ANSTY
The ancient parish of Ansty lay four miles north-east of Coventry; its area was 1,015 acres in 1891. (fn. 20)
The parish, which was of an irregular shape, was
bounded by Shilton on the north-west and north-east, on the south-west by Walsgrave-on-Sowe, and
on the south-east by the district of Combe Fields.
These boundaries were unchanged until 1932, when
an area of 539 acres on the south-west of the parish
was transferred to Ansty civil parish from Walsgraveon-Sowe. Ansty was in Foleshill Union and Rural
District until 1932, when the enlarged parish
became part of Rugby Rural District. (fn. 21) The area of
the ancient parish slopes from the north to several
watercourses which drain into the River Sowe; one
of these watercourses, the Withybrook, forms the
south-east boundary of the parish. (fn. 22) The village
stands on a low ridge in the middle of the parish,
and from it there are extensive views over Coventry
and the valley of the Sowe to the south-west.
The village is built along the Leicester road, which
crosses the parish from south-west to north-east.
Immediately north of the village another road
branches south-east towards Brinklow. The Oxford
Canal runs from west to east, skirting the village on
the south, and crosses the watercourse at the eastern
boundary of the parish by the Hopsford Viaduct.
The railway from Rugby to Nuneaton crosses the
east of the parish and runs immediately north of the
canal viaduct. The village and parish have been very
little affected by modern building and remain rural
in character (1964).
MANORS AND ESTATES.
In 1086 and earlier
Ansty, with Foleshill, was one of the estates of the
Countess Godiva. (fn. 23) The estate came into the hands
of the earls of Chester and descended, with other
Coventry lands, to Hugh, Earl of Arundel, Robert
de Montalt, and Robert de Morlee. It was among the
lands exchanged by Robert de Morlee with Queen
Isabel in the early 14th century, (fn. 24) so that the overlordship descended with the manor of Cheylesmore. (fn. 25)
The earliest known mesne lord of Ansty was
Roger de Boscherville, who held half a knight's fee
there in 1183-4. (fn. 26) By 1243 the half fee was held by
Thomas Ireys, who had married Agnes, the
Boscherville heiress. (fn. 27) The estate was held by Agnes
Ireys in 1275, (fn. 28) and by her grandson, Henry Ireys,
in 1316. (fn. 29) Elizabeth Ireys, presumably Henry's
widow, was occupying the estate in 1327, (fn. 30) and
retained a third as her dower after she married again,
probably by 1332. (fn. 31) Henry's daughters, Thomasina
and Maud, married John and Hugh de Culy
respectively, and in 1337 they settled the estate,
which was then referred to as a manor, on William
de Culy. (fn. 32) In fact by 1357 the estate had descended
to Maud's son, Sir Roger de Culy. (fn. 33) Roger's death
without issue in 1359 (fn. 34) led to a dispute over the
manor. His widow Margery (d. 1380) married John
Deincourt; the heir, Elizabeth, Roger's cousin and
wife of John Stanhope, then released the manor to
John Deincourt, (fn. 35) who did homage for it in 1385. (fn. 36)
When John died his heir Roger was a minor, and
custody of the manor was granted to Sir William
Arundell in 1394. (fn. 37) In 1402 Roger's rights were
challenged by Ralph de Aderley, by virtue of a
grant by Elizabeth and John Stanhope to Ralph and
his heirs in 1380. (fn. 38) After prolonged litigation, (fn. 39)
Roger Deincourt retained possession, but quitclaimed the estate in 1406 to Sir Richard Stanhope,
son of Elizabeth and John Stanhope. (fn. 40)
The manor remained in the hands of the Stanhope
family (fn. 41) until 1506, when Sir Edward Stanhope,
after being temporarily dispossessed by the king in
satisfaction of a debt, sold it to George, 4th Earl of
Shrewsbury. (fn. 42) The earl gave the estate in the
following year to the Dean and Canons of St.
