BILLESDON
Billesdon is a large village, situated nine miles
east of Leicester on the main road to Uppingham.
The area of the civil parish is over 2,000 a. but
the ancient parish and the modern ecclesiastical
parish consist of about 3,600 a. and include the
chapelries of Goadby and Rolleston. The highest
ground in the hundred, rising to over 700 ft., lies
in the northern half of Billesdon parish. It forms
part of the western edge of the east Leicestershire
uplands, the watershed between the tributaries of
the Soar to the west and of the Welland to the
south-east. The eastern boundary of the parish is
formed by the road from Market Harborough to
Melton Mowbray, which here follows the line of
the prehistoric ridgeway known as the Jurassic
Way. (fn. 1) The road from Oakham to Leicester, part
of another ridgeway (fn. 2) which crosses the first at the
extreme north-east corner of the parish, forms the
north-western boundary. It follows the crest of
Life Hill, a western spur of the Tilton plateau
terminating at Billesdon Coplow. (fn. 3) For part of
their length both these roads form the boundaries
of the hundred as well as of the parish. Billesdon
Coplow is a wooded knoll, 625 ft. high, and is a
conspicuous landmark in east Leicestershire. To
the south it is visible for 20 miles. In the extreme
west of the parish the ground falls to 450 ft. Here
two streams, the Coplow and the Billesdon brooks,
meet to form the headwaters of the Sence. Part of the
south-west parish boundary follows the Billesdon
brook.
On the south side of Life Hill, just below the
crest, is an earthwork of uncertain date which
follows the contours of the ground and probably
represents a promontory fortification. (fn. 4) It has been
largely obliterated by quarrying operations. Ironstone quarries in this area appear to have provided
building stone for the surrounding district in the
17th and 18th centuries. A small quarry was opened
as late as 1864 when the new aisle was added to
Billesdon church. (fn. 5)
The main road from Leicester to Uppingham
crosses the parish from west to east, passing
through the northern end of Billesdon village
which has extended along both sides of it. From
the village minor roads lead to Billesdon Coplow
in the north and to Frisby and Rolleston in the
south-west and south-east respectively. The parish
church stands on rising ground 300 yds. south
of the main road. The two village streets, Front
Street and Back Street, leave the main road about
150 yds. apart and curve round to meet at the church.
Most of the older houses lie in Front Street and to
the north and east of the churchyard. They date
mainly from the 17th century and are built of ironstone, a few retaining their thatched roofs. The
group by the church includes the Vicarage, (fn. 6) which
is of early-17th-century origin, and the old school, (fn. 7)
built in 1650. To the north a comparatively small
ironstone house of the 17th century has been altered
and enlarged and has been known since the 19th
century as the Manor House. Near it an old barn
has been converted into a cottage. Two ironstone
houses, both on the west side of Front Street,
retain cruck trusses and are probably the oldest
in the village. The more northerly (No. 6) has a
steeply-pitched thatched roof which contains
original timbers. The other, lying immediately
south of the old fire station, (fn. 8) is of three bays with the
two cruck trusses dividing them still in position.
The roof has been reconstructed and the eaves level
raised. To the south of this building is a 17thcentury ironstone house with a cross-wing at its
north end. The roof has been altered but several
original features, including a four-centred stone
doorhead, survive. It is sometimes known as the
Old Manor House and is said to have been the home
of Miss Mary Heard, a large landowner in Billesdon
at the end of the 18th century. (fn. 9) A circular lead
cistern which formerly stood outside the house is
now in the courtyard of the old Guildhall in Leicester. It bears the initials M.H. and is dated 1773. A
brick house to the north of the old fire station has
a date tablet of 1769 and is characteristic of its
period. It is of two stories, divided by a string
course, and has three-light casement windows with
keystones, a moulded brick cornice, and gable-ends
with parapets.
At the junction of Front Street with the main
road is a large open space, partly occupied by a
green, which was formerly the site of the market.
This forms a second and later village centre,
owing its existence to the establishment of the
market early in the 17th century. (fn. 10) It developed
later with the setting-up of the Leicester to Uppingham Turnpike Trust in 1754 (fn. 11) and the increase
in main-road traffic. On the green stands the base
and slender moulded shaft of the market cross. The
finial appears to have been replaced since the 18th
century. (fn. 12) The houses in this part of the village are
mainly brick buildings of the coaching period,
several being neglected and half-empty in 1959.
There are a few earlier cottages with roofs which
were formerly thatched and walls built of mud
and ironstone. A typical example is Doone Cottage
in Long Lane, probably built after the middle of
the 17th century. There is one early-18th-century
stone house on the north side of the main road
and several large late-18th- and early-19th-century
brick houses with symmetrical fronts and good doorways. One has a porch with 'Gothic' detail and
Potter's Cottage has Gothic windows with four
centred heads. There are several bow-fronted
shop windows. Some of the houses have ironstone
masonry in their lower walls and may have replaced earlier buildings. 'The White Hart' is an
early-19th-century coaching inn. The adjoining
stables, of the same period, were demolished in
1959.
Ground between Front Street and Back Street
is the site of the former kennels and stables of the
Quorn Hunt. They were built in 1838 by Lord
Suffield, then master of the hunt, (fn. 13) and remained in
use until 1847, when Henry Greene of Rolleston
ceased to be master. (fn. 14) The stables were used again
after 1855 when William Tailby took over the
hunting of the southern part of the Quorn country.
The kennels are said to have been either demolished
or converted into cottages, new kennels being built
elsewhere. (fn. 15) The remaining buildings are grouped
round a square courtyard, three sides of which are
now part of the Manor House property. The west
range is approached from Front Street and is
known as The Quadrant. It has been converted
into several dwellings and has a central gable below
which a wide arch formerly gave access to the yard.
Facing Back Street is Suffield Terrace, a row of
two-story red-brick cottages. These were probably
built for grooms and kennel hands in 1838 but
may have been part of the kennels themselves.
The village hall in the main road was erected
by the Ancient Order of Foresters in 1870. (fn. 16) For
a time after the First World War it was in the hands
of a limited company but in 1959 it was being
managed by trustees for the benefit of the parish. (fn. 17)
On the site of the former brick, tile, and pipe
works at the north-east corner of the village, hutments were erected for the land army during the
Second World War. (fn. 18) In 1959 these were being
used as a branch of Glenfrith Hospital. (fn. 19) To the
south-west of the village a partly ruinous prisonerof-war camp had been taken over as a training ground
by the Leicestershire Division of the Civil Defence
Corps. On high ground to the south of the church
a large Council housing estate was built after the
Second World War.
There are several isolated farm-houses in the
northern part of the parish, all apparently built
after the inclosure of 1764. Shortly before 1790
John Palmer, who had acquired the large estate
owned by Nicholas Simons in 1764, built himself a
mansion on the southern slopes of Billesdon Coplow. (fn. 20) Before the surrounding trees grew to their
present height its white stucco front was visible
from a great distance. (fn. 21) The original building was a
square block of three stories with two-story flanking
wings. It was extended to the west and partly
refronted by Charles Thomas Freer in the 1840's. (fn. 22)
The porch bears his crest. Further alterations were
made by John D'Arcy Hartley when he acquired
the property in 1911. He refitted the interior and
built new stables to the south of the house. (fn. 23) Mr.
C. Bennion, who bought the estate in 1937, built the
two lodges at the west entrance. The late-18thcentury ironstone lodge to the north-east was
altered at the same time. (fn. 24)
The recorded population of Billesdon in 1086
was 25. (fn. 25) There were 38 households in 1563 and
134 in 1670. In 1676 there were 277 communicants.
In the 19th century the population rose from 751
in 1821 to 1,085 in 1851, and then gradually fell
to 543 in 1931. In 1951 it was 717. (fn. 26)
MANOR.
Before 1066 BILLESDON formed
part of the estate of the Saxon, Tochi, and had
passed by 1086 to Geoffrey Alselin, from whom it
was held by a sub-tenant, Norman. (fn. 27) Billesdon does
not figure in the Leicestershire Survey and the
subsequent descent of the ownership of the land is
fragmentary and complicated. Part of Billesdon
was said to belong to the honor of Peverel in the
13th century, and part to the honor of Winchester, (fn. 28)
but there are only scattered references to such
connexions, and the overlordship of the village is
even more obscure than the descent of the direct
occupiers of the soil. In the 19th century Billesdon
was said to be one unit, manorially, (fn. 29) but there are
few references which may be safely said to refer to
a manor in any earlier period.
The land which was held by the Skeffington
family from the late 13th century to the end of the
17th was called the 'manor' of Billesdon in the 16th
and 17th centuries and probably descended in the
19th to those who called themselves the lords of the
manor.
