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Yetminster is a village and civil parish in the of . It lies south-west of . It is sited on the River Wriggle, a tributary of the River Yeo, and is built almost entirely of honey-coloured limestone, which gives the village an appearance reminiscent of villages. In the 2011 census the civil parish had a population of 1,105.


History
In 1086 in the Yetminster was recorded as Etiminstre; it had 76 households, 26 , of meadow and 2 mills. It was in Yetminster Hundred and the was the Bishop of Salisbury.

The parish church of St Andrew has origins, though only part of a 10th-century standing cross remains from that period;Bettey, p27 the current building dates mostly from the mid-15th century, though the was built around 1300 and the whole church was restored in 1890 and several times subsequently.

In 1300 the bishop of Salisbury founded a weekly market and three-day annual fair in the village. Records do not state whether the market thrived, but the fair continued until the 19th century.Bettey, p65 It was revived in the 20th century, and today takes place on the second Saturday in July.

, pioneer of modern chemistry who is best known for Boyle's law, left an endowment for the provision of a school for poor boys in the district; the building was constructed in 1697 and functioned as a school between 1711 and 1945.

In the early 19th century, several buildings in the village accommodated a thriving industry.Hall, J. J. (1898). James Padbury, obit. The Horological Journal October 1898, vol. 41. The British Horological Institute, Newark. Records from 1848 indicate Yetminster's degree of self-sufficiency as a community; nearly 20 trades and crafts were conducted in the village, including a glazier, a saddler, several shoe and boot makers, a tailor and a .Bettey, p134

In 1857 the Wilts, Somerset and Weymouth Railway between Weymouth and Westbury opened; it passed through Yetminster and a station was built for the village.Bettey, p86

Many of the buildings still standing in the village were built from the local limestone between the end of the 16th and the middle of the 18th centuries,

(1980). 9780709181354, Robert Hale Ltd.
resulting in an unusually unified architectural appearance. Writing in 1905 Sir Frederick Treves described the village as "probably the most consistent old-world village or townlet in the county",Treves, Sir F., Highways and Byways in Dorset, Macmillan, 1905, p321 in 1965 stated that "Yetminster ... is the nearest Dorset equivalent to the stone building of the Cotswold country",
(1983). 9780709008446, Robert Hale Ltd.
and in 1980 Roland Gant wrote that "little has come since to spoil this largish village."


Governance
Yetminster is within an electoral ward that bears its name and includes and the surrounding area. The population of this ward in the 2011 census was 1,564. The ward is one of 32 that comprise the West Dorset parliamentary constituency.


Geography
Measured directly, Yetminster village is about southwest of Sherborne, southeast of , northeast of and north-northwest of Dorchester.Bartholomew (1980) National Map Series, Sheet 4 (Dorset),

The geology of the parish comprises a narrow central band of and that crosses the parish from west to east, with to the north and south. In the southeast and northeast the Oxford clay is overlain by undifferentiated head deposits. The village is sited on the cornbrash.British Geological Survey (1973) England and Wales 1:50,000 Series, Sheet 312 (Yeovil), XE312C


Demography
In the 2011 census Yetminster civil parish had 531 dwellings, 498 households and a population of 1,105. % of residents were age 65 or over, compared to % for England as a whole.

The population of the parish in the censuses between 1921 and 2001 is shown in the table below:

Source:Dorset County Council


Amenities
Yetminster does not lie on a main road and experiences mostly local traffic. It has its own railway station (on the Heart of Wessex Line), which is sited close to the village centre. St Andrews Church has a 300-year-old faceless clock which chimes the national anthem every three hours. As well as the expected local store and pub, Yetminster still possesses a variety of village amenities and services, including a GP surgery and health centre, and a sports/social club with playing grounds and tennis court.


Notable people
Yetminster was the birthplace of (c.1736–1816), a farmer who lived in the village for much of his life, who is notable for his early experiment in inducing immunity against using deliberate inoculation with the less virulent . Unlike , a medical doctor who is given broad credit for developing the smallpox vaccine in 1796, Jesty did not publicise his findings, even though they were made some twenty years earlier in 1774. Only two people pre-dated Jesty's work.
(2002). 9780226351681, University of Chicago Press. .
*Peter C. Plett: Peter Plett und die übrigen Entdecker der Kuhpockenimpfung vor Edward Jenner. In: Sudhoffs Archiv, Zeitschrift für Wissenschaftsgeschichte, Band 90, Heft 2, Franz Steiner Verlag, Stuttgart, 2006, S. 219–232 ()
(2025). 9780226351681, University of Chicago Press. .
There is a commemorating Jesty's pioneering work at Upbury Farm, near to the church.

English group met in the Yetminster Scout Group in the mid-1950s and took their name from the village.


Notes

General references


External links
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