MANORS AND OTHER ESTATES.
In 1066 one
hide of land at Greenhampstead was held by
Ernesi; it had passed into the possession of Hasculf
Musard by 1086 when it had increased in value. (fn. 58)
During the Middle Ages the manor was variously
described as being held of the barony of Staveley, (fn. 59)
which was the caput of the Musards' lands in
Derbyshire, (fn. 60) and of the king by knight service. (fn. 61)
The manor of MISERDEN apparently passed to
Robert Musard (fl. 1146) (fn. 62) and was later held by
Hasculf Musard. Hasculf, who granted part of the
manor to the Knights Hospitaller, (fn. 63) was dead by
1186, (fn. 64) and the manor passed to his son Ralph who
paid a fine for his father's estates and his own
marriage in 1190. (fn. 65) Ralph died in 1230 and the
manor was apparently inherited in turn by his sons
Robert (d. c. 1247), and Ralph (fn. 66) who died seised
c. 1264. The manor then passed to Ralph's son
Ralph (fn. 67) (d. c. 1271), (fn. 68) and during the minority of
John, son of the younger Ralph, the profits of the
manor were enjoyed at first by Grimbald Pauncefoot (fn. 69) and then by Amice Derneford, lately the
nurse of the king's son Henry. (fn. 70) John entered his
estates in 1287 (fn. 71) and was succeeded in 1289 by his
uncle, Nicholas Musard. (fn. 72) Nicholas conveyed the
manor to his son Malcolm who granted it to Hugh
Despenser the elder in 1297 with the reversion of
that part settled in dower on Christine, his mother. (fn. 73)
Hugh Despenser held the manor until his
forfeiture (fn. 74) when it passed to the Crown which
granted it to Edmund, earl of Kent, in 1326. (fn. 75)
Edmund was executed and his estates forfeited
in 1330, (fn. 76) and later that year the Crown granted the
manor to John Mautravers for life, (fn. 77) with the
reversion to Geoffrey Mortimer. (fn. 78) Mautravers also
suffered forfeiture in 1330 (fn. 79) and in the following year
the manor was restored to the heirs of Edmund,
earl of Kent. (fn. 80) Edmund's eldest son, also Edmund,
died a minor in the king's ward in 1331 (fn. 81) so that the
estate passed to his younger brother John, during
whose minority it was committed to Margaret, his
mother. (fn. 82) In 1338 John Musard, son of Malcolm,
tried to restore his family to the manor by force (fn. 83)
and later brought a writ of novel disseisin against
Margaret. (fn. 84) Nevertheless John, earl of Kent, took
livery of his father's lands in 1349 (fn. 85) and died seised
in 1352. (fn. 86) At John's death his heir was his sister
Joan, wife of Thomas Holland, (fn. 87) but she agreed that
it should be held by John's widow Elizabeth. (fn. 88)
Elizabeth held the estate until her death in 1411
when the next heir was Edmund Mortimer, earl of
March, her great-great-nephew. (fn. 89) Edmund took
livery of his estates in 1413 (fn. 90) and died seised of
Miserden in 1425 (fn. 91) when the manor passed to his
half-sister Joan, wife of John Grey and heir to those
lands which had come to Edmund through the
earldom of Kent. (fn. 92) Joan also died in 1425 (fn. 93) when the
manor passed to Richard, earl of March and later
duke of York, a nephew of Edmund. (fn. 94) Richard
suffered forfeiture in 1459 (fn. 95) and the Crown granted
the manor to trustees for the benefit of Cecily, his
widow, during her life. (fn. 96) After the accession of her
son as Edward IV Cecily received Miserden in
dower (fn. 97) and held it until her death in 1495 (fn. 98) when
the manor was granted to Elizabeth, queen consort
of Henry VII. (fn. 99)
Miserden remained in Crown hands against the
claims of other heirs of Edward IV (fn. 1) and formed part
of the marriage portions of each of the wives of
