CHURCH.
The patronage of Wicken church
presumably belonged to the lords of the manor
until Beatrice Malebisse, then its lady, gave
the advowson in 1232 to the newly founded
Spinney priory. (fn. 75) The priory soon appropriated
the church, probably between 1254, when it
received as a pension 5 marks out of the 18 marks
upon which the whole benefice was taxed in the
late 13th century, (fn. 76) and the 1270s. It was by then
in dispute with Anglesey priory, perhaps over
claims for tithe exemption on Anglesey's
Wicken land. (fn. 77) From the 13th century to the
16th Rumburgh priory (Suff.) received a 15-s.
tithe portion, (fn. 78) under a grant, made to its
mother-house, St. Mary's abbey, York, c. 1130
by Wimar the steward, of his Wicken demesne
tithes. (fn. 79)
By 1279 Spinney had had its appropriation of
the church confirmed by the bishop of Norwich
and the Pope. (fn. 80) No vicarage was established, and
all the tithes, great and small, which in 1340
yielded only half the church's assessed income, (fn. 81)
belonged thenceforth, with all other church
income, to Spinney and then Ely priories. (fn. 82)
After 1540 they were owned with Wicken rectory by successive lay owners of the former priory
estate, who were also said from 1600 to have the
'advowson of Wicken vicarage', (fn. 83) which meant
in practice the uncontrolled right to nominate
the minister. (fn. 84)
The rectory, including the patronage and
tithes, was separated from the Spinney estate
following its sale in 1811. It was bought by John
Rayner, the new lord of Wicken manor, before
his death in 1813. His widow Sarah, patron c.
1830, left her rights in 1832 to her sister Mary
Hatch. (fn. 85) Miss Hatch arranged to have all her
Wicken lands, then 705 a., discharged of all
tithes in 1837. The tithe due from the 411 a. of
the Wicken Hall estate, sold with it to Dr.
Dixon, was also in 1837 merged with its freehold. Dixon had in 1835 accepted the rectorial
duties of maintaining the chancel and paying the
curate's £20 stipend, (fn. 86) which fell upon succeeding owners of the Hall farm, among them
from 1910 the county council, into the late 20th
century. Its Wicken property was then called
Chancel farm. (fn. 87)
In 1839, although the tenant of the Tithe farm
at Upware had recently collected most tithes in
kind, the villagers claimed to have for many
years paid moduses of 8d. and 4d. respectively
for milking cows and for foals. No tithes were
customarily taken directly of calves, milk, or
sedge, nor from the Spinney sheepflock, nor
from the commonable doles in the Fodder
fen. (fn. 88) When the tithes were commuted in 1842,
Spinney Abbey farm, 374 a., was agreed to enjoy
exemption as former monastic land, a privilege
extended to Thornhall farm's 167 a. Those fenlands along Wicken's southern borders already
held in severalty, nominally 350 a., at inclosure,
but not the dolvers to the east, were allowed to
be exempt from tithe by prescription, but allotments then made for the formerly exempt
western doles were charged. The 1,551 a. then
considered titheable, out of an estimated 3,812 a.
in the parish, were subjected to a tithe rentcharge of £513, all payable to Miss Hatch. (fn. 89)
After her death in 1858 £496 of that rentcharge
was sold in 1858 to James Thornton (d. 1880),
lord of the manor, (fn. 90) and passed by 1910 to
Thomas Thornton, a solicitor at Mildenhall
(Suff.). The Thorntons apparently still owned
it, 1895-1926. (fn. 91)
In 1825 Miss Hatch vested her right of presentation to Wicken perpetual curacy, acquired
in 1836, in five trustees, 'attached to the ...