The earliest reference to the Skeffington family
in Billesdon occurs in 1262, when Thomas, son of
Robert de Skeffington, paid 40s. to Walter and
Denise de Langton for a toft in the vill. (fn. 30) In 1287
Isabel, widow of John Skeffington, sued Richard
Ernsby, the tenant of Geoffrey de Skeffington her
son, for dower in Billesdon. (fn. 31) This action was still
continuing in 1327. (fn. 32) The Skeffington family continued to hold land in Billesdon certainly until the
death of William Skeffington in 1606, (fn. 33) and probably until the death of the last male heir of the
family, John, who was killed in 1613. (fn. 34) In 1558
William Skeffington received what was termed the
'manor' of Billesdon from John Purfey of Shalston
(Bucks.), whose title to it is not known. (fn. 35) In 1586
Thomas Skeffington received the 'manor' by fine
from Edward Turville. (fn. 36) In 1606 William Skeffington
was said to hold his lands in Billesdon, which were
not then described as a manor, from the heirs of
Richard Turville. (fn. 37)
After the death of John Skeffington in 1613 his
property passed to his two sisters, Mary, wife of
William St. Andrew, and Katherine, wife of
Robert Barford, her second husband. (fn. 38) Although
the Barfords seem to have retained interests in
Billesdon for some years, the 'manor' came into
the possession of the St. Andrew family. (fn. 39) John
St. Andrew, the son of William and Mary, died
in 1626 (fn. 40) and his property in Billesdon, which in
1646 brought in rents of £23 a year, (fn. 41) passed to his
daughter Barbara, the wife of Oliver St. John of
Woodford (Northants.). (fn. 42) Their son Andrew or
St. Andrew succeeded to the manor before 1663. (fn. 43)
He died in 1701 (fn. 44) and the descent of the former
Skeffington estates in Billesdon then becomes
obscure, although it seems likely that they did not
pass to Thomas Browne, the Skeffington heir. (fn. 45)
In 1713 Matthew Simons of Leicester obtained
one-third of the manor by fine (fn. 46) and his estates
descended to Nicholas Simons, who held a large
area at the inclosure in 1764 although no lord
of the manor is mentioned in the award. (fn. 47) Nicholas Simons died or disappeared from the parish in
1780, but his widow continued to hold land there
until 1788. (fn. 48) In 1789 John Palmer appears as her
successor and was said by Throsby to be owner of
half of the manor. (fn. 49) By 1799 his lands had passed to
a Mr. Holdsworth. (fn. 50) The other owner of the manor,
according to Throsby, was Mrs. Bunney of Leicester, widow of Sir Thomas Fowke. In 1791 there
were said to be four owners of the manor, Peers
Anthony James Keck of Stoughton, Lady Anne
Fowke, Edmund Cradock Hartopp, and John
Palmer of Billesdon. (fn. 51) Sir F. G. Fowke was described as lord of the manor until his death in 1856, (fn. 52)
although he seems to have held no land. His son
Sir F. T. Fowke was described as lord until 1881
together with C. T. Freer. (fn. 53) Freer lived at the Coplow until his death in 1882. The estate was bought
in 1911 by John D'Arcy Hartley, who lived at the
Coplow and was described in 1922 as the lord of the
manor. (fn. 54) Shortly after this the manorial rights, if
any, seem to have died out.
OTHER ESTATES.
An action begun in 1201 and
completed in 1204 resulted in a declaration by
Halanath de Syfrewast, whose family had held land
and the church in Billesdon in the 12th century, (fn. 55)
that Robert de Crevequer was lord of 1½ knight's
fee in Billesdon. In return for this acknowledgement
of his better right Robert de Crevequer granted half
the land to Syfrewast. (fn. 56) In 1205 Halanath de Syfrewast received from his son William half the vill of
Billesdon which William held. (fn. 57) This might mean
that Halanath received the whole vill or that the two
halves referred to are in fact the same half. In 1216
Robert de Crevequer's lands were temporarily granted
to Jolland de Doe. (fn. 58) Hamon de Crevequer held 2
knights' fees in Billesdon in 1236. (fn. 59) In 1261 his
widow Alice sued her son Robert for dower in 5
knights' fees in Billesdon, Rolleston, and Halstead. (fn. 60)
In 1278 Robert de Crevequer held 4 ploughlands in
Billesdon as tenant-in-chief; William FitzBeauchamp held from him and John de Kirkby was the
tenant in demesne. (fn. 61) This is the last certain reference to the Crevequer family. A reference to
1½ knight's fee in Billesdon being assigned as dower
to Isabel Bardolf in 1306 by Hamon de Crevequer
probably refers to the Hamon who was dead before
1261. (fn. 62)
The knight's fee probably passed from the
Crevequers to the Bardolf family, although it is
not known how. In 1278 scutage for one fee was
paid on Crevequer's holding to William Bardolf and
Adam de Everingham; the latter's connexion with
Billesdon is obscure but he appears again in 1348. (fn. 63)
Hugh Bardolf held what is called the 'manor' of
Billesdon over John Kirkby in 1293. (fn. 64) He was
probably the heir of William Bardolf, perhaps his
father or uncle, who died in 1276 seised of 2 knights'
fees in Billesdon, Goadby, Rolleston, and Hallaton.
William was succeeded by his son, another William, (fn. 65)
and he in turn by Hugh. From Hugh the land passed
to Thomas Bardolf, who died in 1329 seised of 2
knights' fees in Billesdon, then held by Ralph de
Wedon, Thomas de Skeffington, and the heirs of
Richard Coleshull. (fn. 66) In 1389 William Bardolf of
Wormegay died holding 1½ knight's fee in Billesdon,
Rolleston, and Skeffington, held by an unidentified
Simon, John Noveray, and William Dalby. (fn. 67)
The John de Kirkby who held from William
FitzBeauchamp under Robert de Crevequer in 1278
later became Bishop of Ely and died in 1290. (fn. 68)
Billesdon is not mentioned in his inquisition post
mortem, but in 1293 he is said to have been the
under-tenant of the 'manor' of Billesdon before his
death, (fn. 69) and by that date it had passed to his heir,
William de Kirkby, who died in 1302 possessed
of lands in Billesdon, Goadby, and Rolleston. (fn. 70)
Three under-tenants, Geoffrey de Skeffington,
John Child, and John Digby, held from William
de Kirkby. (fn. 71) William's lands passed to his sister
Maud de Houby, whose family still possessed an
interest in Billesdon in 1348. (fn. 72)
Geoffrey de Skeffington's connexion with Billesdon has already been mentioned. (fn. 73) John Child was
probably descended from the William de Child
who appears in 1201, (fn. 74) and was probably the son of
Robert Child, whose father John died about 1284. (fn. 75)
Both John Child and John Digby appear frequently
in documents relating to Billesdon at the end of
the 13th and in the early 14th centuries. (fn. 76) John
Digby was a member of the family of Digby of
Tilton and later of Stoke Dry (Rut.). (fn. 77) The name
first occurs in Billesdon in 1272, when John, son of
Robert de Digby, received a grant of land from
Philip de Gaunt, who was probably the lord of the
honor of Peverel. (fn. 78) The family continued to hold
land in Billesdon until at least 1510, when their
holding was called Digby's Manor, but there is no
evidence to suggest that they had any manorial
rights there. (fn. 79) In 1466 some of their land was
granted to Walter Devereux after Everard Digby
had forfeited his lands. (fn. 80)
In 1278 2 carucates of land were said to be held
by Robert de Toleho from Theobald de Nevill
who held from Robert Marcell who held from the
honor of Winchester. The record continues 'et
habet regale' which was explained by Nichols as
meaning that Toleho held the lordship of the
manor. (fn. 81) Although Nichols's interpretation seems
doubtful the words presumably mean that Toleho
had some particular kind of franchise or lordship.
Nothing is known of Toleho or the others mentioned
in this extract (fn. 82) and nothing suggests that the earls
of Winchester had ever held any land in Billesdon.
Leicester Abbey owned considerable property
in small pieces in Billesdon, which had for the most
part been given to the abbey by minor landowners
in the parish. (fn. 83) In 1341 53 virgates were described
as church lands, and this description suggests that
they formed the nucleus of the abbey's property
there. (fn. 84) Most of the land was cultivated as demesne
throughout the Middle Ages and the abbey had a
grange at Billesdon. (fn. 85) The abbey's land was valued
at £2 2s. in 1535. (fn. 86) Nothing is known of its fate
after the Dissolution.
Land in Billesdon was given to the hospital of
Burton Lazars in 1252 by Eudo and Agnes de
Landa. (fn. 87) In 1272 it was stated that the master of the
hospital paid no suit to the hundred court. (fn. 88) This
property is not mentioned in the Valor of 1535 but
in 1554 it was granted to Thomas Carpenter and
William Savage and valued at 27s. 4d. (fn. 89)
Land in Billesdon, which was called a manor in
1547, formed part of the endowment made by
Harold Staunton for his chantry in Castle Donington church, founded in 1512. (fn. 90) It was granted to
Staunton in 1510 by Robert Brudenell, Chief
Justice of Common Pleas, for the foundation by
Staunton of a chantry to pray for the souls of
himself and his parents, of Robert's parents,
Edmund and Philippa Brudenell, and of Robert
himself and his two wives. (fn. 91) No further mention is
made of the Brudenells' connexion with the chantry.
In 1547 this land was valued at £7 18s., and was
then let to John Turville. (fn. 92) In 1550 it was sold by
the Crown to Robert Catlyn. (fn. 93) He sold it to Turville, from whose grandson Edward Turville of
Croft it was purchased by Thomas Goddard, whose
son William Goddard of South Croxton sold it to
George Ashby of Quenby in 1610. (fn. 94) These lands
are probably still to be separately distinguished
in 1735, (fn. 95) but nothing further is known of them.
ECONOMIC HISTORY.
In 1086 7 of the 12
carucates in Billesdon were held by 3 knights, who
had 3 ploughs on their demesne. There were 11
villeins and 2 bordars with 2½ ploughs, and 4
socmen, 3 villeins, and 2 bordars apparently held
the rest of the land with 2 ploughs. There were
10 a. of meadow. Before the Conquest there had
been 12 ploughs and the land was worth 55s. In 1086
it was valued at 60s. (fn. 96)
In 1204 when the vill was divided between
Halanath de Syfrewast and Robert de Crevequer
some of the individual holdings are mentioned.
With the exception of two holdings of 12 and 17
virgates most of the tenants seem to have held
their land in amounts of one virgate or less. (fn. 97) A
'capital messuage of the town' is mentioned, the
only reference to any sort of manor-house apart
from Leicester Abbey's grange (fn. 98) which occurs
throughout the history of the village until modern
times. Half of this messuage was granted to Halanath and he received the demesne land lying to the
north of the house.
