WAMBROOK
The parish of Wambrook had an area of 1,867 a.
in 1901. (fn. 1) In 1966 573 a. were transferred to the
civil parish from that of Chardstock (Devon,
formerly Dors.). (fn. 2) Wambrook lies 1¾ mile WSW.
from Chard, extending for 2¾ miles east to west and
1¾ mile north to south. Formerly in Dorset, the
civil parish was transferred to Somerset in 1896. (fn. 3)
It was included in Beaminster hundred by 1286,
in Sherborne hundred in 1346, and by 1428 again
in Beaminster, known as the hundred of Beaminster
and Redborne in the 19th century. (fn. 4) Its northern
boundary, once that of Somerset, marches with
Whitestaunton and Weston, a detached area of
Combe St. Nicholas. To the east it is bounded by
Chard, to the south and south-east by Chardstock,
and to the west by Membury (Devon).
The parish is divided in two by a north-south
ridge which rises to over 825 ft. in the north, and
formed the northern end of Bewley down. To the
east the land falls away to a valley lying along a
fault line on the sides of which lie the two principal
settlements of Higher Wambrook and Lower Wambrook, the lowest point being at 350 ft. on the SE.
boundary at Castle wood. Further east the ground
rises again to over 700 ft. West of the ridge, in the
NW. part of the parish, lie the settlement of Wortheal, Bickham wood, and another valley, at the foot
of which the land drops to 400 ft. Most of the higher
ground is clay, the two valleys lying on bands of
Upper Greensand over Lower Lias. There are
also outcrops of chalk between the 500 and 600 ft.
contours on the east side of the parish, and on the
lias and chalk both stone and marl were dug from
the 13th century. (fn. 5) Arable land lies principally on
the high ground in the NE., and the upper slopes
of both valleys together with the area around Wortheal are well wooded.
The principal road through Wambrook enters
from Chard in the NE. along the parish boundary
before turning SW. across Bewley down and leaving
the parish in the SW. for Stockland and ultimately
Honiton (Devon). This road was adopted by the
Chard turnpike trust as the main route to Honiton
in 1776. (fn. 6) Another road, also from Chard and known
as Haselcombe Lane in 1509, (fn. 7) enters from the east,
running SW. through Lower Wambrook and then
west to Linnington before turning north to Lancin
to link with the old turnpike road. The present
main road from Chard to Honiton followed the
same course through the north-west of the parish
at the beginning of the 19th century and, under the
Chard turnpike trust, became the main route to
Honiton in 1811. Two variations in its line through
Bickham wood were introduced in 1813 and 1814.
The road had reverted to its former course by 1828. (fn. 8)
Bewley down was a maze of tracks before inclosure
in 1816 and in the early 19th century a lane ran
north from the Cotley inn at Lower Wambrook
following the contour to fields in the NE. of the
parish. Higher and Lower Wambrook are linked
by a lane from north to south past the church and
other lanes link the parish with hamlets in Whitestaunton, Membury, and Chardstock. Palfrey's
Lane, evidently named from a 17th-century yeoman
family of Wambrook, runs NW. through the eastern
corner of the parish and crosses the northern
boundary at Cockcrow or Cockcrowing Stone, so
called in 1765. (fn. 9)
The original settlement was probably in the area
of the church, north of which lay the manor-house.
Immediately south and SE. lies Lower Wambrook,
known as Haselcombe by the 13th century, which
includes Dinnetts Farm, named after another 17th-century family. (fn. 10) The second, and possibly later,
hamlet of Higher Wambrook occurs as 'Higher
Wambrook next the rectory' in 1533, (fn. 11) and includes
Drakes, Wilmington, and Wambrook farms. The
parish also includes several scattered and early
farm sites. Linnington, SW. of Lower Wambrook,
takes its name from 'the hill called Lullindone',
mentioned c. 1200 (Lyllyngedoone in 1520), and
Box Cottage there is called the Box, presumably
from its hedged enclosure, in the 13th century. (fn. 12)
In the extreme south of the parish Castle wood is
recorded in 1422, probably the home of Laurence du
Chastel in 1311. (fn. 13) Lancin farm in the centre of the
parish occurs as Londenesham or Londesham in the
13th century (Lansham in 1517) and Wortheal in
the NW. as Wrthiale or Wurthihale c. 1200. (fn. 14) A
circular embanked and ditched enclosure, with
associated field system, has been traced SW. of
Wortheal farm-house, possibly of pre-Roman Iron
Age date. (fn. 15) Also in the NW. are Loomcroft, found
as a field-name in 1550, the site of Colemans,
mentioned in 1517, and Coombes farm, purchased
by the Combe family in 1567. (fn. 16) Dearhams on the
SW. boundary was referred to as Dorham in the
13th century. (fn. 17) The other farms in the parish were
generally established in the 19th century on lands
inclosed from Bewley down. Mancroft takes its
name from fields called Mannecrofts inclosed in
1421–2, Salt Box was mentioned in 1838 and is
now known as Mounters Hill, and Shaggs Flood
is so called from the Segge or Shegge family, living
in the parish by 1509. (fn. 18) Oatlands, Downlands,
and Broad Oak are all mid-19th-century creations.
Broad Oak was probably built c. 1850 by Brian
Charles Bordes, purchased c. 1862 by Thomas
Palmer Deane (d. 1873), and has since been held
by members of the Eames family. (fn. 19) Beulah Cottage
at Higher Wambrook, which occurs as Balah
Cottage in 1865, (fn. 20) is a corruption of Bewley.
