MANORS
There is some doubt about the identification in
Domesday of the manor of NORTH
WEALD, but it was probably made up
of two estates which in 1086 belonged to
Peter de Valognes and were held of him by Ralf. The
larger of these estates was 'Walla', which was entered
in Domesday after Loughton and Theydon Bois and
would therefore seem to have been, like them, in Ongar
hundred. (fn. 68) Walla had been held in 1066 by two freemen as two manors and as two hides and 40 acres. Peter
de Valognes had it by exchange. (fn. 69) In the hundred of
Harlow Ralf held of Peter de Valognes 'Walda', consisting of 30 acres which before 1066 had been held by
a freeman. (fn. 70)
The tenancy in chief of the manor descended as part
of the barony of Valognes until the 13th century, when
the barony was divided among coheirs. North Weald
fell to the share of Lore, wife of Henry de Balliol and
thus continued to follow the same descent as the manor
of Benington (Herts.) which had been the caput of the
barony. (fn. 71) In 1325 North Weald was said to have been
held of John de Benstede (d. 1323), Lord of Benington. (fn. 72) This seems to have been the last occasion on
which a connexion with Benington was noted. In
1331 North Weald was said to be held of the king in
chief. (fn. 73) Subsequent inquisitions usually report the
manor as being held in chief.
The descent of the tenancy in demesne during the
12th century is not clear. By the end of that century it
was held by the family of Essex. (fn. 74) J. H. Round suggested that it had been brought into that family by
Cecily, mother of Henry and Hugh of Essex. She was
the wife of Henry of Essex, the king's constable, who
was defeated in judicial combat in 1163 by Robert de
Montfort after having been charged with throwing
away the royal standard in battle with the Welsh. (fn. 75)
Henry's lands were forfeited to the king as the result
of his defeat. For this reason one would not expect to
find that North Weald, which apparently was not
forfeited, had belonged to him in his own right. Henry
of Essex, the younger, was his eldest son by Cecily. (fn. 76)
In 1236 Henry of Essex held 5 knights' fees in Sutton,
Springfield, and Layer-de-la-Hay (Essex), Barningham
(Suffolk), and 'Ikenton' (Layston, Herts.) of the barony
of Valognes. (fn. 77) In 1244 Henry, son of Hugh of Essex,
was engaged in litigation concerning the advowson of
North Weald. (fn. 78) Ten years later Henry of Essex compounded with Lore de Balliol for the customs and
services due from his tenement to her at Benington,
and agreed to render suit at her court there twice a
year. (fn. 79) In 1267–8 Hugh, son of Hugh of Essex,
granted to Philip Basset and Ela, Countess of Warwick,
his wife, that they should hold North Weald for their
lives from him and the heirs of his body. (fn. 80) Soon after
this Baldwin, son of Hugh of Essex, granted Philip and
Ela the manor of North Weald and 5 knights' fees
belonging to it. (fn. 81) The 5 fees were specified as being
one in Springfield, one in Layer-de-la-Hay, two in
Sutton (Rochford hundred), and one in Barningham
(Suff.). From this it is clear that the whole of the
knight service had been imposed on the appurtenant
manors, leaving North Weald itself free of charge.
