EAST KNOYLE
The ancient parish of East Knoyle, c. 5,786 a.
(2,341 ha.), included the chapelry of Hindon, 228 a.
(92 ha.). (fn. 1) The parish, on a north-east to south-west
axis some 27 km. west of Salisbury and 6 km. ESE.
of Mere, was rectangular, some 6 km. long and 4 km.
wide. In the 19th century Hindon was a civil
parish. (fn. 2) Its history is related below under its own
heading. In 1885 the southern portion of Pertwood
parish was added to East Knoyle which was thus
enlarged to 2,398 ha. (5,926 a.). (fn. 3)
In two places the parish boundaries were straight.
The western boundary with West Knoyle, described
in a mid-10th-century charter, was made along a
stream and an ancient ditch, (fn. 4) and the northern,
with Pertwood ran along the top of a ridge. At the
south end of the parish the boundaries with Sedgehill and Tisbury followed streams. The southeastern boundary across the grassland between
Knoyle and Tisbury had been fixed by 984. (fn. 5) The
boundaries enclose three types of classic Wiltshire
scenery. (fn. 6) In the northern half of the parish chalk
outcrops and there is the usual bare downland of
ridges and dry valleys. The land slopes from west to
east with the highest land over 213 m. near Willoughby Hedge in West Knoyle and over 205 m. on the
north-western boundary with Kingston Deverill. An
Upper Greensand ridge runs from north-east to
south-west across the middle of the parish to include
Cleeve hill, the twin peaks of Haddon hill, and
Knoyle ridge, all over 213 m., and broadens to include Barn's (formerly Baldwin's) (fn. 7) and Windmill
hills. The greensand is much eroded and the relief
consequently hilly and complicated. Below it in
the southern part of the parish Kimmeridge clay
outcrops and the land is by comparison flat.
Shaftesbury Lane marks a low watershed between
the rivers Sem, flowing eastwards to the Nadder,
and Lodden, flowing westwards to the Christchurch
Stour. The spring line is at the junction of the
greensand and clay and several small streams springing there drain the land which slopes gently southwards and to east and west, to 114 m. at Kinghay in
the south-east corner of the parish and to below 91
m. in the south-west corner. Since its inclosure was
completed in the mid 17th century (fn. 8) the land has
been a patchwork of fields divided by hedges and
ditches. (fn. 9)
Land-use in the Middle Ages was normal for such
a parish lying across the geological outcrops: the
arable was on the southern slopes of the chalk; the
clay was predominantly pasture and, although no
alluvium, there was presumably meadow land beside
the streams; much of the greensand was pasture;
and the northern chalk downs were extensive sheep
pastures. Arable cultivation increased in the 17th
and 18th centuries, (fn. 10) and by 1838 much of the down
land and some of the clay had been tilled. (fn. 11) The
chalk has remained under the plough but in 1977
the greensand and clay were predominantly pasture
lands. There is no early record of extensive woodland in the parish. Knoyle answered at late-12thcentury forest eyres and in 1228 the land west of
Shaftesbury Lane was defined as part of Selwood
forest. It was disafforested in 1330. (fn. 12) There was a
'Westwood' in the parish in the Middle Ages but
its location is not certain. (fn. 13) In 1773 only Knoyle ridge
and an area south of the church were wooded, (fn. 14) both
part of the demesne land of East Knoyle manor. (fn. 15)
Woods were planted in Summerleaze in the 19th
century, and by 1838 a number of small woods had
been grown, presumably for sport, in the south part
of the parish. (fn. 16) More trees were planted in Clouds
House park in the late 19th century and the centre
of the parish had a well-wooded appearance in 1977.
The Roman road from Badbury (Dors.) towards
Bath may have crossed the parish but its course is
not clear. (fn. 17) The main road from Warminster to
Shaftesbury (Dors.) runs from north to south across
the parish. The southern part was laid straight at
the mid-17th-century inclosure when on each side
of it many paths, some of which have become roads,
were defined and confirmed. (fn. 18) That southern section,
Shaftesbury Lane, was turnpiked under an Act of
1753. (fn. 19) The northern section leading to Warminster
was turnpiked under an Act of 1765. (fn. 20) The downs
in the northern part of the parish are crossed by
two east-west roads which converge a little beyond
the parish boundary at Willoughby Hedge, the
southern from Barford St. Martin, Wilton, and
Salisbury, the northern from Amesbury. It is unlikely
that before the 18th century either had more than
local prominence. They were turnpiked under Acts
of 1761 and 1762. (fn. 21) The southern was afterwards
well used by coaches at least as far as Hindon, but
in the 20th century, especially since 1936, has been
surpassed in importance by the northern which,
more direct and passing through fewer villages than
the road through Salisbury and Shaftesbury, has
been made part of the main London-Exeter road
and improved. (fn. 22)
Few archaeological discoveries have been made in
the parish but a hill-fort on Two Mile down indicates
prehistoric settlement. (fn. 23) Later settlement was
nucleated in valleys on the greensand at East
Knoyle, Upton, and Milton, and further south
dispersed on the clay. Knoyle, near the junction of
the greensand and clay, was so called in the 10th
century. (fn. 24) Upton, called 'Childecnoel' in 1201 (fn. 25) and
Upton in the mid 13 th century, (fn. 26) and Milton
(Middleton), so called in the mid 13th century, (fn. 27)
presumably originated as hamlets dependent on
Knoyle and in 1285 Upton was thus described. (fn. 28)
There had been settlement on the clay east of
Shaftesbury Lane by the mid 13th century and there
was more west of it after the mid-17th-century
inclosure. (fn. 29) Only three farmsteads have been established on the chalk, two probably in the 18th century
and the third in the mid 20th century. (fn. 30) Stone has
been the predominant building material of the parish
but from the late 18th century soft red bricks have
been used, presumably those made at the brickyard
which lay below Windmill hill near outcrops of both
greensand and clay. (fn. 31) Taxation assessments of the
early 14th century show the population of the parish
to have been above average but not unusually dense. (fn. 32)
There were 183 poll-tax payers in 1377, 146 in
Knoyle and presumably Milton, and 37 in Upton. (fn. 33)
The parish was apparently still of above average
wealth in the 16th century, and in 1576 the second
highest personal assessment in the county for the
subsidy was of an East Knoyle man. (fn. 34) In 1801 the
population was 853. It was over 1,000 from 1831 to
1871 but afterwards fell steadily. In 1841 East
Knoyle had 541 inhabitants, Milton 358, and Upton
139. The population of the whole parish was 660
in 1931, 700 in 1971. (fn. 35)

East Knoyle and Hindon c. 1840
East Knoyle has always been the largest village in
the parish. It originated on higher ground west of
the Warminster-Shaftesbury road where the chief
messuage and demesne farmstead of East Knoyle
manor and the church and rectory-house were built.
The village did not develop on that site since most
tenant farmsteads were established in the dependent
villages. It grew in areas east of the church along
the Warminster-Shaftesbury road, and west of the
church at Holloway which was a settlement largely
of customarily held cottages dependent on the
rectory manor. (fn. 36) By the late 18th century the
Warminster-Shaftesbury road had been built up
on both sides for c. 800 m. from north of Knoyle
House, around which it was forced to make a very
sharp bend, past the Black Horse inn as far as the
Benett (later Seymour) Arms, a 17th- or 18th-century
building extended in the 19th century. (fn. 37) In the 19th
and 20th centuries there has been ribbon development southwards along the road, especially on the
east side. Holloway and the roadside settlement were
not directly linked. A road led westwards from the
Warminster-Shaftesbury road to the demesne farmstead which, west of the church, formed a rough
square in which the road ended. Holloway was
approached up a steep hill by a road leading
northwards from the Warminster-Shaftesbury road
and passing round the north of the church and
farmstead. (fn. 38) That road was diverted to the south in
1804 when the rector enlarged the garden of his new
house. (fn. 39) The demesne farmstead went out of use in
the mid 19th century and in 1856 the road leading
westwards from the Warminster-Shaftesbury road
was extended through the farmstead to meet the
southwards bulge of the diversion and thus lead to
Holloway. (fn. 40) The tithe-barn near the church was
demolished in 1868 and a barn opposite the church
on the south side of the road was burned down in
1961. (fn. 41) A farm building possibly of the 17th century,
also on the south side of the road, has been converted to a dwelling-house. The hall of the 14thcentury demesne farm-house, (fn. 42) on the north side of
the road, was restored and became the parish room
to which a larger room was added at the west end in
1908. (fn. 43) There are several 17th-century cottages near
the centre of the village and at Holloway, and a few
18th-century cottages in various places. Slades
House was built between Knoyle House and Clouds
House before 1773 (fn. 44) and was rebuilt in the later
19th century. Knoyle House, so prominent in the
middle of the village, was demolished in 1954 (fn. 45)
leaving the village centre open. Few houses of
architectural pretension remain in the village where
in 1977 the buildings, most concentrated at the
north end of Shaftesbury Lane, were mainly
cottages, houses, and bungalows of the 19th and
20th centuries. By the late 18th century small
settlements had established themselves north and
south of Windmill hill at the Green, where there are
two 17th-century cottages, and at Bath, later called
Underhill. (fn. 46) That at the Green grew in the 19th
century when the Fox and Hounds public house
and a nonconformist chapel were opened, (fn. 47) and
especially in the mid 20th century when some 25
council houses were built. That at Underhill has
also grown in the 20th century and in 1977 the 20thcentury houses outnumbered the 19th-century cottages, many of which have been enlarged in the
20th century.
The farmsteads on the clay in the southern part
of the parish include buildings which range in date
from the 14th century to the 20th century. Settlement was apparently earlier east than it was west of
Shaftesbury Lane. At least some of the eastern
farmsteads, but except in one case not their present
buildings, originated in the Middle Ages. (fn. 48) Between
Blackhouse Farm and Coleman's Farm a number of
cottages was built on the verge in the early 19th
century. Settlement began west of the road after the
mid-17th-century inclosure, (fn. 49) but Redhouse Farm
is the only house built then to have survived. Most
of the buildings on the farms were erected or
replaced at various times in the 19th century. Little
Leigh is a substantial farm-house west of Holloway
on the borders of the greensand and clay. It was
built on a three-room plan probably in the period
1600β25 and retains many of its original fittings.
Since 1945 there have been additions at the north
end.
Milton was a village of tenant farmsteads in a
street running in an arc down the valley between
Haddon and Barn's hills. The street makes an
elbow below Clouds House. Its lower north-east
end is more thickly populated than its north-west
end. There are 17th-century stone farm-houses at
both ends, and along the whole length of the street
are many houses clearly of earlier origin than their
earliest datable features which are generally derived
from 18th- and 19th-century remodellings. The
village includes a small stone house bearing the date
1734 and a mid-18th-century house of five bays at
the north-east end, and an extensive range of now
disused 19th-century farm buildings at the elbow of
the street.
The smaller farmsteads of Upton village were
strung along nearly 800 m. of a street between
Upton Knoyle manor-house at the south end and
Chapel Farm between Cleeve and Haddon hills at
the north end. There were ponds in the street at the
south end, where the road splits into two, and in the
middle. Two wells are said to have been used for
medicinal purposes. (fn. 50) The population of the village
has never been great. (fn. 51) Since the late 19th century
several buildings have been demolished and not
replaced, and the population has presumably shrunk
still further. Of the present buildings the two
principal houses and between them Upton Farm,
a 17th-century stone farm-house on a traditional
three-room plan, were built before 1700. There is
an 18th-century cottage towards the south end of
the street but nearly every other building is of the
19th century.
Manors and other Estates.