Houses of 17th-century origin are Loomcroft,
Lancin (two on either side of the road), Dinnetts, and
Drakes farms. Apart from these, most of the buildings are 19th century.
There were two licensed victuallers in the parish
in 1720 and two inns there in 1753, the Old inn
and the Royal Oak, both held by members of the
Seaward family, innkeepers by 1723. The Old
inn evidently changed its name to the Hare and
Hounds between 1754 and 1757, being last recorded
in 1760, and the Royal Oak was mentioned until
1759. References to other inns include the Rose and
Crown (1761–70), the Red Lion (1762, later the
White Hart, 1764), and the Bell (1765). (fn. 21) The
New inn at Lower Wambrook, referred to in 1867,
was known as the Cotley inn in 1975. (fn. 22)
The Cotley harriers, formed c. 1796 at Cotley in
Chardstock by Thomas Deane, passed to his son
Thomas Palmer Deane of Broad Oak in 1855. The
hounds were subsequently kennelled at Broad
Oak, the master in 1974 being Lt.-Col. R. F. P.
Eames of Cotley, great-great-grandson of the
founder. (fn. 23)
There were about 60 communicants in the parish
c. 1600. (fn. 24) The population stood at 138 in 1801,
rose sharply to 174 in 1811 and 201 in 1821, and
then more gradually to 291 in 1871. Thereafter it
declined to 201 in 1901, remaining fairly stable until
a further drop to 174 in 1931. There was a slight
increase to 177 in 1951 and numbers stood at 142
in 1961 and 167 (including the area transferred from
Chardstock) in 1971. (fn. 25)
Sir Simonds D'Ewes (1602–50), antiquarian
writer, born in Chardstock, was educated between
1611 and 1614 by Christopher Marraker, rector of
Wambrook 1591–1621. (fn. 26)
MANOR AND OTHER ESTATES.
An estate
of four hides at 'Awanbruth' was granted to the
monastery of Sherborne (Dors.) between 802 and
839 by Egbert, king of the West Saxons. (fn. 27) The
grant is probably to be linked with WAMBROOK,
subsequently held with Chardstock manor, which
had evidently been conveyed to Sherborne by
King Cynewulf in the 8th century. (fn. 28) The possessions of Sherborne, formerly seat of a bishopric,
were taken to endow the new see of Salisbury
established in the 11th century, and Wambrook
was probably included in the twelve hides assigned
to Chardstock in 1086, when it was held by the
bishop of Salisbury. (fn. 29) The bishop continued as
overlord of the manor until at least 1540. (fn. 30)
The manor may have been held in 1086 by one of
two knights, William and Walter, entered in
Domesday under Chardstock. (fn. 31) It had been subinfeudated by the mid 12th century when the fee
of Nicholas Oliver of Wambrook was quitclaimed to
the bishop by Baldwin, earl of Exeter (d. 1155). (fn. 32)
Jordan Oliver was holding one fee under the bishop
of Salisbury in 1166 and the manor evidently
continued in the Oliver family as a second Jordan
Oliver was holding lands in Wambrook in the early
13th century. (fn. 33) The latter may probably be identified with Sir Jordan Oliver of Dorset, husband of
Sibyl de Aumale, who was evidently succeeded
by Jordan Oliver (III), a justice in eyre and sheriff
of Somerset and Dorset 1239–40, who probably
lived in the parish. (fn. 34) The latter was probably
followed by his son Walter Oliver (fl. 1240–83). (fn. 35)
The manor had passed by 1280 to an heiress,
Sibyl Oliver, wife of Humphrey de Beauchamp
of Ryme (Dors.), from whom she was divorced
between 1287 and 1290. (fn. 36) By 1292 Sibyl had carried
the manor to her second husband John de Aldham
and in the following year Cecily, widow of John
Beauchamp, Lord Beauchamp of Hatch, whose
husband had acted as trustee for his brother Humphrey, unsuccessfully claimed dower in the estate. (fn. 37)
In 1306 Sibyl Oliver granted the advowson and the
reversion of the manor to John de Hertrugge and
Nichole his wife, with a reservation for life to
Sibyl's son William, and John and Nichole secured
a quitclaim of the manor from Humphrey de
Beauchamp two years later. (fn. 38) John de Hertrugge
died in 1309 leaving a daughter Elizabeth, although
Nichole retained her life-interest and was still
holding the manor in 1330. (fn. 39) Sir John Streche
(d. 1355) occurs as lord in 1346, possibly holding the
manor at farm, and his son was born at Wambrook
in 1341. (fn. 40) By 1354, however, the manor was held
by John de Farnebergh and Elizabeth his wife,
possibly daughter of John de Hertrugge, in which
year they sold it to William son of John de Percy
and Mary daughter of William Filoll (I) of Woodlands (Dors.) on their marriage, with remainder
failing issue to the heirs of Willaim Filoll. (fn. 41) In
1390 the manor was quitclaimed to William Percy
and Walter Clopton, Percy's tenant for life, by
Thomas Beauchamp of Ryme, great-grandson of
Humphrey, but Percy died in 1407 without issue. (fn. 42)
Percy's widow Mary married secondly Richard
Bannebury and in 1411 they granted the manor
during Mary's life to William Filoll (II), grandson
of William (I), for £20 a year. (fn. 43) William (II) and
his wife Joan received a grant of the reversion from
William's father John Filoll, and Joan entered on
the manor after the death of Mary Bannebury. (fn. 44)
Joan married secondly Sir William Cheyne and
died in 1434, the manor descending on her death
to her son John Filoll (d. 1468). (fn. 45) John's widow
Margaret, who married secondly John Wroughton,
evidently held a life-interest and in 1497 conveyed
the lordship to her son William (later Sir William)
Filoll (III). (fn. 46)
Sir William (d. 1527) left two daughters and
coheirs, Anne wife of Sir Edward Willoughby and
Catherine wife of Edward Seymour later duke of
Somerset. (fn. 47) Catherine was 'repudiated' by her husband c. 1530, her children were disinherited, and
the whole manor passed to Sir Edward Willoughby
(d. 1540) and his wife. (fn. 48) Sir Edward's son Henry
was succeeded by his son Sir Francis Willoughby. (fn. 49)
In 1588 the latter sold the manor to Henry and
George Drake of London to finance the building
of Wollaton Hall (Notts.). (fn. 50) In the same year
the Drakes, as a condition of their purchase, sold
certain estates to nominees of Sir Francis, and
in 1619 enfranchised most, if not all, of the lands
within the manor. (fn. 51) Subsequently certain fractions
of the lordship were claimed by the representatives
of some of those purchasers.
