KIBWORTH
Kibworth ancient parish consisted of three townships, Kibworth Beauchamp, Kibworth Harcourt,
and Smeeton Westerby. So far as can be discovered,
each parish has always formed a separate unit for
civil purposes. Ecclesiastically, all three townships
were included in Kibworth Beauchamp parish,
though Kibworth Harcourt possessed its own chapel
from the 13th to the early 16th centuries. Smeeton
Westerby became a separate ecclesiastical parish in
1852.
In this account the history of each township has
been treated separately. The mother church of Kibworth, and the charities that concern the whole
ancient parish, have been dealt with under Kibworth
Beauchamp. So far as is known, the boundaries of
the townships have never undergone any change.
Surviving population statistics suggest that the
ancient parish of Kibworth may have been one of the
most populous in the hundred of Gartree since the
11th century. Domesday lists 72 inhabitants: 28 in
Kibworth Beauchamp, 28 in Kibworth Harcourt,
and 16 in Smeeton Westerby. The respective numbers of taxpayers for each of these three places in
1377 were 134, 122, and 122. There were 444 communicants in 1603. The number of households in
1563 was 82, and in 1670 197 (66 in Kibworth
Beauchamp, 63 in Kibworth Harcourt, and 69 in
Smeeton Westerby). There were 551 communicants
in 1676, (fn. 1) and about 150 families in the early 18th
century. (fn. 2) During the 19th century the population in
all three places rose steadily, from a total for the
ancient parish of 1,232 in 1801 to 1,975 in 1871. The
population of Smeeton Westerby reached a peak
figure of 567 in 1841, which it has not attained since;
the population in 1951 was 321. That of Kibworth
Harcourt rose slowly to its highest total, 578, in 1951.
In Kibworth Beauchamp there was a much more
rapid increase, which was most marked in the years
1851-81 and, after a sudden decrease, 1891-1921.
In 1951 Kibworth Beauchamp held nearly twothirds of the combined population of the three civil
parishes. (fn. 3)
KIBWORTH BEAUCHAMP
The township of Kibworth Beauchamp is in shape
long and narrow, running approximately north-west
to south-east. The western boundary, separating
Kibworth from Wistow and Fleckney parishes, follows a small brook and, for a short distance, the
Grand Union Canal. The long south-west boundary
runs at its western end along the south side of the
ridge which largely fills the western part of the township, then curves round to the north of Smeeton
Westerby village, and runs to the south-west along
a small brook. The north-eastern boundary runs
for most of its length near the main Harborough-
Leicester road, and for about 400 yds. immediately
south of Kibworth Harcourt village follows the line
of the road itself.
The western end of the township is mostly occupied by a ridge, rising to about 480 ft. above sea
level. To the south-east the ground falls away gradually, to about 250 ft. on the south-east boundary.
The surface soil is mostly boulder clay. The area of
the township is 1,312 a. (fn. 4) The Midland Railway
opened a line running through the middle of the
parish in 1857, with a station at Kibworth Beauchamp; it forms part of the main line from Leicester
to London. (fn. 5)
Kibworth Beauchamp village, sometimes known
as Lower Kibworth, lies at the centre of the township, its main axis running east and west. The parish
church stands to the north of it, near the main
Leicester-Harborough road and the boundary with
Kibworth Harcourt. The focal point of the village
is a triangular open space, known as the Square,
formerly Cross Bank. (fn. 6) It is now occupied by a small
traffic roundabout. From this point High Street,
which contains most of the village shops, runs
westwards and later becomes Fleckney Road. To the
south of High Street a road branches off to Smeeton
Westerby. To the north School Road is a cul-de-sac,
ending at the grammar school (fn. 7) and being continued
northwards as a footpath to Kibworth Harcourt. To
the east of the Square the continuation of High
Street dates from the inclosure (fn. 8) and is known as
New Road. It passes under the railway beyond the
gasworks and joins the main road in Kibworth
Harcourt parish. Station Road leads northwards from
the Square and passes across the small valley in
which the railway lies by means of a bridge and an
embankment. As Church Road it continues uphill,
past the Rectory (fn. 9) and the church, to join the main
road on the Kibworth Harcourt boundary.
The buildings in Kibworth Beauchamp are almost
entirely of red brick and many of them date from the
late 19th and early 20th centuries after the construction of the railway and when the village became a
small centre of the mechanized hosiery industry.
Doubtless a large number of the older buildings,
including mud cottages, (fn. 10) disappeared at this time.
The oldest surviving house is probably the Manor
House which lies on the south side of High Street.
It dates from the 16th century when it was probably
occupied by the steward or bailiff of the manor. (fn. 11) It is
H-shaped in plan, the lower part of the walls being
of ironstone and the upper story timber-framed.
The hall, with a room above it, occupies the central
block. The hall is lit by a stone-mullioned window
in the front wall, and has a stone chimney at its
west end. Behind the chimney is the former crosspassage, its front entrance now blocked. The service
wing, which lies beyond the passage, has an early
fire-place on its back wall which was originally surmounted by a large flue of timber and plaster construction. This was cleared away in 1911 (fn. 12) and the
space which it occupied on the first floor has been
converted into a bathroom. The remains of the flue
are visible in the roof. The parlour is in the east
wing, which was altered, probably in the 18th century, to accommodate an entrance hall and staircase.
The roof contains original trusses with curved principals. The stables with their small clock tower
were built early in the 20th century, replacing older
outbuildings.
Stuart House, set back behind the east side of
Station Road, contains a carved beam of 1627 and a
stone chimney of the same date. The house itself
was rebuilt in brick in the 18th century. In High
Street and School Road there are several cottages
of the late 17th or early 18th centuries, mostly built
of brick but retaining traces of timber and mud construction. Nos. 1 and 3 Fleckney Road once formed
a farm-house of this period. The building is largely
of brick but its back wall contains timber-framing of
a late type. The steeply-pitched gable-ends have
brick parapets and the roof was formerly thatched.
No. 41 High Street retains its thatched roof and has
the same characteristic steep gables. No. 33 High
Street is a large L-shaped brick house, built in the
early 18th century but with a later stucco front and
altered windows. It was formerly known as Beauchamp House and was a boarding school c. 1865. (fn. 13)
Later in the 19th century it was occupied by W. W.
Underwood who was largely responsible for founding the Baptist chapel. (fn. 14) On the south side of High
Street there are several substantial 18th-century
brick houses whose frontages form a dignified group
facing the Square. No. 14 is a tall two-story building
with a moulded brick cornice, keystones to the windows, and a pedimented door-case. Willoughby
House (no. 22) is of the later 18th century; its doorway has an open pediment and a lead fanlight. The
two-story range which adjoins it probably dates
from the time when much of this property was occupied by John Loveday, a large-scale building contractor. (fn. 15) No. 4, at the east end of High Street, has
a well-designed front of the late 18th century, its
features including a central 'Gothic' window to the
first floor.
Many of the brick cottages in the village date from
the early and mid-19th century. Nos. 1-11 Smeeton
Road, a row of low two-story dwellings of this
period, have unusually large first-floor windows and
may have been designed to accommodate knitting
frames in the upper rooms. In Weir Road, a cul-desac leading south at the east end of High Street, a
mid-19th-century frame-shop, which had proved
unsuccessful, was subsequently converted into tenements. (fn. 16) These (nos. 28, 30, 32, and 34) are still
known as the 'Factory Houses'. A good mid-19thcentury brick building is the former National
school on the north-west side of the Square. The
single-story front range, which is surmounted by
a bell cupola, has a central gable and six tall
windows with diagonal glazing-bars. Above the
entrance are tablets commemorating the foundation
of the school in 1812 and its rebuilding in 1842. The
railway station, incorporating the stationmaster's
house, is a good example of a comparatively unaltered village station of its period (1857). It is of
yellow brick with red- and blue-brick dressings. It is
entered by a small gabled porch and the paired
round-headed windows have ornamental glazingbars. North of the railway is a row of late-19thcentury middle-class houses, built in pairs, known as
Beauchamp Villas.
The expansion of Kibworth Beauchamp in the
late 19th and early 20th centuries is particularly
noticeable in Station Road, in Paget Street (formerly
Pudding Bag Lane), (fn. 17) and in Fleckney Road. At the
west end of Fleckney Road almost a new small town
sprang up after the establishment of Johnson &
Barnes's hosiery factory there in 1901. (fn. 18) Near it,
the Kibworth Working Men's Club and Institute
appears to be of about the same date. Other public
buildings in Kibworth Beauchamp are the village
hall, built in Station Road in 1866 (fn. 19) and enlarged
later, and the Oddfellows' Hall in Paget Street,
formerly the Liberal Club, built about 1875. (fn. 20) The
fire station at the west end of Fleckney Road was
opened in 1955. (fn. 21)
There is a Council housing estate near the gasworks in New Road. Opposite the parish church the
large Hillcrest Avenue estate, containing nearly
150 Council houses, was laid out after the Second
World War. A new building to house the Church
of England school was opened there in 1959.
Groups of houses to the north of the church and
for some distance along the south side of the main
road lie in Kibworth Beauchamp township, although
they appear to be part of Kibworth Harcourt village.
They include the Coach and Horses Inn, an 18thor early-19th-century building with a curved frontage at the junction of Church Road and the main
road. In the main road itself a row of mid-19thcentury cottages is known as Navigation or Navvies
Row and is said to have been built to house workers
during the construction of the railway. (fn. 22) To the west
of it is the Gables, a large mid-Victorian house in
its own grounds. The Grange is a square stucco
house near the main road in the extreme south-east
corner of the parish. It dates from c. 1845 and formerly had substantial outbuildings and well-planted
grounds. In 1959 it was in use as a farm and the twin
lodges at the gates were unoccupied and derelict.
MANOR.
In 1086 11 carucates and 6 bovates in
Kibworth Beauchamp were held by Robert dispensator. Under Edward the Confessor 5 carucates and 6
bovates there had been held by Edwin and Alferd,
and 6 carucates by Ailmar. (fn. 23) In 1130 11 carucates
were held by Walter de Beauchamp, and one
carucate by Richard Basset. (fn. 24) Walter had acquired
much land held in 1086 by Robert dispensator, who
was the uncle of Walter's wife. (fn. 25) The single carucate
held by Richard Basset was described in 1130 as
being de feodo Matildis Ridel, (fn. 26) and Richard must
therefore have acquired it through his marriage with
Maud, daughter of Geoffrey Ridel. It may be
deduced from this that Geoffrey had held it before
his death in 1121. (fn. 27)
The Basset holding at Kibworth Beauchamp
cannot be traced further, though a carucate there
belonging to the Basset Fee is mentioned in a document which may belong to Henry III's reign, (fn. 28) but
Walter de Beauchamp's descendants long remained
lords of KIBWORTH BEAUCHAMP manor. In
1298 William de Beauchamp, Earl of Warwick, died
possessed of the manor, (fn. 29) and it continued to be
held by his descendants (fn. 30) until all the lands of
Thomas, Earl of Warwick, were forfeited in 1397 as
a result of his hostility to Richard II. (fn. 31) In the same
year the king granted the manor in tail male to one of
his knights, Henry Green. (fn. 32) The Countess of Warwick was, however, allowed to hold the manor for
life, to sustain her in view of the forfeiture of her
husband's lands, and new letters patent were issued
granting the manor jointly to Green and the countess,
with reversion after the countess's death to Green
and his heirs. (fn. 33) On the overthrow of Richard II in
1399 the forfeiture of Earl Thomas's lands was
annulled, and he was in possession of the manor at
his death in 1401. (fn. 34) The manor was then held by his
widow in dower, but after her death it reverted to his
son and heir Richard de Beauchamp, Earl of Warwick. (fn. 35) In 1425 the earl conveyed the manor to
feoffees, who were in possession when he died in
1439. (fn. 36) There was some litigation between Earl
Richard's heirs and John Huggeford, or Higford,
son and heir of the last surviving feoffee. (fn. 37) Huggeford was still in possession of the manor when he
died in 1485. (fn. 38) Not long after this the manor must
have been secured by Earl Richard's heirs, for in
1492 Edward Grey, Viscount Lisle, died seised of it
in right of his wife Elizabeth, who was the granddaughter of Margaret, Countess of Shrewsbury, one
of Earl Richard's daughters, and eventually one of
his co-heirs. (fn. 39) Edward Grey was succeeded by his
son John, Viscount Lisle, and after John's death in
1504 the property descended to his posthumous
daughter Elizabeth Grey, Baroness Lisle in her own
right. (fn. 40) The baroness died without issue in 1519, and
her heirs were her two aunts. (fn. 41) Kibworth Beauchamp
seems to have descended to one of these, another
Elizabeth, also Baroness Lisle, the wife first of Edmund Dudley, and secondly of Arthur Plantagenet,
who was created Viscount Lisle in 1523. (fn. 42) After
Elizabeth's death, about 1530, Kibworth was the
subject of long negotiations between her son by her
first marriage, John Dudley, and Arthur Plantagenet. (fn. 43) The latter was in possession for some years
before his death in 1542, (fn. 44) but after that the manor
came to Dudley. (fn. 45) In 1553 the manor was forfeited
through the attainder and execution of Dudley, who
had been created Duke of Northumberland. (fn. 46) In
1554 it was granted to his widow for life, (fn. 47) but
in 1555 she died and the manor reverted to the queen,
who shortly afterwards leased out much of the land
in Kibworth Beauchamp. (fn. 48)
In 1559 Elizabeth I granted the manor in tail male
to Ambrose Dudley, later Earl of Warwick, with
remainder in tail male to his brother Robert. (fn. 49) Ambrose died without children in 1589, and as his
brother was already dead without legitimate issue
the manor escheated to the queen. (fn. 50) In 1610 it was
granted to Sir Augustine Nicholls, Anthony Shugborough, and John Smith. (fn. 51) The descent after that
time is not clear. The manor was acquired by John
Berridge, before 1632, and seems to have been held
by his relatives until 1660. (fn. 52) The manor was bought
by Sir Thomas Halford, Bt., from Richard Davenport
and his wife in 1687. (fn. 53) The Halfords retained the
manor until the death without issue of Sir Charles
Halford in 1780, when it passed to his relict Sarah,
later the wife of Basil Fielding, Earl of Denbigh. (fn. 54)
On the Countess Sarah's death in 1814 the manor
passed under Sir Charles's will to his cousin, Sir
Henry Halford, Bt. (fn. 55) It remained in the hands of his
descendants until the death in 1897 of a later Sir
Henry Halford, who devised it to the Hon. T. F.
