CHURCH
The advowson of High Laver was held by the lords
of the capital manor until 1315. (fn. 26) In that
year Alcher son of Henry retained the
advowson when he granted the manor to
his son Henry and Henry's wife Beatrice. (fn. 27) In 1331
and 1334 Alcher presented to the church. (fn. 28) In 1337
he converted his interest in the advowson into a life
interest with remainder to Sir John de Shardelowe for
life and then to John, son of Sir John, in tail. (fn. 29) In 1366
William de Ferrers, probably Lord Ferrers of Groby
(d. 1371), presented. (fn. 30) Later presentations were made
by John de Beston and others in 1398, by William,
Lord Ferrers of Groby (d. 1445), in 1400, and by
John Gwyne and others in 1426. (fn. 31) By 1438 the
advowson again belonged to the lord of the capital
manor. (fn. 32) It then descended with the manor until soon
after 1662 when the manor passed to coheiresses, Sarah,
wife of Jacob Foster, and Martha, wife of Richard
Matthews. (fn. 33) In 1683 Sarah and Jacob Foster, Martha
and Richard Matthews, Samuel and Mary Lewin, and
Joseph Reeve conveyed the advowson to George Cole
and John Knapp. (fn. 34) In 1710 George Cole presented
and in 1727 William Cheval. (fn. 35) In 1729 the advowson
was held by the rector, Martin Hall, who in that year
sold it to Alexander Cleeve. (fn. 36) After Hall's death in
1734 Alexander Cleeve presented his son John. (fn. 37) Hall
had encumbered the living with many debts. (fn. 38) John
Cleeve devised the advowson to his nephew Thomas
Velley. (fn. 39) In 1778, after Cleeve's death, Thomas Velley
presented his brother-in-law Richard Budworth who
held the living until his death in 1805. (fn. 40) Afterwards
Richard Budworth's trustees held the patronage until
his son Philip was old enough to become rector and
to hold the advowson. (fn. 41) After Philip Budworth's death
in 1861 the advowson was held by Captain Budworth,
grandson of Richard Budworth, until his death in
1885. (fn. 42) It was then held by Captain Budworth's
trustees until after 1906. (fn. 43) In 1912 and 1914 the
living was in the gift of Mrs. Heales. (fn. 44) By 1922 the
advowson was held by Canon R. D. Budworth who
retained it until his death in about 1938. (fn. 45) In 1940
and 1941 it was held by the Revd. D. P. D. Budworth. (fn. 46)
Since 1942 it has been in the gift of the Bishop of
Chelmsford, (fn. 47) and since 1945 has been united with
that of Magdalen Laver. (fn. 48)
In about 1254 and in 1295 the rectory was valued
at 16 marks. (fn. 49) In 1428 the church was still taxed on
this valuation. In 1535 the rectory was valued at
£14 1s. 6d. (fn. 50) In 1637 there were about 47 acres of
glebe. (fn. 51) In 1848 the tithes were commuted for £520;
there were then 63 acres of glebe. (fn. 52)
In 1637 a terrier described the rectory as consisting
of 'a parsonage-house, a kitchen by itself, a barn, a
stable, and a hay-house, also an orchard, a garden-plat,
a little court-yard and a great outer yard'. (fn. 53) A separate
kitchen was a feature of the parsonages at all three
Lavers in the 17th century and was certainly a survival
from medieval times. No mention was made of a
separate kitchen in a terrier of 1810 although the lathand-plaster house still existed then. (fn. 54) Shortly before
he died in 1805 Richard Budworth had plans drawn
up for rebuilding the rectory. (fn. 55) On his death, however, the plan was abandoned and it was not until
shortly after 1864 that the old parsonage was pulled
down and a new one built on nearly the same site. (fn. 56)
The present building is a large red brick gabled house,
part of it of three stories. It ceased to be used as a
parsonage when the living was united with that of
Magdalen Laver and it is now a private house called
High Laver House.
The parish church of ALL SAINTS consists of
nave, chancel, west tower, south porch, and north
vestry. The walls are of flint rubble roughly coursed,
particularly in the chancel. Roman brick is found
among the rubble and forms some of the quoins. Most
of the dressings, originally of clunch, have been replaced.
The nave was built late in the 12th century. It
retains one small round-headed window in the north
wall. West of this is an original doorway, partly
restored, which now leads to the vestry. It has a semicircular arch and chamfered imposts.
The chancel, probably built about 1200, has seven
lancets with pointed heads. There are two in each of
the north and south walls and three graduated lancets
at the east end; all are much restored.
Two doorways, one in the north wall of the chancel
and one in the south wall of the nave, are probably of
the 13th century. The former is now blocked but the
arch in clunch is visible externally. The piscina, which
has a trefoiled head and a double drain, may be of the
13th century. There are fragments of 13th- or 14thcentury glass in the small nave window.
The tower, of three stages, appears to have been
added about 1340. (fn. 57) It was originally of flint rubble,
but this is now mostly plastered and much of the tower
has been rebuilt in brick. The moulded tower arch is
sharply pointed. In the west wall, but not axial with
the arch, is a good 14th-century window with a pointed
arch and two ogee-headed lights. There is a blocked
window in the second stage of the tower on the north
side. The chancel arch was probably rebuilt in the
14th century. The responds and head are finely
moulded. It has spread considerably at springing level
and this may have caused the arch itself to drop, giving
the unusual three-centred shape.
