MANORS AND OTHER ESTATES.
In 1086
NORTH PETHERTON manor was part of the
king's land and had never paid geld. (fn. 85) Its holders
owed a fee farm to the Crown; (fn. 86) in 1761 the farm
of 5 guineas was paid to Antony Duncombe,
Baron Feversham (d. 1763), (fn. 87) presumably by
grant. The fee farm was paid to the Crown in
1779 (fn. 88) but by 1860 to William, Lord Radnor,
son of Lord Feversham's daughter Anne. (fn. 89) It
was later acquired by Anne (d. 1874), widow of
Sir Henry Featherstonehaugh, Bt. In 1876 her
successor Bullock Featherstonehaugh, probably
her nephew, demanded payment, which was six
years in arrears. (fn. 90) No further reference to the fee
farm has been found.
The manor was said to have been given by
Henry I to John of Erleigh. (fn. 91) John held it in
1157 (fn. 92) and died c. 1162. (fn. 93) His successor was
William of Erleigh, the king's chamberlain, (fn. 94) but
John's widow, Adela or Alice, held part of the
estate in 1166. William's lands were in the king's
hands in 1166 (fn. 95) and in 1169 Geoffrey de
Mayenne accounted for North Petherton. (fn. 96) William, probably son of William of Erleigh, held
the manor from 1170 until 1177 when his lands
were confiscated. Henry II probably regranted
the manor to him for a fee farm rent of 100s. (fn. 97)
John of Erleigh had succeeded by 1189. (fn. 98) William of Erleigh was named as holding a fee in
1199, either in error for John or on behalf of
John's son. (fn. 99) John of Erleigh held NorthPetherton from 1202 (fn. 1) until 1231 when he was
succeeded by his brother Henry of Erleigh. (fn. 2)
Henry (d. 1272) (fn. 3) was followed by his son
Philip (d. c. 1275) and Philip by his son John,
who came of age c. 1290 (fn. 4) and died c. 1323.
John of Erleigh, son of the last, died c. 1337,
leaving a son (Sir) John, a minor. (fn. 5) Sir John sold
the manor in 1371 to John Cole and his wife
Margery. (fn. 6)
By 1388 Thomas Beaupyne was in possession,
probably as tenant to the Coles from whom he
bought the manor in 1391. (fn. 7) On the death of
Thomas's widow Margaret in 1408 North
Petherton passed to their daughter Agnes, wife
first of John Bluet and then of John Bevyle. (fn. 8)
Bevyle held the manor in 1412 but was dead by
1431. (fn. 9) Agnes was succeeded in 1442 by her son
John Bluet. (fn. 10)
John Bluet (d. 1463) (fn. 11) was followed in turn by
his son Walter (d. 1481) and his grandson Nicholas Bluet (d. 1522). Nicholas's heir was his
grandson (Sir) Roger, son of Richard Bluet. (fn. 12)
Roger came of age in 1524 (fn. 13) and died c. 1566. (fn. 14)
His son John (d. 1584) was followed by John's
son Richard (d. 1615) and Richard's grandson
John Bluet. (fn. 15) John died in 1634 leaving four
daughters; his widow Elizabeth held the manor
until her death c. 1637 when it passed to trustees. (fn. 16) The property was then divided like
Chipstable manor (fn. 17) between the daughters,
Anne, wife of Cadwallader Jones, Mary, wife
successively of Sir James Stonehouse, Bt., and
(Sir) John Lenthall, Dorothy, wife of Henry
Wallop, and Susan, wife of John Basset. Anne
sold her share to Dorothy, whose half of the
manor formed part of the marriage settlement
of Dorothy's younger son John Wallop and his
wife Alice in 1683. (fn. 18) John (d. 1694) bought the
Lenthall share in 1685, and settled it on his
younger son John after Alice's death. (fn. 19) John's
elder son Bluet inherited the half share but died
without issue in 1707 leaving his brother John
as heir. (fn. 20) John (cr. Baron Wallop and Vct.
Lymington 1720, earl of Portsmouth 1743), held
three quarters of the manor until 1742 when he
acquired the remaining share from John Basset,
great-grandson of Susan Bluet. (fn. 21) In 1754 the earl
sold the entire North Petherton estate to Alexander Seymour Gapper who, unable to pay the
purchase price, sold it back in 1755. The earl
died in 1762 when his heir was his grandson
John, who sold the manor to John Slade in
1768. (fn. 22) The manor descended from 1772 with
the manor of Maunsel. (fn. 23)
No capital messuage for the manor has been
found but there was a court house in the 13th
and 14th centuries. (fn. 24)
Lands, later known as ACLAND'S lands or
North Petherton manor, were left by Baldwin
Malet (d. 1533) to his wife Anne for life and then
to their son John. (fn. 25) The estate descended to
John's son Robert (fl. 1572) and to Robert's
granddaughters Christina (d. 1590), wife of
Robert Brett, and Eleanor, wife of Arthur Acland. In 1602 Eleanor, the sole survivor, sold her
manor to Richard Bluet, lord of the principal
manor of North Petherton. (fn. 26)
In 1225 Roger Baril, serjeant of Petherton
hundred, had a house in the hundred and in the
1240s Roger Baril, possibly the same, held land
in North Petherton, probably what was later
called VOWELL'S lands. (fn. 27) In 1279 Roger's
widow Alice released her dower to her heir John
Baril who held land in 1270. (fn. 28) John is said to
have received land near Petherton park and in
Hay moor from Henry of Erleigh. He died
without issue before 1296 and his land was held
by the Erleighs in the early 14th century. (fn. 29) By
1466 Robert Baril held the land. Gillian Vowell,
who held it by 1477 (fn. 30) and in 1491 gave her estates
in North Petherton and Huntworth to trustees
to the uses of her will, was dead by 1492 when
her estates, described as formerly Baril's, had
passed to her son Richard Vowell. (fn. 31) Richard (d.
1498) was followed by his son William (d. 1552).
William, probably William's son, with his wife
Margaret and Thomas Vowell, sold the estate to
Sir Roger Bluet in 1561. (fn. 32) It descended with the
Bluets' manor of North Petherton. (fn. 33)
A house known as Baril's Place was recorded
in the 18th century but had gone by 1770. (fn. 34)
Lands of St. Mary's chantry in the parish
church were sold in 1550 to men probably acting
for Sir Roger Bluet. He bequeathed the land to
his son John in 1566, (fn. 35) and it descended with the
Bluets' manor of North Petherton. (fn. 36) The
chantry house, sold by the Crown in 1549, was
also later acquired by the Bluets, (fn. 37) but it is not
mentioned after 1677. (fn. 38)
The manor of North Petherton later known as
BUCKLAND FEE belonged to Buckland
priory before the Dissolution. (fn. 39) The Crown
granted it in 1544 to William Portman and
Alexander Popham. (fn. 40) It passed to Alexander's
son Edward (d. 1586) and included lands in
several parishes. It descended with the
Pophams' manor of Huntworth until 1838 or
later. (fn. 41) No later reference to the lordship has
been found. The capital messuage was possibly
that sold to Mr. Crosswell and may be the house
north of the rectory, now demolished, in which
Crosswell kept a school in the 19th century. (fn. 42)
A manor of NORTH PETHERTON, which
can be traced to a holding of John Sydenham (d.
1468), included houses and lands which Margaret Mutton, probably wife of John's son
Walter (d. 1469), held when she died in 1477. (fn. 43)
Her son and heir John Sydenham of Brympton
held land in Whitestock as a free tenant of
Shearston manor in 1519. (fn. 44) In 1613 the Sydenhams' manor, held of the Bluets' manor of North
Petherton, included lands in Moorland, Edington in Moorlinch, and Bridgwater, and probably
less than half its land lay in North Petherton
parish. John Sydenham (d. 1625) settled the
manor on his son John for his marriage to Alice
Hody, (fn. 45) and it descended with Combe Sydenham in Stogumber until 1674 or later. (fn. 46) No
further reference to the lordship has been found
and the land was probably dispersed.
William Brent (d. 1536) held a manor called
DUNWEAR which may have been the
PETHERTON manor held in 1552 by his son
Richard (d. 1570). (fn. 47) Richard's heir was his
daughter Anne, wife of Thomas Paulet. (fn. 48) Anne
died before her husband, leaving a daughter
Elizabeth, married to Giles Hoby. (fn. 49) The Hobys
sold land in North Petherton to John Watts (d.
1622) who was succeeded by his son Nicholas
(d. 1634). Nicholas left two infant daughters
Jane and Walthean; the latter married John
Newton. (fn. 50) The estate has not been traced further.
HULKSHAY manor was held of the Bluets'
manor of North Petherton in 1485 and was so
held until 1647 or later. (fn. 51) In 1397 John Brown
held an estate in right of his wife Isabel with
remainder to John Penny. (fn. 52) Penny conveyed it
in 1428 to Martin Jacob, who with his wife Joan
added land in 1446. (fn. 53) Joan Jacob died in 1485
and Hulkshay, sometimes called North Petherton
manor, descended like Brompton Jacob in Brompton Ralph. (fn. 54) In 1701 Baldwin Malet appears to have
sold the manor, and the lands were dispersed. (fn. 55)
There is no further reference to the lordship.
The Jacob family had a house in the parish in
1428 and in 1443 they were granted a licence for
a private chapel there. (fn. 56) That house may be
represented by Hulkshay Farm, built in the mid
18th century; part of the staircase, a fireplace
with rococo plasterwork, and a stone porch
survive. The house was refitted and partly
refronted in the 19th century.
Ansger the cook, one of the king's serjeants,
held SHOVEL in 1086. Two thegns had held it
freely in 1066. Its 11th-century name, Siwoldestone, may record a former owner. (fn. 57) By the late
15th century Shovel was held by Adam Hamlyn
of Bridgwater who died in 1493 leaving it to his
younger daughter Margaret, wife of John
Wyner. (fn. 58) In 1498 Margaret sold it to John
Heyron (d. 1501) who in the following year was
licensed to found a chantry at Langport endowed
with lands at Shovel. (fn. 59) The Langport chantry
estate was granted to Laurence Hyde of London
in 1549. (fn. 60) Laurence died in 1590 (fn. 61) and Edward
Hyde of West Hatch in Tisbury (Wilts.), in
possession in 1648, (fn. 62) sold it in 1659 to Walter
Catford, who kept courts in 1684. In 1703
Walter's son, also Walter, sold Shovel to the
tenant John Dobin. John or a son of the same
name sold it to Joseph Gatcombe in 1763. (fn. 63)
Joseph (d. 1777) was succeeded by his son
William (d. 1816) and William by his son Joseph
(d. 1820). Joseph's widow Anna died in 1847 and
Shovel passed to Joseph's niece Matilda (d.
1889), wife of the Revd. William Chapman
Kinglake (d. 1881). (fn. 64) They were succeeded by
their second daughter Rosa, wife of Frederick
Kinglake (d. 1900). Shovel was sold in 1910 to
A. M. Wilson. (fn. 65) By 1925 it had been acquired
by Herbert Nelson. (fn. 66)
Shovel House, also known as Gatcombe House
and Shovel Hill, was built probably c. 1820. (fn. 67) It
is a large double-pile brick villa with a fivebayed front and central porch, with a lower
one-bayed wing, probably original, on the east
and a symmetrical bay on the west added after
1841. (fn. 68) Further rooms were added later in the
19th century and the interior retains many
original fittings and good contemporary plasterwork.
