MANOR AND OTHER ESTATES.
Athelney
abbey seems to have acquired its estate in Lyng
through two grants. King Alfred presumably
gave the 'island' site when he founded the abbey
c. 888. (fn. 99) A mansio called Relengen, identified
with the later manor of LYNG or WEST
LYNG, (fn. 1) was granted in 937 by King Athelstan
in free alms in return for the prayers of the
community for Alfred's soul. (fn. 2) In the 12th century the abbot was said to hold his lands in
return for prayers for the then king, (fn. 3) and in
1485-6 to hold in free alms. (fn. 4)
The estate passed to the Crown on the surrender of the abbey in 1539 and it was later divided,
the site of the monastery and its demesnes
forming one holding. (fn. 5) The remainder, described
as the manor and capital messuage, together with
some woodland, were in 1544 granted to (Sir)
John Leigh, the king's servant. (fn. 6) Leigh (d. c.
1563) (fn. 7) settled the manor on his nephew also John
who died in 1576. (fn. 8) A claim by Sir John's
daughter Agnes, wife of Edward FitzGarrett, (fn. 9)
was evidently defeated, since John Leigh's
widow Margery, who was still alive in 1612, held
Lyng as jointure. (fn. 10) The manor was presumably
let by Margery Leigh, since by 1598 the manor
court was held in the names of John Pyne, (Sir)
Jasper, Robert, and Geoffrey Moore, sons of
Thomas Moore of Taunton, and Lancelot St.
Albyn. (fn. 11) In 1602 only Pyne and St. Albyn were
described as lords, from 1604 to 1608 only the
three Moores. (fn. 12) Robert and Geoffrey Moore
were lords in 1609, and between 1611 and 1615 (fn. 13)
Thomas Moore of Heytesbury (Wilts.). Thomas
died c. 1627 (fn. 14) and was succeeded at Lyng by two
sons, Thomas and Francis Moore. (fn. 15) Thomas was
lord in 1651. (fn. 16)
Meanwhile John Leigh (d. 1576) was followed
by his son Sir John (d. 1612) and by his grandson
Thomas (d. 1640). (fn. 17) Thomas's son Philip succeeded as a minor, and he was followed by his
son Edward, on whom the manor was settled in
1659. (fn. 18) In 1697 Edward, of Testwood in Eling
(Hants), sold the heavily mortgaged (fn. 19) manor,
amounting to nearly 1,000 a. of land including
tenements attached to the former abbey holdings
in Burrow, Langport, and North Petherton, to
William Harrison of North Petherton. (fn. 20)
Harrison died in 1740 leaving the manor in trust
for his sister and then for three nieces, but it
seems likely that much of the land had already
been sold. (fn. 21) No further reference to the manor
has been found until 1861 when Richard Gatcombe of North Petherton held the lordship. He
held it until 1875 or later, but by 1883 and until
1923 Clifford Symes of Bridgwater was described as lord. (fn. 22)
In 1697 Edward Leigh sold to Sir Thomas
Wroth of Petherton Park a holding described as
the court leet and view of frankpledge and
royalty of the manor, together with chief rents,
fee farm rents, and the former farm of Lyng
Court. (fn. 23) Sir Thomas died in 1721 leaving the
whole estate to be shared by his two daughters
Cecily and Elizabeth. In 1723 Lyng was awarded
on partition to Elizabeth, and to her husband
Thomas Palmer of Fairfield in Stogursey. (fn. 24)
Elizabeth died in 1738, (fn. 25) leaving her father's
estate in trust to her brother-in-law Peregrine
Palmer, first to carry out the terms of her will
and then successively for the benefit of her
kinswoman Anne and of Anne's daughter
Elizabeth. Anne, who married first William
Oxenham of Newhouse (Devon) and then Wadham Wyndham of Fyfield (Wilts.), died in 1748.