George's, Windsor, (fn. 43) who retained it until 1867,
when it was vested, with the rest of their estates, in
the Ecclesiastical (later the Church) Commissioners. (fn. 44) The Ansty estate then consisted of
approximately 725 acres held under six leases. Of
this about 640 acres were sold in three lots in 1869
and 1870 to the lessees - Arthur Robarts Adams,
the Revd. C. C. Adams, Francis Wigston, and the
executors of J. A. Sartoris - and the remainder was
disposed of in a number of smaller transactions
which were completed in 1886 when the last of the
estate was sold. (fn. 45)
The Dean and Canons of Windsor kept the direct
lordship of the villein holdings, (fn. 46) but granted a
lease of the manor, or more correctly the demesne
estate, for 61 years, to Richard Harrison in 1544. (fn. 47)
He sold the remainder of his lease, about 1550, to
John Barker, (fn. 48) a member of a Berkshire family, who
was succeeded as lessee by his son, William. (fn. 49)
Richard Barker, John's grandson, was described as
of Ansty in 1619, (fn. 50) and was lessee of the manor in
1637. (fn. 51) His daughter Mary married Thomas Woodcock, who died about 1640, and their daughter Anne
(d. 1671) married Richard Tayler. (fn. 52) Tayler took
advantage of the confiscation of church lands to buy
the manor, presumably in 1659 since he was still
referred to as tenant in the summer of that year, (fn. 53)
but he had to restore it and become a leaseholder
again after the Restoration. Richard Tayler died in
1676 and was succeeded by his son Edward, who
rebuilt the manor-house later known as Ansty Hall.
The Taylers remained in Ansty until the death of
Edward Tayler, a lunatic, in 1799, when the estate
passed to his nephew Simon Adams, son of Elizabeth
and Clarke Adams of East Haddon (Northants.).
Simon Adams, to whom the care of Tayler's estates
had been committed by 1782, (fn. 54) is said to have been
living at Ansty from 1783 onwards, (fn. 55) and was
certainly there in 1788. (fn. 56) He died in 1801 and was
succeeded by his son Henry. The Adams (from
1893 Woollcombe-Adams) family owned the estate
until after the Second World War and were often
described as lords of the manor. (fn. 57) In 1956 Mr.
P. E. Woollcombe-Adams sold the Adams estate to
his cousin, Mr. D. Stopford Adams, a member of a
younger branch of the family and a great-grandson
of Henry Adams. (fn. 58) Mr. Stopford Adams was occupying Ansty Hall in 1965. (fn. 59)
The date at which the lessees of the manor first
came to live in the village and the whereabouts of
the earliest manor-house there are not certainly
known. In 1506 there was a grove called Ansty Park,
apparently on the demesne estate, (fn. 60) and in the 19th
century it was recalled that 'the old mansion or
manor-house' had stood in the Hall or Upper Park,
then forming part of land called the Moats (fn. 61) which
in 1651 had been described as a close of pasture
'abutting upon the churchyard'. (fn. 62) A large gabled
house was marked on a late-16th-century map of
Ansty, standing on the village street to the south of
the church and the present hall, (fn. 63) but here the
ground slopes too steeply for it ever to have been the
site of a moated building. However, a field, still
known as the Motts and containing a mound in its
south-east corner, lies to the north and north-west
of church and hall, (fn. 64) in the area which in the late
16th century was occupied by closes called 'the farm
close', 'the grove alias the park', and 'the pale'. (fn. 65)
The present Ansty Hall stands on rising ground
to the north of the main road, overlooking a small
park. As originally built by Edward Tayler about
1678, it was a rectangular two-storied house of red
brick with stone quoins and dressings. On plan it
was two rooms deep, its principal fronts facing
north-west and south-east. The lower part of the
north-west elevation and many of the internal
features belong to this period. It seems that there
may originally have been an approach to the house
on its north-west side from Shilton Lane, which was
then the most important road in the area. This would
have crossed what is still called Avenue Field,
adjoining the Motts, (fn. 66) and its line may be indicated
by the belt of trees standing near Shilton Lane.