STAMFORDLANDS appears to have been
severed from Melcombe Paulet manor in 1573
when it was bought by Richard Bidgood and
William Tucker. (fn. 69) In 1578 Bidgood released his
interest to Tucker who was succeeded by his son
John (d. 1603). (fn. 70) In 1614 John's son William and
John Wroth sold the estate to John Musgrave
(d. 1631) (fn. 71) who was succeeded by his son George
(d. 1640). George's son Richard settled Stamfordlands in 1671 on his son George. (fn. 72) Richard
died c. 1686 and George's estate was described
as a manor in 1699. (fn. 73) The manor descended in
the Musgrave family from George (d. 1721) to
his son George (d. 1724) and then with Shearston to Juliana (d. 1810), wife of Sir James
Langham, Bt. (fn. 74) By 1806 the estate had been
dispersed and William Gatcombe held Stamfordlands farm, (fn. 75) which descended in the
Gatcombe family with Shovel until 1893 when
it was divided and sold. (fn. 76)
The house was described as new in 1573 and
as newly erected in 1614. (fn. 77) It was replaced by
Staffland Farm in the early 19th century.
An estate called BAYMEAD, including
Nether Baymead, purchased by George Musgrave from the Ley or Farthing family in 1626, (fn. 78)
was held with Stamfordlands, but in 1670 it was
described as a separate manor. (fn. 79) It appears to
have been sold in the 1760s (fn. 80) and had been
divided by 1838. (fn. 81)
Saemer held an estate called NEWTON, later
Estable Newton, in 1066 and John the usher held
it in 1086; Stable held it under John. (fn. 82) Before
1199 Roger Stable granted it to William Wrotham. (fn. 83) In 1250 William's nephew Richard
Wrotham held it of Roger Stable by service of
a white wand. (fn. 84) It merged with the other estates
of the Wrothams and had no further separate
existence.
An estate at NEWTON which Osward held in
1066 was in 1086 held by Ansketil the parker
apparently as a royal serjeanty. (fn. 85) It continued to
be held by successive foresters of Petherton
together with the bailiwick of Williton: Robert
son of Bernard (d. c. 1184), Geoffrey FitzPeter
in 1185, and Robert de Odburville until c.
1193. (fn. 86) William Wrotham received a grant of
Newton in 1198. (fn. 87) Wrotham was forester from
1199 and from 1204 acquired land there called
Deneysedon formerly of William Dacus. (fn. 88)
William Wrotham, who combined the forestership, the Stable and Odburville holdings,
and the lands of William Dacus in an estate
known as NEWTON or NEWTON FORESTER, was appointed archdeacon of Taunton c.
1204. (fn. 89) He was still alive in 1212, but by 1216
he had been succeeded by his nephew Richard,
a minor. (fn. 90) Richard (d. s.p. 1250), known as
Richard Forester, was succeeded by his nephew
William de Plessis. Richard's estate at his death
included, in addition to his inheritance from
William Wrotham, land at Newton held of
Stephen son of Michael (fn. 91) which may have been
a half virgate in Estable Newton alienated in the
time of Henry I. (fn. 92)
William de Plessis (d. c. 1274) was given
custody of Petherton park in fee. His nephew
and successor was Richard de Barbeflote or
Plessis (d. 1289). Two thirds of his estate and
the forestership passed to his sisters, Sabina,
wife of Nicholas Pecche (d. 1295), Evelyn, wife
of John Durant, and Emme, wife of John Heyron. (fn. 93) Richard's widow Margery (d. c. 1293) was
to have her third for life, which was to revert to
Evelyn and Emme; the forestership passed to
Sabina. (fn. 94)
Sabina Pecche (d. c. 1307) left to her son
Nicholas an estate later called a third of NEWTON PLECY or NEWTON REGIS manor.
Nicholas Pecche (d. 1323) was succeeded by his
son Richard (d. by 1330). (fn. 95) Richard's son Thomas (d. under age 1332) was followed by Richard's brother Matthew. (fn. 96) Matthew sold his
estates in 1336 to Sir Richard Dammory, who
granted a life interest to Matthew of Clevedon
in 1342. (fn. 97) Matthew released his interest before
1351 when Dammory sold the manor and forestership to Roger Beauchamp. Roger sold them
in turn to Roger Mortimer, earl of March, in
1359. (fn. 98) The estate passed with the earldom of
March to the Crown and to Katharine and
Anne, daughters of Edward IV. In 1511 it was
recovered by the Crown and was granted, as
the lordship and manor of North Petherton, in
1547 to Edward Seymour, duke of Somerset. (fn. 99)
Following Somerset's attainder it was granted
in 1553 to John Dudley, duke of Northumberland. The duke exchanged it for Syon House
(Mdx.) in the same year with Sir Thomas
Wroth (d. 1573). (fn. 1) Sir Thomas was involved in
Suffolk's rebellion in 1554 and went into exile
until Elizabeth's accession. (fn. 2)
Sir Thomas settled Newton Regis on his
younger brother William in 1568 in trust for
his own six younger sons. The sons shared the
manor in 1586. (fn. 3) In 1623 the manor was settled
on John, the only surviving son, and on Sir
Thomas Wroth, son of John's brother Thomas
(d. 1610). Sir Thomas, a member of the Long
Parliament, was appointed to try Charles I but
attended only one session of the trial. (fn. 4) John
died in 1633 without issue (fn. 5) and Sir Thomas
in 1672 when he was succeeded by his greatnephew, Sir John Wroth, Bt. (fn. 6) Sir John died
c. 1677 leaving an infant son Sir Thomas (d.
1721). The estate passed to Sir Thomas's
elder daughter Cecily, wife of Sir Hugh Acland, Bt., and on her death in 1761 to her son
Sir Thomas Acland, Bt. (fn. 7) Sir Thomas died in
1785 and was followed in turn by his grandson Sir John Dyke Acland (d. 1785) and his
own second son Sir Thomas Dyke Acland (d.
1794). The son of the last, Sir Thomas (d.
1871), sold most of the estate in 1834 to William Nation, but the lordship with some land
was still retained by his son, also Sir Thomas
(d. 1898), in 1872. (fn. 8)
A house called Newton Court was recorded in
1274 with a dovecot and gardens. (fn. 9) It probably
stood in North Newton village. Park House was
recorded in 1336, and the name was sometimes
given to the park estate. (fn. 10) A house called the
Lodge, probably in the park, was repaired in
1400. (fn. 11) William Wroth, resident keeper of the
park under Henry VI, was said to have rebuilt
the Court House, which may have stood on the
edge of the park beside Parker's Field House,
and was probably the moated lodge recorded by
Leland. (fn. 12) The Lodge was said to have been
pulled down in Elizabeth's reign but part was
still standing in 1665. (fn. 13) Broad Lodge, built of
materials from the earlier lodge, possibly c.
1582-6, was known as Petherton Park in the 17th
century when it was the home of the Wroth
family. (fn. 14) Sir Thomas Wroth (d. 1721) rebuilt the
house c. 1700 (fn. 15) as a double-piled structure. The
stone west range has 11 bays with mullioned and
transomed windows and a central doorway surmounted by a shell hood. The slightly shorter
east range is of brick and has a recessed centre
of five bays with similar windows and shellhooded doorway. The interior retains many
features of c. 1700 including a fine central
staircase with arched landing, several rooms
with bolection-moulded panelling and moulded
plaster cornices, and in the upper part of the
north-east corner a large room with three tall
sash windows to the north. Some alterations
appear to have been made inside in the 19th
century at which time panelling dated 1601 was
introduced into one of the principal ground-floor
rooms. To the west is a small walled court with
two gateways and, beyond, a stable building of
c. 1700. In 1984 the house was divided and was
known as Park Farm and Manor House Farm.
To the east earthworks mark the layout of a
former garden: James Veitch was planting and
fencing at Petherton Park in 1815. (fn. 16)
Parker's Field House stands just outside the
park boundary, possibly near the site of Court
House. It dates from the late 16th century and
has a main range of two rooms separated by a
central passage, with a jointed cruck roof. Wings
were added in the 17th century, probably before
1651 when the house was described as new. (fn. 17) A
wing was added to the north-west in the late 18th
century.
Evelyn Durant died in 1312 and her share of
Newton Plecy, later called NEWTON
WROTH, passed successively to her son Richard Durant (d. 1333) (fn. 18) and Richard's son
Thomas (d. 1349). (fn. 19) Thomas's daughter Maud
married first Sir John Wroth and second Baldwin of Raddington (d. 1401). (fn. 20) From her son and
heir William Wroth (d. 1408) the estate passed
in the direct male line to William (an infant in
1408, d. 1450), (fn. 21) John (d. 1480), (fn. 22) John (an infant
in 1480, d. 1517), Robert (d. 1535), (fn. 23) and Sir
Thomas Wroth (d. 1573), who had also acquired
Newton Regis manor. Sir Thomas left Newton
Wroth to his wife Mary for her life. (fn. 24) His eldest
son Sir Robert died in 1606 and Sir Robert's
grandson, also Sir Robert, in 1614, leaving an
infant son James. (fn. 25) James died in 1616 when
John Wroth, brother of Sir Robert (d. 1606),
settled the manor on John, brother of Sir Robert
(d. 1614). The younger John and his wife Maud
held the manor in 1621. (fn. 26) In 1634 John sold the
manor to Sir Thomas and Sir Peter Wroth (d.