In 1752 her daughter Elizabeth Oxenham married Arthur Acland (d. 1771). (fn. 26) Their son (Sir)
John Palmer Acland succeeded on Elizabeth's
death in 1806. (fn. 27)
Acland died in 1831 and his trustees sold the
court leet and Lyng Court farm to Anna Gatcombe (d. 1847). (fn. 28) Anna left the property in trust
for Mary, wife of Thomas Mullins of
Goathurst. (fn. 29) Their son, also Thomas, of Weston
super Mare, was dead by 1903, and Lyng Court
and other farms in Lyng and Durston passed to
his widow Lucie Margaret, of Minehead. She
sold Lyng Court in 1911 to her tenant Richard
Gatcombe Turner (d. 1930). The farm then
descended successively to Turner's son James
Gadd Turner (d. 1954) and his grandson
Richard John Dunning Turner (d. 1972). In
1985 it was owned by Anne, daughter of the last
and wife of Mr. R. Lloyd Jones. (fn. 30)
The capital messuage, known as the Court by
1529, (fn. 31) was rebuilt in 1808. (fn. 32) It is of brick, with
two storeys and attics over cellars. To the rear
is a contemporary smoking house. North-east
of the house is a large barn, its west porch entry
and wide-splayed stone-framed openings indicating a late-medieval origin. The idea that
there was a chapel on the farm (fn. 33) was probably
inspired by the surviving medieval fragments.
John Tuchet, Lord Audley (d. 1557), who
seems to have contemplated living at Athelney
abbey while at least part of the community
remained, was given temporary charge of the
abbey by the king's visitors on its surrender in
1539. (fn. 34) He still held the site and demesne at farm
in August 1544, but from March in that year
what was later called ATHELNEY farm was
held in fee by John Clayton or Clutton, (fn. 35) who
shortly afterwards had licence to alienate them
to John Tynbery or Tymbury. (fn. 36) Clutton died
later in that year and was succeeded by his
brother David, of Westminster. (fn. 37) David sold the
estate to Tynbery in 1545, the price including a
sum to discharge all leases granted by Lord
Audley. (fn. 38) Tynbery died in possession of the site
and a fishery in 1553. (fn. 39) His son and heir Henry
died in 1567 still under age. Henry was followed
by his brother William, who took possession in
1573. (fn. 40) Before 1610 William and his wife conveyed the holding to Simon Court, and in that
year Simon and Edward Court were in possession. (fn. 41) Edward died in 1619 leaving a son, Simon,
a minor. (fn. 42) Simon took possession in 1635 and
was followed by his son Thomas, of Shepton
Mallet, by 1664. The estate, then called Athelney farm, was sold in the following year to John
Hucker, a Taunton merchant. (fn. 43) Hucker was
executed in 1685 for his support for the duke of
Monmouth, and his land was forfeit to the
Crown. (fn. 44) A Treasury warrant for a grant to be
made to John Churchill, Baron Churchill, later
Duke of Marlborough (d. 1722), (fn. 45) was evidently
frustrated by the previous creation of a trust in
favour of Hucker's son Robert, (fn. 46) himself a Monmouth supporter. (fn. 47) Robert Hucker was in
possession in 1692 and sold the farm in 1698 to
Thomas Burge of Long Sutton. Burge mortgaged it in 1706 to Richard Brodrepp of South
Mapperton (Dors.) and failed to repay the loan,
but he remained in occupation until his death in
1713. He was succeeded as tenant by his son
John (d. 1715) and by John's only child Mary,
wife of Lawrence Brome. John Evered of Bridgwater bought the farm from Brodrepp's heirs in
1739. (fn. 48) Evered died in 1785 (fn. 49) and his eventual
heir was his daughter Jane, wife of the Revd.
Francis Crane Parsons of Yeovil. In 1791 Parsons sold the farm to John Slade of North
Petherton. The farm descended in the Slade
family until 1863 when it was sold, apparently
to the Barrett family of Moredon in North
Curry; (fn. 50) it was sold again in 1918 to the tenant. (fn. 51)
The descent has not been traced further.
No remains of the abbey buildings survive
above ground. Parts remained standing in 1674
and the ruins of a chapel still existed until c.
1770. The present farmhouse was built in the
later 18th century. (fn. 52)
In the 16th century the RECTORY comprised
tithes and casual cash payments, and until the
Dissolution belonged to Athelney abbey. (fn. 53) It was
leased by the Crown to Thomas Ansell in 1546 (fn. 54)
and was sold to Sir Christopher Hatton in
1579. (fn. 55) Before 1596 it had passed to Sir Nicholas
Halswell, who leased it to William Goble (d.
