MANORS
It is not possible to distinguish with certainty between High Laver and Little Laver in
Domesday but it is probable that before
the Conquest Lewin held a manor in High
Laver worth £16. (fn. 46) Alwin held 'another part of that
manor as a manor but Ingelric added it to his own
manor' in another parish. (fn. 47) In 1086 High Laver was
probably held in demesne by Eustace, Count of
Boulogne, and valued at £20. (fn. 48) Eustace's heir was his
daughter Maud, wife of King Stephen. William, Count
of Boulogne, son of Stephen and Maud, apparently
granted the manor in free alms to the Benedictine
abbey of St. Sulpice in Brittany. (fn. 49) This grant must
have been made by 1159, when William died, but it
was ignored until shortly after 1234. (fn. 50) After the death
of William the honor of Boulogne passed to the king,
who held the manor of HIGH LAVER in demesne
until 1184 or 1185 and from that time until 1237 as
immediate overlord of the Alchers. (fn. 51) Between 1234
and 1237 Mabel, abbess of St. Sulpice, claimed the
manor from Richard fitz Alcher. (fn. 52) A lawsuit ensued
after which the parties came to an agreement. (fn. 53) In
1237 Richard fitz Alcher acknowledged the manor to
be the right of St. Sulpice which was to hold it in chief
as ¼ fee. (fn. 54) The abbess, Amice, then granted the estate
to Richard fitz Alcher and his heirs to hold of the abbey
as ¼ fee and at an annual rent of £10. (fn. 55) In 1259 St.
Sulpice transferred its rights in the manor to Waltham
Abbey. (fn. 56) After 1267 Henry fitz Alcher, then lord of
the manor, refused to admit that Waltham had any
rights in the estate. (fn. 57) In 1275 a jury declared that he
held the manor as tenant of the abbey. (fn. 58) Afterwards,
at the command of the king's justices, Henry did
homage to the abbot and paid his arrears of rent. (fn. 59)
Henry fitz Alcher died in 1303 holding the manor of
Waltham abbey. (fn. 60) It is not clear how much longer the
abbey retained the tenancy in chief. In 1475 the
manor was held of Anne, widow of Humphrey Stafford,
Duke of Buckingham (d. 1460). (fn. 61) In 1485 it was held
of Jasper, Duke of Bedford (d. 1495), and his wife
Katherine, whose first husband had been Henry
Stafford, Duke of Buckingham (d. 1483). (fn. 62) The
manor was still held of Jasper and his wife in 1493. (fn. 63)
By 1510 the Crown received £10 a year from the
manor, (fn. 64) and this rent was paid until after 1559. (fn. 65) In 1584 the manor was held of Robert, 3rd Baron
Rich, at a rent of 8d. a year. (fn. 66)
In 1167 it was reported that the estate could not be
farmed because it was not stocked but during the
following year it was restocked at a cost of £5 2s. 8d. (fn. 67)
In 1184-5 the king granted to William son of Alcher
the huntsman land in Laver to the annual value of
£8. (fn. 68) In 1199 Richard fitz Alcher gave King John
100 marks to have £8 of land in Laver which his
brother William had by the gift of King Richard and
of which William died seised. (fn. 69) In June 1199 the
king granted to Richard fitz Alcher all the land which
his brother William had in Laver of the gift of King
Henry, to hold in chief as ¼ fee. (fn. 70) In 1204 Richard
fitz Alcher gave 10 marks and a goshawk for licence to
assart 15 acres of his land in Laver and to have them
put outside the forest boundary. (fn. 71) It was presented
from the honor of Boulogne in 1212 that Richard son
of Alcher held Great Laver in chief for ¼ fee. (fn. 72) In
February 1227 Henry son of Richard fitz Alcher was
granted his father's lands in Laver according to King
John's charter. (fn. 73) Henry died in 1234 and his son
Richard then had livery of ¼ fee in Laver held in chief. (fn. 74)
In 1237 this estate consisted of 2 carucates of land. (fn. 75)
In 1253 Peter de St. Hilary paid a gold mark to escape
proceedings for the death of Richard fitz Alcher. (fn. 76)
Richard was succeeded by his son Stephen. (fn. 77)
Shortly after 1259 Stephen entered into an agreement with Simon, Abbot of Waltham, whereby the
abbey was to farm the estate for eight years instead of
receiving an annual rent from it. (fn. 78) Stephen was dead
by 1267. (fn. 79) Afterwards his brother and heir Henry
would not let the abbey farm the estate and refused to
pay rent. (fn. 80) In 1269-70 servants of Geoffrey, Prior
of Waltham, went to High Laver to distrain Henry
for arrears of rent. (fn. 81) They took some cattle but Henry's
men then assaulted them and the cattle were restored. (fn. 82) In 1272-3 Henry brought an action against Richard
de Harewes, then Abbot of Waltham. Henry alleged
that 24 of the abbot's men had, at his command,
trespassed upon High Laver manor and carried off
livestock to the value of £40 after ill treating Henry's
men and killing two of them. Henry claimed that he
had suffered £50 damages in consequence of the assault.
