FIGHELDEAN

Figheldean Parish 1839
Figheldean (fn. 1) is 18 km. north of Salisbury on
Salisbury Plain. (fn. 2) The parish, 2,201 ha. (5,439
a.), includes 10 a. considered part of Durrington
parish until the mid 19th century. (fn. 3) It lies east-west and is crossed from north to south by the
Christchurch Avon. It contains six settlements
beside the river: their names suggest that they
are all of Saxon origin, (fn. 4) and each had a strip of
land running from the river to the downs,
Choulston, Figheldean, Ablington, and Syrencot to the east, Alton and Knighton to the west.
Figheldean had a church, and Ablington,
Knighton, and Syrencot, in the same ownership
as Figheldean in the 12th and 13th centuries, (fn. 5)
may have been in its parish early. Alton also had
a church and may have been a parish in the
Middle Ages; (fn. 6) later both it and Choulston were
in Figheldean parish.
The parish boundary, c. 30 km. in length, runs
mostly in straight lines across downland. At the
extremities a prehistoric ditch marks the boundary with South Tidworth (Hants until 1992) on
Dunch Hill on the east, and a prehistoric earthwork, Robin Hood's Ball, straddles the
boundary on the west. The Avon forms two
stretches of the boundary, and in places both the
northern and southern boundaries follow dry
valleys.
The parish is entirely on Upper Chalk. Alluvium and gravel have been deposited by the
Avon, and to the east there is gravel in Bourne
bottom, a parallel valley cut by a tributary of the
Avon, Nine Mile river, now dry in Figheldean.
There are ridges and dry valleys both east and
west of the Avon, but much of the downland
slopes gently. In the east the land exceeds 150
m. on Dunch Hill, and in the west reaches 147
m. on Knighton down and c. 140 m. at Robin
Hood's Ball. (fn. 7) Each of the six settlements had
meadow land beside the Avon, all their sites were
on the gravel near the river, and to the east and
west were large areas of open fields and downland pastures for sheep. Downland and some of
the former open fields were included in military
training areas after 1898. (fn. 8)
The eastern downs of the parish were crossed
by a road from Chipping Campden (Glos.) to
Salisbury via Marlborough prominent in the
17th century. (fn. 9) The road lost importance after a
Marlborough—Salisbury road along the Bourne
valley further east was turnpiked in 1835.
North-south roads linked the villages on each
bank of the Avon. That on the east was turnpiked from a little north of Figheldean parish to
Amesbury in 1761 and disturnpiked in 1871.
That on the west became more important. It was
turnpiked in 1840, disturnpiked in 1877, and,
via Upavon and Amesbury, took some Devizes—
Salisbury and Marlborough—Salisbury traffic. (fn. 10)
The two roads were linked by lanes through
Figheldean village: to the north one crossed the
river on a bridge, called Figheldean bridge in
1649, (fn. 11) near Figheldean mill, and to the south
one forded the river. Between 1773 and 1817 a
bridge was built near the ford: (fn. 12) it was an iron
suspension bridge in 1851, (fn. 13) was later rebuilt,
and was called Figheldean bridge by 1880. (fn. 14) The
southern road, leading from the crossing northwards through Figheldean village, was
turnpiked in 1840 and disturnpiked in 1877. (fn. 15)
East-west roads across the parish fell out of
civilian use after 1898. (fn. 16)
A Palaeolithic artefact was found in the parish,
Robin Hood's Ball is a causewayed camp of the
early Neolithic period, and Bronze-Age barrows
of several types survive on the downs. East and
west of Bourne bottom an Iron-Age field system
of c. 1,500 a., divided by ditches and possibly
associated with the contemporary fort on Sidbury Hill in North Tidworth, indicates
settlement by agriculturalists and cattle farmers.
The cultivated area now in Figheldean parish,
c. 370 a., could have supported perhaps 22
families but no evidence of their dwellings has
been found. There may have been other prehistoric field systems on the lower slopes of the
downs west of Alton and on the boundary with
Durrington further west, c. 220 a. and c. 280 a.
respectively. Romano-British foundations and
pottery have been found west of the Upavon—Amesbury road at Alton Parva Farm. (fn. 17)
The six settlements had a total of c. 160
poll-tax payers in 1377, a high number for a
parish in Amesbury hundred, (fn. 18) and the parish
was apparently prosperous in the 16th century
and early 17th. (fn. 19) The population was 367 in
1801. It rose from 342 in 1811 to 531 in 1831.
Five people emigrated from the parish early in
1841 when there were 510 inhabitants. Increased
mechanization of farming resulted in a declining
population in the later 19th century and early
20th, and in 1911 the population was 429.
Thereafter housing in the parish for military
personnel caused the number of inhabitants to
increase and fluctuate. The population was 893,
including 500 civilians, in 1921, and 625 in
1931. New housing built at Figheldean and
Ablington in the mid 20th century apparently
caused the civilian population to increase. The
parish had 977 inhabitants in 1951, (fn. 20) 675 in
1991. (fn. 21)
Figheldean.
In the early 14th century
Figheldean was apparently prosperous, (fn. 22) but in
1428 was said to have fewer than 10 households. (fn. 23) To judge from its surviving houses it
was much the largest village in the parish in the
17th century and it was clearly so in the 19th
and 20th: it had c. 288 inhabitants in 1841. (fn. 24)
The church stands on high ground at the north
end of the village: the line of buildings south of
it in Church Street and High Street has offshoots
in Mill Lane and Pollens Lane. In the later 17th
century there were houses on both sides of
Church Street, the west side of Mill Lane, and
the west side of High Street. The predominant
building materials were timber, stone rubble,
and brick, and many of the surviving houses
retain thatched roofs. The earlier 17th-century
houses are typically L-shaped with an internal
chimney stack and a lobby entrance. Those of
the later 17th century are typified by a house on
the west side of Church Street built in 1676 (fn. 25)
and the Cottage on the west side of High Street.
Melrose House, also on the west side of High
Street, was built in 1666 (fn. 26) and is L-shaped. Its
principal timber-framed north—south range has
an east entrance front with high symmetrical
gables for second-floor attic windows and has
end gables of flint and ashlar. That range contains the main rooms on either side of a central
hall and at its north end a service wing projects
eastwards. On the east side of High Street there
was little more than two farmsteads in 1773: (fn. 27)
Manor Farm was at the north end, Read's Farm
at the south end. Both were demolished between
c. 1877 and c. 1957. (fn. 28) By 1817 other buildings,
of which only a cottage south of the junction
with Pollens Lane survives, had been erected to
make a continuous line on the east side. (fn. 29) At the
north end of High Street, Figheldean House, a
large L-shaped house of pebble-dashed brick
with label mouldings above the windows and a
thatched roof, was built between 1820 and 1838
for Sir Edward Poore, Bt., whose relict lived
there in 1848. (fn. 30) A range of five almshouses built
in 1826 for Edward Dyke Poore (d. 1859) southwest of the church was demolished in the
1960s: (fn. 31) it is not known by whom or on what
terms the houses were occupied. Also in the
period 1820–38 two cottages were built beside
the turnpike road north-east of the village at Cliff
End; two more were built near the river north
of the church, an area called Little London,
between 1838 and 1850. Of several farmsteads
built on the open land east of the village in the
mid 19th century only Figheldean New Buildings, 400 m. north-east of Cliff End, survives. (fn. 32)

Figheldean and Ablington 1839
The Wheatsheaf, on the west side of High
Street, was open in 1855 (fn. 33) and 1991. The Avon
Valley lodge of the Order of Foresters met there
1866–1904. (fn. 34) A school and a nonconformist
chapel were built on the east side of High Street
in the later 19th century. (fn. 35) Houses in the later
19th century and the 20th, bungalows in the later
20th, have been built in High Street, those on
the west side on old sites; at the south end of
High Street on the west side offices and a
working men's club were built in the 1980s. In
the 20th century the village has also expanded
eastwards, north and south of Pollens Lane. To
the south, in Oak Lane, 4 council houses were
built c. 1920, (fn. 36) several private houses were built,
and 12 old people's bungalows were built in
1970 (fn. 37) and later. To the north, 27 bungalows
were built in Pollen Close in the 1960s and 10
in Hilltop Close in the 1980s. Council housing
also extended the village south-eastwards towards Ablington: in Avon Banks 12 houses were
built in 1949, 8 in 1957, and 6 in 1964–5. (fn. 38)
Ablington.
