In 978,
Anglo-Saxon Calne was the site of a large two-storey building with a hall on the first floor. It was here that
St Dunstan,
Archbishop of Canterbury met the
Witenagemot to justify his controversial organisation of the national
church, which involved the
secular priests being replaced by
Benedictine monks and the influence of landowners over churches on their lands being taken away. According to an account written about 1000, at one point in this meeting Dunstan called upon God to support his cause, at which point the floor collapsed killing most of his opponents, whilst Dunstan and his supporters were in the part that remained standing. This was claimed as a miracle by Dunstan's supporters.
Early market town In 1086 Calne may already have been, as it was later, a
market town on the main Bristol-London road, with 114 households and a church. 74 or more households were held almost outright by
burghal tenure (as citizens of a
borough), and the lordship of its large outlying land was divided between the king (of whom 45 burgesses were tenants) and the church.
Industry Calne had a significant
woollen broadcloth industry in the 18th century, and evidence of this can be seen set around the triangular green by the parish church, where 24
listed buildings remain, five at Grade II* including the Tounson
almshouses for the neediest poor and
Georgian era clothiers' houses. Nearby are some of the 14 original mills along the Marden. St Mary's church was extended by the generous donations of rich clothiers and wool merchants in the 15th century. Houses of the 17th and 18th centuries have external walls of stone and
timber-framed walls inside. Most of the stone is
limestone rubble, laid with
ashlar dressings in houses of higher quality; the walls of many houses were rendered smooth. Until the 19th century, quarries beside the London road northwest and southeast of the town were sources of stone for building.
Former canal The
Wilts & Berks Canal linked the
Kennet and Avon Canal at
Semington, near
Melksham, to the
River Thames at
Abingdon. Much of the traffic on the canal was coal from the
Somerset Coalfield. As the canal passed through open country near Stanley, east of Chippenham, a short branch led through three locks to a wharf in Calne. The canal was completed in 1810 and abandoned in 1914.
Former railway Calne railway station opened in 1863, the terminus of its own
branch line of the
Great Western Railway running east from
Chippenham, with one intermediate stop: Stanley Bridge Halt. The opening of Black Dog Halt in the early 20th century provided insufficient demand to slow a progressive decline. The branch closed as a result of the Beeching Axe in September 1965, having made the biggest loss per mile of any line in the country.
Wiltshire pork and ham Subsequently, Calne's main industry other than being a small
market town was the imposing C&T Harris
pork processing factory. It is said that the pork-curing industry developed because pigs reared in Ireland were landed at
Bristol and then herded across England on
drovers' roads to
Smithfield, London. One resting place for the pigs was at Black Dog Hill, just west of the town, and the Harris family of butchers took the pigs that were not expected to survive the onward journey.
C&T Harris The Harris business began in the second half of the 18th century, when widow Sarah Harris and her son John relocated from Devizes and began trading as pork butchers in Church Street (Butchers Row). Brothers John and Henry Harris, sons of John Harris, continued separately in business, at High Street and the original Church Street shop respectively. Their products included bacon and hams preserved using the
Wiltshire cure method, which the family had developed. John Harris and his wife Mary Perkins had eleven children, and three of them, Thomas, George, and Charles, expanded the family business. The businesses of Charles and Thomas merged in 1888 as C. & T. Harris & Co. each issue containing an article by their managing director, Sir John Bodinnar. C&T Harris built a five-storey factory in the centre of the town in the 1930s, which at its height employed 2,000 people to process 5,000 pigs each week into bacon, pies, sausages and cooked meats. The business declined in the 1970s, due in part to competition from Danish bacon. The company (by now Farmers Meat Company Ltd) closed in 1982, Its site was later redeveloped as housing and the town's public library. The departed industry is celebrated by a bronze sculpture of two pigs, installed in 1979 by Calne Civic Society on Phelps Parade in the town centre. ==Economy==