A quarter of the manor was held by the Revd.
Gamaliel Chase of Yarcombe (Devon) in 1677,
when it was settled on his son, the Revd. John
Chase, and the latter's wife Margaret for their lives
with remainder to John's son Gideon. (fn. 52) It is not
mentioned thereafter but probably descended with
the advowson. (fn. 53)
A further quarter was evidently held by John
Woolmington of Wambrook and Dorchester (d.
1717) and was divided between his daughters and
coheirs, Frances and Mary. Frances married the
Revd. Henry Hooton of Moreton (Dors.) who, with
his daughter Frances wife of Thomas Hyde, conveyed his lands in trust for sale in 1768, when they
passed to Sir Richard Glyn of London, Bt. Mary,
the second daughter, married Robert Wadham of
Poole (Dors.). Wadham was declared bankrupt
in 1737 and his brother and assignee, Martin
Wadham, disposed of the other moiety to Sir
Richard Glyn, thus reuniting the quarter lordship. (fn. 54)
Glyn (d. 1773) was succeeded in turn by his son
Sir Richard Carr Glyn of Gaunts (d. 1838) and
grandson Sir Richard Plumptre Glyn (d. 1868). (fn. 55)
In the earlier 19th century this quarter is referred
to as a moiety of the manor. (fn. 56) In 1881 Sir Richard
George Glyn, nephew of Sir R. P. Glyn, sold his
quarter to Sarah West, Richard Bowerman West,
Richard John Bowerman, and Thomas Palmer
Eames. (fn. 57) Evidently by virtue of this grant Richard
B. T. West (d. 1900) occurs as lord in 1897 and
his first cousin, Thomas Deane Eames (d. 1936),
from 1902 to 1914. (fn. 58) This quarter was probably
held in 1974 by the latter's nephew, Lt.-Col.
R. F. P. Eames of Cotley, Chardstock. (fn. 59)
John Beviss (I) (d. c. 1791) was purchasing lands
in Wambrook between 1764 and 1789 and acquired
a share in the manor, termed a moiety in the earlier
19th century. He was succeeded in turn by his son
John (II) (d. 1809) and grandson John (III) (d.
1840). The last left four sons between whom his
lands and, presumably, his share of the manor was
divided. (fn. 60) Manorial rights were claimed by the
representatives of John Beviss at least until 1939. (fn. 61)
The manor-house and fruit and herbage of its
garden were mentioned in 1309. (fn. 62) Repairs were
made in 1421–2 to the chamber and hall of what was
evidently the manor-house, and in 1508–9 and
1509–10 sums were spent on rethatching the courthouse. (fn. 63) In 1529 the churchwardens took a 60-year
lease of the capital messuage and court barton for
4d. a year, and were ordered to repair their 'church
house' in 1543. (fn. 64) A watercourse running to the
court-house was mentioned in 1570, and a lease of
the court-house to four persons was excepted from
the sale of the manor in 1588. (fn. 65) When the manor
was enfranchised the church house and Pounds
Barton were sold with Drakes farm and continued
to be mentioned at least until 1666. (fn. 66) The house
evidently stood on part of Court mead north of the
church.
On the break-up of the manor Drakes House,
later Drakes farm, was sold in 1619 by Henry
Drake to Simon Mathew of East Budleigh (Devon).
Mathew settled the property on trustees for his
granddaughters Honor, later wife of John Bowditch
of Hawkchurch (Devon), and Mary, children of
John and Agnes Drake. They, with their grandfather, sold the farm to Simon's daughter Honor
Westcott in 1654, who conveyed it to her son Philip
Westcott of Wambrook in 1661. Westcott sold it in
1666 to Richard Tirrel, a Chard sheargrinder. (fn. 67)
By will proved in 1705 Tirrel left the farm to his
granddaughter Rebecca, widow of John Smith of
Honiton (Devon), subject to remainders in favour
of the family of his nephew Michael Tirrel of
Minehead. On Rebecca's death c. 1758 the property
fell into moieties between John Hossem (d. 1778),
a Dunster cabinet-maker and great-grandson of
Michael Tirrel, and Thomas Warren, a Dunster
carpenter and wheelwright, grandson of Michael
Tirrel. The two moieties were purchased by Sir
Richard Carr Glyn in 1796 from John Hossem's
son John and from Thomas Warren, (fn. 68) and sold
by Sir Richard George Glyn with his quarter of the
manor in 1881.
