WISTON
Wiston parish (fn. 97) lies north of the South Downs,
and is 4½ miles long from north to south and 1½
miles wide at its widest point. The ancient parish
comprised 2,842 a. Buncton chapelry, a detached
portion of Ashington parish which lay entirely
within Wiston and comprised 256 a., was added
to it between 1882 and 1891. A further 315 a. on
the north-west side of the parish including Brown-hill farm were 'transferred from another detached
part of Ashington in 1933. In 1960 50 a. were
transferred from Wiston to Ashington. The area of
the modern parish in 1971 was thus 3,363 a.
(1,361 ha.). (fn. 98) The present article deals with the
ancient parish alone until the late 19th century, and
with the former detached parts of Ashington too
after their inclusion in Wiston. The original
Wiston village lay 1¼ miles south-east of the present
one, which is a successor to Buncton hamlet.
Like Steyning and Washington, Wiston is very
varied in its geology and relief. The south part of
the parish is typical chalk downland, rising to
nearly 800 ft. in the south-west part where
Chanctonbury Ring is a prominent landmark.
Between the Chalk and the Weald clay on which
the northern part of the parish lies are alternate
outcrops of sandstone and clay. The northern part
of the parish is rolling country, much of it over
100 ft. high, which is dissected by streams flowing
north-east to the river Adur. (fn. 99) Part of the south-east boundary is formed by an old track; (fn. 1) the
other boundaries of the ancient parish are irregular,
especially in the north, where their outline is much
indented. Chanctonbury Ring straddles the boundary with Washington in the south-west part; (fn. 2) it
was disputed between the manors of Wiston and
Chancton (in Washington) in the late 18th century, (fn. 3)
and had probably never been included in either
parish. The boundary between Wiston and Buncton
chapelry followed old tracks through part of its
course. (fn. 4)
There were two parks belonging to Wiston
manor in the Middle Ages. What may be thought
of as the home park, perhaps mentioned in 1293 (fn. 5)
and called the Strood in 1357, (fn. 6) lay on the Gault
clay outcrop north-west of the manor-house and
village in the south part of the parish. (fn. 7) It was
being enlarged piecemeal on the north towards
Buncton in the 1360s. (fn. 8) A parker was recorded
among the estate servants in 1345. (fn. 9) The other
park, called Solewick, which is recorded from
1289, (fn. 10) lay in the north part of the parish (fn. 11) and
presumably comprised mostly woodland. (fn. 12) In 1427
the combined acreage of the two parks was estimated at 290 a. (fn. 13) Part of Solewick had been disparked for arable by the late 16th century, (fn. 14) perhaps
including the fields called Little park and Goat
park in 1841, (fn. 15) but it was still called the great wood
in 1612. (fn. 16) Much woodland remained in the north
part of the parish in later times, (fn. 17) and even where
assarts had been made, traces of the original woodland cover remained in 1978 in the wide strips of
wood, or 'rews', which divided the fields. The
home park on the other hand survived as such
until the mid 20th century. Between c. 1795 and
c. 1835 (fn. 18) it was enlarged on the east and south to
give privacy to the house, the remaining inhabitants
of the village apparently being removed. (fn. 19) There
is evidence of deliberate landscaping, for instance
in the creation of Wiston pond and in the laying
out of a new drive east of the house. (fn. 20) Another
addition to the park was made on the north before
1875 as a result of the re-alignment of the Steyning-Washington road in 1778. (fn. 21) Meanwhile the western
part of the medieval park was disparked between
1841 and 1875. (fn. 22) There were 400 deer in the park
in 1801. (fn. 23) Deer continued to be kept there until
1939, but after the Second World War the park
was largely turned over to agriculture. (fn. 24)
The Roman road between Barcombe and Hardham, which crossed the centre of the parish, (fn. 25) may
still have been in use in 1374. (fn. 26) The main east-west
road in the Middle Ages, however, was the one
which ran along the foot of the downs south of
Wiston village. It was called the Steyning-Washington road in 1654, (fn. 27) and remained the
chief east-west road until 1778. (fn. 28) A road roughly
along the line of the modern Steyning-Washington
road further north is recorded in 1639. (fn. 29) In 1778
it was re-aligned in part, and the older, more
southerly, route was closed to traffic. (fn. 30) The new
road was a turnpike between 1810 and 1877; (fn. 31) a
toll-house near the north lodge of Wiston Park
survived c. 1970. (fn. 32) Several old tracks ascend the
downland scarp, (fn. 33) of which one was described as
the Wiston-Findon road in 1684. (fn. 34) Another is
continued northwards by a pronounced hollow-way
south of Buncton crossways. The northern continuations of those and other tracks in the north
part of the parish trend from south-west to north-east; their relative width suggests that they were
drove-roads connecting manors in the south of the
county with their Wealden pastures.
