MANORS AND OTHER ESTATES.
The
identifiable Domesday estates in the parish are
Broomfield, Blaxhold, and possibly Denesmodeswelle, while Heathcombe manor first occurs
in the later 12th century and Ivyton manor by
the later 13th.
BROOMFIELD was held by Alnod in 1066
and by William de Mohun in 1086. (fn. 45) It was
claimed as part of Dunster honor until 1777 or
later although in 1460 it was said to be held in
chief. (fn. 46) It was probably one of the fees held in
1166 of William de Mohun (d. 1176) by Gerbert
de Percy (d. 1179) in right of his wife Maud
Arundel, (fn. 47) and they were succeeded at Broomfield by one of their daughters Alice, wife of
Robert de Glastonia. (fn. 48) Alice's daughter Maud
married Roger de Newburgh (d. 1194) and held
the manor as a widow in John's reign, (fn. 49) and was
followed by her son Robert de Newburgh (d.
1246). In 1227 Robert gave the manor in fee to
his sister Margery, wife of William Belet, (fn. 50)
creating a mesne lordship in which he was
succeeded by his son Henry (d. 1271). William
de Montagu (d. 1270) appears to have acquired
it and was succeeded by his son Simon. (fn. 51) The
Montagu family, which held Kingslands and
Oggshole elsewhere in the parish, held the
mesne lordship until 1415 or later. (fn. 52)
The terre tenancy of Margery Belet passed on
her death (after 1241) to her son Robert (d. c.
1256). (fn. 53) Robert's son William granted it to John
de la Linde (d. 1272) who was succeeded by his
son Walter. (fn. 54) Walter held the manor in 1285 and
1316 but in 1303 it was said to be held by
William de Welle, Walter de la Linde's bailiff in
1279. (fn. 55) In 1330 Broomfield was said to be held
by Robert de Burgh and Walter de la Linde,
although the latter was dead. Robert was bailiff
of the manor in 1313 and the highest taxpayer
in 1327. (fn. 56)
Walter died c. 1317 leaving five daughters,
Joan, Cecily, Margery, Isabel, and Amice. (fn. 57)
Amice died in 1332 and in the same year Isabel,
then wife of Philip Parsafey, sold her quarter
share to John of Stoford and his wife Alice. (fn. 58) In
1344 the manor was held by Robert of Lydgate,
Herbert of Flinton, husband of Cecily de la
Linde, John of Stoford, and Robert Dallingrigge, probably an error for Roger, son of Joan
de la Linde by her husband John. (fn. 59) By 1346
Roger Dallingrigge held the whole manor. (fn. 60) By
1350 John Biccombe held the manor, and Broomfield descended with Crowcombe Biccombe manor,
which John had acquired by his marriage with
Iseult of Crowcombe, (fn. 61) until the death of Hugh
Biccombe in 1568 when, under a settlement of
1556, Broomfield passed to Hugh's daughter
Maud, wife of Hugh Smythe (d. 1581). (fn. 62) Maud
probably predeceased her husband, and the heir
on his death was their daughter Elizabeth, wife
of Edward Morgan. (fn. 63) Elizabeth was probably
dead by 1596 when Edward (d. 1633) settled the
estate on their son William for his marriage.
William settled it on his eldest son Edward in
1611 and in 1633 on his second son Henry.
William died in 1634 (fn. 64) and a month later his
eldest son Edward, with Henry and William
Morgan, sold Broomfield manor to Walter
Granger probably on behalf of Andrew Crosse
and William Towill. William Towill the elder
died in 1649, and in 1653 his son William and
Andrew Crosse and his wife Mary made a
partition of the manor. (fn. 65)
One half of the manor, later the FYNE
COURT estate, descended in the Crosse family
in the direct male line from Andrew (d. 1689) to
Andrew (d. 1705), Richard (d. 1716), Richard
(d. 1766), Richard (d. 1800), Andrew (d. 1855),
the scientist, (fn. 66) and John. John took his mother's
name of Hamilton and died in 1880 leaving a
widow Susan (d. 1916), on whom the estate had
been settled. Her grandson John Hamilton sold
the estate in 1952 to F. J. C. Adams but there
is no record of a sale of lordship. In 1972 the
estate was acquired by the National Trust under
an earlier agreement with Adams. (fn. 67)
Fyne Court was built by the Crosse family
probably in the late 17th century. It had a main
eastern elevation of seven bays, with the central
bays recessed, and a secondary elevation of seven
bays to the south. The south front was extended
westwards by five bays when a music room was
added. The room was rebuilt in 1849. Outbuildings and stables to the north and west of the
house enclosed a court by the 19th century. The
outbuildings, music room, and library, remnants
of a stone building, survived a fire which destroyed most of the house in 1894. (fn. 68) The
gardens, north and west of the house, are probably of the 18th century. (fn. 69) They are mostly
wooded but include a walled kitchen garden and,
along part of the western border, a small serpentine lake with a boathouse and adjacent castle-like
summerhouse.