Although there seem to be unusually few references to pasture land in the township in any
medieval documents it is clear that the pasturing
of cattle did take place. Robert Davy, whose stock
was impounded by his overlord Hugh Bardolf
in 1293, had 33 oxen, a cow, a horse, and a steer
and was evidently raising cattle for sale. (fn. 99) Leicester
Abbey had sheep and cattle at Billesdon in 1291
and 1335 (fn. 1) and cattle were several times unlawfully
detained during the 14th century. (fn. 2) The common
in the Middle Ages was presumably where it was
in the 18th century, on the high ground around
and upon Billesdon Coplow, and to the north-east of
the village in the triangle between the two roads
leading along the parish boundary to Tilton. (fn. 3) In
1305 it was decided that for each acre of land a
tenant should claim as much common as would
maintain 2 oxen, 2 cows and calves, 4 horses, 30
sheep and 1 wether, 4 pigs and 2 sows, or 5 geese
yearly. A dispute had arisen because it was held
that John Digby claimed too much common in
respect of his 8½ virgates of land. (fn. 4) In 1609 one
'quartern land' claimed common for 2 cows and 10
sheep. (fn. 5) In 1627 another pasture dispute arose when
it was claimed that one of the freeholders, William
Bent, had exceeded the number of sheep that he
was permitted by custom to pasture. Five hundred
and twenty of his sheep were removed from the
cow pasture. (fn. 6)
From an early date, as has been noted, there
were many small landowners at Billesdon. In 1305
45 holders are named in the sheriff's report on the
pasture dispute. Of these, only 3 held any considerable amount of land: John Child (6 virgates),
Henry son of Henry (4 virgates), and John Digby
(8½ virgates). Thirty-four of the rest held between
8 bovates and ⅓ bovate, most of them with 2 bovates
or under, and 8 persons held 3 a. or less. In all about
1,150 a. were held in this sort of way. (fn. 7) In 1381 57
persons paid poll tax. There were 10 free tenants,
13 tenants at will, 7 servants, 3 cottagers, and a
cooper. One man is described simply as 'farmer',
and their wives bring the number to fifty-seven. (fn. 8) In
1646 there were 17 tenants on the land which had
belonged to John St. Andrew. (fn. 9)
There were three open fields in Billesdon.
Stonepitt Field lay to the north and east of the
village, Portbridge Field, named from the bridge
over the Coplow brook about a mile along the road
to Leicester, to the north and west, and Mill Field
to the south. These were the names by which the
fields were known at the date of the inclosure and
apparently also at the end of the 17th century. (fn. 10)
In 1601 Stonepitt Field was called North Field,
and in 1625 and 1674 North Field towards Tilton. (fn. 11)
The names of the other fields are not known before
the 18th century.
In 1764 Billesdon was inclosed. (fn. 12) Altogether 52
allotments were made, including 2 to parishes,
Billesdon itself and Langham (Rut.). The vicar
received 108 a. in lieu of tithes and the impropriators 271 a. for the great tithes and 61 a. of
glebe. Of the other lay landowners Nicholas
Simons received 269 a., the highest lay allotment.
There were 3 shares of between 100 a. and 200 a.,
2 over 50 a., and the rest were under 40 a. Thirtyfive persons received between 1 and 19 a. of land
and 2 less than 1 a. The impression of a village of
numerous small landowners is continued by the land
tax assessments into the 19th century. In 1781 there
were 29 smallholders and in 1832 there were thirtythree. If anything their holdings were reduced
slightly in size as the amount of tax paid by each
fell from 4s. 7d. to 3s. 9d. during the same period. (fn. 13)
By 1832 more people were occupying their own
smallholdings than had been in 1775, the first year
when a distinction is made in the assessment between
owners and occupiers. (fn. 14)
The amount of land allotted at the inclosure was
1,975 a., which was surveyed at 18d. an acre. The
surveyor was paid extra for his 'extraordinary
trouble and two journeys to stake out the allotments on Coplow Hill, which could not be done on
account of the gorse not being cut'. (fn. 15) In 1801
245½ a. were still under the plough, mainly growing
wheat and oats. (fn. 16)
The tithe award of 1847 reveals a change in the
pattern of landownership. Of 29 owners of houses
in the village, 21 let the whole of their property, one
occupied one of his houses and let the other, and
there were only 7 owner-occupiers, not counting
the vicar, and the guardians as owners of the work
house. (fn. 17)
The occupations of the inhabitants of the parish
have been mainly rural. Some framework-knitting
was done before 1800 but this seems to have died
out in the early 19th century to be revived for a
brief period between about 1850 and 1890. (fn. 18) In
1838 stables and kennels for the Quorn Hunt were
built at Billesdon. (fn. 19) Hunting stables, at first of the
Quorn and then of the Fernie, and the hunting
life which was centred upon them, had a considerable influence upon the village. In 1846 the inhabitants included 3 blacksmiths and a veterinary
surgeon. Billesdon was also the home of the wellknown 'rough rider' or horsebreaker, Thomas
Tomblin, (fn. 20) and in 1861 another rough rider lived
there. (fn. 21) Some brickmaking was also done after
about 1846 (fn. 22) but this had died out by c. 1920. (fn. 23)
Billesdon was granted two fairs in 1618 and a
weekly market to be held on Fridays. (fn. 24) The application for the grant was apparently made by Sir
James Villiers, elder brother of George, Duke of
Buckingham. The fairs were to be held on St.
James's Day (25 July) and St. George's Day (23
April). The market had been discontinued by the
end of the 18th century and only one fair was held,
at which brass, pewter, and toys were specialities. (fn. 25)
In 1846 the inhabitants formed a committee to
establish quarterly cattle fairs, on the last Mondays
in February and August and the first Mondays in
May and October. The first was held in May 1846; (fn. 26)
they were apparently still continued in 1877 but
only one fair was held in 1881, in October. (fn. 27) The
fairs were discontinued early in the present century.
Billesdon Feast, held the weekend nearest to St.
John the Baptist's Day (24 June), used to last for a
whole week. (fn. 28) It was still held for a day in 1956.
In 1956 Billesdon had reverted from its brief
prosperity, which was the result of hunting and the
manufacture of bricks and stockings, and had
once more become an agricultural village. Some men
were employed at a small agricultural machinery
factory on the Rolleston road, but for the most
part the general employment was farming and
Billesdon is noted for its rich grazing land. (fn. 29)
There was a mill in Billesdon probably by 1332, (fn. 30)
when Henry le Milner paid tax, and certainly by
1346. (fn. 31) It is not known what type of mill this was. In
1558 is the first mention of the windmill which
seems to have existed until 1826, (fn. 32) after which
nothing more is known. The windmill presumably
gave its name to Mill Field. A cross-roads on the
Leicester–Uppingham road is known locally as
'Mill', and may mark the site. (fn. 33)
PARISH ADMINISTRATION.
There was a
workhouse at Billesdon before 1776, when £249
was raised as poor rate. (fn. 34) Billesdon had a high
poor rate in 1802–3 when the income of the overseers
was over £600, representing a rate of 9s. 7½d. in the
pound, a large sum in comparison with parishes of
comparable size. Out of 36 adults receiving poor
relief only 8 were in the workhouse, and 28 children were also given out-relief. (fn. 35) In 1836 Billesdon
was made the centre of a poor-law union comprising
36 parishes. (fn. 36) The first union workhouse was at
Glen Magna, but in 1846 a large new workhouse
was opened at Billesdon. (fn. 37) During the First World
War the building was converted into a military
hospital. In 1935 it was demolished and a row of
cottages was built out of the materials. The workhouse was a large brick building standing on a high
bank above the main road and forming a prominent
feature at the west end of the village. The front
range consisted of a two-story central block with
a pedimented gable, flanked by single-story side
wings. (fn. 38)
The accounts of the Billesdon churchwardens
survive from 1860 to 1902 and various officers'
accounts from 1770 to 1812; there are poor-law
records for the parish from 1723 in considerable
quantities. (fn. 39)
In 1894 a parish council was established with a
membership of 6 councillors. (fn. 40) In 1958 it had the
same composition. (fn. 41)
CHURCH.
Billesdon church was given to Leicester
Abbey by William de Syfrewast before 1162, (fn. 42) and
it is clear that by 1220 the abbey had possession of
both the revenues and the advowson. (fn. 43) After the
Dissolution the rectory was leased to John Turville for 42 years from 1536, (fn. 44) but in 1549 it was
sold, together with the advowson, to the Earl of
Huntingdon and Thomas Hazlewood. (fn. 45) They were
purchased by Thomas Skeffington from Francis
Hazlewood in 1586, (fn. 46) and both rectory and advowson descended together until the early 18th century
when they seem to have been separated. In 1764 the
rectory belonged to William Westbrooke Richardson and Piggott Ince. (fn. 47) In 1765–6 they sold it to
James Bellairs of Stamford, a banker, and James
Davie of Lincoln. (fn. 48) By 1791 it had descended to
James Bellairs of Uffington (Lincs.) and the three
heirs of James Davie. (fn. 49) In 1832 the impropriators
were a Mr. Linney and a Mr. Ostler of Grantham. (fn. 50)
In 1836 Linney had been replaced by a Mr. Stokes
of Leicester. (fn. 51) Nothing further is known of the
rectory.
At the inclosure in 1765 the rectorial tithes were
commuted for an allotment of land. The impropriators were entitled to the tithes, 2 yardlands of
rectorial glebe and the attached rights of common,
and another 7½ yardlands. At the inclosure they
received allotments in lieu of the 2 yardlands and
one-eleventh of the rest of the parish in lieu of
tithes, a total of over 271 a. (fn. 52) The value of the tithes
in 1791 was estimated at £137 15s. (fn. 53)
Presentations to the church were made by Leicester Abbey until the Dissolution. (fn. 54) In 1549 the
advowson was sold to the Earl of Huntingdon and
Thomas Hazlewood; (fn. 55) Hazlewood's widow presented in 1566–7 (fn. 56) and Francis Hazlewood in
1571. In 1586 the advowson passed to Thomas
Skeffington, (fn. 57) who presented Anthony Cade in
1599. The advowson descended with the manor,
although Katherine Skeffington was said to own
the advowson in 1626 and 1633. (fn. 58) Under the will
of John St. Andrew (d. 1626) the reversion of
the advowson after Katherine's death passed
to a relative, William Bendish, (fn. 59) who made his
last presentation in 1660. Christopher Coles was
presented in 1638 by a William Griffith who presumably exercised the right of presentation for one
turn only. John Ekins presented in 1661 but the
advowson had returned to the Skeffington family
in 1668. Between 1668 and 1689 presentations
were made by Christopher Coles, and one for him
by John Smith in 1692. The advowson then passed
to the Duke of Chandos who presented in 1730;
in 1739 the presentation was made for one turn by
Anne Thoroughgood, and in 1758 by John Chamberlain of Billesdon. (fn. 60) Joseph Whittingham, the vicar,
was the patron in 1764 (fn. 61) and the advowson descended to his son in 1791. (fn. 62) By 1793 it had passed
to Henry Greene of Rolleston and remained the
property of the Greene family until the death of the
last Henry Greene of Rolleston in 1861. (fn. 63) After
this it was obtained by Victor Albert Spencer,
Lord Churchill, (fn. 64) who presented until 1927 when
the advowson was transferred to the Bishop of
Leicester, (fn. 65) who was the patron in 1956.