Late in the 14th or early in the 15th century four
new windows were inserted in the nave and one in the
chancel. These are all square-headed externally with
label moulds and head stops. Internally the arches are
three- or four-centred. The tracery, which has all been
replaced, was probably originally of this date and has
been copied with fair accuracy. (fn. 58)
In the 15th or 16th century the roofs of the chancel
and nave, which are ceiled in except for the plates and
tie-beams, were renewed.
In 1737 the vestry agreed that the tower should be
repaired and that 'one Tarling should undertake it by
the day and put up a brick buttress and restore the
plaistering where it is necessary, the parish finding all
materials'. (fn. 59) The south-west buttresses may have been
rebuilt in brick at this time as a result of this decision.
In about 1789 the spire and part of the tower were
found to be ruinous and were taken down. (fn. 60) The
upper stage of the tower, and probably the south-west
buttresses, were rebuilt in red brick for some £200. (fn. 61)
The parapet is castellated and there are round-headed
windows to the belfry. The octagonal spire is shingled.
A general restoration of the church possibly took
place in 1865, when the font and tomb of John Locke
were repaired. (fn. 62) The south porch and the vestry
appear to date from this period. The porch, which is
of flint with a timber superstructure, replaced a
plastered porch (fn. 63) of unknown date. The vestry, on the
north side of the nave, is of flint with limestone dressings.
In 1873 an organ was built in the chancel. (fn. 64) In
1927 the chancel was altered, the choir stalls and a
19th-century stone pulpit being cleared away and the
organ moved to the west end. The alterations cost
£127 of which £43 was contributed by the Rhode
Island Society of America. (fn. 65)
The font, which stands in the tower, dates from the
middle of the 14th century. It has an octagonal bowl
on each face of which is a quatrefoil panel enclosing a
shield. The prayer desk in the chancel is a memorial to
those killed in the First World War (fn. 66) and the oak
pulpit is of the same style and date.
There is one bell in use and a small disused sanctus
bell. In 1552 there were two bells in the steeple
weighing about 18 cwt., two 'rogacione bells' weighing
9 lb., and a sanctus bell of 3 lb. (fn. 67) In about 1768 there
were three bells. (fn. 68) In about 1790 the parishioners
agreed that 'one large bell and a small bell or Saints
Bell only shall be hung in the steeple of the church
instead of three bells and that two of the said three bells
shall be sold' and the money used to help defray the
cost of rebuilding the steeple. (fn. 69) In 1866 the cost of a
new bell, evidently a replacement, was raised by a rate
of 4d. (fn. 70) The sanctus bell is inscribed 'XPE AUDI NOS'. (fn. 71)
It is probably of the 14th century and is one of the few
remaining medieval sanctus bells in Essex. (fn. 72)
From 1657-8, or earlier, the church owned Bell
Acre (1 a. 3 r.), in the north-east of the parish. (fn. 73) The
rent from this land, which was £1 a year until at least
1805, was usually spent on church repairs in the 18th
and 19th centuries. (fn. 74) In 1921 the rector informed the
Charity Commissioners that the rent had been applied
to church expenses since before 1915. (fn. 75) In 1945
dividends of £2 were spent in maintaining the church
grounds. (fn. 76) In 1952 the land was sold for £120. (fn. 77)
Nearly all the church plate was given by Sir Francis
Masham, Bt., and his son Samuel, Lord Masham (d.
1758). It includes two silver cups, one of 1674 given
by Sir Francis and one of 1735 given by Lord Masham;
two silver patens, one undated but given by Sir
Francis, and one of 1735 given by Lord Masham; and
a silver almsdish dated 1724 and given by Lord
Masham in 1735. (fn. 78)
In the chancel is a brass to Myrabyll (Mirabel), wife
of Edward Sulyard (c. 1495). (fn. 79) There are figures of
a man in 15th-century armour and a woman in a fullskirted gown and a pedimented head-dress. Below are
figures of four sons and one daughter and a rhymed
inscription. There are floor slabs in the chancel to Sir
Francis Masham (1723) and his granddaughter
Elizabeth Masham (1724). On the north wall is a
marble tablet to Damaris, widow of Ralph Cudworth,
Master of Christ's College, Cambridge. (fn. 80) The epitaph
is thought to have been composed by John Locke. (fn. 81)
Also in the chancel are tablets to Samuel Lowe (1709),
Richard Budworth (1805), and Philip Budworth
(1861), rectors. In about 1835 there was in the
chancel a broken brass plate bearing an imperfect
inscription in ancient characters in memory of Robert
Ramsey (probably died about 1436) and his wife Joan; (fn. 82)
this plate has now disappeared.
Outside the south wall of the nave is the brick altar
tomb of John Locke (1704). A mural tablet, originally
above the tomb, was moved inside the church for preservation in 1932, (fn. 83) the tercentenary of Locke's
birth. Outside the church near the east end there are
many other altar tombs, of the Budworth, Cleeve,
Velley, and Masham families.
There is a chapel of ease at Matching Green dedicated to ST. EDMUND. It was built in 1874 (fn. 84) at
the expense of Francis R. Miller, Vicar of Kineton
(Warws.). (fn. 85) It is of yellow brick with a small western
bell-cote. It consists of a nave and chancel. In 1945
it was transferred to the ecclesiastical parish of
Matching. (fn. 86)