The abbot pleaded in defence that in taking the livestock he was exercising his lawful power of distraint,
since Henry, unlike his predecessor Stephen, had
refused to do homage to him for the manor and was
five years in arrears with his rent. Henry denied that
previous abbots had ever received either homage or
rent for High Laver manor. In 1275, after the verdict
against him, Henry made an agreement with the abbot
whereby he paid four years' arrears in addition to the
current year's rent. (fn. 83) When Henry fitz Alcher died
in 1303 the estate consisted of a dwelling house worth
3s. 4d. a year, 362 acres of arable worth £6 0s. 8d. a
year, 13 acres of meadow worth 19s. 6d. a year, and
5 acres of pasture worth 3s. 4d. a year. (fn. 84) The rents of
assize of freeholders amounted to £5 6s. a year. (fn. 85)
Annual outgoings, including the £10 rent due to
Waltham Abbey, amounted to £10 8s. (fn. 86) The net
annual value was thus £2 10s. 9d. (fn. 87)
Henry fitz Alcher left as his heir his son Alcher. (fn. 88)
In 1315 Alcher granted the manor to his son Henry
and Henry's wife Beatrice and their heirs to hold of
Alcher and his heirs and do all services to the chief
lords. (fn. 89) In 1324 Henry fitz Alcher and his wife
Beatrice granted a life interest in the manor to Robert
Norman for £10 a year. (fn. 90) In 1343 Henry fitz Alcher
and Beatrice granted the manor to John de Depeden
and his heirs to hold of the chief lords except for £10
of rent and the homage and services of seventeen
tenants which were to be paid to Henry fitz Alcher
and his heirs. (fn. 91) In 1346 John de Depeden was reported
as holding ¼ fee in High Laver which Henry Alcher
once held. (fn. 92) At the end of 1358 Maud, widow of John
de Depeden, empowered the Rector of High Laver to
sue for her dower of every freehold which belonged to
her husband in the counties of Essex, Hertford, and
York. (fn. 93) A rental drawn up in 1431 suggests that Maud
held the manor of High Laver in dower. (fn. 94) After her
death it passed into the possession of another John
Depeden, probably her son or grandson. In July 1406
John de Neuton, treasurer of St. Peter's, York, and
other trustees of Sir John Depeden's estate quitclaimed
to Robert Ramsey and his heirs the manor of High
Laver and all other lands in Essex and Herts. which
belonged to Sir John Depeden in demesne and in
reversion. (fn. 95) In 1412 John Ramsey was reported as
holding one manor in High Laver worth £10. (fn. 96) In
1428 Robert Ramsey was holding the ¼ fee which
Henry Alcher once held in High Laver. (fn. 97) According
to the rental of 1431 Robert Ramsey was still holding
the manor of High Laver in that year, but shortly afterwards it came into the possession of his daughter
Eleanor and her husband Richard Priour who in 1436
received confirmation from the Crown. (fn. 98) In 1452
when he presented to the church, Richard Priour was
still lord of the manor, but within a few years the estate
came into the possession of Walter Wrytell, son of
Eleanor Priour by her first husband Ralph Wrytell. (fn. 99)
Walter Wrytell died in 1475; his widow Katherine
held the manor in dower until her death in 1493. (fn. 1) The
estate then descended to John Wrytell, son of John
(d. 1485), son of Walter Wrytell. (fn. 2) In 1493 the estate
consisted of 230 acres and was valued at £4. (fn. 3) John, son
of John Wrytell, died in 1507. (fn. 4) His heir, an infant
daughter Juliane, was dead by November 1509. (fn. 5) The
heirs to High Laver and other manors were the
daughters of Walter Wrytell: Eleanor wife of James
Walsingham and Gresilda wife of Edward Waldegrave. (fn. 6) A partition of their inheritance was made in
May 1510 and the manor of High Laver was apportioned to Eleanor and her husband. (fn. 7) In 1510 the
manor was said to be worth £14 14s. 8d. a year. (fn. 8) The
demesne was apparently farmed out, the chief farmer
being Reynold Foster. (fn. 9) Rents from the farmed land
amounted to £17 9s. 4d. (fn. 10) In addition there were
twelve freeholders paying rents totalling £3 10s. 5d.