The small nucleated village lines
both sides of an east-west lane: a new road was
made to join it to Figheldean in the mid 19th
century. (fn. 39) The village may have been as prosperous as Figheldean in the 14th century (fn. 40) but
was later much smaller. It had 137 inhabitants
in 1841. (fn. 41)
The village is notable for the survival of
timber-framed and thatched houses and cottages of the 17th century, and in the 19th century
two larger houses stood back from the lane,
Ablington House to the north, Ablington Farm
to the south. A house between them on the north
side of the lane was built in 1631. (fn. 42) At the west
end of the lane, also on the north side, a cottage
of one storey and attics incorporates parts of
three crucks. Further east, on the south side, a
cottage was built in 1665. (fn. 43) A few other cottages
were built or rebuilt in the 18th century or the
19th. In a back lane to the north the Terrace, a
row of six houses, was built in the 1920s, north
of that the Crescent, four pairs of houses, was
built from the late 1930s, and nearby new farm
buildings were also erected.
A farmstead was erected on the lower slopes
of the downs east of Ablington in the later 20th
century. (fn. 44) South of Ablington, Gunville Cottage, a rendered and thatched house of the 17th
century, may be on the site of a mill. (fn. 45)
Alton.
In the early Middle Ages Alton was
probably a small village and had a church. (fn. 46) The
village was evidently small in 1377, (fn. 47) and in 1428
had fewer than 10 households. (fn. 48) The church was
dilapidated in the late 16th century. (fn. 49) In 1773
there were only two farmsteads, each connected
to the Upavon—Amesbury road by a short east—west lane, (fn. 50) and the site of the church was
possibly between them. (fn. 51) The hamlet had 42
inhabitants in 1841. (fn. 52)
To the north Alton Magna Farm is an L-shaped house built of brick in the mid 18th
century: in the early 19th it was enlarged on the
south-east and its interior was altered. To the
south Alton Parva Farm was also an Alton Parva L-shaped
18th-century house but had flint walls and aL
thatched roof: it was burnt down during the
First World War and a new house was built on
the site c. 1920. (fn. 53)
A cottage on the west side of the Upavon—Amesbury road was built in 1828, (fn. 54) but two
cottages built in 1854 apparently near Alton
Magna Farm no longer stood c. 1877. (fn. 55) Barns
were built on Alton down in the mid 19th
century; a racecourse and a hunter trials course
laid out there in 1930–1 and extended in the
1970s (fn. 56) were mainly for use by members of the
armed services.
Choulston.
In the Middle Ages Choulston
was apparently a small settlement. (fn. 57) In 1773 it
consisted of no more than a single farmstead (fn. 58)
and in 1841 had 23 inhabitants. (fn. 59) Choulston
Farm, timber-framed and U-shaped, was built
in the early 17th century and encased in red brick
in the mid 18th. The house was made symmetrical with a central east entrance in the 19th
century, and the inside was altered c. 1985. (fn. 60)
Four mid 20th-century cottages are on the site
of an older building nearby. (fn. 61)
In 1912–13 Netheravon airfield and its camp
were constructed north-east of Choulston on
either side of the Figheldean—Fittleton boundary. The officers' mess and quarters and a
hospital were in Figheldean. The airfield was an
operational base for the Royal Flying Corps
during the First World War and was afterwards
used for training pilots. Glider pilots were
trained there during and after the Second World
War. The R.A.F. police occupied the camp
1950–62. The airfield and camp were transferred
to the army in 1963 and from 1966 were the
headquarters of the Army Air Corps. (fn. 62)
The road from Netheravon via Choulston and
the camp to Figheldean, with an offshoot to the
south-east, was given the name Kerby Avenue.
A Roman Catholic church on the west side and,
c. 1952, a cemetery on the east side were opened
there. (fn. 63) Married quarters were built in Choulston Close west of Kerby Avenue in the 1950s
and in the south-east part of Kerby Avenue in
the early 1960s, a total of c. 47 houses. Netheravon sewage disposal works were constructed
west of the Figheldean road before 1948. (fn. 64)
Knighton.
There was a chapel and possibly a
manor house at Knighton in the 13th century, (fn. 65)
and in the 14th century the settlement may have
been more populous than it was later. (fn. 66) There
was a single farmstead in 1773, (fn. 67) and in 1841
Knighton had 20 inhabitants. (fn. 68)
Knighton Farm was built in the early 18th
century and was surrounded by an embankment
as defence against floods. It has two east—west
ranges. The tall south range is entirely of brick,
has two storeys and attics, and contains the
principal rooms. The lower north range, of
mixed brick and chalk, contains service rooms.
Two thatched cottages on the north side of the
lane which linked Knighton Farm with the
Upavon—Amesbury road were built in the late
18th century and altered in the 20th. On the west
side of the main road a pair of cottages was built
between c. 1840 and c. 1877. Farm buildings
erected on Knighton down in the mid 19th
century were demolished in the early 20th. (fn. 69)
Knighton down was used for military training
in the early 20th century, and from the late 1920s
the south part was used as an airfield by aircraft
taking part in army exercises on Salisbury Plain.
It was in R.A.F. Larkhill from 1936 to c. 1942
when it was returned to the army. In the later
20th century the Royal Aircraft Establishment
had offices on Knighton down and there were
several sports grounds. (fn. 70)
Syrencot.
There was presumably a hamlet at
Syrencot in the 14th century (fn. 71) but no building
other than Syrencot House in 1773 (fn. 72) and 1991.
Manors and other estates.
Harding held FIGHELDEAN in 1066 and 1086; (fn. 73)
Henry Hussey held it in the later 12th century.
The overlordship may have descended in the
Hussey family until 1319 with Knighton manor
but is not expressly said to have done so. (fn. 74)
Henry Hussey apparently granted Figheldean
to his younger son Geoffrey, to whom the manor
was confirmed in 1198. Geoffrey was succeeded
by his son Geoffrey (d.c. 1218), who held the
manor in 1210–12. The younger Geoffrey's estate passed to another Henry Hussey (fn. 75) (d. 1260
X 1263), who was succeeded by his son, Sir
Hubert Hussey (d. before 1277). (fn. 76) The manor
passed to Sir Hubert's daughters and coheirs
Margaret, wife of Henry Sturmy, Maud (d. c.
1285, unmarried), and Isabel, in 1316 the wife
of John of Thorney. (fn. 77) Margaret's moiety passed
on her death c. 1320 to her son Henry Sturmy, (fn. 78)
whose right was challenged successfully in 1321
by his brother John. In 1330, however, the
moiety was returned to Henry (fn. 79) (d. c. 1338), and
passed to his son Henry. (fn. 80) Isabel and John of
Thorney held the other moiety in 1336 (fn. 81) and on
Isabel's death it reverted to the third Henry
Sturmy, who in 1359 was granted free warren
in the demesne of the reunited manor. (fn. 82) From
Henry (d. 1381) Figheldean manor descended to
his nephew Sir William Sturmy (fn. 83) (d. 1427),
whose heirs were his daughter Agnes, wife of
John Holcombe, and his grandson John Seymour. (fn. 84) It was allotted to Agnes and John
Holcombe, who together held it in 1429. (fn. 85) The
manor was afterwards owned by William Ringbourne (d. 1450), his relict Elizabeth, his son
Robert (fn. 86) (d. 1485), Robert's relict Elizabeth (d.
1504), and Robert's brother William (fn. 87) (d. 1512).
