CHOLDERTON
Cholderton, (fn. 1) 686 ha. (1,695 a.), is in the upper
Bourne valley 15 km. north-east of Salisbury. (fn. 2)
In 1086 there were eight estates called Cholderton, four in Wiltshire and four in Hampshire: (fn. 3)
the Wiltshire four constitute Cholderton parish;
the other four remained in Hampshire as part of
the adjoining parish of Amport. In the 18th and
19th centuries the Wiltshire Cholderton was
sometimes called West Cholderton, (fn. 4) the Hampshire one East Cholderton. (fn. 5)
On the north-east the parish boundary, with
Hampshire, is marked by a prehistoric ditch,
called Devil's ditch, and on the north-west
crosses a summit of Beacon Hill. On the west
another prehistoric ditch marks the east—west
section of the boundary with Bulford, and roads
mark the boundary on the south and east.
The parish is entirely on Upper Chalk. Where
it crosses the east part, on a roughly north—south
course, the Bourne has deposited gravel. (fn. 6) From
c. 183 m. on Beacon Hill the land falls southeastwards to the river, which leaves the parish
at below 91 m., and in the south-east corner of
the parish there is land at c. 100 m. The river
flows only in late winter; even then it is often
intermittent, and its course is frequently dry all
year. Sometimes, however, severe flooding has
occurred. (fn. 7) There was downland pasture in the
north and south parts of the parish, arable on
lower land east, west, and north of Cholderton
village, and meadow beside the Bourne. (fn. 8)

Cholderton 1841
Two main roads crossed the parish in the later
17th century, the Oxford—Salisbury road via
Hungerford (Berks.) across the west part, the
London to Bridgwater (Som.) road via Andover
(Hants) and Amesbury across the north part. A
new course west of the parish had been adopted
for the Hungerford road by 1773, and the old
road through Cholderton parish decreased in
importance. (fn. 9) The Andover–Amesbury road was
turnpiked in 1761 and disturnpiked in 1871. (fn. 10)
From 1958 it has been part of the London–Exeter trunk road, (fn. 11) and in 1988 a new
dual-carriageway section was made across the
parish a little north of the old course. (fn. 12) The road
linking Cholderton village to Salisbury through
the villages of the lower Bourne valley was
blocked by imparking around Wilbury House in
Newton Tony parish in the 18th century. (fn. 13) The
old road south of the village fell into disuse, and
Salisbury could be reached from Cholderton by
what was evidently a new stretch of road southwest of the village and either a road on the
western edge of Wilbury park or the road on the
boundary with Newton Tony and the old
Hungerford road. (fn. 14) In 1835, however, a turnpike
road from Swindon and Marlborough to Salisbury was completed, a new section of road was
made in Newton Tony, and the road through
and south-west of Cholderton village became
part of a main Swindon–Salisbury road through
the Bourne valley. That road was disturnpiked
in 1876. (fn. 15) It was still a main road in 1992, when
the road on the boundary with Newton Tony
and the old Hungerford road were tracks. A road
from Grateley (Hants) crosses the main road in
the village and runs west to join the Andover–Amesbury road in Bulford parish.
The two ditches on the parish boundary and a
ditch, now obliterated, which crossed the parish
north-west and south-east, all formed part of a
prehistoric network, possibly connected with
cattle ranching, centred on Sidbury Hill in
North Tidworth. Two field systems, one of 50
a. south-west of Devil's ditch, and another of
100 a. in the south-west corner of the parish and
extending into Newton Tony, are associated
with them. Near the Bulford boundary are three
Bronze-Age bowl barrows, one of which contained a secondary Romano-British cremation.
Romano-British coins have also been found in
the parish. (fn. 16)
Cholderton's assessment for taxation 1332–4
showed it as relatively prosperous, (fn. 17) there were
46 poll-tax payers in 1377, (fn. 18) and taxation assessments of the 16th century and earlier 17th
indicate moderate prosperity. (fn. 19) The population
rose from 127 in 1801 to 191 in 1861. It fell to
161 in 1871, apparently because a large family
was away from the parish, but rose to 238 in
1911. It was 188 in 1921, 204 in 1961, and 200
in 1991. (fn. 20)
Cholderton village stands on the gravel, with
buildings on both sides of the Bourne along the
Salisbury road where it follows the west bank.
