:''"Blandford" redirects here. For the town in
Massachusetts, see
Blandford, Massachusetts.''
'Blandford Forum', or 'Blandford' is a
market town on the
River Stour in
Dorset,
England. In the 2001
census the
population was 8,755 people. Blandford is the location of
North Dorset's district council, though it is situated in the far south-east of the district. Nearby is the small
village of
Blandford St Mary. Blandford is situated between
Cranborne Chase and the
Dorset Downs, at the south eastern corner of the
Blackmore Vale, 25 km (16 miles) north-west of
Poole and 34 km (21 miles) south-west of
Salisbury. The town lies at the junction of the
A350 and
A354 main roads but is skirted by an eastern
bypass.
A number of renowned
private schools are located near Blandford, such as
Knighton House,
Bryanston School and
Canford School. The town and surrounding villages are home to many primary Schools, students then move to The
Blandford School which is a specialist technology college in the town at the age of 11, the School also has a sixth form.
Thousands of people attend the
Georgian Fayre which fills the town centre and is held in the first week of May each year. The Fayre combines Georgian celebrations with presentations from different groups, stalls, and a fun fair.
The nearby village of
Tarrant Hinton is home to the well renowned
Great Dorset Steam Fair which can attract in excess of 250,000 in the last week of
August each year. The fair is a showcase for
steam engines from across the
UK and
Europe. Craft stools, camping, and a giant fair are among the other attractions.
One less pleasant local resident is '
The Blandford Fly', a local biting insect which has caused several fatalities. In recent years the weed beds in the river have had to be sprayed to stop it breeding.
History
Blandford has been a
fording point since
Anglo-Saxon times, when it was recorded as ''Blaen-y-ford'' and as ''Blaneford'' in the
Domesday Book, meaning ford of the river of
blay or
gudgeon. By the
13th century it had become an important
market town, with a livestock market serving the nearby
Blackmore Vale with its many dairy farms. The
Latin word ''Forum'', meaning ''market'', was recorded in 1540.
[1] It was an important break on the journey between the port of
Weymouth and the capital
London. There is still a bi-weekly market held in the town.
In 1731 much of the town was destroyed in a fire.
John and William Bastard rebuilt the town over the following 30 years and the town centre is an excellent example of
Georgian architecture from the 1730s to 1760s.
Architecture

The "Corn Exchange" (town hall)
Blandford Forum is often given as an example of a Georgian town, as the entire centre was rebuilt at once in the 1700s, due to a fire, and is hence uniformly Georgian. All facades remain in fair to good condition, and notable buildings include The Corn Exchange, and the 1732 parish church of St Peter and St Paul, a classical building with a cupola on top of the tower. To the south of the town a six arch stone bridge spans the slow-moving River Stour.
Economy
One of the largest industries in the town is the
Badger Brewery which supplies
beer and
ale to
public houses across the region.
Some 2 km northeast of the town lies
Blandford Camp, which has long been home to the
Royal Corps of Signals, the communications wing of the
British Army. The base incorporates a modern technology training college plus a cinema for military personnel, and the National Signals Museum (a museum of items relating to the history of the Royal Signals since its inception) which is open to the public. The museum contains many items of interest including uniforms, medals, signals equipment, (some of which is interactive) and not least, an
Enigma cryptographic machine, famous for cracking the German High Level ciphers during World War 2.
Shopping
Blandford has a blend of small unique shops as well as larger stores such as
Tesco,
Woolworths,
Homebase,
WH Smith,
Somerfield,
Argos,
Spar,
Mackays/M&CO. The town also has a number of banks including
HSBC,
Lloyds TSB ,
Natwest and
Barclays.
Literature
Blandford features in
Thomas Hardy's novels as the
Wessex town of "Shottesford Forum". In 1590,
Edmund Spenser mentioned the town in ''
The Faerie Queene''.
Blandford Forum railway station was mentioned in the song "
Slow Train" by
Flanders and Swann.
References
1. Mills, A.D., 1986. ''Dorset Place Names''. Ensign, Southampton.
★
Blandford Forum Information at Dorset County Council (pdf) - Accessed January 2006
External links
★
A Few Old Postcard Views of Blandford
Photographs
★
Images of Dorset: Blandford
★
Photographs of Blandford Forum by a local photographer (Includes images of monuments to the Bastard Brothers)