Henry VIII. (fn. 2) On the death of Catherine Parr in
1548 (fn. 3) the manor passed to Sir Anthony Kingston
who had received a reversionary grant in 1544. (fn. 4)
Anthony died in 1556 (fn. 5) and the succession to
Miserden became confused, his niece Frances
Jerningham, who was his legal heir, and his illegitimate sons having claims to the manor. (fn. 6) The fine
levied on the manor by Frances and her husband
and Edmund Kingston, Anthony's illegitimate son,
appears to have settled the manor on the Kingstons
for three lives. (fn. 7) Edmund was succeeded by his son
Anthony who presented to the rectory in 1566. (fn. 8)
Anthony died in 1591 when no mention was made of
Miserden, (fn. 9) but his son William, who styled himself
'of Miserden', (fn. 10) was recorded as lord of the manor
in 1608 (fn. 11) and after his death in 1614 had a monument
erected in Miserden church. (fn. 12) Nevertheless Henry
Jerningham, son of Frances, (fn. 13) levied fines on the
manor in 1585 and 1592, (fn. 14) possibly to alleviate the
penalties of his recusancy. (fn. 15) After the death of
William Kingston in 1614 the Crown reaffirmed the
rights of the Jerningham family to Miserden, (fn. 16) and
in 1616 Henry Jerningham sold the manor to Sir
William Sandys, retaining life-interests for himself,
his wife, and his son, Henry. (fn. 17) After Henry's death
the younger Henry sold the manor outright to Sir
William in 1620 when Sandys apparently insisted on
protecting himself against the possibility of subsequent claims to the manor by the Kingstons. (fn. 18)
Sir William Sandys died in 1641 and was succeeded by his grandson William, but his wife
Margaret (d. 1644) retained the house and park-land
as part of her jointure. (fn. 19) The younger William died
in 1649 and was succeeded by his son Miles (d.
1697), whose widow Mary held Miserden Park
during the lifetime of her son William (d. 1712).
Barbara, the widow of William, held the manor in
dower until her death in 1745 (fn. 20) when it passed to
Windsor Sandys of Brimpsfield, a cousin. Windsor
died in 1754 and was succeeded by his son Browne
who died unmarried in 1761. The manor then
passed to Browne's brother, Samuel Sandys, (fn. 21) who
was declared a lunatic in 1793 and committed
with his estate to George Richards, his solicitor, to
whom he had mortgaged part of his property. (fn. 22)
Samuel died in 1806 and his heirs were his sisters
Anne (d. 1810) and Mary (d. 1816), who were both
also lunatics. Custody of the sisters and their
estates was granted to their kinsman Sir Edwin
Bayntun Sandys, Bt., who established his claim as
heir to the manor. (fn. 23) Sir Edwin, who was high sheriff
of Gloucestershire in 1820, (fn. 24) embarked on a series
of financial transactions which ended in 1832 when
the estate was sold by order in Chancery for the
benefit of his creditors. The manor was bought at
auction by Thomas Legg who did not take possession, for in 1833 he was replaced as buyer by the
Revd. Edward Reed (fn. 25) who had married Barbara,
Sir Edwin's daughter. (fn. 26)
Reed sold the estate to James Wittit Lyon in
1839. (fn. 27) Lyon's mortgagees later gained possession
of the estate and sold it to John Rolt in 1862. (fn. 28) Rolt,
who was M.P. for West Gloucestershire from 1857
to 1867 and became Attorney General and received a
knighthood in 1866, died in 1871, (fn. 29) and his trustees
sold the estate in 1875 to E. A. Leatham. (fn. 30) Leatham
(d. 1900) (fn. 31) was succeeded by his son A. W. Leatham
who sold the estate in 1915 to Capt. F. N. H.
Wills. (fn. 32) Wills died in 1927, (fn. 33) and his widow
Margery married W/Cdr. H. M. Sinclair in 1942.