In accordance with the wishes of Sir Francis
Willoughby, Henry and George Drake conveyed
two tenements called Haselcombe and Linnington
with 160 a. of land to Thomas Estmond (d. 1607)
of Lodge, Chardstock, in 1588. The lands passed
from Thomas to his son Nicholas Estmond and
thence to his granddaughter Mary, wife of Humphrey Coffin. (fn. 69) The estate was sequestered during
the Interregnum for Humphrey's recusancy. (fn. 70) Mary
Coffin conveyed the premises to her son John
Coffin of Wambrook in 1670, who sold them to
Robert Smith of Hawkchurch (Devon), later of
Salisbury, M.D. In 1690 Dr. Smith (d. 1694)
settled the estate with some lands in Chardstock
on himself and wife for their lives with remainder
to Wadham College, Oxford. The first £20 of the
income was to be paid to the college chaplains and
the residue to the moderators. The college retained
the property until 1875 when it was sold. It then
comprised 185 a. in Wambrook and Chardstock
based on Linnington Barton. (fn. 71)
ECONOMIC HISTORY.
In 1309 the manor was
valued at £6 1s. 11½d. a year, and the demesne
included 180 a. of arable, 8 a. of meadow, several
pasture worth 3s. 4d., wood and underwood worth
3s., and a water-mill. (fn. 72) A number of freeholds had
been created in the previous century and more, at
Wortheal before c. 1200, Lancin and Haselcombe,
and by 1309 7 freehold tenants paid 20s. 0½d., while
there were 17 villeins, 2 cottars, and 4 tenants
rendering chevage (capitagiarii), paying total rents
of 43s. 3d. (fn. 73)
Demesne leasing from 1421–2 increased the income of the manor from £15 2s. in 1416 to £25
13s. 5d., but by 1435 the value had fallen to £14 2s.
The demesne holding in 1435 was 200 a. of arable,
12 a. of meadow, 20 a. of inclosed pasture, and 200 a.
of hill pasture. (fn. 74) The value fell slightly in 1468, to
£13 6s. 8d., but had returned to its earlier level
by 1508–9, when the income was £21 13s. 11d.
based on a rental of £20 13s. 6d. (fn. 75) The rental
remained constant until 1573–4, in which year
entry fines totalled £430. (fn. 76) After 1574 the income
cannot be ascertained. Sir Edward Willoughby
(d. 1540) called Wambrook 'the best manor that I
have by my wife' and the family sold it for £2,400
in 1588. (fn. 77)
In 1550 the number of freeholders had fallen to
two (Wortheal, and Mangerton in Netherbury,
Dors.) (fn. 78) and there were 18 customary tenants
sharing the demesne. The largest holding was
150 a., 5 tenants held between 50 a. and 70 a.,
3 between 25 a. and 50 a., and 7 under 25 a. There
were 15 a. of copyhold land at Yarcombe, part
called Olyver's mead taking its name from the
medieval lords. (fn. 79) There was by 1550 no indication
of open fields, though field-names included North,
South, East, West, and Middle fields, probably
existing in the north-east of the parish before the
15th century. (fn. 80) That area was also the site of Langland where in 1570 the tenants of Higher Wambrook
were required to repair the way 'used for carrying
grain from the fields' and not to use the way after
grain had been sown or before it was harvested.
There were three customary tenants holding arable
in Langland in 1550. (fn. 81)
Woodland provided a small but constant income
for the manor. (fn. 82) Tenants were forbidden to cut
underwood in Bickham wood in 1517 and one was
fined for shrouding and lopping ash trees there in
1566. (fn. 83) Castle wood had been partly leased by 1530,
comprised 45 a. held by two tenants in 1567–8,
and by 1606 had been developed as the site of Castle
Wood farm. (fn. 84) Bere wood had shrunk from 26 a.
to 22 a. by 1567–8 and was later converted to
pasture. By 1619 the northern part was held with
Drakes farm, and by 1667 the southern section had
passed to Wilmington farm. (fn. 85) Bickham wood was
common to the tenants by 1517 and contained
60 a. with 100 oaks, ashes, and alders in 1550, when
John Drake had the right to cut holly there. It
had fallen to 40 a. by 1567–8, continued as common
until the 1816 inclosure, and in 1975 formed the
principal area of woodland in the parish. (fn. 86)
Bewley down, the largest area of common land
within the manor, was pastured by all the tenants.
By 1509 the lord had leased common pasture there
to three residents of Southay in Whitestaunton. (fn. 87)
In 1561 the tenant of Wortheal was illegally stocking
the lord's common and Chardstock tenants had
over-stocked it. (fn. 88) The hedge forming the northern
boundary with Whitestaunton and Whitestaunton
gate there were constantly out of repair in the 16th
century. (fn. 89) The common contained 524 a. of furze
and heath in 1567–8 and, with Bickham wood,
680 a. when inclosed by Act of Parliament in 1816. (fn. 90)
In 1513 intercommoning with Whitestaunton
tenants was practised on Southay hill, and in 1772
the vestry agreed to prosecute any person carrying
furze, fern, or turf out of the commons. (fn. 91)
Of the early freeholds Wortheal had 70 a. and
was valued at 32s. a year in 1541 when it passed
from John Hody to his son John. (fn. 92) When the
tenements were enfranchised at the break-up of the
manor, John Legg acquired 120 a. at Haselcombe,
Lancin, and Linnington in 1588 which subsequently
formed Lancin farm and were still held by the
Leggs in 1696. (fn. 93) The estate of 160 a. purchased in
the same year by Thomas Estmond, of Lodge in
Chardstock, included Castle Wood farm of c. 40 a.
