MANOR.
The manor of MOUNT BURES was
an estate of 1 hide held in 1066 by Ulmer and
in 1086 by Roger of Poitou, lord of the honor
of Lancaster. (fn. 28) The descent of the overlord
ship, which was recorded until 1488, was the
same as that of Bergholt Sackville manor,
West Bergholt. (fn. 29)
By 1119 the demesne tenancy was held by
Robert Sackville, and subsequently descended
with that of Bergholt Sackville until 1614 when
Richard Weston inherited it. (fn. 30) Richard sold it to
Frances Alston of Polstead (Suff.), to hold in
trust under the will of her husband, Thomas
Alston, for their sons William and Edward. In
1639, Frances, by then the widow of Sir John
Temple, released the manor to the surviving
son, Edward Alston. Edward sold the manor in
1657 to Richard Wiseman of Torrells Hall, who
sold it in 1662 to John Cressener (d. 1696), a
wealthy London grocer and brother of George
Cressener of Earls Colne. (fn. 31) John was succeeded
by his eldest son Edward and then by his second
son and fellow grocer George Cressener (d.
1722), who left it to his son, Edward (fn. 32) (d. 1733
or 1734) of Hamburg, a merchant. Edward's
widow Mary married Stephen Wolfenden,
another merchant of Hamburg. Following
Mary's successful defence of a suit against
Edward's brother, George, (fn. 33) the Wolfendens
sold the manor in 1750 to John Hanbury. He
was succeeded by his son Osgood Hanbury, and
then by Osgood's son, Osgood, who sold it in
1790 to Abraham Newman. Newman's father
Thomas had been the tenant of the demesne
farm since 1733. Abraham (d. 1798) was succeeded by his daughter Anne (d. 1829), wife of
George Caswell, from whom the manor passed
in 1830 to their daughter, Maria, who married
Maj. Gen. James Bourchier. Their son Charles
Bourchier inherited the manor in 1862 and
divided the lands into four lots which he sold in
1863. The lordship was sold separately and in
1996 was held by a local person. (fn. 34)
The manor house, The Hall, has a low building at the north-west corner which was probably
the 16th-century service range to a hall which
lay to its north. A large red brick house was built
to the south and east in the earlier 19th century
and there is a late 19th-century block on the
presumed site of the hall. The garden is now to
the south and east, but a platform to the west of
the house and church may have been the early
hall garden, mentioned in 1506. (fn. 35) That perhaps
served the early house whose main fronts pre-
sumably faced east and west.
Footnotes
| 28 |
V.C.H. Essex, i. 551. |
| 29 |
Above, West Bergholt, Manors. |
| 30 |
Ibid. |
| 31 |
McMaster and Evans, Mount Bures, 123-5; E.R.O.,
Acc. C54 (uncat.), McMaster Colln. |
| 32 |
E.R.O., D/DTu 226. |
| 33 |
Ibid. Acc. A9882 (uncat.), Mount Bures manor, 1731;
C.A.G. Bull. xxxviii. 5-11. |
| 34 |
McMaster and Evans, Mount Bures, 123-5; E.R.O.,
Acc. C54, C119 (uncat.), McMaster Colln.; ibid. Acc. A6807
(uncat.), sale cat. 1863. |
| 35 |
R.C.H.M. Essex, iii. 186; E.R.O., D/DMa M29. |