Milton Abbas Circular

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Lowland and Hill Walks
May 03
2025

25 people attending

0 places left

3 people waitlisted

Your price
£12.50
Event booking closes on May 2 at 19:00:00
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11 miles, 309m height gain in total.

The vague gap on the map at the centre of Dorset is where the little town of Middleton (Milton) once stood. It had grown up in the middle ages beside the magnificent abbey and was big enough to hold a market. The town was demolished by the 1st Earl of Dorchester between 1771 and 1790 and the abbey, saved for the town at the Dissolution of the Monasteries in 1539, was turned into his private chapel adjacent to his fine new house. His tenants were rehoused a mile away in a model village called Milton Abbas, of uniform thatched white cottages which is rather delightful (to us at least). 

The main town street now lies under the cricket green of Milton Abbey School which is what his house became. All in all, 'the sweep of the church, William Chambers' house and Capability Brown's grounds, set in a glade amid wooded slopes, is one of the great set pieces of English landscape' (Simon Jenkins: England's Thousand Best Churches). 

The church itself is probably the most impressive in Dorset. It is mainly fourteenth century, enlarged after a fire in 1309 but the Lady Chapel was lost at the dissolution and the nave was never finished. Another fine church also occurs on this walk at Hilton, which has medieval paintings of the twelve apostles and a very picturesque setting in a wooded valley above thatched roofs.

The route (see it here) will also lead round to the village of Milbourne St Andrew which is a cluster of red brick and cob (clay and straw) cottages on the Dorchester-Blandford Road. The route will then return to the quiet gravel and grassy trackways over fine Dorset downland and woodland with which it began before it completes its circuit back at Milton Abbas.

Dogs  are welcome to join us on this event but we do ask the following: Please ensure you adhere to the Countryside Code at all times - see (Keeping Dogs Under Effective Control) If your dog is uncontrolled and strays in open land frightening other animals or livestock, the leader is supported by the OutdoorLads board of trustees to ask you to leave the event as this is not acceptable behaviour.

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(Image credits are as follows: Milton Abbey Church and School: Photo © Maigheach-gheal (cc-by-sa/2.0); Milton Abbey School: Photo © Adrian King (cc-by-sa/2.0); Milton Abbey Church, Dorset: Photo © Clive Perrin (cc-by-sa/2.0); Thatched cottages in Milton Abbas: Photo © Maigheach-gheal (cc-by-sa/2.0); St Catherine's Chapel, Milton Abbas: Photo © Martin Southwood (cc-by-sa/2.0); 

All pictures are her attributed to the copyright holders and are licensed for reuse under Creative Commons license CC-BY-SA/2.0).