The house was much altered by Simon Adams
about 1800. He added a third story, changed some
of the windows, and gave the building an imposing
south-east front with a central pediment. Above its
new doorway a date-stone of 1678 has apparently
been re-set. Further additions to the house were
made in the late 19th century. Internally the hall
contains 16th- or early-17th-century oak panelling,
brought from elsewhere. The staircase has a
balustrade of pierced scrollwork and may date from
1678; parts of it, however, show signs of alteration,
and the newel caps are of somewhat earlier
design.
In the 15th century Coventry Priory had several
pieces of land in Ansty. (fn. 67) At least one piece had been
a gift of Roger de Boscherville in the 12th century,
and others were in the priory's possession by the
mid 13th century. (fn. 68) The pieces did not amount to an
estate or manor; most of them were connected either
with Ansty rectory, or with the priory's lordship of
Sowe Waste. (fn. 69) In 1539 the property consisted of
Ralph Swillington's holding, worth 14s. a year, and
Sampson Webb's holding, worth 1s. a year, both
described as in Shilton and Ansty. (fn. 70)
During his delineation of commoning rights in
the district in the mid 14th century, the prior made
agreements not only with Roger de Culy, but with
Roger Onley, Robert Forest, Robert Jordan, and the
Prior of St. John's Hospital, Coventry. (fn. 71) These
freeholds survived at least into the early 17th
century, when some were said to have been added
to the principal estate by Richard Barker. (fn. 72) Joshua
Clark and Henry Jephcott, for example, as well as
the Dean and Canons of Windsor, were represented
at the Cheylesmore court in 1617. (fn. 73)
GENERAL HISTORY.
There is a joint Domesday
entry for Ansty and Foleshill (fn. 74) (which may also
include Exhall), and as Foleshill is both much larger
than Ansty, and a very different parish, it is impossible to distinguish any separate features of
Ansty at that time. Nor, because of the small size
of the priory's estate there, do the priory's 14-thand 15th-century rentals give as clear a picture of
Ansty as they do of Sowe or Foleshill.
The name, Ansty, meaning a narrow pathway or
pass, (fn. 75) may be thought to suggest that such a feature
on the route from Coventry to the north-east has
been important in the history of the village. But, as
will be shown elsewhere, the most important
medieval road was the route through Sowe Common
and Barnacle to Shilton, sometimes called Shilton
Lane, (fn. 76) which skirts Ansty on the north. The
'highway' through Ansty mentioned in the 14th
century (fn. 77) was probably only the village street. A
local historian has suggested that there was no road
at all from Ansty to Sowe before the 19th century, (fn. 78)
but it existed as a field boundary through the open
field of Ansty in the late 16th century and, beyond
the village, followed an awkwardly winding hedge
to Shilton. (fn. 79) It was called Sowe Lane in 1698. The
bridge over the stream just south-west of the village
was called Tapping Bridge. (fn. 80) To the south, the path
to Combe Fields, or Brinklow Lane, also followed
a field boundary. (fn. 81) There was a road called Ansty
Stakes leading to Nuneaton by way of Bulkington
in the mid 17th century. (fn. 82) The realignment of the
Sowe-Ansty road in the Sowe inclosure of 1756 (fn. 83)
began the change to the modern road pattern.
The road was turnpiked in 1812-13, (fn. 84) but continued to be less important than Hawkesbury
Lane. It is only in the present century that it has
become the main road from Coventry to Leicester.
The construction of the Oxford Canal in the
1770s (fn. 85) greatly changed the appearance of the
village. It cuts across the north of the parish, close
to the 300 ft. contour, goes under the main road near
the west end of the village, and runs behind the
houses on the south side of the village street. The
canal bridge carrying the main road was evidently
built a little to the south of the village street, so that
a few of the houses which lay along the old street
stand north of the bridge and at a lower level.
The bridge was widened and rebuilt in 1909. (fn. 86)
Further east the road follows the winding street
itself, and this is lined with houses on both sides.
From the bridge the canal forms a striking visual
feature and the village has the appearance of a
community built along the main road and largely
dependent on it. This impression is historically quite
misleading. The ancient village was comparatively
isolated, standing in the midst of its fields, and
dependent almost entirely on agriculture.