1644), sons of Thomas (d. 1610), brother of Sir
Robert (d. 1606). (fn. 27) Sir Thomas was succeeded
in 1672 by his great-nephew Sir John Wroth,
Bt., grandson of Sir Peter. (fn. 28) Sir John died c. 1677
leaving an infant son Thomas; the manor then
descended with Newton Regis. No reference to
the lordship has been found after 1872. (fn. 29)
There was a capital messuage in 1638, (fn. 30) known
as Pyms in 1739. (fn. 31) It may have been the house
called Newton Place in 1776 (fn. 32) and now Church
Farm House, east of North Newton church. It
has cob walls and the roof at the east end is cruck
framed, probably of the 16th century. Some
refitting was carried out in the 18th and 19th
centuries. (fn. 33)
John Heyron, husband of Emme, died in 1326
holding her share of Newton Plecy, (fn. 34) later called
NEWTON CHANTRY. Their son John died
without issue in 1335 and his heirs were his
nephew John Garton and his sister Margaret
Heyron. (fn. 35) The nephew died in 1362, by then
probably holding Margaret's share; he was followed by his son John and that John in 1376 by
his son John, a minor. (fn. 36) The last gave a life
interest to Richard Mayne before 1401 and sold
the reversion to Richard Bruton and William
Gascoigne in 1417. Gascoigne died in 1423 in
possession of the whole estate. His heir was his
brother Thomas who died possibly c. 1424. (fn. 37)
William Gascoigne, perhaps Thomas's son, was
dead by 1462 when his daughter Christine and
her husband John Keyrell were in possession. (fn. 38)
In 1467 they gave the manor to the vicars choral
of Wells cathedral. During the Interregnum it
was purchased by Sir Thomas Wroth, (fn. 39) but it
was returned to the vicars choral c. 1660 and was
transferred to the Ecclesiastical (later Church)
Commissioners before 1875. The Commissioners were lords of the manor in 1984. (fn. 40)
A capital messuage, probably belonging to the
manor, was mentioned in 1326. (fn. 41) In 1362 the
hall and chamber were repaired with stone
tiles. (fn. 42) The house was mentioned in 1450. (fn. 43) In
Elizabeth's reign the vicars choral were said to
have used the materials from Newton chapel to
build a court house. (fn. 44) It can perhaps be identified with Newton House, west of the church,
a late 16th-century building with a main hall
range and north wing. The present wing is
probably of the 18th century, but contains reused 17th-century windows. The hall contains a
canopied fireplace and a framed ceiling. The
parlour has a ribbed plaster ceiling with
moulded foliage decoration. (fn. 45)
The tithes of the former chantry in North
Newton chapel were let by the Crown in reversion to Thomas Tallis and William Byrd in
1578 (fn. 46) and by 1585 they had been let to William
Lacey. (fn. 47) They were sold to William Wroth and
others in reversion in 1592 when they were
assessed at £3 17s. a year, (fn. 48) and were held by
John Wroth (d. 1633). Usually known as NEWTON CHANTRY, the tithe estate descended
with Newton Wroth manor. (fn. 49) In 1664 it was
agreed that all great and small tithes, oblations,
obventions, and mortuaries due within the chapelry should be paid to Sir Thomas Wroth. (fn. 50)
The perpetual curate was said in 1838 to be
entitled to the tithe of the district, c. 260 a.,
except for the £3 paid to the vicar of North
Petherton, but in 1841 the rent charge of £70
was awarded to Sir Thomas Dyke Acland as
impropriator under a corrected award. (fn. 51)
The land of the former North Newton chantry,
lying in North Newton and St. Michaelchurch,
and worth £2 1s. a year in 1547, (fn. 52) was granted
to John Hulson and William Pendred in 1549 (fn. 53)
and later regranted to Richard Bluet, who died
in possession in 1566. (fn. 54) The land descended with
the Bluets' manor of North Petherton and was
usually known as the manor of NEWTON
PLACET. (fn. 55)
The estate later known as PLAYSTREET was
owned by the Heyron family who used it to
endow their chantry at Langport. (fn. 56) In 1549 the
estate was sold to Laurence Hyde (fn. 57) whose grandson Edward Hyde held it until 1656 or later. (fn. 58)
By 1655 it had been acquired by the Catford
family of Melcombe Paulet who sold it to Sir
Thomas Wroth in 1696. (fn. 59) The estate descended
as part of Newton Wroth manor and the name
was lost. (fn. 60)
BALLCOMBE manor was probably held of
the Bluets' manor of North Petherton. (fn. 61) It was
held by Henry Blunt who died before 1515
leaving a son John Blunt or Swell. John's son
Robert sold it in 1545 to William Fouracre of
Hillfarrance and his wife Joan. (fn. 62) In 1605 Matthew Fouracre of Broadclyst (Devon), with his
wife Mary and Hannah, probably his mother,
sold Ballcombe to John Parsons. In 1618 John
settled the estate on his son William for his
marriage to Alice Gredge of Ballcombe. (fn. 63) William was succeeded by Henry Parsons before
1669 and by William Parsons (fl. 1692-1705).
William was followed by Thomas Parsons, a
London grocer, who with his wife Frances sold
Ballcombe manor to William Hodgson in 1714.
In 1721 Hodgson sold it to Charles Challis (d.
c. 1745). In 1758 John Lock and his wife Mary,
a daughter of Charles Challis, sold Ballcombe to
Jeremiah Dewdney. (fn. 64) Dewdney (d. 1776) was
succeeded by his great-nephew Jeremiah Dewdney Parsons (d. 1842), the owner in 1838. (fn. 65) In
1919 the surviving heirs of Jeremiah Dewdney
Parsons sold Ballcombe to the Portman trustees. (fn. 66)
Athelney abbey by grants from John of Erleigh
and members of the Clavil family between the
early 13th century and c. 1400 acquired land in
Clavelshay and Farringdon (fn. 67) which came to be
known as CLAVELSHAY manor and remained
with the abbey until the Dissolution. (fn. 68) The
Crown sold the manor in 1544 to (Sir) William
Portman and Alexander Popham. (fn. 69) Portman
died in sole possession in 1557 (fn. 70) and the manor
descended in the direct male line to Sir Henry
(d. 1591), John (cr. Bt., d. 1612), and Sir Henry
(d. 1621). (fn. 71) Henry was followed in turn by his
three brothers John (d. 1624), Hugh (d. 1629),
and William (d. 1645). (fn. 72) Clavelshay manor descended after 1641 in the Portman family like
Bere manor in Wayford to Henry Berkeley
Portman, Viscount Portman (d. 1923). Claud
Berkeley Portman, Viscount Portman (d. 1929),
brother of the last, was followed by his son
Edward Claud Berkeley Portman (d. 1942)
whose brother Seymour Berkeley Portman,
Viscount Portman, in 1944 sold Clavelshay to
the Crown. All manorial incidents were then said
to have been enfranchised. (fn. 73) In 1984 the estate
comprised two farms, Higher and Lower Clavelshay, formerly Clavelshay and Clavelshay
farm.
A capital messuage recorded in 1539 (fn. 74) may
have been the precursor of the 17th-century
house called Classeys. (fn. 75) In 1735 the capital
messuage comprised hall, parlour, kitchen, and
service rooms, five chambers, 'cold bath', and
servants' rooms. (fn. 76) The present house called
Lower Clavelshay, formerly Clavelshay Farm, is
a substantial 18th-century house which had ten
bedrooms in 1946 before the demolition of a
wing. (fn. 77) It has a symmetrical west front and
nearly contemporary outshuts. In 1699 there
were fishponds in the vicinity (fn. 78) and from the
19th century the house had a terraced garden on
the west, falling to two small lakes. (fn. 79)
The Knights Hospitallers held land at Farringdon which they exchanged in 1310 and 1312 for
land owned by Hugh de Reigny and his wife
Gillian. (fn. 80)
In 1066 Sired held SHEARSTON and in 1086
Robert Herecom held it of Roger de Courcelles. (fn. 81) The overlordship descended with that of
Kilve until 1363 or later. A mesne lordship held
by Matthew de Furneaux in 1253 descended
with Kilve also until 1363 or later. (fn. 82)
Simon son of Simon Brett was tenant in 1195,
but Shearston passed to the Reigny family,
probably by 1253. (fn. 83) John de Reigny held it in
1285, and before 1291 Joan de Reigny owned
rents there. (fn. 84) Shearston was held with Rhode
manor until 1616 when it was sold to George
Blanchflower, probably in reversion. (fn. 85) By 1652
it had passed to George's son the Revd. Thomas
Blanchflower (d. 1661) (fn. 86) whose land at Shearston
was settled in 1663 on his eldest son George. (fn. 87)
George (d. 1664) left the manor to his infant son
George. The younger George died without issue
c. 1686 and Charles Blanchflower (d. 1693), his
uncle and heir, appears to have sold the manor
to Valentine Gardiner. (fn. 88) Valentine held the estate c. 1691 but it was later sold to Thomas
Musgrave. (fn. 89) Thomas (d. 1724) was followed by
his great-nephew George Musgrave (also d.
1724) and George by his second son Thomas
Frederick, an infant. Thomas Frederick, who
settled the manor on his wife Mary in 1761, died
c. 1780. (fn. 90) After Mary's death the estate was held
by her niece Juliana (d. 1810), wife of Sir James
Langham, Bt. (fn. 91) It passed to her son Sir William
(d. Mar. 1812), to his son also Sir William (d.
May 1812) and to the latter's uncle Sir James
Langham (d. 1833). (fn. 92) Sir James's second son
Herbert sold the estate in 1859 and 1860, without reference to the lordship. (fn. 93)
A capital messuage was recorded c. 1392. (fn. 94) A
house recorded in 1663 (fn. 95) was known as Shearston Farm in the 18th century and was described
as the capital messuage in 1776. (fn. 96) By 1838 it was
known as Chapel Hill or Chapel Hill Farm and
in 1859 was described as a six-bedroomed farmhouse. (fn. 97) The house has a front range of cob
probably dating from the 17th century. It was
enlarged and extensively altered in the 19th
century.
SHEARSTON CHANTRY manor originated in the land of Shearston chapel given to
Buckland priory in 1189. (fn. 98) In 1548 the estate,
including a mill and nine tenements, was granted
to John Aylworth and William Lacey. (fn. 99) In 1584
the manor was held by John Bluet and descended with North Petherton manor. (fn. 1) In 1615
Shearston Chantry manor was said to be held
both of Humphrey Sydenham's manor of Dulverton and of the king. (fn. 2) By the late 18th century
the manor had lost its separate identity and most
of the land, called Shearston farm or Woolcott's,
was sold in 1772 to James Woolcott, whose
family had been tenants since the 17th century. (fn. 3)
By 1838 a small farm known as Shearston remained in North Petherton manor. (fn. 4) In 1777
Woolcott sold Shearston to Thomas Pyke. The
Jolliffe family bought the estate in 1818 and sold
it in 1858 to Edward Portman, Lord Portman. (fn. 5)
Saric held MELCOMBE in 1066 and Robert
de Odburville in 1086. (fn. 6) The two Melcombe
manors may have been divisions of that estate.
The manor later called MELCOMBE
PAULET appears to have been held of the
Erleighs' manor of North Petherton in 1293 and
later, (fn. 7) but in 1431 Melcombe Paulet was said to
be held in socage, (fn. 8) and suit and quit rents for
the manor were claimed by the Wroths and the
Vicars Choral of Wells from the 15th to the early
17th century. (fn. 9)
The lands of John de Reigny of Melcombe
were in John of Erleigh's hands in 1293. (fn. 10) Joan
de Reigny of Melcombe, mentioned between
1291 and 1296, may have been succeeded by
John de Reigny by 1312. (fn. 11) Melcombe is said to
have passed from Elizabeth, John de Reigny's
daughter and wife of John Paulet, to her son Sir
John Paulet (d. 1391). (fn. 12) William Paulet of Melcombe, son of Sir John; held the manor by
1412. (fn. 13) William died c. 1436 and his son Sir John
Paulet in 1437. (fn. 14) John Paulet, son of the last,
died c. 1470; his son, also John, was alive in 1519
but had died probably by 1539 when his eldest
son William was created Baron St. John of
Basing. William, created marquis of Winchester
in 1551, died in 1572, when his son John sold
the manor with 430 a. to Richard Bidgood and
William Tucker of North Petherton. (fn. 15)
Bidgood died in 1581 as sole owner of the
manor, which he devised to his wife Joan for life
and then to Catherine, wife of his son Richard.