Fremantle, later Lord Cottesloe. (fn. 56) Lord Cottesloe
was still lord in 1936. (fn. 57)
From the 13th century onwards the manor was
frequently said to be held from the king in grand
serjeanty by the performance of the office of king's
pantler. (fn. 58) The first record of the manor's being held
by such service seems to date from 1298, (fn. 59) but there
is no evidence to show how the office of pantler came
to be linked with Kibworth Beauchamp. In 1559 the
manor was granted to Ambrose Dudley, Earl of
Warwick, to hold by service as the royal pantler, (fn. 60)
but on Dudley's death in 1589 the manor reverted
to the Crown, and in 1610 it was granted away by
James I in fee simple. (fn. 61) After that the connexion
between the manor and pantler-ship ceased, and
claims by later lords of the manor to be allowed to
perform the office were disallowed.
ECONOMIC HISTORY.
In 1086 Robert dispensator held 11 carucates and 6 bovates at Kibworth
Beauchamp. In demesne Robert had 3 servi, and as
tenants he had 17 villeins and 8 bordars, but there
were no socmen. There were 24 a. of meadow. (fn. 62)
From at least the 13th century onwards, and probably from before the Domesday Survey, Kibworth
Beauchamp manor was held in demesne by the
tenants-in-chief. The position shown in Domesday,
with a substantial body of villeins and bordars, suggests that there was then an extensive manorial
demesne.
In 1279, when detailed information about the
manor is first available, its lord, the Earl of Warwick,
had 16 virgates in demesne, and 16 held in villeinage.
There were two free holdings, each of 4 virgates.
As there were said to be 40 virgates in all at Kibworth Beauchamp it seems that there were no other
holdings. (fn. 63) In 1315 the earl had 13½ virgates in
demesne, each virgate containing 15 a.; there were 24
villeins, each holding a virgate, and 18 other tenants
described as nativi, each holding half a virgate. The
villeins and nativi thus held in all 33 virgates, or
more than twice as many as had been held in villeinage in 1279. In addition there were in 1315 3
cottars, whose holdings were not described but were
probably small, and 4 free tenants, holding a total of
7½ virgates. The villeins each paid 14s. rent yearly,
the nativi 7s., and the cottars 1s. 8d. No labour services are mentioned. The free tenants all paid rents;
one of them in addition held his land by the service
of making the summonses, attachments, and other
executions throughout Leicestershire of the earl's
court at Kibworth. The capital messuage of the
manor was said to have fallen into ruin, to have been
rebuilt as a cottage, and to have been let to farm.
There was a common oven, worth 5 marks yearly,
and the total value of the earl's property at Kibworth
was estimated to be £53 7s. 6d. a year. (fn. 64) Arable land
in 1315 amounted to 53 virgates, suggesting that
there had been a considerable extension of cultivation since 1279. (fn. 65) Earlier in 1315, before the extent
from which the above details are taken was made,
the earl had leased out the manor for 10 years. (fn. 66) The
1381 poll tax returns for Kibworth Beauchamp list
32 tenants at will, one free tenant, 5 cottagers, and 8
persons described as labourers or servants. (fn. 67) It may
be deduced that by 1381 both the demesne and the
land which had previously been held by customary
tenants was being rented by tenants at will.
In 1223 Walter de Beauchamp was granted the
right to hold a weekly market at Kibworth on
Wednesdays. This grant, like others made during
Henry III's minority, was to last only until the king
came of age. (fn. 68) It has been suggested (fn. 69) that the
grant was connected with the development in the
late 12th or early 13th centuries of the highway
running from Leicester through Kibworth to Harborough. No further mention of the market has been
found.
John Dudley, Lord Lisle and later Duke of
Northumberland, while lord of the manor, had a
bailiff at Kibworth to collect rents and see to property repairs. (fn. 70) In 1554-5 (fn. 71) there were 18 tenants at
will, holding 37¾ virgates amongst them. There were
also 6 free tenants, who each paid a small chief rent
to the lord. At Smeeton Westerby the lands attached
to the manor comprised 14 virgates, held by 7 tenants
at will and one leaseholder. The lord still had a common oven, now valued at 3s. 4d. a year. After Dudley's attainder a royal collector was appointed to deal
with his property at Kibworth and Burton Lazars. (fn. 72)
In 1555 the Crown leased out some of the property
formerly held by Dudley on 21-year leases. In all
11¾ virgates were leased, besides several messuages
and a number of small crofts. (fn. 73)
Nothing is known of the state of the manor while
it was in the hands of Ambrose Dudley, but in 1591,
when the Crown leased the manor to John Cary,
there were 38 virgates belonging to the manor in Kibworth Beauchamp, 15 virgates in Smeeton Westerby,
and one-quarter virgate in Kibworth Harcourt. (fn. 74)
Subsequently much of the land attached to the
manor was alienated, and in 1687 that which remained was said to consist of less than 150 a., most
of it furze and heath. (fn. 75)
From at least the early 17th century onwards each
of the township's open fields contained some leys,
apparently usually concentrated in one or two furlongs in each field; two cases have, however, been
noted in which a single furlong is stated to have contained both ley and arable. (fn. 76) During the 17th century
the proportion of ley to arable seems to have been
fairly constant, about one-quarter of each field being
ley. (fn. 77) The practice of laying part of the open fields
down to grass lasted certainly until the early 18th
century, and probably until the township was inclosed, despite a statement in 1797 that before the
inclosure the open fields of Kibworth were used
solely for growing grain. (fn. 78)
The whole ancient parish of Kibworth was inclosed by Act in 1779. (fn. 79) There was some opposition
to the inclosure, as the owners of 8¾ yardlands declared themselves against the bill, though they did
not appear before the Commons committee which
considered it, and the owners of 4½ yardlands were
neutral. The whole parish was estimated to contain
148 yardlands. (fn. 80) Under the award (fn. 81) 27 proprietors
were allotted land at Kibworth Beauchamp. The
rector was allotted 231 a. in respect of glebe and in
commutation of tithe. (fn. 82) Four other owners were each
awarded more than 100 a., one of them receiving
190 a. Five owners were allotted between 50 a. and
100 a. and 7 between 10 a. and 50 a. Nine received
between one and 10 a. and 2 less than an acre. By
the time of the inclosure all the land at Kibworth
Beauchamp was freehold, in contrast to Kibworth
Harcourt where much was still copyhold.
After the inclosure most of the township was laid
down to grass, and about 1797 it was said that ninetenths of the land in the whole ancient parish was
pasture. (fn. 83) As a result there was at the end of the
18th century a serious shortage of work for farm
labourers, and expenditure on poor relief increased
greatly. In the year ending at Easter 1776, £72 was
raised for poor relief in Kibworth Beauchamp township, while for the three years ending at Easter 1785
the annual average was £147. (fn. 84) In the year ending at
Easter 1803 the amount raised was £423. (fn. 85) The
shortage of agricultural employment was probably
a factor in leading many of the inhabitants of the
village to enter the hosiery industry and the occupations connected with it. There were at least 2 framework-knitters at Kibworth Beauchamp in 1750-70, (fn. 86)
but since Sir Frederick Eden in his observations on
the township as it was about 1797 does not mention
framework-knitting (fn. 87) it is likely that the occupation
was then still unimportant. Eden does, however,
state that the women and children were engaged in
spinning worsted thread, the raw material of the
Leicester hosiery industry. (fn. 88) By 1830 it was said that
many of the population were engaged in frameworkknitting, (fn. 89) and about 1860 there were several small
workshops where hosiery was made on hand-powered
frames. (fn. 90)
By the early 20th century there were two powerdriven hosiery factories in Kibworth Beauchamp,
those of Johnson & Barnes in Fleckney Road and of
R. H. Poynor & Co. in Smeeton Road. (fn. 91) Johnson &
Barnes's factory was built in 1901 and enlarged in
1922. Subsequently it employed about 400 workpeople. It was still operating in 1959, although on a
much reduced scale. (fn. 92) Poynor's factory ceased to
operate in the mid-thirties, when it was acquired by
J. E. Slater & Co., a firm of display designers and
manufacturers. The buildings were extended in
1958 when the firm was employing about 120 people
in Kibworth Beauchamp and Smeeton Westerby. (fn. 93)
In 1862 a small gasworks, largely financed by
capital subscribed in the parish, was set up at Kibworth Beauchamp. (fn. 94) Since 1945 the accessibility of
the village by road and railway has made it increasingly a place of residence for people employed in
Leicester.
In 1315 there were a watermill and a windmill at
Kibworth Beauchamp, both owned by Guy, Earl
of Warwick, the lord of the manor. (fn. 95) In 1554-5 both
mills still existed, and still formed part of the manor,
then in the queen's hands. (fn. 96) A single mill, probably
the windmill, is mentioned as forming part of the
manor in 1591. (fn. 97) A windmill attached to the manor
is mentioned in 1687, (fn. 98) but there is no later reference
to a mill at Kibworth Beauchamp.
PARISH ADMINISTRATION.
For the purposes
of civil administration each of the three townships in
Kibworth ancient parish seems always to have
formed a separate unit. A constable for Kibworth
Beauchamp township is mentioned in 1670, (fn. 99) and in
1690 there were two churchwardens for the township. (fn. 1) In 1814 there was only one warden for Kibworth Beauchamp, and apparently by that date a
system had been established by which one warden
was elected by each of the three townships. (fn. 2) A
rector's warden, for the whole ancient parish, is first
mentioned in 1845. (fn. 3) In 1958 there were two people's
wardens, one each for Kibworth Beauchamp and
Kibworth Harcourt, and one rector's warden, Smeeton Westerby having become a separate ecclesiastical
parish. (fn. 4)
Some buildings at Kibworth Beauchamp known
as parish houses are mentioned in 1827, and again
in 1836-7. (fn. 5) The houses were in the care of the township's warden, but their function is uncertain. (fn. 6) They
may have been used to house the poor. In 1802-3 26
adults and 48 children in Kibworth Beauchamp
received out-relief, and there is no evidence for the
existence of a workhouse at that date. (fn. 7) After 1836
Kibworth was included in Market Harborough
Union. (fn. 8) Church rates were last levied in the township for the year ending at Easter 1869. (fn. 9) In the first
half of the 19th century it was usual for each of the
three townships to pay one-third of the cost of
maintaining the church fabric and furniture. (fn. 10) From
1825 onwards, and perhaps earlier, it was the practice for the three townships to hold joint general
vestry meetings to discuss business about the church
fabric and general church expenses. (fn. 11)
In 1894 a parish council was established with a
membership of 7 councillors. (fn. 12) It was increased to
8 councillors in 1958. (fn. 13)
CHURCH.
