In 1780,
Joseph Damer, Lord Milton, the first
Earl of Dorchester and owner of
Milton Abbey, decided that the adjacent market town,
Middleton, was disturbing his vision of rural peace. He commissioned
architect Sir
William Chambers and
landscape gardener Capability Brown (both of whom had already worked on the Abbey building and grounds) to design a new village, Milton Abbas, in a wooded valley (Luccombe Bottom) to the southeast of the Abbey. Most of the existing villagers were relocated here, and the previous village was demolished and the site landscaped. The 36 almost identical
thatched cottages were intended to house two families each. They were built from
cob and previously were painted yellow, with each house fronted by a lawn; originally a
horse chestnut tree was planted between each dwelling.
Almshouses and a church were also provided for the new village, sited opposite each other. The almshouses were moved from the old town, where they had originally been built in 1674. The church, consecrated in 1786, is in Georgian Gothic style, with late 19th-century additions. The word '
Abbas' used here as part of a place name (another example would be the English village of Compton Abbas) usually relates to land previously owned by an abbess (the head of an abbey of nuns). Some house-names give clues to some of the original inhabitants of the village:
baker,
blacksmith,
brewery, etc. Today the houses are white-washed, and the main street also features a
public house (the
Hambro Arms), a Post Office/shop, the Tea Clipper Tea Rooms, a now redundant
school building, and a
Wesleyan chapel. In 1953 the original horse chestnut trees were judged unsafe and a danger to the houses and removed. Above the eastern end of the valley, the village has been extended with more modern housing and other facilities, including a
doctor's surgery. ==Geography==