Philip Basset died in 1271, leaving as his heir a
daughter Aline, wife of Hugh le Despenser (d. 1265)
and later of Roger Bigod, Earl of Norfolk (d. 1306). (fn. 82)
Aline died in 1281. (fn. 83) She was succeeded by her son
Hugh le Despenser, who was later summoned to
Parliament as a peer and in 1322 was created Earl of
Winchester. (fn. 84) In 1310 it was stated that North Weald
belonged to him and not to his son Hugh le Despenser
the younger. (fn. 85) It may have been about this time that
John de Rivers, lord of the hundred of Ongar, granted
(the elder ?) Despenser view of frank-pledge of all his
men in the manor of North Weald, exempting Hugh
and his heirs from all tourns and suits of the hundred. (fn. 86)
The two Despensers were deeply involved in the
civil wars during the reign of Edward II and the ownership of North Weald between 1320 and 1331 is not
always clear. In 1320 the younger Despenser conveyed
to Hugh de Audley the younger, Lord Audley, 1
knight's fee in North Weald and the manor of North
Weald except for 5½ fees in it. The agreement was
made by precept of the king. (fn. 87) In the following year
Audley was deprived of the manor as a rebel, and it was
granted to Robert Cole. (fn. 88) In 1322, however, North
Weald was granted to the younger Despenser, to be
held of the king by the service of one sparrowhawk
annually. (fn. 89) The manor presumably remained in the
younger Despenser's possession until his execution in
1326. In 1327 it was granted to Edmund, Earl of
Kent. (fn. 90) Edmund was executed in his turn in 1330
and North Weald was granted for life to Bartholomew
de Burghersh, Lord Burghersh (d. 1355). (fn. 91) In the
same year the king granted that Edmund, Earl of Kent
(d. 1331), should inherit his father's title and lands. (fn. 92)
North Weald was presumably affected by this grant,
for it was among the possessions of John, Earl of Kent
(d. 1352). (fn. 93)
The manor descended with the earldom of Kent
until the death in 1416 of Alice, widow of Thomas,
Earl of Kent (d. 1397), who held it in dower. (fn. 94) It
was then assigned to the purparty of Eleanor, wife of
Thomas Montagu, Earl of Salisbury, who was Thomas,
Earl of Kent's third daughter, and coheir of her brother
Edmund, Earl of Kent (d. 1408). (fn. 95) On Salisbury's
death in 1428 the manor passed to his daughter Alice,
suo jure Countess of Salisbury. (fn. 96) It was forfeited in
1459 as a result of the rebellion of Alice's husband
Richard Neville, Earl of Salisbury. (fn. 97) North Weald
probably passed to Richard's son Richard, Earl of
Salisbury and Warwick, 'the Kingmaker' (d. 1471),
for it was among the possessions of Warwick's daughter
Isabel, wife of George, Duke of Clarence (d. 1478),
at her death in 1476. (fn. 98) The manor descended to
Isabel's son Edward, Earl of Warwick, but was
administered by the Crown during his minority. (fn. 99) On
Edward's execution in 1499 it was forfeited to the
Crown.
North Weald was held by Humphrey Torrell at his
death in 1517. (fn. 1) He presumably had it by royal grant.
The manor appears to have been restored to Margaret,
Countess of Salisbury, only sister of Edward, Earl of
Warwick (d. 1499), for after her execution in 1541 it
was in the king's hands as part of her lands. In 1544
the king granted it to Sir Richard Higham, who then
conveyed it to Sir Richard Rich, later first Baron
Rich. (fn. 2)
The manor descended in the Rich family until
1621, when Robert Rich, Earl of Warwick (d. 1658),
conveyed it to Sir Thomas Cheeke, Kt. (fn. 3) In 1652 Sir
Thomas settled it upon his second son Thomas. (fn. 4) It
descended from Thomas Cheeke to his son Edward
(d. 1707) and then to Edward Cheeke, son of Edward,
who died childless in 1712. (fn. 5) North Weald then passed
to Ann, daughter of Thomas Cheeke and wife of Sir
Thomas Tipping, 1st Bt. (fn. 6) She died in 1727 and the
manor descended to her daughter Katherine, wife of
Thomas Archer, later created Baron Archer. (fn. 7) Katherine
died in 1754 and her husband in 1768. (fn. 8) The manor
passed to their son Andrew, Lord Archer (d. 1778). (fn. 9)
Andrew left four daughters and coheirs: Sarah, who
married Other Windsor Hickman, Earl of Plymouth
(d. 1799), Ann who married Christopher Musgrave,
Maria who married Henry Howard, and Harriott who
married Edward Bolton Clive. (fn. 10)
Between 1791 and 1793 North Weald was bought
by Daniel Giles, Governor of the Bank of England. (fn. 11) It
subsequently followed the same descent as Youngsbury,
near Ware (Herts.), until about 1900. (fn. 12) Christopher
Giles-Puller was lord of the manor in 1899, but by
1902 the manorial rights had passed to Henry E. Paine
and George F. Beaumont. (fn. 13) In 1841 Lady Louisa
Puller owned 801 acres in the parish, including Great
Weald Hall, and William C. Kirkby was her tenant in
all except 4 acres of it. (fn. 14)
The farm-house known as Weald Hall Farm was
probably built early in the 19th century. It is a square
two-story building of gault brick. To the south of the
farm-yard and on the perimeter of the airfield there was
formerly a circular moat, probably representing the
site of the medieval manor house. The north half of
the moat was recently filled in and at the same time an
embankment west of the farm was levelled. The square
red-brick house on the north side of the road, now
known as Weald Hall, dates from the late 19th century.