The vicarage was ordained before 1220, apparently by Hugh of Welles. Charyte declared that the
ordination, which does not survive elsewhere, stipulated that the vicar should have all the altarage. (fn. 66)
The vicarage was valued at 15 marks in 1217, 16
in 1254, and 24 in 1291. (fn. 67) In 1428 the value
had risen to 31½ marks, (fn. 68) but had decreased to
£14 9s. 10d. in 1535. (fn. 69) In 1626 it was valued at
£60 (fn. 70) and in 1831 at £298. (fn. 71)
Elaborate arrangements for the payment of
tithes were laid down in the glebe terrier of 1635
and continued until the inclosure of the parish. (fn. 72)
The vicar, besides his house, ½ rood in the North
Field, and pasture for 4 cows, a horse, and 20 sheep,
was entitled to the corn and hay tithes of those
closes which showed no sign of ridge and furrow
(i.e. which were not clearly under recent cultivation), the tithes of wool, lambs, pigs, hemp, pigeons
from dovecotes, eggs, geese, fruit, and bees, and a
yearly rent from Rolleston. Property in Goadby is
not described in this terrier, but according to those
of 1679 (fn. 73) and 1748 (fn. 74) the Vicar of Billesdon owned
a close of 44 a. and a house there, allotted at the
inclosure. (fn. 75) Two small tithe account books among
the parish records cover the period from 1746 to
1761 and show the receipts of the vicarial tithes
paid in kind. (fn. 76) In 1635 the vicar received 4 fleeces
for the tithes of 44 sheep, which belonged to a
Fleckney man and had been wintered in Billesdon.
It was then stated that according to the custom of the
parish sheep wintering should be subject to the
payment of tithes if they remained in the parish
until midday on the day before Candlemas. (fn. 77)
By the inclosure award the vicar received an
allotment of 12 a. near the Vicarage in lieu of glebe
and as much land as would be worth £55 a year in
lieu of the small tithes. (fn. 78) The whole allotment
amounted to just over 108 a. The 12 a. near the
Vicarage apparently supplemented a large garden
or orchard. In 1821 the glebe near the Vicarage
amounted to over 30 a. (fn. 79) In 1847 the tithes
of the very small area of old inclosure and the
village itself were commuted for an annual payment of £2. (fn. 80) The vicar also received tithes from
Goadby and Rolleston. (fn. 81) In 1956 the total glebe
in Billesdon and Goadby amounted to about
130 a., some having been sold for building purposes in 1945. (fn. 82)
The parsonage lies to the south-east of the church
and is entered from the churchyard. It is built
largely of ironstone and is said to have been begun
by Anthony Cade when he was vicar. (fn. 83) The lower
part of the main range, which has a moulded stone
doorway and mullioned windows, may be of the early
17th century. The roof was evidently raised c. 1700
when wood-framed windows with mullions and
transoms were inserted on the upper floor. A semicircular brick bay at the rear has the date 1770 on
the lead roof. (fn. 84) The west wing of the house, also of
brick, is an addition of the 19th century.
The north aisle of Billesdon church is traditionally
the Rolleston aisle, and in 1607 part of the churchyard
was said to be specially set aside for the burial of
inhabitants of Rolleston chapelry. (fn. 85) In the 18th
century it was said that according to tradition a
row of pews was built on the north side of Billesdon church for the people of Goadby chapelry. (fn. 86)
This seems doubtful in view of the fact that Goadby chapel had full parochial rights before 1220. (fn. 87)
Rolleston chapel had no burial rights and interments from Rolleston took place in the churchyard
of the mother church. In 1869 a joint cemetery for
Billesdon and Rolleston was set up under the
Billesdon burial board, and opened in 1870. (fn. 88)
The church of ST. JOHN THE BAPTIST is
built of ironstone with dressings and some facings
of limestone ashlar. It consists of a chancel, an
aisled nave of four bays, a north porch, a south
vestry, and a spired west tower. The south aisle and
the vestry are additions of 1864 and the tower was
rebuilt three years earlier.
The earliest parts of the building are the base of
the tower and the north arcade of the nave, both of
which were probably built before 1250. Four of the
five piers of the arcade are octagonal, their capitals
having thin mouldings which include a band of
diminutive nail-head ornament. The central pier
is composite and has a 'water-holding' base. The
capital is crudely carved with stylized foliage and
human masks. The arches are of two chamfered
orders and have hood-moulds with carved head
stops. The tower, which is a copy of the original
one, has a lancet window in the west wall of its lowest
stage. The two upper stages and the tower arch were
probably completed in the second half of the 13th
century. The two-light belfry windows contain
geometrical tracery. The tower is surmounted by a
squat broach spire with two tiers of lights. The
circular moulded font may also date from the 13th
century. Except for the east window the windows
in the chancel have uniform Perpendicular tracery
and it may be assumed that the chancel was rebuilt in the 15th century. The north aisle windows
are also of Perpendicular character, some being
very late in date. The aisle may represent a 14thcentury rebuilding but if so the windows are later
insertions. It is almost certain that the church
originally possessed a medieval south aisle but the
evidence for the date of its removal is conflicting.
Traces of a former aisle were found in 1864 when
the new one was built, but nobody then living could
remember it. (fn. 89) Nichols mentions a south aisle
c. 1798, (fn. 90) but confusion may have arisen if his
source was Throsby, who apparently refers to the
nave as the 'principal aisle'. (fn. 91) If there was no
memory of it in 1864 it is unlikely that the aisle was
in existence in Nichols's time. It had certainly
disappeared before 1832. (fn. 92)
The church was apparently in poor condition
in the earlier 17th century. (fn. 93) Extensive repairs
were recommended between 1607 and 1633, many
of which do not seem to have been carried out. (fn. 94)
In 1619 a south porch, which must have disappeared
with the aisle, required slating. (fn. 95) The archdeacon
reported in 1776 that the chancel and tower were
out of repair and that a new south door was needed.
In this year 'Mr. Wing' was paid £65 for repairing
the steeple and the east wall of the chancel was
rebuilt. (fn. 96) A square-headed east window in a wood
frame, which still existed in 1864, (fn. 97) may have
originated at this time. Repairs were again necessary
in 1794. (fn. 98) Throsby, who visited the church in
1790, commented on the mean appearance of the
interior. The floor was 'intolerable' and the 'principal aisle' was 'crowded with two shabby galleries,
not unlike two large pigeon boxes stuck against a
wall'. (fn. 99) In 1832 it was reported that application
had been made in vain to the impropriators for
the repair of the chancel. (fn. 1) The church was repewed in 1838. (fn. 2) In 1832 cracks were noted in
the tower and in 1842 they were said to be dangerous. (fn. 3)
In 1861 Charles Kirk of Sleaford (Lincs.), architect, submitted a report on the fabric. (fn. 4) As a result
of his findings the church was temporarily closed
while the tower was taken down and the south wall
of the nave was shored up. The tower was rebuilt
with a facing of limestone ashlar. The position of the
staircase door was altered and a window was inserted
in the ringing chamber; (fn. 5) otherwise the original tower
was copied. Further restoration of the church was held
up for lack of funds, but in 1864 work was resumed. A
newsouth aisle and south vestry were built, the chancel
arch was reconstructed, a new east window was inserted, and the whole building was re-roofed to a steeper
pitch. The chancel window which had been displaced by the new vestry was inserted in the north
aisle. The aisle and porch were restored. It had
originally been intended to build the south aisle
entirely of Ancaster stone but in order to save
money Billesdon stone from the Coplow estate
was substituted for the walls. (fn. 6) Two Perpendicular
windows from the former nave wall were used in
the aisle and another made to the same design. The
arcade is a copy of that on the north side. The
interior of the church was thoroughly restored and
the old box pews, galleries, and high pulpit were
cleared away. Further restorations and repairs took
place in 1895–6, 1923, and 1926. (fn. 7)
The oak font cover was probably provided
about 1607 when the lack of one was commented on
by the archdeacon at his visitation. (fn. 8) Most of the
other internal fittings date from 1864 to 1865. The
chancel contains memorial tablets to Edward
Thomas (d. 1836), vicar, and to another Revd.
Edward Thomas (d. 1843). There is a marble tablet
to Henry Greene of Rolleston (d. 1861), son of
the Revd. Edward Thomas. In the north aisle is a
tablet and a copy of a painting by Pinturicchio,
both in memory of George Christian (d. 1925),
vicar 1906–13. The east window in the north aisle
contains memorial glass to Charles Thomas Freer
of Billesdon Coplow (d. 1882).
The plate consists of a silver cup of about 1575
and a set of parcel gilt of 1874. There are also
two pewter plates and a pewter flagon, the last of
1713. (fn. 9) There are eight bells: (i) and (ii) 1956;
(iii) 1932; (iv) 1912, the Edward VII memorial bell;
(v) 1628; (vi) 1624; (vii) originally c. 1630, recast
1862 by John Taylor of Loughborough; (viii)
1380, cast by John of Yorke. The registers of
baptisms, burials, and marriages date from 1599
and are complete; they were kept for the first 35
years by Anthony Cade. (fn. 10)
NONCONFORMITY.