Buildings on the east bank are approached by
bridges. Near the north end a new bridge for
Church Lane was built in 1834; in the south a
bridge was built of brick with iron railings in
1858 and rebuilt in 1908. (fn. 21) The chief building
materials of houses in the village are chalk, brick,
and flint, and some cottages have thatched roofs.
In 1773, and presumably earlier, the principal
buildings of the village, the church, the Rectory,
and Cholderton House, were at the north end.
In Church Lane a range of single-storeyed cottages, partly thatched, was built on the north
side, possibly c. 1800, (fn. 22) and a village school was
later built on the south side. (fn. 23) South of the
church stood a manor house which in 1773 and
1817 had a small park to the east: the house was
demolished between 1817 and c. 1832. (fn. 24) On or
near its site Upper Farm, later Drybrook Lodge,
was built c. 1860 to designs by T. H. Wyatt (fn. 25) to
replace a farmhouse which stood beside the
road. (fn. 26)
In the south part of the village the buildings
were in 1773 and 1992 more closely grouped. (fn. 27)
On the west side Lower or Manor Farm had
extensive farm buildings around it in the early
19th century. (fn. 28) The house, called Manor House
in 1992, was built in the earlier 18th century on
a square plan with a single-storeyed kitchen
wing to the south. The principal east front, of
five boys, has two storeys with attic dormers, and
is built of red brick with decorations of black
brick and a moulded brick cornice. A twostoreyed north service block was built from old
materials in 1914 to designs by A. C. Bothams. (fn. 29)
South of the house stand an earlier 18th-century
stable and a weatherboarded barn on staddle
stones. In the 1980s a farm building was converted for residence and two private houses were
built. At the road junction south-east of the
house, a village hall with a clock tower was built
in 1912 and, a little to the north, a fountain was
built about the same time. (fn. 30) On the east side of
the road most of the cottages were either rebuilt
or altered in the 19th century. The Crown was
an inn in 1855 (fn. 31) and 1992. By 1773 settlement
had extended south into what was later called
Grateley Road, (fn. 32) and east along it there was later
more. Holly Tree House on the north side was
built of chalk in the late 18th century and
extended in the early 19th; other houses were
built in the early 19th. (fn. 33) North of Grateley Road
in Edric's Close six council houses and six
bungalows for old people were built 1952–4. (fn. 34)
North of the village a farmstead was built on
downland beside a pond on the south side of the
Andover—Amesbury road in the late 18th century or early 19th. (fn. 35) A coach house east of it (fn. 36) was
later converted to a pair of cottages. The farmstead was burnt down in 1870 (fn. 37) and was replaced
by Down Barn. (fn. 38) A few other buildings, including a commercial garage and a large house of c.
1900, (fn. 39) were built beside the road. About 1900
H. C. Stephens, who owned most of the parish, (fn. 40)
commissioned three houses and three pairs of
cottages, (fn. 41) all of flint and red brick in vernacular
style and built outside the village: Walnut Cottage, Ann's Farm (later Beacon House), and two
pairs of cottages were built beside the road
leading west from the village, later called Amesbury Road; Scotland Lodge was built beside the
parish boundary in Bulford parish, and a pair of
cottages was built beside the parish boundary
north of the village. Also in Amesbury Road a
pair of estate cottages was built in the 1920s or
1930s, and 12 council houses, 4 in 1927, 4 in
1932, 2 in 1939, and 2 in 1958, (fn. 42) and 4 private
bungalows were built. A large private house,
Cowden, was built of brick on the former Cow
down south of the village in 1939. (fn. 43)
In 1904 waterworks, fed from springs in
Hampshire and including reservoirs and a water
tower in Cholderton, were constructed for the
Cholderton Water Co. Ltd. to supply H. C.
Stephens's Cholderton estate in Wiltshire and
Hampshire. In 1992 the Cholderton & District
Water Co. Ltd., so called from 1939, still supplied Cholderton and parts of other parishes. (fn. 44)
Manors and other estates.
Alfsige (d. 959), archbishop of Canterbury, devised the
reversion of either Cholderton or East or West
Chittington (Suss.) to Alfwig. (fn. 45)
The estate of 3½ hides less 4 a. which became
CHOLDERTON manor was held in 1086 by
William of Eu (d. c. 1095). (fn. 46) Like other estates
of William, the overlordship of the manor descended to Walter Marshal, earl of Pembroke (d.
