MANORS AND OTHER ESTATES.
The manor of MINCHINHAMPTON, comprising 8 hides and
including Rodborough, was held before the Conquest by Goda (fn. 68) (or Godgifu), sister of Edward the
Confessor and wife of Eustace, count of Boulogne. (fn. 69)
In 1082 King William and Queen Maud granted it to
the nuns of Caen Abbey in Normandy. (fn. 70) The manor,
together with Avening which descended with it until
the early 19th century, was apparently held at farm
by Simon of Felstead for a period in the early 12th
century, (fn. 71) and later it was farmed by Simon's son
William, who quitclaimed his rights to the abbey in
1192. (fn. 72) For most of the 14th century the manor was
forfeit because of the war with France and was held
under the Crown by a succession of farmers or
custodians, and it passed irrevocably to the Crown
by the Act of 1414. In 1324 after a short period of
forfeiture the manor was restored to Caen Abbey's
proctors for a fine of £200 (fn. 73) but in 1341 it was in the
custody of Maud de Burgh, countess of Ulster. (fn. 74)
Later it was granted to Thomas of Woodstock, duke
of Gloucester, who made a 7-year lease to Philip
Rodborough and John Craft in 1390. (fn. 75) In 1397 after
the expiry of the lease and Thomas's death the
Crown granted the manor to Andrew Haake and his
wife Blanche at a farm of £80, (fn. 76) and in 1399 it was
granted at farm to Hugh Waterton and his wife
Catherine. (fn. 77) Catherine, as a widow, retained possession in 1411 (fn. 78) but in 1413 the manor was granted at
an increased farm to Catherine, widow of John
Bromwich, who soon afterwards married Roger
Leech and died in 1420. (fn. 79) It then passed, under a
reversionary grant of 1414, to Alice, widow of John
Phillips, (fn. 80) who married secondly Thomas Montague,
earl of Salisbury (d. 1428), and thirdly William de la
Pole, earl (later duke) of Suffolk (d. 1450); (fn. 81) Alice
retained the manor until her death in 1475. (fn. 82) The
rent paid by the farmers of the manor was settled on
Queen Joan (d. 1437) in 1409, (fn. 83) and in 1424 Henry V
granted the reversion of the farm rent and the
reversion of the manor itself to his foundation Syon
Abbey (Mdx.). (fn. 84) The abbey evidently took possession
of the manor on the duchess of Suffolk's death and
retained it until the Dissolution. (fn. 85)
In 1542 Henry VIII granted the manor to Andrew
Windsor, Lord Windsor (d. 1543), who was compelled to surrender to the king his manor of Stanwell
(Mdx.), (fn. 86) and it passed in direct line to Sir William
Windsor (d. 1558), (fn. 87) Sir Edward (d. 1575), and
Frederick (fn. 88) (d. 1585). Frederick was succeeded by
his brother Henry (d. 1605), whose son Thomas (d.
1641) settled the manor on his nephew Thomas
Windsor Hickman on condition that he took the
surname Windsor. (fn. 89) The younger Thomas sold the
manor in 1656 to Philip Sheppard (fn. 90) (d. 1713), (fn. 91) from
whom it passed in direct line to Samuel (d. 1724),
Samuel (d. by 1754), (fn. 92) and Samuel (d. 1770). The
last Samuel was succeeded in the manor by his
brother Edward but a considerable estate in
Minchinhampton and Avening had been settled on
Samuel's marriage in 1747 and was retained by his
widow Jane; the four daughters of the marriage,
Jane (who married Francis Boughton), Ann, Sarah,
and Mary, made a partition of their reversionary
right to the estate in 1784. (fn. 93) Edward Sheppard (d.