The townships of Kibworth Beauchamp,
Kibworth Harcourt, and Smeeton Westerby once
formed a single parish. During the Middle Ages
there was a chapel at Kibworth Harcourt, (fn. 14) but
whether there was one at Smeeton Westerby is uncertain. (fn. 15) In 1852 the township of Smeeton Westerby
became a separate ecclesiastical parish, (fn. 16) and from
that time Kibworth Beauchamp ecclesiastical parish
has included the townships of Kibworth Beauchamp
and Kibworth Harcourt only.
About 1220 it was said that besides the Rector of
Kibworth Beauchamp there was a vicar, who had
been instituted by Hugh, Bishop of Lincoln (1186-
1200), and who was paying a pension of 20 marks
a year to the rector, while receiving all the revenues
of the church. (fn. 17) It is doubtful how long this arrangement lasted; when a new rector was instituted in
1239-40 no mention was made of the existence of a
vicar. (fn. 18)
About 1220 the patron of Kibworth Beauchamp
church was Walter de Beauchamp. (fn. 19) The advowson
remained in the hands of the Beauchamp family
until at least 1435, when Richard de Beauchamp,
Earl of Warwick, presented. (fn. 20) The descent of the
advowson after that date is not clear. The Crown
presented in 1542, (fn. 21) and again in 1554. (fn. 22) Elizabeth I
granted the advowson to Ambrose Dudley. (fn. 23) After
Dudley's death the advowson should have reverted
to the Crown, like the manor, but it is uncertain that
it did so. John Cary presented in 1601, (fn. 24) but the
king in 1612. (fn. 25) Subsequently the patronage was
acquired by John Berridge, himself Rector of Kibworth, (fn. 26) whose family retained it until 1660. (fn. 27) The
king presented in 1640, by lapse, (fn. 28) and during the
Interregnum the parliamentary sequestrators exercised the patronage. (fn. 29) In 1660 Samuel Bordman
presented, (fn. 30) but it is not clear whether he possessed
the advowson, or had merely acquired the right of
presenting for one turn.
In 1687 Sir Thomas Halford bought the advowson
from Richard and Dorothy Davenport. (fn. 31) About
1708 the advowson was bought by a Dr. Vernon, and
later sold by him to the Revd. William Vincent, who
was himself the rector. (fn. 32) After Vincent's death the
advowson came into the hands of the Revd. Peter
Shuter, also the rector; Shuter died in 1769, and in
1771 the advowson was bought by Merton College, Oxford, (fn. 33) who were still the patrons in 1956.
The benefice was valued at £17 6s. 8d. in 1259, (fn. 34)
and at £37 6s. 8d., less certain pensions, in 1291. (fn. 35)
In 1535 the net value was £39 14s. 11d. (fn. 36) In 1291 a
yearly payment of 13s. 4d. was being made to the
Rector of Saddington. (fn. 37) It is not known how this
arrangement originated, but it is possible that the
pension was paid in return for the abandonment by
the Rector of Saddington of claims over Smeeton
Westerby, which Saddington adjoins. In 1535 a
yearly payment of 14s. was being made to Saddington. (fn. 38)
In 1779 it was stated that the rector's glebe consisted of 2 yardlands in Kibworth Beauchamp, and
small parcels of land in Kibworth Harcourt and
Smeeton Westerby. (fn. 39) Under the Kibworth Inclosure
Act of that year the rector was allotted about 37 a.
in respect of glebe, about 577 a. in commutation of
tithes from the open fields of the whole ancient
parish, and about 16 a. in commutation of tithes
from certain old inclosure that had land in the open
fields attached to them. The tithes of the remaining
old inclosures, houses, and homesteads were commuted for £2 4s. 0¾d. (fn. 40)
In or shortly before 1542 the rector, Richard
Pates, forfeited his benefice, probably because he
failed to accommodate himself to the varying
beliefs of those in authority. (fn. 41) In 1553 the rector,
William Watkyn, was in prison, (fn. 42) and in 1554 the
benefice was vacant by deprivation. (fn. 43)
Under Elizabeth I and James I the incumbents
often seem to have been pluralists and absentees.
In 1576 the rector, William Berridge, was living in
Bedfordshire. (fn. 44) In 1585 Berridge was apparently still
absent, but he had a curate at Kibworth. (fn. 45) His successor, John Berridge, was noted as a pluralist in
1603, but it is uncertain whether he was then resident. (fn. 46) In 1614 Berridge's functions at Kibworth
were being performed by Peter Sergeant, who had
been curate since 1585, and who received a yearly
stipend of £13 6s. 8d., and a further £5 'in commodities'. (fn. 47)
In or before 1645 William Hunt, who had been
presented to the living by Charles I in 1640, (fn. 48) was
sequestered, (fn. 49) and about 1647 the Committee for
Plundered Ministers established John Yaxley as
minister at Kibworth Beauchamp. (fn. 50) Hunt later compounded for his delinquency by a payment of £150,
but when he tried to establish himself at Kibworth
he was ejected by troops, and when he tried to regain
his rights by action in the courts proceedings were
stopped by order of the Council of State. (fn. 51) Eventually, in 1655, an agreement was made between
Hunt and Yaxley, and confirmed by the Council. It
was provided that Yaxley should retain the benefice
as long as Hunt lived, that he should restore to
Hunt all his chattels at Kibworth, and should pay
him £120 for the first year, and thereafter £80 a year
for life. Yaxley was to retain all the revenues of the
rectory. (fn. 52) The terms of the agreement suggest that
Kibworth was a very valuable living. At the Restoration, Yaxley was ejected with some violence. (fn. 53)
A document drawn up in 1705-23 records that the
rector, William Vincent, was then resident, though
he was also the incumbent of Laughton. At that
time there were 2 services every Sunday, and 10
celebrations of Communion a year. (fn. 54) The Revd.
Jeremiah Goodman, headmaster of the grammer
school, at his death in 1836 left £1,000 to endow
a lecture to be given every Thursday evening in the
parish church. (fn. 55) In 1956 the lectures had for long
been discontinued for most of the year but were still
given in seasons of special devotion such as Lent.
At other times a Thursday evening service was held
instead. The income from the endowment was still
being paid to the rector in 1956. (fn. 56)
The early parsonage lay in the valley to the south
of the church and near the present railway station. (fn. 57)
Two fishponds belonging to it were filled in when
the railway was constructed. (fn. 58) The house was
evidently a timber-framed building of seven bays and
there were barns and stables of eleven bays. (fn. 59) The
present Rectory was built in 1788 by the Revd. James
Norman. (fn. 60) It occupies a fine site immediately southeast of the churchyard, the ground falling away from
it on two sides. It is a large square house of three
stories, built of red brick. One of the ground-floor
bay windows on the south side is of the original date,
the other is a later addition. (fn. 61)
The church of ST. WILFRED is a large and
handsome building consisting of a clerestoried nave,
chancel, north and south aisles, north and south
porches, west tower, and north vestry. Apart from
some 13th-century work in the chancel the church
was rebuilt in the second half of the 14th century,
the clerestory, chancel windows, and the original
tower possibly not being completed until the early
15th century. The present tower replaced one which
collapsed in 1825.
The lower part of the north and south chancel
walls and the small priest's door on the south side
date from early in the 13th century. The external
jambs of the door have attached shafts and its arch
is enriched with dog-tooth ornament. Internally the
lower part of the three sedilia may be of the same
date; certainly the 14th-century traceried panel at
the head appears to be a later addition. The body of
the church has a continuous 14th-century plinthmoulding (restored in places) and uniform buttresses
with small traceried gables. One buttress on the
south side carries a scratch dial. The two porches,
of equal size and almost identical design, may have
been for the use of the two townships, Kibworth
Beauchamp and Kibworth Harcourt. Both have
niches, now containing 19th-century figures, above
their external arches, and both retain their ancient
oak doors. The aisle windows have flowing tracery
of the later 14th century. Those at the east end of
both aisles are of five lights, the heads containing
reticulated tracery. An unusual feature is the existence of two small windows, one square and one
lozenge-shaped, high up on the east wall of the
nave. The clerestory windows have segmental rear
arches but are square-headed externally. The upper
part of the chancel may have been rebuilt slightly
later than the nave. The windows in the north and
south walls have flat segmental-arched heads filled
with late Decorated tracery. The east window, of
five lights, originally had a similar head. Below the
westernmost window in the south wall is a square
'low side' window.
Internally the nave arcades of four bays have
slender moulded piers resting on square bases and
the arches are without capitals. The roofs have been
renewed but the grotesque corbels supporting the
aisle roofs appear to be original. Carved corbels on
the east wall of the nave may have supported an
earlier steeply-pitched roof or possibly a rood beam.
There was formerly a rood-loft stair leading from
the south aisle. The extra light provided by the small
windows above the chancel arch and by a three-light
clerestory window on the south side may have been
for the benefit of a rood loft contemporary with the
rebuilding of the church. The carved oak screen,
consisting of eight bays with traceried heads, was
largely renewed in 1868 (fn. 62) but it appears to be of
late-14th- or early-15th-century origin. There is
a 14th-century piscina in the east wall of the north
aisle and a similar one in the south wall of the south
aisle.
The original tower and spire were together about
159 ft. high. (fn. 63) The spire was tall and slender, with
small broaches and three tiers of lights. (fn. 64) It was
probably a little later in date than the spire at Market
Harborough. Doubts about the structural soundness
of the tower were evidently felt in 1777 when the
visiting archdeacon ordered it to be examined. (fn. 65) In
1816 an attempt was made to strengthen it with
internal buttresses of brick. (fn. 66) While repairs were in
progress in 1825 it collapsed, damaging in its fall the
west ends of the nave and the south aisle. (fn. 67) An organ
gallery which had been erected in the same year (fn. 68)
was destroyed. It was stated afterwards that the
tower walls, which were of rubble 4 ft. thick with a
facing of ashlar 9 ins. thick, had long been unsound. (fn. 69)
An approach was made to the London architect
Robert (later Sir Robert) Smirke, and estimates
were invited for rebuilding the tower in approximately its original form. When these proved too
high (the lowest was over £4,000) it was suggested
that the spire be omitted. (fn. 70) Long and very acrimonious discussion followed, mainly on the question of
expense. (fn. 71) Finally between 1832 and 1836 the tower
was rebuilt without a spire to the designs of William
Flint, architect, of Leicester. (fn. 72) It is a simple structure of stone ashlar, rising in three stages and with
angle buttresses. It has a band of carved quatrefoils
below the embattled parapet which is surmounted by
four corner pinnacles.
Apart from the tower considerable work was done
to the church in the first half of the 19th century.
New pews were installed in 1813 and a lean-to
vestry, apparently of brick, was added to the chancel
in the same year. (fn. 73) The east end of the chancel was
rebuilt in 1817. (fn. 74) In 1838 a dilapidated north gallery
was taken down (fn. 75) and in 1846 the nave and aisles
were again re-pewed. (fn. 76) Paint and whitewash were
removed from the interior in 1854. (fn. 77) Between 1860
and 1864 a major restoration under the direction of
William Slater of London was put in hand. (fn. 78) The
low ceilings were removed and the church was reroofed, the chancel roof being given a steeper pitch.
The east window was replaced by a pointed window
with flowing tracery similar to those in the aisles.
The hexagonal buttresses at the east end of the
chancel were altered to match the buttresses elsewhere. A recess for the organ was built on the south
side of the chancel. The north vestry, replacing that
of 1813, is probably of this period also. The roodloft stair was blocked and a new tower arch was built.
The font, which has traces of trefoiled arcading
and may date from the 14th century, was retrieved
from a field and replaced in the church during the
restoration.
The church contains an iron-bound oak chest
dated 1681. A new organ was installed in 1895, the
carved oak pulpit in 1897, and the choir stalls in
1902. (fn. 79) The reredos dates from 1931 and the tower
screen from 1936. (fn. 80) The chancel contains a brass
bearing an inscription to John Berridge (d. 1632),
surmounted by his arms. Tablets to rectors include
those to Jeremiah Goodman (d. 1836), James
Beresford (d. 1840), William Ricketts (d. 1844),
and E. S. B. Fletcher (d. 1933). There are also tablets
to William Parker (d. 1699), John B. Humfrey
(d. 1797), the Revd. Thomas Thomas (d. 1825),
James Morpott (d. 1845), Martha, relict of Thomas
Crick (d. 1864), and Sir Charles Marriott, M.D.,
F.R.C.S. (d. 1910). In 1876 there were six bells: (i)
1618; (iii) and (iv) 1621; (ii), (v), and (vi) 1732. One
of the bells was still cracked as a result of the collapse
of the tower in 1825. Two more bells were added in
1910. (fn. 81) In 1825 a chalice and paten, which had
been in the church's possession since at least 1724,
were melted down and the proceeds given towards a
set of plate presented by the Revd. Thomas Thomas.