Joan died c. 1587 and in 1592 Richard and
Catherine conveyed the manor to William
Gough. (fn. 16) In 1622 Richard Gough, possibly William's son, sold it to Robert Catford. (fn. 17) Robert
(d. 1623) was succeeded by his son Robert (d.
s.p. 1625), whose heir was his brother Walter (d.
1653). Walter's son Robert (d. 1672) left the
manor to his daughter Elizabeth (d. 1696). Elizabeth's heir was her cousin Walter Catford (d.
1706) whose widow Jane and son Charles sold
the manor in 1723 to John Morley, husband of
Charles's cousin Katharine Catford. (fn. 18) John died
in 1727 and Katharine held the manor in 1763.
Their son John died in 1765 and his son John
was in possession in 1792 but the estate had been
reduced and was known as Melcombe farm. (fn. 19) By
1806 the estate was held by Richard King, the
owner in 1838. (fn. 20) No further reference to the
lordship has been found but the estate was
acquired by the Kinglake family of Shovel and
sold by them in 1893 and 1901. (fn. 21)
A hall at Melcombe was repaired in 1293 and
a court house was built there in the same year. (fn. 22)
The capital messuage was referred to in 1581
and 1723 but had gone by 1838. (fn. 23)
Richard Bidgood and William Tucker sold an
estate at RHODE, part of Melcombe Paulet
manor, to Nicholas Chute in 1574. In 1594
Robert, Nicholas's son and heir, conveyed it to
(Sir) Nicholas Halswell, who leased it to the
Woodhouse family. (fn. 24) Halswell added an estate
called Roadbrooks and before 1665 the Halswells added land there which had belonged to
the Paulets and later further land formerly held
with Woolmersdon manor. (fn. 25) By 1838 the estate,
having descended with Halswell in Goathurst to
the Tyntes, had shrunk in size and was known
as Road farm. (fn. 26)
The house, now called the Chantry, is a substantial early 17th-century house with a main
range of three rooms with short rear wings at
each end, one containing a staircase. The northern wing was extended in brick in the 19th
century to provide outbuildings. Many original
windows remain, mostly in moulded oak, but
those of the entrance front ground floor are of
Ham stone. A first-floor room has a plaster heart
bearing the date 1655 and initials 'I.W.' (fn. 27) There
is a carved wooden cornice on the south-east
front.
The manor of RHODE seems to have been
held of North Petherton manor in 1311-12, and
its lords were described as free tenants of John
Slade's manor of North Petherton in 1770. (fn. 28)
Thomas de Reigny was lord c. 1256, and may
have been succeeded by John de Reigny (fl.
1285-93). (fn. 29) In 1308 John de Reigny the younger
granted land in Shearston and Rhode to another
John de Reigny and his son John for their lives
in succession. (fn. 30) John de Reigny paid a relief for
Rhode in 1311-12. (fn. 31) The manor appears to have
descended with Melcombe Paulet manor to Sir
John Paulet (d. 1391). (fn. 32) Sir John's widow Elizabeth held the manor in 1412 (fn. 33) and Sir John's
grandson William, son of Thomas Paulet, held
it in 1428. Rhode descended with Hinton St.
George manor until 1538 when Sir Amias
Poulett settled Rhode on his son Henry for life. (fn. 34)
Henry died probably before 1559 when his
brother Sir Hugh was in possession. (fn. 35) Rhode
continued to descend with Hinton St. George
until 1600 when Anthony Poulett was succeeded
by his brother George Paulet. (fn. 36) George probably
settled it on his son Edward, whose second wife
Elizabeth was married to Thomas Yeates by
1647. (fn. 37) She still held the manor in 1676 although
the inheritance had been divided between Edward's daughters. (fn. 38)
Elizabeth had been succeeded by Edward's
grandson, Paulet Payne (d. 1707), by 1701 when
he settled the manor on his son John (d. 1717).
John's son Paulet (d. 1726) was succeeded by his
sisters Mary and Elizabeth who married their
step-brothers Edmund and John Jeane. (fn. 39) In
1783 Mary Jeane and Elizabeth's son Thomas
Jeane (d. 1791) divided the estate for the benefit
of their respective sons, both called John. (fn. 40)
Mary's son John Jeane (d. 1790) of Binfords in
Broomfield left his share to his daughter Elizabeth (d. 1859) who married the Revd. Thomas
Coney. (fn. 41) Thomas's son John Jeane of West
Monkton (d. s.p. 1798) was succeeded by his
nephew Thomas Jeane Buncombe. (fn. 42) There was
no reference to the lordship after the 1780s.
There was a house at Rhode by 1316. (fn. 43) Rhode
Farm, on the Coney's share of the estate in the
19th century, can perhaps be identified with a
house of c. 1690 which had a hall, parlour,
kitchen, brewhouse, and six chambers. (fn. 44) It was
almost completely rebuilt in 1855. (fn. 45)
The three sons of Robert Whiting (d. 1500)
may have shared the manor of WEST MELCOMBE or BOOMER. It was held of the
Bluet's manor of North Petherton. Christopher
Whiting died in 1501 in possession of a third,
which passed to his brother John. (fn. 46) John Whiting settled the whole manor on his wife Anne in
1511. When he died in 1529 his heirs were his
five daughters Mary, Agnes, Isabel, Joan or
Jane, and Elizabeth. (fn. 47) Elizabeth died evidently
soon after 1533, and her share was divided
among her sisters, giving rise to the name Four
Lords Land. (fn. 48) Mary Whiting married Humphrey Keynes and died in 1548 leaving a son
John. (fn. 49) John Keynes sold his share to Robert
Halswell in 1565. (fn. 50) Robert died in 1570 leaving
a young son (Sir) Nicholas, who leased his share,
then called a quarter, to Robert Catford in 1608
and sold it to him in 1620. (fn. 51) Agnes Whiting was
succeeded in 1555 by her son Humphrey Walrond. (fn. 52) Humphrey's four sons seem to have
entered the estate in 1584, two years before their
father's death. (fn. 53) William Walrond, the eldest,
leased his share of West Melcombe to Robert
Catford in 1598. In 1627 William's son Henry
sold a quarter of the manor to William Catford,
Robert's son. (fn. 54) Isabel Whiting married Nicholas
Ashford and was probably dead by 1573 when
a quarter share of the manor was settled on
Nicholas's son Roger and his wife Elizabeth. (fn. 55)
In 1599 the estate was settled on Roger's son
Henry Ashford who leased his share to Robert
Catford in 1608 and sold it to him in 1618. (fn. 56) Joan
or Jane Whiting had married Robert FitzJames
by 1538. (fn. 57) Joan and Robert were dead by 1592
when her heir was her daughter Thomasin, wife
of Thomas Stoton, who leased the estate. In
1599 the lease was assigned to Robert Catford
and by 1605 Joan's share of West Melcombe was
in the hands of Sir John Sydenham. (fn. 58) In 1620 it
was settled on Sir John's younger son Sir Ralph
Sydenham. Sir Ralph leased it to Robert Catford
in 1621 and it was probably sold to the Catfords
shortly after Robert's death in 1623. (fn. 59)
Robert Catford (d. 1623) was succeeded in turn
by his sons Robert (d. 1625) and William (d.
1644). (fn. 60) William was succeeded in turn by his
sons William (d. 1655) and Walter (d. 1662). (fn. 61)
Walter's heir was his infant son William, and the
manor may have been in the hands of trustees;
John Gatcombe and his wife Elizabeth kept the
manor courts in 1665. (fn. 62) William Catford died in
1698 leaving a son William, a minor. William (d.
1744) was succeeded by his son William Hardy
Catford, who mortgaged the estate and put it up
for sale in 1748. Some of the land was sold in
1751, but the manor was conveyed in 1761 to
John Slade. (fn. 63) Slade retained the manor until
1779 when it was dismembered; the lordship
with some land was sold to Sir Charles KemeysTynte (d. 1785) (fn. 64) and after his widow's death
passed to his niece Jane Hassell, wife of John
Johnson who took the name Kemeys-Tynte. In
1799 Jane settled West Melcombe on her son
Charles Kemeys Kemeys-Tynte. (fn. 65) There is no
further reference to the lordship, but the estate
descended with Halswell in Goathurst until
1953 when it was sold by Charles KemeysTynte, Baron Wharton. (fn. 66)
The capital messuage of West Melcombe,
usually called Boomer House, was recorded in
1592. (fn. 67) In 1644 the house comprised porch, hall,
parlour, study, kitchen, 4 service rooms, 2 cellars, 8 chambers, 2 servants' rooms, 2 lofts, and
some 15 outbuildings and produce stores. (fn. 68)
Boomer House has a five-bayed front with
central, three-storeyed porch. It appears originally to have been L-shaped, with a main front
range and a back kitchen wing on the north side.
Some plasterwork of the early 17th century
survives on the first floor above the kitchen and
some internal fittings from the 1680s. Rainwater
heads are dated 1681. An extensive remodelling
c. 1740 gave the main south front a new entrance
archway with rusticated architrave. Much of the
interior was panelled and provided with new
fireplaces and staircases. A new kitchen block
was added in the angle between the older ranges.