William was succeeded by his grandson Thomas
Bruyn. (fn. 88) The manor was afterwards acquired,
perhaps by inheritance, by John Seymour's
great-great-grandson Edward Seymour, earl of
Hertford, who in 1545 gave it to the bishop of
Salisbury in an exchange. (fn. 89) The bishop owned
the manor, c. 1,000 a., until it passed to the
Ecclesiastical Commissioners in 1869. (fn. 90) Copyhold land was enfranchised in 1846 for the tenant
Edward Dyke Poore (d. 1859) and descended to
his son Edward Dyke Poore (d. 1874), whose
daughters Frances, wife of the Revd. Henry
Baker, and Alice Dyke Poore in 1879 sold 340
a. to Sir Michael Hicks Beach, Bt. Also in 1879
the Ecclesiastical Commissioners sold 394 a. to
Hicks Beach, (fn. 91) who sold 489 a. to T. W. Hussey
in 1897 and 247 a. to the War Department in
1898. (fn. 92) Hussey also owned 224 a., presumably
former copyhold land, settled on his wife Mary
(d. 1885) in 1871, and in 1898 sold c. 713 a. to
the War Department. (fn. 93) The Ministry of Defence
owned all the land in 1991. (fn. 94)
Part of the Figheldean estate held in 1066 by
Harding was afterwards held by Aubrey de
Couci and had been forfeited to the king by
1086. (fn. 95) It may have been the estate, later called
READ'S farm, held in 1535 by Wilton abbey. (fn. 96)
At the Dissolution the abbey's land in
Figheldean passed to the Crown, and in 1544
was granted to Sir William Herbert (cr. earl of
Pembroke 1551) and his wife Anne. (fn. 97) It descended with the Pembroke title to George, earl of
Pembroke and of Montgomery, who in 1877 sold
the 359-a. farm to T. E. Simpkins. (fn. 98) It passed
with Simpkins's land in Ablington, (fn. 99) and the
Ministry of Defence owned it in 1991. (fn. 100)
Ablington, held after 1066 by Aubrey de
Couci, had been forfeited to the king by 1086. (fn. 101)
Like Figheldean manor it was held in the later
12th century by Henry Hussey and by his son
Geoffrey. (fn. 102) Geoffrey's son Geoffrey (d. c. 1218)
apparently subinfeudated ABLINGTON
manor to Geoffrey of Fundenhall. Henry
Hussey, the younger Geoffrey's successor,
subinfeudated it to Reynold of Whitchurch, to
whom Geoffrey of Fundenhall ceded it in 1226 (fn. 103)
and it was confirmed in 1227. (fn. 104)
Ablington manor was later held in demesne by
Bevis de Veel, whose son (Sir) Peter (d. c. 1343)
held it in 1312. It was held by Sir Peter's relict
Catherine (fn. 105) (d. 1386), who married Thomas
Berkeley, Lord Berkeley, and passed to his
grandson Sir John le Moyne (fn. 106) (d. 1429), whose
daughter and heir Elizabeth married William
Stourton (d. 1413). (fn. 107) From the Stourtons' son
John, Lord Stourton (d. 1462), the manor passed
with the barony to William Stourton (fn. 108) (d. 1478)
and John Stourton (fn. 109) (d. 1485). It was held for
life by John's relict Catherine (d. 1494), wife of
Sir John Brereton, and passed to her brother-in-law William Stourton, Lord Stourton (fn. 110) (d.
1524). It descended to William's brother Edward, Lord Stourton (d. 1535), and to Edward's
son William, Lord Stourton, who sold it to
Thomas Long in 1544. (fn. 111) The manor passed from
Long (d. 1562) and his relict Joan (d. 1583) to
his nephew Edward Long (fn. 112) (d. 1622), and in the
direct line to Gifford (fn. 113) (d. 1635), Edward (fn. 114) (d.
1644}, and Henry Long (d. s.p. 1672). (fn. 115) Henry
devised the manor to his nephew Richard Long
(d. 1730), and it again descended in the direct
line to Richard (d. 1760), Richard (d. 1787), (fn. 116)
and Richard (d. 1835), who sold it in 1799 to
William Dyke. (fn. 117) Dyke (d. 1818) was succeeded
by his son Edward Dyke Poore (d. 1859), who
in 1839 had c. 950 a. called Great Ablington.
The manor passed, with part of Figheldean
manor, to Edward Dyke Poore (d. 1874) (fn. 118) and
to Frances Baker and Alice Dyke Poore. (fn. 119) It was
afterwards bought by George Knowles, who
sold it to the War Department in 1898, and it
belonged to the Ministry of Defence in 1991. (fn. 120)
Ablington Farm was built as a long east—west
range with rendered walls and a thatched roof in
the 17th or 18th century. A matching gabled
extension was built on the west in the early 19th
century and extended north in brick after c. 1890.
Geoffrey Hussey, probably he who died c.
1218, gave land in Ablington that became
ABBOT'S farm to Durford abbey in Rogate
(Suss.). (fn. 121) The abbey was granted free warren in
its demesnes in 1252 (fn. 122) and held the land until
the Dissolution. (fn. 123) The estate was granted in 1537
to Sir William FitzWilliam (cr. earl of
Southampton 1537, d. s.p. legit. 1542), (fn. 124) reverted
to the Crown, and in 1546 was sold through
agents to Richard Cowper (d. 1558). (fn. 125) It passed
to John Cowper (d. 1561), his relict Margaret
(d. 1599), and their son Thomas, a lunatic. John
Cowper administered the estate for his cousin
Thomas (fl. 1618) from c. 1603 (fn. 126) and he was
presumably the John Cowper who divided and
sold it. Thomas Sheppard (d. 1665) bought part
of it from Cowper in 1631. Another part was
bought after 1623 by Geoffrey Bigge and in 1657
was sold to Sheppard by Joseph Bates, the
husband of Bigge's daughter Anne. Sheppard's
son Thomas was succeeded by his son William. (fn. 127)
That William Sheppard or a namesake may have
owned the farm in 1736. (fn. 128) By will dated 1771 it
was given by, presumably another, William
Sheppard to his four sisters, all of whom died
unmarried. From the last sister, Anne, the farm
passed to her brother Thomas, who by will
proved 1806 gave it to his son Thomas Somerby
alias Sheppard. In 1833 Thomas conveyed it to
a trustee, who in 1837 sold it to Edwin Simpkins.
The farm, 74 a. with c. 40 per cent of the rights
to use a down of 279 a., was sold by Simpkins
to T. E. Simpkins in 1842. (fn. 129) It became part of
Simpkins's Ablington House estate. (fn. 130)
An L-shaped house, timber-framed with brick
noggings, thatched, and jettied on all sides at
first-floor level, was apparently built for Thomas
Sheppard. The west lobby entrance with the
date 1631 above it is set against the central
chimney stack in the north—south range. The
south ground-floor parlour retains some original
panelling.
Other land in Ablington was granted before
1223, possibly also by Geoffrey Hussey (d. c.
1218), to St. Denis's priory, Southampton, (fn. 131)
which held it until the Dissolution. (fn. 132) In 1539 the
Crown granted the estate, possibly later COWPER'S, to Charles Brandon, duke of Suffolk. He
sold it to Edward Seymour, earl of Hertford (cr.
duke of Somerset 1547, d. 1552), on whose
execution and attainder it reverted to the
Crown. (fn. 133) It was sold in 1560 to agents. (fn. 134) Margaret Cowper (d. 1599) may have owned the
estate c. 1563, and Thomas Cowper (d. 1626),
not her son, owned it in 1614. Cowper then
settled a moiety on his son Edmund, who inherited the rest in 1626. (fn. 135) The farm descended to
Thomas Cowper (d. 1728), who settled it for life
on himself and his wife Sarah. His son Thomas
(d. 1756) devised it for life to his wife Anne, who
married John Neate, and in trust for sale after
her death. The trustees sold it in 1783 to Edward
Poore (d. 1787), evidently for his niece Mary
Anne Poore, from 1789 wife of William Cox and
from c. 1807 wife of the Revd. William Edwards. (fn. 136) She owned the farm, 95 a. with c. 50
per cent of the rights to use the 279-a. down, in
1839. (fn. 137) Her children, William Cox and Mary
Anne, wife of F. J. Chapman, sold it in 1843 to
T. E. Simpkins and it became part of the
Ablington House estate. (fn. 138)
T. E. Simpkins (d. 1878) devised his estate,
including Ablington House, c. 450 a. in
Ablington, and Read's farm, in trust for sale. In
1883 the trustees transferred it to the beneficiaries, his sons T. H. Simpkins and Ernest
Simpkins. Alfred Rawlins bought the estate c.