Another false impression is given by the commanding position of Ansty Hall with the church
close beside it, suggesting a village traditionally
dominated by squire and vicar. But this aspect of
the village is not historically deep-rooted and was
largely the work of the Adams family in the 18th
and 19th centuries. The late medieval lords probably
did not live at Ansty, and the manor was held in the
16th century by the lessees of the demesne estate.
It was only in the 17th century that these lessees
began to reside in the village and to establish themselves as the local lords. (fn. 87) The church remained little
more than the poor chapelry it had been before the
Dissolution. There was no resident vicar and sometimes no curate until T. C. Adams appeared in
1809. (fn. 88) Of the two 19th-century inns, the Crown
and the Fox, the Crown is said to have been in
existence since 1647, (fn. 89) but it seems unlikely that it
was an inn until the turnpiking of the main road in
the early 19th century. The local school and later
the post office were built at Shilton. The present
Ansty Hall, the vicarage (demolished c. 1939), the
park, and even the church spire, were all comparatively late additions to an otherwise featureless
landscape.
The late-16th-century map of the parish shows
twelve houses along the village street, with the
church and a single isolated house at Shuthooks to
the north. Beyond the village gardens, to the east,
south, and west, Ansty Town Fields was divided
into three parts by the stream running from just
west of the village towards Sowe, and by the lane to
Combe Fields. To the north, towards Shilton,
Barnacle, and Sowe Waste, was an area of closes,
waste, and wood. The site of the church and graveyard, in one of the closes, and on a turning off the
village street, (fn. 90) suggests that the layout of the parish
had differed little when the church was added to it
in the 12th century. (fn. 91)
In the 15th century the northern part of the later
parish was part of Sowe Waste or Shortwood. This
was common to the surrounding villages; parochial
claims there were only just being established, and
were probably not determined until after the
Dissolution. (fn. 92) The waste was being inclosed and
assarted from at least the 13th century, and the
process was marked by a series of disputes and
agreements between the Prior of Coventry, as lord
of Sowe, and the lords of Ansty, Barnacle, Bulkington, and Shilton. (fn. 93) By these agreements, the parties
recognised their respective rights to inclose and
cultivate a part of the disputed area, and to surrender
commoning rights, pannage, and estovers in the
other's territory. The terms of the agreements
varied considerably; in that with the Hospitallers of
Barnacle, the Hospitallers were to retain commoning
rights in Sowe and Ansty between the harvest and
the sowing, while in that with Roger Culy rights
were retained only in uninclosed lands. (fn. 94) There were
special provisions in some agreements for the collection of tithes by the priory, but in other cases it had
already become difficult for the priory to get the
tithes from the closes which had become merged in
another estate, and the uneven northern boundary
of the parish was clearly in process of definition. (fn. 95)
The names of some of these closes, including Ansty
Park or Grove, Clerkspiece, and Priorspiece, were
still used in the 17th century, (fn. 96) and were known in
the 19th century. (fn. 97) General commoning rights,
particularly for villein tenants, were thus steadily
reduced. There was still some waste in the 15th
century, when the beasts running on the common
of Ansty were mentioned, and, in the late 16th
century, the small pieces called Ansty Waste Field (fn. 98)
were probably either still being used as common
pasture or had only recently been inclosed.