In 1066 Alwig held WOOLMERSDON. In
1086. Alfred d'Epaignes held Woolmersdon,
which formed part of the barony of Nether
Stowey until 1605 or later. (fn. 69) In the late 13th
century the honor of Dundon claimed overlordship, probably because of confusion with
Woolstone in Stogursey. (fn. 70)
The terre tenant in 1086 was Walter d'Epaignes. (fn. 71) In 1166 Woolmersdon was held by
Geoffrey de Vere, who was succeeded possibly
by Baldwin de Vere (fl. 1234). (fn. 72) Geoffrey of
Woolmersdon was in possession from 1239 until
1248 or later, and Gilbert of Woolmersdon was
recorded in 1268. (fn. 73) John of Woolmersdon held
the manor in 1285 but was dead by c. 1298, and
was survived by Rose, probably his widow (still
alive 1338), and by Sibyl, wife of Roger Arundel,
possibly his stepmother. Sibyl died c. 1298, and
Roger held ½ knight's fee at Woolmersdon in
1303. (fn. 74)
The estate was divided by 1338 between Joan,
daughter of John of Woolmersdon and wife of
Vincent Trivet, Susan, possibly her sister, wife
of Edmund Trivet, and Rose, probably John's
widow. Edmund and Susan sold their share and
their reversion of Rose's interest to Peter Trivet,
Edmund's brother, in 1337. Peter was dead by
1377 when his son John held lands in Woolmersdon and Hadworthy. (fn. 75) John's son Peter died
without issue before 1420 and his heirs were
probably his sisters Joan, wife of Roger Pym,
and Margaret, wife of Roger Tremayle. (fn. 76) In
1423 and 1429 Peter's half of the manor was
settled on Margaret and her children. (fn. 77) The
estate known in the 16th century as Woolmersdon and Hadworthy descended to Margaret's son
John Tremayle (fl. 1440-52) and to John's son Sir
Thomas Tremayle (d. 1508). (fn. 78) Sir Thomas's son
Philip died in 1520 leaving a daughter Florence,
wife of William Ashleigh. (fn. 79) By 1544 the estate
was divided between Alexander Popham and
Nicholas Halswell. (fn. 80) Popham died in 1556 and
his share passed to his son Edward and descended with Huntworth until 1641, although it was
leased to John Popham in 1580. (fn. 81) It was retained
by Thomas Popham (d. 1653) and his son
Thomas, but George Musgrave acquired it in
1676. Musgrave died in 1692 leaving as his heir
his nephew George Musgrave of Nettlecombe. (fn. 82)
Musgrave's share of the manor descended with
Stamfordlands and was sold to tenants c. 1800. (fn. 83)
Nicholas Halswell's share of Woolmersdon and
Hadworthy descended with Halswell manor in
Goathurst. There was no reference to the lordship after 1799 and most of the lands were sold
before 1838. (fn. 84)
Joan and Vincent Trivet settled their share of
Woolmersdon in 1338 on Vincent's heirs. (fn. 85) Vincent was dead by 1343 when Joan released her
right to land in Woolmersdon to Ralph Verney
(d. 1350) and his brother Roger. Ralph had
married Maud Trivet, said to be a daughter and
coheir of Thomas Trivet of Durborough, possibly heir to Vincent. (fn. 86) The Verneys' third share
of Joan's estate descended in the direct male line
with Fairfield in Stogursey until 1482 when it
was held by Alexander Verney, half-brother of
William Verney of Fairfield. In 1488 Alexander
gave all his lands in Woolmersdon to William
and the manor, also called Petherton manor,
continued to descend with Fairfield. (fn. 87) From
1488 to 1592 it was said to be held of the Paulets'
manor of Rhode, possibly indicating that some
of the Verney estate came from another fee. (fn. 88)
The holding was enlarged in 1723 and in 1771
the manor was known as Woolmersdon and
Bridgwater. (fn. 89) It was broken up in sales of 1799,
1815, and 1836-8. (fn. 90)
Another third share of Joan Trivet's estate was
held in 1383 (fn. 91) by John Pokeswell (d. 1400) and
his wife Eleanor (d. by 1400). (fn. 92) Their son John
(came of age 1408, d. 1413) left two sons who
died young (fn. 93) and a widow Elizabeth (d. 1432),
who married Thomas Tame. (fn. 94) John's nephew
and heir John Pokeswell (fn. 95) was succeeded in 1505
by his son Thomas. Thomas's son Thomas (d.
1537) left as heirs his daughters Eleanor and
Elizabeth. (fn. 96) By 1578 Eleanor and her husband
John Roynon held Woolmersdon, (fn. 97) which they
sold in 1584 to George Smythe. George's son
Sir Nicholas was succeeded in 1622 by his son
Nicholas, (fn. 98) whose son George died an infant in
1631. George's uncle and heir George (fn. 99) conveyed the estate in 1634 to Benjamin Bull, who
sold it in 1641 to Henry Harvey (fn. 1) (d. c. 1658).
Henry's son Henry (d. 1671) left as heir his uncle
John Harvey (d. 1673), whose heir was his
brother Francis (d. 1682). (fn. 2) In 1715 the owner
was John Harvey who had bought lands at
Hadworthy in 1678 and was succeeded in turn
by his sons Francis (d. by 1764) and John. (fn. 3) No
further reference to the lordship has been found
but the Hadworthy lands were sold to George
Musgrave, owner of another part of Woolmersdon, in 1685. (fn. 4)
The capital messuage on the Pokeswells' estate
was possibly Ball's Farm. The rendered and
colourwashed house retains the roof and walls of
a small late-medieval hall into which an upper
floor and chimney stack were inserted probably
in the 17th century. At about the same time a
wing was added at the back of the south end.
The remaining third of Joan Trivet's estate
was divided between the heirs of Cecily (d.
1361), wife successively of John Stapleton and
of Stephen Laundy. (fn. 5) Those heirs were first the
Dodingtons, who in 1544 sold part to the Newports; (fn. 6) secondly, the Orchards whose estate
passed by marriage after 1420 to the Careys and
was sold in 1564 to Nicholas Halswell; (fn. 7) and
thirdly the Crewkernes, who appear to have sold
their share before 1431. (fn. 8)
A capital messuage, also known as Barret's,
was recorded in 1717 on the former Dodington
estate. (fn. 9) It was later known as Bell's Farm and
was demolished c. 1982. Built of rubble, it had
a three-roomed plan with smoke-blackened
trusses and evidence of two possible open
hearths. (fn. 10)
In 1066 Algar held HADWORTHY, and in
1086 Roger de Courcelles held it with Robert as
his tenant. (fn. 11) In 1287 John de Columbers held
Hadworthy of the honor of Compton Dundon. (fn. 12)
By 1239 Geoffrey of Woolmersdon held land at
Hadworthy, which from 1429 apparently descended with part of Woolmersdon manor, (fn. 13)
whose lords, the Halswells and their successors,
retained the lordship of Hadworthy in 1736,
although they had only c. 8 a. of land there by
1708. (fn. 14)
William of Erleigh gave WILLSTOCK to
Buckland priory in the 12th century. (fn. 15) Alexander
Popham may have acquired it in 1544. (fn. 16) Alexander's son John gave it to his brother Edward (fn. 17)
and it descended with Huntworth until 1615
when it was settled on Thomas, a younger son
of Alexander Popham (d. 1602). (fn. 18) Sir William
Portman probably bought Willstock in 1652, and
sold it to George Musgrave in 1679. (fn. 19) George
(d. 1692) left it to his wife Dorothy for life and
then to his nephews Richard and William Musgrave, who conveyed their interest to their elder
brother George (d. 1721). (fn. 20) Dorothy was followed by Mary, widow of George Musgrave's
son George (d. 1724). (fn. 21) Willstock descended
with Combe Sydenham in Stogumber (fn. 22) until
1795 when Juliana Langham sold it to Thomas
Southwood, who retained a message and 110 a.
and sold the rest. (fn. 23) In 1838 it belonged to the
Coate family, who had been tenants in the 18th
century. (fn. 24)
Alwig Banneson held HUNTWORTH in 1066
and Richard Demeri as tenant of Alfred d'Epaignes in 1086. (fn. 25) The manor was held of Alfred's
honor of Stowey until 1586 or later. (fn. 26)
Huntworth was said to have passed from Jordan Rufus (fl. 1200) to his daughter Joan, wife
of Walter of Kentisbere, and to her son Sir
Walter of Kentisbere. (fn. 27) The son (fl. c. 1248-68)
was probably succeeded by Stephen of Kentisbere (fl. 1275) (fn. 28) and Stephen by his sister or
daughter Joan, wife of Sir Hugh Popham, who
held Huntworth in 1285. (fn. 29) Sir Hugh (d. by 1326)
was followed by his son John (d. c. 1345), John
by his son Hugh (d. c. 1361), (fn. 30) and Hugh by
John Popham (d. by 1428). Thomas Popham,
probably John's son, held Huntworth in 1428
and 1438, and was succeeded by William Popham (d. 1479). (fn. 31) William's widow Agnes, who
had a life interest, married Alexander Sydenham, survived until 1525, and was followed by
her son John Popham. (fn. 32) John died in 1536 and
was followed in turn by his son Alexander (d.
1556), his grandson Edward Popham (d. 1586),
and Edward's son Alexander (d. 1602). (fn. 33) Alexander's son Edward, outlawed for debt between
1623 and 1625, had conveyed Huntworth and
other estates in 1621 to trustees. (fn. 34) Edward died
without surviving issue in 1641 leaving Huntworth to Sir William Portman. (fn. 35) Portman died
in 1645 and was succeeded by his son William.
The manor descended in the Portman family
with Clavelshay and Bere in Wayford to Claud
Berkeley Portman, Viscount Portman (d. 1929),
and was divided and sold in 1930, when no
reference was made to the lordship. (fn. 36)
Huntworth House, built in the late 16th century, had a symmetrical front including a central
hall range between a projecting three-storeyed
porch and wing on one side and a projection,
possibly for a stair, and a similar wing on the
other. (fn. 37) By 1799 the house, known as Huntworth
Farm, was let and it was demolished c. 1828.
Some of the materials, including a royal coat of
arms, were used to make a garden house in the
grounds of the present Huntworth House. (fn. 38)
Dunwear hamlet was said to be held by John
of Erleigh in 1298, (fn. 39) and DUNWEAR manor,
held of North Petherton in 1630 and 1770, (fn. 40) can
perhaps be traced back to the mid 13th century
when Henry of Erleigh gave land there to Lawrence Wild (fl. 1260-7). Wild's son and heir John
left a brother Richard, (fn. 41) who in 1307 settled 2
messuages and 95 a. in Standenhay and Dunwear on himself for life with remainder to John
Popham, and other lands on members of the
Paris family. (fn. 42) Richard was dead by 1349. (fn. 43) John
Popham's grandson Thomas Popham of Postridge in Aisholt died c. 1410 leaving a son or
grandson John Popham (d. c. 1473) who held
lands at Dunwear. John's son John (d. c. 1510)
was probably father of Margaret, wife of Cuthbert Clavelshay (d. 1523). (fn. 44) Margaret died c.
1546 leaving a son Richard Clavelshay (d. c.
1554) who held land at Dunwear. (fn. 45) Richard's
heir was his son John whose daughter Mary
married Robert Jennings. Mary's son Marmaduke Jennings bought an estate called Dunwear
manor from Richard Clavelshay, probably
John's male heir, and his wife in 1609. (fn. 46)
Marmaduke died in 1625 and his son Robert
in 1630. (fn. 47) Robert left Dunwear to his second son
Robert, but the eldest son Marmaduke (d. by
1662) took possession. After Marmaduke's death
Robert entered the estate but in 1670 sold it to
John Selleck, archdeacon of Bath. (fn. 48) Selleck (d.
1690) was succeeded in turn by his second son
Nathaniel (d. c. 1699) and by Nathaniel's son
John (d. 1732). (fn. 49) By 1766 John Stradling held at
least part of the estate and in 1767 was said to
hold the manor. (fn. 50) By 1770, however, it was in
the possession of Benjamin Allen (d. 1791), and
was said to have been held by his father Dr. John
Allen (d. 1741). Dunwear manor descended to
Benjamin's son Jeffreys Allen (d. 1844) who left
it in trust for his son John, (fn. 51) but the manor lands
in North Petherton parish had been sold to
William Kinglake before 1838 and were later
known as Hales farm. (fn. 52)
There was a house on Richard Wild's estate in
1316 when he had a licence for a private chapel. (fn. 53)
No more is known of it.
