Introduction
Leonard William Saunders was a dairyman and farmer who spent most of his life in Dorset. He was born around 1866 at Eling near Southampton to parents originally from Dorset, who returned to their native county when he was about ten years old. In 1892, he married Harriett Laura Vine, the daughter of a local farmer. Leonard and Harriet lived and worked at several farms, including at Hardington Mandeville; Broom’s Farm, Wynford Eagle; Elworth, Abbotsbury; Lower Farm, Portesham and North Down Farm, Sutton Poyntz. While his life had many similarities with other farmers of that time, it also included distinctive elements, such as his commitment to temperance, a devastating fire and the posthumous birth of a daughter.
Childhood
Leonard’s parents, John and Maria Saunders, were married at Litton Cheney in Dorset on 8 June 1858. John was the youngest son of Robert Saunders, a farmer of Higher Kingcombe, while Maria was the second surviving daughter of Richard Mellish, a farmer of Litton Cheney.[1]
After their marriage, John was the licensee of the Hut Inn, Long Bredy, from August 1859 to November 1861, where he also farmed fifty acres.[2] The family then moved sixty miles east to Eling near Southampton, where John worked as a dairyman, probably at the dairy attached to Testbourne Farm.[3] Seven of their nine children were born at Eling, including Leonard, who was born in late 1865 or early 1866.
The family’s relocation to Eling may be linked to John’s stepmother, Ann Barter, who came from Bishop’s Waltham, ten miles east of Eling. She also influenced the life of John’s brother, William, who married her illegitimate niece, Sarah Ann Barter.
In about 1875, the family returned to Dorset, initially residing at the Manor Farm, Litton Cheney, where Leonard worked until his marriage. In 1902, the family moved to the Manor House, Portesham.[4]
On 4 January 1878, John’s father died at Beaminster, leaving an estate valued at “under £3,000.” After leaving £600 for the benefit of his daughter, Elizabeth Symonds, and her children, he divided the remainder equally between his three sons, John, Joseph and William.[5] Consequently, John inherited about £800.
Marriage
On 28 January 1892, Leonard married Harriet Laura Vine at Long Bredy church. Harriet, born at Long Bredy Farm on 23 March 1868, was the tenth of thirteen children born to Stephen and Sarah Vine. Two years before their marriage, Harriet’s older sister, Anna Helena, had married Leonard’s brother, Henry Richard, at the same church, and both Harriet and Leonard signed the register as witnesses.[6]
Temperance
Harriet and Helena belonged to a family that rejected alcohol. Their parents actively promoted temperance in the parish and were chiefly responsible for closing its only pub.[7] When the family held a family party at the farm on Boxing Day 1895 to celebrate the youngest child’s twenty-first birthday, a local newspaper reported that “the whole of the family are total abstainers. The father and mother have been teetotalers for over 30 years, and many of the children have never tasted alcoholic liquor.”[8]
Leonard was probably an abstainer, too. When he advertised for a dairy lad in February 1894, he specified, “Abstainer preferred.”[9]
Hardington
Leonard and Harriet’s first child, Laura Gertrude, was born at Hardington on 5 November 1892.[10] According to her birth certificate, Leonard’s occupation at the time was dairyman, but the name of the dairy is not mentioned. However, it was probably the dairy at Moor Farm owned by Abraham Genge. In November and December 1891, Genge advertised his dairy of thirty cows to let from 2 February 1892.[11] When those advertisements failed to attract a suitable dairyman, he sought “Dairy Managers” who were “good butter and cheese makers.”[12]
The distance from Long Bredy and Litton Cheney to Hardington is about twenty miles, raising the question of why Leonard and Harriet moved there. The 1891 census indicates that Leonard’s sister, Flora, lived at 3 Cranbourne Road, Yeovil, suggesting her proximity could have influenced their decision. Another possibility is that Leonard and Harriet wanted to begin their married life without interference from parents and siblings.
Wynford Eagle
After their time at Hardington, the family moved to Broom’s Farm, Wynford Eagle, where they remained until their lease expired on Lady Day (25 March) 1901.[13] The farm comprised a farmhouse, 72 acres of pasture, stalls for twenty cows, and other outbuildings. Leonard and Harriet’s second child, Archibald Leonard, was born at the farm on 25 January 1892.[14] While living at Broom’s Farm, Leonard won a highly commended award for his Dorset Blue cheese at the Dorchester Show in September 1896.[15]
Portesham
After leaving Broom’s Farm, Leonard and his family lived briefly at Elworth, Abbotsbury, before moving to Lower Farm, Portesham. Not long after, Leonard’s father, John, moved to the Manor House in Portesham.
When John died on 14 October 1907, he left an estate valued at £3,524-6s, of which Leonard received a mere £53. However, according to John’s will, all his children had received various sums of money from him in his lifetime, and he had arranged his affairs to distribute his estate as equally as possible among them.[16] On that basis, Leonard received a few hundred pounds from his father in lifetime gifts.[17]
Sutton Poyntz
By November 1907, Leonard and his family were living at North Down Farm, Sutton Poyntz, which was part of the Weld Estate.[18] Shortly after their arrival, they suffered a dreadful calamity. The previous tenant, Mrs Macey, had stored some of her furniture in one of Leonard’s barns. On Saturday, 18 April 1908, a fire broke out in the barn, quickly spreading to adjacent thatched buildings and causing extensive damage. The fire destroyed all the outbuildings on Leonard’s farm as well as Mrs Macey’s home at Old Court House. Fortunately, Leonard’s farmhouse remained unharmed because it had a slate roof. The Weymouth fire brigade worked throughout the night to contain the fire and prevent it from spreading across the road, aided by a plentiful water supply from the Weymouth Water Works located in the village.[19]
Around November 1914, Leonard became ill with intestinal stasis, which is a slowdown or cessation of the normal movement of food through the digestive tract. He underwent surgery and was then cared for at the Casterbridge Nursing Home, Dorchester, owned and run by his sister, Flora. Unfortunately, he did not recover and died there on 30 January 1915, at the age of 49.[20]
Meanwhile, around Christmas 1914, Harriet became pregnant after an eleven-year gap since her last child. Leonard possibly went to his grave unaware of his wife’s pregnancy. Harriet gave birth to a daughter, Marjorie Constance, on 1 October 1915.