In 1066
Aileva held East Knoyle. Later it was held by
William FitzOsbern, earl of Hereford, and was
presumably among the many English lands which
William I granted to William for his part in the
Conquest. (fn. 52) William FitzOsbern was succeeded by
his son Roger de Breteuil in 1071. In 1075 Roger
rebelled against William I and his lands were confiscated. (fn. 53) In 1086 East Knoyle was therefore the
king's. (fn. 54) It was not afterwards mentioned among
the lands of Roger's descendants, (fn. 55) and was possibly
given by William II to Henry de Beaumont (d. 1119)
after he was created earl of Warwick in 1088. The
earldom passed to Henry's son Roger (d. 1153) and
to Roger's son William (d. 1184). (fn. 56) Between 1174
and 1184 William sold the manor of KNOYLE to
the see of Winchester. (fn. 57) After his death, however,
his widow Maud claimed it from Bishop Ilchester
as dower and at the will of Henry II it was assigned
to her. To prevent it from passing at Maud's death
to William's brother and heir Waleran, earl of
Warwick, Bishop Lucy in 1200 claimed it from
Waleran in the king's court. (fn. 58) In that year the bishop
bought the reversion from the earl, (fn. 59) and by 1204
Maud had died. (fn. 60) The manor subsequently passed
with the see and was not among the lands which
Bishop Ponet was compelled to surrender to Edward
VI in 1551. (fn. 61) In 1650 the trustees for the sale of
bishops' lands sold it to the regicide Edmund
Ludlow. (fn. 62) It had been restored by 1661 and again
passed with the see. (fn. 63) Even after the land was sold (fn. 64)
the lordship of the manor was retained by the
Ecclesiastical Commissioners. (fn. 65)
From the 16th century copyholds of Knoyle manor, held under fines and for rents which were both
fixed, began to assume the importance of freeholds. (fn. 66)
Some were in Knoyle but most were in Milton. (fn. 67)
None seems to have exceeded 100 a. (fn. 68) and their
descents are not traced. In the 19th century most of
such copyholds of inheritance were acquired by the
Seymours. (fn. 69) The demesne lands of Knoyle manor
and the right to receive the copyholders' rents, but
not the right to hold courts, were leased to farmers
until 1567 when Bishop Home granted a 79βyear
lease from 1592 to Elizabeth I. (fn. 70) Before 1592 the
queen assigned the lease to Thomas Mompesson of
Corton who in 1604 assigned it to Sir Edward
Bellingham. (fn. 71) About 1610 it was acquired like the
lease of the demesne lands of Fonthill Bishop manor
by Henry Mervyn (knighted 1619). (fn. 72) It passed with
that lease and the manor of Fonthill Gifford to the
earls of Castlehaven and by sale to Francis Cottington, Lord Cottington, who went into exile in 1646. (fn. 73)
The lease was sequestered and from 1647 held by
Sir Roger Palmer who in 1650 assigned it to Edmund
Ludlow. (fn. 74) In 1661 Charles II assigned the remainder
of the lease of Elizabeth I to Henry Hyde (styled
Viscount Cornbury from that year) (fn. 75) who surrendered and obtained a new lease for lives from
Bishop Duppa. (fn. 76) Cornbury was lessee until 1673
when Bishop Morley leased to Francis Morley,
possibly his son. (fn. 77) Leases for lives, renewed for
substantial fines, passed in the Morley family of
Droxford (Hants), (fn. 78) and after 1782 to a relative
Charles Ingoldsby Paulet (d. 1843), marquess of
Winchester. (fn. 79) After 1843 the lease was acquired by
the sub-lessee Henry Seymour (d. 1849) and his
wife Jane and in 1852 a new lease was made to Jane
and her son Alfred Seymour. (fn. 80) In 1862 Seymour
bought the reversion in fee of those leased demesne
lands, c. 2,023 a. comprising mainly Manor (then
part of Park), Sheephouse, Knoyle Down, Friar's
Hayes, and Summerleaze farms. (fn. 81) In 1877 he sold,
with his other lands in Knoyle west of the HindonShaftesbury road, (fn. 82) all but Sheephouse andSummerleaze farms which after his death in 1888 passed
with Knoyle House and other lands east of that road
to his daughter Jane Margaret (d. 1943). (fn. 83) They
were sold in 1948. (fn. 84) In 1977 Summerleaze farm
belonged to the Clouds estate trustees. (fn. 85) The old
farm-house lies at the northern edge of a group of
19th- and 20th-century farm buildings. It was
replaced c. 1900 by a large house standing a short
distance to the west. In 1948 Sheephouse farm was
bought by Maj. F. H. Crawshay Bailey and in 1977
belonged to Mr. Neil Rimmington as part of the
Fonthill Abbey estate. (fn. 86) Friar's Hayes farm passed
with the Clouds estate (fn. 87) until 1919. (fn. 88) In 1977 it
belonged to Mr. R. E. Drake. (fn. 89) Park and Knoyle
Down farms also passed with the Clouds estate and
were sold in 1936 to John Granville Morrison
(created Baron Margadale 1964) of Fonthill House. (fn. 90)
In 1977 Knoyle Down farm still belonged to the
Morrison estate. (fn. 91) Knoyle Down Farm is of the
early 19th century and has 20th-century additions.
Near it are early-19th-century farm buildings of
brick. Park farm was sold in 1971 to the Clouds
estate trustees, the owners in 1977. (fn. 92) Park Farm
occupies the site of the former parish workhouse. (fn. 93)
The farm-house was apparently built in the mid
19th century.
In the 14th century the bishop of Winchester's
chief messuage in Knoyle had a chapel within its
confines. (fn. 94) The house was presumably occupied by
the farmers of the demesne and from 1592 by the
sub-lessees. The hall of a 14th-century house survives as a parish room. A photograph of the house
before 1908 and before its restoration shows it to
have had an upper floor entered through the present
window. In 1740 a house, presumably substantial,
beside the Warminster-Shaftesbury road was held
freely by William Seymour, son of Sir Edward
Seymour (d. 1741). (fn. 95) After William's death in 1747
the house, later called Knoyle House, passed to his
brother Francis (d. 1761) and to Francis's son
Henry (d. 1805) and grandson Henry Seymour (d.
1849) who built up the Seymour estate in the
parish. (fn. 96) It was the manor-house occupied by Alfred
Seymour and belonged to his daughter Jane until
1943. (fn. 97) After 1888 its lessees included Richard de
Aquila Grosvenor, Lord Stalbridge, in 1889 (fn. 98) and
Beatrix, dowager countess of Pembroke (d. 1944),
from 1914. (fn. 99) After the Second World War it was a
home for elderly women. (fn. 100) It was demolished in
1954. (fn. 101) Photographs of the house show it to have
been of various dates from the 17th to the 19th
centuries. (fn. 102) In the later 19th century Alfred Seymour
apparently planned to replace it by a new house on
the site of the old Clouds House, (fn. 103) and drawings of
a new house were made for him by Edward Blore. (fn. 104)
The plan was abandoned presumably because of the
financial difficulties which caused Seymour to sell
the Clouds estate, (fn. 105) but the sale of the Clouds estate
in 1877 made possible the reconstruction of Knoyle
House in 1880. As rebuilt to designs of R. H.
Carpenter and Benjamin Ingelow (fn. 106) the house extended some 60 m. along the south side of the
Warminster-Shaftesbury road and had a garden
front overlooking terraces to the south. It was raised
a storey, a central hall and picture gallery were built
on the site of an open courtyard, and a new staircase
and a circular drawing-room were added. The style
was mixed and the roof-line was broken by numerous
gables and ornamental chimneys. (fn. 107)
Two other farms, New Leaze and Blackhouse,
were part of the demesne of Knoyle manor and were
held by leases from the bishops. (fn. 108) Blackhouse was
sold to the tenant John Lambert in 1871. (fn. 109) At least
from 1910 to 1947 it was like Lower Leigh farm part
of the Pythouse estate. (fn. 110) Blackhouse Farm is an 18thcentury stone house. In 1892 the Ecclesiastical
Commissioners sold New Leaze to James Lush. (fn. 111)
In the 20th century it has had a succession of
different owners. (fn. 112)
In the 19th century Milton farm, consisting
largely of copyhold of inheritance land in Milton, (fn. 113)
grew substantially. It passed with the Seymour
estate until 1877 and with the Clouds estate until
1936 but by then had been broken up. (fn. 114)
In 1086 Gilbert of Breteuil held 1 hide in Knoyle. (fn. 115)
Other of Gilbert's lands passed to a Robert of
Breteuil, (fn. 116) but it is not clear what happened to his
estate at Knoyle. In 1201 Stanley Abbey bought
lands at 'Childecnoel' from Michael son of Reynold
of Knoyle, possibly Gilbert's Domesday estate. (fn. 117) In
1204 the abbey sold to Godfrey de Lucy, bishop of
Winchester. (fn. 118) In the same year Bishop Lucy gave
the land, later called the manor of UPTON or
Chapel farm, to the prior and convent of St. Swithun
for his anniversary. (fn. 119) The Old Minster held the
manor until 1284 when, as part of the composition
of that year between the prior and the bishop, it was
returned to the bishop. (fn. 120) Together with but separate
from (fn. 121) Knoyle manor it subsequently passed with
the see and, as in the case of Knoyle, the Ecclesiastical Commissioners retained the lordship of the
manor after the land was sold. (fn. 122)
Like those of Knoyle manor the copyholds of
inheritance of Upton manor, none of which had
grown to considerable size by 1800, (fn. 123) were bought
up by the Seymours in the 19th century. (fn. 124) The
demesne lands of Upton manor, Chapel farm, and
the right to receive the copyholders' rents were
leased to farmers. (fn. 125) In the earlier 17th century they
were leased to George Mervyn, and a George Mervyn
held them until 1669. (fn. 126) Leases for lives for substantial fines were made to Robert Compton of
Mere (from 1669), (fn. 127) Elizabeth Buck, the sister of Sir
James Howe, Bt., of Berwick St. Leonard (from
1698), and Robert Lock (fl. c. 1730) and his widow
Susanna (from 1738). (fn. 128) In 1754 a lease was made to
Edmund Ashby who was succeeded by his son
George (d. 1808), president of St. John's College,
Cambridge, and by George's amanuensis Thomas
Lyas. (fn. 129) In 1832 the lease was acquired by Henry
Seymour whose son Alfred in 1862 bought the
reversion in fee of the lands held by it. (fn. 130) Chapel
farm thereafter passed like Park farm. (fn. 131) The oldest
part of Chapel Farm is the short range three storeys
high at its southern end which is probably of the
later 16th century. It was extended to the west in the
17th century and to the north in the 18th century,
when kitchens were built at ground level to replace
those in the basement of the old house. A chapel,
possibly built close to the house for a Mervyn, was
mentioned in 1610. (fn. 132) It gave its name to the farm
but no later reference to it is known.
In the early 13th century Osbert Baldwin held
land assessed at 2 hides. (fn. 133) It was presumably the
land in Upton which Thomas Baldwin held in the
later 13th century and in 1306 sold to Walter Scudamore. (fn. 134) That land, later called the manor of UPTON
KNOYLE, seems to have passed in the Scudamore
family like the manor of Upton Scudamore. (fn. 135) In the
later 14th century and the early 15th John Chitterne
was apparently buying land in various places, possibly to settle on the marriage of his sister Agnes and
William Milbourne, (fn. 136) and his purchases probably
included Upton Knoyle of which he died seised. (fn. 137)
The manor passed to the Milbournes and to their
son Richard, grandson Simon, great-grandson Sir
Thomas (d. c. 1492), (fn. 138) and great-great-grandson
Henry (d. 1519) whose son Richard Milbourne died
without issue in 1532. (fn. 139) The Milbournes' lands were
then disputed by Henry's widow Margaret, formerly
wife of Anthony Ernie and then wife of Roger Yorke,
William Fauconer, grandson of Sir Thomas's sister
Agnes, and Joan Brooke and Margaret Halswell,
descendants of John Chitterne's sister Christine. (fn. 140)
A Chancery decree of 1538 settled them on Margaret
Yorke for life with remainder to Fauconer. (fn. 141) In
1539, however, those two settled Upton Knoyle on
Richard Milbourne's widow Edith, wife of Edward
Twinyhoe, for her life. (fn. 142) In 1544 Fauconer conveyed
his interest to Robert Titherley, (fn. 143) husband of
Margaret Yorke's daughter Elizabeth Ernie, (fn. 144) who
apparently occupied the manor, (fn. 145) and in 1556 the
Twinyhoes conveyed their interest to Robert. (fn. 146) In
1576 Robert's son William sold to John Mervyn of
Pertwood. (fn. 147) The manor passed in the Mervyn
family, apparently with Pertwood manor, to Thomas
(d.s.p. 1622β3) and George, the sons of John Mervyn
(d. 1601), and to George's son John (fl. 1670) who
sold to his brother Richard (d. 1669), chancellor of
Exeter cathedral. (fn. 148) Richard was succeeded by his
sons George (d. c. 1680) and John of Bratton
Clovelly (Devon), on whose marriage the manor was
settled in 1690. John (d. 1729) had a son John (d.
unmarried) but his heir was probably his grandnephew John who was presumably the John Mervyn
who in 1750 sold the manor to Nicholas Williams. (fn. 149)
The manor passed to Charles Williams (d. 1806) and
to Charles's son William Mead alias Williams (d.
c. 1814) and grandson Charles William Mead (d.
1826). Mead's heir was his son Charles who died a
minor in 1829 leaving as heir his uncle James Charles
Williams who immediately sold to Henry Seymour. (fn. 150)
The land subsequently passed with Seymour's
manor of Upton and became part of Chapel farm. (fn. 151)
A substantial manor-house was built in the late 16th
century, presumably for a Mervyn. It had a main
range of two rooms with a short cross-wing at its
north end and another, possibly service, range
abutting the centre of the east side. The house,
called Upton Manor, has been added to only in the
mid 20th century when kitchens and bathrooms
were built in the north-east angle.