In 1370 Matthew Clevedon held an estate in
Moorland which Alexander Clevedon held in
1412 when it was called NEW HITCHINGS. (fn. 54)
By 1458 it was held by Sir Edward Brooke, Lord
Cobham (d. 1464), who was succeeded by his
son John and daughter Elizabeth whose shares
were bought by Sir Edward's nephew John
Brooke in 1496 and 1502. (fn. 55) In 1650 Edward
Court held the manors of OLD HITCHINGS,
New Hitchings, and Moorland, (fn. 56) and in 1677 he
and his wife sold New Hitchings and Moorland
manors to Samuel Reynolds. (fn. 57) Samuel was dead
by 1694 and his heir was his daughter Anne who
with her husband Edward Leigh sold New
Hitchings in 1711 to John Travers, (fn. 58) who in the
same year sold it to Francis Newton. (fn. 59) James
Byrt Newton had succeeded by 1742 and was
dead by 1761 when his heirs were his cousins
Elizabeth, wife of Thomas Putt, and Margaret,
wife of Benjamin Incledon who sold New Hitchings and Moorland to Charles Chichester. (fn. 60) No
further reference to the lordship has been found
but most of the lands were acquired by John
Chapman (d. c. 1776) and Richard Gatcombe
(d. 1782). (fn. 61)
WELY manor at Moorland can be traced to a
holding of William le Bole in the late 13th
century. His unnamed heir, a minor in 1300,
held Wely. In 1307 Nicholas Cralle was holding
Wely from Hugh Popham but by 1323 John le
Bole was in possession. John had died probably
by 1332. (fn. 62) For most of the 14th century the Wely
family held lands at Moorland. (fn. 63) Richard Wild
(fl. 1329) also held land at Moorland. His heir
Thomas Cave, a minor in 1349, (fn. 64) married Alice
Wely. Cave and Richard Wely held courts jointly
at Moorland in 1369. (fn. 65) In 1394 Richard Wely
and Christine his wife held 'Kewelwere' (fn. 66) and
MOORLAND. (fn. 67) John Cave of Wely, recorded
in 1415, was probably son of Thomas and
brother of Thomas Cave the younger (d. by
1438). Thomas's son Richard Cave married
Joan, sister and heir of John Sydenham, whose
family had held land at Moorland in the 14th
and 15th centuries. Richard was succeeded by
his son Philip who died in possession of Moorland in 1471. (fn. 68) He was succeeded by his son
William, who was dead by 1527 when his son
John settled the manors of Moorland and Wely
on himself and his wife Elizabeth. John died c.
1529 and Elizabeth married James Hadley of
Withycombe. In 1533 the manors were settled
on Elizabeth and James for life; a statement in
1535 that Thomas Michell held Wely, Moorland, and 'Culawere' of the heirs of John
Whiting, lord of West Melcombe, may be erroneous. (fn. 69) James Hadley was dead by 1539 but
Elizabeth probably survived him. (fn. 70) The manor
passed to John Cave's nephew George Perceval,
who in 1566 sold Moorland to James Boyes of
Bridgwater. (fn. 71) James left his lands to his elder
son Simon (fn. 72) but his younger son John was
holding Moorland by 1581 and sold it to Henry
Andrews or Fry of Cannington. In 1599 Henry
sold Moorland to John Cornish who in 1602 gave
it to Nicholas Halswell in exchange for Stretcholt in Pawlett. (fn. 73) Moorland was settled on
Nicholas and his male heirs in 1608 and descended with Halswell in Goathurst to the Tyntes. (fn. 74)
In 1636 it was said to be held of Nether Stowey
manor. (fn. 75) No reference to the lordship has been
found after 1800. In 1838 the estate consisted of
farms in Northmoor Green. (fn. 76)
In 1504 Alexander Sydenham acquired land at
Moorland from Gilbert Collins. Alexander, who
lived at Huntworth, gave all his estates in Moorland, Dunwear, and Chadmead to his son
Sylvester and to Sylvester's wife Joan in 1511. (fn. 77)
Alexander died in 1523, Sylvester in 1526, and
Joan in 1547. Sylvester's nephew John held an
estate called MOORLAND manor in 1578. (fn. 78)
John was dead by 1603 when the manor was in
the hands of Sir John Poyntz of Iron Acton
(Glos.), husband of Elizabeth, daughter and heir
of Alexander Sydenham, John's brother. In 1603
Sir John let and then sold the manor to Thomas
Webber of Luxborough. (fn. 79) Thomas (d. c. 1609)
was succeeded by his son John (d. 1627) and
John by his son Thomas. (fn. 80) Thomas held the
manor in 1640 but was dead by 1667 and
probably by 1647. His son John (d. c. 1673) left
his estate to his widow Gertrude (d. c. 1675). (fn. 81)
Alexander Kinglake had acquired the manor
by 1693 probably from the heirs of John Webber. It may have passed to Alexander's son John
(d. 1739) and to John's son Alexander in 1766. (fn. 82)
Alexander mortgaged and subsequently sold
parts of Moorland in 1771 and conveyed his
remaining estate c. 1780 to his brother John (d.
1784). (fn. 83) John's son John (d. 1809) was succeeded
by his widow Anna (d. 1847) and she by his
brother William and his brother Robert's son
John Alexander. (fn. 84) No reference has been found
to the lordship after 1836. Some land was sold,
but William Kinglake's son Alexander (d. 1891)
bought the remainder of his cousin's share. (fn. 85) In
1897 Alexander's brother John Hamilton Kinglake gave it to his son Hamilton Alexander
Kinglake as part of Saltmoor manor in Stoke St.
Gregory. (fn. 86)
In 1370 Richard Coker held land at Moorland (fn. 87)
which probably descended to James Coker.
James's heir was his kinsman John Coker whose
estates passed to his daughter Margaret, wife
successively of Alexander Hody (d. 1461) and
Sir Reynold Stourton. (fn. 88) Margaret died in 1489
in possession of the manor of MOORLAND by
inheritance from her father. Her heir was John
Seymour, grandson of her uncle Robert Coker. (fn. 89)
The subsequent descent of this manor has not
been traced.
Robert Broughton (d. 1631) settled land at
Moorland on his daughter and coheir Jane, wife
of James Clarke, in 1606. (fn. 90) In 1632 Jane, then a
widow, sold MOORLAND manor to her
daughter Bridget. In 1635 Bridget conveyed the
manor to Alexander Bulpan. (fn. 91) Alexander and his
sons Alexander and John were dead by 1666
when the manor was divided between their heirs,
namely Joan, wife of John Phelps, and Mary,
wife of Edward Batt. Mary sold her share to
George Musgrave. (fn. 92) In 1672 Musgrave sold all
or part of the estate to John Ballam. John had
been succeeded by his son John by 1695, but the
estate may have been forfeited under a mortgage,
as land called Ballams formed part of the Tyntes'
manor of Moorland in 1708. (fn. 93) John Phelps died
in 1672; his son John mortgaged an estate at
Moorland in 1685 to Sir Halswell Tynte. (fn. 94) No
further reference to the lordship has been found
nor has later ownership of the land been traced.
In 1288 Walter le Lyf held land in North
Petherton and la More. (fn. 95) Joan, wife of Walter
Tilley, and Amice, wife of Baldwin Malet, coheirs of Richard Lyf, held an estate, probably at
MOORLAND, in 1401. (fn. 96) Walter and Joan appear to have acquired Amice's share c. 1416. (fn. 97)
Walter probably died shortly afterwards and
Joan married William Pym. She died c. 1426
when her heir was Thomas Blanchard, her son
by her first husband. (fn. 98) Thomas's half-brother
Leonard Tilley settled Moorland in 1463 on
Joan, wife of John Speccote, for life and on his
own children. (fn. 99) Thomas Tilley, probably Leonard's son or grandson, died in 1536 in
possession of a manor of Moorland held of North
Petherton. (fn. 1) Thomas was succeeded by his
grandson James Tilley (d. 1557) and James by
his son George (d. 1590). (fn. 2) George's heirs were
his daughters Anne, wife of William Walton, and
Elizabeth who later married Sir Edward Parham. In 1604 Walton obtained Elizabeth's
share. (fn. 3) He died in 1617 survived by Anne and
leaving a son Francis, a minor. (fn. 4) By 1647 the
estate appears to have been acquired by the
Court family, and descended with their manor
of New Hitchings. (fn. 5)
John Bowyer owned land in MOORLAND in
1552. Before 1555 he acquired the reversion of
more, and in 1586 held Moorland manor. (fn. 6) Bowyer died in 1599 when his heir was his son
Edmund. (fn. 7) Edmund (d. 1625) was followed by
his son Edmund (d. 1665) and by his grandson,
also Edmund Bowyer (d. 1670). (fn. 8) Edmund, son
of the last, assigned Moorland to William
Browne in 1702. (fn. 9) The estate was dispersed in
1714 on behalf of William's son William, a
minor; (fn. 10) subsequent ownership has not been
traced.
St. John's hospital, Bridgwater, acquired estates in North Petherton in 1349 and 1357. (fn. 11)
After the Dissolution the hospital's estate, in the
east part of the parish, was divided and sold in
1544, 1553, and 1610. (fn. 12) Athelney abbey had
lands at WEST YEO which were sold to John
Leigh in 1543. (fn. 13)
An estate called Newton, held by Brictwold in
1066 and by Ralph under Roger Arundel in
1086, has been identified (fn. 14) as MAUNSEL
manor, which was held of the Erleighs' manor
of North Petherton in the 13th century. (fn. 15) By
1539, however, Maunsel was held of Buckland
priory's manor of North Petherton, later known
as Buckland Fee. That overlordship continued
until 1566 or later. (fn. 16)
William of Erleigh is said to have given Maunsel to Philip Arblaster in the late 12th century
in free marriage with William's daughter Mabel.
Her mother Aziria confirmed the grant for
Philip's son Philip, surnamed Maunsel. (fn. 17) Philip
may have been succeeded by Roger Maunsel (fl.
1242-3) and Walter Maunsel (fl. 1276-80). (fn. 18)
Geoffrey Maunsel was probably holding the
manor in 1287 and died c. 1302 when his lands
were in the custody of his widow Hawise during
the minority of his heir. (fn. 19) Philip Maunsel, probably Geoffrey's heir, was dead by 1349. He was
probably succeeded by William Maunsel (fl.
1366) who was dead by 1398 when his son
Richard held the manor. (fn. 20) Richard was probably
succeeded by his son John before 1423. John the
elder, possibly the same, was at Maunsel in 1457.
He was M.P. for Bridgwater in 1449 and 1454
and was still alive in 1469. (fn. 21) By 1500 he had been
succeeded by Robert Maunsel. Marmaduke
Maunsel (d. 1544) had inherited the manor by
1533 when he settled it on his son John for his
marriage to Catherine Vowell. (fn. 22) In 1570 Catherine, then a widow, gave Maunsel to her son
John Maunsel in return for an annuity. John
died in 1586 leaving his son Richard a minor. (fn. 23)
Richard, who came of age in 1587, was in
possession of Maunsel in 1609. In 1631 his
widow Elizabeth and heir John sold the manor
to John Harvey of Taunton. (fn. 24)
Harvey sold Maunsel to William Bacon of
Broomfield in 1648. William (d. 1663) was
followed by his son William (d. 1690). In 1689
Maunsel was settled on William's son Thomas
for his marriage. Thomas (d. 1722) left four
daughters, Dorothy, Grace, Susan, and Elizabeth, who in 1726-7 released their shares to
Henry Portman. Portman died in 1728 and was
succeeded by his nephew Sir Edward Seymour,
Bt., who in the same year conveyed the manor
to his son Alexander. Alexander died c. 1733
leaving Maunsel to his sister Letitia for life and
then to her son Alexander Seymour Gapper. (fn. 25)
Gapper mortgaged the estate heavily and in
1765 he left it to John Nichols (d. c. 1769). In
1771 John's sons John and William Nichols
released Maunsel to the mortgagee Richard
Scrafton, to enable John Slade to buy the manor
in 1772. (fn. 26) John Slade (d. 1801) was succeeded
by his son John (later Gen. Sir John Slade, Bt.,
d. 1859) who held command under Sir John
Moore in 1808 and was defeated at Llera in 1812.