After the partition of 1653 William Towill sold
parts of the estate, including the capital messuage, to members of his own family. (fn. 70) Among
them was the former leasehold farm known as
Hollams and Lakes which by 1799 had been
acquired by Thomas Mullins (d. 1811) and had
become part of the Halswell estate in 1813.
Mullins probably built the house known as Rose
Hill by 1810. (fn. 71) It comprises two storeys with
attics and its main front is of three bays with a
central, pedimented porch. What remained of
the Towill share of the manor was sold in 1659
to Hugh Halswell of Goathurst and descended
like Halswell manor. (fn. 72)
In 1508 Lydeard Farm, the name recorded in
1327, was described as a capital messuage. (fn. 73) At
the partition in 1653 it passed to William Towill,
and remained with a younger branch of the
family until the 1720s. (fn. 74) In 1734 it was owned
by Ann Crosse, and by 1750 by her son Andrew,
and descended with the Crosse estate. (fn. 75) The cob
house may have a medieval core but was rebuilt
in the 17th century when a carved staircase was
installed. The house was greatly altered in the
19th and 20th centuries. (fn. 76)
IVYTON manor was held of Broomfield
manor in 1283 and continued to be so held until
1790 or later, although suit and rent had probably been unpaid for many years and it was not
recorded as a manor after 1662. (fn. 77) Ivyton was
held by Hugh de la Tour (d. 1283), possibly in
succession to his brother Henry (d. by 1280). (fn. 78)
Hugh's son Thomas was succeeded by his son
Hugh who died c. 1321 leaving a son William. (fn. 79)
William died in 1349 leaving a daughter Alice,
wife of John Roche. Alice was dead by 1375 but
had had a child. (fn. 80) That child may have been
Isabel, wife of John Haddecombe, who released
her claim to Ivyton to John Roche in 1375 and
again in 1390. (fn. 81) Later in 1390 Roche gave Ivyton
to John Luttrell who in 1392 assigned the rents
to John Haddecombe and his wife Isabel for her
life, and granted the estate in 1394 to Joan,
Roche's second wife, by then married to Thomas
Trowe of Plainsfield. In 1404 Richard Roche,
son of John, quitclaimed Ivyton to Joan's
feoffees. (fn. 82) In 1429 John Luttrell gave the reversion after Joan's death to his kinsman Richard
Luttrell; Joan was dead by 1439 when Richard
took possession. (fn. 83) Ivyton then descended with
Over Vexford in Stogumber until 1570 when the
manor was sold to William Lovel. (fn. 84)
William Lovel (d. 1590) was succeeded by his
son John who conveyed Ivyton to James Clarke,
his sister Emmot's husband, c. 1596. (fn. 85) Emmot's
sons John, James, and Thomas Clarke sold it in
1611 (fn. 86) to Sir Bartholomew Michell (d. 1616)
who was followed by his daughters Jane, wife of
William Hockmore, and Frances, wife of Alexander
Popham. (fn. 87) In 1635 Frances released Ivyton to
Gregory Hockmore. (fn. 88) Between 1647 and 1662
Hockmore divided and sold the estate. Nicholas
Brown bought the capital messuage but forfeited
it under a mortgage to Dr. Thomas Dyke who
had purchased the lordship and remaining lands
from Hockmore in 1662. Dyke also bought some
of the other Ivyton lands and his widow Joan
purchased more in 1698. (fn. 89) Most of Ivyton passed
on Dyke's death in 1689 to his kinsman Thomas
Deane or Dyke of Tetton in Kingston St.
