A charter of 932 in which King
Æthelstan granted West Meon to the
thegn Æthelweard includes a detailed account of the boundary of the estate which almost coincides with the boundary of the modern parish of West Meon. The Manor of West Meon was listed in the
Domesday Book as owned by the
Bishop of Winchester. A charter of 1205 confirmed the grant of land to the
Prior and Convent of St. Swithun,
Winchester, in whose hands it remained until the
Dissolution of the Monasteries. In 1541 the manor was granted to the Dean and Chapter of Winchester by
Henry VIII, and the maintenance of six theology students at each of the universities of
Oxford and
Cambridge was ordered. In 1544 the king changed this regulation, and the manor was granted to
Thomas Wriothesley,
Earl of Southampton, in whose family the manor remained until 1677. Other lands in West Meon Parish held by the Wriothesley family were the manors of Hall Park, Coombe and Woodlands. Another manor, called Punsholt, was first mentioned in 1341 when it was held by Walter de Ticheborne. Later the manor was combined with that of
West Tisted and followed the same descent. Punsholt Farm in the North of the Parish indicates the site of the manor.
Thomas Lord of cricket ground fame retired to the village in 1830. The eponymous pub is in the high street. British spy
Guy Burgess lived in the village and his ashes were interred in the family plot in the churchyard. Between West Meon and East Meon is
Westbury House which was built in 1904, after the previous
Palladian mansion on the estate was destroyed by fire. == Woodlands ==