Sir John's third son Sir Frederick (d. 1863) was
followed by his son Sir Alfred (d. 1890) and
Alfred by his son Sir Cuthbert (d. 1908). Cuthbert's eldest son Sir Alfred died in 1960 and his
second son Sir Michael in 1962. Michael's son
Sir Benjamin Slade was the owner in 1983. (fn. 27)
Maunsel House or Grange was recorded as
Maunsel Place in 1544. (fn. 28) An east-west range at
the south end of the house comprises a medieval
hall, screens passage, and cross wing. The hall
became a kitchen when the main north-south
range was added in the early 16th century. That
range comprises a ground-floor hall and a firstfloor great chamber which has an arch-braced
roof of eight bays with cusped windbraces. The
porch may be a later 16th-century addition.
During the early 17th century the medieval hall
was ceiled and a rear wing added at the north
end of the main range. The rooms there have
plastered intersecting beamed ceilings and two
first-floor rooms contain contemporary panelling. Probably during the 18th century the great
chamber was ceiled to provide an attic storey:
John Bastard of Blandford (Dors.) worked on
the house in 1727. (fn. 29) In the mid 18th century,
probably when Sir John Slade bought the house,
the staircase was rebuilt and several rooms were
refitted. During the late 1820s extensive internal
alterations were made by the architect Richard
Carver including the removal of the great chimney stack from the hall. He built the dining room
and extended the great hall northwards. (fn. 30) In the
19th century single-storeyed service rooms and
a passage were added on the west and the porch
was rebuilt. In the 1860s a library and billiard
room were added west of the dining room and
a canted bay was built above the main staircase.
By the early 18th century 4 a. around the house
included a dovehouse, stables, barns, gardens,
orchards, and a large fishpond with an island. (fn. 31)
A canal was constructed in the early 18th century, possibly from earlier fishponds. Further
south a lodge, called the dairy, on the site of the
former mill, probably dates from the late 18th
or early 19th century and incorporates a semicircular thatched room. A northern lodge was
rebuilt in the early 20th century. The park north
of the house was established between 1823 and
1838, probably c. 1828 when the north drive was
made, hedges removed, and a haha reconstructed. (fn. 32) In 1839 James Veitch of Exeter
supplied many ornamental trees which were
planted along the north drive, around the canal,
and in a copse east of the house. (fn. 33) A partly walled
kitchen garden lay west of the house.
ERNESHAM, recorded in the 13th century, (fn. 34)
belonged to Richard Wely and his wife Christine
in 1394. (fn. 35) In 1457 it was held by the Maunsel
family (fn. 36) but by the early 17th century it was
divided. (fn. 37) In 1613 Robert Catford sold an estate
at Ernesham to Marmaduke Ling (d. 1641), who
was succeeded by Marmaduke Ling (d. 1682). (fn. 38)
Eleanor, widow of the last, died in 1683 and left
as coheirs Eleanor, wife of Simon Court, and
Joan, wife of James Porter, possibly her granddaughters. (fn. 39) Simon Court (d. 1726) settled his
share of Ernesham on his son Thomas (d. by
1733) (fn. 40) who was succeeded by his son Thomas
(d. by ? 1740) and his daughter Eleanor. (fn. 41) Eleanor
was dead by 1759 when the estate, including the
house later known as Court's Farm, had been
bought by Jeremiah Dewdney who also acquired
the Porters' share. (fn. 42) Dewdney's great-nephew
Jeremiah Dewdney Parsons sold Court's farm to
William Webber c. 1822. (fn. 43) Court's Farm probably dates from the early 18th century and is
built of brick with a pantile roof. The five-bayed
front has a central door with wrought iron porch.
BUCKLAND SORORUM manor probably
originated in estates held by Buckland priory in
North Petherton. They were let to Edward
Rogers before the Dissolution and in 1544 were
granted to William Parr, earl of Essex, Edward
Rogers, and others. (fn. 44) The manor descended with
Chadmead in the Rogers family (fn. 45) and was sometimes called the manor of Buckland Sororum
cum Chadmead. From the 18th century it was
also known as Buckland Tithe Free. (fn. 46) By 1838
much of the estate had been sold to Richard
Meade King, Thomas Stacey, Sir Charles
Kemeys-Tynte, and Sir John Slade, Bt. (fn. 47) There
does not appear to have been a capital messuage.
CHADMEAD manor, also known as Brickland, Bankland, or Bankland Chadmead, (fn. 48) was
held of the Bluets' manor of North Petherton in
1485. (fn. 49) In 1298 Henry of Somerset held Chadmead and Holbrook. (fn. 50) Ralph of Middleney (d.
1363) held an estate at Chadmead which passed
at his death to his widow with reversion to his
granddaughter Katharine, second wife of Thomas Berkeley. Katharine died in 1385 and was
succeeded by Thomas Berkeley (d. 1417), her
husband's grandson. Thomas's heir was his
daughter Elizabeth (d. 1422), wife of Richard
Beauchamp, earl of Warwick. Chadmead appears to have descended to her eldest daughter
Margaret (d. 1467), wife of John Talbot, earl of
Shrewsbury, and to their son John, Lord Lisle. (fn. 51)
John's widow was in possession of deeds of
Chadmead c. 1457, but the land was probably
sold to the Newburghs. John Newburgh possessed land at Chadmead in 1423. (fn. 52) Sir John
Newburgh (d. by 1441), probably his son, was
followed by his son John. That John's grandson
John Newburgh (d. 1485) (fn. 53) was succeeded by
his brother Roger who with his wife Elizabeth
sold Chadmead to Alexander Sydenham in
1498. (fn. 54) Alexander settled the manor on his son
Sylvester in 1511, (fn. 55) and in 1557 it was held by
George Sydenham and his wife Eleanor, (fn. 56) who
may have been the daughter of Sylvester. In
1586 the manor was in the possession of Joan or
Jane Rogers, widow of Sir George Rogers of
Cannington and granddaughter of Sylvester
Sydenham. (fn. 57)
Joan Rogers died in 1602 and her son Edward
in 1627. (fn. 58) Sir Francis Rogers (d. 1638), son of
Edward, was succeeded by his son Hugh, a
minor, and Hugh (d. 1653) by his uncle Henry
Rogers. Henry died in 1672 leaving a life interest
to Hugh's grandson Alexander Popham of
Littlecote (Wilts.). (fn. 59) Alexander died without
male issue in 1705 and by 1712 the manor had
reverted to Sir Copplestone Warwick Bampfylde, heir to Warwick Bampfylde, nephew of
Henry Rogers. (fn. 60) Sir Copplestone sold the manor
to Sir Thomas Wroth in 1720. (fn. 61) The manor then
descended with the Wroth estate in Lyng until
the death of Elizabeth Acland in 1806, when her
daughter Elizabeth Grove and her son Wroth
Palmer Acland held it for the remainder of
certain terms. In 1815 part was put up for sale
and in 1829 that portion known as Little
Bankland was sold to Sir John Slade. (fn. 62) The
remainder of the estate, called Eames, was retained by John Acland's son Peregrine in 1838
as part of Buckland Sororum manor. (fn. 63)
There was a house on the estate in 1423 (fn. 64) and
the capital messuage, called Chadmead or
Eames, probably after a former tenant, was let
in 1720. (fn. 65) In 1754 Arthur Acland reserved the
right to hold courts in the house but in 1767 the
house was described as unfinished and the barn
and offices were down. By 1771 the house had
fallen into decay and had been demolished. (fn. 66)
BANKLAND was held by John Bluet in
1573 (fn. 67) and descended as part of North Petherton
manor until 1855 or later. (fn. 68) A capital messuage
recorded between 1573 and 1757 (fn. 69) may have
been Bankland Farm, (fn. 70) which dates from the
16th century with a three-roomed plan and cross
passage. The rear wing was added in the 18th
century when the house was reroofed and
refitted.
It has been suggested that TUCKERTON
formed part of Newton, (fn. 71) and during the early
13th century the name is recorded as Tokar
Newton. It was held as of Nether Stowey manor
in the 13th and 14th centuries. (fn. 72) Before 1216 the
Hospitallers of Buckland received land at Tuckerton from Robert Bacon given to him by
Robert son of Bernard and from Gerard of
Brocton given to him by Robert Bacon. Stephen
son of Michael de Perers also gave land there to
the Hospitallers. (fn. 73) The Hospitallers held Tuckerton until 1428 (fn. 74) and probably until the
Dissolution.
After the Dissolution Tuckerton was probably
granted with other lands of Buckland priory to
William Portman and Alexander Popham in
1544. (fn. 75) Alexander Popham in 1551 gave Tuckerton manor to his son Edward (d. 1586) and
Edward's wife Jane. (fn. 76) Jane (d. 1610) was succeeded by her grandson Edward Popham. (fn. 77)
Edward was outlawed for debt in 1628 and the
Crown granted the manor of Tuckerton and
Clayhanger, probably after 1635, to William
Dowthwayte of Bridgwater, who assigned it in
1638 to Emmanuel Sandys and William Dawe. (fn. 78)
In 1671 Tuckerton belonged to Robert Hunt, in
1680 to John Hunt, and in 1703 to John Jeanes. (fn. 79)
John Jeanes, apparently another, held it in 1766
and Miss Jeanes in 1770. By 1791 Sir John
Durbin had acquired the estate, probably by
marriage. (fn. 80) Joseph Jeanes Durbin, son of Sir
John, sold the estate in 1839 to Sir John Slade. (fn. 81)
There is no further reference to the lordship and
the estate descended with Maunsel until 1870 or
later. (fn. 82) Tuckerton farm was sold to the Portman
family before 1897. (fn. 83)
Athelney abbey received rent for land at Primmore in the 13th century and held an estate at
Tuckerton in 1338. (fn. 84) It was granted to John
Leigh in 1543 (fn. 85) but subsequent ownership has
not been traced.
HEDGING belonged to Buckland priory by
the late 13th century. (fn. 86) In 1706 Sir Philip Sydenham sold a house and c. 40 a. at Hedging to Giles
Gardner (d. 1719) whose son Giles conveyed
them to Henry Selleck in 1720. Henry's son
John sold Hedging to George Coombe in 1742.