In the early 13th century 14 virgates of Knoyle
manor in East Knoyle and Milton were held freely. (fn. 152)
Their descents cannot be traced but it was presumably from those lands that five freeholds which
became substantial had emerged by the 16th century.
An estate in Milton occupied by John Cloud and
later called the manor of CLOUDS was sold by
John Stephens of Portsmouth in 1551, apparently
to a trustee of Robert Goldsborough (d. 1581). (fn. 153) In
1577 Robert settled it on his son John (d. c. 1585). (fn. 154)
John was succeeded by his son Robert (fl. 1610) and
Robert's son Augustin who compounded in 1648. (fn. 155)
In 1658 Augustin sold the estate to William Coker
of Frampton (Dors.) who in 1672 sold it to Nathaniel
Still (d. 1701). (fn. 156) It was gradually increased as it
descended in the Still family to Nathaniel's son
Robert (d. 1728), grandson James (d. 1803), and
great-grandson James Charles Still (d.1828), whose
executors sold it to Henry Seymour. (fn. 157) The estate
passed with Seymour's land in East Knoyle and his
two manors in Upton to his son Alfred. (fn. 158) When in
1876 the western part of the Seymour estate was
offered for sale without Knoyle House prospective
purchasers were invited to regard the land of Clouds,
on which Seymour had apparently intended to build
a new house for himself, as a new focus. (fn. 159) Seymour's
lands mainly west of the Hindon-Shaftesbury road
were bought in 1877 by the Hon. Percy Scawen
Wyndham (d. 1911). (fn. 160) They included Park (formerly
Manor), Knoyle Down, and Friar's Hayes farms,
the manors of Upton and Upton Knoyle, (fn. 161) and the
manor of Clouds, and were afterwards called the
Clouds estate. They passed to Wyndham's son
the Rt. Hon. George Wyndham (d. 1913) and to his
grandsons Percy Lyulph Wyndham (d. 1914) and
Guy Richard Charles Wyndham, who in 1919 and
1936 sold the estate which was largely broken up. (fn. 162)
By 1977 a new Clouds estate, consisting of Clouds
House and several farms in the parish, had been
built up by Mr. S. E. Scammell and placed in the
hands of trustees. (fn. 163) A new house was built on his
estate by Robert Goldsborough (d. 1581). That was
apparently replaced in the 18th or early 19th century
by the small house with a garden front of three bays
which was demolished in 1881. (fn. 164) A new Clouds
House was designed for Percy Wyndham by Philip
Webb, built near the site of its predecessor by the
Gloucester firm of Estcourt, and completed in 1883
at a cost of Β£100,000. In 1889 a serious fire caused
damage which cost Β£40,000 to repair. (fn. 165) Webb's
design was in a distinctive style which incorporated
elements from the 14th century to the 18th. (fn. 166) The
main block, mostly of stone, was arranged round
a central covered courtyard which acted as a hall
and gave access by closed first-floor galleries to
the bedrooms. The south elevation of six bays
beneath three gables was symmetrical but the east
and west elevations had irregularly placed square
and canted bays. To the north a service range extended eastwards to meet lower brick outbuildings.
North-west of the house near the Green an extensive
walled kitchen-garden was laid out. In the early 20th
century Arthur Balfour was a frequent visitor to the
house. (fn. 167) In 1936 the house was sold to speculators
who resold to Percy Houghton-Brown. (fn. 168) In 1938 it
was 'georgianized' and greatly reduced in size by the
removal of all but the basement of the service range,
most of the bays on the east and west fronts, and
the gables and tall chimneys of the roof. (fn. 169) A
mezzanine floor was inserted into the northern part
of the main block and the hall was partly filled in
and redecorated in the Italian quattrocento style.
The house was later used as a home by the Church
of England Children's Society. In 1963 it was sold
to the Clouds estate trustees, (fn. 170) and in 1977 was
used as a school for some 50 maladjusted boys with
a staff of eight teachers. (fn. 171)
From at least the early 13th century a freehold
passed in the Sturge family. (fn. 172) Richard Sturge (d.
1504β5) presumably held it. His heir was his daughter Elizabeth, wife of John Horsey (d. 1531). (fn. 173) The
Horseys held it in 1525. (fn. 174) They apparently settled
their land in East Knoyle, LEIGH or Upper Leigh
farm, on their younger son Jasper and in 1544 their
elder son Sir John quitclaimed to Jasper. (fn. 175) In
1554β5 Jasper's son George sold the farm and his
lands in Milton and Upton to Corpus Christi
College, Oxford, whose president was then rector
of East Knoyle. (fn. 176) In 1875 the college sold the estate
to Alfred Seymour. (fn. 177) The lands in Milton and Upton
were among Seymour's lands sold in 1877. (fn. 178) They
passed with the Clouds estate and in 1977 most were
parts respectively of Holden's and Chapel farms. (fn. 179)
Upper Leigh farm passed with Knoyle House (fn. 180) and
was sold in 1948 to W. H. Burton. In 1977 it
belonged to Mr. E. H. Burton. (fn. 181) Upper Leigh Farm
contains a long range probably built in two stages
in the 17th century. A stair turret was built in the
second stage during which some of the upper rooms
were heightened. A new parlour wing was added
beyond the stairs in 1891. (fn. 182) North-west of the house
the farm buildings include a timber-framed granary
on staddle-stones and a medieval barn with buttressed stone walls and a cruck-framed roof of five
bays. (fn. 183)
A freehold in the south-east corner of the parish
later called LOWER LEIGH farm belonged in 1535
to the chantry of Compton Pauncefoot (Som.). (fn. 184) It
passed to the Crown at the Dissolution and in 1545
was granted to John Whitehorn and John Bailey
who immediately granted it to William Hunton (d.
c. 1581). (fn. 185) The land passed to Hunton's son Thomas
(d. 1631) and to Thomas's son James (fl. 1639). (fn. 186) Its
later descent is not clear. It was possibly the land,
sequestered from Francis Toope in 1645, which was
bought from the Treason Trustees by Matthew
Davies in 1653. That land was being claimed in 1653
by Toope, Davies, and Robert Moore who claimed
to be Toope's mortgagee. (fn. 187) The result of those
claims and the subsequent descent of Lower Leigh
are unknown. In 1750 the farm belonged to Richard
Jackson, rector of Donhead St. Mary, after whose
death in 1796 it passed to his successor at Donhead
Gilbert Jackson (d. 1816). (fn. 188) It was held by Gilbert's
widow until c. 1822 and then passed, presumably by
sale, to George Fort of Alderbury. (fn. 189) About 1870
Vere Fane-Benett-Stanford of Pythouse in Tisbury
acquired the land which passed like Pythouse to his
son John Montagu Fane-Benett-Stanford (d. 1947). (fn. 190)
In 1977 Lower Leigh farm belonged to Cdr. J. M.
Child. (fn. 191) Lower Leigh Farm, formerly the farm-house
of an adjacent copyhold, (fn. 192) is a house of 18th-century
origin with additions, including a new west front of
c. 1840, of several dates in the 19th century.
In the early 13th century John Coleman held 2
virgates freely. (fn. 193) In 1412 his land belonged to Sir
Walter Hungerford. (fn. 194) It passed like the manor of
Rushall until 1474 when COLEMAN'S was settled
on Margaret, Baroness Botreaux (d. 1478). (fn. 195) The
descent of the land is afterwards obscure. It belonged
to Nicholas Bacon (fl. 1591) and was held by his
widow Elizabeth until her death c. 1609. Elizabeth's
heir was her daughter Joan, wife of William Noyes. (fn. 196)
She died seised in 1622 when the land passed to her
son William who presumably sold it. (fn. 197) In 1636
Christopher Benett died seised. (fn. 198) He had a son
Thomas but the descent of Coleman's is again not
clear. In the mid 18th century it belonged to William
Coles (d. 1784) and passed with Moot farm in Downton until 1796 when Henry Spencer bought out the
interests of John Greene and the Revd. Charles
William Shuckburgh. (fn. 199) About 1810 the land passed,
presumably by sale, to Peter, brother of James Still
of Clouds. (fn. 200) It was acquired by Henry Seymour
c. 1828, (fn. 201) and passed with Knoyle House to his son
Alfred who in 1876 conveyed it to Vere FaneBenett-Stanford in an exchange of lands. (fn. 202) It was
added to and until 1947 remained part of Lower
Leigh farm. (fn. 203)
In 1734 REDHOUSE farm was bought from a
Mr. Coward by Wilton Free School. The school
held it until 1880 when it was sold, (fn. 204) apparently to
Alfred Seymour. It passed with Knoyle House until
1948. (fn. 205) By 1977 it had been broken up. (fn. 206) Redhouse
Farm is a 17th-century house.
Economic History.
The existence of field
systems on Two Mile down and near Hindon
indicates early ploughing on the downs. (fn. 207) The
northern half of East Knoyle, however, was part of
the Wiltshire chalk country where sheep-and-corn
husbandry predominated from at least the Middle
Ages until the 19th century. In that period the
northernmost of the downs in the parish were mainly
pasture, and the arable lay on the chalk nearer the
villages. The southern part of the parish, Knoyle
common, was part of the small Wiltshire butter
country. It was apparently pasture in 984 and has
since remained largely so. (fn. 208)
In 1086 Knoyle was assessed at 30 hides. The
king's demesne, on which there were 5 ploughs and
10 serfs, was reckoned 17Β½ hides; Gilbert of
Breteuil's hide was worth 7s. 6d. and had on it 3
bordars; and the remaining hides were held by 16
villeins, 10 bordars, and 18 coscez who shared 10
ploughs. Those figures possibly show a large demesne farm already relying on the tenants for its
cultivation. The whole estate had been worth Β£28
and was then worth Β£30. There were 15 a. of
meadow, pasture 1 league long and Β½ league wide,
and woodland Β½ league square. (fn. 209) The Domesday
figures presumably refer to the whole ancient parish
in which in the early 13th century there were the
bishop of Winchester's demesne lands, 2 hides, 14
virgates, and some smallholdings held freely, 16
virgates, 16 Β½-virgates, and various smallholdings
held customarily, and the manor of Upton. (fn. 210)
In the 12th century, when cultivation at East
Knoyle was presumably expanding, the manor was
passing from royal to episcopal through noble possession and the hand of lordship was possibly light. (fn. 211)
That may have resulted in the three significant
features of the parish's agrarian history. There
emerged in the parish before 1300 four separate
systems of common fields and pastures, those of
Knoyle, Hindon, Upton, and Milton. (fn. 212) Hindon is
dealt with elsewhere. (fn. 213) The several agrarian units,
each with its own rules of common husbandry,
presumably developed as more land was used and
boundaries between the villages' lands were defined.
Its large amount of land held freely also made
Knoyle remarkable among the bishop of Winchester's
manors. (fn. 214) The 12th century is a likely time for the
freeholds to have been created and may also have
been the time when a few farms established themselves on Knoyle common. The farms, later called
Upper Leigh, Lower Leigh, and Coleman's, were
apparently there before 1250. (fn. 215) Their tenure of
Knoyle manor was perhaps no more than a mark of
dependence made for licence to inclose and build on
the common. The definition of each village's lands
which took place in the northern half of the parish
was, however, not mirrored in the southern half, and
Knoyle was remarkable thirdly for the fact that
intercommoning among the men of the three villages
continued on the common until the mid 17th
century. The remainder of this section deals in turn
with agriculture in each of the three townships and
afterwards with the common.