1245). (fn. 47) The overlordship has not been traced
further.
Bernard was William of Eu's tenant in 1086, (fn. 48)
and the mesne lordship descended in his family
to Roger Bernard (fl. c. 1175) and to Eudes
Bernard who held it in 1242–3. (fn. 49) One of the
family subinfeudated the manor to Reynold de
Argentine, (fn. 50) and Richard de Argentine held it in
1242–3. (fn. 51) It passed to Reynold de Argentine (d.
c. 1308) and his son John (d. c. 1323), who left
a son John, a minor. (fn. 52) The family's interest has
not been traced further.
The first Reynold de Argentine further subinfeudated the manor to a member of the
Bassingbourn family. (fn. 53) Alan of Bassingbourn
held it in 1242–3 (fn. 54) and it passed like Bassingbourn manor in Wimpole (Cambs.) in the direct
Bassingbourn line to Baldwin (d. 1275), Warin
(d. 1323), Warin (d. 1348), who held in chief and
was granted free warren in his demesne at
Cholderton, and Warin. (fn. 55)
John Skilling and his wife Faith held Cholderton manor in 1382. (fn. 56) Another John Skilling held
it in 1428, (fn. 57) and it descended in the Skilling
family like Shoddesden manor in Kimpton
(Hants) to Elizabeth, daughter of a John Skilling, who married John Wynnard (fl. 1465) and
afterwards Thomas Wayte (d. 1482). (fn. 58) Sir
Thomas Lovell held the manor in 1492–4: it is
likely that it had been forfeited, perhaps in 1485,
and granted to him by the king. (fn. 59) In a way that
is obscure it passed to John Thornborough, who
died seised of it in 1511. It passed to John's son
Robert (fn. 60) (d. 1522) and to Robert's relict Anne,
who later married Sir Anthony Windsor. It was
held in 1562 by Robert's grandson John Thornborough, (fn. 61) and after John's death c. 1594 by his
relict Margaret. (fn. 62) The manor was sold before
1603 to Sir George Kingsmill (fn. 63) (d. 1606), passed
to his relict Sarah (fn. 64) (d. 1629), afterwards wife of
Edward la Zouche, Lord Zouche (d. 1625), and
of Sir Thomas Edmundes, (fn. 65) and reverted to
Bridget (will proved 1672), relict of Sir George's
elder brother Sir Henry Kingsmill (d. 1624). (fn. 66)
Bridget was succeeded by her son Daniel
Kingsmill (will proved 1679) and Daniel by his
relict Abigail (fl. 1681), (fn. 67) on whose death the
manor reverted to Daniel's nephew Sir William
Kingsmill (d. 1698). From Sir William's son and
heir William (d. s.p. 1766) it descended to his
niece Elizabeth (d. 1783), wife of Robert Brice,
who took the name Kingsmill in 1766. (fn. 68) The
manor was owned from 1781 or earlier by William Hayter (d. 1795) and afterwards by his
nephew the Revd. Edward Foyle (d. 1832). (fn. 69)
The manor house was that, south of the church,
demolished in the earlier 19th century. (fn. 70)
Foyle, who already owned other land in the
parish, (fn. 71) devised his Cholderton estate to his
niece Frances Bolton (from 1835 Frances Nelson, Countess Nelson, d. 1878). (fn. 72) Her son and
successor Sir Maurice Nelson sold the 1,016-a.
estate in 1889 to the ink manufacturer H. C.
Stephens (fn. 73) (d. 1918). (fn. 74) From 1893 Stephens
owned nearly all the parish. (fn. 75) He devised it to
his grandson P. M. L. Edmunds (fn. 76) (d. 1975),
whose son Mr. H. A. Edmunds sold 380 a. in
1986 (fn. 77) and owned over 1,000 a. in 1992. (fn. 78)
Other estates in Cholderton originated in small
estates held in 1066 by Alwin and Ulvric (½ hide
each), Sewi (I hide), and Ulward (1 hide and 4
a.). Ernulf of Hesdin held them all in 1086 when
Godric held the two ½ hides of him and Ulward
held his I hide and 4 a. by lease. (fn. 79) The overlordship of the estates descended like Berwick St.