This consists of a silver chalice, paten, salver, and
flagon, all of 1825. (fn. 82) There are also a silver chalice
and a cover paten of 1931, given in memory of F. G.
Bolton, churchwarden from 1923 to 1938. (fn. 83) The
registers of baptisms and marriages begin in 1574
and of burials in 1787; they are complete.
The churchyard was closed and a new cemetery
was opened on the main road in Kibworth Harcourt
in 1892. (fn. 84)
Frederick Iliffe, by will proved 1928, left £300 to
endow quarterly payments to members of the choir,
to maintain the organ, or for hymn and chant books
for the choir. In 1953 the income was £10 13s. (fn. 85)
ROMAN CATHOLICISM.
There was some recusancy at Kibworth Beauchamp during the 18th
century. (fn. 86) In 1935 a Mass centre, served from
Market Harborough, was established in the village. (fn. 87)
PROTESTANT NONCONFORMITY.
In 1731
the house of David Cooper at Kibworth Beauchamp
was licensed as a meeting-place for Protestant dissenters, (fn. 88) and by 1790 there was a Methodist chapel
in the village. (fn. 89) In 1846 the Wesleyan Methodists
built a new chapel, (fn. 90) probably to replace the previous
one. By 1861 the Reformed Methodists also had a
chapel in Kibworth, (fn. 91) which was known as the Little
Chapel and stood behind the buildings on the west
side of Station Road. They numbered only a dozen
about 1865, (fn. 92) and by 1888 their chapel was closed. (fn. 93)
The Wesleyan Methodist chapel was enlarged in
1874, (fn. 94) and was still being used in 1959. It stands in
School Road and is a red-brick building with a
gabled front dating from 1846. The entrance is
flanked by round-headed windows with Gothic
glazing-bars.
About 1885 the Baptists were holding services in
an outbuilding at Beauchamp House, the home of
W. W. Underwood. (fn. 95) Five years later they built a
chapel on the north side of High Street, (fn. 96) a redbrick building with pointed windows and bluebrick dressings. It went out of use before 1924 when
it was acquired by the parish church. It has been
used as a church hall, known as St. Wilfred's Hall,
since 1953. (fn. 97)
SCHOOLS.
Though the grammer school at Kibworth Beauchamp is first mentioned in 1559, (fn. 98) its
foundation is attributed by local tradition to Richard
Neville, Earl of Warwick (d. 1471). (fn. 99) In 1651 it was
believed that the school's endowment of land had
been preserved at the dissolution of the chantries
through the intervention of John Dudley, Duke of
Northumberland (d. 1553), who was lord of the
manor. (fn. 1) From at least 1559 to 1877 land and houses
at Kibworth Beauchamp were held by feoffees in
trust for the maintenance of a free school. (fn. 2) The
feoffees acted as sole governors, received the rents
of their tenants, and appointed the schoolmaster,
who until 1907 was always a clerk in holy orders. (fn. 3)
Although deeds of feoffment for 1559 and 1595
have survived and give the names of the governors
in the late 16th century, (fn. 4) little is known about the
organization of the school until 1615, (fn. 5) when the
Commissioners for Charitable Uses ordered a schoolhouse to be built, apparently for the first time; this
was completed about 1630. (fn. 6) They also raised the
rents of the school lands from £31 12s. 6d. to
£58 5s. (fn. 7)
The headmaster of the school before the Commissioners' visit, John Orpin, later moved to become
master of Market Harborough Grammar School.
It is not until after 1639 (fn. 8) that any evidence has survived in college registers of Kibworth boys entering
the universities. (fn. 9) It is clear, however, that the policy
of the school was to give some boys a training in the
classical languages which would prepare them to
take a university degree. The constitutions which
were drawn up in 1647 were to a large extent based
upon those issued for Market Bosworth Grammar
School in 1630. (fn. 10) They are the principal evidence for
the organization of the school in the 17th century, and,
although revised to accommodate Puritan opinion
between 1657 and the Restoration, (fn. 11) were in practical
operation until about 1750; they were not superseded until 1822. (fn. 12) The age of entry was not stipulated, but applicants were to be 'well entered into
the spelling of words'. (fn. 13) The hours of work were
to be 6 or 7 a.m. to 11 a.m. and 1 to 5 p.m. every
weekday. (fn. 14) The master had no assistance except
through boy monitors, but it was hoped to appoint
an usher as soon as there was a competent number
of pupils in the upper school. (fn. 15) About 1650 a violent
dispute arose between the feoffees and tenants of
the school lands which hindered the running of the
school; (fn. 16) it was settled in 1653 by the Commissioners
for Charitable Uses in favour of the feoffees. (fn. 17) The
tenants had excluded the master from the schoolhouse which they threatened to pull down. The
farm-house next to the school which had been
leased to John Abbott, a leading disputant in the
controversy, in 1653 became the residence of the
master. (fn. 18)
After some confusion at the time of the Restoration, (fn. 19) the school enjoyed a more settled régime
during the long masterships of a father and son, John
Dand from 1670 to 1706, and William John Dand
from 1706 to 1724. (fn. 20) Ten pupils of John Dand have
been identified in the surviving Cambridge registers, (fn. 21) including two future schoolmasters, John Bold
(d. 1751) (fn. 22) and Samuel Elly (d. 1734). (fn. 23) Their
careers indicate that in the late 17th century Kibworth Grammar School was attended by the sons of
local gentry and clergy. The master's salary was increased during the second half of the 17th century,
from £20 a year in 1650 to £50 in 1700. (fn. 24)
From 1708 to 1724 there was a dispute between
Anglicans and dissenters over the control of the
governing body, the feoffees of the school lands. (fn. 25)
The occasion of the dispute was the need to reconstitute the trustee body, which in 1708 comprised a
majority of dissenters, the survivors of an appointment of 1675. An arbitration of 1718 (fn. 26) resulted in the
appointment of an Anglican majority, and in 1724 an
attempt by the dissenting minority to secure the
vacant mastership for their nominee was defeated. (fn. 27)
One of the arbitrators in 1718, Francis Edwards,
was chiefly responsible in 1725 for the building of a
new schoolroom and house for the master which
still stand. (fn. 28) During the 18th century the school ceased
to provide instruction in the classical languages. It
is difficult to account for this decline, which took
place during the mastership of William Cox, 1724-
1758. Its extent is illustrated by the decision of the
feoffees on the death of Cox in 1758 to appoint besides the master an usher who would confine his
teaching to reading, writing, and arithmetic. (fn. 29)
The new master, Joseph Wilson, (fn. 30) who although
Rector of Arnesby and Vicar of Foxton lived at
Kibworth, may have left a considerable amount of
the teaching to his usher. He remained master until
his death in 1803. William Buzzard, the usher about
1800, who received £50 a year for teaching the
elements, remained with the school until 1848
through the changes introduced in 1822 and 1836. (fn. 31)
In 1822 at the instigation of one of the feoffees,
Joseph Cradock (d. 1826) of Gumley, (fn. 32) a Chancery
decree (fn. 33) was secured which appointed 15 new feoffees and, in a new list of rules which replaced the
constitutions of 1647, ordered that the master should
teach Latin to those children whose parents required
it. In 1828 the governors resolved that no boy should
be admitted to the school before the age of seven. (fn. 34)
On the death of Wilson's successor, Jeremiah Goodman, in 1836, the governors decided that in order
to promote a return to the study of Latin they would
admit fee-payers to the school. (fn. 35) A partition was
built across the school-house to divide the upper
and lower schools. (fn. 36) In the lower school the usher
taught elementary subjects but no Latin; in the upper
school the master taught the classical languages. (fn. 37)
It was necessary to pass an examination in Latin to
enter the upper school. Although the sons of the
inhabitants were still entitled to free education in the
upper school, they could not in the lower school
acquire free of charge the necessary knowledge for
entry. The upper school was therefore largely composed of fee-payers who paid £12 a year, and the
master at his own cost extended his house for the
accommodation of boarders. In 1837 there were
45 pupils. Numbers fell to 22 in 1850, but by 1859
had risen again to 68. The first total to distinguish
between fee-payers and others, in 1862, gave 59
pupils of which 24 paid fees. (fn. 38) The master appointed
in 1836, J. B. Hildebrand, (fn. 39) who remained with the
school until 1870, regarded the construction of the
railway through Kibworth in 1857 as a hindrance to
the running of the school, not only because the line
crossed the bottom of the school paddock, but also
because it provided transport for fee-payers to distant
boarding schools. (fn. 40) He accepted a decision of the
governors that he should himself take charge of the
lower school, so that in 1864 only one fee-payer remained in a total of 50 boys, (fn. 41) and the attempt to
run a secondary department teaching Latin was
abandoned. It appears that because of the governors'
decision, in 1863 the usher resigned taking with him
29 fee-payers and set up a private school. (fn. 42)
The school was completely reorganized under a
Charity Commissioners' Scheme of 1877. (fn. 43) The
governors were no longer to be the feoffees of the
school lands, who were replaced by 10 new governors,
5 representing local government (a magistrate, and
4 chosen by the Boards of Guardians of Billesdon
and Market Harborough), and 5 co-opted; the
former served for five-year terms and the latter for
eight years. Under the new Scheme fee-paying was
the rule rather than the exception: an entrance fee
was fixed at £2, tuition fees at £6 10s., and boarding
fees at not more than £40. The governors were
bound to admit some pupils free by means of entrance scholarships to the yearly value of £60, but
they did not follow this obligation strictly. (fn. 44) Boys
were to be admitted from the age of 8 to 17 and the
curriculum included Latin, with Greek as an extra.
The first two headmasters to administer this Scheme
did not stay long, D. J. J. Barnard (fn. 45) from 1877 to
1884, and F. W. Crick (d. 1924) from 1885 to 1888. (fn. 46)
The former took with him most of the boarders when
he moved to become headmaster of Stamford School.
A. P. Dawson (d. 1930), who remained headmaster
from 1888 until 1906, (fn. 47) enjoyed the benefit of new
boarding facilities provided in 1888, (fn. 48) but this new
arrangement did not attract as many pupils as the
previous introduction of fee-paying in 1836. The
total of pupils, both boarders and day-boys, rose from
23 in 1880 to 33 by 1884, (fn. 49) and 40 by 1896. (fn. 50) The
governors were hampered by the decreasing income
from the school lands-£342 in 1885, £272 in 1897,
and £236 in 1904 (fn. 51) -and accepted a measure of
financial assistance. The technical education committee of the county council in 1892 made its first grant
to the school, which involved the appointment of
three of its representatives to the governing body. (fn. 52)
The Science and Art Department of the Board of
Education began making grants to the school in
1900. (fn. 53)
In 1906 the Leicestershire Education Committee
decided to include the school in the group for which
it was to be completely responsible, (fn. 54) and the transfer had been completed by 1909. (fn. 55) The L.E.A.
admitted girls to the school for the first time. (fn. 56) The
first lay headmaster, C. L. Ryley, who was appointed
in 1907 when the school contained 40 children, was
able to increase the attendance to 60 in 1914, 75 in
1918, and 80 in 1920. (fn. 57) The staff in 1914 consisted
of the headmaster and 2 assistants, with 2 part-time
teachers for woodwork and art. The L.E.A. raised
the fees from £4 4s. to £6 13s. 4d. in 1920, and to
£10 in 1922. (fn. 58) After 1920 the number of pupils in
the school decreased; in 1927, when Ryley resigned,
there were only 37 children. J. E. Elliot, headmaster
from 1927 until 1955, achieved a rapid expansion
from 62 in 1928 to 145 in 1935, 372 in 1944, and 525
in 1957. (fn. 59) He introduced prefects and the house
system, and reintroduced boarders.
A former headmaster, Jeremiah Goodman (d.