The township of Knoyle contained the bishop of
Winchester's demesne lands and some free and
customary holdings. In 1208β9 some 360 a. were
sown for the bishop. That was an average figure for
the period 1209β80 when the area sown was only
occasionally over 500 a. or under 300 a. (fn. 216) From
those figures it is clear that most of the chalkland on
the east side of the parish was then episcopal
demesne. Less land was sown for the bishops after
1280 but never fewer than 200 a. before 1349; (fn. 217) in
1377β8 196 a. were sown. (fn. 218) If fully used labour
services from the sixteen virgaters and seventeen
Β½-virgaters, who all held by Borough English, were
almost certainly sufficient for the entire cultivation
of the demesne. (fn. 219) The downs in the northern part
made East Knoyle one of the bishops' most important sheep farms. The men of Upton and Milton
had correspondingly small sheep pastures. (fn. 220) More
than 1,000 sheep were kept in 1208 and numbers
over 2,000 were not uncommon in the 13th and
occasional in the 14th century, totals well above
average for the episcopal estate. (fn. 221) At the same time
dairy farming on the lowland was also important. (fn. 222)
In 1405 the demesne, including large areas of
upland and lowland pasture and some 200 a. of
arable land, was leased with the rents, but not the
fines, of the tenants for Β£80 a year. (fn. 223) It had been
taken back in hand by 1438 but leased again by
1451. (fn. 224) There is no evidence for the Middle Ages or
later that the demesne lands on the chalk were
commonable. From at least 1512 to 1581 Richard
and William Hunton were farmers. (fn. 225) In the early
17th century the demesne was sub-let to Robert
Toope. (fn. 226) By 1650 it had been split into four main
farms: (fn. 227) the principal farmstead with c. 90 a. of
pasture, 200 a. of arable land, and a large area of
down, all later called Manor farm, Friar's Hayes and
Summerleaze farms, (fn. 228) and the down, at the north
end of the parish, which had been for wethers and
was later called Knoyle Down farm. Later Sheephouse farm was established on the down of Manor
farm. In 1782 Manor farm measured 170 a., including 88 a. of woodland, Sheephouse 761 a., half
arable and half pasture, and Knoyle Down 467 a.,
presumably partly arable. (fn. 229) In the early 19th century
Manor farm, which until then had been worked
from buildings beside the church, was merged with
Clouds farm (see below) and worked from the
buildings near Clouds and Slades Houses. (fn. 230) The
buildings near the church were afterwards given up. (fn. 231)
After 1838 Sheephouse farm was split between
Manor and Knoyle Down farms, respectively 448 a.
and 834 a. in 1852. (fn. 232) By 1876 a new farmstead on
the workhouse site had been erected for Manor
farm which was renamed Park. (fn. 233) After 1876 Sheephouse again became a farm, 139 a. in 1940. (fn. 234) In 1977
Park was a mixed farm of c. 450 a., Knoyle Down a
largely arable farm of c. 700 a., and Sheephouse
a farm of c. 150 a. (fn. 235)
It is not clear how many of the bishop's free and
customary tenants held in Knoyle township in the
early 13th century. Several holdings had been taken
into demesne, (fn. 236) but some presumably passed back
to tenants in the later Middle Ages. In 1513 rents
from customary tenants in Knoyle were Β£19 18s. 8d.,
from free tenants Β£5 17s., (fn. 237) and in the early 17th
century there were eleven freeholders and thirteen
copyholders in the tithing. (fn. 238) All those totals included
holdings on Knoyle common. (fn. 239) Holdings on the
chalk and greensand near the village seem to have
been very small. In 1662 and 1736 the east, north,
and west fields of Knoyle were mentioned. (fn. 240) Their
location is not certain but they probably lay near
East Knoyle village on the chalk west of the road to
Hindon. (fn. 241) In 1780, when Henry Seymour apparently
held most among seven tenants, they were inclosed
by private agreement. (fn. 242) The land was part of
several small farms in 1838, (fn. 243) and has since been
taken mainly into Park farm. The tenants' common
pastures for sheep and cattle, Windmill hill, Knoyle
hill, and Shaftesbury Lane, were not inclosed in
1780. (fn. 244) The wide verge formerly on the east side of
Shaftesbury Lane was built on in the 19th century,
but Knoyle hill, 8 a., and Windmill hill, 34 a.,
remained common. In 1955 the Church Commissioners conveyed the lord of the manor's rights in
the lands to the parish council. (fn. 245)
The township of Milton contained the lands of
the rector and of customary and free tenants of
Knoyle manor. Its fields were clearly worked in
common in the later 13th century. (fn. 246) Later evidence
shows them to have been on the chalk north and
north-east of the village, over 400 a. (fn. 247) In 1671 there
were three fields. (fn. 248) The common pastures were on
Haddon hill and on downland near the road from
Willoughby Hedge to Barford St. Martin. There
was probably no boundary between those pastures
and those of the men of Upton in the same places. (fn. 249)
In the 16th century and later the rector and two of
the principal freeholders had several downs, (fn. 250) but
it is not clear when those downs were separated from
the down of the customary tenants and small freeholders which remained common. The lands around
Barn's hill were inclosed pastures. (fn. 251) In 1705 the
rector held 73 a. in the fields and 30 a. of down, (fn. 252) in
1750 Corpus Christi College held 50 a. in the fields,
10 a. of inclosed pasture, and 18 a. of down. (fn. 253) In
1513 rents from customary tenants totalled Β£8 9s.,
those from free tenants 1 mark; (fn. 254) there were five
freeholders and thirteen copyholders in the early
17th century when the amount of land held by each
class probably corresponded roughly to their numbers. (fn. 255) In 1558 those tenants assigned their common
down, 30 a., to the farmer of the demesne of East
Knoyle manor who exchanged it with the lessee of the
parsonage for the rector's down. Despite requests to
the farmer and rector and legal action they had not
recovered it by 1594 but presumably did so later. (fn. 256)
In 1799 the common fields were inclosed by Act
under a joint award with Upton. (fn. 257) Only four farms,
including the rector's and Corpus Christi's, were
allotted more than 50 a. of arable. The Clouds estate
then seems to have consisted of inclosed pastures on
Barn's hill, arable allotments totalling some 47 a.,
and feeding for 148 sheep. The remaining land was
shared among some twelve smaller farms presumably
with farmsteads in Milton street. The pastures on
Haddon hill, 28 a., and the down, 21 a., were distinguished from those of Upton but remained
commonable. They and the Upton part of Haddon
hill were for a total of 1,145 sheep of the freeholders
and copyholders of Milton and of the small farmers
of Upton. On Haddon those sheep could be joined by
523 sheep of the rector, Corpus Christi College, and
the other Milton freeholder who had a several down.
By 1838 Clouds farm had been merged with
Manor farm in East Knoyle; (fn. 258) much freehold and
copyhold of inheritance land in Milton had been
merged by Henry Seymour into Milton farm, 155 a.
with buildings at the north end of the street; and
there were still small farms based in the street. (fn. 259) In
1876 Milton farm measured 270 a. (fn. 260) That holding
was broken up in the 20th century but in 1977
Milton, c. 70 a., was still the only farm worked from
the street. (fn. 261) The remaining lands in the south part
of the township were then mainly parts of Park farm,
and those in the north part, including 85 a. of former
glebe land, were mainly parts of Holden's farm
which was established after the Second World War
as a mixed upland farm of c. 500 a. with lands from
Milton, Park, and Chapel farms. (fn. 262) Haddon hill was
never inclosed and has become a common for the
whole parish. The Church Commissioners conveyed
the lord of the manor's rights in it to the parish
council with their rights in Knoyle and Windmill
hills. (fn. 263) Their rights in the common down were conveyed to John Granville Morrison in 1948. (fn. 264)
The township of Upton contained the demesne
and tenanted lands of Upton manor and the manor
of Upton Knoyle which never had customary
tenants. The arable land was on the chalk north of
the village. (fn. 265) It was used in common presumably in
the 13th century when east and west fields were
named, (fn. 266) and certainly in the 18th century when
there were three fields divided into small strips in
the usual way. (fn. 267) A several down, c. 46 a. in 1790, (fn. 268)
was part of the demesne of Upton manor but the
tenants of that manor and the lord of Upton Knoyle
manor fed their sheep in common, and effectively
in common with the copyholders and small freeholders of Milton. (fn. 269) In the early 13th century a
pasture called the Frith, possibly near the village,
was common to all the villagers. (fn. 270)
In 1288β9 90 a. were sown for the bishop of
Winchester on the demesne of Upton manor, 73 a.
in 1330β1, and 68 a. in 1377β8. (fn. 271) In the later 13th
century and the early 14th sheep were not kept. In
the later 14th century, however, there was a wether
flock which numbered over 500 in 1395. (fn. 272) Like that
of East Knoyle the demesne farm was leased in
1405 with the rents and services of the tenants (fn. 273) but,
unlike Knoyle, was never taken back in hand. The
annual rent was Β£11 in 1405, Β£12 6s. 8d. in 1482, and
not afterwards changed. (fn. 274) The farm, called Chapel
by 1650, (fn. 275) had buildings at the north end of the
street. In 1790 it measured 236 a., including 149 a.
in the common fields, with additional land at Lugmarsh. (fn. 276)
In the early 13th century 2 virgates and 7 Β½virgates were held of Upton manor for rents and
onerous labour services. (fn. 277) In 1288β9 rents totalled
23s. 3d.; (fn. 278) in the early 17th century there were eight
copyholders. (fn. 279) The manor of Upton Knoyle was
held of Knoyle manor for 15s. and a few labour
services in the early 13th century. (fn. 280) In 1283 it was
reckoned 1 carucate. (fn. 281) Later evidence shows it to
have been smaller than Chapel farm, but by the late
18th century the addition of copyhold of inheritance
land of Upton manor had made it roughly equal in
size to that farm. (fn. 282) It had buildings at the southern
end of Upton street. (fn. 283) There were five small freeholds c. 1638 (fn. 284) some of which, including that of
Corpus Christi College, were apparently held of
Upton Knoyle manor. (fn. 285)
The arable fields of Upton, c. 400 a., were inclosed
with those of Milton in 1799. (fn. 286) Chapel farm was
allotted the easternmost lands, 144 a., Upton Knoyle
farm was allotted 121 a., and the remainder was
divided among several free and customary small
farms. The common pastures were not inclosed but
their use was regulated by the award. That on the
down, 19 a., was common to Chapel and Upton
Knoyle farms, 102 sheep. That on Haddon hill, 15 a.,
was fed on by the same flocks as the Milton part of
Haddon.
Upton Knoyle farm, including a large area of
copyhold of inheritance land, measured c. 395 a. in
1807 and Chapel farm measured 285 a. in 1808 when
there were also some five small farms and several
smallholdings in Upton. (fn. 287) By 1838 the two large
farms had been merged as Chapel farm and Henry
Seymour had amalgamated most of the copyholds
into Upton farm with buildings in the middle of
Upton street on the west side. (fn. 288) In 1876 Chapel
farm measured 703 a. mainly on the chalk north of
the village, Upton farm 117 a. mainly below Cleeve
hill west of Upton street. (fn. 289) In 1977 Chapel was a
primarily arable farm of some 500 a. and Upton,
then called Upton Dairy, a mixed farm of some
100 a. (fn. 290) The Upton part of Haddon hill was part of
the parish common. The lord of the manor's rights
in the formerly common down were conveyed with
those in Milton down in 1948. (fn. 291)
The great lowland common of Knoyle on the clay of
the Vale of Wardour extended over at least 1,500 a.
The north-eastern part of it called Summerleaze,
c. 350 a., was part of the bishop of Winchester's
demesne farm although common rights over it were
enjoyed by others. (fn. 292) The remainder included some
lands which were inclosed in the Middle Ages
but otherwise was open to the animals of all
parishioners. (fn. 293) The inclosures were east of Shaftesbury Lane and were possibly complete in the early
13th century, by which time probably fewer than
400 a. had been inclosed. (fn. 294) They resulted in the
establishment of three farms. Upper Leigh, possibly
the largest, included 83 a. of inclosed lands in 1555; (fn. 295)
Lower Leigh was leased for Β£5 11s. a year in 1548; (fn. 296)
and Coleman's was c. 55 a. in 1622. (fn. 297) There were in
addition inclosed meadows in the south-east corner
of the parish including Jaghay which was apparently
part of the Pythouse estate in the early 17th century; (fn. 298) and on some of the bishop of Winchester's
demesne meadows, which had presumably been
inclosed out of the common, Blackhouse farm had
been established by 1635. (fn. 299)
Knoyle common west of Shaftesbury Lane was
until 1330 within Selwood forest and could not
lawfully have been inclosed without royal licence. (fn. 300)
Its inclosure began under articles drawn up by
agreement in 1636. It was agreed that of perhaps
750 a. to be disposed of there should be allotments
of 100 a. to the bishop of Winchester, 100 a. to his
lessee, 12 a. a yardland to the farmers, and 4 a. or
3 a. each to the cottagers. The inclosure was stopped
by a dispute over whether the allotments of 100 a.
should be fragmented, as the bishop and his lessee
wished, or intact. The Exchequer decreed in 1638
that they should be intact and that, despite the
agreement, the amounts of other allotments should
be at the allotters' discretion. (fn. 301) In 1641 it was agreed
to proceed under the terms of the decree. (fn. 302) In 1651
there were still disputes over how the land had been
inclosed and in 1657 the parties appointed a commission which reported in 1658. The commissioners'
findings were disputed and they resigned. (fn. 303) Later
evidence shows the inclosure to have stood on
roughly the terms of the 1636 agreement. (fn. 304) Allotments were made in respect of the farms on the
common already inclosed. (fn. 305) The bishop's allotment,
New Leaze, was in the extreme south-west corner
of the parish. Buildings were erected on it and an
arable and pasture farm, New Leaze, c. 100 a., was
established. (fn. 306) The allotment to the bishop's lessee
was at Friar's Hayes where Friar's Hayes farm,
110 a., had been established by 1650. (fn. 307) Other new
farms were set up on the inclosures including
Redhouse by 1773 (fn. 308) and Moor's and Brickyard by
1838. (fn. 309) A barn and 42 a. at Lugmarsh were then part
of Chapel farm, and Vernhill farm, 35 a., had been
established on the allotment to Corpus Christi
College. (fn. 310) The rector received an allotment of 13 a.
north of Friar's Hayes: seventeen of his nineteen
cottagers, most of them at Holloway and Knoyle,
received allotments of 3 a. or 4 a. (fn. 311)
In 1838 the common on both sides of Shaftesbury
Lane was still a patchwork of small fields, none more
extensive than c. 20 a., held of Knoyle manor freely,
by lease, or by copy. There were still many owners
but some of the farms had grown, presumably at the
expense of smallholders based in the three villages.