George (d. c. 1762) was succeeded by his son
George (d. c. 1823). (fn. 87) In 1838 George's nephew
George Coombe was holding Hedging from
Elizabeth Coles. (fn. 88) James Coles was the owner in
1858. (fn. 89)
Hedging Barton was a two-bayed open hall
house with a one-bayed service block to the
south. It was extended in the 17th century with
the addition of a cross passage and a third room
and a semi-attic upper storey. (fn. 90)
PRIMMORE belonged to the Hospitallers at
Buckland (fn. 91) and was later held by Thomas Musgrave of West Monkton (d. 1627) (fn. 92) whose son
Edward (d. 1684) was succeeded by his son or
grandson Edward Musgrave (d. 1719). Thomas
(d. 1760), son of the last, (fn. 93) settled the estate on
his wife Martha (d. 1772) and his daughter, also
Martha, (fn. 94) who died in 1800 and was followed by
William Beadon, husband of her niece Martha
Hammet and owner in 1838. (fn. 95)
In 1066 Lewin held WEST NEWTON, also
known as NEWTON COMITIS and NEWTON HAWYS, and in 1086 Alfred of
Marlborough held it of Eustace, count of Boulogne. (fn. 96) Eustace's fee passed to the Crown
through the marriage of his daughter to Stephen
of Blois, later King Stephen. (fn. 97) In 1524 West
Newton was said to be held of the abbot of
Athelney, and in 1600 and 1618 of Sir John
Leigh's manor of Lyng, evidently in succession
to the abbey. (fn. 98) No further reference to the
overlordship has been found.
Alfred of Marlborough's lands were granted to
Harold son of Ralph, earl of Hereford, during
the reign of William Rufus. Harold was succeeded by his son Robert (d. after 1147) and by
Robert's son Robert who died in 1198 leaving a
daughter Sibyl, wife of Robert Tregoz. Sibyl
died in 1236 leaving a son Robert Tregoz (d.
1265). (fn. 99) By 1241 West Newton had been subinfeudated; the mesne lordship passed from
Robert's son John (d. 1300) to his daughter
Sibyl, wife of William Grandison, and to John
Warre, son of his daughter Clarice. John died in
1347. (fn. 1) No further reference to the mesne lordship has been found.
Reynold of Newton had been succeeded as
terre tenant by his son Robert by 1241. Robert,
alive in 1269, probably died shortly afterwards. (fn. 2)
He had had a son called Richard but seems to
have been succeeded by his brother Richard
before 1280. (fn. 3) Richard held Newton in 1285 and
1303 (fn. 4) but was dead by 1305 leaving a son Robert
and a widow Sarah as tenant for life. (fn. 5) In 1346
Philip Luccombe and Agnes Trivet, possibly
Robert's widow, were said to hold the fee. (fn. 6) By
1355 the manor was divided, part being held by
Margaret, wife of John Payn. (fn. 7) Philip Luccombe's wife Agatha was possibly daughter of
Robert Newton, and in 1385 Alice, daughter and
heir of the Luccombes' son Geoffrey and wife
of John Copplestone, held the entire manor. (fn. 8)
John Copplestone's brother Richard bought the
manor in 1385 and died leaving John Copplestone as his heir. John may have been still alive
in 1423 but by 1428 Thomas Copplestone, possibly John's son, had succeeded. (fn. 9) Thomas
Copplestone, possibly the same, and his wife
Anne held the manor in 1477. (fn. 10) He died in 1480
leaving four daughters: (fn. 11) Catherine, wife of John
Sydenham; Joan, wife successively of Simon
Littlecote, Sir Morgan Kidwelly, and Sir Edmund Gorges; Margaret, wife successively of
William Hymerford and Henry Thornton; and
Elizabeth, wife of William Seymour. Catherine
appears to have died by 1524 leaving her three
sisters as her heirs. (fn. 12)
Joan died in 1524 holding one third. Her heir
was William Thornborough, son of her daughter
Alice. (fn. 13) William (d. 1535) left an infant son John,
but he or his widow seems to have sold their
share to William Hymerford whose son Andrew
sold it to William Hawley (d. 1567). The estate
descended in the Hawley family with Durston
until 1618 when Sir Henry Hawley sold his share
to Henry Cheeke (d. 1630), (fn. 14) who acquired most
of the other shares.
In 1529 Margaret settled her share on William
Hymerford her son and heir, on whose death it
was divided between his two daughters Margaret, wife of William Vowell, and Joan, wife of
John Hambridge. (fn. 15) John Willoughby bought
Margaret's sixth share in 1555 and died in 1559.
His son Richard sold it to Richard Galhampton
and George Cheeke (d. c. 1589) in 1580. (fn. 16) The
share passed to Cheeke's son Henry (d. 1594)
and to Henry's son also Henry (d. 1630). (fn. 17) Joan
Hambridge, holder of the other sixth share, was
dead by 1542 and her share probably descended
on the death of her husband in 1569 to her son
Richard, and from Richard passed by sale like
other family land to George Harrison and then
to John Bowyer of Beere in Chilton Trinity. (fn. 18)
Bowyer died in 1599 and his son Edmund held
a sixth share in 1602. (fn. 19) Edmund died in 1625
and his son Edmund sold his share to Sir Robert
Phelips in 1626. (fn. 20) In 1668 that share was reunited with the rest of the manor.
Elizabeth died before her husband William
Seymour (d. 1532). Her daughter Agnes, wife of
Henry Fortescue, (fn. 21) was succeeded by her son
John. John's son William (fn. 22) held a third of the
manor in 1588 and died in 1599 leaving a son
Francis under age. (fn. 23) In 1617 Francis sold his
estate to Henry Cheeke. (fn. 24)
Henry Cheeke held five sixths of the manor at
his death in 1630. (fn. 25) His son Henry (d. 1654) left
a daughter Dorothy who in 1658 married John
Bury (d. 1667) and in 1668 (Sir) Edward Phelips
of Montacute (d. 1698), holder of the remaining
share of the manor. (fn. 26) Dorothy Phelips died in
1678. Her only child, also Dorothy Phelips, may
have predeceased her as the manor formed part
of the marriage settlement of Sir Edward and
his second wife Edith in 1683. (fn. 27) From Edith (d.
1728) the manor passed to her youngest
daughter Edith (d. 1772), wife of Carew Mildmay, and to the younger Edith's nephew Edward
Phelips (d. 1797) who in 1778 gave it to his elder
son Edward (d. 1792). That Edward was succeeded by his brother the Revd. William
Phelips. (fn. 28) The manor descended with Montacute manor until 1810 when John Phelips sold
it to Thomas Warre. Thomas died in 1824
leaving as his heir his nephew John Ashley
Warre. (fn. 29) No later reference to the lordship has
been found, but John was succeeded in 1860 by
his son, also John, who died in 1894 leaving West
Newton to his niece Mary Elliott. Her father
Arthur Warre seems to have occupied the estate.
West Newton was bought by the tenant in
1904. (fn. 30) Showerings Ltd. bought the estate in
1958 and owned it in 1984. (fn. 31)
The manor house, formerly called Court
House and in 1984 the Manor, may date from
the 14th century. (fn. 32) It is of rubble, of two storeys,
and formerly had a three-roomed frontage with
cross-passage entrance; it is two rooms deep, and
is probably a double-aisled hall house. The
two-storeyed north porch has a moulded arch.
Parts of smoke-blackened roof posts and some
arch braces survive. The house was remodelled
in the 17th century. The north porch bears the
date 1622 and the initials of Henry Cheeke and
his second wife Katharine. Also from the 17th
century, possibly including some later work by
the Phelipses, are ceiling beams in rooms at the
west end, a staircase, and other fittings, and
ovolo-moulded casements. There was probably
some alteration in the later 18th century and a
wing was added in the 20th century. (fn. 33)
Margery Lyte held RYDON in the early 16th
century. In 1561 her son John Lyte sold it to
Nicholas Halswell (fn. 34) who conveyed it to John
Phelps in 1620. (fn. 35) He or another of that name
died in 1678 (fn. 36) and his son John sold Rydon to
Andrew Moore in 1685. (fn. 37) Moore enlarged his
estate at Rydon and was followed by his nephew
Andrew Moore (d. 1743). Andrew's son William
(d. 1768) left a widow Elizabeth, (fn. 38) who in 1792
with her then husband, the Revd. John
Chaunter, settled Rydon on William Moore's
nephew Hill Dawe. (fn. 39) In 1826 the Revd. Thomas
Coney bought Rydon (fn. 40) which in 1984 was a
county council smallholding.
In 1086 3 virgates of land were attached to the
church of North Petherton. The church was in
the king's hands but had formerly belonged to
Peter, bishop of Chester (d. c. 1084). (fn. 41) The land
may have been granted to John of Erleigh with
the royal manor of North Petherton. The church
and lands of Walter the priest were given to the
canons of Buckland by William of Erleigh in the
later 12th century. Walter may have held the
land there as priest of the church or as heir to
his father Robert and grandfather Leofric. (fn. 42) The
gift was confirmed in 1186 for the support of
the sisters at Buckland. (fn. 43) The priory continued
in possession until the Dissolution and in 1539
the land and tithes, then known as the RECTORY, were let to John Worth. (fn. 44) Worth
continued to hold it under the Crown (fn. 45) until his
death in 1546, (fn. 46) when he was succeeded by a son
of the same name. John Worth died in 1568 (fn. 47)
leaving his lease to his wife Margaret, who died
while their son Thomas was under age. (fn. 48) William Lacey was probably lessee by 1557. (fn. 49)
Alexander Popham, who was granted a reversionary lease in 1579, (fn. 50) died in 1602 and left part
of the rectory estate to his wife Dulcibella. (fn. 51) His
son Edward sold the rectory to William Rolfe in
1629, but subsequent litigation awarded part of
the estate to Sir Peter Vanlore, Kt. and Bt. In
1639 Sir Peter assigned his share to his daughter
Mary, wife of Henry Alexander, earl of Stirling.
She seems to have acquired the whole by 1648,
and was dead by 1659. (fn. 52) She was followed in
turn by her son Henry, earl of Stirling (d. 1691),
and Henry by his son Henry (d. 1739). The heirs
of the last were two of his sisters, Mary, wife of
John Philips, and Judith, wife of Sir William
Trumbell. Mary had three sons, Charles,
Robert, and William, and Judith had one son,
William. William Trumbell (d. 1760), of Easthampstead Park (Berks.), acquired the entire
estate in 1743. (fn. 53) It passed to his daughter Mary
(d. 1769), wife of Martin Sandys, whose
daughter, also Mary, married in 1786 Arthur
Hill, Viscount Fairford (d. 1801), who succeeded his father as marquess of Downshire in
1793. In 1811 Mary (cr. Baroness Sandys 1802),
released the rectory to her son Arthur, marquess
of Downshire (d. 1845), (fn. 54) and he in 1813 sold it
to Richard King and others. King sold most of
the tithes to individual landowners, retaining
small plots of land in North Petherton and
Moorland. (fn. 55)
In 1813 the rectory house stood in North
Petherton and there was a barn and barton at
Moorland. (fn. 56) The site of the house is not known.
Between 1816 and 1838 Richard King or his successor, Richard Meade King, built a house, then
called the Rectory (fn. 57) and in 1984 Wood Lea. It is
a large, three-bayed house with a stucco front.