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East Boldre

East Boldre
East Boldre Church.JPG
St. Paul's church, East Boldre
East Boldre is located in Hampshire
East Boldre
East Boldre
East Boldre shown within Hampshire
Population 847 
832 (2011 Census)
OS grid reference SU374003
Civil parish
  • East Boldre
District
Shire county
Region
Country England
Sovereign state United Kingdom
Post town BROCKENHURST
Postcode district SO42
Dialling code 01590
Police Hampshire
Fire Hampshire
Ambulance South Central
EU Parliament South East England
UK Parliament
List of places
UK
England
Hampshire
50°48′04″N 1°28′15″W / 50.8011°N 1.4707°W / 50.8011; -1.4707Coordinates: 50°48′04″N 1°28′15″W / 50.8011°N 1.4707°W / 50.8011; -1.4707

East Boldre is a linear village and civil parish situated near Lymington, Hampshire, England. East Boldre is surrounded by the New Forest and forms part of the district of New Forest.

The Anglican parish church is dedicated to St. Paul and there is a baptist chapel which was founded in 1810. There is a traditional local pub, The Turfcutters Arms, and a post office. The parish includes the adjoining hamlet of East End.

People have lived in the East Boldre area since prehistoric times. Over thirty Bronze Age barrows lie within the parish boundaries.

The village of East Boldre was originally a straggling hamlet and was known as Beaulieu Rails. This earlier name reflected the fact that the settlement had grown up along the wooden railings defining the western boundary of the Manor and parish of Beaulieu. The residents were described in a parliamentary report in 1834 as "for the most part smugglers and deer-stealers."

The first church was a Baptist church founded in 1810. The Anglican church of St. Paul was built in 1839, but was restored and the chancel added in 1891. The ecclesiastical parish of East Boldre was formed in 1840. There were 650 inhabitants in 1871. The village hall was built in 1917. In 1929 East Boldre Civil Parish was created from the Parish of Boldre.

An airfield was built in East Boldre in 1910. There was a flying school here for two years before the airfield reverted to quiet grazing land, but in 1914 one of the sheds on the airfield was taken over by the Royal Flying Corps and by 1915 the demand for pilots for World War I was so great that a training school, called RFC Beaulieu was built on the area. On 24 October 1917, the village post office at East Boldre was accidentally damaged by a British aeroplane, and for six months the elderly inhabitants had to live under tarpaulins in the house even whilst transacting postal business. The camp was closed in 1919.


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