James manor: it passed from Ernulf through the
Chaworth family, in the 14th century was held
by the earls and dukes of Lancaster, and as part
of the duchy of Lancaster was attached to the
Crown in 1399. (fn. 80)
Some estates held of Ernulf of Hesdin and his
successors apparently merged to form LOWER
farm. In 1203 Jordan Britton made good his
claim against William Bacon to hold 3½ yardlands in Cholderton. (fn. 81) William Britton conveyed
I hide in 1236 to Michael of Cholderton, (fn. 82) who
held ½ knight's fee in 1242–3. (fn. 83) Land in
Cholderton, possibly the same, was confirmed
to Peter of Cholderton and his wife Isabel in
1256. (fn. 84) In the later 13th century William Edmund conveyed land, again possibly the same,
to John of Durnford, who conveyed it to Sir
Henry Thistleden. (fn. 85) About 1330 Henry Thistleden held land in Cholderton later reputed a
manor (fn. 86) and either he or a namesake held it in
1361. (fn. 87) It apparently passed to Walter Carbonell
and by 1428 had been divided into five or more
parts. (fn. 88) One part, held in 1428 by William Nail,
was conveyed in 1440 by him or a namesake to
Thomas Bailey. (fn. 89) Later it was said to comprise
a house and c. 508 a. and was held by Robert
Bailey. Robert's daughter and heir Elizabeth
married Ralph Reeve and 1532 x 1544 their son
John claimed it. (fn. 90) Called a manor, it was later
owned by Cuthbert Reeve (d. 1594) and his relict
Eleanor (fl. 1599). (fn. 91) Another part, also called a
manor, was held in the later 16th century by
William Pound and his wife Ellen; (fn. 92) others were
held by Agnes Philpot (fl. 1540) and her son
Edward Philpot, (fn. 93) by William Rutter, (fn. 94) and possibly by Henry Clifford (fl. 1599). (fn. 95) None of the
five has been traced further, and some or all were
apparently merged to form Lower farm, which
Henry Hoare (d. 1785) owned in 1737 and
William Blatch (d. 1820) in 1781. (fn. 96) Blatch's son
William sold the farm in 1830 to Sir Alexander
Malet, Bt. (d. 1886), whose son Sir Henry Malet,
Bt., sold it, then 565 a., in 1893 to H. C.
Stephens, the owner of most other land in the
parish. (fn. 97)
Other estates held of Ernulf of Hesdin were
possibly the origin of the CHOLDERTON
HOUSE estate. One, perhaps the ½ knight's fee
held in 1242–3 by John de Aure, (fn. 98) was conveyed
by Robert Hungerford (d. 1352) to Ivychurch
priory. (fn. 99) It passed to the Crown at the Dissolution, (fn. 100) and was sold through agents in 1582. (fn. 101)
John Harding (d. 1609) owned it, and his son
Thomas (fn. 102) sold it in 1613 to Sir Thomas White
(will proved 1641), who owned it in 1638. (fn. 103) It
passed, apparently like Claygate manor in Ash
(Surr.), to Sir Thomas's cousin Robert Woodroffe (d. 1639). Robert was succeeded in turn by
his sons Thomas (fl. 1658) and George. (fn. 104) In 1676
George sold it to Jonathan Hill (d. 1727), who
already owned land in the parish. (fn. 105) Hill's estate
descended to his grandson John Lee Hill (will
proved 1760), who owned it in 1737, and to
John's son John Jonathan Hill. (fn. 106) J. J. Hill sold
Cholderton House and 750 a. in 1771 to the
Revd. Edward Foyle (d. 1784). The estate
passed to Foyle's son the Revd. Edward Foyle
and from 1795 descended with Cholderton
manor. (fn. 107) In 1690 Cholderton House was built,
of flint with red-brick dressings, as a twostoreyed house with attics above dentilled eaves
and with a central doorway in a five-bayed east
entrance front. (fn. 108) Features of 1690 to survive
inside the house include panelling in rooms in
the north-east corner, a staircase, doorcases, and
doors. Other panelling was renewed or inserted
in the 18th and 20th centuries. In the 19th the
attics were made into a third storey. Before c.
1840 a west wing was built from the south end
of the west elevation and a south wing from the
west end of the south elevation. (fn. 109) The south
wing was demolished in the mid 20th century. (fn. 110)
West of the house the walls of a former kitchen
garden incorporate a small, possibly early 19thcentury, classical gazebo and a large doorway
with a keystone dated 1780. North of the house,
and perhaps of c. 1690, a grove of yew trees, c.