Although three parts of Town Field were shown
on the late-16th-century map, there is no other
evidence of a three-course rotation in the parish, or
of how the virgates or yardlands mentioned until the
early 19th century (fn. 99) were related to actual holdings
in the fields. The holdings of the villein tenants in
the mid 15th century show little or no pattern, with
two holdings of about 60 acres, three of between
25 and 40 acres, six between seven and thirteen
acres, and various smaller pieces. (fn. 1) The most
important field was Southfield; Middlefield and
Aylesfield were also mentioned, but may only have
been closes. There was a cultura called Straightfurlong in Southfield, (fn. 2) but other culture appear to
have been closes. (fn. 3)
The inclosure of the open fields seems to have
taken place in several stages during the 17th and
18th centuries. Richard Barker is said to have
inclosed land after buying some freeholds in the
early 17th century, and the Taylers apparently
continued the process. (fn. 4) The glebe by 1674 consisted
of 35½ acres in closes. (fn. 5) One close, of seven acres in
fourteen leys, suggests a surviving arrangement of
strips. (fn. 6) There had, however, been a single open
corn field in the parish in 1664. (fn. 7)
The tithe award of 1850 (fn. 8) gives some indications
of how the inclosure was carried out. H. W. Adams
then owned about 600 acres, on 200 acres of which
he had merged the tithe with the freehold; on
another 350 acres he was owner of the tithes; 40
acres of his land were still scattered among the other
fields, and so were tithed, and some other lands were
untithed. The Award was concerned with some 220
acres held of the Dean and Canons of Windsor,
which represent the leasehold or villein lands retained by the dean and canons after they had granted
the demesne estate to Harrison in the 16th century.
The Tithe Award map shows that these Windsor
lands occupied almost exactly the eastern and
western sections of the Town Field of the late-16thcentury map, and the 19th-century meadows and
closes show signs of having been strips and furlongs.
Most of the southern section of Town Field was,
however, owned and occupied by Adams. The
former open-field demesne land had clearly been
consolidated and inclosed in this field, leaving the
tenant land to more piecemeal inclosure in the other
fields. The outlying farm later called Chronies
Buildings may have been built for the consolidated
holding.
Ansty did not, then, break up into several compact
farms on inclosure. Apart from the lands owned and
occupied by the Adams family, there were in 1850
eleven leaseholders on the Windsor lands. Of these,
the largest was Thomas Reynolds, who was tenant
or undertenant of over 80 acres in sixteen fields. (fn. 9)
H. W. Adams had part of his land in hand under a
farm bailiff; the principal leaseholders on his estate
at this time were apparently John and William
Pridmore, who were not natives of Ansty; (fn. 10) so that,
in contrast to Sowe, where after inclosure farm
buildings were dotted about the former open fields,
there are in Ansty few buildings away from the
village street and the canal. In the present village
street most of the buildings date from the 18th and
19th centuries, but one substantial thatched house
on the south side (now two dwellings) is timberframed and probably of 16th-century origin. More
recent building has taken place along the canal west
of the village and along the Sowe road to the south
(1964).
There were 16 taxpayers in Ansty in 1327 (fn. 11) and
1332, (fn. 12) and 33 individuals in 1378-9. (fn. 13) In the mid
15th century there were 17 villein tenants and 10
houses on the Stanhope estate. (fn. 14) There were said to
be 20 households in 1563. (fn. 15) In 1630 pews were
allotted to 15 men, 15 women, some 18 maid-servants, and 8 men-servants; there were at that
time said to be 12 copyhold tenants. (fn. 16) In 1730 there
were about 25 houses. (fn. 17) The population rose sharply
in the early 19th century. In 1801 there were 32
houses and 189 people, in 1831 51 houses (and one
uninhabited) with 268 people. Thereafter the population fell steadily to 127 in 1891, and the number of
occupied houses to 34 in 1901. (fn. 18)
The rise in population in the early 19th century
was the result of the spread of ribbon weaving into
the village. There was a weaver in Ansty by 1681, (fn. 19)
but there was probably no continuity between him
and the later industry. Cottage weaving spread north
from Coventry in the early 18th century. In 1818
there were 69 people engaged in weaving in Ansty,
out of a population which numbered 205 in 1821. (fn. 20)
By the 1830s the trade was declining; of the 155
looms in Ansty and Shilton in 1831, 103 were
unemployed, and in 1838 there were only 60 looms. (fn. 21)
There was considerable distress at this time: about
a fifth of the children in the neighbourhood did not
go to school, principally because of poverty, and of
these the elder children worked 'when they have it
to do', but the young ones were 'in the streets'. (fn. 22)
Nor was all well with agriculture at this time; only
some 150 acres were sown in 1801, and it was said
that 'the farmers of this parish, being tied from
ploughing, do not get corn sufficient to feed the
inhabitants'. (fn. 23)
In contrast to Foleshill and Sowe Waste, as
ribbon weaving declined it was not replaced by
general industry or suburban housing, and Ansty
reverted to its rural character. In 1850 the tradesmen
consisted only of a single shopkeeper, a butcher
and tailor, a blacksmith, a shoemaker, and two
wheelwrights. (fn. 24) In 1938, when there were complaints
about the lack of social amenities in the village, there
was no main water or sewerage, and only some of the
houses had electricity. (fn. 25)
LOCAL GOVERNMENT.
