The hamlet of Sutton Row is about one mile west of Sutton Mandeville village. Lower Chicksgrove, in the northwest of the parish and on the left bank of the Nadder, was transferred from Tisbury parish in 1986. The Apshill area, south of the river on the road from Sutton Row to Lower Chicksgrove, was also part of the transfer from Tisbury parish. The hamlet here, which includes the Compasses Inn, is unmarked on a 1958 Ordnance Survey map but on some modern maps is labelled as Chicksgrove.
History
No prehistoric sites are recorded in the area, although an Iron Agehillfort known as Castle Ditches lies to the west in Tisbury parish. Domesday Book in 1086 recorded a settlement of 25 households at Sudtone, with woodland and a mill. Later landowners included the Wyndham family of Dinton House. In 1859 the Salisbury and Yeovil Railway opened their line from Salisbury to Gillingham, following the Nadder valley and crossing the parish north of Sutton Mandeville. The station at was closed in 1966; station remains in use, and the line forms part of the route from London Waterloo to Exeter via Salisbury.
Parish church
The parish church dedicated to All Saints, built in uncoursed dressed limestone, dates from the 13th century; the chancel arch is from that period. The chancel was restored in 1850 and there was further restoration in 1862. The church was recorded as Grade II* listed in 1966. The three-stage west tower was built in the 15th century and carries three bells: one possibly dated 1399, the others cast by John Wallis in 1615 and 1616. In the churchyard is a late 17th-century sundial, restored in the 19th century. At some point the benefice was united with those of Fovant and Compton Chamberlayne. In 1979 the benefice of Teffont Evias with Teffont Magna was added to the union and a team ministry was established, today known as the Nadder Valley benefice and covering fourteen parishes with sixteen churches.
Notable buildings
Church Farmhouse, now a dwelling, began as a cottage in the 17th century. An 18th-century watermill on the Nadder, northwest of the village, was in use to grind flour until the 1940s. Chicksgrove manor at Lower Chicksgrove is Grade II* listed. The house, in rubble stone under a thatched roof, has 14th-century origins and is described by Historic England as "a very fine Wiltshiremanor house retaining many features from different periods of its development". Behind the house is an 18th-century timber-framed granary, on staddle stones. Apshill House, part of the hamlet between Sutton Row and Lower Chicksgrove, dates from the 14th century and was altered and extended in the 16th and 17th. Historic England state it is "an unusual survival of a hall house". The Compasses Inn, in the same hamlet, is a late 17th-century building.