The former settlements of Wiston and Buddington lay along two of the north-south tracks
just below the downland scarp, Wiston being
sited on the well-drained Upper Greensand outcrop. Another settlement lay further west on the
old road to Washington; (fn. 35) it may have been in
distinction from it that Wiston village was called
North Wiston in 1262. (fn. 36) Buddington apparently
still had a few inhabitants in the early 16th century, (fn. 37) but later declined to a single farm. Wiston
village had contracted by 1639; a few buildings
then still lay between the church and the road
along the foot of the downs, but the western part
of the village had disappeared. (fn. 38) Later it declined
still further, some buildings perhaps being removed
to enlarge the park in the early 19th century. In
1978 only Wiston House with its outbuildings, the
church, and the former rectory house, a timber-framed building probably of the 17th century,
remained. The settlement lying west of Wiston
was apparently more populous than the village in
1639, with 12 houses, (fn. 39) but it too had declined by
the late 18th century, when its east part had
perhaps already been replaced by new home farm
buildings for Wiston House. (fn. 40) In 1978 only one
house survived there, a 17th-century timber-framed building called Malthouse Cottages. The
old centres of population had meanwhile been
replaced by new ones further north, which apparently owed their origin to the colonization of
waste land by the side of the road from Buncton
crossways to Ashington. (fn. 41) A straggling hamlet
north and north-west of Buncton chapel, known
in 1978 as Wiston village, but evidently the successor to the decayed hamlet of Buncton, contains
at least two buildings of the 17th or 18th centuries,
besides some 19th-century cottages and a row of
council houses. The hamlet of Hole Street, c. ½ m.
north-west of that, was recorded in 1795, (fn. 42) and
in 1978 contained 8 houses of the 18th century
and later, of which at least one was timber-framed.
There are also several isolated farm-houses in the
parish of the 17th century and later.
Thirty-nine persons were recorded at Wiston in
1086. (fn. 43) There were 31 tax payers in 1327 (fn. 44) and 54
in 1378. (fn. 45) Forty-eight persons were assessed to the
subsidy in 1524. (fn. 46) The total of 75 adult males
listed in the parish in 1642 (fn. 47) is surprisingly large,
since only 64 adult inhabitants were recorded in
1676. (fn. 48) The population rose from 258 in 1801 to
296 in 1831, and 341 in 1841. After a sharp decline
in the succeeding decade, it rose again to 315 in
1881. The enlarged parish had 352 inhabitants in
1891, and c. 320 between 1901 and 1931, but
thereafter, despite the further enlargement of the
area, the population declined to 249 in 1971. (fn. 49)
Wiston House was captured by royalist troops
for a brief period in 1643. During the same campaign the estate was plundered to supply both
armies in turn. (fn. 50)
MANORS.
The manor of WISTON was held of
Earl Godwin (d. 1053) by Azor. By 1086 it belonged
to William de Braose, (fn. 51) the overlordship thereafter
descending with Bramber rape. (fn. 52) In 1086 it was
held of William by one Ralph. (fn. 53) Ralph of Wiston,
who is recorded in the mid 12th century, and his
son William of Wiston who occurs locally between
1181 and 1204, were presumably his descendants. (fn. 54)
William's son Henry (fn. 55) had apparently succeeded
by 1210, (fn. 56) and was called lord of Wiston c. 1230. (fn. 57)
Another William of Wiston, apparently Henry's
son, is recorded in 1238, (fn. 58) and held 4 fees in Wiston
and West Chiltington in 1242 and later. (fn. 59) In 1252
he was granted free warren in his demesne lands
at Wiston. (fn. 60) In 1272 he granted the reversion of
the manor to Adam de Bavent, (fn. 61) who was confirmed
in free warren there in 1279 and 1285 (fn. 62) and had
died by 1292. (fn. 63)
Adam's widow Alice was the largest taxpayer in
Wiston in 1296. (fn. 64) Their son Roger who came of age
in 1301 (fn. 65) was the largest taxpayer in 1327 and 1332, (fn. 66)
and was summoned to Parliament between 1313
and 1322 and between 1332 and 1335. (fn. 67) Roger's
son Roger, who had succeeded by 1338, (fn. 68) granted
Wiston to the Crown in 1344, (fn. 69) and enjoyed a
life-interest in it after 1345. (fn. 70) After his death in
1355 it was held by Dartford nunnery (Kent) until
1357, when the Crown granted it to Peter de
Braose and his wife Joan. Peter's son John (fn. 71) had
succeeded by 1378, (fn. 72) and was confirmed in the
manor 20 years later. (fn. 73) After his death in 1426 (fn. 74)
his widow Margaret, who later married Sir Thomas
Wickham, succeeded, and at her death in 1449
Wiston passed under a settlement of 1409 to Ralph
Shirley, great-nephew of John de Braose (d. 1426). (fn. 75)
He was succeeded at his death in 1466 by his son
Ralph, and Ralph in 1510 by his son Sir Richard,
the two last-named both holding the office of
sheriff. Sir Richard (d. 1540) was succeeded by his
son William (d. 1551), (fn. 76) whose widow Mary, wife
of Richard Elrington, held Wiston in 1568. (fn. 77)
William's son Thomas (knighted 1573) was
knight of the shire and sheriff, and as Treasurer-at-War in the Low Countries incurred large debts
to the Crown. (fn. 78) In 1602 he granted Wiston and
other manors to the queen, receiving them back
for a sum converted in 1604 into an annuity of
£1,002. (fn. 79) Sir Thomas was living at Wiston in 1606
and 1611, (fn. 80) and died in 1612. His son Sir Thomas,
M.P. for Steyning 1614-20, (fn. 81) forfeited Wiston
in 1622 by his non-payment of the annuity of 1604.