Ansty has had a
curious historical relationship with the neighbouring
village of Shilton and, to a lesser extent, with that of
Barnacle. (fn. 26) They are small villages, a mile from each
other, and with only low hills between. The three
village fields bordered each other, and formed a
continuous stretch of cultivation around the tongue
of common extending from Sowe Waste. Ownership
and parochial rights in this common were only slowly
determined. In 1316 the three places were said to be
one village (sunt una villa) under the lordship of
Henry Ireys, (fn. 27) but Barnacle seems subsequently
to have been associated with Bulkington, further
away to the north (with which it had had an ancient
connexion), and Shilton, (fn. 28) rather than with Ansty.
Ansty and Shilton chapels, because of the
circumstances of their foundation, (fn. 29) never had the
same close relationship with Coventry as chapels
such as Sowe, on the pre-Conquest estate of Coventry
Priory, or Foleshill, in the wastes of Cheylesmore
manor. (fn. 30) With most of the chapelries around
Coventry, Ansty appeared in the tripartite indenture
of 1355, and both Ansty and Shilton in the leet book
version of the charter of the county of the city in
1451. But Shilton did not appear in the tripartite
indenture or in other versions of the 1451 charter,
and although Shilton was from time to time
administered with Ansty in the county of the city,
and the two were virtually a single ecclesiastical
parish, (fn. 31) Shilton kept a separate identity outside the
county.
In 1649 the Warwickshire magistrates were still
trying to decide which of several holdings fell in
Ansty and so in Coventry, or in Shilton and so in
Warwickshire. (fn. 32) On several occasions in the 17th
century the Warwickshire magistrates seem to have
assumed jurisdiction over Ansty. (fn. 33) In 1649, too,
Barnacle was being assessed for rates with Shilton,
not with Bulkington. The Aglionby family, the
tenants of Barnacle Hall in the early 17th century,
and the Fielding family, tenants there from the mid
17th to the early 18th centuries, worshipped at
Shilton church. (fn. 34) As late as 1705 a single rate was
levied in the three villages, Ansty, Shilton, and
Barnacle. (fn. 35) It was probably only with the operations
of the Census and the Ordnance Survey in the 19th
century that the relationship of the villages was
defined, and then on no real historical basis.
The prolonged doubt about the identity of Ansty
is reflected in the fragmentary evidence about local
government. Tithingmen were appointed in the
Cheylesmore court in the 14th century, (fn. 36) and a
tithingman, together with a constable, was still
being appointed at the court in 1663. (fn. 37) The constable
was being appointed at the Cheylesmore court in
the mid 18th century, but the tithingman had
apparently disappeared. (fn. 38) There were two overseers
of the poor in 1760. (fn. 39) By 1841 two constables and
an overseer were appointed at an annual parish
meeting, which was also called a vestry meeting.
The Revd. T. C. Adams then said that as it was a
very small parish only just enough people could be
found to be constables and overseers, and the
proceedings were sometimes not written down; he
had seen records of a manor court, but he had never
known of one being held. (fn. 40) Ansty has been too small
to have a modern parish council, but has a parish
meeting, of which a member of the Adams family
was normally chairman before the Second World
War. It has been said that the Crown Inn was the
traditional meeting-place in the village, and village
stocks stood opposite the inn. (fn. 41) In fact, the magistrates were meeting weekly at the Fox Inn in 1850. (fn. 42)