a year and 4 copyholders paying rents amounting to
£4 6s. 5d. (fn. 11) A rental of 1540 showed no change in the
value of the manor. (fn. 12)
James Walsingham died in 1540. (fn. 13) Sir Edmund
Walsingham, elder son of James, apparently succeeded
to the estate, for in 1550, the year in which he died,
his only surviving son Thomas held his first court for
the manor. (fn. 14) In June 1552 the demesne land consisted
of 266 acres. (fn. 15) By 1559 the annual value of the manor
had risen to £17 9s., the rents from farmed land
amounting to £20 7s. 8d. (fn. 16) There were apparently
only three copyholders at this time. (fn. 17) Sir Thomas
Walsingham died in 1584, leaving as his heir his son
Edmund; the manor was then said to be worth £5. (fn. 18)
Edmund died in 1589 and was succeeded by his
younger brother Thomas who retained the manor until
his death in 1630. (fn. 19) His son and heir, Sir Thomas
Walsingham, disposed of the estate about 1655 to
Anthony Stanlake. (fn. 20) During the ownership of the last
two Walsinghams, at least part of the estate was leased,
the lessees being in turn G. Day and Josias and Thomas
Tunbridge. (fn. 21)
Stanlake was described as lord of the manor in 1659
and it may have been on his death, sometime after 1662,
that the estate descended to coheiresses: Sarah, wife of
Jacob Foster, and Martha, wife of Richard Matthews. (fn. 22) In 1682 and 1686 Foster and Matthews were described
as lords of the manor in right of their wives. (fn. 23) In 1695,
1699, and 1706 Richard Matthews and Abraham
Foster, a London grocer and probably son of Jacob
Foster, were lords. (fn. 24) Mary, daughter of Richard
Matthews, brought one half of the estate in marriage
to her husband Samuel Beachcroft who was lord of
the manor with Abraham Foster in 1713. (fn. 25)
On Abraham's death his widow Anna held her
husband's half manor for life. (fn. 26) On her death this half
was divided between Abraham's two daughters: Sarah,
wife of Richard Merry, a London merchant, and Mary,
wife of Lewis Scawen. (fn. 27) The quarter inherited by
Mary and Lewis Scawen descended to their only son
Thomas who in 1753 devised all his real estate to his
uncle Robert Scawen. (fn. 28) In addition to 'an undivided
fourth part' of High Laver manor, Robert also held an
'undivided half' of Hayleys manor in Epping. (fn. 29) In
June 1766 he and the owners of the other 'undivided'
half (of Hayleys) and quarter (of High Laver manor),
Richard Merry and his heir Anthony, agreed that it
would be to their mutual convenience to make a
physical division of their properties. (fn. 30) Lots were cast,
as a result of which the two quarters of High Laver
manor fell to the share of Robert Scawen. (fn. 31)
There must have been an agreement about the same
time with the owner of the other half of the manor,
which had remained in the Beachcroft family until
after 1762, for the sale of the whole manor, for by
August 1767, when he held his first court, Thomas
Darby had become sole lord. (fn. 32) At the time of the sale
to Darby the whole estate, which consisted of about
370 acres, was leased to Abraham Thorrowgood. (fn. 33) Thomas Darby, who continued to live at Sunbury
(Mdx.), died in 1769, having devised the manor of
High Laver to his wife Dulcibella for her life and then
to his brother George. (fn. 34) Dulcibella died in 1784 and
George in 1790.