They, as directors of the Miserden Park estate,
owned the manor in 1970. (fn. 34)
There was a castle at Miserden by the mid 12th
century, (fn. 35) standing on a site dominating a crossing of
the river Frome. The castle ceased to be inhabited
some time between 1266 (fn. 36) and 1289, and by the
early years of the next century had been replaced by
a manor-house on a new site. (fn. 37) The site of the castle,
a motte and bailey of considerable proportions, was
covered with firs in 1970. Excavation in 1915
uncovered masonry of the 13th century and ridgecrest tiles decorated with faitage and crockets; on
the tiles were small sculpted collared bears standing
processionally. (fn. 38) More recent work has revealed the
remains of a 13th-century gateway. (fn. 39)
The house at Miserden Park, probably on the site
of the medieval manor-house, dates from the earlier
17th century, probably from soon after the arrival
of the Sandys family at Miserden. External features
which survive from that period are part of the ground
floor and first floor of the south front and the stonemullioned and transomed windows and the gabled
porch and entrance on the north front. The hall
retains a 17th-century carved stone fire-place,
resting on columns and decorated with the arms of
Sandys. The 17th-century house was of two
storeys with attics and had gables and five bays on
the south, and probably also the north, front.
There was a gateway with a room above to the west
c. 1710 and the outbuildings formed a two-storey
block arranged round the four sides of a courtyard
north of the house. (fn. 40) The house wore the 'aspect of
desertion and decay' c. 1775 (fn. 41) but by 1874 had
undergone extensive alteration, probably dating
from the earlier 19th century. The work comprised
the removal of the gables, except those over the
entrances, and the attic floor and the substitution
of a crenellated parapet. A two-storey east wing,
lower than the main building, set back from the
south front and projecting northwards was also
added. A quatrefoil light was added on the south
entrance bay and a bellcot over the north entrance. (fn. 42)
In 1875 extensive alterations were undertaken by
the new owner, E.A. Leatham, who employed Alfred
Waterhouse as architect. The work was probably a
conscious restoration of the 17th-century house.
The parapet and bellcot were removed and gables
restored to the south and north fronts. The east wing
was brought up to the same height as the main
building by the addition of another storey and a
gable, and the windows on the south wall were
brought into line with those on the south front. The
arrangement of the windows on the north front,
which had been uniform with the south front, was
altered. The present windows, with stone mullions
and transoms, are irregularly placed and of varying
sizes with a large window east of the porch to light
a new staircase. (fn. 43) A further east wing was added in
1914 but burnt down in 1919. In 1920-1 it was
rebuilt in the Cotswold style by Sir Edwin Lutyens. (fn. 44)
It extends to the line of the south front of the house
and is joined to the main building by a covered
arcade of five bays, behind which remains the old
east wing rebuilt in 1875. (fn. 45)
That part of his estate which Hasculf Musard
granted to the Knights Hospitaller before 1186,
later known as the manor of WISHANGER, (fn. 46)
became an adjunct of the preceptory of Quenington. (fn. 47) The prior, William de Tothale, leased the
manor in 1312 or 1313 to Hugh Despenser the elder
for life, and in 1337 it was temporarily in Crown
hands on the grounds that Hugh had acquired it
without licence. (fn. 48) At the Hospitallers' surrender in
1540, (fn. 49) Sir William Kingston held a lease of the
manor, which passed to his son Anthony (fn. 50) but
must have ceased by 1552 when the Crown granted
the manor in fee to Sir Thomas Palmer. (fn. 51) After
Palmer's attainder for his support of Lady Jane
Grey, (fn. 52) the Crown granted the manor in 1554 to Sir
William Howard, Lord Howard, and Henry Peckham
in consideration of the former's services at the time of
Wyatt's rising. (fn. 53) In 1555 Peckham had a licence to
alienate the manor to Christopher Bumpstead, a
London mercer, (fn. 54) who conveyed it to Thomas
Browne in 1557. (fn. 55) Browne sold the manor in 1563
or 1564 to William Partridge (fn. 56) in whose family it
remained until the 19th century.
