To understand the present day A303 trunk road, you have to
understand a little bit more about the recent history of routes around
Stonehenge and the road west from London to Penzance.
The bigger road near Stonehenge didn’t initially run along the route
of what became the A344. Instead,
it led from Amesbury to Seven Barrows (Now known as the New King’s Barrows) to
Maddington, north of Shrewton, and then on to Warminster and eventually the
important trading port of Barnstaple in north Devon, via Bridgewater.
Traffic on the minor route between Amesbury and Mere, past Stonehenge and on through Winterbourne Stoke, really
picked up in the 1700s and around 250 years ago, the powers that be organised
themselves into the Amesbury Turnpike Trust, opening up the route from Mere
to Thruxton and on to London. Money raised through tolls was used to maintain these roads and provide
a profit for the turnpike trust.
It was probably around this time that the direct link to Bridgewater and
Barnstaple was broken when a section of the route was converted to parkland by
an affluent landowner – no doubt trying to recreate his idealistic view of what
the “natural” landscape should look like. Sound familiar?
Attempts were made to improve the road to Shrewton after
1761, but these were abandoned. In
1773, a brand new turnpike road was built, leading away from the Amesbury to
Mere turnpike at Stonehenge Bottom, directly to Shrewton; the route of the
recently closed A344.
In 1871, both these roads and several others in the locality
were dis-turnpiked. The reasons
for this are unclear, but by the early part of the 20th century, the
main route west from London had changed radically west of Basingstoke and looked
as follows. It began by
following the route of what was then the A30:
London
Hounslow Heath
Staines
Egham
Bagshot
Hartley Row
Basingstoke
Dummer Down
Stockbridge
Lopcombe Corner
Salisbury
Wilton
Shaftesbury
Sherborne
Yeovil
Crewkerne
Chard
Yarcombe
Honiton
Exeter.
Then along a bit of the then A38
Exeter
Kennford
Chudleigh
Ashburton
Ivybridge
Plymouth
Torpoint
Liskeard—
Bodmin
And finally back on the route of the A30
Bodmin
Fraddon
Zelah
Redruth
Hayle
Penzance
In 1936, the Trunk Roads Act came into force, intended to
develop a network of 30 fast, important and ‘modern’ routes across the UK. A bit ironic when you consider the
traffic jams of today. The route
of the current A303 through Wiltshire wasn’t even considered as part of this
review – the London to Penzance route via Salisbury was going to become the new
T3 trunk road. As it happens, the
new nomenclature, based on the French Route Nationale, was never adopted, even
though all the new signs had been prepared and so the A30 kept its status as
the main trunk route through the West Country.
In 1939, the bridge over the River Till in Winterbourne
Stoke , which now carries the A303, was built. No doubt it was designed to carry the traffic of the 1930s
on what remained a minor route to the West Country. (The Till road bridge
became a listed Grade II building on 10 October 1988). Aside from a few repairs and
modifications to the roadway over the years, the bridge remains largely
unchanged form its pre trunk road days.
This is a really important factor when considering the A303 today and it
is a point I will return to in future posts.
Nothing changed after WWII either. In 1946, a second Trunk Roads Act was passed, but again, the
London to Penzance route in Wiltshire remained unchanged.
It was only in 1958 that the A303 was born and the role of
the A30 downgraded. On April the 1st
to be exact.
Finally, in this roundup of the last 250 years of recent
history, the Amesbury bypass was opened in 1970 – ending a few hundred yards
east of Stonehenge bottom and providing us with the legacy from which we now suffer.
There is an encouraging message here, for all of us. Paths
have become tracks and tracks have reverted to downland. Downland has become road. Roads have
become turnpikes and in turn, these have been de-turnpiked. Trunk roads have been created and then
detrunked.
Nothing that has been done to the roads around Winterbourne
Stoke and Stonehenge in the past can’t be undone in the future – it has
happened time and time again before.
When it comes to the A303, there is no such word as can’t.
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