Evidence of occupation of the area in the late
Neolithic era is provided by many
round barrows on the downs. A
Bronze Age boundary ditch is in the northeast of the parish. The 1086 Domesday Book recorded 39 households at Bulford, within an estate of
Amesbury Abbey. The name is derived from the
Old English bulut ieg ford meaning '
ragged robin island ford'. It is recorded in the Wiltshire Charter Rolls of 1199 as
Bultiford and as
Bultesforda in 1270. It is then recorded as
Bulteforde in the Ecclesiastical Tax Records of 1291. From 1897, land east of Bulford began to be used by the Army as Bulford Camp. In 1906 the
Amesbury and Military Camp Light Railway was extended from Amesbury into the camp and a
station was provided at Bulford, on the southern edge of the village where the line crossed the road which is now the A3028. The line closed to passengers in 1952 but goods services continued until 1963. == Governance ==