The manor was granted by the Crown in 1622
to Lionel Cranfield, earl of Middlesex, (fn. 82) who
conveyed it in 1634 to John Tufton, earl of Thanet, (fn. 83)
who sold it in 1649 to John Fagg. (fn. 84) Fagg, a prominent parliamentarian soldier and administrator, was
pardoned and created a baronet in 1660, and sat as
M.P. for Steyning from that year until his death in
1701. (fn. 85) His son Sir Robert, M.P. for New Shoreham
and Steyning (d. 1715), was succeeded by a son
(d. 1736) and grandson (d. 1740) of the same
forename. The last-named Robert's sister and coheir Elizabeth married Sir Charles Matthew
Goring, Bt., of Highden (d. 1769), (fn. 86) whose son
Charles (d. 1829) was succeeded by his son Charles
(d. 1849), M.P. for New Shoreham. By the mid
19th century the Gorings owned most of the parish,
as well as large estates in other parishes, Charles's
brother and heir, the Revd. John Goring (d. 1905)
being the sixth largest landowner in the county in
1874. His son Charles (d. 1924) was succeeded,
also in the direct line, by Mr. John Goring, (fn. 87) who held
Wiston in 1978.
In 1357 there was a manor-house at Wiston,
built partly of stone and with a western gatehouse. (fn. 88)
The present house was begun c. 1575 (fn. 89) and completed in the 1620s; (fn. 90) building presumably ceased
between the late 1580s and 1622 when the Shirleys
were in straitened circumstances. The house was
built round a courtTreasurer
. (fn. 91) It was apparently axially
planned with the gatehouse (fn. 92) in the east range and
the screens passage in the centre of the west range;
the hall and other principal rooms were on the
north side of the passage and service rooms on the
south. The courtyard elevation of the hall range is
almost symmetrical about a projecting central
porch. It is similar in style to contemporary work
at Parham House and elsewhere, (fn. 93) the porch
having a frontispiece of superimposed orders, and
is notable for the great extent of the windows.
There was at least one other courtyard besides the
principal one in the 1630s, (fn. 94) when rooms included
a chapel and a long gallery 90 ft. long. (fn. 95) The former
dining-room in 1978 had decorative plasterwork
and panelling dated 1576. In the mid 17th century
the house was complemented by terraced gardens
to the north, and with its numerous gables and tall
chimneys had the appearance of a small town. (fn. 96)
In 1664 Sir John Fagg was assessed for 36 hearths
there. (fn. 97) A water supply was laid on c. 1630 from a
spring north-west of the house. (fn. 98)
In the mid 18th century the house was considerably reduced in size. (fn. 99) The east range was
demolished, leaving the courtyard open, the walls
of the courtyard were refaced, and a corridor was
added to the west side of the hall range. Externally
the new work was given mullioned windows in the
style of the late-16th-century house. Internally the
main alterations were in the hall, which was redecorated with Rococo plasterwork and a Gothic
overmantel. Plans for a major rebuilding made by
James Gibbs were however not carried out. (fn. 1) The
western and southern parts of the house were
remodelled c. 1840 to the designs of Edward Blore, (fn. 2)
who moved the kitchens into the eastern end of
the old south range and built a new south front,
behind which were the principal rooms of the
house. During the 19th century some rooms were
decorated with fittings brought from elsewhere,
for instance the west gallery with 18th-century
French boiseries, and the library with Flemish
Gothic and Baroque carvings. (fn. 3) In the 1930s the
house was let, (fn. 4) and since 1951 (fn. 5) it has been occupied
by the Foreign Office as a discussion centre.
Pieces of stonework from the Elizabethan and
Jacobean house are incorporated in the churchyard
walls and north gateway, and in a fountain commemorating the Diamond Jubilee of Queen Victoria
in the modern Wiston village. The Elizabethan
stone chimney-piece which stands against an
external wall at the back of the house was perhaps
originally in the great hall. (fn. 6) A long, low stone stable
block of the 16th century survives south of the
church. Other outbuildings, including an ornate
free-standing dovecot, are 19th-century. An 18thcentury keeper's lodge which also served as a park
ornament stands on the north side of the Steyning-Washington road, having been separated from the
park by the diversion of the road. It was converted
into a house before 1928. (fn. 7)
William de Braose held BUDDINGTON manor
in demesne in 1073, (fn. 8) and it continued to be so held
by his descendants until the early 13th century. (fn. 9)
About 1218 Reynold de Braose granted it to Henry
of St. Valery, a relation by marriage, who gave it
c. 1230 to Godstow abbey (Oxon.). The abbey's
estate was augmented c. 1260 by William Berneval, (fn. 10)
and in 1361 Buddington was described as 2 yardlands held of Bramber rape. (fn. 11) Ralph Shirley of
Wiston was farmer from 1484 until his death in
1510, when the lease passed to his younger son
Thomas, (fn. 12) who received a grant of the manor in
fee from the Crown in 1540. (fn. 13) At his death in 1544
it was held in chief as 1/20 fee. (fn. 14) His son Francis
enjoyed it as a minor from 1546. (fn. 15) At his death in
1578 it passed to his son Thomas (fn. 16) who conveyed
it to Sir Thomas Shirley of Wiston in 1584. (fn. 17)
From that date it descended with Wiston until
1649, when it was retained by Lord Thanet, who
had it in 1652. (fn. 18)
Thomas Badmering owned Buddington in 1684,
and perhaps already in 1654, (fn. 19) and was succeeded
at his death c. 1719 by his sisters Elizabeth (d. c.