1890 (fn. 139) and sold it to the War Department in
1897. The Ministry of Defence owned it in
1991. (fn. 140) Ablington House, built in the early 19th
century, was a two-storeyed L-shaped house of
brick with a hipped slated roof. Its north-west
entrance front had five bays, the central one of
which projected, was surmounted by a pediment, and had a stone porch. (fn. 141) The house was
demolished in 1963. (fn. 142)
Godric and Bollo held a 5-hide estate at Alton
in 1066. It was held in 1086 by John the
doorkeeper, of whom Turstin and Frawin each
held 1 hide. (fn. 143)
In 1179 ALTON PARVA manor was
confirmed to Amesbury priory. The priory was
granted free warren in its demesne in 1286 (fn. 144) and
held the manor until the Dissolution. (fn. 145) The
manor was granted in 1541 to the dean and
chapter of Winchester, (fn. 146) which in 1839 owned
Alton Parva farm, 503 a. (fn. 147) In 1867 the dean and
chapter sold the farm to the Ecclesiastical Commissioners, (fn. 148) who in 1875 allotted it to the dean
and chapter of Salisbury, in 1896 received it back
in exchange for other land, and in 1899 sold it
to the War Department. The Ministry of Defence owned the land in 1991. (fn. 149)
The knight's fee that became ALTON
MAGNA manor was held in 1242–3 by Simon
de Montfort, earl of Leicester (d. 1265). (fn. 150) The
overlordship of the manor descended with the
honor of Leicester to Henry, earl of Lancaster
(cr. duke of Lancaster 1351, d. 1361). It was
allotted in 1362 to Henry's elder daughter Maud
(d. s.p. 1362), wife of William, duke of Bavaria,
and passed to her sister Blanche (d. 1369), wife
of John of Gaunt (cr. duke of Lancaster 1362,
d. 1399). When Blanche's son Henry, earl of
Derby, became Henry IV in 1399 the honor of
Leicester passed to the Crown. (fn. 151) The overlordship was still part of the honor in 1428, (fn. 152) but,
apparently, was held in 1462 by Richard Nevill,
earl of Warwick and of Salisbury, (fn. 153) and descended with the earldom of Salisbury; it was last
mentioned in 1494. (fn. 154)
The lordship in demesne was held in 1242–3
by Robert of Layham, (fn. 155) in 1298 by John Barratt, (fn. 156) and in 1306 by Sir Richard Brompton. In
1307 Sir Richard's son Thomas sold it to Sir
Robert Reydon, (fn. 157) who was granted free warren
in the demesne in 1310. (fn. 158) Reydon sold the manor
to John Goodhind in 1320. (fn. 159) Richard Woodford
held it in 1330, (fn. 160) apparently William FitzWarin
in 1332, (fn. 161) and Sir Adam Shareshill and his wife
Alice in 1340. In 1342 the Shareshills settled
Alton Magna on Sir Peter de Veel and his wife
Catherine. (fn. 162) Thereafter the manor descended
with Ablington manor until 1799, (fn. 163) when Richard Long sold it to Michael Hicks Beach (fn. 164) (d.
1830) as a trustee for his father-in-law William
Beach (d. 1790). (fn. 165) On the death of Michael's
relict Henrietta Maria in 1837 the manor, 627 a.
in 1839, (fn. 166) descended to their son William (d.
1856), from 1838 called William Beach. William's son William Beach sold Alton Magna
farm in 1861 to his cousin Sir Michael Hicks
Beach, Bt., (fn. 167) who sold it to the War Department
in 1898. (fn. 168) The Ministry of Defence owned the
land in 1991. (fn. 169)
Amesbury abbey held CHOULSTON manor
in 1086 when Alward was tenant. (fn. 170) The manor
was confirmed in 1179 to Amesbury priory,
which in 1286 was granted free warren in the
demesne. (fn. 171) The priory held Choulston until the
Dissolution (fn. 172) when it passed to the Crown. The
manor was apparently granted to Edward Seymour, duke of Somerset, and forfeited on his
execution and attainder in 1552. The Crown sold
it in 1557 to agents, (fn. 173) who immediately sold it
to Ellis Fowler. (fn. 174) From Edmund Saunders alias
Mills (d. 1596), possibly the owner in 1571, the
manor descended in the direct line to Thomas
Saunders alias Mills (fn. 175) (d. c. 1619), Edmund
Saunders alias Mills, and Henry Saunders alias
Mills, the owner in 1655. Edward Saunders alias
Mills owned it in 1657. In 1659 the manor
belonged to (Sir) Samuel Eyre (fn. 176) (d. 1698) and it
descended in the direct line to Sir Robert (d.
1735) and Robert (d. 1752). (fn. 177) The younger
Robert presumably sold it with Netheravon
Lambert manor in Netheravon in 1750 to Charles Somerset, duke of Beaufort (d. 1756), and it
passed with Cormayles manor in Netheravon to
Charles's son Henry, duke of Beaufort, whose
lands there were in 1773 settled upon trust for
sale. William Beach (d. 1790) had bought Choulston manor by 1781, and it passed to his
daughter Henrietta Maria, wife of Michael
Hicks, from 1790 Michael Hicks Beach. (fn. 178) As
Choulston farm, 378 a. in 1839, it passed in 1837
on Henrietta Maria's death to her grandson Sir
Michael Hicks Beach, Bt. (fn. 179) (d. 1854), and in
1854 to Sir Michael's son Sir Michael Hicks
Beach, Bt., who sold it with Alton Magna farm
to the War Department in 1898. (fn. 180) The Ministry
of Defence owned it in 1991. (fn. 181)
Harding held Knighton in 1066 and 1086; (fn. 182)
Henry Hussey held it in the later 12th century.
The overlordship descended like the capital
manor of Harting (Suss.), and possibly with the
overlordship of Figheldean manor, from father
to son from Henry Hussey (d. c. 1213) to Henry
(d. by 1235), Sir Matthew (d. 1253), Sir Henry
(d. 1290), and Henry, Lord Hussey (d. 1332). It
was last mentioned in 1319. (fn. 183)
From Henry Hussey KNIGHTON manor
passed with Figheldean manor to Geoffrey
Hussey (fl. 1198), Geoffrey Hussey (d. c. 1218),
and Henry Hussey (d. 1260 x 1263). (fn. 184) The
second Henry apparently granted it to William
Hussey whose title was challenged in 1239 by
Maud Hussey, granddaughter of Henry Hussey
(d. by 1235). (fn. 185) William held the manor in 1242–3 (fn. 186) but Maud's claim was allowed in 1269 when
Henry Hussey, the chief lord, conveyed to her
and her husband William Paynel two thirds of
it and the reversion of the third held in dower
by William's relict Gillian. (fn. 187) In 1275 Maud and
William conveyed the manor to another William
Paynel (fn. 188) (d. 1317), who was succeeded by his
brother John (d. 1319). John's daughter and heir
Maud, wife of Nicholas of Upton, (fn. 189) afterwards
married Edmund FitzAlan, earl of Arundel (fn. 190) (d.