Mary. (fn. 90) The rest went to another kinsman Edward Dyke (d. 1728). In 1721 Thomas married
Edward's daughter Mary and their only child
Elizabeth inherited the shares of both her father
and an uncle, Edward Dyke (d. 1746). (fn. 91) Elizabeth, who married Sir Thomas Acland, died in
1753 and was succeeded by her son John Dyke
Acland (d. 1778). John's widow Harriet (or
Harriot) held the estate until her death in 1815
when it passed to her son-in-law Henry Herbert,
2nd earl of Carnarvon, formerly husband of
Harriet's daughter Elizabeth Kitty (d. 1813).
Henry was succeeded by his son also Henry, the
3rd earl (d. 1849). (fn. 92) Alan Herbert (d. 1907), a
younger son of the 3rd earl, left Ivyton to his
nephew Mervyn (d. 1929), a younger son of the
4th earl, and Mervyn's son, Mervyn, was the
owner in 1988. (fn. 93)
A capital messuage was recorded probably
early in the 16th century and in 1677. (fn. 94) Ivyton
Farm, with a garden front of three bays and a
rear service wing, dates from the early 18th
century.
RASWELL, formerly Rawleshill or Rawshill, (fn. 95) was a freehold of Broomfield manor. It
belonged to John Towill or at Well in 1507-8. (fn. 96)
John (d. 1535) was followed by his son William
(d. 1591) and grandson Edward Towill (d.
1647). (fn. 97) Edward was succeeded by his son William (d. 1649) who left it to his wife Mary for
life. Mary died in 1677 (fn. 98) and was followed by
William Towill (d. 1685), probably her grandson. William's son, also William, and his wife
Margaret sold Raswell to Thomas Dyke in 1697
but took a lease of the premises which the Towill
family occupied until c. 1740. (fn. 99) Raswell descended in the Dyke family with Ivyton. (fn. 1)
Raswell farmhouse, which is rendered apparently over rubble, probably dates from the 16th
century and has a roof of jointed-cruck construction with a framed ceiling in the hall. The threeroom cross-passage plan house was extended in
the 17th century by the addition of a rear north
wing and an eastern room, probably a kitchen,
with a jettied first floor. (fn. 2)
In 1066 BLAXHOLD was held by Leofric and
in 1086 by Geoffrey of Roger de Courcelles. (fn. 3) A
separate manor until 1451 or later, it descended
with Enmore manor and by the late 17th century
had become a leasehold of Enmore manor. (fn. 4) The
tenant, Jasper Porter, seems to have acquired the
farm by 1744 and left it to his daughter Susanna
(d. 1805), wife of Richard Crosse. (fn. 5) Susanna left
it to her second son Richard, who died childless,
and it passed on his death to his elder brother
Andrew Crosse. Andrew sold Blaxhold in 1853
to Meshach Brittan of Bristol, from whom it
passed to his sons William and Charles. They
conveyed the estate in 1870 to Thomas Palfrey
Broadmead and it descended with the Enmore
Castle estate. (fn. 6)
There was a house on the farm in 1637 with
wainscotted hall and parlour. (fn. 7) The capital messuage in 1810 was Lower Blaxhold House, in
Enmore parish. (fn. 8) Hill House, built at Blaxhold
before 1819 by Richard Crosse in the form of a
double cube, appears to have been demolished
by 1890. (fn. 9)
In 1086 DENESMODESWELLE was held of
Alfred d'Epaignes; formerly it had been part of
the royal manor of Somerton. (fn. 10) It is thought to
have been the estate called Denman's or Deadman's Well, possibly from the personal name
Denman recorded in the parish in the early 15th
century, (fn. 11) but that estate can be traced only from
1649, when it was left by Thomas Collard to his
wife Frances. (fn. 12) It was held with an adjoining
farm called Heathcombe by the Thorne family
until after 1761 (fn. 13) and passed from Margaret
Jeanes (d. 1769) to her nephew Lancelot St.
Albyn. (fn. 14) It descended with Alfoxton in Stringston until c. 1910 when it became part of the
Halswell estate. (fn. 15) The site of the farm was later
abandoned.