1836), bequeathed £300 in order to found two
scholarships for Kibworth boys at the proposed
Church Langton College of the Hanbury trustees, or
failing this, at Merton College, Oxford. In 1880 a
Charity Commissioners' Scheme allowed the governors to use the money to provide scholarships for
boys leaving for 'places of higher education'. (fn. 60)
The school is situated at the north end of School
Road. The building of 1725 forms part of an Lshaped block of which the south wing is the master's
house. The schoolroom is a high single-story redbrick building with a parapetted gable at its north
end. The east front, which remains intact, has a central doorway in a plain opening, flanked on each side
by three very tall sash windows. The master's house
has an early-18th-century doorway with a moulded
hood supported on brackets. The two lower stories
of the house are original. It was later given a third
story and a new south front, probably by J. B. Hildebrand in 1836. There are numerous extensions to the
school of various dates in the form of both permanent and temporary structures.
In 1833 there were at Kibworth Beauchamp, besides the grammar school, five schools attended by
22 boys and 52 girls. (fn. 61) Four of these were apparently
private ones. The fifth was the National school, built
in 1812 as an Anglican school, and granted funds by
the National Society shortly afterwards. (fn. 62) New
school buildings for the National school, capable of
accommodating 250 pupils, were erected in 1842
with the aid of a state grant, (fn. 63) and improved in 1855
and 1872. (fn. 64) In 1876 the average attendance was 114, (fn. 65)
and in 1910 it was 115. (fn. 66) In 1927 the senior pupils
from Smeeton Westerby National School were transferred to Kibworth, (fn. 67) and in 1933 all the remaining
pupils at Smeeton Westerby, except infants, were
similarly transferred. (fn. 68) In 1937 it was decided that
all the senior pupils attending Kibworth Beauchamp
National School were to be transferred to Church
Langton, (fn. 69) and about the same time the children
under five years were transferred to the council
infants' school (see below). In 1952 the National
school accepted 'controlled' status as a junior school,
and in 1957 there were 162 children in attendance. (fn. 70)
In 1959 the school was transferred to a new building in Hillcrest Avenue, and the original building
was being converted for use as laboratories for the
grammar school. (fn. 71)
In 1907 the county council built an infants' school
at Kibworth Beauchamp. (fn. 72) The building is a singlestory structure of red brick, with some facings in
artificial stone. In 1910 the average attendance was
82, (fn. 73) and in 1957, 98. (fn. 74)
CHARITIES.
Under the will of William Thornton,
proved in 1675, a rent-charge of 10s. a year was left
to the poor of the parish, to be distributed at the
overseers' discretion. (fn. 75) John Coleman bequeathed
£10, William Smalley £20, and John Lane £4, the
interest in each case to be used for the poor of the
parish. The dates of these three bequests are not
known, but all were made before 1743. (fn. 76) In 1837
the Thornton, Coleman, Smalley, and Lane charities
were being administered jointly by the churchwardens, and £2 4s. was given to the poor every two
years. (fn. 77) The income of 10s. from Coleman's charity
was still being distributed in 1925-6, (fn. 78) but by 1956
distributions had ceased. (fn. 79) In 1956 the Thornton
charity was distributed in money, and the Lane
and Smalley charities in groceries. (fn. 80) The Coleman
charity seems to have been restricted to Kibworth
Beauchamp township, as the donor left further
sums to the poor of Kibworth Harcourt and Smeeton Westerby, (fn. 81) but it is uncertain whether the
Thornton, Lane, and Smalley charities were intended by the donors to apply to the whole ancient
parish, or to be confined to Kibworth Beauchamp
township; nor is it clear which areas benefit from
the charities.
By will proved 1812, the Revd. James Norman
bequeathed £100 to the Rector of Kibworth Beauchamp in trust, the income from it to be used for the
parish poor. (fn. 82) In 1956 part of the income was being
distributed by the rector in coal. (fn. 83) The remaining
income was distributed in Smeeton Westerby. (fn. 84) The
Revd. Jeremiah Goodman, by will proved 1836, left
£100, the income to be used to buy coal for the poor
of the whole ancient parish. (fn. 85) In 1956 distributions
in coal were still being made by the Rector of Kibworth Beauchamp and Kibworth Harcourt. (fn. 86) Distributions were also made in Smeeton Westerby. (fn. 87)
Robert Haymes, by will proved 1855, left £100 to
provide bread for the poor of the whole ancient
parish, thus continuing a charity that he had maintained during his life. (fn. 88) In 1956 distributions were
being made from the charity in groceries. (fn. 89)
Sarah Marriott, by will dated 1862, bequeathed
£200 for the poor of Kibworth Beauchamp and
Kibworth Harcourt. (fn. 90) In 1956 distributions were
still being made from this charity. (fn. 91) By will proved
in 1931, Dame Lucy Marriott left £161 as a fund to
help to provide a trained nurse for the poor of Kibworth Beauchamp and Kibworth Harcourt. The
dividends were used to support the local nursing
association. (fn. 92) The payments ceased in 1947 as a
result of the creation of the National Health Service. (fn. 93)
KIBWORTH HARCOURT
Kibworth Harcourt lies about nine miles southeast of Leicester, on the main road from Leicester to
Market Harborough. The area of the township is
1,475 a. (fn. 94) The township, roughly triangular in
shape, occupies part of a ridge running from southwest to north-east, and forming the watershed between the headwaters of the River Sence to the
north-west, and the tributary streams of the Welland
to the south-east. The southern boundary of the
township runs obliquely across the ridge, following
for a short distance at the village itself the Leicester-
Harborough road. On the north-west the boundary
follows a stream which marks the edge of the ridge
in that direction. On the north-east the boundary
runs across the ridge approximately at right angles
to its axis. On the north-east the land rises to about
480 ft. above sea level; in the south it is about 300 ft.
The surface soil is largely boulder clay. In 1956 the
township was mostly pasture.
Kibworth Harcourt village lies near the southern
boundary of the township on the Leicester-Harborough road. It joins the north end of Kibworth
Beauchamp village where the main road, built up on
both sides, forms the boundary between the two
villages. Until 1810 the turnpike road ran northeast of its present course, following the line of
Kibworth Harcourt village street. (fn. 95) This route, involving two gradients and several sharp turns,
proved of such danger to coaches that a by-pass was
constructed between the gateway of Kibworth
Lodge and the Rose and Crown Inn. The old centre
of the village lies 200 yds. east of the present main
road where the principal street, known as Main
Street, is joined by a road from Carlton Curlieu and
Tur Langton. Until the 19th century there was a
considerable open space at this point, on which
stood the village pump, a water trough, and a stone
cross. It is said to have been reduced in size by encroachments from the Manor House and the Old
House, both of which faced on to it. (fn. 96) The cross was
taken down in 1818 (fn. 97) but a pump was still standing
against the garden wall of the Manor House in
1959.
The Manor House was originally a timber-framed
building on an ironstone base, H-shaped in plan.
Its main front faces east and its south wall abuts on
the village street. The house may be medieval in
origin but, apart from its internal timbers, it shows
little sign of antiquity. The exterior has been faced
with brick and much altered, both at the end of the
17th century and in 1860. The exposed ceiling
joists in the front ground-floor room of the south
wing are tenoned into a diagonal 'dragon' beam.
This indicates that this side wing originally had
a timber-framed upper story, jettied on two sides.
A rear extension of the south wing has a wall of
chequered brickwork facing the road, part of which
carries the date 1702. The house was occupied between 1788 and 1825 by the Revd. Thomas Thomas,
incumbent of Isham (Northants.) and Curate of
East Farndon. (fn. 98) In 1863 it was said to have been
'lately rebuilt' by John Phillips, (fn. 99) his nephew and
heir. The brick front with its twin gables and ornamental barge-boards is evidently his work. The
garden wall, also built by Phillips, carries tiles dated
1475, 1690, and 1860. As both he and his uncle were
local antiquarians (fn. 1) there may be good evidence for
the earlier dates. About 200 yds. north of the house
are two fishponds, probably of medieval origin.
West of the Manor House is Priory Farm (no. 41
Main Street), a rectangular house built partly of
ironstone. The upper story, which is timber-framed,
has been faced with later brickwork. There are
massive timbers internally and there is some evidence
that the house originally contained an open hall.
From the Manor House, Albert Road (formerly
Hog Lane) leads eastwards. At its lower end it joins
Carlton Road and the road to Tur Langton. Here a
huddled group of cottages, approached by a footway,
is known as the City. Among them is a small singlebay cottage with mud walls and a thatched roof.
Several other mud cottages were in existence in this
area c. 1865. (fn. 2)
At the junction of Albert Road and Main Street
stands the Old House, a fine brick building with
stone dressings dating from 1678. (fn. 3) It is remarkable
for its period, both because the use of brick is early
for this district, and as an example of the fullydeveloped Renaissance house. Although fairly common in the Home Counties this type is rare in
Leicestershire before the beginning of the 18th century. The house is of two stories, cellars, and attics.
It is approximately square in plan with a hipped
roof of Swithland slate, dormer windows, and a
symmetrical front. The central doorway has a Tuscan porch which may be a later addition. The mullioned and transomed windows are surrounded by
moulded stone architraves and there are two small
oval lights in the centre of the north wall. The
principal front, facing west, has five windows to the
first floor, the central one being flanked by pilasters
and surmounted by a scrolled pediment containing
a shield of arms. Below the pediment is the date 1678.
The arms (three escutcheons each charged with a
pheon) appear to be those of Parker (fn. 4) and it is possible that the house was built by William Parker
(d. 1699), whose memorial tablet is to be found in
Kibworth Beauchamp church. (fn. 5) Internally the house
contains a staircase with twisted balusters and some
original panelling. There is a 19th-century addition
at the rear and a fine old brick barn on the opposite
side of Albert Road. The house was used as a hunting box in the 19th century, and had stabling for
more than 15 horses. (fn. 6)
The buildings in Main Street and Albert Road
date mostly from the 18th and early 19th centuries
and all are of brick. There are a few rows of Victorian
cottages but there was no expansion at this period
comparable to that at Kibworth Beauchamp. Early18th-century houses with steep parapetted gables
and thatched roofs include nos. 22-28 Main Street
and a range at the south end of Main Street where
it joins the Leicester road. Part of the much-altered
Rose and Crown Inn, which stands opposite, dates
from the mid-18th century. (fn. 7) Its original symmetrical
front faces the old village street. On the main road
near the north-west end of the village are two large
brick farm-houses of the early 18th century, nos.
69-71 Leicester Road (fn. 8) and the White House. They
represent the local type of country building of the
period. Both have long fronts of two stories divided
by a string course and steeply-pitched roofs whose
parapetted gable-ends contain the attic windows.
No. 69 is dated 1704 in darker brickwork and until
1958 it retained on its end wall an original mullioned
and transomed window. The sashes in the front
windows and the doorways of both houses are of the
later 18th century. Opposite the White House is
Kibworth Lodge, a late-18th-century three-story
brick house in its own grounds. The white stucco
front has an Ionic porch and later ground-floor bays.
South of this another late Georgian building, Kibworth House, was demolished in 1955-6. (fn. 9) At the
north-west end of the village the Congregational
chapel, dating from 1759,10 faces the main road.
Beyond it are several large late-19th- and early20th-century houses surrounded by gardens.
In the years between the two world wars some
semi-detached houses and a row of shops were built
along the main road at the south-east end of the
village. A certain amount of ribbon development has
taken place beyond them. There are also small 20thcentury houses and bungalows in New Road, leading
to Kibworth Beauchamp. In 1959 bungalows were
being built in the Tur Langton road and small
houses in a new residential road connecting it with
the south-east end of the village. Hall Close, a culde-sac on the site of Kibworth House, was being
laid out for larger detached houses. There are a few
Council houses on the Tur Langton road but the
main Council estates are in Kibworth Beauchamp.
On the north-east boundary of the township,
Kibworth Hall, a square Georgian mansion standing
in an extensive park, was probably built c. 1825. It
has an embattled parapet and hoodmoulds to the
windows. Internally there is a fine staircase with an
iron balustrade. In the 19th century it belonged for
many years to the Humphrey family. (fn. 11) From 1946 to
1955 the hall was used by the Church of England
Children's Society as an approved school for girls.
In 1956 it was sold to the Sheffield Regional Hospital
Board, and in 1958 it was opened by the board's
Leicester No. 3 Management Committee as an
extension of the Glenfrith Hospital for mental defectives at Stretton Hall. (fn. 12)
Prominent on high ground beside the road to Tur
Langton stands the restored windmill. (fn. 13) In a small
close between the old village street of Kibworth
Harcourt and the early-19th-century by-pass there
is a small tumulus surrounded by a ditch. Some
excavations were made in the mound about 1835,
but there is no adequate record of the proceedings. (fn. 14)
In 1863 (fn. 15) a trench was cut through the tumulus, and
there have been subsequent excavations at the site.
