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Dorset Fingerposts

Travelling along Dorset’s roads in the 1700s was hazardous. Not only was there the risk of being robbed by highwaymen, but as there were few signposts, an unwary traveller could so easily get lost.

It was the Turnpike Act of 1767 which required trusts, who managed many roads and who charged a toll, to show the names of main towns. This was followed by milestones, often made of local stone, showing distances to the nearest town. Outside the Crown Hotel, Blandford there was a milestone which recorded the distance to Hyde Park Corner in London.

Dorset has its own characteristic road signs known as fingerposts (see above). They are topped off by a circular finial or roundel which displays not only the place name but also a map reference. The latter was included at the suggestion of the Ministry of Transport in the 1930s. Worried about the prospects of a German invasion during World War II, the British Government ordered navigational signposts to be removed. After the war, to supplement the fingerposts, motoring organisations put up their own signs which often featured their own colour schemes and logo.

With many Dorset fingerposts falling into disrepair, the Campaign to Protect Rural England offer a small grant scheme to enable people to restore fingerposts proving the correct materials are used. With this initiative, road fingerposts remain very much a part of the county’s road heritage.

 (Illustration: Sixpenny Handley fingerpost)

 

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