HEATHCOMBE, described in 1284-5 as ¼
fee and from 1359 as a manor, (fn. 16) was shared in
1211 between Hilary wife of Nicholas Avenel,
Joan wife of Henry Furneaux, and Lettice wife
of John son of Gerard of Earnshill, (fn. 17) the three
daughters of Robert son of William (d. c. 1185-
6). With Robert's manor of Kilve the estate was
held of Compton Dundon manor until 1510 or
later, (fn. 18) and descended in the Furneaux family
and their descendants with Perry Furneaux in
Wembdon until c. 1485. (fn. 19) It then passed to the
Stawell family with Merridge in Spaxton (fn. 20) and
was one of the estates confiscated from Sir John
Stawell during the Interregnum and sold to
Edward Jenkins in 1652. (fn. 21) It was recovered at
the Restoration, but was sold in 1698 to Francis
Bennet who dismembered the holding. The
lordship was not recorded thereafter. (fn. 22)
William de Say was a tenant on the estate in
the later 12th century (fn. 23) and was succeeded before 1211 by his sister Emme, wife of Roger
Reimes. She died without issue before 1227. (fn. 24)
That holding may have been the capital messuage and lands on the estate known as the farm
of Heathcombe, which Matthew Furneaux
granted to William of Sutton, heir of Hugh of
Heathcombe, c. 1251, and William conveyed to
William Malet of Enmore. From William Malet
the estate passed to his son, also William, and
the latter's widow Mary gave it to Raymond
Malet and his wife Millicent. (fn. 25) Raymond's greatnephew Baldwin Malet settled it on Raymond
and his then wife Joan c. 1306 (fn. 26) but the holding,
which came to be known as HEATHCOMBE
manor, reverted to the main line of the Malets
and descended as a holding in fee of the main
manor until 1603 or later. (fn. 27) In 1602 John Malet
sold to John Colford (d. 1622) most of the
Heathcombe land, which was included in the
later Willoughby's and Wood farms. (fn. 28)
Buckland priory appropriated the church before 1334, (fn. 29) and in 1539 the rectory estate,
comprising the tithes of the parish and some
glebe, passed to the Crown. It was granted in
1549 to Silvester Taverner, (fn. 30) from whom it had
passed by 1557 to Humphrey Colles. Colles
conveyed it to William Towill. (fn. 31) The RECTORY descended with Raswell until 1675,
when it was settled on Jeffrey Towill, a younger
son. (fn. 32) He died without issue in 1683 and by 1691
it was owned by Matthew Baron, later mayor of
Wells. (fn. 33) He or another Matthew Baron held it
until 1750, (fn. 34) and was succeeded by John Moss,
who was in possession until 1784. (fn. 35) Richard
Crosse of Fyne Court probably owned it by
1786, and it remained in the Crosse and Hamilton families. (fn. 36) Between the 1820s and 1840s it
was held by John Hamilton, possibly in trust for
Andrew Crosse's first wife Mary Hamilton and
her children. The tithes were commuted for a
rent charge of £379 in 1838. (fn. 37) In 1619 the glebe
consisted of two gardens and 6 a. of land. By
1838 there were nearly 30 a. of glebe, (fn. 38) which
were later absorbed into the Fyne Court estate.
A house on the rectory was mentioned in 1557
and 1619. (fn. 39) It was known in the 19th century as
Parsonage Farm, or Old Parsonage, and was
occupied by the lay rector in 1754. (fn. 40) Known by
the end of the 19th century as the Cottage (fn. 41) and
later as Fyne Court Cottage, it stands behind a
small green north-west of the church. The
house, which dates from the 17th century, was
in 1988 occupied as two dwellings.