George Darby was succeeded by his son William
who changed his surname to St. Quintin. In 1802
William mortgaged the manor to Mrs. Elizabeth
Dashwood for £2,557. The estate was still encumbered
with this debt in 1805 when William died, leaving as
his heir his son William, a minor. The trustees of the
estate eventually repaid Mrs. Dashwood in 1812. In
1831 William St. Quintin mortgaged the manor for
£5,000. In each of the years 1840 and 1850 he borrowed a further £1,000, making a total mortgage on
the estate of £7,000. This was still outstanding when
William St. Quintin died in 1859.
The St. Quintins never lived in High Laver. After
the death of Abraham Thorrowgood and his wife the
manor house and farm were leased to the Speed family
and, from 1826, to William Barnard and his son who
paid a rent of £425 a year for the first 12 years, £360
a year for the next twelve, and £373 a year from
1850.
William St. Quintin stipulated in his will, made 30
years before his death, that all his lands, except those
in Yorkshire, should be sold by his trustees. The
manor of High Laver was sold for £12,050 to John
Watlington 'Perry Watlington, M.P., and the mortgage
on the estate was paid out of the purchase money. At
the time of the sale the estate consisted of 374 acres. (fn. 35)
J. W. Perry Watlington was still owner in 1874. (fn. 36) By
1886 he was dead and Robert Wicksted Ethelston had
succeeded to the estate. (fn. 37) Ethelston died in 1914. (fn. 38)
By 1917 the estate was apparently no longer regarded
as a manor. (fn. 39)
The present farm-house stands on a moated site
immediately north of the church. South of it an arm
of the moat may have enclosed the church itself. To
the north there was formerly a third rectangular moated
enclosure. (fn. 40) The present house is of brick, partly
plastered, and probably dates from the late 18th or
early 19th century. At least two of the timbered farm
buildings are older than the house.
The manor of OTES alias OATES may originally
have formed part of the manor of Little Laver (q.v.).
In 1288 Emma, daughter of Eustace fitz Walter,
granted all her lands in High Laver and Housham
(Matching) to Sir Henry de Enfield. (fn. 41) In 1325 Sir
John de Enfield, son of Henry, John Otes, and others
were tenants of the manor of Little Laver. (fn. 42) In 1329
Sir John divided his estates between his sons Richard
and William. He conveyed to William his holding in
Little Laver which became the separate manor of
Envilles. (fn. 43) To Richard he conveyed 1 messuage, 2
carucates of land, 12 acres meadow, and 40s. rent in
High Laver and Housham (Matching). (fn. 44) It is possible
that at this time or shortly afterwards the lands held of
Little Laver manor by John Otes were merged with
the lands held by Richard de Enfield in High Laver to
form a separate manor which descended in the Enfield
family but which became known by the name of Otes.
The heir of Sir Richard de Enfield was his daughter
Elizabeth, wife of Thomas Battail. (fn. 45) In 1397 the
manor of Otes was held by John Battail, son and heir
of Thomas and Elizabeth. (fn. 46) John Battail made his
will in 1397, on the eve of his departure for Jerusalem. (fn. 47)
He gave detailed instructions for the partition of his
property between his sisters, Margaret, soon afterwards wife of John de Boys, and Alice, wife of John
Barrington. Battail died shortly afterwards and Boys
and Barrington quarrelled over the partition. (fn. 48) The
dispute was eventually referred to the arbitration of the
Countess of Hereford who decided that Otes should be
equally divided between Alice Barrington and Margaret
de Boys, as John Battail had instructed. (fn. 49) In 1412
John de Boys and John Barrington were each reported
as holding lands in High Laver and elsewhere worth
£20. (fn. 50) Margaret de Boys apparently died without
issue. (fn. 51) Afterwards two daughters of John Barrington,
Elizabeth, wife of John Sulyard, and Katherine, wife
of John Pykenham, each inherited half of Otes. (fn. 52)
Sir John Sulyard, son of Elizabeth and John Sulyard,
died in 1488 in possession of half of Otes which he held
of Edward, Duke of Buckingham, and which was
worth 20 marks. (fn. 53) His son and heir Edward died in
1516 and was succeeded by his son Sir William Sulyard
who held his first court in 1523. (fn. 54) William died without issue in 1540 and his half-brother Eustace Sulyard
inherited his half of Otes. (fn. 55) Eustace died in 1547
leaving as his heir his son Edward. (fn. 56) In 1574 Edward
conveyed his half of the manor to John Collins who
had already acquired the other half (see below). (fn. 57)
John Pykenham survived his wife Katherine and
died in 1436 in possession of half of Otes. (fn. 58) In 1445
William Hasilden and others (named) conveyed this
half of the manor to John Pykenham, evidently the son
of John Pykenham (d. 1436), and his wife Margery. (fn. 59)
Margery Pykenham was still seised of this half in 1500
when her son and heir George died childless, leaving
as his heirs his two nieces, Margery and Elizabeth
Pykenham, daughters of his brother Thomas. (fn. 60) At
that time this half of the manor was held of John, Earl
of Oxford, and was worth 20 marks. (fn. 61) Apparently the
sisters Margery and Elizabeth Pykenham each
inherited half of the moiety.