Reformed Faith', to include then and later three
Anglican clergy, who were to present 'fit and
pious' persons by majority vote. (fn. 92) From 1858
the patronage of the living, styled by 1870 a
vicarage, was said to belong to a, and by the
1860s to the, Church Patronage Society, (fn. 93) which
still had it in the late 20th century. (fn. 94)
When Mary Bassingbourn granted to Spinney
priory in 1303 property, including 68 a., in
Wicken to maintain four additional canons
there, partly to maintain her family chantry, she
required that two of them ride daily to celebrate
masses in Wicken church. (fn. 95) By 1395 falling
numbers of canons led the priory, despite opposition from the Peytons, then lords, to seek leave
to stop sending the two canons to the parish
church and serve it instead by a secular priest. (fn. 96)
In 1416-17 the villagers complained that the
prior neither sent the two canons, nor even provided, according to custom, a chaplain at the
church, so depriving them of services. (fn. 97) In 1419,
however, the canons obtained from Mary's heir
the conversion of those obligations into commemorative services for her family in their own
priory church. (fn. 98)
In appropriating Spinney to Ely priory in
1449 the bishop of Norwich permitted it to serve
Wicken church either by a monk or a suitable
secular chaplain. (fn. 99) One such chaplain died in
1492. (fn. 1) About 1540, when Ely priory was
required to find, and pay £5 yearly to, a priest
to serve Wicken church, the Spinney impropriator's lessee who occupied the 'parsonage' was
expected to pay his wages. (fn. 2) The curate was paid
only £10 yearly in 1603, (fn. 3) and £13 6s. 8d. in the
early 1640s, besides 30s. of offerings. One curate
then, when preaching, demanded that his parishioners should help him get more wages, or he
would leave them to perish for want of teaching. (fn. 4)
In 1650 the Russells allowed his successor £30. (fn. 5)
In the 1740s the duke of Somerset raised the
curate's customary stipend, charged on the
Spinney estate, from £18 to £20 net, besides £3
yearly from the churchyard rent and surplice
fees. (fn. 6) That £20 continued to be received from
Hall farm after 1835. (fn. 7) A grant by lot of £200 in
1748 from Queen Anne's Bounty was invested
in 1765 in 22½ a. (originally) in Mildenhall
(Suff.). Another £200 grant, matching a benefaction, of 1773 was used in 1774 to buy 25 a.
in Outwell and Upwell (I. Ely). (fn. 8) That land,
reckoned as glebe, yielded rents of £65-70 gross
from the 1830s to the 1880s, (fn. 9) which later
declined. Of 24½ a. owned at Mildenhall 20 a.
was sold in 1921, as was 10 a. at Upwell in
1928. (fn. 10) By 1940 only 10 a. was left. (fn. 11)
Miss Hatch agreed in 1854 to make up the
curate's annual income to £100 for 20 years. (fn. 12)
In 1858 she bequeathed for the living £500 due
on a sister-in-law's death, which was received in
1870. By 1873 the net income had risen from c.
£115 to c. £150. (fn. 13) Later benefactions, also
matched by augmentations, included £300 given
by another kinswoman, Mrs. Sarah Archer,
in 1880, and £500 more from the Church
Patronage Society in 1885, (fn. 14) altogether increasing the vicar's income by c. £87 since the 1860s.