East of Shaftesbury Lane were the older farms,
Upper Leigh, 147 a., Lower Leigh, 150 a., Blackhouse, 28 a., Coleman's, 72 a., and Kinghay, 43 a.;
west of it were New Leaze, 100 a., Friar's Hayes,
211 a., Redhouse, 102 a., Moor's, 56 a., and a few
farms of less than 50 a. (fn. 312) All were then arable and
pasture farms but later dairy farming predominated. (fn. 313)
East of the lane Lower Leigh, Kinghay, and Coleman's, all parts of the Pythouse estate, were merged
into a farm measuring 318 a. in 1910. (fn. 314) In 1977
Lower Leigh, 216 a., and Coleman's were again
separate farms. (fn. 315) Upper Leigh, c. 100 a., and
Blackhouse remained similarly separate farms. (fn. 316)
West of the lane Lugmarsh, Moor's, and Friar's
Hayes were in 1919 pasture farms of respectively
142 a., 145 a., and 188 a. (fn. 317) They and New Leaze
remained farms in 1977 but Redhouse was broken
up. (fn. 318) On both sides of the lane pasture farming
still predominated but there was again some tillage.
Certain free tenants claimed feeding for a total of
30 oxen with the bishop of Winchester's oxen,
presumably in Summerleaze, in the earlier 13th
century. (fn. 319) Summerleaze, said in 1782 to be 'a large
piece of greensward ground much in the nature of a
common', (fn. 320) remained part of the bishops' demesne
and was used by the lessees for cattle and sheep. In
1600 Thomas Mompesson sub-let it to Sir Richard
Grobham and there followed a dispute in which each
impounded the other's animals. (fn. 321) It was later sublet as a farm, 360 a. in 1782, and buildings were
erected on it. (fn. 322) The commoners had feeding from
3 May to 30 November. (fn. 323) In 1782 they numbered
four, including the rector and Corpus Christi College,
and had rights for 37 beasts. (fn. 324) Summerleaze was
inclosed by Act in 1867. The commoners' rights
were replaced by allotments which they exchanged
with Alfred Seymour for lands in other parts of the
parish. (fn. 325) In 1977 Summerleaze was a mixed farm of
c. 360 a. (fn. 326)
Mills. The first mill in East Knoyle was apparently built in the earlier 13th century. (fn. 327) It was in
the south-west corner of the parish at a place called
Lushley near the confluence of the several southflowing streams. (fn. 328) There is no evidence that it
survived the Middle Ages. A windmill was part of
the manor of Knoyle in 1377β8 when two new sailyards were bought. (fn. 329) Its site is unknown but was
possibly on Windmill hill. It seems to have worked
until replaced by a new windmill built there c.
1536. (fn. 330) There was still a miller in 1855 but the mill
had ceased working by 1886. (fn. 331) The circular stone
post standing in 1977 had no datable feature. The
weatherboarded cap and two sails shown in photographs of c. 1930 and earlier (fn. 332) have been removed.
Local Government.
In the Middle Ages
only the bishops of Winchester exercised public
jurisdiction from within East Knoyle. The bishops
assumed for Knoyle many of the liberties which
they had in the manor of Downton. (fn. 333) In 1255 they
were defined as return of writs, vee de naam, and
view of frankpledge. (fn. 334) In 1275 the bishop also
claimed gallows and the assize of bread and ale, (fn. 335)
and in 1289 felons' chattels, pillory, and tumbril. (fn. 336)
Although part of the bailiwick of Downton, East
Knoyle was for the purposes of the bishops' jurisdiction under those liberties never merged with the
hundred of Downton. It remained separate and,
including Hindon and Fonthill Bishop, was called a
hundred and sometimes a liberty. (fn. 337) In the Middle
Ages the hundred contained three tithings, Knoyle,
Milton, and Fonthill Bishop. (fn. 338) Upton, which was
then in Milton tithing although separately represented at royal inquests and in tax lists, (fn. 339) established
itself as an additional tithing in the 17th century
although its 'foreman' was never called a tithingman. (fn. 340) The tithings of East Knoyle and Fonthill
were, however, united in a single constablewick. (fn. 341)
In the early 13th century bishops held Hock-tide
and Martinmas tourns for the hundred as they did
elsewhere. (fn. 342) The assize of ale was enforced from the
mid 13th century. (fn. 343) The first separately enrolled
records of the tourn known to survive are for 1464. (fn. 344)
Procedure was similar to that of contemporary
Downton tourns. The tithingmen of Fonthill,
Knoyle, and Milton and the bailiff of Hindon
presented and a jury of twelve freemen affirmed and
added to the presentments. In the later 15th century
and the 16th the presentments of the Knoyle and
Milton tithingmen were not numerous and, apart
from recording that cert-money was paid, were
mainly of brewers, butchers, and millers. Occasionally, however, affrays and breaches of agrarian
custom were dealt with and further offences,
including public nuisances, were presented by the
jurors. From the mid 16th century elections of
constables of the hundred were recorded. In the
17th century the constable and the tithingmen made
formal presentments at each tourn but rarely of an
offence beyond failing to attend the tourn. The
jurors, however, regularly presented offenders and
were particularly concerned with the condition of
roads and bridges, sometimes ordering the parish to
repair. From the later 17th century tourns were held
annually in September. The tithingmen presented
nothing but the payment of cert-money, and the
courts proceeded on the presentments of two juries.
The 'jury for the king' continued to present public
nuisances and the homage presented manorial
business formerly transacted in separate courts. (fn. 345)
Tourns continued thus until the mid 19th century
and ostensibly serious presentments of nuisances
were still made. They included the presentment in
1829 of the trustees of the Shaftesbury turnpike for
encroaching on the waste by building on it a turnpike
gate and house. By 1800, however, the main work
of the jurors was to present the choice of constables,
tithingmen, and foremen of Upton and of the
homage to present the customs of the manor.
Overseers and waywardens were being appointed
for East Knoyle in the early 17th century: (fn. 346) Hindon
and Fonthill Bishop apparently had their own
officers. Later there were surveyors of roads for each
of the three Knoyle tithings. (fn. 347) Outdoor relief under
the Elizabethan poor law totalled Β£8 in 1607. (fn. 348) More
money was being spent in the 1630s but the most
rapid increase in spending, to over Β£50 a year in the
period 1665β7, was after the Restoration. (fn. 349) In the
late 17th century more than half the annual expenditure was on monthly doles. (fn. 350) In 1733 the parish
repaired a house in Milton tithing to receive the
poor who in 1749 were required to be badged. (fn. 351) A
surgeon and apothecary was regularly appointed. (fn. 352)
Indoor relief certainly increased in the 18th century, (fn. 353)
and in 1750 a condition of outdoor relief was that
those owning a dwelling-house convey reversion of
it to the parish. A determination to insist on that
condition was marked by the vestry's resolution,
repeated in 1794, to appeal against an order of any
justice to relieve unconditionally. (fn. 354) In 1776β7 Β£245
was spent. (fn. 355) By the mid 18th century the office of
overseer had been attached to farms and rotated, and
from 1794 was held for two years. (fn. 356) In 1796 a
salaried deputy overseer was appointed. (fn. 357) In 1811
the parish agreed to provide a new workhouse which
was built a little north of East Knoyle village beside
the road to Hindon. (fn. 358) The parish nominated a
visitor to inspect it each year and from 1825 paid a
full-time governor and governess. (fn. 359) Its inhabitants
were uniformed. (fn. 360) In 1835 East Knoyle joined Mere
poor-law union, (fn. 361) and in 1841 sold its workhouse
and five tenements. (fn. 362) The site of the workhouse is
that of Park Farm. (fn. 363)
Private jurisdiction through manorial courts was
exercised by the bishops of Winchester and by the
rectors. The bishop's courts for the manor of East
Knoyle were held several times a year by his bailiff. (fn. 364)
In the Middle Ages the courts enforced customary
obligations to the lord, heard pleas between tenants,
and presentments by the homage that, for example,
tenants had died and agrarian customs had been
breached, and witnessed surrenders and admittances. (fn. 365) In the 16th century the tithingmen of East
Knoyle and Milton, the foreman of Upton, and the
homage all presented. From c. 1515 separate courts
were held for the manor of Upton. (fn. 366) Manor courts
apparently ceased in the later 17th century. The
business, by then principally the recording of conveyances of copyholds of inheritance, was transferred
to the annual tourns where in 1702 and 1720 the
bishop was presented for not keeping three-weekly
courts for the liberty. (fn. 367) No record, beyond copies, (fn. 368)
survives of rectors' courts which were presumably
held solely for surrenders of and admittances to
copyholds.
Church.
A church was standing at Knoyle before
the Conquest. (fn. 369) In the early 13th century a chapel
of ease was built at Hindon which became a separate
ecclesiastical parish in 1869. (fn. 370) In 1914 318 a. of East
Knoyle, New Leaze and Friar's Hayes farms, were
made part of the new ecclesiastical parish of Sedgehill. (fn. 371) From 1952 the rectory was held in plurality
with the living of Sedgehill. (fn. 372) In 1976 it was united
with the vicarage of Hindon with Chicklade and
Pertwood. (fn. 373)
The advowson of the rectory passed with the
lordship of Knoyle manor. From 1199 to 1201 it was
disputed between Godfrey de Lucy, bishop of
Winchester, and Maud de Beaumont, countess of
Warwick, who claimed it as part of her dower, (fn. 374) but
after her death it passed with the see of Winchester. (fn. 375)
The only recorded presentations not by a bishop
were in 1559 and 1570, (fn. 376) in the Civil War and
Interregnum, (fn. 377) and in 1660 when the Crown
presented after the ejection of the incumbent. (fn. 378) In
1865 the advowson was transferred to the see of
Oxford (fn. 379) and in 1953 to the see of Salisbury. (fn. 380) The
bishop of Salisbury was patron in 1977.
Medieval and modern valuations, including those
of 1291 at Β£20 and 1296 at 60 marks, (fn. 381) of 1650 at
Β£230 excluding Hindon's tithes, (fn. 382) and of 1829β31
at Β£850, (fn. 383) show the living to have always been rich.
The rector was entitled to all the tithes from the
whole parish including Hindon. (fn. 384) Those of East
Knoyle were valued at Β£925 in 1837 and commuted
in 1841, those of Hindon valued at Β£70 in 1843 and
commuted in 1844. (fn. 385) The glebe, consisting of a
demesne farm and land held customarily, some 170
a. in all, was considered a manor. (fn. 386) The copyholds
were enfranchised in the late 19th century, (fn. 387) and
85 a. of upland demesne were sold in 1947 to John
Granville Morrison (Lord Margadale). (fn. 388) Some 13 a.
of land on Knoyle common were part of the living
in 1977. (fn. 389) Parts of the medieval glebe-house can be
seen in a low range abutting the west side of the later
Rectory, now called Knoyle Place, in which there
are some old walls containing parts of two 15thcentury doorways apparently at the opposite ends of
a cross-passage. The remainder was presumably
demolished when in 1799 (fn. 390) the large almost square
new house was built with an eastern entrance front
of three bays and a southern garden front of five
bays. In 1935 the Rectory was sold to Sir Francis
Geoffrey Fison, (fn. 391) and from 1965 has belonged to
Sir John Eden. (fn. 392) The new Rectory at Holloway,
formerly Holloway Farm, is a late-17th-century
house with a symmetrical front to the west and a rear
service wing. (fn. 393) It was sold in 1977 when the incumbent lived at Hindon. (fn. 394)
In the 14th century several of the rectors are
known to have been pluralists. (fn. 395) Stephen Morpeth,
rector 1405β68, already a pluralist, was in 1409
licensed to study for three years. (fn. 396) He became a
chaplain of Henry V and held among other livings
the deanery of the free chapel of St. Nicholas in
Wallingford castle. (fn. 397) Robert Morwent, rector 1523β
58, was president of Corpus Christi College, Oxford,
from 1537 and in 1550 a curate served the church. (fn. 398)
After Morwent's death, presumably when the living
was in Elizabeth I's gift after the Marian Bishop
White was deprived in 1559, John Haytor, the lessee
of the tithes and glebe, (fn. 399) was licensed to present.
