Lasham is a village and civil parish in the East Hampshire district of Hampshire, England. It is northwest of Alton and north of Bentworth, just off the A339 road. The parish covers an area of and has an average elevation of above sea level. The nearest railway station is Alton, southeast of the village. Lasham formerly had its own railway station, Bentworth and Lasham, on the Basingstoke and Alton Light Railway until the line's closure in 1936. According to the 2011 census, the village had a population of 176.
The earliest recorded tenant was Roger de Clere, who held the estate in 1175. He granted Lasham to his wife, Hawise de Gournay, as dower. After her death, the estate was expected to revert to Roger's brother Ralph but was instead granted to Ingram Dabernon. In 1207, the manor was divided between Walter Dabernon and Ralph de Clere, leading to the creation of two separate manors.
Ralph de Clere, a baron who opposed King John, forfeited his lands, which were granted to Ellis de Falaise in 1215. However, Henry III restored Ralph's lands in 1217. Ralph's successor, Sir Roger de Clere, sold the estate to John de Gatesden, whose daughter Margaret married John de Camoys. The Camoys family eventually lost the estate to the Prior of God's House, Portsmouth, in exchange for lands in Dorset in 1268.
In 1315, Idonea and her husband, John de Crumbwell, arranged for their half-fee in Lasham to be settled on them for life, with remainders to the Despenser family. However, in 1322, Edward II granted the estate to Robert de Baldok following the forfeiture of Roger de Clifford. By 1478, Sir Roger Lewknor held the estate under the queen as part of her castle of Odiham. The estate passed through various hands, including the Dawtrey, Pincke, Bartlett, and Blunden families, before being acquired by the Jervoise family, who remain the current lords of the manor.
The other moiety, initially assigned to Walter Dabernon in 1207, also changed ownership frequently. By 1268, it was settled on Simon de Montcuyt. John Dabernon, who succeeded Walter, granted land to Walter de Aberval in 1314. The estate eventually passed to the Hampton family, who held it until the late 15th century. The Waller family inherited the estate, and in 1576, it was sold to Sir William Kingswell. The Kingswell family held the estate until 1630, when Sir Edmund Plowden acquired it. The estate was sold to Anthony Guidott in 1705 and later passed to the Guidott family before being acquired by the Jervoise family, who remain the present lords of the manor.
The Royal Navy used the village name for a Ham class minesweeper, HMS Lasham, which was operational from 1954 to 1981.
The Basingstoke–Alton road used to pass through Lasham village but as the land to the north was needed for the west end of the main runway, the road between the Avenue and Lasham village was diverted to the west on lower ground and now by-passes the village, passing between Lasham and Bentworth just west of the old railway station. This road was made of large concrete "sets" and was built by Italian prisoners of war who were housed in a camp at Thedden Grange southwest of Bentworth.
The airfield is now a major centre for the sport of gliding and is owned by Lasham Gliding Society, which bought the land from the Ministry of Defence. The airfield is also used by a company called ATC Lasham Ltd, which services airliners, mainly made by Boeing, in hangars on the south side of the main runway.
The current Lasham parish boundary [1] is Avenue Road to the north, the A339 to the west and south (except for a small extension west to Spain Lane towards Burkham, and a line to the east between Lasham and Shalden.
Previously, for some 200 years, Lasham was part of the Herriard Park estate [2] (which still exists today to the north of the parish). The villages of Herriard and Lasham used to have the same rector, the rectory being in Lasham. Today Lasham is part of a larger CofE benefice which includes the villages of Bentworth, Lasham, Medstead and Shalden, the Rector living in Medstead.
Avenue Road. An avenue of beech trees was planted in 1809 by George Purefoy Jervoise MP, to commemorate the golden jubilee of King George III in 1810. The original avenue was one mile long but in 1942 when Lasham Airfield was constructed, some of the avenue was cut down. When the plans became known, Sir George Jeffreys MP wrote a letter of objection which was published in the London Times newspaper on 7 October 1941. The Jervoise family continue to own the land to the north of the airfield today.
Today, the A339 Alton-Basingstoke road runs to the west of the village and the B3349 Alton-Odiham road to the east. Avenue Road, mentioned above and running on the north side of Lasham Airfield, connects the A339 to the B3349 at the Golden Pot public house at the top of the hill between Alton and Odiham. [3]
Lasham Airfield
Highfield Site
Lasham parish
Transport links
Geography
Lasham and surrounding villages
External links
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