Domesday Book of 1086 recorded a relatively large settlement of 71 households at Ocheborne, corresponding to the later manors of St Andrew and St George.[2]
In the Middle Ages the manor of Ogbourne St George belonged to the BenedictineAbbey of Bec in Normandy. Ogbourne Priory was founded in about 1149 as a daughter house of the abbey.[3] For some two hundred years the priory managed all the English estates belonging to the abbey.[4][5]
During World War II, the address of the manor house was used atop a fictitious headed letter from 'Pam' to 'Major Martin' as a part of Operation Mincemeat, a disinformation strategy, the idea being that 'no German could resist the "Englishness" of such an address'.[6]
Buildings
The present manor house is built on the site of the priory and is Grade II* listed.[3][7] The house is Jacobean and the date 1619 is inscribed on one of its chimneystacks.[3] It received some Georgian remodelling, including the current glazing of its windows and probably the hipped roof.[3]
A 14th or 15th century barn at Hallam Farm is Grade I listed.[9] A 17th-century cottage known as Applegarth, on the High Street, is Grade II* listed.[10]
Part of the line has been obliterated in the Ogbourne St George district by the realignment of the A346, but most of the trackbed is now part of National Cycle Route 482, between Chiseldon and Marlborough.[12]
Amenities
The 17th-century Old Crown Inn was a coaching inn and is currently called the Inn with the Well.[13] The village had another public house which has been converted into the Parklands Hotel.[14]
^Macintyre, Ben (2010). Operation mincemeat: the true spy story that changed the course of World War II. Bloomsbury Publishing PLC. pp. 77–78. ISBN978-1408808542. OCLC869820828.
A.P. Baggs; Jane Freeman; Janet H. Stevenson (1983). Crowley, D.A. (ed.). Victoria County History: A History of the County of Wiltshire, Volume 12: Ramsbury and Selkley hundreds; the borough of Marlborough. pp. 151–160.