1626), of Bridgwater. (fn. 56) The descent of the rectory thereafter is uncertain until 1676, although
in 1662 the patronage was exercised by Henry
and John Stallington and in 1669 by John Ellis
and John Stallington, possibly heirs of Goble.
Richard Jeane and Alexander Atkins presented
in 1675, (fn. 57) and in the following year the rectory
and advowson were sold by Benjamin Hart of
Bridgwater to Alexander Atkins. Alexander,
son and heir of the last, conveyed it in 1688 to
his mother Margaret (fn. 58) although his younger
brother Samuel was patron in 1692 and 1719. (fn. 59)
Margaret died in 1718 leaving the rectory to
be divided between her grandchildren. Half
was shared between John Leigh and James
Potter in 1737, (fn. 60) and both were among the eight
patrons who presented in 1746. (fn. 61) Another patron
then was William Moore, who in that same year
acquired the whole rectory (fn. 62) which he added to
a farm of some 100 a. inherited from his father
Andrew Moore (d. 1743) of North Newton in
North Petherton, formerly part of Lyng
manor. (fn. 63)
William Moore died in 1768 (fn. 64) and the rectory
and advowson passed to his widow Elizabeth, of
Bourton-on-the-Water (Glos.). She made over
the estate in 1792 to Hill Dawe of Ditcheat,
Moore's nephew. (fn. 65) Hill died in 1820 and was
succeeded by his son and heir, also Hill Dawe. (fn. 66)
The latter died in 1851 and was followed in
succession by his nephew the Revd. Hill Richard
Dawe (d. 1857) and by his brother Charles Dawe
(d. 1869). (fn. 67) By 1861 (fn. 68) the estate had been acquired by Richard King Meade-King (d. 1887),
of Walford in West Monkton, and passed successively to his son Lt.-Col. W. O. Meade-King
(d. 1913) and grandson (Sir) William O. E.
Meade-King (d. 1940). (fn. 69) Richard E. B. MeadeKing died c. 1972 and his executors sold the
land. (fn. 70)
A manor of BURROW was mentioned in
1786. (fn. 71) It may have comprised Burrow Hill,
which belonged to the Harris family by 1767 and
until 1780, when it came to John Chard. (fn. 72) A
descendant married Capt. William Barrett of
Moredon in North Curry, and the land passed
to their son, Major A. G. Barrett, of Trull, who
gave it and the chapel on its summit to the
National Trust in 1946 as the county War
Memorial. (fn. 73)
In 1528 the bishop of Winchester, the abbot of
Glastonbury, the prior of Taunton, the warden
of Eton College, and William Moleyns were
freeholders of Lyng manor. (fn. 74) The Winchester
holding, acquired by 1208, (fn. 75) comprised a messuage in Lyng and a fishery called Tappingweir,
which was said to be on the Parrett, (fn. 76) and probably lay near the present Tappingwall Drove in
Othery. The messuage remained part of the Winchester estate, administered with Ruishton
tithing, until 1868 or later. (fn. 77) The Glastonbury
estate has not been identified. The prior of Taunton acquired land in North moor early in the 13th
century. (fn. 78) It presumably passed with the priory
holding to John Ogan in 1540 and its reversion
was granted to Humphrey Colles in 1543. (fn. 79) John
Colles was a freeholder of the manor in 1604. (fn. 80)
Eton College held a small piece of land near North
moor by 1431 which was administered with
Stogursey Priory manor, later Monkton Home
manor, in Stogursey. (fn. 81) It was sold in 1922. (fn. 82)
William Moleyns's holding was part of a family
estate owned by 1429 (fn. 83) which continued in their
possession until after 1541. (fn. 84) John Phelips held
land of the manor in 1601 which the family still
retained in 1797 and which was the nucleus of
Church farm, (fn. 85) its fields approached from East
Lyng village along Phillips's Drove. (fn. 86) The
chantry of Our Lady at North Curry owned land
in the parish by 1314 (fn. 87) which passed from the
Lyte family to Hugh Isaacs in 1560. (fn. 88)
In the 14th and 15th centuries the chapter of
Wells owned a small piece of meadow in the
parish. (fn. 89) The Hospitallers had tenants of unspecified land in the early 16th century. (fn. 90)