3 a., was aligned in four north-south rows c. 250
ft. long: the inner rows enclosed two circular
clearings. (fn. 111) The grove was ruined by a gale in
1893. (fn. 112)
Mottisfont priory (Hants) held land at
Cholderton at the Dissolution. It was possibly
given by one of the Chaworths, overlords of land
in Cholderton and descendants of the priory's
founder. In 1536 the land was granted to William Sandys, Lord Sandys (d. 1540), and his
wife Margery. (fn. 113) From their son Thomas, Lord
Sandys (d. 1560), it descended to his grandson
William, Lord Sandys (d. 1623), who owned it
in 1600. (fn. 114) It was perhaps the estate owned in
1659 by Jonathan Hill (d. 1670). Hill devised his
lands to his wife Elizabeth (d. 1675) and to his
son Jonathan (d. 1727). (fn. 115) From 1676 they descended as part of the Cholderton House estate. (fn. 116)
Two yardlands at Cholderton were given to
Monkton Farleigh priory by Roger son of Otes,
possibly the Roger of Cholderton who leased
them from the priory in 1210. (fn. 117) The priory held
the estate in 1291. (fn. 118) No later evidence has been
found.
Before 1737 Anthony Cracherode (d. 1752)
acquired an estate in Cholderton. He devised it
to his cousin Mordaunt Cracherode, (fn. 119) who in
1755 sold it, then 97 a., to Thomas Hayter. (fn. 120)
From Thomas (d. 1779) it passed to his son
William (d. 1795), and it was merged with
Cholderton manor. (fn. 121)
Economic history.
In 1086 the four
estates at Cholderton had land for 5½
ploughteams which were there: apparently 3
teams were on demesne land and 2½ on land held
by 5 bordars and 5 coscets. On the demesne of
what became Cholderton manor there were 2
servi. There were 36 square furlongs of pasture
but neither meadow nor woodland. (fn. 122)
Sheep-and-corn husbandry prevailed in the
parish until the later 19th century. Until the later
18th there may have been roughly equal areas of
open fields and common pasture. Nearly all the
land north of the Andover—Amesbury road was
apparently pasture for sheep: in the early 19th
century, after inclosure, Tenantry down (c. 120
a.), Upper down (c. 200 a.), and Lower down (c.
200 a.) were mentioned, and a further 58 a. called
Upper down lay west of the old Hungerford road
in the south-west corner of the parish. In the
south-east corner lay Cow down, c. 130 a. The
open fields, mainly in the centre of the parish
and perhaps c. 750 a., were called North, West
or Middle, and South in the 16th, 17th, and 18th
centuries. Meadows lay on either side of the
Bourne. (fn. 123) A sheep down of 220 a., on which 560
sheep could be stinted, was inclosed in 1737, (fn. 124)
other downland and some arable were inclosed
in the period 1747–52, (fn. 125) and the remaining
commonable land, c. 180 a. of arable and 73 a.
of Cow down, was inclosed in 1806. (fn. 126) After it
was inclosed most of the downland was
ploughed. Some was burnbaked in the earlier
18th century (fn. 127) and in the earlier 19th all the
downland except 52 a. of Cow down was arable.
About 40 a. more of Cow down were ploughed
in the period 1840–7. In the later 18th century
there were two small parks, West park, c. 40 a.
in 1776, and that south-east of the church: both
had been ploughed by c. 1840. (fn. 128)
In 1659 there were two large farms, Upper and
Lower, and four others, 1 of 2½ yardlands, 2 of
1 yardland, and 1 of ½ yardland. (fn. 129) Sainfoin was
grown on c. 30 a. of Lower farm in the earlier
18th century (fn. 130) and elsewhere in 1753. (fn. 131) From 1781
or earlier to c. 1797 nearly all the land in the
parish was in Lower farm, worked by William
Blatch. From c. 1798 Upper farm was again
separate. (fn. 132) In 1840 Upper farm was 953 a., of
which c. 863 a. were arable, and Lower farm was
595 a., of which c. 550 a. were arable. The fields
of both farms were of 20–30 a. (fn. 133)
There was less arable, but still about two thirds
of the parish, in the period 1867–76, when grain,
especially barley, was sown on about half the
arable, root crops and vetches on the rest of it.