Buckland priory had at least three tenements
in the parish attached to their manor of North
Petherton. (fn. 42) The tenements were known as
BUNCOMBE, and perhaps also included Holwell. (fn. 43) In 1544 the Crown granted the reversion
to Sir John Fulford and Humphrey Colles and
licensed alienation to Thomas Hill. (fn. 44) Hill was
succeeded by his son George. (fn. 45) Some or all of
the land passed to the Slape family and has not
been traced after 1604. (fn. 46)
An estate described in the 16th century as
HOLWELL manor and perhaps before 1539
owned by Buckland priory came into the possession of Thomas Hill (d. 1565), and he sold
part of it to Edward Jenkins (d. c. 1572). (fn. 47)
Andrew Jenkins (d. 1593) held other land of
George Hill, Thomas's son. (fn. 48) By the 17th century three separate holdings at Holwell may have
derived from Hill's estate. One, later known as
Nether, Lower, or Middle Holwell, was assigned
in 1602 by John Malet and his wife Mary to John
Colford, in succession to John Jenkins. (fn. 49) The
Colfords, who are said to have held the land in
chief by knight service, remained in possession
until the later 17th century, but by 1710 had sold
to George Buller. (fn. 50) George's great-nephew, also
George Buller, sold it in 1789 to John Barrell,
and John's son, also John, in 1857 conveyed it
to the Revd. Henry Codrington. Henry conveyed it to trustees. (fn. 51)
A second holding, known as Great or Higher
Holwell, descended with Enmore manor in the
late 17th century (fn. 52) but in 1743 was purchased
by William Duddlestone Skinner. Twelve years
later Skinner sold to John Perceval, earl of
Egmont (d. 1770), and until 1835 Holwell remained part of the Enmore Castle estate. John
Jeffereys bought it in that year. (fn. 53)
A third holding, later known as North or Little
Holwell or Diddicks Down, passed from the
Malets to Charles White on his marriage to Jane
Malet in 1655, but later in the century it was
held by the Thorne family. (fn. 54) Roger Thorne sold
it to John Perceval, earl of Egmont (d. 1770), c.
1761, but by 1838 it had been acquired by John
Jeffereys. (fn. 55)
Jeffereys, a nabob from Hertfordshire, died c.
1852 and his whole estate passed to his illegitimate children John and Mary. (fn. 56) They acquired
Great and Little Holwell direct and Lower
Holwell through trustees. John was dead by
1861 and his widow Anne in 1879, leaving
Holwell in trust for Mary for life. She died in
1900 and her surviving trustee sold Great and
Little Holwell to William Broadmead of Enmore
Castle. (fn. 57)
A house at Lower Holwell had seven hearths
in 1664 but the site was abandoned probably in
the 1870s. (fn. 58) A house attached to Little Holwell
was in Spaxton parish. Great Holwell house was
built between 1841 and 1851 but had probably
been demolished by 1881. (fn. 59) Great Holwell farm
dates probably from the early 17th century and
has a main range of three rooms, of which the
easternmost, the kitchen, is beneath a lower roof;
the parlour wing is at the west end. The principal rooms retain intersecting ceiling beams with
heavy chamfers.
CASTLE, later ROOKS CASTLE, was a
Crown estate associated with Somerton manor. (fn. 60)
Its tenants, nominally copyholders, claimed in
the 17th century to hold in fee simple, and
Crown ownership ceased to be recorded after
1662. (fn. 61) Tenants in the 13th and 14th centuries
may have been members of the Rok family, but
by 1403 the estate was held by Richard, son and
heir of John atte Castell. (fn. 62) Richard atte Castell
(d. c. 1467) was succeeded by his son Richard
(d. 1476). Richard's widow Edith and her son
Robert were followed by John atte Castell (d. c.
1529), and by his son John. Robert atte Castell
(d. c. 1617) was succeeded by his son Thomas,
perhaps the Thomas Acastle who sold Rooks
Castle probably in trust for Philip Yard. Philip
and mortgagees sold it to John Tynte in 1662 in
trust for Hugh Halswell. (fn. 63) Rooks Castle descended as part of the Halswell estate, to which
was added by 1764 a neighbouring holding
known as Rooks Castle or Steven's Place
which had belonged to the Bragge family in
the 17th and early 18th century. (fn. 64) Rooks
Castle farmhouse was built on the site of
Steven's Place in 1893. (fn. 65)
Part of the Rooks Castle estate was sold,
probably in the later 17th century, and was
known as BINFORDS by 1662. (fn. 66) It was owned
by the Catford family until 1700, and later by
the Paynes and the Jeanes. Charles Tynte
bought the estate from the Revd. Thomas Coney
and his wife Elizabeth Jeane in 1811, and it
descended like Rooks Castle. (fn. 67)
Binfords house was built before 1662. (fn. 68) There
were fishponds near it in 1700, and by 1791 it
was an 'elegant seat' surrounded by pleasure
grounds, and later a 'desirable place for retirement'. (fn. 69) Occupied by labourers in 1881, it was
later abandoned and was in ruins by 1959. (fn. 70) The
house had a main front of seven bays with a
central, two-storeyed porch. (fn. 71)
KINGSLANDS formed part of Thurlbear
manor in 1320 (fn. 72) and descended with the earldom
of Salisbury until the death of Edward Plantagenet in 1484. He was succeeded by Cecily
Bonville, Baroness Harrington and Bonville (d.