1326), on whose execution and attainder
Knighton was forfeited. (fn. 191) The manor was restored in 1343 to Edmund's son Richard, earl of
Arundel (d. 1376), (fn. 192) on the execution and attainder of whose son Richard, earl of Arundel, in
1397 it was granted to Sir Henry Green. (fn. 193) In
1400 it was restored to Richard's son Thomas,
earl of Arundel (d. s.p. 1415). From Thomas's
heir, his cousin John d'Arundel, earl of Arundel (fn. 194) (d. 1421), it descended in the direct line
with the Arundel title to John d'Arundel (fn. 195) (d.
1435) and to Humphrey FitzAlan (d. s.p. 1438).
From Humphrey, Knighton manor passed to his
uncle William FitzAlan, earl of Arundel (fn. 196) (d.
1487), and again descended in the direct line
with the title to Thomas (d. 1524), William (d.
1544), and Henry, who in 1560 gave it to
Elizabeth I in an exchange. (fn. 197)
Knighton farm, which may have represented
the whole manor, was sold by Bartholomew
Tookey to Samuel Linch in 1633. (fn. 198) In 1650
Linch sold it to Andrew Duke, (fn. 199) who sold it in
1659 to his brother John (d. 1671). John's relict
Avice and son George sold the farm in 1675 to
Philip Poore (fn. 200) (d. 1693). Philip's relict Elizabeth
in 1696 settled it on her son Philip Poore (d.
1719) and his wife Mary. (fn. 201) The farm later passed
with Alton Rectory estate and a lease of the East
End manor of Durrington, and was devised by
Edward Poore (d. 1780) to his daughters
Eleanora (d. s.p. 1812), wife of David Michel,
and Charlotte (will proved 1829). Charlotte devised the farm, which was increased by exchange
from c. 205 a. to c. 402 a. at inclosure in 1823,
to Sir Edward Poore, Bt. (d. 1838). (fn. 202) It passed
with the Poore baronetcy to Sir Edward's son
Sir Edward (d. 1893) and that Sir Edward's son
Sir Richard, who in 1898 sold it to the War
Department. (fn. 203) The Ministry of Defence owned
the land in 1991. (fn. 204)
Land at KNIGHTON was apparently subinfeudated in the 12th century by a member of the
Hussey family. The mesne lordship descended
with Figheldean manor to Sir Hubert Hussey
and was last referred to in the later 13th century. (fn. 205)
Nicholas of Maund, probably in the 12th
century, gave ½ knight's fee in Knighton to his
daughter Eve and her husband William Percy. (fn. 206)
The manor was later given to Bernard of Areines
and his wife Isabel, possibly a Percy. Isabel's
and Bernard's son Sir Guy of Areines, who held
it in 1242–3, subinfeudated it to his son Jocelin. (fn. 207)
It was afterwards acquired, apparently from Sir
Guy, by John Burton, subdean of Salisbury
cathedral, who conveyed it to the dean and
chapter between c. 1260 and 1271. (fn. 208) It may have
formed an endowment of a fund for the poor
called Our Lady's Chamber. (fn. 209) Later it was
treated as part of the East End manor of Durrington. The dean and chapter's estate in
Knighton was reduced by exchange from c. 239
a. to 44 a. at inclosure in 1823. (fn. 210) The War
Department bought it from the Ecclesiastical
Commissioners in 1899 and the Ministry of
Defence owned the land in 1991. (fn. 211)
SYRENCOT manor, like Figheldean manor,
was held by Geoffrey Hussey (d. c. 1218) and
Henry Hussey (d. 1260 X 1263). (fn. 212) Another
Geoffrey Hussey held it of Henry in 1242–3. (fn. 213)
It was held 1293 X c. 1306 by Reynold Hussey,
who granted it for life to William of Kelsale.
From Reynold the reversion may have passed
with part of Teffont Evias manor, and Syrencot
manor was held by Edmund Hussey (d. c. 1362),
by his relict Joan, and by their daughter Maud,
who married Sir Philip de la Mere (fl. 1390). (fn. 214)
Sir Ellis de la Mere (d. s.p. 1414 X 1428) held
the manor in 1412. It passed with Fisherton de
la Mere manor to his nephew Sir John Paulet
(fl. 1460), to Sir John's son John (d. 1492), and
to John's son Sir John (d. 1525). (fn. 215) It was possibly
owned by William Skilling (d. 1608), whose
nephew and heir Edward Skilling sold it in 1639
to Thomas Dyke (d. 1651). (fn. 216) The manor descended to Daniel Dyke (fl. 1700–31) and to
William Dyke (will proved 1776), whose nephew
and namesake was possibly the William Dyke
(d. 1818) who owned it in 1781. (fn. 217) The manor, c.
300 a., passed like Ablington manor to Edward
Dyke Poore (fn. 218) (d. 1859), Edward Dyke Poore (d.
1874), and Frances Baker and Alice Dyke Poore.
In 1897 the 335-a. estate was sold to George
Knowles, the tenant, and by him to the War
Department in 1898. The Ministry of Defence
owned it in 1991. (fn. 219)
The entrance hall and a room north of it, which
in 1991 together formed the central portion of
the east front of Syrencot House, are on the plan
of a small 17th-century house. The house was
enlarged to the south for William Dyke in 1738
when a three-storeyed brick block with stone
quoins and a five-bayed east front was built. (fn. 220) In
the early 19th century the east front of the
17th-century part of the house was altered and
a wide Tuscan portico built. In the mid 19th
century the 17th-century range was extended
northwards and on its west side at the north
end a three-storeyed service block was built.
A single-storeyed billiards room was built c.
1898 west of the 18th-century block. (fn. 221) A park
was created east of the house between 1773 and
1817. (fn. 222)
In the early 12th century and from 1157
Figheldean church belonged to the dean and
chapter of Salisbury, and FIGHELDEAN
RECTORY estate was appropriated to the
treasurer of the cathedral, apparently before
1180–5. (fn. 223) The estate consisted of the great tithes
of the whole parish except Alton, of other tithes,
and of land. In 1839, when the treasurer held 49
a., the tithes were valued at £671 and commuted. (fn. 224) The estate passed to the Ecclesiastical
Commissioners in 1841 (fn. 225) and afterwards was
merged with their other land in the parish. (fn. 226)
The great tithes of Alton Parva and Alton
Magna belonged at the Dissolution to Alton
church which, as a free chapel, was appropriated
by the Crown. (fn. 227) In 1607 the Crown conveyed
those tithes, ALTON RECTORY estate, to
agents, (fn. 228) who before 1616 sold them to the lessee
Thomas Hanbury (d. 1618). Hanbury's son
Thomas sold them in 1642 to John Rumball.
John Duke, who bought them from Rumball in
1647, (fn. 229) settled them in 1662 on his son John
Duke (d. 1671), whose son George sold them to
Edward Poore in 1697. (fn. 230) Poore settled them on
his son Edward (d. by 1726), and they passed to
that Edward's wife Eleanor (d. by 1731) and son
Edward (d. 1780). They passed with Knighton
farm to Eleanora Michel and Charlotte Poore
and to Sir Edward Poore, Bt. (d. 1838). (fn. 231) The
tithes of Alton Magna were sold in 1831 to
William Hicks Beach (William Beach from
1838), the owner in 1839 when they were valued
at £88 and commuted. Those of Alton Parva
descended to Sir Edward's son Sir Edward
Poore, Bt. (d. 1893), and in 1839 were valued at
£114 and commuted. (fn. 232)
In 1179 the Crown confirmed the tithes from
the demesne and half the customary land of
Alton Parva, which had presumably been part
of the endowment of Alton church, and all the
tithes of Choulston to Amesbury priory, lord of
those two manors. (fn. 233) The priory held tithes valued at £4 6s. 8d. in 1291, (fn. 234) possibly all those
confirmed in 1179, but by 1535 received only
a pension of 6s. 8d. from the rector of Alton
for the Alton Parva tithes. (fn. 235) That pension, payable to the owner of Alton Parva manor by the
owner of Alton Parva tithes, was still recorded
in the 19th century. (fn. 236) The tithes of Choulston
were part of the Figheldean Rectory estate by
1839. (fn. 237)
Economic history.
