MANORS AND OTHER ESTATES.
Three
estates together seem to have formed the ancient
parish of Chilton. (fn. 18) Pignes, including Chilton
church, was the largest and was held with Huntstile and probably Idstock in 1086. Beere
adjoined Idstock and was held with it in 1408.
Beorhtric held PIGNES in 1066. In 1086 John
the usher held it (fn. 19) with the estates of Huntstile
and probably Idstock; (fn. 20) he also held Perry in
Wembdon (fn. 21) and Wigborough in South Petherton (fn. 22) together with land in Cannington, North
Petherton, and elsewhere which was alienated
from the holding in Henry II's reign. (fn. 23) John held
Pignes of the king in chief by the sergeanty of
usher or porter of the king's hall. (fn. 24) Pignes evidently passed to William the usher (fl. 1199), (fn. 25)
and by 1207 to William's daughter Helen of
Wigborough, who married Eustace of Dowlish. (fn. 26)
Helen and Eustace still held land at Pignes in
1243 but by 1250 had been succeeded by their
son Richard of Wigborough. (fn. 27) William of Wigborough followed Richard in 1270 and was in
possession in 1284-5. (fn. 28) Another William, who
was knighted, was lord in 1309 and died in
1324-5 leaving his brother Richard as his heir. (fn. 29)
Richard was dead by 1343, and on his widow
Maud's death in 1359 the manor passed to John
Horsey (d. 1375) whose grandfather and namesake had bought the reversion in 1328-9. (fn. 30) The
holding descended from 1359 with Horsey in
Bridgwater until the death of Sir Ralph Horsey
in 1612, but it then passed to Ralph's son
George, who still possessed it in 1638 and who
had been succeeded by Ralph Horsey by 1641. (fn. 31)
By 1703 the holding had passed to the Pleydell
family and descended with Horsey. (fn. 32)
Alweard held HUNTSTILE T.R.E. In 1086
it was held by John the usher, (fn. 33) and descended
from him like Pignes until 1324-5, held as part
of the sergeanty of serving as usher of the king's
hall. (fn. 34) By 1431 it was said to be held for ½ fee. (fn. 35)
Sir William of Wigborough held Huntstile
with Pignes and Wigborough at his death in
1324-5. (fn. 36) Joan, his widow, held it with land in
Chilton as dower, (fn. 37) and it had passed from her
to Maud, widow of Richard of Wigborough, by
1343. (fn. 38) Maud's successor was Sir Richard
Cogan, who died in 1368 leaving a son William
as his heir. (fn. 39) The manor then descended like
Wigborough to Sir Fulk FitzWaryn (d. 1391)
and then through Sir Fulk's granddaughter Elizabeth FitzWaryn to her husband Sir Richard
Hankeford (d. 1431). Their daughter Thomasia,
later wife of William Bourchier, succeeded to the
whole of her mother's estate on the death of her
sister in 1433. (fn. 40)
Fulk Bourchier, Lord FitzWaryn, son and heir
of William and Thomasia, died in 1479, (fn. 41) and
Huntstile descended like Wigborough to Fulk's
son John, Lord FitzWaryn (cr. earl of Bath 1536,
d. 1539). (fn. 42) He or one of his successors sold
Huntstile to Edward Walker of Nether Stowey,
who was in possession in 1562. Walker died in
1565 (fn. 43) and his son John sold it in 1571 to John
Brodripp. (fn. 44) Brodripp died in 1578 leaving his
son Richard a minor. (fn. 45) Another Richard Brodripp had succeeded by 1670 (fn. 46) and died in 1705
leaving Huntstile to his son Robert. Robert died
c. 1709 leaving unspecified lands to his brothers
Thomas (d. c. 1756) and Richard (d. 1737). (fn. 47) In
1766 the manor was bought from Bennett
Coombe by Sir Charles Tynte and descended
with the Halswell estate in Goathurst. (fn. 48) In 1987
it belonged to the Herbert family. (fn. 49)
Huntstile Farm, a stone building, stands on a
steeply sloping site which is probably the reason
for the unusual arrangement of the rooms within
its L-shaped plan. Repairs and alterations, especially the replacement of windows, and much of
the roof, have made the dating of its development uncertain. In the 16th century the hall was
probably the room at the north-east corner. The
ground is lowest there and it is built over a cellar.
The service rooms were in the south wing
beyond a cross passage and the parlour was in
the west wing behind the hall stack and beyond
a lobby with a newel stair. The kitchen was
subsequently rebuilt and the service rooms to
the south of it are later still. An inventory of
1674 (fn. 50) lists a number of rooms which presumably occupied the south wing although it is
doubtful whether any of them were in their
present form. The hall and the room above it
retain a quantity of early 17th-century panelling.
IDSTOCK, formerly Ichestock, was held in
1066 by Wulfa and in 1086 by Roger de Courcelles. Roger's tenant was John, (fn. 51) probably John
the usher, since by the earlier 13th century the
estate was held by Helen of Wigborough, John's
successor in his other Somerset holdings. (fn. 52) By
1284-5 William of Wigborough was said to hold
the vill of Idstock of the king in chief, but in
1312 he was returned as holding the mesne
lordship for 1/20 knight's fee of Nicholas Poyntz,
successor to Robert de Courcelles in neighbouring
estates. (fn. 53) That mesne lordship had apparently
lapsed by 1408 when Idstock was said to be held
of the countess of Kent. (fn. 54)
In 1284-5 Robert de St. Clare held Idstock of
William of Wigborough. (fn. 55) By 1360 Sibyl, widow
of Robert de St. Clare (d. 1359), held land there
which passed on her death to her son Richard.