In 1719 a Protestant conventicle was held in Thomas Neale's house and in
1779 there was another in Samuel Ireland's house. (fn. 11)
In 1791 the vicar declared that with the exception of
one Methodist there were no nonconformists in the
village. (fn. 12) Registrations of meeting-houses in Billesdon
were made in 1811, by Robert Pearson (fn. 13) and by
John Lewin for a house called the Red House, (fn. 14)
and in 1813. (fn. 15)
The General Baptist chapel was built in 1812 and
registered in the same year by its minister, John
Deacon. (fn. 16) In 1829 there were 35 Baptists, including
a congregation of Particular Baptists formed in
1820. (fn. 17) The General Baptist chapel was registered for
marriages in 1879. (fn. 18) It stands east of Back Street
and is a plain brick building with a gabled front,
repaired and altered in 1861. (fn. 19) To the south is
a three-story early-19th-century house, known as
the Academy. For a short period in the 19th century
it was used as a boys' boarding school. (fn. 20) In 1846 the
Salem chapel in West Lane was built for the Particular Baptists and the Independents. (fn. 21) By 1959
the building had been converted into a garage. In
1854 the Wesleyan chapel was established. (fn. 22) The
chapel, which was in Front Street, was said to have
been formed out of an old building re-fronted and
enlarged in 1859. (fn. 23) It went out of use c. 1925 (fn. 24) and
after 1940 was converted into a fire station. An
unspecified congregation of nonconformists was
registered in 1843 in the house of William Randal. (fn. 25)
SCHOOLS.
There was a succession of private
schools in Billesdon during the 17th century which
prepared boys for the universities. George Villiers,
later Duke of Buckingham, probably between 1602
and 1605 attended a private school run by the
Vicar of Billesdon, Anthony Cade, who has been
described as chaplain and tutor to George Villiers. (fn. 26)
The tradition that George Fox, the Quaker, received
his early education at Billesdon does not seem to be
founded on fact. (fn. 27) But Cade prepared the sons
of local gentlemen for Cambridge (fn. 28) and regretted
that some of these later became Roman Catholics. (fn. 29)
Two pupils of the two schoolmasters who followed
Cade, William Scampton (1638) and Henry Trigg
(1646), are known to have gone to Cambridge, (fn. 30) but
the names of later schoolmasters at Billesdon who
appear in subscription books (fn. 31) may not have belonged to private schools of this kind.
In 1650 the present old school building was
erected by William Sharpe of Rolleston as a free
school for the parish. Several bequests were made
to the school between its foundation and 1837,
when the Charity Commissioners reported that they
amounted to £180, the interest from which, £12,
was used for the payment of the schoolmaster. The
then vicar, Dr. Thomas, supported the school from
his private means to a considerable extent, and the
rest of its funds came from the fees of the 18 paying
pupils who paid between 7s. 6d. and 10s. a year.
The costs of stationery were defrayed by the
parents of the children. In 1837 there were 22 free
pupils in addition to those paying fees. (fn. 32)
In 1853 the poor condition of the building
caused the vicar to raise subscriptions for its repair, (fn. 33)
and the money was used in 1856 to repair the school
and purchase a harmonium. The architect called in
to survey the building in 1853 was William Parsons
of Leicester who had himself been educated at
Billesdon; he advised the rebuilding of the school, (fn. 34)
but this was evidently not done. In 1855 the
Leicestershire Archaeological Society was in some
apprehension lest the building should be demolished. (fn. 35) The old school remained in use until
1876 when the children were transferred to the
new National school.
In 1895 a dispute arose between the vicar and the
parish council over the rights of each to the old
school building. The vicar claimed that since its
foundation the school had been under the control
of the vicars of Billesdon and cited several 18thcentury instances of the building being repaired
by the churchwardens out of the funds of the
church. (fn. 36) The parish council made strenuous
efforts to deny this, saying that the building had
been erected by William Sharpe for the use of the
parish in general and that the vicar had no right to
say who should and who should not be able to use it.
The school had always been used for vestry meetings and for many years it served as the Sunday
school. The vicar also allowed it to be used for
general religious, benevolent, or charitable purposes. His claim that the Vicar of Billesdon was
ex officio controller of the school was endorsed by
the Charity Commissioners in 1908, when a new
Scheme was issued for the management of the
school building and its assets. (fn. 37) A committee of
trustees was set up, including the vicar and elected
representatives, to manage both the building and
the assets of the school. The money which belonged
to the school, stock valued at £329 1s. 2d., was to
be used in the first place for repairs to the fabric.
If any residue remained of the interest it could be
used for the purchase of a school library. In 1959
the old school was again being used by the schoolchildren as an extra classroom, the National school
proving too small to accommodate larger classes.
The old school is a one-story ironstone building
with a slate roof, which replaced the old thatch in
1856. It has three three-light windows and a squareheaded door facing the road. The stone windows
are square-headed with label mouldings, the lights
round-headed. The long axis of the building is
north-west to south-east and a curious feature is
the existence of four sundials, one on each face.
In 1958 the structure was restored with the help
of the Historic Buildings Council under the direction of the Ministry of Works. (fn. 38)
The National school and the schoolmaster's
house were built in 1875 to the designs of R. J.
and J. Goodacre of Leicester. The cost, over £850,
was raised largely by voluntary contributions and
local effort. (fn. 39) The new school was designed to
accommodate about 130 children. In 1910 the average
attendance was 97, and in 1933 60. (fn. 40) In 1937 the
Leicestershire County Council resolved to make it
a primary school as soon as the seniors could be
moved to the new school at Church Langton. (fn. 41) The
attendance of juniors and infants in 1957 was 92. (fn. 42)
In 1833 2 private day schools and one boarding
school with 26 boys were reported in Billesdon;
these were still maintained in the 1860's. (fn. 43)
CHARITIES.
Anthony Cade, vicar, in 1638 gave
£13 6s. 8d. to the parish, which, with other donations,
was used for the purchase in 1706 of the Poor's
Close, the rent from which was to be distributed to
the poor on St. Thomas's Day. (fn. 44) In 1714 most of the
money for the purchase of the land was said to
have been given by the ancestors of the Greenes of
Rolleston. (fn. 45) The Close was exchanged for 5 a. in
Portbridge Field and Under Greenhill at the inclosure in 1764. The land was let as grazing before
1835, when it was divided into 30 allotments which
were let to poor labourers and brought in a rent of
£14. (fn. 46) In 1895 the management of this land was
held to be the responsibility of the parish council
under the Local Government Act. (fn. 47) In 1935 the
rent was £10, which was divided between 48 poor
persons. (fn. 48) In 1956 the allotments had again been
converted to grazing ground, the rent from which
was still distributed to the poor. (fn. 49)
Richard Woollaston of Whitchurch (Hants), by
will dated 1688, left £2,000 to be invested in an
estate capable of yielding about £100 a year;
one-tenth of the income was to go to Billesdon.
In 1836 Billesdon's share amounted to £29, which
was spent on bales of flannel and sheeting delivered
from Leicester each November for the poor. (fn. 50) A
century later it was worth £16. (fn. 51) In 1956 the charity
was distributed in the form of vouchers. (fn. 52)
Robert Arnold by will dated 1740 devised a rentcharge of 5s. for bread for the poor. This was still
paid in 1837 (fn. 53) but was reported lost in 1926. (fn. 54)
William Ward, by will proved 1773, gave £400
to the vicar, churchwardens, and overseers of
Billesdon for the support of 4 poor widows in 4
houses to be provided by the parish within two
years of his death. The widows were to receive the
interest on the £400 in equal shares. The deed of
sale for the houses was apparently not executed
until 1791 when the parish paid £21 3s. to Thomas
Mitchell for 4 houses already in occupation by the
widows, who were appointed by the vicar and the
parish officers. In 1837 the houses were dilapidated
as the income of the charity made no provision
for a repair fund. The widows then received
payments of 3s. weekly which were paid partly from
the income, which then amounted to £17 10s.,
and partly from the parish rates. (fn. 55) In 1866 a
repair fund was raised for the houses and included
a payment from the fairs. (fn. 56)
The revenues of the widows' houses were augmented in the late 18th century by the bequest of
£100 in the will of Joseph Whittingham, proved
1793, the interest from which was to be spent on
coal for the widows. (fn. 57) Three of the 4 houses were
demolished about 1926 and in 1927 the Charity
Commissioners issued a new Scheme for their
management. Future occupants of the houses were
to be in receipt of the old-age pension or other
secured income. The cost of the repair and insurance of the houses was to be the first charge
upon the income from Ward's and Whittingham's
charities, and any residue was to be spent on coal
for the widows and payments to them. (fn. 58) The
funds were held in the form of £492 stock in 1935,
which yielded £12 6s. interest, out of which £6
a year was paid to the widows. A new block containing two houses was built in 1928 on the original
site in Back Street. They were opened on Feast
Monday 1929. (fn. 59) In 1959 the occupants of two houses
were paid £4 a year. (fn. 60)
At unknown dates towards the end of the 18th
century John Pippin gave £30 and Mary Heard
£200, both for the poor. These charities produced
a yearly income of £9 7s. 3d. in 1837. (fn. 61) In 1927
under a Scheme of the Charity Commissioners it
was provided that the income could be used for the
provision of medical and other help for poor persons not in receipt of poor relief, or for clothing or
temporary cash assistance, or for subscriptions to an
infirmary or provident club. (fn. 62)
GOADBY
Goadby is a civil parish of 961 a., twelve miles
east of Leicester, and is for ecclesiastical purposes
a chapelry in the parish of Billesdon. Keythorpe
Wood lies on the eastern side of the parish where
the ground rises to nearly 600 ft. along the boundary.
Goadby village is on a western spur of the same hill,
the ground falling away steeply on three sides of it.
In the narrow valley immediately west of the village
the boundary with Noseley parish follows a small
stream which flows southwards and eventually
joins the Welland. The village is small and compact.