There was probably no clergy house before
the 1830s. (fn. 15) In 1836 Miss Hatch acquired a 3a. plot north of Church Lane, just beyond the
east end of the village, in order to build on it a
house, let to the curate by 1842, which she gave
for the minister in 1853. (fn. 16) The originally plain,
rectangular greybrick house, enlarged with bay
windows in 1869 and improved in 1946-7, (fn. 17)
remained the vicar's residence in the early
1990s. (fn. 18)
A 'gildhouse' was mentioned in the 1410s. (fn. 19)
In 1603 the chaplain reported 200 communicants. (fn. 20) In 1644 the curate Robert Grimer, sonin-law of his patron Isaac Barrow, was accused
of upholding ceremonies, including churching
women at the communion rail, and of encouraging villagers who sported on the sabbath by
reading out the king's Book of Sports. Grimer
had supported observation of saints' days, but
not parliamentary fasts or the Covenant. He was
ejected at once. (fn. 21) His successor, thought in 1650
of 'irreprehensible ... life', but not doctrine, was
replaced by 1653. (fn. 22) In 1664 Henry Cromwell
used his uncontrolled right to appoint curates
to bring the Puritan Isaac Archer from
Chippenham to serve Wicken, then reckoned a
sinecure. Although Archer claimed to have won
much approval by his preaching there, he left in
1665 when Cromwell found that he must, to
avoid political trouble, procure another clergyman to administer the sacrament which Archer
would not celebrate. (fn. 23) In the 1670s the patrons
did not always provide a 'settled' minister, sending instead scholars from Cambridge, and the
parishioners complained of having no-one to
christen, bury, or visit the sick. (fn. 24)
Between 1764 and 1826 the parish was served
by two successive vicars of Isleham as perpetual
curates. (fn. 25) In the early 19th century the second
of those curates successively hired, to serve
Wicken, the vicar of Fordham from 1806 to 1813
and the curate of Kennett from 1817. Those
hard-pressed clergy could only provide one
service each Sunday, alternately morning and
evening, at Wicken where the quarterly sacraments were attended by 15-30 people until the
1810s, supposedly by 70 in 1820. (fn. 26) In 1826 Mrs.
Rayner appointed her kinsman Edward Hatch
Cropley to Wicken. (fn. 27)
C. L. Allnutt, curate 1843-6, the first modern
one to reside, started a Sunday school and district visiting, and had the church restored. Later
incumbents resided thenceforth. Allnutt's successor, a fervent opponent of Dissent, (fn. 28) claimed
in 1851, by when as later two Sunday services
were held, an average attendance of up to 230
adults, besides 120 Sunday-school children. (fn. 29)
Miss Hatch replaced him in 1854 with a more
emollient German, C. W. Francken, who served
until 1869: by the 1860s he was holding evening
services and fortnightly mission ones, and
from 1865 also harvest thanksgivings, the first
of which attracted 400 people. Few among his
360 churchgoers were farmers. (fn. 30)
His successor claimed 100 churchgoers in
1873, out of the minority of the inhabitants, a
third in 1897, who were church-people; 40-50
of them attended communion, held monthly
by 1873, weekly by 1897. Occasional missions
brought no permanent gain. By 1873 the vicar
held winter cottage lectures for the distant
hamlet of Upware, where a wooden mission hall
was erected in 1883. (fn. 31) A brick Jubilee Mission
Hall, opened in 1887 off the north-west side of
the village green, accommodated in the 1890s
the harvest festivals and a church Temperance
Society. (fn. 32) In the 1920s the church roll numbered
70-100, and in 1940 115 people, (fn. 33) but by 1967
barely 20-30 might attend services in winter. (fn. 34)
Although a small village, Wicken, though
occasionally left vacant, usually had a resident
vicar to itself throughout the 20th century; one
of them served 1925-59 (fn. 35) and the latest, acting
from 1974, was still there in 1994. (fn. 36)
The church of ST. LAWRENCE was perhaps
so named by 1331 when a fair was granted at his
feast, (fn. 37) although its dedication was uncertain in
the 18th century. (fn. 38) It stands by the roadside ½
mile east of the village, just north of the modern
Wicken Hall. Built of fieldstones and clunch,
largely replaced with brick on the north aisle
exterior, and partly dressed in Barnack stone, it
comprises a chancel, aisled and clerestoried nave
with south porch, and a three-stage west tower. (fn. 39)
The fabric is mainly of the late 14th century,
although the chancel sidewalls' western parts,
which retain narrow lancets on each side, are
presumably 13th-century. One of the two lancets on the north side is bisected where it meets
a short eastward extension in ashlar.
