century, though in 1404 the men of Weymouth were victorious over a party which landed in the Isle of Portland .

Early in the 16th century the commercial rivalry between Weymouth and the neighbouring borough of Melcombe came to a height . Melcombe had received a charter from Edward I. in 1280 granting to its burgesses

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half the port and privileges similar to those enjoyed by the citizens of London; Edward II. in 1307-1308 granted that its men might elect for themselves two bailiffs . The date of the grant of the town at an
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annual
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fee-
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farm of 8 marks is uncertain, but in the reign of Henry VI. a commission was appointed to inspect the destruction wrought by the king's enemies on the town, with the result that the fee-farm was reduced to 20S . The continual disputes between the two boroughs led to the passing of an act of union in 1571, the new borough being incorporated under the title of the " Mayor, Bailiffs and Burgesses " by James I. in 1616; further charters were granted by Charles II. and George II . Melcombe Regis first returned two members to parliament in 1307, and Weymouth in 1319, four members being returned by the
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united boroughs until 1832, when the representation was reduced to two and ceased in 1885 . The
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medieval fairs are no longer held . As early as 1293 trade was carried on with
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Bayonne, and six years later a
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receiver of customs on wool and wool-fells is mentioned at Weymouth, while wine was imported from
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Aquitaine . In 1586
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sugar is mentioned as an import, and in 1646
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deal boards were brought here from
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Hamburg . The town suffered severely during the
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Civil War, being garrisoned by the parliamentary troops in 1642, taken by the earl of Carnarvon in 1643, and surrendered in the following
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year . The town is described as " but little " in 1733, but a few years afterwards it gained a reputation as a watering-place, and the duke of Gloucester built a house here; George III. and the royal
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family in 1789 paid Weymouth the first of a series of visits which further ensured its popularity . See H . J .

Moule, Descriptive

Catalogue of the Charters, Minute Books, and other Documents of the Borough of Weymouth and Melcome Regis, A.D . 1250 to i86o (Weymouth, 1883) ; John Hutchins,
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History and Antiquities of the County of Dorset (3rd ed., Westminster, 186o) .

End of Article: WEYMOUTH
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STANLEY JOHN WEYMAN (1855— )
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