which descended to his grandson, Christopher
Estmond of Gillingham (Dors.). (fn. 94) In 1701 Estmond
sold the lands to John Deane whose family retained
Castle Wood until its conveyance to John Tanner in
1814. The Tanners still held the farm in 1869. (fn. 95)
John de Wolminton was witnessing Wambrook
deeds in the early 13th century, and the Woolmington family had acquired lands of 90 a. by 1667
which eventually became known as Wilmington
farm. John Woolmington (d. 1640–1) at his death
had 80 sheep, 13 head of cattle, and 3 horses. (fn. 96)
Combe farm, purchased by John Combe of Chardstock in 1667, was sold by his grandson in 1735
to Henry Hooton of Moreton (Dors.). Wilmington,
Coombes, and Drakes farms, a total of 280 a.,
were acquired in the late 18th century by Sir Richard
Carr Glyn. (fn. 97) John Beviss, of Weston in Combe St.
Nicholas, was from 1764 purchasing lands in
Wambrook amounting to over 300 a. in all, the
largest holding being 145 a. bought in 1789 from
the heirs of Le Roy White (d. 1777). (fn. 98)
By 1844 the largest landowners in the parish were
the Beviss family with 306 a., including the newlycreated Wambrook farm, and Sir Richard Glyn
with 282 a. Thomas Deane held 228 a. based on
Dinnetts and Box, and John Deane 119 a. at Lancin.
Wadham College, Oxford, had 185 a. at Linnington,
James Benjamin Coles 181 a., including Wortheal,
Thomas Mallock 120 a. at Dearhams, and the rector
103 a. including Shaggs Flood and Downlands.
The largest farming units were then Wortheal
with 170 a., Linnington with 161 a., Wambrook
farm with 152 a., Dinnetts with 140 a., and three
others, Drakes, Wilmington, and Lancin, with over
100 a. each. The parish then comprised 822 a. of
grassland, 800 a. of arable, and 130 a. of coppice and
woodland. (fn. 99) The principal 19th-century crops were
wheat, barley, oats, and apples; flax dressers occur
in 1791 and 1795 and a flax merchant, Joel Dampier
of Loomcroft, in 1817. (fn. 100) The farming units continued relatively unchanged in 1975, although some
of the larger holdings, such as at Wortheal, 218 a.
in 1975, (fn. 101) had been extended.
A lease of a tenement in 1285 included licence to
burn lime on the hill at Haselcombe. (fn. 102) Robert
Pinney paid 8d. a year from 1547 until at least
1576 to dig stone at Whiteland on the waste of the
lord and to build lime kilns there. (fn. 103) There are
repeated references to four common marl pits in the
manor from 1588, one of which lay in a close called
Charlepitt in 1619, (fn. 104) and the scars left by quarrying
operations and former lime kilns can be seen northeast of Lower Wambrook on either side of the road
to Chard there, on the southern boundary of the
parish near Oatlands, in the field called Whiteland
on the northern boundary, in fields called Brookland east of Higher Wambrook, and in those called
Snowdon on the north-western boundary. A
further source of limestone lay in Haselcombe mead
immediately south of Dinnetts farm in Chardstock
parish. Chardstock had fewer sources of limestone
than Wambrook and that may explain the tortuous
nature of the parish boundary near Lower Wambrook. (fn. 105)
Being close to Chard, Wambrook had links with
the cloth trade. A weaver occurs in 1551, and in
1561 Roger Glade, a yeoman, left his broad looms
to his son John. (fn. 106) A John Glade, weaver, was mentioned in 1589 and it was probably he who was
described as a coverlet-weaver at his death in 1626.
He then possessed a pair of coverlet looms and two
pairs of cloth looms. (fn. 107) A hosier occurs in 1663,
a tailor in 1764, and there were four dressmakers in
the parish in 1851. (fn. 108) With those exceptions the
parishioners were almost wholly engaged in agriculture.
The manor included a water-mill worth 6s. 8d.
a year in 1309 but the mill was not mentioned
thereafter. (fn. 109) A pasture called Millewere and Courteorchard, evidently near the manor-house, was
mentioned in 1513 and demesne meadow called
Mylmede in 1520. (fn. 110) A lease of a way called the
Milleway with the 'mill stream' was granted in
1552, and in 1841 fields called Millway lay west of
the church on either side of a stream there. (fn. 111)
LOCAL GOVERNMENT.
Manor court rolls
survive in broken series for 1506–33, 1543, 1559–61,
1565–73. (fn. 112) Courts, described as curie or curie
manerii, were usually held twice a year in April
or May and September or October by 1422, and
there was an isolated reference to a three-weekly
court in 1414. (fn. 113) Apart from normal tenurial
matters court business included repairs to buildings,
common gates, and hedges, the scouring of ditches
and watercourses, subletting without licence, entertaining persons of evil reputation, and the sale of
pannage and windfall timber. No manorial officers
were appointed by the court, which was summoned
by a man serving as both bailiff and rent-collector.