1724) (fn. 20) and Anne (d. c. 1726) as joint owners. The
latter's heir Ann Chitty (fn. 21) and her husband Joseph
were dealing with it in 1727, (fn. 22) and apparently
conveyed it in 1732 to John Mellersh, (fn. 23) who
mortgaged it in the following year to Benjamin
Periam. In 1765 Periam's daughter Catherine
Bulstrode conveyed her rights in it to the Revd.
Edward Bourchier, (fn. 24) who sold it shortly afterwards (fn. 25)
to Richard Bourchier (d. c. 1771). Richard's son
Charles (fn. 26) sold it to Charles Goring in 1792, (fn. 27) since
when it has again descended with Wiston.
Buddington manor-house, a large building of
various materials, apparently of the 17th century,
was used as three cottages in 1932, but was
demolished after 1953. (fn. 28)
The manor of LYONS, which was also held of
Bramber rape, (fn. 29) belonged to Richard de Lyons c.
1262. (fn. 30) Henry de Lyons held it in 1296, (fn. 31) and
John de Lyons in 1361. (fn. 32) Lucy Lyons, perhaps
John's daughter, married Henry Tutbury, who
held it in 1401, and by 1452 it belonged to Bartholomew Bolney, (fn. 33) who still held lands in Wiston
in 1472. (fn. 34) By 1548 Francis Shirley of Buddington
was the owner, (fn. 35) and it was afterwards evidently
absorbed in that manor. (fn. 36) The site of the manor-house was presumably near Buddington, where a
place-name Lyons Bank was recorded in 1875. (fn. 37)
ECONOMIC HISTORY.
Ten villani and 24
bordars held land of Wiston manor in 1086, and
there was a demesne farm worked by 2 plough-teams and 5 servi. (fn. 38) Buddington manor was not
described in Domesday Book, but fixed rents of
tenants there were worth 18s. 7d. in 1210. (fn. 39) About
1300 Wiston manor had 53 tenants. Nine freeholders held estates of varying sizes, some lying
outside the parish. Nineteen villeins each paid 16d.
or 24d. rent a year besides goods in kind for a
'ferling' of land, apparently 7 a., and owed two
week works at harvest and one during the rest of the
year except at the greater festivals. They and another
tenant who owed half their services were known
collectively as the 19½ customers. Three other
villeins, called the three thrashers, paid no rent on
their half ferlings of land, but owed two weekworks all the year round except at the greater
festivals. Twenty-one other tenants, most of whom
were villeins, were quit of week-works but owed
varying services for holdings of between ½ a. and
16 a. (fn. 40) In the mid 14th century the demesne farm
comprised 127 a. of arable land, 7 a. of meadow,
and c. 130 a. of several pasture land outside the
two parks; (fn. 41) in addition to the agricultural services
of tenants, it was worked by regular servants
(famuli), including a shepherd, a harrowman, a
swineherd, and a dairywoman. (fn. 42) In 1371 it had a
herd of 65 cattle and a flock of more than 500 sheep. (fn. 43)
The number of tenants was greatly reduced by the
Black Death and two later plagues in 1361 and
1369. Nine villein holdings lay vacant in 1357, and
15, including those of the three thrashers, in 1374,
when the remaining 8 customers compounded for
some of their works. (fn. 44)
Crops mentioned in the Middle Ages were wheat,
barley, oats, rye, vetch, peas and beans, flax, and
apples. (fn. 45) The open-field arable of the parish lay
chiefly on the chalk and Greensand outcrops around
and to the south of the settlements of Wiston and
Buddington. Various fields and furlongs in which
the Wiston manor demesne farm held strips in the
late 14th century (fn. 46) presumably lay near Wiston
village, where there were closes called North field,
South field, and Middle Laine in 1622. (fn. 47) Other
fields and furlongs apparently part of Buddington
manor were mentioned in the mid 13th century. (fn. 48)
There was further arable land on the sandstone
ridge around Buncton, the detached part of Ashington parish that lay entirely within Wiston. The
chalk downs in the south part of the parish provided both common and several sheep-pasture;
the Wiston manor demesne farm had several
pasture there in 1293 (fn. 49) and 500 sheep-leazes in
1357, (fn. 50) and Lyons manor had 250 leazes there c.
1400. (fn. 51) There was also common meadow land
lying presumably along the streams in the central
part of the parish, including Hurstbrook mentioned
c. 1260, and possibly Laymeads, Normansmead,
and Broadmead mentioned c. 1300. (fn. 52) The clay
soil of the north part provided woodland swinepasture, not only for estates in Wiston, but also
for the manors of Annington (in Botolphs), and
Bidlington (in Bramber). (fn. 53) The woodland in the
same area belonging to estates in the neighbouring
parishes of Ashington and Ashurst, however, lay
within those parishes, which thus formed deep
salients into Wiston. Windsor Common on the
boundary with Ashurst in the north-east part of
the parish, (fn. 54) where common rights survived c.