There is a tradition at Kibworth that it is the burial
place of a King Kibbeus, but this seems to have been
invented early in the 19th century by the owner of
the close. (fn. 16)
The main road from Leicester to Harborough,
which crosses the township, was put under the control of a turnpike trust in 1726. (fn. 17) The railway from
Leicester to Harborough, which passes through the
western part of the township and also across its
south-east corner, was opened in 1857. (fn. 18)
MANORS.
In 1086 12 carucates in Kibworth
Harcourt were held by Robert de Vescy. The land
had been held under Edward the Confessor by
Aelric the son of Meriet. (fn. 19) In 1130 the 12 carucates were described as belonging to Ansketil's fee. (fn. 20)
For about a century after 1130 the ownership of the
manor cannot be traced. In 1235-36 Richard de
Harcourt was holding land in Kibworth from the
Earl of Warwick, (fn. 21) and it is probable that this was
the manor of KIBWORTH HARCOURT, which
Richard certainly possessed in 1250. (fn. 22) The Harcourt
family retained the manor until 1265, when it was
taken from Saer de Harcourt by Henry III after Saer
had joined Simon de Montfort's revolt. (fn. 23) Subsequently the king handed over the manor to Saer's
overlord, William Mauduit, Earl of Warwick, (fn. 24) who
had been a royalist during the preceding civil war. (fn. 25)
In 1267, however, the king pardoned Saer, and the
manor was returned to him before October 1268 by
Mauduit's relict, the Countess Alice. (fn. 26)
Financial difficulties due to Saer's support of the
losing side in the civil war and his need to redeem
his lands may have been the cause of his selling Kibworth Harcourt. (fn. 27) At an unknown date, but apparently shortly after the manor had been returned by
Alice Mauduit, Saer conveyed it to John le Ferrun
of London, perhaps as security for debt. (fn. 28) In 1269
Ferrun gave up his rights in the manor to Walter of
Merton, founder of Merton College, Oxford, and
Bishop of Rochester 1274-77, (fn. 29) and in 1271 Saer
granted the manor to Walter. (fn. 30) When Walter died in
1277 he was still possessed of the manor, though he
had granted rent-charges from it to two of his relatives for life. (fn. 31) His heirs were six relatives, and in
June 1278 the sheriff was ordered to give them
seisin, reserving, however, the rights of the Warden
and Scholars of Merton. (fn. 32) During 1278 two of the
heirs gave up their rights in the manor to Merton
College, (fn. 33) which in 1279 was described as possessing
one-third of the township. (fn. 34) After long negotiations
the remaining heirs also gave up their shares to the
college. (fn. 35) The fact that some at least of them were
bought out for fairly substantial sums (fn. 36) suggests that
the college cannot have had any very good claims on
the manor at the time of Walter of Merton's death.
Merton College thus became possessed of the whole
manor, which it still retained in 1956.
A lesser manor in Kibworth Harcourt was held,
apparently early in Henry III's reign, by Lawrence
of Apetoft. The APETOFT manor, which had
probably been held from the Harcourts, came into
Saer de Harcourt's hands and was subsequently held
by John le Ferrun and Walter of Merton in turn, but
seems to have remained distinct from the main
manor of Kibworth Harcourt. About 1295 the manor
was granted by William of Ingarsby to two fellows
of Merton, who subsequently conveyed it to the
college. The manor was then absorbed in the college's
main holding. (fn. 37)
ECONOMIC HISTORY.
In 1086 Robert de Vescy
held 12 carucates of land at Kibworth Harcourt.
In demesne he had 6 servi with 3 ploughs, and
his tenants consisted of one Frenchman, 6 socmen,
5 bordars, and 10 villeins. There were 16 a. of
meadow. (fn. 38) In 1130 there were again said to be 12
carucates at Kibworth Harcourt. (fn. 39)
In 1265 the manor of Kibworth Harcourt, then in
the king's hands owing to Saer de Harcourt's revolt,
included a messuage, presumably the manor-house,
and 9 virgates in demesne, and 18½ virgates in villeinage. There were also rents from free tenants and
cottars, but the amount of land held by them is not
stated. (fn. 40) According to an inquisition of 1279 there
were then 6 virgates in demesne and 16 virgates in
villeinage, held by Saer's successors. A further 5¼
virgates were held by free tenants. (fn. 41) The amount of
demesne may have been underestimated in 1279,
as the amount then noted is less than is recorded in
1265 and in 1283-4. The changes which occurred in
the agrarian organization of the manor after Merton
College acquired it have been analysed in detail
elsewhere. (fn. 42) Here it may be briefly stated that by
1283-4 demesne farming had been abandoned. At
that date there were 8 virgates of demesne land,
which were rented out; there were 28 customary
tenants, holding 16½ virgates between them, 9 free
tenants holding in all 9½ virgates, and 9 cottagers. (fn. 43)
The cessation of demesne farming made it no longer
essential for holdings to be kept intact as the units
from which labour services were provided, so that
during the 14th century land at Kibworth Harcourt
was alienated fairly freely, and some holdings disintegrated. (fn. 44) A survey of the college lands at Kibworth,
made in 1636, (fn. 45) still describes the tenants' holdings in
terms of yardlands, but it is evident that by that date
the size of the various yardlands varied. Of several
tenants said to be holding half a yardland each, one
was holding 20 a., another only 11 a. (fn. 46) About 850 a.
in the township were then occupied by the college's
copyhold or leasehold tenants, and about 485 a. by
freeholders. (fn. 47) Kibworth Harcourt was a three-field
village in the late 13th century, (fn. 48) and the three fields
existed until the township was inclosed. (fn. 49)
Kibworth Harcourt was inclosed, with the rest of
Kibworth ancient parish, under an Act of 1779. (fn. 50)
The award (fn. 51) allotted land to 23 persons in all, including the Rector of Kibworth Beauchamp. Apart
from the rector, the chief landowners were Lebbeus
Humphrey, who obtained about 108 a. in respect of
his freehold land and about 70 a. in respect of his
copyhold; Robert Haymes, who obtained 111 a. in
respect of his freehold and 65 a. for his leasehold;
George Foxton, who obtained about 68 a. for freehold, about 171 a. for leasehold, and about 6 a. for
copyhold; and William Haymes, who obtained about
128 a. for copyhold. Five persons or institutions
obtained between 20 and 70 a. each, and 7 received
10 or 12 a. each. The remainder received less than
7 a. each. The rector received allotments in Kibworth
Harcourt totalling 192 a. in commutation of the
tithes from the township's open fields and old
inclosures, and in respect of the small area of glebe
in the township. (fn. 52) When the inclosure had been
completed there were 641 a. of freehold in the township, including the rector's property, 523 a. of copyhold, and 248 a. of leasehold. (fn. 53)
In Kibworth Harcourt, as in Kibworth Beauchamp, the inclosure was followed by some unemployment and distress. (fn. 54) In the year ending at Easter
1776 £64 was raised in poor rates in the township,
but in the three years ending at Easter 1785, the
average yearly amount raised was £120. In the year
ending at Easter 1803 £402 was spent on poor relief. (fn. 55)
In 1797 it was said that there was a little stockingknitting in the township, (fn. 56) but the hosiery industry
never became important there, and no other industry ever established itself on any substantial scale.
Before the Second World War the hatchery of W. D.
Evans Ltd. was started on the main road southeast of the village. In 1959 it was still operating with
a much increased output.
MILLS.
In 1265 Saer de Harcourt's lands at Kibworth Harcourt, then temporarily held by the king,
included a mill, valued at 26s. 8d. (fn. 57) From Saer the
mill passed, with the manor, to Merton College, (fn. 58)
which retained it throughout the Middle Ages. (fn. 59) In
1959 a windmill still existed at Kibworth Harcourt,
though it was no longer in use. The mill then stood
on rising ground to the east of the village. It was a
weather-boarded post-mill, the main structure probably dating from 1711. (fn. 60) The brick round-house was
of later date. In 1936 the building and its site was
conveyed by Merton College to local trustees acting
in conjunction with the Society for the Protection
of Ancient Buildings. The structure, which had been
derelict since 1913 or earlier, was restored and made
weatherproof. (fn. 61) The thatched house adjacent to the
mill was built in 1950. (fn. 62)
A horse-mill at Kibworth Harcourt is mentioned
in 1432, (fn. 63) and again in 1498-9, when it was rebuilt
or extensively repaired. (fn. 64) It was the property of
Merton College.
PARISH ADMINISTRATION.
The constable of
Kibworth Harcourt is mentioned in 1670. (fn. 65) In 1690
there were 2 churchwardens for the township, (fn. 66) but
by 1809 there was a single warden only. (fn. 67) In 1958
there was one people's warden for Kibworth Harcourt, and one rector's warden for the whole of
Kibworth ecclesiastical parish. (fn. 68) Kibworth Harcourt
was maintaining its own poor in 1776, and in 1802-3
50 adults and 41 children received out-relief; there
was no workhouse. (fn. 69) After 1836 Kibworth was included in Market Harborough Union. (fn. 70)
In 1894 a parish council was established with a
membership of 5 councillors; (fn. 71) it had the same composition in 1958. (fn. 72)
CHURCH.
By about 1269 a chapel existed at Kibworth Harcourt, (fn. 73) but there is evidence that earlier
in the 13th century the township had been to some
extent ecclesiastically separate. About 1220 it was
recorded that a clerk called Simon de Stanketon had
two-thirds of the great tithes of William de Harcourt's demesne at Kibworth Harcourt, (fn. 74) and in
1263-4 Saer de Harcourt granted Robert of Queniborough, priest, the tithes of his demesne lands at
Kibworth, on the death of William de Harcourt,
Rector of Ayleston. (fn. 75) It would seem as if the tithes
of Kibworth Harcourt had come to be treated as a
separate benefice, and that eventually a chapel was
built. The chapel is mentioned in a document which
is not later than 1269; (fn. 76) no mention of a chapel
occurs in an extent of Saer de Harcourt's lands at
Kibworth made in 1265. (fn. 77) In 1271 Saer conveyed
the advowson of the chapel of Kibworth Harcourt
manor to Walter of Merton. (fn. 78) After Walter's death
the advowson was acquired by Merton College, presumably by the same process as it acquired the
manor. (fn. 79) The college possessed the advowson by
1283, (fn. 80) and subsequently presented regularly. (fn. 81) In
1344 the chapel was said to be assessed for taxation at
an annual value of 5 marks, but to have a true yearly
value of 10 marks. (fn. 82) In 1509 the college presented
William Knight to the chapel, (fn. 83) but there is no
mention of any subsequent presentation, and no
later mention of the chapel at all. It is referred to on
several occasions as a free chapel (fn. 84) but its precise
relationship with the parish church of Kibworth
Beauchamp is not known.
NONCONFORMITY.
After the Restoration Kibworth Harcourt became a centre of Protestant
dissent. In 1669 there was a conventicle of Presbyterians and Independents there, with about 200
members of the 'middle sort'. The leaders of the conventicle were said to be Matthew Clark, John
Shuttlewood, an ejected minister called Southam,
and a husbandman called Farmer, (fn. 85) but of these
Clark seems to have been chiefly active at Market
Harborough, (fn. 86) and Shuttlewood also seems to have
been mostly engaged elsewhere than at Kibworth. (fn. 87)
In 1672 William Sheffield's house at Kibworth
Harcourt was licensed for Presbyterian worship. (fn. 88)
John Jennings, who had previously acted as chaplain to a private household at West Langton
nearby, and had gathered a dissenting congregation
there, moved to Kibworth about 1690 (fn. 89) and established himself as pastor of the dissenters there. (fn. 90)
On his death in 1701 he was succeeded by his son,
the younger John Jennings. (fn. 91) From 1715 to 1722
Jennings conducted an academy at Kibworth Harcourt, (fn. 92) but in 1722 he removed to Hinckley. (fn. 93) His
house was bought by the congregation. (fn. 94) In 1723-9
the minister was Philip Doddridge, later well-known
as a nonconformist divine and teacher. (fn. 95) When
Doddridge came to Kibworth there was a congregation of 150, but it seems to have been declining. (fn. 96) It
consisted chiefly of farmers and farm labourers, and
did not include any persons of note. (fn. 97) The dissenters
at Kibworth were by then Congregationalists. (fn. 98) In
1759 the meeting-house was burnt, and subsequently a new one was built at the north end of the
village. (fn. 99) The earlier meeting-house stood in the
yard of the Crown Inn and on the site of Jennings's
academy, and it may have been the house bought
from Jennings in 1722. (fn. 1) In 1761 a building at Kibworth Harcourt was licensed for dissenters' worship, (fn. 2)
and this was, no doubt, the meeting-house built after
the fire. The chapel still remained in use in 1956, and
was then one of the more important Congregational
places of worship in the county.
