Forestdale hotels offers good quality hotel accommodation in the New Forest in Burley ( nr. Ringwood ), Brockenhurst and Lyndhurst
Home
Enquiries
Forestdale Little Extras
Diary of Events
New Forest Code
Hotels
Weddings
Conferences
  General Information
Attractions
  History
  Museums
  Cycling
  Road Safety
  Maps
  Nature
  Towns
  Commoners
Tourist Information
Agents

 
You are safe entering your details online. See our Security Guarantee.
 
 

History


Within the New Forest there are no large earthworks, Roman Villas, or medieval castles.

The Stone Age
The large areas of heather moorland in the New Forest were originally dense woods. Stone Age settlers cut down many trees for building and cleared the ground for agriculture.

The Bronze and Iron Ages
The change from woodland to heathland accelerated with the bronze age appearing around 100 BC. Bronze age round barrows are plentiful. The Iron Age followed. The field systems with banks and ditches are pre-Roman.

The Romans
The Romans started a thriving pottery industry. There are many sites around the Forest each with a distinctive circular earth kiln. New Forest pottery has been found at most Roman sites in southern Britain.

Angles, Saxons & Jutes
After the Romans left the Saxons & Jutes from Northern Europe invaded Britain although little has survived in evidence their language lives on in most of the local place names.

King William
In Saxon times the kings used the New Forest for hunting. When William, Duke of Normandy, invaded England in 1066 and was crowned William I, the Nova Foresta came into being and was mentioned in the Domesday Book in 1086. The New Forest was taken into Crown ownership and imposed laws to protect the the forest and deer for Royal hunting.

The Rufus Stone marks the spot when in August 1100 William II (Rufus) was killed by Walter Tyrell in a hunting accident in the Forest. The stone was erected by Earl De La Warr in 1745. At the start of the nineteenth century the stone had become damaged and was covered in iron in 1841 to protect it from further damage. 

The inscription on the Rufus Stone reads: "Here stood the oak tree on which an arrow shot by Sir Walter Tyrrell at a stag glanced and struck King William II surnamed Rufus on the breast of which storke he instantly died on the second day of August anno 1100. King William thus slain was laid on a cart belonging to one Purkess and drawn from hence to Winchester, and buried in the Cathedral Church of that City"

The Rufus Stone  can be found in the New Forest, near the village of Minstead, in the county of Hampshire, in England. The 'Stone' is situated just off the A31. From Ringwood filter off the dual carriageway and follow the signs, from London visitors must go a short distance beyond the Rufus Stone and then turn back through a gap in the central reservation back onto the A31.

17th Century
Bucklers Hard village was built on the Beaulieu river to bring timber down to the Solent to be used in the production of many Royal Navy war ships but the scale of the needs of the Royal Navy caused the siezing of thousands of acres of forest purely for timber growing.

The Act Of 1877
After many Acts of Parliaments throughout the following years in 1877 the New Forest Act, sometimes referred to as the 'Charter of the Forest' or the 'Commoners Charter' was passed.

The Act protected the old woodlands allowing only the commoners to take fuel wood right provided the ornamental trees were not cut down.

The Court of Verderers was empowered to employ staff and collect a marking fee for each head of commoners stock that roamed the Forest, their role was also to look after the New Forest commoners and made bylaws.

1914-45
Heavy felling of trees for the war were replaced by conifers. Then in 1928 the Forestry Commission assumed responsibility for bridges and drains and the clearance of conifers. This was again halted due to the arrival of the 1939-45 war. During the Second World War 10 airfields were built in and around the New Forest including Bealieu, Holmsley and Stony Cross.

1949 New Forest Act 
Membership of the Court of Verderers was increased to 10. By 1964 the main A31 was fenced. The rest of the area was still wide open with no fencing along any of the other forest roads allowing the livestock to wander freely outside the forest limits.

1964 New Forest Act
The Forest increased in size, taking Hale Purlieu in the north, Cadnam, Furzley, Half Moon, Penn, Plaitford and West Wellow commons in the north-east and the common lands of Hythe, Ibsley, Rockford and parts of Kingston Great in the west. 

1970 New Forest Act
The main provision was to correct the oversight from the 1968 Countryside Act which gave the Commission wide powers to make provision for recreational use on land they managed. 

1971
The New Forest was declared a Site of Special Scientific Interest by the Government. In November 1971 the forest became a car free area and a large number of car parks were made coupled with a series of camp sites.

1992
The Government agrees special status equivalent to a National Park.


 
Home - Enquiries - Forestdale Little Extras - Diary of Events - New Forest Code - Hotels - Weddings - Conferences - Attractions - History - Museums - Cycling - Road Safety - Maps - Nature - Towns - Commoners - Tourist Information - Agents - Links - Security/Privacy Policy - Site Map

www.forestdale.com
Ardsley House ( Barnsley, South Yorkshire) - Shillingford Bridge ( Nr. Wallingford, Oxfordshire ) - Norfolk Arms ( Arundel, West Sussex ) - Southampton Park ( Southampton, Hampshire ) - Lyndhurst Park ( Lyndhurst, Hampshire ) - Forest Park ( Brockenhurst, Hampshire ) - Burley Manor (Burley, Hampshire ) - Wessex Hotel ( Bournemouth, Dorset ) - Moorland Links ( Yelverton, nr. Plymouth, Devon ) - Pratt's ( Bath, Somerset ) - Stratton House ( Cirencester, Gloucestershire ) - Touring Hotel ( Saint-Leonard-des Bois, France ) - Carrington House (Bournemouth, Dorset) - Goddard Arms (Swindon, Wiltshire) - Royal Cambridge (Cambridge, Cambridgeshire) - Rutland Square (Nottingham, Nottinghamshire) - Arno's Manor (Bristol, Somerset) - The Roebuck (Ware, Hertfordshire) - Winchester Royal (Winchester, Hampshire)

New Forest tourist information guide