1800, (fn. 55) and a meadow called Perry Mead which
lay in the same two parishes (fn. 56) were perhaps originally intercommonable between them. Assarting of
woodland for arable had probably begun by the
14th century; Woodman's farm in the extreme
north may commemorate a tenant of Wiston manor
of that date. (fn. 57) Other farms in the same area whose
names derive from personal names were also
presumably assarts, as were also Coombewick
farm, recorded in 1327, (fn. 58) and an estate called
Backreed, whose name indicates a clearing in
woodland. (fn. 59)
In the early 15th century the demesne farm of
Wiston manor had 146 a. of arable and 200 a. of
pasture. (fn. 60) There were 8 freehold tenants, and 20
copyhold tenants, the successors to the villeins of
the 14th century, held 32 tenements. Hardly any
labour services were still performed. (fn. 61) Former
villein tenements which had become tenantless
were farmed, usually for periods of years, (fn. 62) as they
had also been in the late 14th century. (fn. 63) Both free
and copyhold tenants paid heriots in kind, and one
copyholder in 1370 had surrendered her land to
another in exchange for an annuity. From at least
the early 16th century copyholds could be sublet. (fn. 64)
In 1555 13 copyhold tenants remained, while 18
other tenements, possibly former copyholds, were
leased. (fn. 65) Buddington manor still had c. 6 or 8 free
and copyhold tenants in the late 15th and early
16th centuries, some of whom held land in Shoreham. They paid a fine or relief on succession or
death besides heriots; copyholders could sublet
their holdings, but one tenant in 1521 forfeited his
land for cutting down trees without licence. (fn. 66) There
was still at least one copyhold tenant of Buddington
in 1587. (fn. 67) Licence was given for inclosing part of
one of the open fields of Wiston manor in 1428, (fn. 68)
but other fields remained uninclosed in 1466, when
pasture rights on the stubble between Martinmas
and Candlemas were allotted at the rate of 26
sheep-leazes a yardland. (fn. 69)
By 1622 (fn. 70) the south part of the parish had
largely been engrossed by the demesne farms of
Wiston and Buddington manors, which comprised
455 a. and c. 200 a. respectively. Both were leased,
the former being called Wiston Street farm. Only
one copyhold tenant of Wiston manor remained,
and all but one of the surviving freeholds of the
manor lay outside the parish. At the same date
Buddington manor no longer apparently had any
tenants. (fn. 71) Only the two demesne farms retained
pasture rights on the downs, Wiston Street farm
having 400 sheep-leazes and Buddington farm 289.
By the middle of the century the common down
seems already in practice to have been divided
between them, and the partition was made permanent in 1684, Wiston Street farm receiving 452 a.
and Buddington farm 155 a. (fn. 72) Meanwhile the open
fields to the west and south of Wiston village had
been entirely inclosed by 1639, becoming closes
mostly between 4 a. and 20 a. in area.
Many small farms of up to 70 a. are recorded in
the central and northern parts of the parish during
the 17th and 18th centuries. (fn. 73) Some were known as
copyholds, but since they were not listed as such
in 1622 they had presumably already been enfranchised. (fn. 74) Butcher's farm was mentioned as
Butcher's alias Piper's copyhold in 1614, and
Weppons farm as Wepham's copyhold at the same
date. Other farms in the same area as they existed
in the 19th century, for instance Abbott's, Guesses,
and Guessgate farms, had been formed by the
amalgamation of smaller ones. Fairoak farm was
recorded in 1634, (fn. 75) and Coombewick and Woodman's farms at the same period. In the 18th and
19th centuries those farms were gradually engrossed by the Goring family. Butcher's and
Abbott's farms were bought before 1800, and
Guessgate farm in 1832. About 1841 the Goring
estate included five farms, of which the two largest,
the Wiston home farm of 844 a. and Buddington
farm of 353 a., were kept in hand, the other three
each comprising between 120 a. and 165 a. At the
same date the estate of W. W. Richardson, the next
largest landowner, comprised four farms in the
north part of the parish, of which Fairoak farm
(225 a.) was the largest. Other farms of over 40 a.
which belonged to others included Guesses,
Weppons, and Coombewick farms. (fn. 76) Guesses and
Weppons were bought soon afterwards by the
Gorings, who also bought the Richardson estate,
which by then included Coombewick farm, in
1861. By the late 19th century nearly the whole
parish belonged to the Goring family, as it still did
in 1977. (fn. 77) There were c. 10 farms in the parish in
1881, (fn. 78) and c. 15 in the enlarged parish in 1938, (fn. 79)
but by 1977 the number had declined to six or
seven. (fn. 80)
There was a flock of 800 sheep at the Wiston
manor demesne farm in 1510, (fn. 81) and one of c. 400
at Buddington farm in 1791. (fn. 82) In the north part of
the parish during the same period, however, cattle
seem to have been more important, and probate
inventories of the 17th and 18th centuries record
few sheep. (fn. 83) Sir John Fagg (d. 1701) was breeding
bullocks for the London market on the Wiston
manor home farm in the 1690s. (fn. 84) In 1801 1,600
sheep and over 200 cattle were recorded in the
parish. (fn. 85) Wheat, barley, oats, peas, tares, (fn. 86) and
hops (fn. 87) were recorded in the 17th century, and flax
at the end of the 18th. (fn. 88) Turnips or rape had been
added by 1801. (fn. 89) During the late 18th century
Charles Goring (d. 1829) experimented with converting arable land into permanent pasture. (fn. 90) In
1849 ley farming was being practised on the Wiston
manor home farm, and clover was grown. (fn. 91) In the
late 19th century an annual sale of fatstock from
the Wiston estate was held at Steyning. (fn. 92) In 1977
the predominant type of agriculture was dairying,
with some cereals. (fn. 93)
A windmill belonging to Wiston manor was
recorded in 1293, (fn. 94) in 1357, (fn. 95) and in 1639. (fn. 96) Its
site is unknown, but was presumably not far from
the village. A mill which Roger Woodman held of
the manor c. 1300 had become too dilapidated to
be used by 1358. (fn. 97) It may have been the same as
the manorial mill; alternatively it may have been
identical with the one north of Woodman's farm in
the north part of the parish which was commemorated c. 1841 by the field name Windmill croft. (fn. 98)
A water-mill belonging to the manor was mentioned
in 1623; (fn. 99) its most likely site seems to be in the
south-east part of the parish, near the entrance to
Wiston park. (fn. 1)
A merchant dealing in unspecified merchandise
was recorded in the parish c. 1260, (fn. 2) and a wool
merchant c. 1330. (fn. 3) The only other tradesmen
mentioned in the Middle Ages besides carpenters (fn. 4)
and smiths (fn. 5) were a weaver and a 'ripier' or fishcarrier. In the poll-tax of 1378, however, 12 out of
54 parishioners were assessed at more than the
basic rate, suggesting a moderately wealthy community. (fn. 6) The abundant woodland of the parish
continued to provide employment in later centuries.