He was receiving a stipend of 6s. 8d. a year between
1509 and 1521, raised by 1550 to 13s. 4d. with
the sale of branches of trees. A woodward occurred
in 1521. (fn. 114)
There were two churchwardens from 1530 but
only one from the late 17th century. (fn. 115) In addition
to the wardens there were two economi between
1597 and 1610, possibly to be identified with the
two sidesmen who occur in 1638. (fn. 116) There were also
two overseers and a constable in 1642. (fn. 117) A poundkeeper was appointed by the vestry from 1772
and two 'reeves' between 1789 and 1792. From
1840 there were two churchwardens, two overseers,
two waywardens, and a guardian. A salaried
assistant overseer was appointed from 1878. (fn. 118)
In 1772 the churchwardens sold what was probably a poorhouse on Bewley down for £13 10s.
and devoted the money to the use of the poor. (fn. 119)
There was a poorhouse lying south of Wortheal
farm by 1814 and another immediately south-west
of the New Inn by 1844. (fn. 120) One of them, described
as the parish house, was repaired by the churchwardens in 1841, and the poorhouse near the inn
was occupied by a labourer, his family of four, and a
lodger in 1851. (fn. 121) The poorhouse was repaired and
rethatched in 1877–8 and the materials of an old
cottage, probably the same building, were sold in
1897. (fn. 122) The parish became part of the Chard
poor-law union in 1836. (fn. 123)
CHURCH.
The chapel, later church, of Wambrook
was first mentioned in a deed of 1215–20 by which
Philip of Yarcombe, chaplain, probably the parish
priest, acknowledged that the chapel was a member
of the prebendal church of Chardstock. It had
evidently formed part of the grant of that church to
Salisbury cathedral by Gerbert de Percy before
1158. (fn. 124) As a member of the prebend the parish
had to repair part of Chardstock churchyard wall
in 1573 and payments for the repair of the wall and
church 'hatches' there continued at least until
1811. (fn. 125) The benefice was a rectory by 1306 and so
remained despite a fruitless attempt to treat it as a
free chapelry and dissolve it in 1551. (fn. 126) The rectory
was united with the livings of Combe St. Nicholas
(where the incumbent lives) and Whitestaunton in
1974, and then transferred from the diocese of
Salisbury to that of Bath and Wells.
The advowson was held with the lordship of the
manor by 1306 and descended with it. (fn. 127) Rectors
were presented by the Crown in 1416, presumably
by lapse, and for single turns by George and John
Swallow in 1555 and by William Estmond and
Bernard Prince in 1591. (fn. 128) The patronage was
granted to Alexander and Ann Brett of Whitestaunton in 1594, presumably for a single turn, and
c. 1611 to George Thornhill of Thornhill in
Stalbridge (Dors.). (fn. 129) The advowson was sold by the
lord c. 1620 to John Chase of Membury (Devon)
(d. 1641), who presented his son Gamaliel (rector
1621–45), when the rectory was stated to be held
of the earl of Bristol as of Sherborne Castle. (fn. 130)
Chase left the rectory to Gamaliel but the patronage
was exercised by the Dorset Standing Committee
in 1650. (fn. 131) The advowson passed from Gamaliel
Chase's son John (rector 1648–9, 1662–81) to
John's son Gideon Chase of Chard and Upottery
(Devon), and in 1710 Gideon's son John sold it to
William Bragg, of Sadborow in Thorncombe
(Devon formerly Dors.), his mortgagee since 1706. (fn. 132)
William (d. 1713) was succeeded in turn by his
grandsons, William (d. 1726) and John Bragg
(d. 1749), and from the last the advowson passed to
his son John (d. 1786), and his grandson, John
Bragg, all of Sadborow. (fn. 133) John Bragg sold the
patronage to Charles Edwards of Chard (d. 1813)
in 1796; Martha Edwards (d. 1842) presented in
1818, and Charles's son Henry (rector 1818–50)
in 1850. (fn. 134) The son of the last, Henry Edwards
(rector 1850–81) apparently sold the advowson to
the Revd. H. H. A. Smith (assistant curate 1857–
62), patron from 1859 until at least 1880. (fn. 135) The
advowson was held in 1882 and 1888 by Admiral
John William Dorville of Great Malvern (Worcs.)
and in 1894 by Dorville's executors. By 1901 it had
passed to the Revd. Melville Russell Moore, by
1906 to the Revd. Frederick Williams, of Bettiscombe in Charmouth (Dors.), father of the rector
presented in 1901, and between 1919 and 1921
to Williams's daughter, Mrs. Agnes Elsie Eames,
who presented until 1948. The patron from 1952
was Mrs. Eames's son, Lt.-Col. R. F. P. Eames of
Cotley, Chardstock, who became joint patron of the
united benefice with the bishop of Bath and Wells
in 1974. (fn. 136)
The benefice was valued in 1334 at £4 6s. 8d. (fn. 137)
By 1405 an annual pension of £1 was payable by
the rector to the prebendary of Chardstock, evidently in lieu of tithes, and in 1535 8d. was being
paid to the vicar of Chardstock. The value of the
church in the latter year rose to £8 7s. 0½d. net, (fn. 138)
a total which fluctuated between £7 10s. and £9
until c. 1600. (fn. 139) The rectory was 'of mean value'
in 1646 and provided £41 3s. 4d. gross in 1650. (fn. 140)
Between 1831 and 1864 the living was stated to be
worth £262, although the figure evidently referred
only to the tithes, the gross income standing at
c. £324 in 1879 and in 1883 at £317. (fn. 141) The payment of £1 a year to the owner of the great tithes of
Chardstock was still continuing in 1795. (fn. 142)
Despite the parish's dependence on Chardstock
all tithes belonged to the rector. In 1334 the tithes
of mills, milk, oblations, and obventions were
valued with the glebe at 27s. 10d. (fn. 143) By 1535 the
income from tithes was £6 16s. 7d. (fn. 144) In 1612 the
rector was claiming tithes in kind on corn, hay, wool,
lambs, pigs, geese, hops, and apples, 1d. for the fall
of a colt, and 4d. for a cow and calf. (fn. 145) The tithes
were valued at £30 a year in 1650. Compositions
agreed between 1789 and 1798 amounted to
£53 6s. 6d. (fn. 146) The tithes were commuted in 1844
for a rent-charge of £264. (fn. 147)
Glebe land was mentioned in 1334, and in 1405
comprised 20 a. of arable and ½ a. of meadow. (fn. 148)
Glebe rents produced 24s. 9d. in 1535, there were
17 a. of glebe in 1551, and two orchards and 24 a.