1803) was succeeded in the manor by his son Philip,
whose extravagance led to the piecemeal selling of
parts of the estate and some of the manorial assets. (fn. 94)
Finally, in 1814, Philip sold the manor to David
Ricardo, (fn. 95) the political economist. Ricardo devised it
on his death in 1823 to his second son David, (fn. 96)
whose estate in the parish covered 1,709 a. in 1839,
by which time most of the property alienated by
Philip Sheppard had been bought back. (fn. 97) The
younger David was M.P. for Stroud 1832-3 and
chairman of the board of guardians of the Stroud
union until 1856, (fn. 98) and, like all the Ricardos, he took
an active and beneficial interest in the affairs of the
parish. On his death in 1864 he was succeeded by his
son Henry David (d. 1873), after whose death
trustees held the manor until the coming of age of
his son Henry George in 1881. The younger Henry,
who followed a military career, held the estate until a
year or two before his death in 1940, (fn. 99) when he sold
it to Samuel Courtauld (d. 1947), who was succeeded
by his son-in-law, the politician R. A. Butler, later
Lord Butler of Saffron Walden. Lord Butler retained
the estate in 1973 when it comprised c. 530 a. of
farm-land and c. 270 a. of woodland. (fn. 1)
The ancient manor-house of Minchinhampton
stood west of the church with a well-wooded park on
its north and west sides. At the beginning of the 14th
century it had fairly extensive farm buildings including a cattleshed, dairy, wool-house, granary, and
grange, (fn. 2) and in 1450 a chapel and a gatehouse with a
chamber over were also mentioned. (fn. 3) In the early
18th century it was a gabled house in traditional style
with a formal garden on the north side and a farmyard and buildings, including a circular dovecot, on
the south. Philip Sheppard made it his residence (fn. 4)
and his descendants lived there or at Avening (fn. 5) until
the 1770s when a new house was built at Gatcombe
Park in the south part of the parish. The old manorhouse, then known as Hampton Park but formerly
called the Farm, with its park and other lands was
sold by Philip Sheppard to Richard Harris in 1809.
Harris, originally of Bourne but later of Wood House
in Minchinhampton, built up a considerable estate
in the parish at that period but he later became
heavily mortgaged (fn. 6) and sold the Hampton Park
estate back to the owner of the manor, David
Ricardo, in 1830. Some years previously William
Whitehead had contracted to buy the property and,
although the transaction was uncompleted at the
time of his bankruptcy in 1827, (fn. 7) he is said to have
demolished the house and begun the foundations of
an extensive new residence. The site was later
occupied by the school. (fn. 8)
The house at Gatcombe Park, for which Francis
Franklin of Chalford was the mason-in-charge and
possibly the designer, was begun by Edward
Sheppard in 1771 (fn. 9) and he was living there by 1774. (fn. 10)
It was a simple rectangular block with a central
entrance hall and staircase, to which bow-fronted
wings were added by Basevi for David Ricardo
c. 1820. At the same period a curved iron conservatory was added on the west, joining the house to a
summer-house, and stable buildings around an oval
yard were built to the east. (fn. 11)
Among several estates whose owners held from
the chief manor by the service of helping to carry
Caen Abbey's money to Southampton, (fn. 12) was one
anciently called the manor of SEINCKLEY or
SEYNTCLEY, a name later corrupted to St. Loe or
St. Chloe. It was held in 1273 and 1294 by John of
Seyntcley (fn. 13) but c. 1300, when it comprised 1½ yardland and 2½ a., it belonged to Miles of Rodborough. (fn. 14)
Miles's son Thomas forfeited the estate by involvement in the rebellion of 1322. (fn. 15) An estate, described
as a house and yardland at Seinckley, belonged to
Maurice, Lord Berkeley, at his death in 1368 (fn. 16) and
was held in dower by his widow Elizabeth (d. 1389),
reverting to their son Thomas, (fn. 17) Lord Berkeley (d.