More arable was laid to pasture 1876–86, and
flocks totalling c. 2,000 sheep and herds averaging 60 pigs were kept. (fn. 134) Between 1889 and 1900
nearly the whole parish was brought in hand as
part of H. C. Stephens's Cholderton estate based
at Cholderton Lodge in Amport. It was divided
into four farms, each with its arable divided into
fields of 24 a. and its own manager. Michael's
farm, 435 a. worked mainly from Down Barn,
had 13 fields and c. 120 a. of woodland and
downland; Ann's or Mount Pleasant farm, 389
a. worked from Beacon House, had 11 fields and
c. 122 a. of woodland and downland; Pearl farm,
308 a. in the north corner of the parish, had 11
fields and c. 40 a. of woodland; Scotland farm,
330 a., had 11 fields and c. 62 a. of woodland.
Cow down and other land east of the village was
tenanted. The estate maintained a herd of Tamworth pigs, pedigree herds of Galloway and of
Highland cattle, a stud of Cleveland Bays set up
in 1885 from which carriage horses were supplied for the royal mews, and a flock of
Hampshire Down sheep formed in 1890. Sainfoin was reintroduced as summer grazing for
sheep. By the 1930s all the farms had been
leased, the fields were again of different sizes,
and all the downland north-east of the old
Hungerford road was again pasture. In 1992 all
except Ann's farm were again in hand as part of
the Cholderton estate, which included about as
much land in Hampshire as in Wiltshire: much
of the Wiltshire land was arable and the Hampshire Down flock and Cleveland Bay stud were
maintained. (fn. 135) Based at Beacon House, Cholderton Rare Breeds farm, c. 50 a., was open to the
public. (fn. 136)
Hill's copse, 4 a. in 1817, was apparently the
only woodland in the parish until c. 36 a.,
including the 14 a. of Scotland wood, were
planted between 1817 and 1840. (fn. 137) Hill's copse
was enlarged before c. 1878, and between 1889
and 1910 a total of 25 a. in four areas in the
centre and west of the parish were planted.
Between 1925 and 1948 trees were also planted
along the parish boundary at its north corner. (fn. 138)
All those woods were standing in 1992.
At a small factory opened at Down Barn c.
1990 Country Leisure Group Ltd. in 1992 employed 18 people in making equipment for
swimming pools. (fn. 139) Extensive stabling and an
indoor riding school were built c. 1980 west of
Cholderton House for a commercial equestrian
centre. In 1992 the buildings and the former
kitchen garden of the house were used for
dressage training. (fn. 140)
Local government.
An average of £16
a year was spent on the poor 1783–5, and in
1802–3 c. £37 was spent on relieving 7 regularly
and 6 occasionally. Between 1812 and 1815 c.
£70 a year was spent on relieving c. 8 regularly
and c. 6 occasionally: the total number relieved
in Cholderton was a much smaller proportion of
the population than was usual elsewhere. (fn. 141) Sums
spent each year were low for Amesbury hundred: they averaged c. £44 in the early 1820s, c.
£67 in the early 1830s. (fn. 142) There was no unemployed pauper in Cholderton in 1848. (fn. 143) The
parish was included in Amesbury poor-law union in 1835, (fn. 144) in Salisbury district in 1974. (fn. 145)
Church.
A church stood in Cholderton c.
1175 when Roger Bernard, mesne lord of
Cholderton manor, granted it to St. Neots priory
(Hunts.). (fn. 146) The benefice remained a rectory and
became part of Bourne Valley benefice in 1973. (fn. 147)
The advowson was held until 1337 by St.