Each of the six
settlements in the parish had its own long and
narrow strip of land; the division in Saxon
times possibly corresponded closely to that in
the 19th century, when Figheldean had c. 1,400
a., Ablington c. 1,400 a., Alton c. 1,150 a.,
Choulston c. 380 a., Knighton c. 650 a., and
Syrencot c. 300 a. (fn. 238) There was sheep-and-corn
husbandry in all six areas, and generally it
seems to have been on a three-field system.
Figheldean.
In 1086 Figheldean had land for
5 ploughteams: on the demesne were 6 servi
with 1 team, and 7 villani and 8 bordars had 4
teams. There were 24 a. of meadow, and the
pasture measured 12 by 3 furlongs. (fn. 239)
Common husbandry continued until 1844. (fn. 240) In
the 16th century there was a common meadow
called North mead, open arable in North field,
Foxlinch bottom, and the field next to
Ablington, and extensive common pasture for
sheep. (fn. 241) Later the fields were called Upper,
Middle, and Lower, and there was a second
common meadow called Newton. In 1839 the
tenants of Figheldean manor had three areas of
downland for use in common, East down and
West down for sheep, and a cow down, a total
of 505 a. The use of a further 206 a. of downland
was shared between the demesne and the freehold later called Read's farm. (fn. 242)
One of the thirds of Figheldean manor in 1296
included 51 a. of demesne arable with common
pasture for 4 oxen and 80 sheep; it had two
customary tenants holding a total of 2 yardlands,
and two cottars. (fn. 243) The reunited demesne had
been leased by 1428. (fn. 244) Of the 12 customary
tenants in 1504, 1 held 2½ yardlands, 2 held 2
yardlands each, 2 held ½ yardland each, 4 held
I yardland each, and 3 cottagers held a few acres.
Each yardland was of c. 30 a. and the tenants
held 409 a. of arable and 16 a. of meadow. (fn. 245) The
demesne, worked in the early 16th century by
members of the Cowper family, included 89 a.
of arable and 8 a. of inclosed meadows in the
1540s, (fn. 246) and in the 1560s what became Read's
farm had 150 a. of arable, 7 a. of meadow, and
pasture rights for 400 sheep, 7 cattle, and 7
horses. (fn. 247)
In 1769 the 17 copyholds of Figheldean manor
had a total of 409 a., including meadow: none
exceeded 50 a., each had a small amount of
meadow beside the Avon, and each had a farmstead in the village. The demesne was then 236
a., and other farms, principally Read's, had a total
of 262 a. (fn. 248) In the late 18th century and early 19th
the number of farms decreased and in 1839 there
was a composite farm of c. 680 a. with nearly all
the rights to use the downland. The arable, c. 635
a. in c. 600 strips, c. 25 a. of meadow, and the
711 a. of commonable downland (fn. 249) were divided,
allotted, and inclosed in 1844 by Act. (fn. 250)
Ablington.
In 1086 Ablington's land was
mainly demesne, 2½ hides on which were 4
coscets and 1 team. The remaining ½ hide there
was probably uncultivated. There were 35 a. of
meadow, and 3 furlongs by 1 of pasture. (fn. 251)
For purposes of agriculture the lands of
Ablington manor had been separated from those
of the other Ablington estates by the 19th century. (fn. 252) In 1322 there were neifs who owed
customary works on Ablington manor, (fn. 253) which
in 1343 had 300 a. of demesne arable, a third
worth 3d. an acre, a third 2d. and a third 1d. (fn. 254)
The manor had land in open fields called North,
South, and Barrow in 1790, (fn. 255) later North, Second, and Third or Home, (fn. 256) and in the earlier
16th century had a copyholder with 12 a. and 3
leaseholders with a total of 52 a. (fn. 257) From 1790 or
earlier, however, it consisted of a single long
narrow farm, Great Ablington, c. 950 a., adjoining Syrencot's land on the south. (fn. 258)
On other Ablington land, a strip between
Great Ablington's and Figheldean's, there was
still common husbandry in the early 19th century, when there were three farms. There were
c. 169 a. of arable in c. 120 strips and a down
pasture of 279 a. (fn. 259) The land was in single
ownership in 1844, (fn. 260) and had presumably been
inclosed by then.
Alton.
In 1086 Alton had land for 4 teams: 3
teams were there, 2 with 3 servi on the demesne
land, ½ held by 4 villani and 2 cottars, and ½
with 1 bordar and 1 cottar on subinfeudated
land. There were 10 a. of meadow and 14 square
furlongs of pasture. (fn. 261)
It is unlikely that much of the land of Alton
was in severalty in the Middle Ages, and the
19th-century names of the two fields, North and
South, in each of the Alton manors, may be
evidence of earlier common husbandry. (fn. 262) In
1343 Alton Magna manor almost certainly had
customary tenants, and the demesne had 280 a.
of arable and 3 a. of meadow. (fn. 263)
The whole of Alton Parva manor was in a single
farm in the later 16th century, (fn. 264) and the whole
of Alton Magna manor was in a single farm in
the 18th. In 1727 c. 800 lb. of wool were produced
on Alton Magna farm. By 1731, when they were
leased to the same tenant, (fn. 265) the two farms were
presumably in severalty. In 1839 each was an
east—west strip of land, to the north Alton Magna,
627 a., to the south Alton Parva, 503 a. (fn. 266)
Choulston.
In 1086 Choulston had 1½ team,
which was all that there was land for. There were
2 servi and 3 coscets, 8 a. of meadow, and 5
square furlongs of pasture. (fn. 267)
There is no evidence of common husbandry at
Choulston, nor of customary tenants. About
1557 the demesne farm was said to include 325
a. of arable, probably an exaggeration unless
some lay elsewhere, 10 a. of meadow and pasture, and a 4-a. warren. (fn. 268) It was the only farm
in Choulston in 1749, (fn. 269) and in 1839 was 378 a. (fn. 270)
Knighton.
In 1086 there was land for 6 teams,
and 5 were there: on the demesne there were 6
servi and 2 teams, and 7 villani and 6 coscets had
3 teams. There were 20 a. of meadow and the
pasture was 12 by 4 furlongs. (fn. 271)
Open arable was in three fields, called North,
Middle, and South in 1634; (fn. 272) in 1823 c. 275 a.
were arable, Knighton down was c. 303 a., and
there were probably c. 35 a. of common meadows. (fn. 273) In 1317 on William Paynel's manor there
were said to be 216 a. of demesne arable of which
30 a. were sown with wheat, 40 a. with barley,
20 a. with oats, and 12 a. with vetches and peas;
the demesne included common pasture for cattle
and for 350 sheep. (fn. 274) There were 125 a. of arable
and 8 a. of meadow on the demesne in a year
between 1422 and 1461. (fn. 275) Knighton's land was
worked in common in the 17th century, (fn. 276) and
possibly until it was inclosed by Act in 1823. (fn. 277)
In 1839 Knighton farm was 470 a., and most of
the other land, a strip of 166 a. beside the
southern parish boundary, (fn. 278) was apparently
worked from Durrington.
Syrencot.
The manor had only four tenants
c. 1300, (fn. 279) and its land may have been in a single
farm by the 15th century. In the 18th century
Syrencot farm belonged to William Dyke, described by his contemporary Arthur Young as
the greatest farmer in Wiltshire. There and on
the adjoining Great Ablington farm in 1796 he
had 1,000 a. of corn and c. 5,000 sheep, mostly
Southdowns with which he was replacing the
Wiltshire breed. After experimenting unsuccessfully on newly ploughed downland with
temporary grasses and root crops he grew wheat
on it in 1796. (fn. 280) Syrencot farm, 274 a. including
c. 150 a. of arable, was worked from Great
Ablington in 1839. There was then an 18-a. park,
divided into Upper and Homeward, east of
Syrencot House. (fn. 281)
In the whole parish in 1839 there were 2,299 a.
of arable, 2,618 a. of downland pasture, and 194
a. of lowland pasture and meadow of which 80 a.
were watered meadow. About 188 a., at Syrencot,
Knighton, and Alton, had been burnbaked. The
only woodland had apparently been planted by
William Dyke after 1773, a total of c. 80 a. in
plantations around Syrencot House and on
Dunch Hill at the east end of Syrencot and
Ablington downs. (fn. 282) Most of that woodland and
several plantations made after 1898 were standing
in 1991. (fn. 283)
Several farms in the parish were already large
in the earlier 19th century, and some grew larger.