In 1539 John Heron and his wife Elizabeth, who
was probably the daughter of Thomas Pykenham,
conveyed a quarter of Otes to John Lymsey. (fn. 62) The
latter died in 1545; in 1558 Edward Lymsey, his son
and heir, conveyed this quarter to John Collins. (fn. 63)
Meanwhile in 1550 John Collins had received the
other half of the moiety from John Jennyns and his
wife Joan, one of whom may have been the child or
grandchild of Margery sister of Elizabeth Pykenham. (fn. 64)
Between 1550 and 1574 John Collins thus acquired
the whole manor of Otes. It remained in the Collins
family until shortly after 1614 when it was purchased
by William Masham whose son William succeeded
him and was created a baronet in 1621. (fn. 65) In 1638 Sir
William Masham was visited at Otes by Oliver
Cromwell, who was his relative by marriage. (fn. 66) Sir
William died about 1656. (fn. 67) His heir was his grandson
William Masham, 2nd Bt., who died unmarried about
1662 and was succeeded by his brother Francis
Masham, 3rd Bt. (fn. 68) In 1668 there were 59 freeholders
and copyholders on the estate. (fn. 69) The area in their
hands was more than 354 acres (fn. 70) and they paid rents
amounting to £9 12s. 1d. (fn. 71) In 1678 22 tenants who
failed to attend their lord's court were each fined 2d. (fn. 72)
From 1691 until 1704 John Locke the philosopher lived at Otes as the paying guest of Sir Francis
Masham. (fn. 73) In 1723 Sir Francis died, leaving as his
heir his son Samuel, 1st Baron Masham of Otes (cr.
1712). (fn. 74) In 1736 Lord Masham impoverished himself
when he settled the greater part of his estates, including
the manor of Otes, on his son Samuel at the time of the
latter's marriage to Henrietta Winnington. (fn. 75) The
young Samuel had already inherited the property of
his uncle General Hill and Henrietta brought him a
dowry of some £10,000. (fn. 76) He was a lord of the Bedchamber to George II and auditor-general of the household of George, Prince of Wales. (fn. 77) He was, however,
a wastrel (fn. 78) and before he succeeded his father as Baron
Masham in 1758 (fn. 79) he was already in need of money.
In 1757 he mortgaged Otes and his two other manors
of Matchinghall in Matching and Little Laver to Dr.
Robert Taylor of Albemarle St., Hanover Square
(Mdx.) for £3,000. (fn. 80) Part of the manor farm, which
was valued at £140 a year, was then let to John
Hinson. (fn. 81) There were 100 acres of woodland, valued
at £35 a year, in hand. (fn. 82) The free and copyhold rents
belonging to Otes and Matchinghall manors amounted
to £11 16s. 11½d. a year and the fines and reliefs for
the two manors were estimated at £5 a year. (fn. 83)
In 1761 Lord Masham was granted a pension of
£1,000 a year by George III. (fn. 84) In February 1762 he
still owed £2,000 of the £3,000 he had borrowed from
Taylor in 1757. (fn. 85) He then married as his second wife
Charlotte Dive whose father John Dive of Queen
Square, Westminster, gave her a dowry of £8,000,
paying off the debt to Taylor as part of this sum. (fn. 86) At about the time of the marriage Lord Masham sold
to a bookseller part of his family library, including
books bequeathed by John Locke, 'to make room', it
was commonly believed, 'for books of polite amusement'. (fn. 87) Charlotte Masham was as irresponsible and
as extravagant as her husband, (fn. 88) and, less than three
years after the marriage, Lord Masham began to borrow money on a scale which led rapidly to the loss of
his estate. Between January 1765 and June 1766 he
borrowed a total of £8,600 on the security of the
estate. (fn. 89) Most of this was lent by Robert Palmer of
St. Andrew's parish, Holborn (Lond.) who had been
manager of the estate from 1757, if not before. (fn. 90) In
1766 the estate was valued at £25,369. (fn. 91) Early in
1767 Palmer acquired the freehold on terms which
allowed Lord Masham to live at Otes for the rest of
his life. (fn. 92) Masham died there in 1776. (fn. 93) Even at the
end he was 'so burdened with debt that he could not