The manor of CANES or CAWNES took its name
from the family of Calne or Caune which held it
during the 13th and 14th centuries. (fn. 15) Richard de
Calne was a litigant concerning land in the parish in
1204–5. (fn. 16) About the same time Richard de Caune
granted an assart called 'Unere Redene' in Weald to
his brother Walter de Caune. (fn. 17) Richard de Caune had
sons Richard and John, both of whom held land in
North Weald about 1230. (fn. 18) In 1261 a Richard de
Caune held land in the parish. (fn. 19) Joan, widow of
Richard de Caune, is mentioned in deeds of about
1290. (fn. 20) In one of these is a reference to the 'greenway'
leading to Richard's hall. (fn. 21) In 1295 Joan granted to
Thomas, son of Richard de Caune, all the tenements
which she held in dower in North Weald. In return
Thomas granted her an annuity of 12 marks for life,
to be paid in her chamber at Hedingham Priory. (fn. 22)
Thomas de Caune was alive in 1335. (fn. 23) His son and
heir John had apparently succeeded him by April 1343.
Katherine widow of Thomas, was then still living. (fn. 24)
Sir John de Caune, kt., held land in the parish in 1349. (fn. 25)
In 1371 John Caune (possibly son of Sir John), then
about to leave for Gascony, enfeoffed Sir John atte
Vyne and others with all his lands in North Weald
and elsewhere to the uses of his will. If he returned
from Gascony he was to enjoy the property for life.
If he died abroad it was to be sold and the money was
to be applied for the salvation of his soul and those of
his parentes and benefactors, and in works of charity. (fn. 26)
It is not clear whether John de Caune died in
Gascony, but he was apparently the last of his line to
hold Canes. By October 1406 the manor was held by
Thomas Caune, son of John le Rous of Norton Mandeville (q.v.). (fn. 27) This Thomas presumably assumed the
name of Caune after acquiring the manor. (fn. 28) The name
of Rous was evidently readopted by Thomas, second
son and ultimate heir of the above Thomas Caune. (fn. 29)
The manor descended along with that of Norton
Mandeville until about 1864, when Norton was sold
by Merton College, Oxford. Canes remained in the
possession of the college until 1923 when it was sold
to the lessee, William Hart. (fn. 30)
Between 1536 and 1593 the manor was leased by
Merton College to successive members of the Springer
family. (fn. 31) In 1841 the property consisted of 292 acres
and was farmed by Frederick Chaplin. (fn. 32)
The present farm-house of Canes dates from about
1840. It is a square stucco building with a low-pitched
slate roof. South of the farm buildings is part of a large
moat. In the early 19th century it extended farther
north, almost enclosing the farm-yard. (fn. 33) The pond in
front of the farm-house may represent part of a second
moat.
The manor of MARSHALLS was held of that of
North Weald. It derived its name from the family of
Ralph le Mareschal or Marchal who held land in the
parish in 1280. (fn. 34) In 1300 Hugh le Despenser, lord of
North Weald, granted to John son of Laurence le
Mareschal, of Laver, clerk, land which Laurence once
held of him, at a yearly rent of 40s., John agreeing that
if the rent should be in arrears not only this land but
also his property in Magdalen Laver might be distrained. (fn. 35) In 1306 William de Sutton and Margery his
wife conveyed to Peter Mareschal and Amiane his wife
2 messuages, 123 acres of land, 2 acres 1 rood of meadow,
and 20d. rent in North Weald. (fn. 36) Peter and Amiane
were still alive in 1317. (fn. 37) In 1331 Robert son of Peter
Mareschal was holding a messuage, 199 acres of land,
18 acres of meadow, 3 acres of wood, and 50s. rent in
North Weald and Theydon Garnon. (fn. 38) The reversion
of this property was settled upon his son Thomas and
the heirs of his body, with remainder to Thomas's
brother Robert and his right heirs. In 1359 Robert le
Mareschal settled an estate in North Weald and
Theydon Garnon slightly larger than that of 1331
upon his son Roger and Margaret, Roger's wife. (fn. 39)
Robert Mareschal occurs in 1374. (fn. 40) Margaret, widow
of Roger Mareschal of North Weald, executed a charter
in 1402. (fn. 41)
For most of the 15th century the descent of the
manor has not been traced. In 1496 Joan, widow of
Sir Robert Billesdon, died holding 8 parcels of land
called Marshalls. (fn. 42) Sir Robert (d. 1492) was a
haberdasher of London, alderman for Bread Street
Ward and mayor 1483–4. He was knighted in 1485. (fn. 43)
His wife was daughter and heir of John Williams; her
heir was her son Thomas Billesdon. (fn. 44) Soon after her
death Marshalls was acquired by Sir William Fitzwilliam (1460?–1534), merchant tailor of London,
who was probably connected in some way with Sir
Robert Billesdon because he lived and traded in Bread