It consists of 5 farms, a few cottages, and 2 larger
houses, grouped round a small triangular open
space. The church lies on its northern edge. Facing
the open space is the former National school,
built in 1857 (fn. 63) and now converted into a house. It
consists of a single-story schoolroom with gabled
side wings of two stories. The front is faced with
stone and has elaborate 'Tudor' features, including
leaded windows with stone tracery and hoodmoulds.
The Hazlerigg crest is above the doorway. Holme
Lodge, standing east of the school, was built c.
1900 on the site of the former glebe house. After
the First World War it was occupied by Lieut.-Col.
T. Hazlerigg (d. 1935), lord of the manor. (fn. 64) East
of Holme Lodge is a mid-18th-century brick
house which was also occupied by connexions of
the Hazlerigg family in the 19th and 20th centuries. (fn. 65)
Greenacres, formerly The Laurels, is a farm-house
standing in a garden on the west side of the village
with a small ironstone lodge at the gate. It is a mid19th-century house of red brick, built by Sir Arthur
Hazlerigg as a dower house but never used as one. (fn. 66)
To the north of it Hill Farm probably represents
a reconstructed medieval house. It stands on an
ironstone base, the upper part of the walls being
of variegated late-17th-century brick with some
diaper work. The roof contains ancient smokeblackened timbers which have been re-used. The
house at the Manor Farm also has an ironstone base
and appears to have been reconstructed in the 18th
century. The Home Farm, lying immediately south
of the church, was the property of Lord Berners
in the 19th century. (fn. 67) The house dates from 1680 (fn. 68)
and is an L-shaped building of ironstone, having
two stories and attics. A late-18th-century doorway
has been added. A cottage with mud walls, partly replaced by brickwork, survives on the south side of
the village. There are two pairs of Council houses
on the road to Keythorpe, built in 1951. (fn. 69)
Goadby seems always to have been thinly populated. In 1086 the recorded population was seven. (fn. 70)
In 1381 there were 34 taxpayers, mostly tenants at
will. (fn. 71) In 1670 there were 11 households, and in
1676 57 communicants. The population rose from
72 in 1801 to a peak of 141 in 1851 and thereafter
declined. It was 64 in 1951. (fn. 72)
MANOR.
Goadby was held before the Conquest
by Tochi, whose lands descended to Geoffrey
Alselin in 1066. In 1086 an under-tenant, Norman,
held from Geoffrey. (fn. 73) By the early 13th century
Goadby seems to have passed into the possession
of the Preston family, (fn. 74) although the Martival
family of Noseley held some land there and received a grant of free warren there in 1268. (fn. 75) In
1265 Henry de Preston held a yardland in demesne
and two yardlands in villeinage, which he forfeited
after Evesham. (fn. 76) The land was restored to his
heirs, for before 1282 Laurence de Preston leased
the manor of GOADBY to Peter de Welles for
life and to Welles's heirs after his death for a period
of two years. (fn. 77) Before 1313 the manor had passed
into the possession of John Pecche, who granted
it in that year to Nicholas and Joan Seaton. (fn. 78) It
descended in their family, with its principal manor
of Seaton (Rut.), until 1476, (fn. 79) when at the death of
Edward Seaton his property was divided between
his co-heirs, his daughters Anne and Joan. Goadby
formed part of the share of Anne and her husband
Eusby Catesby (fn. 80) and was inherited by Anne's
son Edward (d. 1535). (fn. 81) His son Michael, a minor
at his father's death, (fn. 82) sold the manor in 1579 to
Anthony Colly. (fn. 83) Colly sold it in 1593 to Sir
Edward Heron, (fn. 84) and in 1611 Heron's son Edward
sold it to Thomas Brudenell of Stonton Wyville. (fn. 85)
From Thomas the manor descended to his third
son Edward Brudenell of Barton Seagrave (Northants.). (fn. 86) On the death of Edward's son, Edmund
Brudenell, the manor passed to his sister Frances,
and her husband, Joseph Pippin. Joseph's sister and
heir was Elizabeth, the wife of John Weston, a
tallow-chandler of London. Their daughter Frances
Brudenell Weston was in possession by 1784 (fn. 87) and
by 1787 had become the wife of Joseph Sibley of
Bedford, (fn. 88) in whose family the manor descended
until after 1847. (fn. 89) Between then and 1877 the manor
was bought by Sir Arthur Hazlerigg of Noseley, (fn. 90)
who was succeeded at Goadby by his second son
Major-Gen. Thomas Hazlerigg (d. 1915). MajorGen. Hazlerigg was succeeded by his son Lt.-Col.
Thomas Hazlerigg (d. 1935). (fn. 91)
ECONOMIC HISTORY.
In 1086 the recorded
population of Goadby was 7: one serf on the
demesne, 5 villeins, and 2 bordars. There was a
tract of woodland two furlongs by four, (fn. 92) traces of
which can probably still be seen in the plantations
towards Keythorpe. This wood was valued as a
pasture in the Middle Ages. In 1299 Roger
Martival stated that his ancestor William had been
granted common of pasture in the 'high wood' of
Goadby. (fn. 93)
Little is known of medieval Goadby. The threecourse system of agriculture was practised there. In
1601 the three open fields were known as the North,
East, and West fields, but they were described in
1625 as the North Field and the fields 'towards
Keythorpe' and 'towards Noseley'. (fn. 94) In 1676 a
Nether Field is mentioned. (fn. 95) In 1677 the fields were
known as the East or Keythorpe Field, the South
or Nether Field, and the Rolleston Field, which
is presumably the same as the former West Field. (fn. 96)
The nomenclature is, however, vague and a North
Field is also mentioned in 1677, whereas it does not
appear that there were four fields at an earlier date.
Goadby was partly inclosed in the 16th century,
although the main inclosure did not take place
until 1677. In 1511 Thomas Hazlerigg of Noseley,
who had leased 3 farms and 60 a. of land from
Edward Catesby, was said to have converted this
land to pasture and reduced the farms to the status
of cottages with Catesby's consent. (fn. 97) In 1528
Anthony Colly, who leased two closes in Goadby
from Edward Catesby, accused Thomas Hazlerigg
of breaking into them and pasturing 400 sheep
there on 12 April and 700 sheep and other animals
on 9 May. This caused a considerable dispute, but
it has been suggested that these two closes may be
those created by Hazlerigg in 1511, which had then
been leased to Colly over Hazlerigg's head. (fn. 98) In
1512 Thomas Hazlerigg was accused of breaking
down a close in Goadby belonging to Christopher
Neal of Prestwold. (fn. 99)
It seems clear, however, that most of the lordship
remained open. On 3 May 1676 articles of agreement were drawn up between the patron of the
vicarage of Billesdon (which included Goadby), the
vicar, the lord of the manor of Goadby, and four
freeholders. (fn. 1) These set out that the whole of the
lordship should be inclosed before 29 September
1677 after being surveyed and divided by two
independent assessors. Two of the plots were set
out in the articles, but it is not clear why two of the
freeholders were selected for preferential treatment
in this way: they were to be allowed these particular
plots for their 'convenience'. One of the bounds
mentioned in the division of Thomas Fowler's
plot was 'the ash tree in Noseley lordship'. Provision was made in the agreement for the payment
of two reserved rents from two holdings, for tithes,
and for the display by all those concerned of their
title-deeds before 29 September 1678. It seems to
have been estimated that there were at least 600
a. of arable for inclosure: the amount of pasture
is not stated. The inclosure was regulated by a
further agreement in July 1682. (fn. 2) The delay was
caused by the resignation of William Coles, the
former Vicar of Billesdon. The plots were laid out
in September 1677. Edmund Brudenell, as lord of
the manor, received 196 a. and the Oldfield, the
extent of which is not stated but which was probably
formed by one of the 16th-century inclosures. William Whalley received 126 a., Brian Satterthwaite
114 a. Thomas Fowler 97 a., Thomas Woodcock
59 a., and the vicar 44 a. of glebe. A total of
636 a. were thus allotted, leaving rather over 300
which were not dealt with. These were probably
already pasture, and some at least must have already been inclosed. Elaborate arrangements were
made for the payment of tithes, for payments to
equalize the profits made by each freeholder from
trees, and for fencing and ditching the new fields.
The vicar was given special permission to drive his
milch cows through part of Thomas Woodcock's
land and to milk them there. Town lands were also
laid out although the precise amount of these is not
stated. The profits from them were to be used for
the repair of the village street and for other public
uses. (fn. 3)
PARISH ADMINISTRATION.
Goadby cared
for its own poor but had no workhouse. In 1802–3
out-relief was given to 5 adults and 8 children. (fn. 4)
No administrative papers of the civil parish survive,
except a loose sheet of constables' accounts for
1775. (fn. 5) In 1836 Goadby was placed in Billesdon
Union (fn. 6) and in 1871 was created a civil parish. (fn. 7)
CHURCH.
For ecclesiastical purposes Goadby is
a chapelry of Billesdon. The chapel was first mentioned in the 12th century, when it was granted to
Leicester Abbey with the mother church by William de Syfrewast before 1162. (fn. 8) In 1220 it is described
as a free chapel with a resident chaplain paid by the
Vicar of Billesdon and with full parochial rights. (fn. 9)
The great tithes were reserved to the abbey as
rector of the parish when the relations of Goadby
and Billesdon were regulated by an unidentified R.,
Bishop of Lincoln (probably Grosseteste). The bishop
ordered that the chapel of Goadby was to be
attached for all time to the church of Billesdon.
