LOCAL GOVERNMENT.
Profits of court for
Sapperton manor were recorded in the mid 13th
century (fn. 80) and records of courts baron exist for
1597, 1684-5, and 1696-8. (fn. 81) The records of courts
baron for Frampton Mansell survive for the years
1572, 1580-1, 1655, and 1668 but the court there
seems to have been discontinued after the fragmentation of the manor in the late 17th century. The
Frampton court elected a hayward and 3 sheeptellers in 1655. (fn. 82) No evidence has been found for any
court attached to Hailey manor. In the mid 16th
century a tithingman for Sapperton and a tithingman for Frampton attended the view of frankpledge
for Bisley hundred. (fn. 83) For parish government
purposes Hailey tithing appears to have been
incorporated with Sapperton and no record of a
separate tithingman has been found for Hailey. (fn. 84)
Two churchwardens are recorded at Sapperton
from the 15th century (fn. 85) and their accounts survive
for the period 1730-1844. (fn. 86) A church house, given
to the parish by Leonard Poole (d. 1538), (fn. 87) was let by
the churchwardens as a poorhouse during the 18th
century. (fn. 88) The churchwardens also held c. 2 a. in the
parish by the same bequest. (fn. 89) In 1840 the church
house, described as a pair of cottages, was sold to
Earl Bathurst by the churchwardens and the
guardians of Cirencester union. (fn. 90) The cottages,
opposite the church, were rebuilt in 1889 (fn. 91) on to a
17th-century two-storey gabled cottage. There
were two overseers of the poor, one for Frampton
and one for Sapperton, whose accounts survive for
the period 1720-1763. They usually housed two or
three people in the poorhouse and occasionally
boarded paupers with families in the parish. In
1721 the expenses of the overseers amounted to
£37 10s. but they had increased to £51 12s. by
1740. In 1756 £63 was spent on poor-relief. (fn. 92) The
cost of relief rose from £67 in 1776 to £89 in 1803
when nine people were on permanent relief and five
were given occasional help. (fn. 93) By 1813 £234 was
spent and 13 people, all in Sapperton tithing,
were being permanently relieved and 12 occasionally. (fn. 94) In the mid 1820s the yearly cost of relief was
c. £185 but between 1827 and 1834 the cost
fluctuated between £220 and £291. (fn. 95) In 1836
Sapperton was made part of the Cirencester poorlaw union (fn. 96) and remained part of the Cirencester
rural district in 1971. Among other surviving
parish records are those of the surveyors of highways
for the period 1787-1836. (fn. 97)
Footnotes
| 80 |
Inq. p.m. Glos. 1236-1300, 31. |
| 81 |
Glos. Colln. RV 260.2. |
| 82 |
Glos. R.O., D 1571/M 13-14. |
| 83 |
S.C. 2/175/11 rot. 2 and d. |
| 84 |
For the separate identity of Hailey tithing, see Glos.
R.O., D 1388, copy of incl. award. |
| 85 |
Hockaday Abs. xxii, 1498 visit. f. 26. |
| 86 |
Penes the rector. |
| 87 |
G.D.R., V 5/260T 6. |
| 88 |
Churchwardens' acct. bk. 1730-1844. |
| 89 |
G.D.R., V 5/260T 6. |
| 90 |
Glos. R.O., D 2525, Sapperton deed 1840. |
| 91 |
Inscr. on bldg. |
| 92 |
Overseers' acct. bk. 1720-63, penes the rector. |
| 93 |
Poor Law Abstract, 1804, 170-1. |
| 94 |
Ibid. 1818, 144-5. |
| 95 |
Poor Law Returns (1830-1), p. 66; (1835), p. 64. |
| 96 |
Poor Law Com. 2nd Rep. p. 522. |
| 97 |
Penes the rector. |