There was a woodbroker in 1724, (fn. 7) and the Richardson family of Hole Street were carpenters in the
18th and 19th centuries. (fn. 8) A joiner was recorded in
1679, (fn. 9) and two sawyers, three further carpenters,
a wheelwright, and a builder in the early 19th
century. (fn. 10) A blacksmith was recorded in 1649 and
1676, (fn. 11) perhaps on the site north of Buncton which
was occupied by a smithy between 1826 and the
early 20th century. (fn. 12) Weavers were also recorded
in the 17th and 18th centuries. (fn. 13) There had been a
fulling-mill in the north part of the parish in 1570, (fn. 14)
on a site commemorated c. 1841 by the field-name
Fulling Mill mead. (fn. 15) It was still active in 1602,
when it was leased to a shearman of West Tarring,
and it was mentioned again in 1637. (fn. 16) Other
trades occasionally recorded between the 16th and
18th centuries were those of brewer, (fn. 17) maltster,
glover, (fn. 18) and shoemaker. (fn. 19) In the early 19th
century between three and five families out of 40
or 50 were said to gain their livelihood from nonagricultural employment. (fn. 20) A potter was recorded
in 1812. (fn. 21)
By the mid 19th century the Wiston estate was
self-sufficient in basic skills, with its own brickyard, timber yard, and carpenter's shop. (fn. 22) The
proportion of parishioners who worked on the
estate increased; in 1905, when the village was
very much an estate village, they included a farm
bailiff, a clerk of works, a woodreeve, and a head
gamekeeper. (fn. 23) The estate was still the chief employer
in the parish in the 1970s; (fn. 24) in 1977, for instance,
eight men were employed there in forestry. (fn. 25) Other
tradesmen recorded in the late 19th and early 20th
centuries were a shopkeeper, a grocer, and a
thatcher. (fn. 26) In 1977 there was a general store and
post office.
LOCAL GOVERNMENT.
Tenants of Wiston
manor owed three-weekly suit of court in the early
14th century, and one forfeited an animal in 1310
for non-attendance. (fn. 27) By the late 14th century,
however, there were usually only two courts a year at
most. There are court rolls for various years
between 1357 and 1599. (fn. 28) During the early part of
that period pleas of debt, detinue, and trespass
were heard, (fn. 29) and in 1357 the manor had jurisdiction over stray beasts. (fn. 30) A covenant about a
farm of lands was enrolled at the court in 1436. (fn. 31)
During the 15th century, however, the amount of
business declined, only the repair of roads, hedges,
and ditches being afterwards dealt with for the most
part, besides changes in tenancies. Two by-laws
about common pasture-rights were enrolled in
1517. (fn. 32) Officers elected in the late 14th century
were a reeve and a harrower, (fn. 33) and a hayward was
mentioned in 1381. (fn. 34) A herdman was elected in
1517. (fn. 35) Courts were still held in the early 17th
century, (fn. 36) and the revised manor rental of 1664
was said to have been compiled at a court held in
that year. (fn. 37) Quit-rents and other payments in
connexion with the management of waste land were
received by a reeve in 1784, but after 1788 his
functions were performed by the gamekeeper. (fn. 38)
A court of Buddington manor was mentioned in
the late 14th century. (fn. 39) There are court rolls of
four courts held between 1489 and 1521, a bailiff
being mentioned in 1489. Changes of tenancy
formed the chief business dealt with at that period.
In 1521 two tenants were presented for not repairing their houses and others for cutting down
trees. (fn. 40)
Two churchwardens were recorded between
1560 and 1670; thereafter until modern times there
was usually only one. In the late 17th and early 18th
centuries he was often chosen by the incumbent
and on one occasion when there were two the incumbent and the parishioners each chose one. (fn. 41) There
were apparently usually two overseers in the 17th
and 18th centuries. (fn. 42) Two parishioners who were
perhaps waywardens were presented in 1650 for
non-repair of the roads, (fn. 43) and there were usually
two waywardens between 1678 and 1691. (fn. 44) After
1884 the waywarden, who in the mid 19th century
was often also churchwarden, had a salary of £5,
increased to £7 in 1886. (fn. 45)
In the 1640s the parish officers were ordered
by quarter sessions to pay weekly maintenance to
one pauper, and to pay a widow of Washington for
keeping another. (fn. 46) During the 18th century other
methods of relief included the provision of fuel,
clothes, food, and medical care, and the payment
of rent. (fn. 47) In 1789 Wiston parish was included in
Thakeham united parishes, which later became
Thakeham union. (fn. 48)
In 1834 the four or five labourers unemployed in
winter were supported by parish work, chiefly on
the roads. (fn. 49) A close called the Poor Men's Gardens
recorded in the extreme west of the parish c. 1835
may perhaps have been allotments. (fn. 50)
From 1894 the parish formed part of Thakeham
rural district, being transferred to Chanctonbury
rural district in 1933, (fn. 51) and Horsham district in
1974.