Inside, the three-bayed nave is separated from
the wide aisles by arcades with much-moulded
arches on octagonal piers; they are possibly
slightly later than the similarly moulded chancel
arch. Possibly in the late 14th century two threelight windows with early Perpendicular tracery
were inserted at the west ends of the chancel
sidewalls. The five-light chancel east window
also has Perpendicular tracery. The south aisle
windows, with their double and triple lights
under square heads, are perhaps late 15thcentury: they resemble one inserted near the
chancel south wall east end. In the north aisle
are traceried windows of two, and in its east wall,
three lights, probably of the same period, like
the clerestory with its short two-light windows. (fn. 40)
The west tower, buttressed and embattled with
renewed corner pinnacles, has a square stair
turret on its south-east, and a west window of
three uncusped lights over its plain west doorway, both possibly reset. In the angle between
the tower and the north aisle is a small medieval
vestry, which still had in 1769 on its east wall
paintings of figures kneeling before a crowned
letter M. Some remains of medieval stalls then
survived in the chancel. (fn. 41) The medieval north
doorway was apparently moved slightly during
late 20th-century repairs. The porch outside the
original south one has been reconstructed with a
round-headed outer arch, and above it a sundial.
The nave roof, with braced collars resting on
stone corbels carved with heads, is 15th-century.
From that period survive also in the north
aisle other braces, some elaborately carved,
which were rehung in the 1980s below a renewed
roof. In 1518 Sir Robert Peyton left Wicken
church £1 for repairs and a cope, perhaps one
of the two silk ones reported, with only two vestments, in 1552. (fn. 42)
In 1627 the steeple was said to be 'ruinated
and fallen down', and the church walls, roof, and
windows, much decayed. (fn. 43) A 17th-century communion table, railed in by 1769, has been
removed to the north aisle, along with a simple,
probably 18th-century, font, replaced after
1850. In the mid 18th century the lead was sold
from the high-pitched nave and chancel roofs,
sparing only the lower-pitched aisle ones, to pay
for repairs. Thereafter the church was mostly
tiled. (fn. 44)
Brasses survive of Margaret Peyton (d. 1414),
a dog at her feet, probably once on an altar tomb
at the south aisle east end; and of John Peyton
(d. c. 1520) second son of Sir Robert (d. 1518). (fn. 45)
Within the altar steps are floorslabs for Henry
Cromwell (d. 1674) of Spinney Abbey, his
widow, and a son and grandson. Their remains
were removed c. 1880 from a vault below. (fn. 46) The
churchyard contains numerous 18th-century
headstones with lively cherubs, one with a
gravedigger's tools. An early 19th-century
sarcophagus there stands over a vault for the
Rayner and Hatch families, which are also commemorated by Neo-Classical tablets inside on
the chancel walls.
In 1844 the church was restored with £900
provided by the Church Building Society, some
windows being unblocked and all reglazed.
From that restoration dates most of the woodwork, including new deal seating in plain Gothic
with flat poppyheads. Free, open benches for the
poor were then provided in the nave, but still
pews, some surviving in the 1990s, in the
aisles. (fn. 47) Out of 257 sittings only 92 were free in
1873, but all by 1897. (fn. 48) The windband in the
singing gallery was replaced by the 1870s with
a harmonium, (fn. 49) succeeded in the 20th century
by an organ. A legacy of £20,000 from R. Alsop
(d. 1986) helped to repair the roofs from 1987, (fn. 50)
while arches were installed across the north aisle
to support the leaning arcade. A lychgate was
erected in 1990-1 for the churchyard, (fn. 51) closed
since 1876. (fn. 52) A burial ground with a small brick
chapel, opened in 1877 on ½ a. just across the
road, was enlarged in 1900, (fn. 53) and again c. 1980. (fn. 54)
In 1552 the church had only one silver chalice
and paten. (fn. 55) The existing plate includes, as in
1834, a silver cup of 1838-9 and a silver flagon
of 1685 given by John Margetson (d. 1690). (fn. 56)
There were four bells in 1552, (fn. 57) five in 1677, as
in 1769 and in 1994, when a new upper ringing
floor was being installed. (fn. 58) The oldest, probably
pre-Reformation, bell bears a Latin prayer in
Gothic script to the Virgin. The others were
cast in 1582, 1634 after money was left towards
hanging recast bells, 1660, and 1703. (fn. 59) The
parish registers, beginning in 1564, have two 2or 3-year gaps in the late 16th century. (fn. 60)