1529), granddaughter of Richard Neville, earl of
Salisbury (d. 1460), and wife in turn of Thomas
Grey, marquess of Dorset (d. 1501), and Henry
Stafford, earl of Wiltshire (d. 1523). Her son
Thomas Grey, marquess of Dorset (d. 1530),
was succeeded by his son Henry (cr. duke of
Suffolk 1551, d. 1554). Following Suffolk's attainder Thurlbear was granted to William
Howard, Baron Howard of Effingham (d. 1573),
who in 1556 conveyed it to Sir William and
Henry Portman. (fn. 73) In 1557 Henry Portman sold
the Broomfield lands to Nicholas Halswell and
his son Robert. (fn. 74) The land was held by the
Halswells until c. 1638 and from then until after
1751 with Clavelshay in North Petherton. (fn. 75) It
later reverted to the Halswell estate by being
absorbed into Hatcombe farm, a holding which
Nicholas Halswell had acquired from John Stawell in 1560. (fn. 76)
MILCOMBE or MELCOMBE STREAM
formed part of the manor of Creech in 1558
when it was sold to John Pyleman the tenant,
and was held of Creech until 1592 or later, but
in 1691 it was said to be held of the queen in
chief. Richard Pyleman, John's son, conveyed
half the estate, called Helliers Place, to his
brother Thomas and in 1574 sold the rest,
including the Cross House, to Richard Kebby.
Kebby died in 1586 leaving his share to his son
Giles (d. c. 1595). (fn. 77) Thomas Pyleman died in
1575 leaving an infant son Eleazer. In 1612
Eleazer sold his share to Robert Kebby, son of
Giles, and Giles sold to his brother Hugh in
1614 and 1616. (fn. 78) Hugh Kebby (d. 1645) was
succeeded by his son Hugh (d. 1658) and his
grandson Hugh Kebby (d. c. 1675). In 1676 the
last Hugh's daughter Mary and sister Jane conveyed Helliers Place and the Cross House and
their lands to Sir Halswell Tynte. (fn. 79) The Melcombe Stream land formed Stream farm on the
Halswell estate by 1797. (fn. 80)
OGGSHOLE was held by William de Montagu
in 1212 of the Crown as a member of Somerton, (fn. 81) and was so held by successive earls of
Salisbury until 1409 or later. (fn. 82) The land was in
part subinfeudated to Richard Fromond, as heir
to his father Robert and grandmother Margery. (fn. 83)
Richard was alive c. 1285 but his estate had
passed to John Gyan by 1316 and to Robert
Gyan by 1344. (fn. 84) In 1397 Robert Tilley was
holding Oggshole and he remained in possession
in 1409. (fn. 85) In 1540 it belonged to William Hody
as son and heir of Richard (d. 1536). William
sold Oggshole to Nicholas Halswell in 1556 and
1558 and it descended with the Halswell estate. (fn. 86)
Oggshole farmhouse was rebuilt in 1868. (fn. 87)
Athelney abbey owned land at Oggshole by
grant of King Henry II and John of Erleigh in
the 12th century. (fn. 88) The land descended after the
Dissolution with Clavelshay in North Petherton. (fn. 89)
William son of Walter and Engelois, William
Fichet, and King John made grants of land at
KINGSHILL, once part of the Fichets' manor
of Merridge, to Taunton priory in the early 13th
century. (fn. 90) By 1275 the priory also had a small
tenement in Melcombe with common pasture at
Oggshole. (fn. 91) In 1544 the Crown granted the
Kingshill land and perhaps the rest to William
Portman and Alexander Popham. (fn. 92) Kingshill
formed part of an exchange between Nicholas
Halswell and John Stawell in 1560, and on the
break-up of the Stawell estate in the late 17th
century passed to the Thorne family. (fn. 93) Priors,
East, or Great Down, possibly also once part of
the priory estate, (fn. 94) were acquired with Kingshill
c. 1798 by John Ryall (d. c. 1813), and John
Hamilton bought them before 1882 from John
Ryall Mayo, adding them to the Fyne Court
estate. (fn. 95)