CHURCH.
There was a church at Wiston in
1086, (fn. 52) and rectors are recorded from c. 1230. (fn. 53)
Between 1946 and 1977 the living was held in
plurality with Ashington-with-Buncton. (fn. 54) In the
latter year it was united with Ashington-with-Buncton and Washington, the parishes remaining
distinct. (fn. 55)
The advowson of Wiston descended with the
manor from an early date, (fn. 56) the Crown presenting
during the minority of Roger de Bavent in 1300. (fn. 57)
Richard Shelley presented for a turn in 1515. (fn. 58)
When the manor was sold in 1649, the advowson
was retained by Lord Thanet, descending with his
successors in the earldom (fn. 59) until 1778 when it was
sold to Charles Goring. (fn. 60) The Committee for
Plundered Ministers had presented c. 1652, (fn. 61) and
the Crown by lapse in 1670. (fn. 62) Between 1778 and
1977 the advowson again descended with the
manor; (fn. 63) from the latter year the advowson of the
new benefice was to be exercised alternately by the
Goring family and the bishop of Chichester. (fn. 64)
The rectory was valued at 20 marks in 1291. (fn. 65)
A glebe house had been mentioned in 1262, (fn. 66)
and in 1341 the rector also had 14 a. of glebe land,
besides offerings and mortuaries worth £2 13s. 8d. (fn. 67)
In addition all the tithes of the parish belonged to
the rectory, except the demesne tithes of Buddington, which had been granted to Sele priory in
1073, (fn. 68) and which later passed to Magdalen College,
Oxford. (fn. 69) The living was said to be worth less than
12 marks in 1440, (fn. 70) but in 1535 was again valued
at 20 marks, though 1 mark was payable annually
to Magdalen College. (fn. 71) In 1570 the rector and the
patron leased the living for 100 years to Richard
Bellingham and his heirs, Bellingham undertaking
to pay the rector an annuity of £8, and to find and
maintain a curate. (fn. 72) The revenues of the living
were said in the early 17th century to be in the
possession of the patron or his assigns, (fn. 73) and the
incumbent in 1640 was described as vicar. (fn. 74) In
1653, when Lord Thanet himself was enjoying the
income, estimated at £120 a year, he agreed to
increase the incumbent's stipend to £40 and to
defray £50 to repair the glebe house, but the
incumbent was receiving only £8 or £10 in the
following year. (fn. 75)
By 1724 the rector again enjoyed the revenues,
apparently worth £48 a year. Only 1 a. of glebe
land remained, the rest of the 14 a. mentioned in
1341 having presumably been incorporated into
the Wiston manor estate. The glebe house, which
stood close to the church on the south-east, was
then still in good repair. (fn. 76) By 1801 it had become
ruinous, and a new building on the Steyning-Washington road ¾ mile north, of brick and Horsham stone, was erected by Charles Goring to
replace it. (fn. 77) About 1830 the average net income of
the living was £340. (fn. 78) At the commutation of
tithes nine years later the rector received £437 of
rent-charge, and Magdalen College £64. (fn. 79) In 1884
the net income of the benefice was £367. (fn. 80) The
new rectory house of 1801 was exchanged with the
Revd. J. Goring in 1899 for a piece of land further
west. (fn. 81) A third rectory house was built there c.
1906, (fn. 82) but was sold after the Second World War. (fn. 83)
The second rectory house was known during the
20th century as The Falconers. (fn. 84)
A chantry of St. Mary is recorded between 1357
and c. 1548, the priest, who was sometimes called
the lord's chaplain, receiving the income from
lands in Ashurst in the late 14th century, and
sometimes serving Buncton chapel too. (fn. 85)
Walter de Bedwind, instituted in 1300, held
Wiston as one of a number of livings. (fn. 86) At least
two other rectors before the Reformation were
apparently pluralists, George Shelley (1515-57)
holding Parham and Coombes, (fn. 87) but in 1440 the
rector was resident. (fn. 88) Three assistant curates are
recorded between 1539 and 1556, of whom one,
the former chantry-priest, received a stipend of £9. (fn. 89)
John Arnold, rector 1560-90, served through
curates after leasing the rectory in 1570, and was
living at Coombes in 1579. (fn. 90) For a time during
1586 there was no curate, and hence no services. (fn. 91)
Curates continued to serve in the early 17th century,
though the incumbent generally resided in 1640. (fn. 92)
Two Puritan ministers are recorded in the mid
17th century, the living remaining vacant for some
time after the second was ejected in 1662. (fn. 93)
Communion was celebrated three times a year
in 1724, and four times a year between 1746 and
1759. (fn. 94) Two Sunday services, one with a sermon,
were being held in the 1720s. (fn. 95) John Hart, instituted in 1731, was also master of Steyning
school. (fn. 96) Incumbents later in the 18th century
were often non-resident, probably because of the
ruinous condition of the glebe house; Edward
Tredcroft, for instance, rector 1778-96, appears
never to have officiated in person, the incumbents
of Washington and Bramber successively serving
as curates. (fn. 97) George Wells, rector 1796-1839, was
generally resident, though holding other benefices
after 1822, (fn. 98) and for a time kept a school for sons
of noblemen in the rectory. (fn. 99) His successor, W. J.
