Laverstock parish incorporates all of Laverstock, Ford and part of Milford, as well as several more recent housing developments. The parish is within Salisbury's Urban Area but is controlled by its own parish council rather than Salisbury's
city council.
Milford Milford was an ancient manor, recorded in 1275 as belonging to the
Bishop of Salisbury. In 1835 part of Milford which bordered the city of Salisbury became the civil parish of Milford Within. In 1904 the city became a single civil parish and more land, extending as far as the Bourne, was transferred to the city. The eastern part of Milford became the parish of Milford Without in 1894, then in 1904 was divided between Salisbury and Laverstock parish. Milford is a suburb in eastern Salisbury and is situated on the A36, which is known locally as
Southampton Road. The suburb is also the home of the large Southampton Road retail park and is near the Petersfinger Park and Ride site. The area remains divided between the Salisbury and Laverstock parishes. The eastern half of Milford is within the Laverstock parish; the western half is in the parish of Salisbury where the suburb is part of the St Edmund and Milford ward. Milford is bounded by the
A36 road to the south and west, Laverstock to the north and the
River Bourne to the east.
Laverstock Laverstock is a suburban village on the eastern outskirts of Salisbury, 1.2 miles (2 km) east-northeast of the city centre. The village has a small number of businesses, mainly clustered around Church Road. These include a fish and chip shop, a Chinese takeaway and a 'One Stop' convenience store. Also within the area is Laverstock and Ford sports club which is home to
Laverstock & Ford F.C. and a cricket team, among others. There are two secondary schools on adjacent sites:
Wyvern St Edmund's and
St Joseph's Catholic School. Laverstock borders Milford to the south, Hampton Park to the north, and across the River Bourne to the west is St Mark's. Laverstock is the largest settlement in the parish, having a population of around 3,000 in 2011.
Ford The hamlet of Ford is in the north of the parish, at a
crossing of the
Bourne. The area is bordered by Old Sarum to the north-west and Hampton Park to the south, and is two miles north-north-east of Salisbury city centre. Ford had a population of 402 in 2011. Until at least the late 19th century, the settlement was known as Winterbourne Ford. In 1269 the parish of
St Martin's church, Salisbury extended as far as Ford. In 1545 a small part of Ford's land (in Laverstock parish) was recorded in Underditch
hundred, while the remainder of it was entered under Alderbury hundred. Later it was a
tithing which was stated in the 1870
Imperial Gazetteer to lie in
Idmiston, Laverstock, and St. Martin parishes. The
Ordnance Survey map published in 1958 shows a small number of houses and a chapel on the left bank of the river, and farm buildings on the other side. In the later 20th and early 21st centuries, some of the farm buildings were replaced by a housing estate, bounded on the south by the straight lane which follows the route of the Roman road.
Bishopdown Farm, Hampton Park and Riverdown Park These contiguous residential areas have developed since the early 1990s on the northeastern edge of Salisbury, north of Laverstock and south of Ford. Bishopdown Farm lies to the west, Hampton Park to the east, and the newer Riverdown Park to the north. In 2020, the combined population of these areas was estimated at 3,600, compared to the 2,700 residents of Laverstock and the relevant part of Milford. – lies within the city boundary, but the name has been adopted for more recent developments in the same area, in the north-west of Laverstock parish. Around 800 homes and a primary school were built just north of Old Sarum Airfield between 2008 and 2016, and there is a small business park next to the airfield. A further housing development called Longhedge Village, around 750 homes accessed from the
A345, was built further north from 2018. ==Governance==