The vicar was to find a chaplain at a salary of 5½
marks, and was to take half the profits of the hay
tithes and of a virgate of land in Goadby, with
half a toft and the altarage, and 4 marks were to be
paid to the vicar by the Abbot of Leicester, to
whom the rest of the profits were reserved. (fn. 10) By
the 15th century it seems that the abbey was no
longer drawing anything from Goadby; Goadby
is not mentioned in the Valor of 1535, although
Billesdon and Rolleston are mentioned as profitable
parts of the abbey's estates. This apparent extinction
of rectorial rights in the parish led to complications
in the 17th and 18th centuries. The vicar's right
in glebe and a house at Goadby remained, and the
absence of anyone with a rector's rights and obligations in Goadby, coupled with the mistaken belief
that the Vicar of Billesdon was Rector of Goadby,
resulted in confused disputes in the 17th and 18th
centuries about responsibility for the repair of Goadby chapel and churchyard. In 1619 there was a dispute about the upkeep of the churchyard. (fn. 11) Up to
1750 the vicars were apparently content to undertake repairs to the chapel, but in 1753 the vicar took
the matter to court and it was found that, Goadby
being a chapelry, the repair of the chapel was a
charge on the Goadby ratepayers. (fn. 12)
At the inclosure in 1676 the Vicar of Billesdon
was allotted a rent-charge of £48 18s. in lieu of
tithes from Goadby. (fn. 13) The vicar's own glebe was
exempted. In 1821 the payment was £56 11s. 5d. (fn. 14)
In 1847 a further tithe award regulated the small
tithes which were commuted for £77. In addition
the great tithes on land not allotted in 1676 were
commuted for a payment of £12 to the landowners. (fn. 15)
Nothing further is known of this. In 1787 Thomas
Pares as agent for Joseph Sibley received the tithes
of Goadby by fine from several other persons whose
connexion is not known. (fn. 16)
The glebe allotted by the inclosure agreement
amounted to a house and a large close of 44 a.
The house stood in 1679 'at the north side of the
common street at the corner of church lane'. (fn. 17)
The glebe remained in the possession of the Vicar
of Billesdon in 1956, (fn. 18) but the house was demolished
c. 1900. In the 18th century the chaplains of Goadby
held benefices elsewhere, but some evidently lived
in Goadby. (fn. 19) In 1863 William Green, the incumbent of Noseley, acted as curate of Goadby and
Rolleston, and lived in Goadby. (fn. 20)
The dedication of the chapel is uncertain. It is
said to be dedicated to ST. JOHN, but in 1517 the
parishioners of Goadby objected to having to pay
for wax for the celebration of the feast of St. John
the Baptist, because this should, they said, properly
be celebrated in 'another church', presumably
either Billesdon or Rolleston, the former certainly
and the latter probably dedicated to St. John the
Baptist. (fn. 21) The chapel at Goadby stands in a small
churchyard immediately behind the Home Farm.
It seems likely that it was founded as a manorial
chapel in the late 12th or early 13th century.
The building consists of an undivided nave and
chancel, a south porch, two small transepts, and a
vestry. There is a small bellcote at the west end of
the nave containing one bell. The nave and chancel
formed the original chapel and are built of ironstone with limestone dressings. The nave, which
has been heavily restored, probably dates from the
early 13th century and retains two small lancets
with wide internal splays in the south wall. In the
north wall are a wider lancet and a blocked doorway.
In the south wall of the chancel is a late Perpendicular window with a four-centred head, the sill
being carried down to form a seat. The original
east window, which has been replaced, was of
three lights with 14th-century tracery and a pointed
head. (fn. 22) The chancel contains an aumbry and a
restored piscina. The medieval south porch may
originally have been partly of timber, but has
been rebuilt in stone. Its roof has king-posts,
cambered ties, and curved braces and principals.
The nail-studded oak door bears a wooden shield
inscribed 'William Colinson gave this 1618'. (fn. 23)
According to Nichols the south transept was added
in the late 17th century at the expense of Brian
Satterthwaite who was eventually buried there. (fn. 24)
The base is of ironstone but some original diaperpatterned brickwork survives above. In about 1750
the parishioners complained of the poor condition
of the chancel. (fn. 25) It was evidently still much neglected in 1776 when the archdeacon ordered repairs
and replacements. He also commented on the need
for a new north door. (fn. 26) When Nichols first visited
the chapel in 1793 it was urgently in need of repair. (fn. 27)
In the following year the archdeacon ordered that
the west wall of the nave be taken down and rebuilt.
This was evidently done and the bell turret was
reconstructed in a different form. (fn. 28) In 1832 Archdeacon Bonney said of the bell turret that 'nothing
could be more mean' and he reported unfavourably
on the structural condition of the building. (fn. 29) The
chapel was thoroughly restored and refitted by
Sir Arthur Hazlerigg in 1848. (fn. 30) In 1860 the east
window was replaced by Lord Berners and it is
thought that he was also responsible for reconstructing the south transept in red brick. (fn. 31) The north
transept and the vestry, also in brick, were added in
1874. (fn. 32) The chapel was again restored in 1899. (fn. 33)
At a further restoration in 1931 two scratch dials
were found on the stonework of one of the south
windows. (fn. 34)
In Nichols's time there was a pulpit dated 1643. (fn. 35)
It was replaced by another in 1848 (fn. 36) which is now
missing. The chapel contains stone fonts of 1848
and 1899, the original square medieval font being
in the Vicarage garden at Billesdon. (fn. 37) There are
mural tablets to Margaret, wife of the Revd.
Thomas Davenport (d. 1778), and to Lt.-Col.
Thomas Hazlerigg (d. 1935). A slab in the south
transept is inscribed to Elizabeth, wife of William
Bromley (d. 1778). The single bell is dated 1714. (fn. 38)
The plate consists of a silver cup of about 1570, a
paten of 1864, and some 17th- or 18th-century
pewter. (fn. 39) The registers of baptisms, burials, and
marriages begin in 1599 and are complete.
NONCONFORMITY.
None known.
SCHOOL.
There was apparently a schoolmaster
in Goadby in the early 17th century, (fn. 40) but nothing
further is known of a school there until the 19th
century. In 1824 a Sunday school was opened. In
1833 it educated 9 boys and 13 girls with the aid of
voluntary contributions. (fn. 41) A day school had been
started by 1842, (fn. 42) perhaps by the Hazlerigg family,
for in 1855, (fn. 43) when the first definite information is
forthcoming, it was supported by Sir Arthur Hazlerigg, who erected a school building in 1857. (fn. 44)
This school was continued until after the death of
Sir Arthur Hazlerigg in 1890, but it was subsequently abandoned. (fn. 45) In 1910 the school was reopened with the help of Sir Arthur Hazlerigg (d.
1949) (fn. 46) and in 1922 had an attendance of 14. (fn. 47) It was
closed in 1933. (fn. 48)
CHARITIES.
None known.
ROLLESTON
Rolleston is a civil parish of 1,094 a. lying ten
miles east of Leicester; ecclesiastically it is a
chapelry in the parish of Billesdon. The parish is
roughly triangular in shape and is mostly pasture.
About a quarter of the area, at the south-west
corner, is occupied by the grounds and park of
Rolleston Hall. The western boundary follows the
road from Market Harborough to Melton Mowbray
which here runs along a ridge mostly at a height of
over 600 ft. The ground falls away towards the east
where the boundary follows a brook which rises
in the parish and further south becomes the boundary between Noseley and Goadby. Rolleston Hall
stands in the centre of the parish with the chapel
immediately to the north of it. It is approached by
three gated roads, one from the west and one
each from Billesdon and Skeffington. The grounds,
which include a lake and areas of woodland, were
improved at a cost of £10,000 in the second quarter
of the 19th century. (fn. 49) There are several cottages
and estate buildings to the north and west of the
hall, mostly built by Lord Churchill c. 1900, a
few being added by Lord Michelham between the
two world wars. (fn. 50) Lord Churchill's buildings
include a large red-brick stable court. There are
now no early cottages or outbuildings. These
appear to have stood to the east of the church and
garden. (fn. 51) An early-19th-century brick cottage in
this area has Gothic window-glazing and a very
large pedimented doorcase. It is of early Georgian
date and may originally have come from the hall
itself. The only other houses in the parish are
Home Farm, Cranhill Farm, and Rolleston Lodge
Farm. These, with a lodge and a few cottages,
were built along the road from Harborough to
Melton in the 19th and early 20th centuries.
The former Rolleston Hall was a stone mansion,
said to have been re-fronted c. 1700. (fn. 52) It consisted
of a central two-story range, flanked by gabled
cross-wings. By 1793 the house had a Georgian
doorway and sash windows (fn. 53) but the general layout
suggests that it had an early-17th-century origin.
There were further alterations in the 19th century.
During and immediately after the Second World
War the building was used as an orthopaedic
hospital. In 1955 it was demolished and a smaller
house, mainly in the Tudor style, was built of
Clipsham stone to the design of Robert Cawkwell
of Sheffield. (fn. 54) It was completed in 1958. The old
garden walls and part of the wall of the east wing
were incorporated in the new scheme.
In 1086 the recorded population was nine.
There were 133 taxpayers in 1377. In 1670 there
were 10 householders, and in 1676, 35 communicants. The population, 43 in 1801, remained fairly
constant from then until the 1880's, when it rose
slightly. In 1951 it was sixty-one. (fn. 55)
MANOR.
