Diversion: Join the A272 southbound on to the A31 southbound to the join the M3 at junction 10 southbound. Diversion: join the M3 at junction 10 northbound, continue to junction 9 exit turn around and re-join the M3 at junction 9 southbound M3 junction 9 – the M3 junction 9 southbound entry slip road will be closed overnight on Thursday 17 August 2022. Diversion: Exit the M3 northbound at junction 11 and re-enter the M3 northbound at junction 11 M3 junction 10 – the M3 junction 10 southbound entry slip road will be closed overnight on Tuesday 16 August 2022. M3 junction 11 – the M3 junction 11 between slip roads northbound will be closed overnight on Tuesday 16, Wednesday 17, Thursday 18, Friday 19, Saturday 20 and Sunday 21 August 2022. Diversion: continue on the M3 to junction 12 southbound, exit and turn around and re-join the M3 at junction 12 northbound and exit the M3 at junction 11. Diversion: use the Hockley Link, Otterbourne Road, Main Road and Otterbourne Hill to M3 junction 13 southbound M3 junction 11 – the M3 junction 11 southbound exit slip road will be closed overnight on Tuesday 16 August 2022. Next week (wc 15 August 2022) our planned closures are: M3 junction 11 to 12 – the M3 carriageway between junctions 11 and 12 southbound will be closed overnight on Monday 15 August 2022. Before the renovationĭetails of overnight M3 carriageway and slip road closures in the next two weeks (received from National Highways via County Councillor Jan Warwick) All overnight traffic management for lane closures, carriageway and/or slip road closures will usually be rolled out from 9pm and taken off by 6am. The only remaining evidence is a fragment of the 16th century brick and flint wall, and the narrow Tudor arched gateway. In 1713, the lease of land by Sir Henry Worsley to John Goldfinch includes “ … lands where the ancient manor house, outhouses and gardens lately stood”. The Hearth Tax record from 1673 mentions a house of ‘10 hearths’, making this later building also quite substantial. The Tudor House, Wall and Gatewayīy 1455, tenancy had passed to John Philpott, Sheriff of Hampshire. This suggests that it was a dwelling of some substance. Thomas de Thornecombe, a later owner and great-nephew of John Wascelyn, had a licence for the celebration of mass in the ‘oratory’ of his manor house. John was the last in the male line of the Wascelyn family. The 1302 post-mortem report for John Wascelyn records ‘a house, garden, arable land and pasture’. The site is believed to have contained a moated house and chapel. J.S.Drew’s book Compton, Near Winchester, published by the Wykeham Press in 1939, provided the information for the text on the display board, reproduced below.
#Compton place archive#
Parish Newsletter Archive up to May 2019.
![compton place compton place](https://clareflynn.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2016/09/Former-Dining-Room-at-Compton-Place-768x1024.jpg)
Parish Newsletter Archive from May 2019.
![compton place compton place](https://www.cardcow.com/images/set466/card00812_fr.jpg)
Listed buildings and monuments in Compton & Shawford.