1417). The estate passed to Thomas's nephew James
(d. 1463), whose son William, Lord Berkeley, held it
in 1470. (fn. 18) Antony Wye with Guy Hill and Susan his
wife were dealing with the manor of Seinckley in
1573, (fn. 19) and in 1605 it belonged to James Dunning. (fn. 20)
In the later 17th century it passed to Nathaniel
Ridler of Edgeworth and in 1698 the estate, comprising St. Loe's House and 44 a., was bought from
him by the trustees of Nathaniel Cambridge for the
purposes of a charity school. (fn. 21) The house remained a
school until 1908, (fn. 22) and from then until 1940 was
tenanted by H. A. Payne, a stained glass painter. (fn. 23) In
1973 it was owned and occupied by Mr. J. F.
Swatton.
The medieval house at St. Loe's appears to have
been built around two courtyards, separated by a
range of buildings which may have included the hall
but of which only one wall survives. On the lower,
western court there survives a two storeyed, late14th-century range on the north, and a long range,
probably 15th-century, on the west. The eastern
court is surrounded by a high wall, considerably
reconstructed, with a late medieval gateway in the
south-east corner, but there is no surviving evidence
of buildings. In the earlier 17th century a new range,
incorporating some old materials, was built on the
south side of the lower court, and at the end of that
century the conversion of the north range for use as
the schoolroom involved the removal of the upper
floor, the insertion of tall windows in its north wall,
the reconstruction of its roof, and the placing of a
bell over the east end. Early in the 18th century the
west range was remodelled with new windows and
floors and a reconstructed roof, incorporating the
main timbers of its medieval predecessor; at the same
period a new staircase was built in the angle of the
west and south ranges. Twentieth-century restoration revealed an original staircase and a probable
garderobe in the north range.
Another small manor, called DELAMERES or
LAMBERDES, may have represented lands in
Minchinhampton in which Malmesbury Abbey
claimed rights c. 1234, (fn. 24) for it carried a rent of 40s. to
the abbey in 1292. (fn. 25) The estate apparently included
only the house and ½ yardland which Richard Syred
granted to Robert de la Mare in 1259 (fn. 26) but by the
end of that century ½ hide at Hyde had been added
to it. (fn. 27) It descended with the de la Mares' Cherington
manor until 1410 (fn. 28) when William Roach was succeeded by her infant grandson John Baynton. (fn. 29) The
estate later passed to Robert Baynton on whose
attainder in 1471 it was taken by the Crown (fn. 30) which
granted it to John Cheyne in 1475. (fn. 31) In 1485
Delameres was being farmed by William Gyan,
rector of Minchinhampton, when George Neville
had a grant of the reversion. (fn. 32) The later descent of
the estate has not been traced but tradition associates
it with the house called the Lammas, south-west of
the main cross-roads in Minchinhampton town. (fn. 33)
That house belonged in the later 18th century to
Nathaniel Perks, who was succeeded before 1787 by
Mary and Elizabeth Pinfold. (fn. 34) They devised it to
William Cockin, rector of Minchinhampton (d.
1841), and Cockin's heir sold it in 1876 to C. R.
Bayries. (fn. 35) Cockin appears to have rebuilt the house, a
large villa standing in extensive pleasure grounds,
soon after he came into possession of the estate.
One of the estates which owed the money-carrying
service to Caen Abbey was held c. 1300 by Alan of
Forwood when it comprised 3 yardlands, (fn. 36) and it
later passed to William of Forwood (d. c. 1333). (fn. 37) It
was apparently that estate which John Craft held in
the later 14th century, passing by 1438 to the chantry
of St. Mary, (fn. 38) among possessions of which in 1548
was a house called Forwood with 100 a. land. (fn. 39) It
may have been either of two estates later bearing the
name.