Before the Conquest ROLLESTON
formed part of an estate in the neighbourhood of
Billesdon which belonged to the Saxon landholder,
Tochi. After 1066 it passed with the rest of his
land to Geoffrey Alselin, from whom Norman
was holding Rolleston in 1086. (fn. 56)
The descent of the manor of Rolleston in the
12th century has not been traced, but it seems
likely that by the beginning of the 13th century the
overlordship had passed to the Bardolf family
who had succeeded to the land of Geoffrey de
Alselin in Hallaton. (fn. 57) In 1279 the mesne lord
paid scutage to William Bardolf and Adam de
Everingham for the lands of his tenant in Rolleston. (fn. 58)
The descent of the overlordship can be traced
from William Bardolf (d. 1276) (fn. 59) to William,
Lord Bardolf (d. 1386), (fn. 60) after whom it appears to
have lapsed. The Crevequer family are known to
have been mesne lords of this fee in Rolleston
between 1199 and c. 1280. In 1199 Robert de
Crevequer established his right to a knight's fee in
Rolleston against the claim of his tenant, Robert
de Beauchamp. (fn. 61) Hamon de Crevequer, probably
Robert's son, was holding 2 knight's fees in Billesdon
in 1236, (fn. 62) and in 1260 was reported to be the tenant
of Adam de Everingham for the land of his own
tenant in Rolleston, Ralph de Beauchamp. (fn. 63) By
1261 Hamon's son, Robert de Crevequer, was in
possession. (fn. 64) In 1279 he was reported to be holding
2½ carucates in Rolleston with 3 virgates in chief, (fn. 65)
but by 1292 the mesne lord of this fee was William
de Kirkby (d. 1302) who held of Hugh Bardolf. (fn. 66)
Kirkby's estate was divided between his four
sisters and their respective husbands. (fn. 67) One of
these, Maud de Houby, was reported in 1302 to be
holding ¼ knight's fee in Rolleston, (fn. 68) but all the heirs
of William de Kirkby appear to have retained some
interest in the manor; their interest has not been
traced after 1342. (fn. 69)
The tenants in demesne of this manor in
Rolleston were in the 13th century the Beauchamp
family, and in the early 14th century the Wedon
family. The first known demesne tenant is Robert
de Beauchamp in 1199. (fn. 70) In 1292 the manor of
Rolleston was held for ¼ knight's fee by William de
Beauchamp from William de Kirkby who held of
Hugh Bardolf, (fn. 71) but by 1328 it was in the hands of
Ralph de Wedon. (fn. 72) Ralph was assessed for ¼ knight's
fee in Rolleston in 1346. (fn. 73)
Between 1365 and 1433 the demesne tenants of
the manor of Rolleston were members of the Cheyne
family, who secured possession through arrangements
which were made by John de Cobham, Lord Cobham. (fn. 74) The latter, who came of age in 1346, was
apparently enfeoffed as lord of Rolleston by Ralph
de Wedon. (fn. 75) In 1359, before leaving for the war in
France, Cobham, who had received the manor for
life from the king, enfeoffed Robert Bertram of
Bothall (Northumb.), probably as a trustee, and in
1362 the manor formed part of a settlement made
for Lord Cobham's mother. (fn. 76) Robert Bertram
granted the manor to Robert de Ruddestane,
Rector of Bothall, who in 1365 issued letters of
attorney giving seisin to Thomas Cheyne. (fn. 77) The
heir of Ralph de Wedon quitclaimed any rights he
might have in Rolleston to Hugh Cheyne, probably
Thomas's son, in 1375. (fn. 78) Hugh Cheyne died in
1390 seised of the manor of Rolleston which he
held from John de Cobham. (fn. 79) In 1377 an inquiry
had been made into the legality of Cheyne's title,
and the jury had agreed that Cheyne was possessed
of the manor, although they did not know by what
right. (fn. 80) Hugh Cheyne was succeeded by his nephew
Roger who recovered the manor from his uncle's
feoffees in 1392. (fn. 81) John Cheyne, perhaps Roger's
son, was lord of the manor in 1428. (fn. 82)
In 1433 John Cheyne sold the manor to Sir
John Popham, (fn. 83) to whom Thomas Wedon, one of
the heirs of Ralph Wedon, released his rights. (fn. 84)
Popham still held the manor in 1451 (fn. 85) but in 1458
he granted it to the London Charterhouse, which
held it until the Dissolution. (fn. 86) In 1546 it was granted
by Henry VIII to Richard and Joan Dixon of
Illston. (fn. 87) It descended in this family until the death
of William Dixon in 1628, (fn. 88) and shortly after was
sold to William Sharpe (d. 1658). (fn. 89) It was subsequently bought by Henry Greene (d. 1680), (fn. 90) whose
family had held land at Rolleston since the early
17th century (fn. 91) and remained in possession of it
until the death of its last member in 1861. (fn. 92) It
was then held for a short time by the Heap family
of King's Norton, (fn. 93) but about 1890 was purchased
by Victor Albert Spencer, Lord Churchill. (fn. 94) Shortly
after the First World War it was purchased by
Herman Alfred Stern, Lord Michelham, who sold
it in 1940 to G. Sonderman. Sonderman's daughter,
Mrs. F. W. Eske, succeeded him and owned the
estate in 1959. (fn. 95)
ECONOMIC HISTORY.
In 1086 there were 10
carucates of land in Rolleston, which had supported
6 ploughs before the Conquest. In 1086 there was
one plough in demesne, and a knight, 7 villeins,
and one bordar had 3 ploughs. There were 8 a. of
meadow. The value of the manor had risen from
20s. to 25s. (fn. 96) In 1279 only 8 carucates of land are
described, held by 7 tenants, who mostly held in
demesne and who included John de Digby of Billesdon and Geoffrey de Skeffington. (fn. 97) In 1332 15 persons paid tax, and in 1381 13 tenants at will, all
married, and 2 servants. (fn. 98)
The date at which Rolleston was inclosed is not
definitely known. The chapelry was still open in
1658, when each yardland was entitled to common
for 4 cows and 22 sheep, and each cottage to
common for 2 cows and 10 sheep. (fn. 99) Rolleston is
described by Monk in 1794 as old inclosure, (fn. 1)
and a letter of about 1750 from the parishioners
to the Bishop of Lincoln described the changes
that were made in the amount of money paid from
Rolleston to the Vicar of Billesdon at or since the
inclosure. (fn. 2) Further than this it seems impossible
to go. In 1850 only 75 a. were arable, as against 940 a.
of meadow and pasture. (fn. 3)
A windmill is mentioned at Rolleston in 1302 (fn. 4)
and continued to exist until the 17th century. It is
apparently last mentioned in 1641. (fn. 5)
PARISH ADMINISTRATION.
Although Rolleston had no workhouse it cared for its own poor and
in 1802–3 out-relief was given to 5 adults and 6
children. (fn. 6) In 1836 Rolleston was placed in Billesdon
Union (fn. 7) and in 1871 became an independent civil
parish. (fn. 8) Churchwardens' accounts survive from 1782
to 1838. (fn. 9)
CHURCH.
Rolleston chapel formed part of the
grant of the church of Billesdon with its two chapels
which was made to Leicester Abbey by William de
Syfrewast before 1162. (fn. 10) In 1220 the chapel was
served from the mother church at Billesdon three
days in the week. (fn. 11) The chapel has apparently
never had a resident curate.
The rectorial tithes from Rolleston were paid to
Leicester Abbey until the Dissolution. (fn. 12) In 1551 John
Beaumont, Master of the Rolls, was licensed to transfer the tithes to John Dixon, the lord of the manor, (fn. 13)
and thereafter the tithes descended with the manor.
In 1850 the tithes were commuted for an annual
payment of £4 to Henry Greene, who himself
owned 930 a. of the land from which the tithes
were due, and £45 to the Vicar of Billesdon for the
small tithes. (fn. 14) In 1635 the vicar also received
13s. 4d. from Rolleston for reading prayers there,
and was then said to have had this payment time
out of mind, (fn. 15) but in 1674 it was said to be paid
according to an old composition. (fn. 16) At the same time
he received 40s. a year from the owners of the tithes.
In 1821 the figure was £35 10s. 10d. a year. (fn. 17)
About 1750 the freeholders of the whole of the
parish of Billesdon appealed to the Bishop of
Lincoln to make better arrangements for services
in Rolleston chapel. They complained that no
sermon was ever preached at Rolleston, although
since the inclosure the sum paid to the vicar had
been increased from £11 12s. to £36 a year. They
urged that if services were not said regularly the
inhabitants of the chapelry would be more inclined to vagrancy. (fn. 18)
The chapel of ST. JOHN THE BAPTIST
stands within the grounds of Rolleston Hall. To the
south-east of the building is an ancient wheel-head
cross, supported on a narrow shaft. (fn. 19) The chapel
is built of ironstone with limestone dressings and
consists of a nave, a chancel, and a small west
tower of three stages. It was largely rebuilt c. 1740. (fn. 20)
The semi-circular tower arch dates from c. 1200
and the base of the tower may be contemporary
with it. The tower windows are square-headed with
stone mullions and are probably of post-Reformation date. One contains fragments of 18th-century
glass. The embattled parapet to the abbreviated
third stage may be an addition of 1740. In the
earlier 17th century there were complaints about the
condition of the building and of the fittings; in
1619 the north wall was in a bad state and there
were no windows in it; in 1626 the chapelyard was
not divided from the roadway and there were no
bell-ropes. (fn. 21) The chapel is said to have been
thoroughly repaired and refitted by Richard Greene
c. 1740 and it seems probable that the body of the
church was entirely rebuilt at this period. (fn. 22) It
consists of a structurally undivided nave and chancel
of three bays, divided externally by buttresses and
surmounted by an embattled parapet. Both north
and south walls have three tall windows of late
Perpendicular type with segmental-pointed heads.
The east window has been replaced. The north and
south doorways, the latter with a curious shallow
stone porch, appear to be of the same date. Internally the tie beams of the low-pitched ceiling are
masked by moulded plaster. The 18th-century
pulpit, desk, and altar rails (fn. 23) have disappeared,
but facing inwards along the north and south walls
are four sets of oak pews with carved and scrolled
ends. The marble retable is probably also of the
18th century. The building was said to be in
perfect repair in 1794 and again in 1839. (fn. 24) It is
evident that it continued to be well cared for by
the Greene family and their successors at the hall.
In 1899 a restoration was carried out by Lord
Churchill (fn. 25) and several of the earlier fittings were
replaced. The east window was inserted in 1902
in memory of Jane, Lady Churchill (d. 1900),
who had been Lady of the Bedchamber to Queen
Victoria for 46 years. (fn. 26) Queen Victoria, who was
godmother to Lord Churchill (d. 1934) and to his
son and daughter, is said to have presented the
harmonium to the chapel. (fn. 27)
There is one bell, cast in 1629 by Thomas Norris. (fn. 28)
The plate consists of a silver cup, two plates, and
a flagon, all of 1737 and probably the gift of Richard
Greene. (fn. 29) The registers of baptisms, burials, and
marriages begin in 1599 and are complete.
NONCONFORMITY.
None known.
SCHOOL.
None known.
CHARITIES.
None known.