Neots priory, which presented rectors. Its right
to present was challenged unsuccessfully in 1305
by Henry Spicer, who may have been undertenant of Warin of Bassingbourn's Cholderton
manor. After 1337 the possessions of St. Neots,
the cell of an alien house, were frequently in the
king's hands, and the king presented rectors in
1337 and 1348. The lords of Cholderton manor
presented from 1399, except in 1602 when Giles
Hutchins presented by grant of a turn. (fn. 148) On the
death of Sarah Edmundes in 1629 the advowson,
unlike Cholderton manor, reverted to Sir
George Kingsmill's nephew Sir William
Kingsmill (d. 1661), whose wife Anne presented
in 1651. (fn. 149) The advowson passed to Sir William's
and Anne's son Sir William Kingsmill (d. 1698),
lord of Cholderton manor, who sold it in 1692
to the Revd. Thomas Cholwell (fn. 150) (will proved
1694). Cholwell devised it to Oriel College,
Oxford. (fn. 151) John Potter (d. 1747), then regius
professor of divinity, presented in 1709 by grant
of a turn, (fn. 152) but thereafter the college presented
and from 1973 was on the patronage board for
Bourne Valley benefice. (fn. 153)
The rectory was valued at £4 6s. 8d. in 1291, (fn. 154)
£11 10s. 6d. in 1535, (fn. 155) and £60 in 1650. (fn. 156) Its
average income of £225 a year 1829–31 made it
one of the poorer livings in Amesbury deanery. (fn. 157)
Oriel College augmented the living in 1864. (fn. 158)
The rector was entitled to all the tithes from the
whole parish. (fn. 159) They were valued at £267 in
1840 and commuted. (fn. 160) The rector had 16 a. of
glebe in 1341, (fn. 161) 12 a. in 1677, (fn. 162) 10 a. in 1840,
and, after two exchanges, 8 a. from 1896: (fn. 163) 5 a.
were sold in 1960, the remaining 3 a. c. 1967. (fn. 164)
The rectory house was repaired in 1652–3, extended east in 1659, (fn. 165) and rebuilt c. 1722. (fn. 166) Most
of the new house was demolished when another
was built further east in 1828. (fn. 167) That was enlarged between 1836 and 1847. (fn. 168) It was sold c.
1967, (fn. 169) a new house having been built west of it
c. 1965. (fn. 170)
Rectors, one of whom was licensed to study
for a year in 1298, were often in minor orders in
the late 13th century and early 14th. (fn. 171) In 1409
the rector was given a year's leave of absence. (fn. 172)
A curate assisted the rector 1550–3 (fn. 173) and one
may have served the cure in 1565 when the
rector, a pluralist, did not reside. (fn. 174) Nathaniel
Noyes, rector 1622–51, signed the Concurrent
Testimony and, although he did not live in
Cholderton, preached twice on Sundays in
1650. (fn. 175) His successor, Samuel Heskins, was rector 1651–1709. (fn. 176) In 1662 the church lacked the
Book of Homilies and Jewell's Apology. (fn. 177) The
rectors were fellows of Oriel College 1709–
1879. (fn. 178) George Carter, rector 1709–20, was
provost of the college and employed a curate at
Cholderton. (fn. 179) John Bradley, rector 1774–1801, (fn. 180)
was also rector of Worting (Hants) (fn. 181) and employed Basil Cane, rector of Everleigh, as curate
at Cholderton. Cane lived at Kimpton and was
also curate of Shipton Bellinger (Hants). He held
two Sunday services at Cholderton and preached
at the morning one; he administered the sacrament four times a year to 12–14 communicants. (fn. 182)
James Pickford, rector 1802–36, was also perpetual curate of Little Eaton (Derb.). His curate at
Cholderton preached at two services each Sunday in 1832, held some weekday services, and
administered the sacrament four times a year. (fn. 183)
Thomas Mozley, rector 1836–47, (fn. 184) was a pupil
and brother-in-law of J. H. Newman. He was
the first rector since 1709 to reside continuously
and propagated the tenets of the Tractarians,
locally by distributing Tracts for the Times,
nationally through the British Critic, of which
he became editor in 1841, and in articles in The
Times. (fn. 185) James Fraser, rector 1847–59, continued Mozley's work and incurred the displeasure
of leading parishioners by preaching in a surplice. He became bishop of Manchester in
1870. (fn. 186) In 1850–1 c. 80 people attended Sunday
morning services, c. 100 those on Sunday afternoons. (fn. 187) The rector held two services on
Sundays in 1864: he preached at all the services
except the morning ones in alternate weeks.