His nominee was his son Thomas who was later
found to have been under age and not in holy orders.
In 1570 Bishop Home granted the advowson for one
turn to James Mervyn who presented John Mervyn.
After contests between Thomas Haytor and John
Mervyn in the spiritual and secular courts and twice
by force at the rectory-house Mervyn retained the
living, but the church was served by a curate. (fn. 400) The
rector from 1623 was Christopher Wren, dean of
Windsor from 1635. (fn. 401) Wren was registrar of the
Order of the Garter, a position which he used to
invoke the king's intervention when his pigeonhouse was undermined by the saltpetre commissioner
in 1636. (fn. 402) He held other parish livings and was the
father of Sir Christopher Wren, who was born at
East Knoyle in 1631 or 1632. (fn. 403) Sir Christopher kept a
link with the parish until 1662 when he surrendered
a small copyhold of inheritance. (fn. 404) Dean Wren compounded for the rectory in 1645, but in 1646 it was
sequestered for his support of the king and given to
William Clifford who was later said to preach twice
every Sunday. (fn. 405) Clifford's son Samuel succeeded
him in 1655 and was ejected in 1660. (fn. 406) His successor
Enoch Gray was also ejected for nonconformity and
both remained in the parish. (fn. 407) Samuel Rolleston,
archdeacon of Salisbury 1732β66, was rector 1745β6. (fn. 408)
His successor Charles Wake, whose assistant curate
was a local landowner and who held other livings, in
1783 held services twice on Sundays and administered
the Sacrament at the great festivals. His curate
catechized. (fn. 409) In 1864 the rector held services with
sermons thrice on winter and twice on summer
Sundays with an average congregation of 220. Communion was once a month for the 80β100 communicants. (fn. 410) In 1977 services were held every Sunday.
The church of ST. MARY is built mostly of
coursed rubble, which was formerly rendered, (fn. 411) and
has a chancel with south organ chamber, a nave with
short aisles, north-western vestry, and south porch,
and a west tower. Parts of the walls of the nave and
of the western part of the chancel remain from a
pre-Conquest church. Early features which survive
are an exposed length of double plinth and cut back
blind arcading on the north wall of the chancel, and
possibly the north doorway. Early in the 13th
century the chancel was extended and refenestrated.
Later in that century north and south transeptal
chapels were added to the nave. The porch was
built in the 14th century and the tower in the 15th
when the south doorway and east window were also
inserted. The arrangement of the interior is shown
in a plan of 1632. (fn. 412) About 1639 the chancel was
decorated with plasterwork, designed by Dean Wren
and executed by Robert Brockway, depicting scenes
from the Old and New Testaments. (fn. 413) In 1714 a west
gallery was erected, (fn. 414) and in 1756 the lead was
removed from the roof and replaced by stone tiles. (fn. 415)
The first of several 19th-century enlargements was
the extension of the north transept into an aisle in
1829, perhaps by John Peniston of Salisbury who is
known to have built a gallery about then. (fn. 416) In 1845
the south aisle and the vestry were added, the chancel
arch was widened, the gallery enlarged, and there
was general restoration under Wyatt and Brandon. (fn. 417)
The organ chamber was added, the gallery removed,
and the church refitted under Sir Arthur Blomfield
in 1875β6. (fn. 418) A new burial ground opened in 1899 (fn. 419)
contains Wyndham corner, a partly walled enclosure
by Detmar Blow with ground and wall monuments
and a central monolith.
There were four bells in 1553. (fn. 420) The treble was
recast in 1627. (fn. 421) In the 18th century the ring was
increased to six: bells (i)β(iii) were founded by
William Cockey of Frome (Som.) in 1726, (iv) came
from the same foundry in 1748, and (v) and (vi)
were probably also by Cockey. (fn. 422) Bell (v) was recast
by Robert and James Wells of Aldbourne in 1794
and the tenor by Mears and Stainbank of Whitechapel
in 1839 when all the bells were rehung. The bells
were restored and rehung in 1933 (fn. 423) and were still
in the church in 1977. (fn. 424)
In 1553 the king's commissioners took 4 oz. of
plate from the parish and left 11 oz. Augustus
Mervyn (d. 1637) gave a new paten and Richard
Hill, rector 1662β95, gave two chalices and a paten
in 1677 and a flagon in 1681. (fn. 425) Those pieces still
belonged to the church in 1977. (fn. 426)
The registers date from 1538. Entries before 1636
are transcriptions. Richard Dew was appointed
parish registrar in 1654 and from 1653 the registers
are complete. (fn. 427)
Nonconformity.
An East Knoyle man was
suspected of recusancy in 1584, (fn. 428) in 1586 a Roman
Catholic priest ordained abroad was arrested in
Knoyle, (fn. 429) and it is possible that in the early 17th
century several papists lived at Knoyle. (fn. 430) Between
1662 and 1706 several papist families were named
but never more than six people at once. (fn. 431)
After their ejection from the rectory Samuel
Clifford and Enoch Gray apparently led an Independent congregation at Knoyle and in 1662 there were
also some Baptists. (fn. 432) In 1676 there were 45 nonconformists, an unusually high number for a place
outside the cloth-working areas of the county. (fn. 433)
The Baptist congregation, whose leader John
Williams attended the London General Assemblies
of 1689 and 1692, was possibly linked with Baptists
in neighbouring villages. It continued until 1743
but afterwards died out and in 1783 there was no
nonconformist at Knoyle. (fn. 434)
In 1797 and 1805 dwelling-houses were certified
as meeting-houses for Independents. (fn. 435) In 1827 the
Independents, under the patronage of Charles Jupe,
a silk manufacturer of Mere, opened a cottage for
worship and a chapel was built to adjoin it. (fn. 436) In 1849
the chapel was bought by the rector and closed. The
congregation converted a cottage into a meeting
house and on Census Sunday in 1851 36 and 35
people attended the morning and evening services. (fn. 437)
Jupe built a new Congregational chapel and schoolroom in the village at the top end of Shaftesbury
Lane in 1854. (fn. 438) It was served by ministers of the
Wiltshire and East Somerset Congregational Union
and a manse had been added by 1906. (fn. 439) The church
remained open and had a resident pastor in 1977. (fn. 440)
A chapel, later called the Ebenezer chapel, was
built at the Green for Primitive Methodists in 1843. (fn. 441)
In 1851 congregations of 90 and 79 attended afternoon and evening services. (fn. 442) The church, which is
dated 1857, had been closed by 1977.
The East Knoyle and Semley Baptist chapel had
a schoolroom in Knoyle which in 1821 was licensed
for meetings. (fn. 443) It flourished for a time but the room
had apparently been closed by 1851. (fn. 444)
Education.
In 1683 a school was being held by
an unlicensed nonconformist. (fn. 445) By will proved 1707
the rector Charles Trippett gave Β£100 to be invested
for a school for poor children. The capital was
invested in 1765 and the interest, Β£5 a year, was
given to the mistress of the Sunday school. Before
1783 Mary Shaw, widow of the rector John Shaw
(d. 1745), gave by will Β£100 to assist the teaching of
poor children and the interest, Β£6, was applied with
Trippett's money. (fn. 446)
In 1808 the two charities provided for the teaching
of 26 children; another school had recently been
started; and there were some smaller schools. (fn. 447) In
1818 the charity money was given to a mistress who
taught 27 children and there were four other dayschools for a total of 65 children. (fn. 448) Those schools
possibly included the Baptist school, which in 1821
is the first known to have had a special room but in
1833 was apparently a Sunday school. (fn. 449) The school
partly supported by the charities was in 1833
attended by 54 children but was still held in the
mistress's house, leased to her by the rector. At two
other schools there were 31 and 15 pupils. (fn. 450) By 1839
a new schoolroom near Knoyle House had been
built for the charity school, (fn. 451) but other schools
continued and in 1858 there were three in the parish,
the National school supported partly by the charities,
a private school for some twenty children of farmers
and tradesmen, and for the Congregationalists a
British school adjoining the chapel. (fn. 452) A new
National school was built between the church and
the Rectory in 1872β3. It is of stone with details in
a Moorish style to designs of G. Aitchison. (fn. 453) The
British school, which had an average attendance of
38 in 1870, (fn. 454) had been closed by 1881 (fn. 455) and from
then the National school was the only one in the
parish. In 1906 the average attendance was 135. (fn. 456)
It had fallen to 89 by 1922 and to 74 by 1936. (fn. 457) In
1977 there were 29 pupils. (fn. 458)
Trippett's and Mary Shaw's charities, managed
by the trustees of Robert Compton's charity (see
below), were merged with Compton's by a Scheme
of 1897. In 1903 their joint income, Β£8, was paid to
the school. (fn. 459) In 1975 they were united as the East
Knoyle Educational Charity and in 1976 the income
of Β£7 was given to the school. (fn. 460)
Charities for the Poor.
By will proved
1687 Robert Compton gave,Β£300 to invest in land
for the purposes of binding orphan children
apprentice and relieving the old and feeble poor
not otherwise relieved. In 1692 the trustees were
mortgagees of an estate of 27 a. in Upton and Milton
and from 1717 owned it. To augment the charity
the trustees were given, Β£20 by Francis Morley in
1693 and Β£40 by Edward Sanger in 1713, and in
1766 Β£50 from those gifts was invested. In 1833 the
total income was Β£38: Β£5 was placed annually in an
apprenticing fund, the remainder distributed at
Whitsun among some 30 unrelieved poor over 60
who received between 10s. and Β£3 15s. each. In 1867
the income was Β£62 of which Β£42 was distributed. (fn. 461)
The trustees administered several other East Knoyle
charities (fn. 462) of which by a Scheme of 1897 they
became trustees. (fn. 463) The charities thus merged were
united by a Scheme of 1975 as the East Knoyle
Welfare Trust and the East Knoyle Educational
Charity. In 1976 the trust had an income of Β£327 of
which Β£60 was spent on apprenticing, Β£261 on
winter fuel for 24 pensioners. (fn. 464)
In 1690 Robert Compton's widow Susannah gave
11 a. to benefit unrelieved poor of the parish. The
rent from it, Β£18 in 1833, was received by the
trustees of Robert Compton's charity who distributed money in November, in 1833 in sums of
between 1s. 6d. and 16s. The charity was merged
with Robert Compton's in 1897. (fn. 465) In 1962 the land
was apparently sold and Β£990 invested. Income
that year was Β£47 of which most was spent on coal. (fn. 466)
In 1975 the charity was united with Robert
Compton's. (fn. 467)
John Shaw (d. 1745), the rector, (fn. 468) gave by will Β£50
to benefit the poor of East Knoyle. In 1766 that sum
with interest, Β£74, was given to trustees who, when
the capital reached Β£80, distributed Β£4 a year. In
1829 the capital was invested. In 1832 the trustees
of Robert Compton's charity distributed the income,
Β£2 14s., in sums of 1s. at Christmas and in 1897 the
charity was merged with Compton's. In 1904 the
beneficiaries were the 21 parishioners receiving
poor-relief who were each given 2s. 4Β½d. (fn. 469) Under a
Scheme of 1950 the income was devoted to emergency relief in money or goods. (fn. 470) In 1962 Β£3 15s.
was spent. The charity was united with the
Comptons' charities in 1975. (fn. 471)
Anthony Burbidge (d. 1823) gave by will Β£100 to
benefit poor widows and widowers over 50 at
Christmas. Benefit was confined to practising Anglicans. The money was invested in 1833 and Β£5
distributed among ten widows and five widowers.
In 1906 6s. was paid to each of seven or eight poor
widows and widowers. (fn. 472) The charity, whose subsequent history is not clear, has possibly been
merged with Robert Compton's.
HINDON
Hindon is a settlement planned by a bishop of
Winchester and founded in the early 13th century.
The tenements were built on both sides of a street
and behind them were narrow burgage plots,
vestiges of which remain visible. (fn. 473) The main period
of building seems to have been 1218β20. (fn. 474) Like
other contemporary new towns Hindon was presumably conceived as a centre for artisans and of
trade in their and other wares. (fn. 475) It was established
on chalk downland in the north-east corner of the
manor and parish of East Knoyle nearer to Chicklade, Berwick St. Leonard, and the Fonthills than to
East Knoyle. The street ran north-west to south-east
down a steep hill and ended abruptly at the parish
boundary. (fn. 476) It was part of a road which was possibly
ancient but apparently without prominence, (fn. 477) and
the straightness of the street is a mark of the bishop's
planning rather than the road's original course. If,
as may be assumed, it was previously unoccupied
Hindon's site on remote downland in a far corner of
the parish calls for an explanation. The most likely
one is perhaps that Hindon was built as far as
possible from the rival centres of Mere and Shaftesbury (Dors.), and as near as possible to the villages
of the upper Nadder valley and to those lying along
the Wylye between the market towns of Warminster
and Wilton.
