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Posts Tagged ‘Bloody Assizes’

The Oak Room Dorchester

Thursday, June 10th, 2010
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Our market town of Dorchester is steeped in history with an abundance of visitor attractions and shops and restaurants for visitors to explore. One hidden gem with historic credentials that is well worth seeking out is the tea rooms at The Oak Room located in Dorchester’s Antelope Walk in South Street.

History

Inside The Oak Room, Dorchester

Inside The Oak Room, Dorchester

The Oak Room dates back to 1589 and was famously used by Judge Jeffreys ‘the Hanging Judge’ as the courtroom of the Bloody Assizes when in September of 1685, 302 cases were heard, of which a total of 74 of the accused were executed, 175 transported, 9 fined or whipped and 54 discharged. Jeffreys didn’t believe in half measures and hanged, transported, whipped and fined hundreds of the unfortunate accused.

During this period Judge Jeffreys lodged at 6 High West Street Dorchester, (now the restaurant, Judge Jeffreys) and for his own protection used a secret passage linking his house with the Oak Room of the Antelope Hotel. This tunnel is wide and high, with enough room for two to three people to walk side by side.

The ghost of Judge Jeffreys is said to haunt the Antelope courtyard.

The Oak Room – Present Day

The Oak Room entrance in Antelope Walk

The Oak Room entrance in Antelope Walk

Today the The Oak Room in Dorchester has a much more pleasurable and relaxing use.

Now housing traditional style tea rooms the Oak Room retains the beautiful oak-panelling and has a wonderfully welcoming ambience. Table service is provided by waitresses in ‘Nippy’ uniform, based on the old style Lyons Corner House service.

The whole experience is so very different from that of modern coffee chains common to our high streets these days.

A customer review on www.dorchesterpeople.co.uk said

A visit to the Oak Room tea room in Dorchester is like a step back in time! The waitresses wear old-fashioned pinnies and serve cucumber sandwiches, cream teas and home made cakes. The Oak Room also does good, simple hot food like soup and jacket potatoes, so it’s a great place to stop for something warming while out shopping in Dorchester.”

The tea rooms are open every day  from 9.30 am to 4.30pm (except Sunday) serving morning coffee, mouth watering light lunches, afternoon teas and delicious Dorset cream teas.

Antelope Walk

After a refreshing snack you’ll be ready to explore the present day Antelope walk which still retains its historical charm and ambience with an arcade of tempting shops lining the pedestrianised cobbled street. Dorchester Tourist Information Centre is sited at the top end of the walk from where you can find more details on Dorchester Town, and its tourist attractions.

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History of Judge Jeffreys

Thursday, December 17th, 2009
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Judge Jeffreys

Judge Jeffreys

Dorchester is a beautiful English market town with a rich and varied past. Its history is inextricably linked with one of England’s most notorious judges, the “hanging judge” George Jeffreys, and the scene of his many trials can still be experienced by visitors today.

Judge George Jeffreys was born in 1648 on the family estate of Acton Hall, Wrexham in North Wales, he was the sixth son of John and Margaret Jeffreys. Educated at Cambridge, he was appointed Solicitor General to the Duke of York, and was knighted in 1677.  He became recorder of London in 1678, and at age 33, he became Lord Chief Justice of England and a privy counsellor, later becoming Lord Chancellor. In 1683, he became Baron Jeffreys of Wem.

In 1685, Judge Jeffreys came to Dorchester and stayed at 6 High West Street Dorchester, (now the Prezzo Restaurant, Judge Jeffreys).  It was built in the early 17th century, and is one of the few timber-framed buildings to survive Dorchester’s disastrous town fires. Here he sat in trial of the supporters of the Duke of Monmouth and their failed rebellion against King James II.  The Bloody Assizes were held in the Oak Room (now a Tea Room) of the Antelope Hotel on the 5th day of September 1685 (an assize were courts originally initiated by King Henry II (1154-1189), where he would send judges all over the country to preside over local cases). Judge Jeffreys is said to have had a secret passage from his lodgings to the Oak Room.  Jeffreys didn’t believe in half measures and hanged, transported, whipped and fined hundreds of the unfortunate accused.

Judge Jeffreys headed up the investigative team and became known as the Hanging Judge because of the punishments he had given to the supporters of the Duke.  In Dorset a total of seventy-four people were condemned to be hung, drawn and quartered, the heads of some being displayed on spikes outside St. Peters church in Dorchester, opposite the Judges lodgings.  One hundred and seventy five of Monmouth’s supporters were transported abroad and only twenty nine were pardoned. Executions were also carried out in towns and villages close to Dorchester. Monmouth himself was beheaded on Tower Hill in London on 15 July 1685.

Following the Glorious Revolution in 1688, James II the Catholic King left for France. Jeffreys was the only high legal authority in James’s abandoned kingdom left to perform the political duties. When the armies of William were approaching London, Jeffreys attempted to flee the country disguised as a sailor. He was captured in a public house and was recognized by a surviving judicial victim. Jeffreys was sent to the Tower of London “for his own safety”, where he died on April 18, 1689 aged 44, as the result of kidney disease. The painful kidney disease may well have affected his unbridled temper and added to this reputation. He was originally buried in the Chapel Royal of Saint Peter ad Vincula, Tower of London. In 1692 his body was moved to St Mary Aldermanbury, which was destroyed along with all traces of Jeffreys’ grave in a 1941 German air raid.

Judge Jeffreys Prezzo Restaurant in Dorchester

Judge Jeffreys Prezzo Restaurant in Dorchester

Judge Jeffreys attended many of the hangings in person, and his ghost is said to haunt several West Country locations as well as his own home at Walton on Thames.

Why not visit Dorchester and follow the historic story of Judge Jeffreys for yourself. With lots of great hotel accommodation in Dorchester and B&Bs in Dorchester it is the perfect place to base your stay and explore the beautiful Dorset countryside.

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