Cookies

We use essential cookies to make our site work. We'd also like to set analytics cookies that help us make improvements by measuring how you use the site. These will be set only if you accept.

For more detailed information about the cookies we use, see our cookies page.

Essential Cookies

Essential cookies enable core functionality such as security, network management, and accessibility. For example, the selections you make here about which cookies to accept are stored in a cookie.

You may disable these by changing your browser settings, but this may affect how the website functions.

Analytics Cookies

We'd like to set Google Analytics cookies to help us improve our website by collecting and reporting information on how you use it. The cookies collect information in a way that does not directly identify you.

Third Party Cookies

Third party cookies are ones planted by other websites while using this site. This may occur (for example) where a Twitter or Facebook feed is embedded with a page. Selecting to turn these off will hide such content.

Skip to main content

Parish History

Empshott is a village of about 90 inhabitants situated two miles south of Selborne in the hangers of East Hampshire. The village has been included in the civil parish of Hawkley since 1932. The village is spread out from the B3006 to the mill on the river Rother, which forms the old boundary with Hawkley, to the base of Noar Hill towards Selborne to a winding boundary near the former Le Court Cheshire Home, now demolished and replaced by prestige housing. The village centres around the village church next to "The Grange" and "The Empshott Hut" an early 20th century wooden village hall that is the venue for most of the village activities, such as Scottish Reels nights, Harvest Supper, some meetings for the Empshott & Hawkley Horticutural Society, occasional Parish and Parochial Church Council meetings and quiz nights.

This tiny Parish was distinguished in a survey of 1428 as one of the Hampshire Parishes in which there were fewer than ten inhabitants holding houses, in 1931 the population had risen to 171. The manor of Empshott belonged to Edward the Confessor but was leased to Bundi and Saxi; at the time of the Domesday Survey it was held by Geoffrey de Venuz, a marshall to William the Conqueror. The manor remained in the Venuz family during the twelfth and thirteenth centuries but by the reign of Edward II it had passed to Aymer de Valence. Grange Farm was originally the manor house, and the manor courts were always held there.

The village no longer has any shops, the Village Stores & Post Office closed in the 1970's and became virtually derelict until it was extensively refurbished in 2013. The nearest pubs are in Hawkley, Selborne and Greatham all approximately 2 miles away. The B3006 running through the village was, until the early 80's, a winding country lane which was then widened to accommodate the transportation of cruise missiles for deployment at nearby Longmoor military ranges. The introduction of a 30mph speed limit some years later did help to improve levels of safety and noise although traffic volumes continue to increase over time.

Hawkley is a village of about 300 inhabitants situated about 2 miles from the main Portsmouth to London road, but with the advantage that there is very little “through traffic”. The heart of the village is the Church, the Green and the Village Hall. The Hawkley Inn is a popular village pub, which attracts a variety of external visitors, but particularly ramblers, who often use the village green as an assembly point. It is an area of outstanding natural beauty of mixed farmland, woodlands, with special features of wooded slopes - the Hangers, and sunken lanes.

The modern Parish of Hawkley was created in 1894 as part of the Petersfield Rural District Council until the 1974 reorganisation of local government and now is within the East Hampshire District Council. It has included the small Parish of Empshott since 1932. Hawkley was not recorded in the Domesday Survey of 1086 as the manor probably formed part of Newton Valence with which Hawkley was closely associated for centuries. Lands belonging to Robert de Pont de l'Arche passed to William de Valence in 1252 and subsequently followed the descent of the manor of Newton Valence. An old cottage at Lower Green was originally mill house of Hawkley mill. The ancient mill belonged to the Bishops of Winchester, was seized by Adam Gordon but given back by Edward I in 1280. It was later burnt down, rebuilt in 1774 and used as a cottage from 1882 onwards. The stream behind the house originally drove the overshot wheel of the mill.