The nearby hamlet of Tarlton was home to the Arts and Crafts architect and designer Alfred Powell and his wife Louise from the 1920s to 1960. They built themselves a summer home and pottery studio where they designed pottery for Wedgwood and trained local workers in pottery painting.[6]
Geography
Rodmarton is situated approximately 4 miles (6.4 km) north-east of Tetbury and 6 miles (9.7 km) west of Cirencester, and is close to Gloucestershire's border with Wiltshire. The village's proximity to Wiltshire appears to give origin to part of the parish's name, as the Old Englishmaer means "boundary".[3][7]
Geology
The parish lies primarily on the Forest Marble Formation. The soil in the area ranges from a light loam to stony brash, and the quality of the bedrock led to a number of quarries being established in the area.
Demography
Historical populations
According to statistics gathered during Charles I's reign, the parish had a population of 227, of whom 121 were male and 106 were female.[8] By 1794, under the reign of George III, the population had grown by 82 to 309, of whom 152 were male and 157 were female.[8] 38 parishioners were listed as being servants.[8] At this 1794 survey, all the men in the village were employed in agriculture, and the women in spinning wool. Working children were listed as carders.[8] The villagers' wages ranged from 6s to 9s per day, with salaries increasing during the harvest. The standard diet for a labourer was described as bread and cheese, "garden stuff" and dumplings for dinner, and tea for breakfast.[8]
The 2001 United Kingdom census showed that of the 333 parishioners, 162 were male and 171 were female.[1] Of the 163 residents aged between 16 and 64 who were in employment at the time of the census, the majority were classified as being in "managerial and professional occupations".[9]