In 1871 T. E. Simpkins farmed 1,600 a. from
Ablington House, a farm of 1,700 a. was worked
from Choulston, Alton Parva farm was 570 a.,
and Knighton farm was 468 a. In 1881 Great
Ablington farm was 1,145 a., Little Ablington
farm 850 a. (fn. 284) From 1867 to 1898 the parish was
half arable and half pasture. Turnips and swedes
were grown on an average of c. 600 a., barley on
c. 500 a., wheat on c. 500 a., oats on c. 410 a.,
and vetches on c. 140 a. Temporary grasses,
mostly for hay, made up a third of the grassland
in 1867, nearly half in 1876, and less than a
quarter in 1896. In the period 1867–98 there
were usually c. 7,000 sheep, c. 70 cattle, and c.
95 pigs in the parish. (fn. 285)
About 1898 nearly all the parish was bought
by the War Department, (fn. 286) and much of it was
subsequently used for military training, from c.
1939 to c. 1956 about three quarters. Only three
farms were based in the parish 1910–28: Choulston in 1920 was a grazing farm of 669 a., the
farm based at Knighton, 1,147 a., included 519
a. of Alton's land and 74 a. of Figheldean's, and
one based in Figheldean village had 739 a. In
1939 the farms were Ablington, Alton Magna,
and Choulston. Sheep farming declined sharply
in the earlier 20th century, and in the 1930s few
sheep were kept. More land became available for
farming from the late 1950s, most of it grazing
land, and from then more cattle and sheep were
kept. (fn. 287)
In 1990 there were still three farms based in
the parish. East of the river Choulston farm had
c. 2,000 a. and Ablington farm had c. 1,760 a.;
west of it Knighton farm had only 106 a. and
most of the agricultural land was worked from
Wexland Farm in Netheravon. On both sides
the downland was in military training areas and
its agricultural use limited to grazing for cattle
and sheep. Mixed farming, in which corn growing predominated, was practised on land nearer
the river. (fn. 288)
Mills stood on the Avon at Figheldean and
Knighton in 1086. (fn. 289) Figheldean mill stood
south-west of the church (fn. 290) and ceased to work c.
1900. (fn. 291) Knighton mill was last mentioned in the
15th century. (fn. 292) A water mill stood on Ablington
manor in 1422 (fn. 293) and a similar mill for corn on
Thomas Sheppard's Ablington estate in the 17th
century. (fn. 294)
The manufacture of woollen cloth is suggested
by the admission in 1653 of a Figheldean man
as a freeman of the Weavers' company of London. (fn. 295) There was a disused fulling mill at
Ablington in the 17th century (fn. 296) and new woollen
mills at Figheldean in the 1790s. (fn. 297) In 1831,
however, there was no clothmaker in the parish. (fn. 298)
There was a chalk quarry on the west side of
the Upavon—Amesbury road near Alton Parva
Farm in the 18th century: (fn. 299) in the early 19th chalk
for building and for making lime and whiting
was quarried at it. (fn. 300) A smith made hoes at
Figheldean 1898–1903, horse trainers were
based in the parish 1903–7 and 1928–38, (fn. 301) and in
1990 a small meat-processing factory and a travel
company were based in Figheldean village.
Local government.
Between 1189 and
1199 the lord of Figheldean manor was granted
sac and soc, toll and team, infangthief, and
quittance from county and hundred courts, liberties confirmed in 1252. (fn. 302) In the 13th century
the lord held a three weekly court and twice
yearly view of frankpledge at which cert money
was paid: both were apparently attended by men
of Figheldean and elsewhere. (fn. 303) The view was still
held in 1504. (fn. 304) From the 17th century a court,
called court leet, view, and manor court, was
held, probably twice a year, by the lessee of the
demesne farm. In the early 19th century a court
was held only for the admission of copyholders. (fn. 305)
Amercements paid by his men attending the
Figheldean view were granted to the lord of
Ablington manor in 1227, (fn. 306) and between 1263
and 1277 the men of Durford abbey's Ablington
estate were granted freedom from attending the
three weekly court but not the view. (fn. 307) Men of
Ablington, possibly tenants of Ablington manor,
owed suit at the view for the honor of Wallingford (Berks., later Oxon.) held at Ogbourne St.
George in the 15th century and earlier 16th; cert
money was paid, a tithingman, a constable, and
two affeerors were chosen, and business included
nuisances such as blocked ditches, ruinous
bridges, and overcharging by the miller. (fn. 308)
In 1539–40 tenants of Alton Parva and Choulston manors owed suit at courts for Bulford
manor: all three manors formerly belonged to
Amesbury priory. (fn. 309) The dean and chapter of
Salisbury's Knighton manor was represented
from the 17th century to the 19th at the dean
and chapter's court for the East End manor of
Durrington, but its business, if any, was not
distinguished in the records. (fn. 310)
Paupers could be accommodated in a parish
house c. 1769. (fn. 311) The amount raised for the poor
in Figheldean parish rose from £91 in 1775–6 to
£121 in 1783–5. In 1802–3 c. £3 each was spent
on regular relief for 88 paupers, nearly a quarter
of the inhabitants. In 1812–13, when £768 was
spent on regular relief for 31 adults and on
occasional relief for 25, in all about a sixth of the
inhabitants, the poor were generously relieved.
Lower expenditure 1814–15 represented a fall in
the number relieved. (fn. 312) From 1816 to 1834 the
average of c. £470 spent each year was among
the highest in Amesbury hundred. The sums
spent were highest at £629 in 1817 and £701 in
1818, lowest at £263 in 1834. (fn. 313) Figheldean became part of Amesbury poor-law union in
1835. (fn. 314) The parish was included in Salisbury
district in 1974. (fn. 315)
Churches.