Trower, was later successively bishop of Glasgow
and of Gibraltar. (fn. 1) By 1844 communion was being
celebrated once a month, and by 1884 fortnightly.
In 1865 there were prayers and a sermon every
Sunday in both morning and afternoon. (fn. 2) Trower's
successor held the cure for 55 years from 1850. (fn. 3)
Meanwhile the northwards migration of population had made Wiston church remote for many
parishioners, who therefore attended Buncton
chapel, (fn. 4) and after 1872 burials were discontinued
at Wiston, except for members of the Goring
family. (fn. 5) After the union of benefices in 1977 a
group ministry was established, the incumbent
living at Ashington. (fn. 6) Services were then being held
twice a month at Buncton, but only infrequently
at Wiston. (fn. 7)
The church of St. Michael, of which the
dedication is recorded in 1327, (fn. 8) is built of rubble
and ashlar, and has a chancel with south chapel,
nave with south aisle, and west tower. The nave
is of the 13th century or earlier. The chancel was
rebuilt and the chapel, aisle, and tower added, in
the 14th century. Much of the church's present
appearance, however, is due to an extensive mid-19th-century restoration. The south chancel chapel
was called the chapel of Our Lady in the early
16th century, (fn. 9) and since it always belonged to the
lord of the manor was perhaps the chapel of the
chantry of the same dedication. Between the 17th
and 19th centuries it was generally in bad repair, (fn. 10)
and during the rebuilding of the house c. 1840 was
used as a lumber room. (fn. 11) The chancel was partly
rebuilt before 1844, (fn. 12) and the whole church
thoroughly restored in 1862. (fn. 13)
Monuments in the south chancel chapel include
a floor brass to Sir John de Braose (d. 1426), (fn. 14) a
possibly contemporary stone effigy of a child
within an ogee arch, and figures from destroyed
monuments to Sir Richard Shirley (d. 1540) and
Sir Thomas Shirley (d. 1612). (fn. 15) Both the lastnamed monuments existed in the late 18th century
and the former survived in 1852. (fn. 16) The Norman
font is square and of Sussex marble. Medieval wall
paintings discovered apparently in the 19th century
had been destroyed by 1900. (fn. 17) The screen under
the tower is of 1635. (fn. 18) There were three bells in
1724, of which only one was serviceable; (fn. 19) in 1745
they were replaced by a single bell. (fn. 20) The plate
includes a silver cup of 1726. (fn. 21) The registers begin
in 1638. (fn. 22)
NONCONFORMITY.
One recusant was recorded
in Wiston in 1587. (fn. 23)
The Fagg family, lords of the manor after 1649,
were dissenters. Sir John Fagg was sending two
of his sons to a dissenter's boarding school in
Steyning in the 1660s, and provided shelter for a
Presbyterian teacher, John Beaton, brother of one
of the Puritan ministers of Wiston. (fn. 24)
There was a small Quaker community in the
parish in the 1660s and 1670s, whose members
refused payment of church-rate and of tithes. It
held its own meetings and at least two burials were
made in the parish. The community ceased apparently soon after 1677, and certainly by 1724. (fn. 25)
EDUCATION.
The curate of Wiston was giving
lessons in 1579. (fn. 26) About 1800 there was a school
attended by c. 30 children in a building next to the
old rectory south-east of the church. (fn. 27) In 1818,
when it was being supported entirely by Charles
Goring, about 50 children attended on weekdays
and 58 on Sundays. (fn. 28) It continued to flourish
during the 1830s. (fn. 29) By 1844 a new building, with a
master's house, had been built further north, in
the chapelry of Buncton. (fn. 30) The new school, which
was leased by the year from the Gorings at a
peppercorn rent, was known as Wiston and Buncton
parochial school. (fn. 31) In 1847 it was said to be supported by subscriptions alone; a master and
mistress were paid £77 and £20 respectively.
Sixty-six children attended during the day, and 9
boys in the evening only, and 16 boys and girls on
Sundays only. (fn. 32) In 1871 labourers' children paid
no fees. (fn. 33) During the late 19th century the school
was often called the 'free school'. (fn. 34) It was receiving
a government grant by 1871. Average attendance
then was 81, (fn. 35) and in 1893 67. (fn. 36) Thereafter it fell,
to 51 in 1906, (fn. 37) 43 in 1932, and 36 in 1938. (fn. 38) The
school was closed soon afterwards, and in 1977 the
children of the parish went to school in Steyning
and Washington. (fn. 39)
CHARITY FOR THE POOR.
By a codicil to his
will proved 1712, John Dyne, an employee of the
Fagg family, devised his house and ¼ a. to be
managed by the Faggs and their successors as a
poor-house without interference from the parish
officers. (fn. 40) The site is unknown, unless it is indicated
by the wood west of Buncton chapel called Work-house copse. (fn. 41) In 1792, after Wiston parish had
been included in Thakeham united parishes, an
inmate of the poor-house was forced against his
will to send his daughter's bastard child to the
poor-house at Thakeham. (fn. 42)