Street, and was alderman for Bread Street Ward. (fn. 45)
In 1543 Marshalls was settled upon Sir William's
grandson Sir William Fitzwilliam (1526–99) on his
marriage to Anne daughter of Sir William Sidney. (fn. 46)
In 1554 Sir William Fitzwilliam sold Marshalls
to John Searle. (fn. 47) The Searles were a local family,
many of whose names occur in the parish registers of
North Weald. (fn. 48) John was succeeded on his death in
1591 by his eldest son John. (fn. 49) In 1605 the latter
settled the reversion of the manor upon his eldest son
Samuel. (fn. 50) In 1616, after John Searle's death, the manor
was claimed by Mary, widow of Thomas Searle, a
younger brother of Samuel Searle, but Samuel's right
was maintained by the court. (fn. 51) Samuel, who was a
clergyman, was still alive in 1636. (fn. 52) He was succeeded
by his son Samuel, citizen and stationer of London. (fn. 53)
In 1660 Samuel Searle the younger sold the reversion
of Marshalls after his death to John Archer, serjeantat-law, for £680. (fn. 54)
Archer, who became a justice in the court of Common Pleas and was knighted in 1662, died in 1682. (fn. 55)
It is doubtful whether he himself ever took up the
reversion of the manor. Samuel Searle was still lord of
Marshalls in 1680, and the next court, in 1683, was
held in the name of Eleanor widow of Sir John
Archer. (fn. 56) In 1676 Sir John had settled the reversion
of the manor upon his eldest son John, and the latter
succeeded to Marshalls in or after 1687, in which year
his mother is last known to have held the court. (fn. 57) John
Archer died childless in 1707. He left a will desiring
that Eleanor Wrottesly, daughter of his sister Eleanor,
wife of Sir Walter Wrottesly, should marry William
Eyre of Highlow (Derbs.) and that Eyre should
assume the name of Archer and inherit Marshalls in
his own right. (fn. 58) The will had an unusual result.
Eleanor duly married William Eyre but died childless,
and Marshalls subsequently passed to Eyre's son by his
second wife. The manor descended in the Archer and
Archer-Houblon families until 1914, when Capt.
Lindsay Archer-Houblon sold the manorial rights to
Raymond E. Trotter of Epping, solicitor, for £100. (fn. 59)
In 1841 J. Archer-Houblon owned 63 acres in North
Weald, for 57 acres of which his tenant was Thomas
Speed. (fn. 60)
A rectangular moat enclosing an overgrown area
marks the position of the medieval site of Marshalls.
It lies to the east of Woodside, a little south of its
junction with Duck Lane. The house itself had disappeared by about 1768. (fn. 61) The present Marshalls
Farm, which dates from the 17th century, is a timberframed house with a chimney stack which is T-shaped
in plan. The base has a moulded capping above which
are four detached shafts set diagonally.
The manor of PARIS HALL derived its name from
the Paris family, which held land in North Weald in
the 13th and 14th centuries. In 1280 Sir Humphrey
de Hastings granted Roger de Paris, citizen of London,
'all the lands which he holds of my fee in North Weald
Hasting . . . to hold of me and my heirs . . . yielding to
me . . . 1d. (a year). . . . Saving to me and my heirs the
whole foreign service, to wit the scutage of the king,
so much as appertains to the fee of one knight; and
making therefore yearly for me and my heirs to Ralph
le Mareschal and his heirs 20s. at two terms of the year,
and at . . . Pentecost a pair of gilded spurs or 6d.' (fn. 62)
From this it appears that Paris Hall was previously
held by Sir Humphrey de Hastings of Ralph le
Mareschal (see above, Marshalls). The family name
of Hastings is preserved in the modern Hastingwood,
which adjoins Paris Hall. (fn. 63)
In 1298–9 Robert de Lincoln and Joan his wife
quitclaimed to Roger de Paris ½ messuage, 180 acres
of land, 5 acres of pasture, 8 acres of meadow, 60 acres
of wood, and 5s. rent in North Weald which they had
claimed as the dower of Joan of the endowment of
William de la Haye, formerly her husband. (fn. 64) In 1303
Nicholas de Paris conveyed land in Weald and Harlow
to Nicholas Roland. (fn. 65) A survey of the knights' fees in
the half-hundred of Harlow in 1314 reported that
William de Paris then held 1/8 knight's fee in North
Weald of the Earl of Gloucester. (fn. 66) In 1324 William,
son of Roger de Paris, and Alice, William's wife,
acknowledged the right of Adam de Masshebury to
1 messuage, 180 acres of land, 13 acres of meadow, 45
acres of pasture, and 13s. rent in North Weald Hasting
and Latton; Adam thereupon granted two-thirds of
the property to William and Alice, and also the reversion of one-third which Beatrice, late wife of Roger
de Paris, held in dower of the inheritance of Adam. (fn. 67)
The agreement was made in the presence of Beatrice,
who did fealty. (fn. 68) Adam here appears to have been a
mesne lord.