attend the House of Lords'. (fn. 94) An interesting comment
on the characters of Lord Masham and Robert Palmer
was written a century later by P. J. Budworth whose
family had been connected with High Laver almost
from the time when Masham lost his estate. (fn. 95) In 1876
Budworth wrote that 'Lord Masham seemed to have
been improvident and his improvidence had been taken
advantage of by one to whom he confided the management of his estates and who built up his own fortune
upon the ruins of that of his master'. (fn. 96)
Robert Palmer never lived at Otes. (fn. 97) He died in
1786 leaving all his real estate to his only son Richard
but charging it with the payment of £10,000 to each
of his two unmarried daughters. (fn. 98) In 1801 Richard
Palmer put up his Essex estate for auction. (fn. 99) This
consisted of 1,258 acres valued at £1,075 a year. (fn. 1)
Otes manor farm contained 279 acres which were
valued, with the manor house, at £385 a year. (fn. 2) Of
these 279 acres, 160 were in the occupation of three
leaseholders, called Browne, the elder and younger,
and Crush, and 92 were occupied by the elder Browne
as tenant at will. (fn. 3) The manor house was empty. (fn. 4) The
quit rents on the manor amounted to about £10 a year
and the royalties were valued at £20. (fn. 5) An offer for the
leasehold land appears to have been accepted in 1801. (fn. 6)
The manor house and 116 acres in hand or in the
occupation of the tenant-at-will were sold in 1802-3
to John Hughes who held his first court in 1808. (fn. 7) In
1811-12 the manor came into the possession of George
Starkins (fn. 8) who had already acquired much of the land
in High Laver which was auctioned in 1801-2. In
1824 there were 44 manorial tenants whose rents
totalled £9 19s. 6d. a year (fn. 9) and in 1837 34 whose
rents totalled £7 5s. 8d. (fn. 10) In 1841 George Starkins
owned 613 acres in the parish; of this he then occupied
426 acres. (fn. 11)
Between 1841 and 1843 John and Thomas Inkersole
came into possession of the manor. (fn. 12) In 1848 the manor
farm consisted of 68 acres and was occupied by Thomas
Inkersole. (fn. 13) The Inkersoles also owned an estate of
155 acres which had previously been in the possession
of George Starkins. (fn. 14) They were still lords of the
manor in 1860 when the last recorded court was held. (fn. 15) By 1870 the manor had apparently come to Mrs.
Wright and others who still held it in 1914. (fn. 16) By
1917 the estate was apparently not regarded as a
manor. (fn. 17)
There is no longer a house at Otes. The site, which
is partly moated, is clear except for a well shaft and two
large lime trees. South-west of the moated enclosure
are the remains of an orchard wall and of two outbuildings. One of these buildings was constructed of
re-used timbers. South of the site a small stream has
been dammed, probably in the 18th century, to form
an ornamental lake with a weir at its outlet.
In about 1770 Otes was said to be one of the only
two good houses in the parish: 'a large building, in a
delightful situation, with a park, gardens, canals etc.' (fn. 18) A woodcut of the house, published in 1821, (fn. 19) shows on
the left hand a low three-gabled block, apparently
timber-framed and plastered. It was probably of
medieval origin, altered in the 16th or early 17th
century. There were slightly projecting oriel windows
and a two-storied porch with a pointed entrance arch.
Adjoining the old house to the right there were two
later additions. In front was a square three-story
block, probably of the Queen Anne period. (fn. 20) Behind
this was a two-story wing in the picturesque style of
the late 18th century. In 1801 it was said that the
newer part of the house had been recently erected. (fn. 21)
The building is said to have been demolished in 1822. (fn. 22)
In 1835 it was described as 'completely destroyed'. (fn. 23) Some outbuildings remained, however, for some time. (fn. 24) The last of them fell in 1952.
(fn. 25)