The chapel is a rectangular building of red brick
facing the main road to Leicester. It has a hipped
slate roof and a two-story front. The building is very
plain except for the mullioned and transomed windows which have diagonal glazing surrounded by
margins of coloured glass. The west end of the building, originally entered by a central doorway, dates
from 1759. In 1811 (fn. 3) an extension was made to the
east, containing a vestibule, a vestry, and a schoolroom. The design of the earlier windows was copied.
A gallery was inserted in the chapel in 1815. (fn. 4) The
organ was given in 1930 (fn. 5) and the box pews were
replaced by oak seats shortly before the Second
World War. (fn. 6) The chapel contains mural tablets
(erected in the 19th century) to Philip Doddridge
(1702-59), Edward Chater (d. 1844), Francis Islip
(d. 1866), and Edmund Hipwood (d. 1895). Behind
the chapel is a small graveyard and an outbuilding
formerly used as a stable. The manse is at right
angles to the chapel at its west end and forms one
side of the small forecourt in front of it. It was built
in 1794 (fn. 7) and is a tall three-story house of red brick.
It was unoccupied in 1959. Backing on to it is another
house of similar size and character but slightly later
in date.
SCHOOLS.
Until 1722 Kibworth Harcourt was the
site of a dissenting academy, which is said to have
been opened in 1715, (fn. 8) and which was certainly
already well established when Philip Doddridge
went there in 1719. (fn. 9) The course of studies at Kibworth Academy lasted four years. In the first eighteen months pupils were taught a wide range of
subjects, including Latin, French, Hebrew, history,
geography, mathematics, and a little natural science.
The later part of the course was concerned mainly
with studies useful to those who were to enter the
ministry, most of the time being devoted to divinity,
ethics, logic, pneumatology, biblical criticism, and
ecclesiastical and Jewish history. The pupils were
required to compose and deliver homilies, and to
engage in theological disputations. They also took
part in amateur theatricals. Freedom of inquiry
and the absence of sectarian bigotry were said to be
characteristics of the academy. (fn. 10)
There is no public elementary school in Kibworth
Harcourt; the children of the village always attended
school at Kibworth Beauchamp.
CHARITIES.
Matthew Foxton, by will proved
1723, left two rent-charges, each of 5s., for the use
of the poor of Kibworth Harcourt. By 1837 one of
the rent-charges had been lost; at that time the
remaining 5s. was being distributed to the aged poor
of Kibworth Harcourt. (fn. 11) In 1956 distributions in
cash were still being made. (fn. 12)
John Marriott, by will proved 1880, left £100 in
trust, the interest to be distributed amongst 10
needy families yearly. His son, the Revd. R. W.
Marriott, added a further £100 to the charity in
1907. (fn. 13) Distributions in money were still being made
to the poor of Kibworth Harcourt in 1956. (fn. 14)
Sums left for the poor of Kibworth Harcourt by
Elizabeth Lee, John Coleman, and Isabella Simpson,
before 1786 in all three cases, had been lost by
1837. (fn. 15) Kibworth Harcourt also benefits from the
Thornton, Lane, Smalley, Norman, Goodman,
Haymes, and Sarah Marriott charities. (fn. 16)
SMEETON WESTERBY
The township of Smeeton Westerby is formed by
the valley of a small brook, running from west to east,
and the high ground on either side of it. The southwestern portion is occupied by Smeeton Hill, which
rises to over 500 ft. In the north the ground rises
more gradually from the brook to the boundary with
Kibworth Beauchamp, reaching a height of about
450 ft. In 1957 the township was mostly pasture.
Its area was 1,391 a. (fn. 17) The surface soil is mostly
boulder clay.
As late as the 18th century Smeeton and Westerby
could be considered two distinct hamlets, Smeeton
to the north-east and Westerby to the south-west.
This distinction is still preserved locally, although
the building of the church and of Council houses
between the two hamlets has given them the appearance of one continuous village. William Burton, in
1622, describes the two places separately, (fn. 18) and
medieval and Tudor documents dealing with property in the two places use terms indicating that they
were distinct. (fn. 19) Throsby, writing about 1790, described them as two separate but closely adjacent
hamlets, but Nichols, writing 7 or 8 years later,
apparently considered Smeeton Westerby as one
village. (fn. 20) It seems clear that the two hamlets were
closely connected from an early date. In Domesday
Book Westerby is not mentioned, but several holdings are mentioned as being in Smeeton; (fn. 21) in the
Leicestershire Survey Smeeton is not mentioned,
but a number of holdings are listed under Westerby,
some of them clearly the same as those recorded
under Smeeton in Domesday. (fn. 22) An Inquisition of
1279 (fn. 23) mentions the two places together as 'Smetheton Westerby', and describes the holdings there as
if the two formed a single township. There is no
evidence to suggest that each hamlet ever had its
own open fields. In the hearth tax returns of 1670,
the houses of Smeeton Westerby are enumerated on
two lists, one headed 'Westerby', and the other
'Smeeton Westerby'. (fn. 24)
The Grand Union Canal runs across the southern
part of the township. Debdale Wharf, on the boundary
between Smeeton Westerby and Gumley, was the
southern terminus of the canal from the time when
its construction was suspended in 1797 until the
start of the construction of the branch to Market
Harborough in 1805. (fn. 25) Minor roads lead from the
village to Kibworth Beauchamp, Saddington, and
Gumley; there are no arterial roads in the township.
Smeeton Westerby village stands on high ground
near the northern boundary of the township. The
larger part of the village, known as Smeeton, consists mainly of a single street, running north and
south, the continuation of the road from Kibworth.
Mill Lane branches off to the west and on the east
a track leads to Debdale Wharf. At its southern end
the main street turns westwards and leads to a triangular open space from which roads branch off
to Saddington and Gumley. West of this is the small
hamlet of Westerby. The road to Gumley runs
southwards, descending abruptly to cross the brook
over a small brick bridge. The triangular space,
known as Pitt Gardens, lies well below road level
on two sides and probably represents a long-disused
gravel pit. Part of the area was formerly occupied by
mud cottages. The parish church, built in 1851,
stands to the north of Pitt Gardens. East of the
churchyard is a large depression, partly filled with
water, where a gravel pit was in use until after the
First World War. (fn. 26) Smeeton Terrace, which stands
high above Pitt Gardens on the west side, is a tall
three-story range of red brick. It is locally identified
with the former workhouse, probably built early in
the 19th century and later divided into separate
dwellings. The existence of large windows on the
top floor suggests that at some period it was adapted
for the use of framework-knitters. A two-story workshop is built out at right angles to the main block.
The buildings in the village consist mainly of
19th-century brick cottages and farm-houses with a
few private residences. At the end of Springfield
Lane an earlier house has a lower story of ironstone
with 19th-century brickwork above. The building
consists of two ranges at right angles to one another.
In the back range ceiling joists with painted decoration, possibly dating from the 16th century, have
been discovered. (fn. 27) Debdale Farm in the main street
is built partly of ironstone and is probably a 17thcentury house. The stone gable-end retains its
mullioned windows but the pitch of the roof has
been lowered. Further south in the village street
a farmyard wall of ironstone contains the blocked
mullioned windows of a former house. There are
several 18th-century brick cottages, originally
thatched, with steep parapetted gable-ends. One
in the main street, now the post office, is dated
1731 and a similar cottage in Westerby is dated 1756.
Westerby House is a large late-18th-century house
of red brick, its façade facing the south end of the
main street. It was owned and occupied by the
Rector of Kibworth in the second half of the 19th
century. There are two pairs of Council houses near
the school, built after the First World War. Three
pairs were erected opposite the church in 1950. Four
cottages in a single terrace were built west of the
church to house agricultural workers c. 1944.
MANOR.
In 1086 3 carucates of land at Smeeton
Westerby were held by Robert dispensator; 4 carucates and 7 bovates were held by Robert de Buci
from Hugh de Grentemesnil, who held them from
the king; one carucate and 2 bovates belonged to the
king as part of the royal soke of Great Bowden. There
were also 4 socmen in the township whose holdings
were attached to de Grentemesnil's land at Bruntingthorpe, about 5 miles away to the west. (fn. 28) Robert
de Buci held much land from the king in chief elsewhere in Leicestershire. (fn. 29) The soke of Great Bowden
had been held by Edward the Confessor, (fn. 30) but the
pre-Conquest holders of the other lands in Smeeton
Westerby are not known. Robert dispensator's 3
carucates descended in the same way as his manor
at Kibworth Beauchamp, and probably formed part
of that manor. (fn. 31)
The land in the township held by de Grentemesnil
in 1086 had by 1130 been acquired by Robert, Earl
of Leicester, from whom it was then being held by
Richard Basset. (fn. 32) No doubt the earl's father, Robert,
Count of Meulan, had obtained them from Ivo de
Grentemesnil, Hugh's son, early in Henry I's reign,
at the same time as he obtained much other Grentemesnil property, (fn. 33) while Richard Basset had acquired
much other land once held by de Buci. (fn. 34) The overlordship of this holding remained with the earls of
Leicester until the death of Simon de Montfort in
1265, after which it passed to the earls, and later the
dukes, of Lancaster. (fn. 35) Subsequently the Duchy of
Lancaster seems to have retained some land at
Smeeton in demesne, (fn. 36) while the rest was subinfeudated. The position of the under-tenants of this
holding, which was generally known as the manor of
SMEETON, is at first not clear. The holding was
acquired, apparently in the mid-12th century, by
Ivo of Neufmarché, (fn. 37) but it is not known when the
Bassets relinquished the ownership. Ivo's heirs were
his two daughters Emma, wife of Hugh de Senlis,
and Aubrey, wife of a certain Ingebald. (fn. 38) Emma's
rights passed to her son Henry de Senlis, and
Aubrey's to her son Robert de Braybrook. Henry and
Robert agreed to divide the lands that had once
been Ivo's between them, and Robert's share included Smeeton Westerby. (fn. 39) Robert was bringing an
action about land at Smeeton Westerby in 1203, (fn. 40)
and his agreement with Henry may well have been
made about that time. In 1208 King John confirmed
Robert de Braybrook in the possession of land at
Smeeton Westerby which had been handed over
to him by Ralph de Turville. (fn. 41) There can be little
doubt that this was the same land which had been
held by Richard Basset from the Earl of Leicester in
1130, for in 1086, and again in 1130, the property is
described as 4 carucates and 7 bovates, and in 1208
it is described as 19½ virgates, that is, 4 carucates
and 7 bovates again. (fn. 42) How Turville obtained an
interest in Smeeton Westerby is not clear, but from
what is known of the descent of the manor at a later
date there can be little doubt that it was held by
Turville from the earls of Leicester, and was held
by Braybrook from Turville. From an action brought
in 1254 it seems that the manor was then held by
Walter Ledet, Robert de Braybrook's descendant,
from Ralph de Turville, and from Ledet by Walter
de Langton. (fn. 43) In 1279 the manor was held from
Edmund, Earl of Lancaster and Leicester, by the
heirs of Nicholas de Turville, and from the heirs by
William Latimer. (fn. 44) Latimer had married Alice,
Walter Ledet's elder daughter and co-heir, and his
younger brother John Latimer married Christine,
Ledet's younger daughter. (fn. 45) No doubt William
Latimer owed his possession of the manor to his
wife. In 1282 John Latimer died possessed of 6¾
virgates at Smeeton, held in right of his wife
Christine, from Ralph de Turville of Normanton. (fn. 46)
William Latimer, at his death in 1304 or 1305, was
holding 9 virgates and some other property at
Smeeton in right of his wife Alice, from Turville. (fn. 47)
Evidently the lands at Smeeton Westerby which
Alice and Christine had inherited from their father
had been divided between them.
The land held by the elder brother William
Latimer descended to Nicholas Latimer, who may
have been one of William's younger sons. (fn. 48) Nicholas
died seised of property at Smeeton in 1325, (fn. 49) and
was succeeded by his son John. When John, still
possessed of the holding, died in 1343, his heir was
said to be his son Nicholas, then a minor. (fn. 50) The
descent of this holding cannot be traced further.
