Enford

Enford is a village and civil parish in Wiltshire, England, in the northeast of Salisbury Plain.

Later owners included Thomas Culpeper (executed in 1541 for alleged adultery with Catherine Howard), and Sir Edmund Antrobus who in 1899 sold the manor to the War Office.

The school moved to new buildings at Longstreet in 1966, next to the newly built village hall; it closed in 1989.

[3] The East Chisenbury midden is a notable example of a large dump of archaeological material, dating to the 1st millennium BC.

Now within a military training area, the midden mound contains discrete layers of flint, charcoal, bones, pottery and excrement.

The accumulation is believed by some archaeologists to have a ritual basis, with organised deposition of produce and waste being suggested as an explanation for its size and longevity.

A small octagonal building on the north side, built as a chapel but now the sacristy, is from a similar date.

[17] Enford is a civil parish in the area of the Wiltshire Council unitary authority, which is responsible for all significant aspects of local government.

The parish has two pubs: the Swan Inn at Enford (17th/18th century) and the Red Lion at East Chisenbury.

All Saints' Church