It formed the dower of Richard's widow, Isabel,
and in 1394 Richard's son Ralph St. Clare sold
the reversion on her death to Sir William Bonville. (fn. 56) Sir William died in 1408 (fn. 57) and his heir
was his grandson William Bonville (cr. Lord
Bonville 1449, d. 1461). Lord Bonville was
succeeded by his great-granddaughter Cecily
Bonville (d. 1529), wife first of Thomas Grey,
marquess of Dorset (d. 1501), and secondly of
Henry Stafford, earl of Wiltshire (d. 1523). (fn. 58)
Cecily's heir was her son Thomas Grey, marquess of Dorset, who died in 1530 leaving as heir
a minor, his son Henry (cr. duke of Suffolk
1551). (fn. 59) Henry was attainted in 1554 but Idstock
did not pass to the Crown until the death of his
widow Frances, then wife of Adrian Stokes, in
1559. (fn. 60)
In 1558 the Crown granted the reversion of the
manor to William Honnynge, clerk of the
queen's privy signet, and Nicholas Cutler. They
sold it in the same year to John Bowyer, formerly
a servant of the duke of Suffolk and tenant since
1553. (fn. 61) Bowyer died in 1599 (fn. 62) leaving his son
Edmund (d. 1625) his heir. (fn. 63) Edmund was followed by his son Edmund (d. 1665) (fn. 64) and
grandson, also Edmund Bowyer (d. 1670). (fn. 65) In
1707 Edmund, son of the last, sold Idstock with
Beere and other adjoining land to Edward Colston of London, remaining life tenant until his
death in 1715. (fn. 66) The estate formed part of
Colston's Hospital foundation at Bristol until it
was sold as part of Edbrook farm in 1919. (fn. 67)
The capital messuage was let in 1557. (fn. 68)
An estate called Bera, probably BEERE, was
held both in 1066 and 1086 by Leofa, one of the
king's clerks. (fn. 69) No further trace of the holding
has been found until 1369 when (Sir) William
Bonville (d. 1408) owned Beere manor. It was
said in 1408 to have been held as of Lady
Margaret Courtenay, (fn. 70) presumably Margaret de
Bohun (d. 1391), widow of Hugh Courtenay,
earl of Devon (d. 1377). (fn. 71) The estate had been
let to Sir John Paulet (d. 1391), and his successor
there, probably his brother William, was in
occupation in 1412 and probably in 1416 when
he founded a chantry in Idstock chapel. (fn. 72)
The lordship of Beere descended from Sir
William Bonville with Idstock, and in 1558
Frances Grey, duchess of Suffolk (d. 1559), was
said to hold it in chief. (fn. 73) It passed with Idstock
to the Bowyer family, and was sold by Colston's Hospital in 1920 to Charles Venner,
whose family owned it in 1987. (fn. 74)
Beere Manor is probably in origin a stone
house of the later 15th or earlier 16th century,
with a great upper chamber above a central hall.
The hall was entered from a screens passage
which had a porch on the south. The porch was
balanced by a projection in the south front
between the hall and the parlour to the east. By
the earlier 18th century both were four storeys
high, perhaps as a result of remodelling in the
earlier 17th century. (fn. 75) Early in the 18th century
Edmund Bowyer panelled the hall and the parlour. Later additions have been made to the rear
of the hall and the service wing. The main roof
and the windows throughout are of the later 17th
and earlier 18th centuries. The stable block
adjoining the south-west corner of the house was
built c. 1707. (fn. 76)
Between 1199 and 1207 William the usher gave
land at Huntstile to Montacute priory. It was
held by the priory in 1251-2 (fn. 77) but no further
reference to the land has been found.
In 1329 Simon Furneaux was licensed to grant
a house and land, including some at Chilton, to
form part of the endowment of a chantry at
Kilve. (fn. 78) The land became part of Kilve rectory
after the chantry had ceased to function before
the end of the 14th century, (fn. 79) and some 28 a. in
Chilton belonged to the rector in 1613. (fn. 80) There
were nearly 22 a. in 1839; (fn. 81) they were sold in
1925-6. (fn. 82)
In 1326 Matthew Coker was licensed to grant
land in Chilton to endow a chantry in Wembdon
church. (fn. 83) No further trace of the chantry has
been found. St. George's chantry in Bridgwater
parish church had 1 a. at Chilton. (fn. 84)
The lands of the free chapel of Idstock were
bought in 1548 by Sir John Thynne and
Laurence Hyde. (fn. 85) By 1572 the chapel was owned
by John Mawdley, who was succeeded in that
year by his son Thomas. (fn. 86) As concealed Crown
property it was sold to John Farnham, a gentleman pensioner of the queen, in 1577; (fn. 87) he in the
same year sold to Christopher Peyton of London, and Peyton sold to the tenant, John
Bowyer. (fn. 88) The chantry house, probably that
later known as Edbrook Cottage and locally in
Cannington parish, was demolished c. 1905. (fn. 89)