In 1115 Henry I granted
Figheldean church to Salisbury cathedral and
Bishop Roger. The bishop gave up his right in
it to the dean and chapter, and Stephen
confirmed the gift in 1139. (fn. 316) The church was
taken from the cathedral, presumably in the
1140s, but, by a grant of 1157 and a confirmation
of 1158, Henry II restored it. (fn. 317) The rectory was
appropriated to the treasurer of the cathedral,
apparently before 1180–5 when the church was
granted for payments of £10 a year to him, (fn. 318) and
by 1291 a vicarage had been ordained. (fn. 319) The
treasurer fulfilled all the functions of the ordinary in the parish from c. 1190 until his peculiar
jurisdiction was abolished in 1841; the church
was also exempt from archidiaconal jurisdiction
from c. 1190. (fn. 320) A proposal made in 1650 to unite
Knighton to Durrington parish (fn. 321) was not implemented. The vicarage was united in 1940 with
Milston rectory, (fn. 322) and in 1982 Bulford vicarage
was added to the united benefice. (fn. 323)
Until 1821 the treasurer collated vicars. (fn. 324) His
right of patronage passed in 1841 to the bishop
of Salisbury, (fn. 325) who from 1940 was entitled to
present alternately (fn. 326) and from 1982 at one turn
in three. (fn. 327)
The vicarage was worth £4 6s. 8d. in 1291, (fn. 328)
£14 in 1535. (fn. 329) The treasurer augmented it with
£30 a year between 1634 and 1672, (fn. 330) and it was
worth £50 c. 1654, £60 in 1705. (fn. 331) With an
income of c. £106 in 1830 it remained poor. (fn. 332) A
pension of £10 from the treasurer, possibly
allotted to the vicar in the 18th century, was not
received 1821–32 but was again paid from
1845. (fn. 333) The vicar took the small tithes, in 1535
some tithes of wool and lambs, and in 1705 some
hay tithes and some great tithes from the land
of the Figheldean Rectory estate. (fn. 334) The vicarial
tithes were valued at £180 in 1839 and commuted. (fn. 335) Part of the rent charge was given to the
treasurer for 1½ a. of glebe in 1840. (fn. 336) The
Ecclesiastical Commissioners in 1859 gave the
vicar an additional rent charge of £171 and c. 3
a. of glebe. (fn. 337) The vicarage house was out of
repair in 1667. (fn. 338) A new house, with a brick plinth
and mud walls, was built c. 1832; it was replaced
by a new one in 1872, (fn. 339) and that was sold in
1976, when another was built in its grounds. (fn. 340)
A chapel at Knighton in the 13 th century may
have been manorial (fn. 341) and was not afterwards
mentioned. A curate who either assisted the
vicar or served the cure was in minor orders in
1634. (fn. 342) The vicar preached each Sunday in
1650. (fn. 343) The intruder who served the cure in 1660
was replaced by a vicar, collated in 1661, (fn. 344) who
was reported in 1667 and 1673 for neglecting to
catechize. (fn. 345) Vicars in the earlier 19th century
were non-resident pluralists. J. H. Hume, vicar
1821–48, was also vicar of Calne and from 1835
of Hilmarton. David Owen, curate from 1814,
was also curate of Durrington and of Milston,
where he lived. (fn. 346) A curate held a service every
Sunday, alternately morning and evening, in
1832. (fn. 347) Henry Carswell, Hume's last curate and
his successor as vicar, (fn. 348) in 1850–1 held two
services every Sunday: morning service was
attended by an average of 175, afternoon service
by one of 130. (fn. 349) He preached at morning and
afternoon services on Sundays in 1864 and held
weekday services on great festivals. He administered the sacrament on Christmas day, Easter
day, Ascension day, Whit Sunday, and four
other Sundays. The average number of communicants was 60, of whom 40 received at Easter
and 30 at the other great festivals. Carswell
thought that the counter-attraction of the Primitive Methodist meeting could be lessened by
making church services more interesting for the
poorer inhabitants. A parish library which he
established had 70–80 subscribers in 1864. (fn. 350)
The church of ST. MICHAEL AND ALL
ANGELS, so called in 1763, (fn. 351) is built of flint
rubble and ashlar and is partly chequered. It
comprises a chancel, an aisled and clerestoried
nave with south porch, and a west tower with
north vestry. (fn. 352) The church which stood in the
early 12th century had a chancel and a nave, and
the west tower was built later in that century.
Chancel and nave were rebuilt, probably on their
original plan, and the aisles were built, in the
later 13th century. St. Edmund was invoked in
a chapel in the church c. 1251. (fn. 353) In the 15th
century or early 16th the clerestory was built and
the chancel and rood stair were rebuilt. The
chancel roof was renewed in the 17th century or
the 18th, possibly in 1788 when other parts of
the church were repaired. (fn. 354) During a restoration
of the chancel by Ewan Christian in 1858–9
external parapets were removed, the east wall
was rebuilt, and the arch was enlarged. The rest
of the church was restored by J. W. Hugall in
1859–60: the tower and the south aisle roof were
heightened, both aisles were refenestrated, the
west gallery was removed, a new gallery was
formed from the middle stage of the tower, (fn. 355) the
vestry was built, and the porch was rebuilt. (fn. 356) In
both 1858–9 and 1859–60 original materials were
re-used. Two later 13th-century effigies of
knights, in the church before 1671 and in the
porch in 1991, may have been brought from
elsewhere. (fn. 357)
The king's commissioners took 13 oz. of plate
in 1553, and left a chalice of 14 oz. A paten
hallmarked for 1787 was given in 1810, and a
new chalice and flagon were added in 1858: (fn. 358) all
were held for the parish in 1991. (fn. 359) There were
three bells in 1553. Three new ones were cast in
1581 by John Wallis. The second, cracked and
useless in the later 17th century, was recast in
1721 by William Tosier. All three were in the
church in 1991. (fn. 360) Registrations of baptisms,
marriages, and burials begin in 1653 and are
complete. (fn. 361)
Alton church was recorded from the mid 12th
century (fn. 362) to the 16th. (fn. 363) It appears to have been
a parish church held in the later Middle Ages
by sinecurists; in 1548 it was said that for long
the vicars of Figheldean had received £2 a year
for serving it, and c. 1547 the Crown appropriated it as a free chapel. (fn. 364) Jocelin, bishop of
Salisbury 1142–84, had granted the church to
the dean and chapter of Salisbury, (fn. 365) but apparently they did not keep it. The advowson of the
rectory descended from 1306 to the 16th century, apart from 1485–94, with the lordship in
demesne of Alton Magna manor. Francis, Lord
Stourton (d. 1487), held it 1485–7, William,
Lord Stourton, to whom the manor reverted in
1494, from 1487. The bishop collated by lapse
in 1364. (fn. 366) In a way that is not clear Edward
Seymour, earl of Hertford, acquired the advowson, which was confirmed to him by Act in
1544. (fn. 367) The bishop collated under the Act in
1545. (fn. 368) In 1535 the rectory was worth £10 10s.
and was endowed with all the tithes of Alton, (fn. 369)
paying a pension for the share which Amesbury
priory formerly held. (fn. 370) In 1548 the church had
a chalice weighing 10 oz., a bell, a missal, and
two vestments. (fn. 371) It was dilapidated c. 1590. (fn. 372) In
1831 the Alton Rectory estate was still paying
the vicar of Figheldean £2 a year for serving the
non-existent church. (fn. 373)
Roman Catholicism.
A church dedicated to St. Thomas More and St. John Fisher
was opened in Kerby Avenue c. 1934, primarily
for military personnel. In 1976 it was served by
a priest from Amesbury, and in 1985–6 was
closed. (fn. 374)
Protestant nonconformity.
Presbyterians, among whom were the vicar's son and
members of the Sheppard, Smart, and Cowper
families, certified a house at Figheldean in 1672;
dissenters certified houses in 1700 and 1711, and
Independents certified a house in 1797. A house
on the east side of High Street at Figheldean,
certified for Primitive Methodists in 1838, (fn. 375) was
attended on Sundays in 1850–1 by average congregations of 30 in the morning, 63 in the
afternoon, and 70 in the evening. (fn. 376) A small
red-brick chapel, built near the site for the group
in 1882, (fn. 377) was closed before 1971. (fn. 378)
Education.
Small children were taught in
a school approved of by the minister in 1667. (fn. 379)
Two schools, one with 22 pupils, one with 20,
were opened in 1831. (fn. 380) They were attended by
a total of 60 children in 1846–7, (fn. 381) and apparently
merged before 1848. The single school stood
west of Church Street in 1851 and was closed in
1858, when a new National school was built at
the south end of High Street on the east side. (fn. 382)
On return day in 1871 that school was attended
by 57 pupils. (fn. 383) Average attendance, 100 in the
years 1906–12, declined to 81 in 1914 and to 69
in 1938. (fn. 384) There were 60 children on roll in
1991. (fn. 385)
Charities for the poor.
A rent charge
of £1 10s. was given in 1714 for paupers not
relieved by the parish. (fn. 386) It was received in 1826 (fn. 387)
but was deemed lost in 1833. (fn. 388)
In 1898 Alfred Rawlins gave the income from
£100 for blankets, coal, or meat for the poor. In
1899 c. £3 was spent on coal and in 1900 £3 on
meat. (fn. 389) Meat was bought for c. 24 people each
year 1904–6, for 33 in 1912. Funds accumulated
1914–18, and meat was again given 1920–31.
Fuel was bought for c. 12 people a year 1938–43,
but from 1944 small money doles were given.
From 1947 to 1954 eight people each received
7s. 6d. a year; (fn. 390) no distribution was made after
1982. (fn. 391)