It was possibly intended that the burgesses should
have no land beyond the burgage plots. Soon after
foundation, however, at least 75 a. of land in plots of
1β10 a. were conveyed for 6d. an acre to inhabitants,
presumably to ensure the survival of so young and
remote a community, (fn. 478) and c. 1231 the bishop sold
a coomb of his down to the burgesses for an annual
payment of 15s. (fn. 479) Those lands, whose boundaries
were the straight boundaries of East Knoyle, were
presumably the lands around Hindon which with the
village became the chapelry, 228 a. (92 ha.). (fn. 480)
Hindon remained a chapelry of East Knoyle until
1869 but, relieving its own poor, was considered a
civil parish. (fn. 481) In 1934 parts of Chicklade, Berwick
St. Leonard, and Fonthill Gifford parishes were
transferred to Hindon (fn. 482) whose bounds were thus
extended southwards and eastwards to enclose a
roughly square parish, 417 ha. (1,031 a.). (fn. 483)
Hindon survived as a settlement and c. 1250, when
there were some 150 houses, (fn. 484) its population was
apparently above that of an average village. There
were no more than 77 poll-tax payers in 1377 (fn. 485) and
Hindon was clearly not a large settlement in the 17th
century. (fn. 486) In 1801 the population was 793. It
reached a peak of 921 in 1831 when there were some
190 houses. (fn. 487) What prosperity Hindon had was due
more to its market and fairs, (fn. 488) and to its position on
and near main roads, than to its industry. From the
later Middle Ages Hindon's status as a parliamentary
borough (fn. 489) may have attracted investment and
occasional trade, and its central position in southwest Wiltshire made it a centre of local government.
Between 1530 and 1660 it was sometimes a venue
for quarter sessions and in 1786 was made the
centre of a petty sessional division. (fn. 490) In 1688
Clarendon met William of Orange there. (fn. 491) The road
from Barford St. Martin, Wilton, and Salisbury
to Willoughby Hedge in West Knoyle crossed
Hindon street. Especially after that and the main
London-Exeter road across the downs were turnpiked in the 18th century, (fn. 492) Hindon attracted much
coach traffic, providing for which was probably its
principal industry. (fn. 493) There were fourteen inns and
public houses in 1754, (fn. 494) and in the early 19th century
the inns were still numerous. (fn. 495) In 1830 London
coaches from Exeter left daily from the Swan and
from Barnstaple (Devon) nightly from the Lamb,
and there were corresponding services westwards. (fn. 496)
Such was the vitality of Hindon in the 18th century
that it quickly recovered after a serious fire which
spread along the street and did much damage 2β3
July 1754. (fn. 497) In the 19th century, however, after the
peak of 1831, Hindon declined. The population had
fallen to 603 by 1871 and the decline continued until
1931 when there were 376 inhabitants. (fn. 498) By then
market and fairs had ceased and there were only two
public houses, the Lamb and the Grosvenor Arms
which both remained open in 1977. (fn. 499) The magistrates' court was moved to Tisbury in 1887. (fn. 500)
Hindon's decline coincided with and has been
attributed to its disfranchisement in 1832, (fn. 501) but
probably as important was the railway connexion of
London to Taunton and Exeter in the early 1840s (fn. 502)
and a decline in road traffic through the borough.
Some of the population decline in Hindon after 1831
was compensated by the growth of settlement around
the bottom of the street. That settlement, including
a school and a nonconformist chapel, (fn. 503) was part of
Hindon although situated in the three neighbouring
parishes. In 1934 it was transferred to Hindon with
its population of some 110. (fn. 504) In 1971 Hindon's
population was 534. (fn. 505)
In 1748 there were unbroken lines of buildings on
both sides of the whole length of the street and
behind them many cottages, some of them in rows
endways on in the narrow burgage plots, and other
buildings had by then been erected on those plots. (fn. 506)
The market was presumably held along the whole
street and a market building then stood in the street
between the points at which the road from Barford
St. Martin to Willoughby Hedge entered and left
it. The survival of a number of houses which are of
the early 18th century or earlier, particularly on the
west side of the street, suggests that the fire of 1754
did not seriously affect every building and belies the
contemporary claim that little of Hindon survived. (fn. 507)
Damage was clearly extensive, however, in the
centre of the street on the east side, where on both
sides of the road from Barford St. Martin the
buildings behind the street were most numerous.
Part of that area was not rebuilt and in 1977
remained an empty square around the south and
west sides of which the road from Barford St.
Martin to Willoughby Hedge passed. On the east
side of the street south of that road, however, is a
group of houses which seem to have been built soon
after 1754. Hindon is still characterized by its long
straight street which was lined with trees in 1863. (fn. 508)
It contains a mixture of houses dating from the
later 17th century to the 19th. Stone predominated
until the later 18th century; red brick afterwards
became more common. A notable feature of the
centre of the street on the west side is a group of
substantial buildings whose frontages are pierced
by carriage entrances and which were presumably
inns. Mid-20th-century council houses have been
built behind the church at the north-west end of
the street. The settlement at the south-east end is
on a north-east to south-west line at right angles to
the street.
There were a few houses on the downs in 1748. (fn. 509)
One of them, Hawking Down House, was replaced
by a small house in Tudor style which was described
as new in 1838. The new house was said to have
been built for the valet of William Beckford (d. 1844),
possibly c. 1822 when Beckford left Fonthill
Gifford. (fn. 510)
Manor.
The land on which Hindon was built and
the land which became the chapelry were part of
the bishop of Winchester's manor of East Knoyle.
The lands were held freely and the bishops remained
overlords. (fn. 511) The freeholds were at first small but in
the 14th century the Mussel family, including
Walter (fl. 1297), his son John (fl. 1332), and grandson Philip Mussel (fl. 1380), apparently accumulated
a substantial estate. (fn. 512) Philip's heir was his sister
Joan, wife of John Brit (fl. 1430) who bought more
land, probably including the 94 a. held by Thomas
Mussel in 1348. (fn. 513) The Brits' heirs were Joan's
cousins Joan, wife of Richard Herdell, and Catherine,
wife of Richard Coof. (fn. 514) Their land in Hindon was
allotted to the Herdells whose son Robert mortgaged
it to Thomas Tropenell in 1452. Tropenell (d. 1488)
entered in 1456 and, despite disputes before and
after then, retained his manor of HINDON. (fn. 515) The
manor passed to his son Christopher (d. 1503),
Christopher's son Thomas (d. 1547), and Thomas's
son Giles (d. 1553) whose heirs were his four
sisters. (fn. 516) Hindon was allotted to his sister Eleanor,
wife of Andrew Blackman who held the manor until
his death in 1588. (fn. 517) Blackman's successor was the
one of his three daughters who married Richard
Mompesson, whose brother and heir Drew held the
manor in 1600. (fn. 518) Drew Mompesson was succeeded
by his son Jasper who, a debtor, conveyed it to
William and Robert Toope as trustees for the payment of debts and legacies. (fn. 519) Despite Mompesson's
attempts to stop them the Toopes sold the manor
c. 1620, possibly to Edward Perry (d. 1648), a Hindon
innkeeper, who held it c. 1641. (fn. 520) In 1670 it was
conveyed by James Perry, possibly Edward's son,
and others to Thomas Thynne, (fn. 521) whose executors
sold it to Sir Matthew Andrews of Mere, presumably
c. 1683. (fn. 522) In 1701 Sir Matthew sold it to Thomas
Jervoise. (fn. 523) About 1738 the manor was acquired,
presumably by purchase from Jervoise, by Henry
Calthorpe (knighted 1744, d. 1788) whose heir was
his nephew Sir Henry Gough-Calthorpe, Bt.
(created Baron Calthorpe 1796, d. 1798). (fn. 524) The
manor, in 1820 consisting of 179 a. and some
89 houses, (fn. 525) passed with the Calthorpe title to
Sir Henry's sons Charles (d. 1807), George (d.
1851), and Frederick Gough, Lord Calthorpe,
who apparently in the 1850s sold it to Richard
Grosvenor, marquess of Westminster. (fn. 526) The manor
passed with Fonthill Abbey to Westminster's widow
Elizabeth Mary (d. 1891) who sold her life interest
to Sir Michael Robert Shaw-Stewart, Bt. (d. 1903),
the husband of her daughter Octavia. (fn. 527) At Octavia's
death in 1921 the manor passed to her son Walter
Richard Shaw-Stewart who sold it in 1922. (fn. 528) The
manor was broken up. (fn. 529)
Economic History.
Agriculture. There is
evidence of prehistoric ploughing on the downs near
Hindon, (fn. 530) but when it was demised to the burgesses
c. 1231 the coomb was a pasture for the bishop of
Winchester's sheep. (fn. 531) By the later 13th century the
burgesses had ploughed it. The east and west fields
of Hindon were mentioned then and in the early
14th century in terms which indicate that they were
divided into small strips and cultivated in common
in the manner normal in older established field
systems. (fn. 532) The plots of 1β10 a. conveyed to individual burgesses, however, were presumably
several and inclosed. (fn. 533) References to a north field in
1332 and later suggest cultivation in three fields. (fn. 534)
There was common feeding, presumably on the
summit called Hocken (later Hawking) down in the
north end of the chapelry. (fn. 535) Strip cultivation still
prevailed in 1431, (fn. 536) but there is no evidence of it later.
The land had possibly been inclosed by the mid
16th century when many small closes were mentioned. (fn. 537) Hocken down, which in the mid 18th
century lay divided among several farms, (fn. 538) had
presumably been inclosed with it. In 1741 there
were several small farms in Hindon. (fn. 539) In 1843 there
were three of 30β45 a. and three of 10β20 a. All had
farmsteads in the street except Hawking Down
farm, 18 a., which, however, then had no land on the
old Hocken down. Nearly all the land was ploughed. (fn. 540)
In 1923 there were still several farms in Hindon,
some apparently including land in other parishes. (fn. 541)
In 1977 most of the land of the parish, more arable
in the northern half, pasture in the southern half,
was shared among smallholders. (fn. 542)
Markets and Fairs. A market-place and a
building for merchants were provided and a cross
raised in 1218β19, and in 1219 the bishop of Winchester was granted a Thursday market. (fn. 543) The
weekly market seems to have begun immediately.
Frequent references to stallage and shambles suggest
that it continued without interruption, (fn. 544) and a
claim that many were attracted to it was implied in
1405. (fn. 545) Hindon was noted for its market in the mid
and later 16th century when clerks of the market had
opportunities to be corrupt which might not have
existed had the market been less popular. (fn. 546) In the
17th century it clearly flourished as a corn market:
Aubrey, rather surprisingly, rated it second only to
Warminster c. 1650, (fn. 547) and c. 1707 it was coupled
with Chippenham as a great Wiltshire market. (fn. 548)
The market was still held in the early 19th century (fn. 549)
but then its prominence may have been less marked,
and in the later 19th century it seems to have
declined rapidly. It ceased in the early 1880s. (fn. 550)
A Michaelmas fair was granted with the market
in 1219 and seems to have been annually held. (fn. 551) In
1332, however, it was replaced by two yearly threeday fairs at Ascension and St. Luke's (18 October)
which were then granted to the bishop. (fn. 552) Like the
market the fairs seem to have flourished but by the
1790s, when dealing in cattle and cheese was mentioned, they had been restricted to single days, the
Monday before Whitsun and 29 October. (fn. 553) In the
later 19th century they were held on 27 May and
29 October. In the early 20th century only the
autumn fair was held and after the First World War
none was held. (fn. 554)
Trade and Industry.
From its foundation most
of the inhabitants of Hindon presumably supported
themselves through trade. (fn. 555) In 1558 the town was
said to abound in artisans, (fn. 556) but it has never contained a great concentration of any one trade. While
the market and fairs flourished many were engaged
in baking, brewing, and innkeeping, (fn. 557) and in the
later 18th century the support of travellers was said
to be the chief trade. (fn. 558) That trade was reduced in
the 19th century when the market and fairs and
coach travel declined, but revived somewhat when
motor traffic increased in the mid 20th century.
In the 15th and 16th centuries there were weavers
in Hindon. (fn. 559) In the late 18th century the town had
a small share in the linen, dowlas, and tick-weaving
industry based at Mere, but had almost lost it by
1820. Similarly the making of silk twist was in
decline in 1820. (fn. 560) About 1700 there were three
clock-makers and the Gerard and Stephens families
continued clock-making until the late 18th century. (fn. 561)
Gunpowder was apparently made at Hindon until
the making was transferred to Salisbury c. 1636. (fn. 562)
Trades and industries in Hindon were otherwise
what might have been expected to meet the needs of
the agrarian economies of the surrounding villages:
craftsmen working in wood, metal, and leather were
frequently mentioned, (fn. 563) as were other tradesmen
such as chandlers and surgeons, (fn. 564) but no business has
ever grown to a substantial size. In 1977 most of the
working population was employed outside the parish.