William Partridge died in 1578 (fn. 57) and Wishanger
passed to his son Robert (d. 1600), and to Robert's
son John. (fn. 58) John's brother Anthony held the manor
by 1608 (fn. 59) and it passed at Anthony's death in 1625
to his son Henry (fn. 60) (d. 1653), whose son, also Henry,
succeeded. The younger Henry died in 1696 and,
having disinherited his son by his first wife, was
succeeded by Thomas, his eldest son by his second
wife. (fn. 61) Thomas (d. 1750) was succeeded by his
nephew Joseph who died in 1769 when the manor
passed to his cousin, John Partridge (d. 1785), who
was succeeded by his son Harry. By that time the
estate was heavily mortgaged and in 1796 Harry's
brother, John Partridge of Bowbridge, Stroud,
contracted to buy the manor. (fn. 62) Harry and John sold
the manor-house with 283½ a. of land to William
Somers in 1802, and Harry sold a further 138 a. to
Paul Wathen of Lypiatt Park in 1807, who immediately sold to Edward Hogg. (fn. 63) Somer's estate passed
at his death in 1821 to his daughter and heir, Mary,
the wife of Isaac White, alias Berry, who sold it in
1824 to James and Henry Hogg, silk-merchants of
Randwick and Congleton (Ches.). (fn. 64) James (d. 1826)
devised his share of the manor to his wife Mary Ann
for life with the reversion to his daughter Martha
Sophia. Mary Ann married the Revd. Richard
Morris in 1828, and by an agreement of 1838 they
received Henry Hogg's share of the manor. (fn. 65) They
may also have acquired that part of the estate
belonging to Edward Hogg (d. 1836). (fn. 66) In 1849 the
Morrises and Martha Sophia Hogg conveyed the
manor to trustees for sale, and it was bought by
Julius Partridge, a kinsman of the earlier owners,
who sold it to Sir John Rolt in 1867 (fn. 67) since when it
has descended with Miserden manor. (fn. 68)
The present house, Wishanger Manor, may date
from the marriage of Robert Partridge in 1566 when
the Partridge arms were placed over the entrance. (fn. 69)
It is a two-storey stone house with a stone-slated
roof. The gabled entrance porch of three storeys is
later, and the entrance has a moulded stone surround
and classical pilasters on each side rising to a string
course. A sundial above the entrance is dated 1721.
During the 17th century a west wing was added with
a higher roof level than that of the original house.
In the mid 19th century Julius Partridge restored
the property and built a stone barn with a window
in its gable end, decorated with his initials, but by
1903 the house was no longer considered to be
suitable for a gentleman's residence. (fn. 70) It was
carefully restored in 1968.
In 1706 William Sandys sold part of the manorial
estate at Sudgrove to John Durston, (fn. 71) rector of
Miserden, who built a house there and established
the SUDGROVE estate. Durston sold his estate
to John Temple, who augmented the estate before
selling to William Trye (fn. 72) (d. 1769). (fn. 73) In 1772
William's son Thomas conveyed the estate, then
called Pinings, to John Selfe of Cirencester, (fn. 74) who
purchased an adjoining estate from William
Yarnton Mills in 1791. John's devisees, his brother
Richard Selfe and sister Mary Cripps, sold the whole
property in 1802 to Joseph Pitt of Cirencester, who
conveyed it the following year to Richard Estcourt
Cresswell. Cresswell sold the estate in 1806 to Mrs.
Sarah Yarnton who settled it on the marriage of her
nephew Daniel Mills and his wife Hester in 1808. (fn. 75)
Mills died in 1838 (fn. 76) and his wife retained the 234-a.
estate. (fn. 77) It passed to their son Daniel Yarnton Mills
(d. 1872), whose eldest son, also Daniel Yarnton,
conveyed it c. 1890 to his brother Henry Hamilton
Mills (d. 1932). Henry devised it to his nephew
Daniel Yarnton Mills, who sold it to Gerald Godwin
in 1952. The estate was divided into two almost
equal parts in 1962 when Godwin sold part to the
tenant, Mr. Ratcliffe, and another part with
Sudgrove House to Miss Pat Smythe, (fn. 78) a distinguished international horsewoman, who, as Mrs. P.
Koechlin-Smythe, lived at Sudgrove House in 1970.
The 18th-century house was refronted in Cotswold
style during the 19th century.