of arable and pasture in 1612. (fn. 149) By 1650 there were
18¾ a. of glebe worth £11 3s. 4d. and the lands were
leased for £10 a year between 1789 and 1798. (fn. 150)
The rector received 12½ a. under the Inclosure
Award of 1816, and in 1844 the glebe amounted to
26 a. (fn. 151) The lands were valued at £60 a year in
1879 and £48 in 1883, and comprised 27 a. in
1880. (fn. 152) Estimated at 29 a. in 1897 and 1919, the
area had been reduced to 10 a. by 1923. (fn. 153)
The parsonage house was described in 1612 as
having a hall, a buttery outside the entry, a chamber
within the hall, a kitchen, and three chambers on
the first floor. There was a barn, a stable for four
horses, a stall for cattle, two gardens to the east of
the hall, and two orchards west and south of the
house. (fn. 154) It was called 'a handsome thatched house'
in 1650 when it was valued at £2 a year. (fn. 155)
It was under repair in 1788 but was in a poor
state in 1800, and in 1808 it was 'pulled down and
rebuilt at very great expense by the patron Charles
Edwards', so that 'but few houses belong to the
church equal to it'. (fn. 156) The house, some distance
from the church at Higher Wambrook and now a
private dwelling called Oren, was replaced by a
rectory-house built in 1907 and extended in
1932. (fn. 157)
John de Fordington, rector by 1310 until at
least 1312, was ordained deacon only after his
institution (fn. 158) and no rector is known to have been a
graduate in the Middle Ages. Both John Loder,
rector c. 1507–22, and Henry Staple, rector c. 1535
until at least 1551, served as receivers for the lord,
and John Marraker, rector 1555–91, was probably
related to the manor bailiff of 1565, Hugh Marraker. (fn. 159) John Marraker was evidently unpopular
with his flock. About 1570 he was accused of not
catechizing and in 1576 for preaching while unlicensed 'neither having knowledge therein'; he
failed to read the service clearly, and was presented
for immoral behaviour with a female parishioner.
Between 1582 and 1585 he still did 'not read
distinctly and with a voice intelligible to all the
people' and, because of his 'insufficiency', most of
the parishioners did not receive Communion
three times a year. (fn. 160) Gamaliel Chase, rector 1621–
45 who held the living in plurality with Yarcombe
(Devon), was imprisoned by the Parliamentary
authorities for buying land from a royalist in 1641.
Having surrendered part of the purchase money
he was then imprisoned by the Royalists for so
doing. On his release he fled to Exeter where he
lived until its capitulation in 1646. Most of his
personal effects and books at Wambrook were seized
by the sequestrators and in 1646 he was fined for
delinquency. (fn. 161) An appeal from Chase's wife and
four children for their fifths out of his estate was
denied while he continued to officiate at Yarcombe. (fn. 162)
Henry Backaller, rector c. 1645–8, was allowed
£12 2s. 1½d. from the rent of Chardstock manor
in 1646 (fn. 163) but had removed to Somerset by 1648.