A few months later, on 11 January 1916, Harriet’s elderly father, Stephen Vine, died after falling from a bedroom window due to senile dementia.[21] Under the terms of his will, Harriet probably inherited around £200 or £300.[22]
Harriet continued at North Down Farm until the 1920s or 1930s, eventually retiring to Preston, where she died on 14 December 1956 at the age of 88. Her estate was valued at £5,362-6s-2d.
Children
1892-Gertrude Laura (married Harry Edward Brown, a local printer);
1894-Archibald Leonard (emigrated to Australia);
1899-Ernest Alfred (lived at North Down Farm until at least World War II);
1901-Margaret Amy (married Thomas John Morgan Norris, a farmer from Charmouth);
1902-Reginald John (at school in 1911; later disappears from the records);
1903-Kathleen Helena (married Edgar Reginald Hillard of Yeovil in 1933; he died in 1935, aged 27; in 1948, she married George William Perry);
1915-Marjorie Constance (a bank clerk in 1939; married Alfred Leslie Smith, a bank clerk, in 1942).
References
[1] Dorset County Chronicle, 17 June 1858, p.20.
[2] 1861 census; Dorset County Chronicle, 11 August 1859, p.3; Bridport News, 9 November 1861, p.3.
[3] 1871 census; baptism registers for Marchwood and Netley St Matthew’s.
[4] Bridport News, 18 October 1907, p.8; 20 December 1901, p.4.
[5] The will of Robert Saunders, dated 19 December 1876, proved at Blandford on 23 January 1878. He also left £10 to one of his executors.
[6] Leonard’s brother, Albert Edwin, married Alberta Dorothy Vine, the youngest child of Stephen and Sarah Vine, in 1900, making another link between the two families.
[7] Southern Times and Dorset County Herald, 7 March 1908, p.7.
[8] Bridport News, 3 January 1896, p.5.
[9] Western Gazette, 16 February 1894, p.4. His later advertisements omit any reference to abstainers being preferred.
[10] Birth certificate of Laura Gertrude Saunders; Western Gazette, 11 November 1892, p.8.
[11] Western Gazette, 20 November 1891, p.4; 27 November 1891, p.4; 4 December 1891, p.4; 11 December 1891, p.4.
[12] Western Gazette, 8 January 1892, p.4; 15 January 1892, p.4; 29 April 1892, p.4.
[13] Western Gazette, 8 March 1901, p.5.
[14] Bridport News, 2 February 1894, p.8.
[15] Weymouth Telegram, 8 September 1896, p.6.
[16] The will of John Saunders, dated 7 October 1905, proved at Blandford on 11 November 1907.
[17] The legacy of £53 suggests that precise calculations underlay the will. As these do not survive, it is impossible to know precisely what Leonard received in his father’s lifetime.
[18] Western Gazette, 8 November 1907, p.6; Western Gazette, 24 April 1908, p.11; Bridport News, 24 April 1908, p.7.
[19] Western Gazette, 24 April 1908, p.11; Bridport News, 24 April 1908, p.7.
[20] Death certificate of Leonard William Saunders.
[21] Western Times, 17 January 1916, p.3; Western Gazette, 21 January 1916, p.3.
[22] The will of Stephen Vine, dated 29 November 1913, proved In London on 5 February 1916. Gross value of estate £5,278-13s-3d; net value of personal estate £4,343-3s-9d. Stephen authorised his executors to carry on his farm called Look Farm for the remainder of the lease and employ as much of his capital as they thought fit for that purpose. He directed them to pay his wife an annuity of £30 and divide the residue of his estate among all his children (13 in total) except Richard Jone Vine, who had already received his share of his father’s estate.
The will of Leonard William Saunders
Executors: Harriet Laura Saunders, Preston-cum-Poyntz and Ernest Frederick Saunders, Manor House, Portesham.
To my executors on trust: all my personal estate and I direct my business be carried on as before, and when my youngest child is 21, one-half of the value of my estate (excluding household effects) shall be equally divided between my six children, Laura Gertrude, Archibald Leonard, Ernest Alfred, Margaret Amy, Reginald John, Kathleen Helena Saunders and the other half applied for the maintenance of my wife, subject to her dividing the remainder equally between my children.
To my wife: all my household furniture and effects.
Wit: Elizabeth Ann Rebecca Saunders, Casterbridge Nursing Home, Dorchester.
Annie Berrill, Sutton Mills, Weymouth.
The will of John Saunders
Table to show legacies and the amount available to distribute to the residuary beneficiaries (excluding expenses).
£ | £ | |||
Value of estate | 3,524.25 | |||
Legacies | ||||
1 | Alfred John Robert | 253.00 | ||
2 | Leonard William | 53.00 | ||
3 | Albert Edwin | 20.00 | ||
4 | Maude Adah | 300.00 | ||
5 | Flora Maria | 300.00 | ||
6 | Henry Richard | – | ||
926.00 | ||||
2,598.25 | ||||
7 | Elizabeth Ann Rebecca | 866.08 | ||
8 | Lavinia Mellish | 866.08 | ||
9 | Ernest Frederick | 866.08 | ||
2,598.25 |