A William de Paris of North Weald died about
1338, leaving tenements in the parish of All Hallowsthe-Great, London, to Roger de Waltham, corder, and
to Sir Ralph Spigurnel and Alice his sister, wife of the
testator. (fn. 69)
No further mention of the estate has been found
until late in the 15th century. In 1482–3 Paris Hall
seems to have been held by John Symonds, who in that
year was said to have made an agreement with Sir
Thomas Tyrell providing for the settlement of the
manor upon John and Joan his wife and their issue,
with remainder to Tyrell. (fn. 70) John and Joan were also
said to have agreed to pay Tyrell £4 a year during
their lives. (fn. 71) In 1501 Joan Symonds, now a widow,
filed a suit in Chancery against Tyrell and other persons
alleged to be trustees and to have refused to make over
to John and Joan their estate in the manor. Tyrell
replied that the annual rent of £4 had not been paid
for more than seventeen years and that the other persons named in the writ had never actually been
enfeoffed to uses. (fn. 72) Joan did not appear in court and
the case was dismissed. (fn. 73) Two years later Paris was
among the possessions left by Sir John Shaa (d. 1503). (fn. 74)
The manor was then said to consist of 600 acres of land,
120 acres of meadow, 200 acres of pasture, 60 acres of
wood, and £5 rent in Harlow, Latton, North Weald,
and other parishes. Sir John was succeeded by his son
Edmund. Some time later, between 1515 and 1529,
Edmund was engaged in litigation with the trustees of
the settlement of the manor made upon him by his
father. (fn. 75)
Edmund Shaa's heir was his daughter Alice, who
married William Pooley of Boxted (Suff.) in 1548. (fn. 76)
After William's death (1587) Paris Hall passed to his
son John. (fn. 77) John Pooley died in 1593 and was succeeded by his brother William. (fn. 78) In 1594 William
Pooley conveyed the manor to Thomas and Katharine
Fuller. (fn. 79)
According to Morant Fuller was a clothier of
Coggeshall. (fn. 80) Paris Hall descended in his family for
about 180 years. A William Fuller held it in 1705 (fn. 81)
and another of the same name in Morant's time (c.
1768). (fn. 82) By 1775–6 Paris Hall had been acquired by
William Hollick. (fn. 83) He conveyed the manor in 1798–9
to William Wedd Nash. (fn. 84) Nash held it only until
1804–5 when it passed into the possession of John
Denner. (fn. 85) In 1822–3 it came to a Mr. Chatham. (fn. 86)
In 1825–30 the owner was Mrs. Chatham. (fn. 87) James
Ewing held Paris Hall in 1841 and 1848. (fn. 88) By this
time it had ceased to be styled a manor. In 1841 it
was a farm of about 120 acres.
In 1780 Paris Hall was leased to Joseph Clarke. (fn. 89)
Thomas Stallibrass was the tenant in 1796–1822 and
John Stallibrass in 1823–4. (fn. 90) In 1825–30 John
Skingle was tenant (fn. 91) and in 1841 Charles Smith. (fn. 92)
Early in the present century' the farm belonged to
Frederick Bond, who owned it until about 1938. It
was then bought by a Mr. Good. In 1946 or 1947 it
was bought by a Mr. Parris and it is now owned by his
sons, Messrs. V. and L. Parris. (fn. 93) The house and garden,
apart from the farm, were bought at the same time
from Mr. Good by Mr. Denning, their present
owner. (fn. 94)
Paris Hall is a timber-framed house built late in the
16th century, possibly by Thomas Fuller after he
acquired the property in 1594. It is a long rectangular
building with gabled ends and a fine central chimney
with six tall octagonal shafts. Near the west end a
small staircase wing projects on the south side of the
house and at the farther end there is a single-story
service wing, evidently a later addition. Four late16th-century fireplaces have been uncovered inside the
house. To the south and west of the house are two
arms of a rectangular moat.