An estate, comprising FORWOOD FARM and
130 a., belonged to Thomas Elkington, a London
merchant, in 1637 (fn. 40) and after his death was partitioned among his daughters, of whom Sarah and her
husband William Plumley of Ratcliffe (Mdx.),
mariner, held a fourth part in 1663. In 1696 Sarah,
by then widowed, sold out to the mortgagee
Nathaniel Owen of Sevenoaks (Kent), mercer, who
appears to also have acquired the other shares in the
property. Nathaniel died in 1705, leaving Forwood
farm to his widow Elizabeth with reversion to his son
Salem, and in 1710 Salem and Elizabeth sold the
estate, then comprising the house and 113 a., to John
Barnfield, clothier of Minchinhampton, (d. 1714 or
1715). John was succeeded by his son Samuel, who
was in business as a clothier at Trowbridge in 1737
when he sold the equity of redemption to the mortgagee, John Purnell of Dursley. John Purnell,
apparently the same man, retained the estate in 1782
but was dead by 1784, being succeeded by his son
William who sold it that year to Edward Tugwell, a
Tetbury wool-stapler. The estate passed to Edward's
son John (d. 1790) and then to his daughter Elizabeth
who with her husband, the Revd. Joseph Williams of
Wickwar, owned it in 1807. In that year she contracted for its sale to Peter Playne, who took possession then although the transaction was not completed until 1815 pending the majority of her
children. (fn. 41) Peter's brother George Playne (fn. 42) was
occupying the house by 1808, (fn. 43) and in 1839 he owned
the house with 29 a. and was working a brewery
there. (fn. 44) George died in 1847 (fn. 45) and was succeeded by
another George Playne (d. c. 1870). (fn. 46) Fitzarthur
Henry Playne owned Forwood Farm in 1897. (fn. 47) The
house, which is of the 17th century with 19thcentury additions, was in two occupations in
1973.
An estate of 101 a., including FORWOOD
HOUSE and another house near by called Colthrops,
was granted by the lord of Minchinhampton manor
to Francis Manning, a butcher, in 1651. (fn. 48) In 1684 his
son Francis Manning, clothier, (fn. 49) settled the two
houses and part of the lands on his marriage to Sarah
Showering, who apparently survived him. In 1724
Francis's daughter Martha and Thomas Hathway,
who had married her sister Anna and held by
right of his infant daughter Hester, agreed to partition the property until Hester's majority, and in
1737 Hester's moiety was settled on her marriage
to James Chambers. (fn. 50) Martha later married Luke
Showering of Bristol and in 1748 their daughter
Sarah agreed that James and Hester should have
the chief house and the bulk of the lands. (fn. 51)
James died in 1787 and was succeeded by his son
Thomas Chambers (fn. 52) who settled the estate on the
marriage of his son James in 1802. (fn. 53) By 1839 an
estate of 105 a. at Forwood belonged to Francis
Chambers (fn. 54) (d. 1850). The estate passed with Thrupp
House, Stroud, where the family afterwards resided,
to W. C. Chambers who apparently sold it c. 1895. (fn. 55)
Forwood House became detached from the estate in
the early 19th century, apparently in 1827 when
Francis Chambers conveyed it to James C.
Chambers, (fn. 56) and subsequently it passed through
various owners. In 1948 it was bought by Sir Robert
Ricketts, Bt., a solicitor, who owned it in 1973. (fn. 57) The
original small 17th-century house was extended to
the north in the mid 18th century and provided with
a central pediment and new window-surrounds to
create a symmetrical eastern elevation. The symmetry was destroyed by alterations at the north end
in the early 19th century, and a verandah was added
to the main front in the middle of the century.
Considerable alterations were made to the service
quarters in the mid 20th century.
In 1438 John Hampton, senior, and John
Hampton, junior, held property from Minchinhampton manor (fn. 58) and a John Hampton owned an
estate comprising 20 tenements in Minchinhampton,
Avening, and Frampton Mansell at his death c. 1461.
Provision was made out of the estate for his widow
Ellen but he was apparently succeeded by his
daughter Alice (fn. 59) who was in possession of the estate
in 1507 when it was claimed to be a manor. (fn. 60) At or
before her death in 1516 she granted her estate to
Syon Abbey, which she herself entered as a lay
sister, (fn. 61) and it was absorbed in the chief manor.