Weekday services were attended by c. 20. The
sacrament was administered on Christmas day,
Easter Sunday, either Whit Sunday or Trinity
Sunday, and eight other Sundays. Of the c. 36
communicants, c. 20 received communion at the
great festivals, c. 18 at other times. (fn. 188) The last
fellow of Oriel College to be rector, 1875–9, was
William Stubbs, who in those years lived at
Cholderton each summer: Stubbs was regius
professor of modern history at Oxford 1866–84
and later bishop of Chester and of Oxford. (fn. 189) The
rectory was held in plurality with that of Newton
Tony 1953–73. (fn. 190)
The church of ST. NICHOLAS was so called
in 1763. (fn. 191) In the early 19th century the nave may
have survived from the 12th-century church.
The chancel may have been built in the early
13th century: it had a roof of lower pitch than
the nave's but internally was undivided from the
nave. Two windows were inserted in the south
wall of the nave in the 15th century or early 16th.
A west gallery was lit by a south dormer window.
The church also had a west porch. (fn. 192) A new
church was built 1841–50, mostly at the expense
of Thomas Mozley, beside and north of the old,
which was demolished in 1851. The new church,
collegiate in plan and 15th- or early 16th-century
in style, comprises an undivided chancel and
nave with west ante-chapel and north-west belfry. It was built of flint with dressings of Tisbury
stone to designs by Mozley and T. H. Wyatt
which allowed a late-medieval 10-bayed roof
from Ipswich (Suff.) to be used. The pyramidal
cap of the belfry was replaced by a wooden cage
c. 1987. (fn. 193) A late 12th-century font and most of
the mid 19th-century fittings survived in 1992.
In 1553 the king's commissioners took 2 oz. of
plate and left a chalice of 8 oz. A paten and flagon
given in 1848 and a chalice given in 1850 were
held in 1992. (fn. 194) There were two bells in 1553, one
presumably the medieval bell from the Salisbury
foundry which alone hung in the belfry in 1992. (fn. 195)
Registrations of baptisms and burials survive
from 1652 and are complete. Marriage registrations survive from 1664 but are lacking 1753–
1812. (fn. 196)
Nonconformity.
A house in Cholderton
was certified for Independents in 1765, another
for Methodists in 1813, and another in 1850. (fn. 197)
There was only one dissenter in the parish in
1864. (fn. 198)
Education.
A school for poor children was
held in the earlier 18th century, evidently by the
curate, (fn. 199) and Anthony Cracherode (d. 1752) gave
by will £8 17s. a year to provide a teacher and
books for 12 poor children. (fn. 200) Cracherode's
school existed from 1753, and in 1818 a poorly
qualified woman taught 6–8 children at it. Another school had c. 15 pupils in 1808 and was
presumably the school with 16 pupils in 1818. (fn. 201)
In 1833 the charity school had 28 pupils and was
the only one in the parish; (fn. 202) in 1846–7 another
ill qualified woman taught 14 children in it. (fn. 203) A
new school in Church Lane was built from
materials of the old church and opened in 1851, (fn. 204)
when 17 attended. Numbers rose to 36, including children from other parishes, in 1853, (fn. 205) and
in 1858 two teachers taught 40 children. (fn. 206) There
were 30 pupils on attendance day in 1871. (fn. 207) The
school was enlarged in the earlier 20th century; (fn. 208)
the £8 17s. a year was added to its funds. (fn. 209)
Average attendance was 53 in 1906–7, 34 in
1932, and 46 in 1938, (fn. 210) only 18 when the school
was closed in 1978. (fn. 211)
An evening school was held twice weekly in
winter 1851–3 by the rector and the schoolmistress. (fn. 212) The rector still held a night school in
1864. (fn. 213) At an evening continuation school held
1894–1900, attended by c. 9 pupils 1896–9 and
c. 6 in 1900, arithmetic, geography, chemistry,
botany, drawing, and music were taught. (fn. 214)
Charities for the poor.
Anthony Cra-cherode (d. 1752) gave £3 3s. a year for the poor
at Christmas. The money was shared among 6–8
people in 1901, (fn. 215) among 3 in 1951. (fn. 216) The £12
yearly income from that and from Cracherode's
educational charity was being allowed to accumulate c. 1992. (fn. 217)
Agnes, relict of the rector James Fraser, by
deed of 1885 gave £250 for winter clothing for
the poor. In 1901 £8 10s. was given to a clothing
club and £1 10s. to old people. (fn. 218) Between 1933
and 1947 money was given to a nursing fund and
to poor people. The £9 income was divided
among 9 people in 1951. (fn. 219) The £25 yearly
income was being allowed to accumulate c.
1992. (fn. 220)