The Dorset Standing Committee presented John
Chase, Gamaliel's son, in 1648 but he was also
sequestered for delinquency in the following year
and William Randall, 'an idle, sottish fellow', was
presented in 1650. (fn. 164) By 1662 Randall had been
ejected and John Chase restored, and the Chases
continued to occupy the rectory until 1716. (fn. 165)
Assistant curates occur regularly from the 17th
century until c. 1882, (fn. 166) and served the parish in the
absence of the rectors during the later 18th century. (fn. 167)
Henry Edwards the elder, rector 1818–50, was
involved in 1829 in a pamphlet battle with Richard
Towers, a Roman Catholic priest of Taunton,
about James Il's complicity in the Bloody Assizes. (fn. 168) Edwards's son, Henry, rector 1850–81,
was non-resident and held the living with Churchstanton. (fn. 169)
In 1405 the church goods included a latten
cross, at least ten service books, and, among other
vestments, a frontal embroidered with beasts. (fn. 170)
By 1552 the incumbent held a silver chalice parcel
gilt, two copes, and five banners (one of silk),
most of them seized by Edward VI's commissioners. (fn. 171) Between 1582 and 1585 it was presented
that Holy Communion was often not celebrated
three times a year, that the curate had failed to
administer it to a sick woman, and had refused it to
one couple at Easter. (fn. 172) In 1663, after the Restoration, the Communion table needed repair, and in
1674 the church was without a Communion
flagon. (fn. 173) From 1736 Holy Communion was usually
administered three or four times at the major feasts
and in 1743 payment was made for guarding 'a
lunatic person for interrupting the congregation
in time of service'. (fn. 174)
In 1842 morning and evening Sunday services
were held alternately with attendances of 100–150
on summer evenings and half that number in the
morning. Holy Communion was being celebrated
three times a year and the average number of
communicants was about fourteen. The rector
then had difficulty in getting the poor to attend, as
the farmers paid their labourers on Sundays and the
women stayed at home to prepare meals. (fn. 175) By
1864 both morning and afternoon services with
sermons were being held, with attendances of 50
in the morning and 150 in the afternoon in fine
weather, the number of communicants having risen
to 30. The two services attracted similar attendances
in 1870 and 1879 and monthly celebrations of Holy
Communion had been introduced by the former
year. (fn. 176)
The former manor-house was leased to the
churchwardens as a church house for 60 years in
1529 and continued to be called the church house
between 1543 and 1666. (fn. 177)
The church of the BLESSED VIRGIN MARY
was described as so dedicated in 1362; (fn. 178) in 1405
it was said to be undedicated but the principal
altar was consecrated to the Virgin's honour. The
church is built of Ham stone rubble with ashlar
dressings and has a chancel, nave with north and
south porches, and west tower. The chancel is of
13th-century origin but has been much rebuilt in
the 19th century. The nave, porches, and tower
were all built or rebuilt in the 15th century but are
also much restored. There was a bell tower by
1405. (fn. 179) In the 1560s the roof was thatched and
shingled, but it was leaded by 1613. (fn. 180) Proposals
for rebuilding the church in 1860 were evidently
not executed, and in 1892 a faculty was obtained for
taking down the chancel, with the exception of the
south wall, renewing the roof and upper part of the
wall of the nave, and building a vestry room to the
north of the chancel. At the same time most of the
furniture and fittings were replaced. (fn. 181)
In 1552 there were four bells in the tower, a lych
bell, and two sacring bells. (fn. 182) In 1975 there were
five bells: (i and ii) 1892, John Warner and Sons,
London; (iii and iv) early 14th century, Bristol
foundry; (v) 1509–46, Thomas Jeffries, Bristol.
The first and second bells were recast from the old
tenor, a 15th-century bell, probably from the Exeter
foundry. The third and fourth are the earliest
bells in the old county of Dorset. (fn. 183)
The plate includes a silver chalice of 1621
inscribed inside 'given to this challis by me Cristover
Maricker pastor of Wambrook the some of xxxv
s.' (fn. 184) The registers date from 1653 but there are
gaps in the marriage register for 1715–18, 1720–30,
1734–54, and in the burial register for 1733–76. (fn. 185)
NONCONFORMITY.
Two persons were presented in 1665 for not coming to church or receiving
communion, and were called 'schismatical' in the
following year. One of them was declared to be
'inconformable' in 1667 and continued to be
presented at least until 1683. John Coffin, gentleman, was presented as a popish recusant in 1674. (fn. 186)
Bible Christians met once in the parish in 1825,
and there was one Baptist in 1864, although she
was also 'a regular attendant at church and communion'. (fn. 187) There were 'very few' dissenters in
1879. (fn. 188) Wesleyan Methodists met in the kitchen
of Loomcroft Farm from c. 1900 and built a small
chapel in 1908 in the north of the parish, west of
Higher Wambrook, on the Chard road. The
building, derelict in 1975, seems also to have served
Whitestaunton. Services had ceased by 1961 when
it was sold. (fn. 189)
EDUCATION.
Christopher Marraker, rector
1591–1621, was taking private pupils in 1614.
One of them commented that, although an excellent
teacher and a man of learning, Marraker 'had no
regard to the souls of his scholars . . . never causing
them to take notes of his sermons in writing, or so
much as to repeat any one note they had learned
out of them'. (fn. 190)
In 1818 there was no school in the parish and the
farmers were averse to a Sunday school. (fn. 191) There
was a Sunday school by 1842 and a school-house
had been built on a site north of the church by
1845 for a National school. (fn. 192) A new school was
built on the same site c. 1862, on land given by Sir
R. P. Glyn. (fn. 193) Evening schools were opened during
the winter of 1863–4 and again in 1868–9, 1869–70,
and 1878–9. The average attendance at the dayschool was 22 in 1870, although the children were
then leaving at the age of 8 or 9. (fn. 194) The buildings
were enlarged in 1875, and by 1903 the average
attendance had risen to 36, when there were 47
children on the books. In 1903 the school had two
teachers, there was a teacher's house, two schoolrooms, and an evening school was again being held. (fn. 195)
Numbers on the books rose to 57 in 1918 but fell
to 45 in 1928. In 1935 the school took juniors and
infants; older children were transferred to Combe
St. Nicholas. After the Second World War the
number of pupils remained fairly steady at about
fifteen. The school was closed in 1963 and children
have since attended school in Chard. (fn. 196) The buildings were unoccupied in 1975.
CHARITIES FOR THE POOR.
In 1842 there
were stated to be no charitable endowments, but
there was 'a small and inconsiderable property',
the income from which was devoted to the use of the
poor. (fn. 197) Thomas Deane Eames, by will proved in
1936, left £500 in trust for the repair of the church
or its general benefit and the relief of the poor.
The income, which was over £22 in 1966, has been
used for church repairs and other expenses, there
being insufficient money to assist the poor. (fn. 198)