Local Government.
In the Middle Ages
Hindon was governed through the bishop of Winchester's tourns held for the liberty of East Knoyle. (fn. 565)
Hindon was part of no tithing. Its bailiff fulfilled the
functions of the tithingmen in East Knoyle and
Fonthill Bishop, and Hindon had its own constable. (fn. 566)
The bailiff presented more breaches of the assizes of
bread and ale than did the tithingmen, presumably
because of Hindon's market and fairs. In 1464, for
example, 2 brewers, 9 taverners, 2 innkeepers, 3
bakers, and 1 butcher were amerced. (fn. 567) Other offenders were less frequently presented although in
the late 15th century and the 16th affrays, unlawful
gaming, and moral offences were sometimes dealt
with. (fn. 568) In the 17th and 18th centuries public
nuisances were the main Hindon matters presented,
and both before and after the fire of 1754 the
dangerous condition of chimneys was frequently
reported. In 1732 and 1754 the stocks, blindhouse,
pillory, and cross were said to need repair. (fn. 569)
Hindon was responsible for relieving its own poor
but no record of its doing so survives. In 1812 the
inhabitants agreed to provide a new workhouse and
by the 1820s a house and malt-house in the street
had been converted. (fn. 570) In 1835 Hindon joined
Tisbury poor-law union. (fn. 571)
Parliamentary Representation.
Hindon was summoned to parliament first in 1378
and continually until 1385 but returned no member. (fn. 572) From 1448β9 until it was disfranchised in
1832 it was regularly summoned and represented by
two members. (fn. 573) The returning officer was the
bailiff appointed by the bishop of Winchester. (fn. 574)
The franchise was possibly in the burgage holders
but in the mid 17th century was apparently
broadened: in 1646 and perhaps in 1660 there were
double returns, of elections both by the burgesses
and by the inhabitants at large. (fn. 575) In 1688 there were
some 120 electors, (fn. 576) presumably the occupiers of
all houses in the borough, and in 1701 and 1728 the
franchise was formally vested in the householders. (fn. 577)
The influence of bishops of Winchester has been
detected in 16th-century elections of members, few
of whom had local connexions. (fn. 578) From the late 16th
century, however, episcopal influence waned and
members of prominent south-west Wiltshire families began to be elected. The families included
those of Mervyn, Thynne, Hyde, and Ludlow in
the earlier 17th century and those of Hyde, Thynne,
Howe, and Benett in the later 17th century. (fn. 579) The
borough, open and corrupt, was the stage on which
fierce local rivalries were enacted. (fn. 580) The Morley
family, members of which were lessees of the
demesne of Knoyle manor, enjoyed a period of
influence from 1695 to 1710 but afterwards the
pattern of representation changed. (fn. 581)
Hindon was reckoned an exceptionally corrupt
borough by even 18th-century standards. (fn. 582) In 1702
a bill to widen the franchise to include freeholders
in Downton hundred qualified to vote in county
elections was passed by the Commons but went no
further, and in 1774, when an election was declared
void after reciprocal accusations of bribery by all
four candidates, a disfranchisement bill was unsuccessfully introduced. (fn. 583) Because seats could be
bought Hindon attracted a variety of candidates
without local connexion. Its M.P.s included from
1735 to 1741 Henry Fox, afterwards created Baron
Holland, and from 1761 to 1768 the legal writer and
judge Sir William Blackstone. (fn. 584) In the 18th century,
however, the influence of the Calthorpe and Beckford families grew as each acquired property in
Hindon. Calthorpes appeared among the members
in the earlier 18th and earlier 19th centuries and
William Beckford from 1790 to 1818. (fn. 585) From the
later 18th century until disfranchisement the
influence on elections of the lords of Hindon and
Fonthill Gifford manors was paramount. (fn. 586)
Church.
A chapel was built when Hindon was
founded. (fn. 587) It was presumably poorly served by the
rector and at least in the later 14th century, when
the inhabitants had to attend their parish church,
almost certainly closed. About 1405 it was refounded
and apparently partly rebuilt. The inhabitants were
granted rights of burial and baptism in it but not of
marriage, and the church remained dependent on
East Knoyle as a chapel. Under the terms of a papal
licence it was served by a chaplain nominated by the
rector or, if he failed to appoint, by the inhabitants
of Hindon themselves. (fn. 588) The chapel was not endowed
at foundation but it seems that in the 15th century
the congregation, as permitted by the papal licence
and it is said with royal licence, endowed it with
buildings in Hindon and with land. In return the
inhabitants secured sole right of appointment from
the rector (fn. 589) who nevertheless retained the tithes
of the chapelry. (fn. 590) The church's endowment was
confiscated at the dissolution of the chantries and
in 1549 part of it was sold by the Crown. (fn. 591) The
inhabitants, stating that the church could not be
maintained without an endowment, petitioned for
its restoration and in 1558 the Crown restored the
unsold portion. A corporation of governors was
established to hold and manage it for the maintenance of the chaplain and chapel, and the word
'free' was subsequently prefixed to the church's
name. Although not expressly stated it is clear that
from then the right of appointment passed to the
Crown. (fn. 592) About 1650 the parliamentary commissioners recommended that Hindon should become a parish, (fn. 593) but it remained a chapelry and in
1783 there was still no right of marriage. (fn. 594) The
corporation of governors was reconstituted in 1779
and in 1868 the real property in the chapel's endowment was sold. (fn. 595) After commutation in 1844 (fn. 596) the
rent-charge in respect of the great tithes of Hindon
was received by the chaplain and by 1864 marriages
were being performed in the church. The perpetual
curacy was therefore sometimes styled a rectory (fn. 597)
until in 1869 Hindon became a district chapelry and
the living became a vicarage. (fn. 598) In 1922 the benefice
was united with the benefice of the united parishes
of Chicklade and Pertwood. (fn. 599) From then until 1960
the Crown presented alternately and since 1960 has
been sole patron. (fn. 600) In 1972 the parish was united
with the parish of Chicklade and Pertwood as the
parish of Hindon with Chicklade and Pertwood,
the benefice of which was in 1976 united with the
benefice of East Knoyle. (fn. 601)
The living has never been rich. At the Dissolution
the endowment consisted of 20 a. with pasture rights
in Milton and East Knoyle and land and tenements
in Hindon, all valued at Β£3 14s. 3d. (fn. 602) The premises in
Hindon were restored in 1558 (fn. 603) and in 1636 the
chaplain's stipend was only Β£16. (fn. 604) In the Interregnum
the tithes of Hindon as well as the rents from those
premises, Β£49 in all, were paid to the curate. (fn. 605) In
1808 the endowment produced some Β£60. (fn. 606) In 1821
it was augmented by lot with Β£400 from Queen
Anne's Bounty (fn. 607) but, with a net annual value
averaging Β£75 1829β31, the living remained poor. (fn. 608)
It was augmented by the great tithes of Hindon
which at least from 1844 to 1869 the rectors of East
Knoyle seem to have allowed the chaplains to
receive. (fn. 609) The proceeds of the sale of premises in
1868 were invested for the incumbents by the
Charity Commissioners. (fn. 610)
In 1636 the chaplain was said to have a house in
the churchyard later called the Parsonage, presumably a glebe-house. (fn. 611) In 1680 it was said to need
repair. (fn. 612) In 1783 the chaplain lived in Hindon but
not in the Parsonage which in 1833 was said to be
unfit for residence. (fn. 613) In 1864 there was said to be no
glebe-house. (fn. 614) West of the church on land formerly
in Chicklade a new house was built in 1950 and
enlarged in 1960. (fn. 615)
In 1636 a dispute between the chaplain, Samuel
Yarworth, and the governors over his stipend and
behaviour led to Yarworth's forcible removal from
his house and to a suit in the court of High Commission. (fn. 616) George Jenkins, chaplain during the Civil
War, conformed and in 1648 subscribed to the
Concurrent Testimony. (fn. 617) In 1662 the church lacked
much that was thought necessary for divine worship. (fn. 618) In 1783 it was served by the chaplain John
Evans who with his brother James held Sunday
services in four local churches. Those at Hindon
were held in the morning and afternoon. Prayers
were said on two weekdays and the Sacrament was
administered at the great festivals to some twenty
communicants. (fn. 619) On Census Sunday in 1851 there
were congregations of 160 and 240 at the morning
and evening services. (fn. 620) In 1864 two Sunday services
were still being held but Holy Communion was less
frequent than in many parishes. (fn. 621)
In 1553 the dedication was to St. Luke, (fn. 622) but was
later to ST. JOHN THE BAPTIST. About 1804
the church consisted of apparently undivided nave
and chancel, a south tower the lower stage of which
served as a porch, and a small south transeptal chapel
against the tower to the west. The tower appears to
have been that built at foundation and parts of the
nave and chancel may also have survived from that
time. The west doorway and window and a south
window of the nave were later-medieval, and the
south window of the chapel was 18th-century. (fn. 623) In
1836 the church was enlarged to designs of William
Gover. (fn. 624) A north aisle was added and a roundheaded window placed in the south wall of the nave
at the west end. (fn. 625) In 1870β1 the church was taken
down and rebuilt in Early English style to designs
of T. H. Wyatt and at the expense of Richard,
marquess of Westminster (d. 1869). (fn. 626) The new
church has chancel with south vestry, an aisled and
clerestoried nave, and a south tower which serves
as a porch.
In 1553 there were two bells. Later there were
five which with additional metal Abel Rudhall cast
into six in 1754. (fn. 627) They were rehung in 1934 (fn. 628) and
remained in the church in 1977. (fn. 629)
In 1553 a chalice of 9 oz. was left when the king's
commissioners took 2Β½ oz. of plate. New plate
consisting of chalice, paten, and flagon was given
under his will by James Ames (d. 1828), a Hindon
surgeon. (fn. 630) It belonged to the church in 1977. (fn. 631)
The registers date from 1599. (fn. 632)
Nonconformity.
The Roman Catholic martyr
John Story was chosen M.P. for Hindon in 1547. (fn. 633)
In the late 17th century Hindon was probably under
the strong Catholic influence emanating from Fonthill Gifford and it housed a small papist community.
Papists remained there throughout the 18th century.
In the later 18th century, when their leader was
Henry Lambert, a surgeon, they were said to be part
of the Wardour congregation. (fn. 634)
There were four Protestant nonconformists in
Hindon in 1676. (fn. 635) In 1787 a dwelling-house was
certified for Independents, (fn. 636) and in 1810 a Congregational church was built near Hindon on land in
Fonthill Gifford, claimed as an offshoot by both
Warminster and Trowbridge. (fn. 637) On Census Sunday
in 1851 there were congregations of 95 and 64 at the
two services. (fn. 638) The church was possibly served from
East Knoyle in the later 19th century. (fn. 639) By 1977 it
had been closed.
A room was certified for Primitive Methodists in
1836 and in 1841 the Providence chapel was built
for them behind the south side of the street. A total
of 80 attended the two services on Census Sunday in
1851. (fn. 640) In 1896 that chapel was replaced by one, on
the north side of the street, (fn. 641) in which services were
still held in 1977.
Education.
In 1783 poor children were taught
at a school supported by William Beckford of
Fonthill Gifford. (fn. 642) In 1818 there were also a school
supported by George, Baron Calthorpe, presumably
that near Hindon on Chicklade land, and three
schools for very young children. (fn. 643) In 1822 Lord
Calthorpe seems to have enlarged his school to make
separate boys and girls schools. In 1833 those schools
were attended by some 136 children and there were
then three small day- and boarding-schools for
36β40 pupils. (fn. 644) In 1858 there was still another school
in the parish, (fn. 645) but in 1864 only Lord Calthorpe's,
then a single school at which children stayed until
they were twelve or thirteen. (fn. 646) In 1881 it was
attended by children from Chicklade and possibly
from other parishes. (fn. 647) In 1906 the average attendance
was 133. (fn. 648) It had fallen to 74 by 1936. (fn. 649) In 1977
there were seventeen children on the roll. (fn. 650)
Charity for the Poor.
By will proved 1828
James Ames gave an annuity of Β£10 to the overseers
for distribution in bread and clothing to the relieved
poor. In 1833 it was distributed in coal. In 1860 the
charity's capital was Β£333. The annual income of
Β£8 6s. 8d. was spent on bread and calico given out
on Christmas eve. (fn. 651) The charity was regulated by
Schemes of 1913 and 1957. In 1965 twenty people
each received 8s. 6d. (fn. 652)