The land held by John, the younger brother, descended to his heirs, the Latimers of Braybrooke, who
held it from the Turvilles of Normanton, who in
turn held from the earls, and later the dukes, of
Lancaster. (fn. 51) On the death of Edward Latimer in
1411, the land descended to John Griffin, grandson
of Edward's sister Elizabeth. (fn. 52) The manor continued to be held by the Griffin family until the 16th
century. After Nicholas Griffin's death in 1509 it
was said that he had held the manor of Smeeton from
the king as part of the Duchy of Lancaster. (fn. 53) The
position of the Turvilles as mesne lords had evidently
been allowed to lapse. Nicholas's heir was his son
Thomas, (fn. 54) who seems to have been still in possession
of the manor in 1550. (fn. 55) According to Nichols, the
manor was alienated by one of the Griffin family
during the reign of Elizabeth I (fn. 56) but there does not
seem to be any reliable evidence for this. The subsequent descent of the holding is uncertain. By 1449
the Duchy of Lancaster possessed a manor at
Smeeton Westerby. (fn. 57) In 1628 Charles I granted the
manor to Charles Harbord, Christopher Favell, and
Thomas Young. (fn. 58) Possibly this manor may have
been once part of the Earl of Leicester's holding.
According to Nichols, (fn. 59) Harbord and his colleagues
conveyed the manor in 1631 to William Lewis and
others, who in turn conveyed it in 1654 to John
Lewis and others, but no evidence is cited in support
of these statements. In 1846 H. H. H. Hungerford
was lord of the manor. (fn. 60) Hungerford was still the
owner in 1861, (fn. 61) but by 1877 he had been replaced
by Sir Henry Halford. (fn. 62) No person is mentioned as
lord of the manor at any later date. In 1888 it was
said that the manorial rights had lapsed. (fn. 63)
LESSER ESTATES.
In 1086 the king held one
carucate and 2 bovates at Smeeton Westerby belonging to the royal soke of Great Bowden, (fn. 64) and in
1130 there was said to be the same amount of
land belonging to the king's soke in the township. (fn. 65)
Subsequently this holding became part of the soke
of Stretton, the descent of which is discussed elsewhere. (fn. 66)
In 1130 Richard de Rollos held one carucate
and one bovate at Smeeton Westerby. (fn. 67) In 1279 the
township was said to contain one carucate of the
Rollos fee, held by John Sakry and his brother. (fn. 68)
The descent of this holding after 1279 has not been
traced.
ECONOMIC HISTORY.
In 1086 the tenants
on Robert dispensator's holding of 3 carucates at
Smeeton Westerby consisted of 3 socmen, 2 villeins,
and one bordar. There was one demesne plough. (fn. 69)
Robert de Buci's tenants on his 4 carucates and 7
bovates were 2 socmen, one villein, and 2 bordars.
There was a demesne plough here also. (fn. 70) The royal
soke-land at Smeeton Westerby then consisted of one
carucate and 2 bovates. (fn. 71) As against the total of
9 carucates and one bovate for these holdings, the
Leicestershire Survey of 1130 lists 12 carucates and
one bovate, but the entry is mutilated, and it is
uncertain what the completed total should be. (fn. 72)
In 1279 the king's soke-land at Smeeton Westerby
was divided into four holdings, each of one virgate.
William de Beauchamp, Earl of Warwick, held 4
carucates and 3 virgates, which apparently formed
part of his manor of Kibworth Beauchamp. One
carucate of the earl's land was held by a free tenant,
and the remainder was held in villeinage. There
were 5 carucates held by William Latimer, and
one carucate, belonging to the Rollos fee, held by
John Sakry and his brother. (fn. 73) In 1304-5 it was stated
that the property which William Latimer had held at
Smeeton Westerby included 9 virgates, each held
by a bondman, and that each virgate contained 15 a. (fn. 74)
In 1599 it was stated by the jurors of the manor
court that the manor's customary tenants, who were
presumably copyholders, had from time immemorial
paid a fixed fine equal to a year's rent when their
holdings changed hands. Early in the 17th century
the Duchy of Lancaster, to which the manor then
belonged, contested this, and in 1620 an agreement
was made between the Duchy and the Smeeton
Westerby copyholders, under which in return for
a sum equal to 45 years' ancient rents the copyholders were to be allowed to pay a fixed fine equal
to one year's rent in future, and to exchange any
of their copyhold land in the open fields for any
freehold land in the open fields. There appear to
have been only 3 copyholders in the township at the
time. (fn. 75)
Smeeton Westerby was inclosed under the Act
for inclosing the whole ancient parish of Kibworth,
passed in 1779. (fn. 76) By that date no copyhold land
seems to have been left in the township. The inclosure award (fn. 77) allotted lands in Smeeton Westerby
to 35 persons or institutions. The Rector of Kibworth
Beauchamp received 202 a. in commutation of the
tithes from the township's open fields, 4 a. for the
tithes from the old inclosures, and 1 a. in respect of a
small parcel of glebe land. Two landowners obtained
over 200 a. each. Two others obtained 74 a. and 64 a.
respectively, 9 were allotted between 20 a. and 50 a.
each, and 7 between 10 a. and 20 a. each. The remaining 15 received between one and 10 a. each.
During the 19th century framework-knitting became of some importance at Smeeton Westerby, and
in 1844 there were 140 frames in the village. (fn. 78) There
were 3 bag hosiers in the village as late as 1896, (fn. 79) but
the industry there never seems to have developed into
the factory stage, and by 1908 hosiery manufacture
seems to have ceased. (fn. 80) About 1936 a brick building
north-east of the church, which had originally belonged to a hosiery manufacturer, was taken over by
the firm of J. E. Slater of Kibworth Beauchamp. (fn. 81)
Other buildings were erected and in 1959 the factory
was employing about 60 people.
Land 'anciently known as Watermill Close', lying
south-east of the village, was mentioned in the
inclosure award. (fn. 82) A windmill stood about half a
mile west of Smeeton and a little south of Mill Lane
in 1885. (fn. 83) It is said to have been blown down,
apparently about this date, with the miller inside it. (fn. 84)
PARISH ADMINISTRATION.
Hearth tax lists
for both Smeeton Westerby and Westerby were
signed by the same constable in 1670, and it is likely
that the hamlets then formed a single township. (fn. 85)
A churchwarden at Smeeton Westerby was mentioned in 1634. (fn. 86) In 1690 there were 2 wardens, (fn. 87)
but by 1825, and probably from an earlier date, there
was only one. (fn. 88) By 1776 Smeeton Westerby was
maintaining its own poor (fn. 89) and had a workhouse for
20 persons. (fn. 90) In 1802-37 people were relieved there,
while 58 adults and 56 children received out-relief. (fn. 91)
It seems likely that this workhouse was used not only
by Smeeton Westerby but also Kibworth Beauchamp and Kibworth Harcourt. A reference in 1806
to 'the old workhouse' suggests that a new one was
built about then, (fn. 92) and this new one may be the
building traditionally known in the village as the
workhouse. After 1836 Smeeton Westerby was
included in Market Harborough Union. (fn. 93)
In 1894 a parish council was established with a
membership of 5 councillors; (fn. 94) it had the same
number in 1958. (fn. 95)
CHURCH.
In 1587 Elizabeth I granted the graveyard of a chapel at Smeeton to Edward Heron and
John Nicholas. (fn. 96) Nothing further is known about the
chapel, nor is it clear how the graveyard came into
the queen's hands, but the grant seems to imply that
the chapel was disused by 1587. A survey of 1781
mentions a close called the chapel yard, (fn. 97) but this
may have been the yard of the dissenting chapel
then existing at Smeeton Westerby. (fn. 98)
The abbey of St. Evroul (Orne) in Normandy
obtained from Hugh de Grentemesnil under William I a grant of two-thirds of the tithes of all Hugh's
demesne lands in England, and they included his
demesne at Smeeton. (fn. 99) About 1220 St. Evroul was
receiving two-thirds of the rectorial tithes from the
demesne of a manor at Smeeton. (fn. 1) By 1291 the abbey's
rights in the tithes of Smeeton had been commuted
for an annual payment of £1 to the Prior of Ware, (fn. 2)
and this pension was later transferred to Sheen
Priory (Surr.). (fn. 3) In 1535 Sheen was receiving a pension of 13s. 4d. a year. (fn. 4) In the 18th century the
Rector of Kibworth Beauchamp was receiving all
the tithes from Smeeton Westerby. (fn. 5)
In 1851 a church was built at Smeeton Westerby, (fn. 6)
and in 1852 the township was formed into a separate
ecclesiastical parish. (fn. 7) The advowson of the new
parish belonged from the beginning, and still belonged in 1957, to the Rector of Kibworth Beauchamp. (fn. 8) The living was endowed with 128a. of
glebe, formerly belonging to the patron. (fn. 9) It was
declared a rectory in 1867. (fn. 10) A parsonage house was
built in Mill Lane in 1900-1. (fn. 11)
CHRIST CHURCH,
Smeeton Westerby, is built
of grey stone with limestone dressings and was designed by H. Woodyer. (fn. 12) It consists of a chancel, an
aisled nave of four bays, a south porch, and a north
vestry. At the west end is a circular bell turret surmounted by a spire. A large arch which is incorporated
in the west wall of the nave suggests that the addition
of a west tower was contemplated at some future
period. The windows and the internal fittings are all
in the Decorated style of the 14th century. The church
was repaired in 1873 and 1895. (fn. 13) A new organ was
installed between 1906 and 1908. (fn. 14) There are no
mural tablets apart from those commemorating the
two world wars. Several of the windows contain
memorial stained glass.
There are two small bells, cast in 1849. The plate
consists of a cup dated 1847, a paten dated 1849, and
a flagon dated 1848, all silver gilt, and all bought for
Smeeton Westerby in 1849. (fn. 15) Frederick Iliffe, by will
proved 1928, left £300 to endow quarterly payments
to members of the choir, to maintain the organ, and
for books for the choir. (fn. 16) The registers date from
1852, Smeeton Westerby being included in the
Kibworth Beauchamp registers before that date.
NONCONFORMITY.
In 1668 it was said that
'great numbers of persons commonly called Quakers'
met at Smeeton Westerby. (fn. 17) In 1724 Francis
Tilley's house was licensed for nonconformist worship. (fn. 18) Further licences for places in the village were
issued in 1743 and 1783. (fn. 19) These 18th-century dissenters were probably Baptists as in the closing
years of the century there was a Baptist chapel in the
village, and the chapel established in 1743 later belonged to the Baptists. (fn. 20) By that time the number of
Baptists had decreased and services were held only
a few times each year. (fn. 21) Apparently this chapel
belonged to the General Baptists, as in 1829 there
were reported to be 30 members of that denomination in the village. (fn. 22) By 1846 both the General and the
Calvinistic Baptists had chapels in Smeeton Westerby. (fn. 23) The Calvinistic Baptist chapel had ceased
to exist by 1861, (fn. 24) but the General Baptist chapel
remained in use in 1956. It stands in Debdale
Lane and is a small red-brick building with a single
round-headed window facing the road. Headstones
in the adjacent burial ground include several of
Swithland slate to members of the Woodruffe family
(1767-73). A Primitive Methodist chapel was established at Smeeton Westerby by 1846, (fn. 25) but by 1862
it had ceased to exist. (fn. 26)
SCHOOLS.
In 1833 there were three day schools
at Smeeton Westerby, attended by 23 boys and 24
girls, all being educated at their parents' expense. (fn. 27)
There was an infants' school in the village in 1846. (fn. 28)
A National school for 88 children was built in 1862. (fn. 29)
The average attendance was 46 in 1876, (fn. 30) 52 in
1910, (fn. 31) and 45 in 1922. (fn. 32) In 1927 the senior pupils
were transferred to Kibworth Beauchamp, (fn. 33) and in
1933 it was decided that the school was to be used
for infants only. (fn. 34) In July of that year the school
had 36 pupils. (fn. 35) In 1953 it accepted 'aided' status
under the local authority as an infants' school. In
1957 there were only 12 children in attendance. (fn. 36)
The school, built in 1862, is a small single-story
red-brick building, standing in the main street at
Smeeton.
CHARITIES.
About 1740 Edward Freeman gave
£5 for the poor of Smeeton Westerby. (fn. 37) By 1837
the money had been lost. (fn. 38) John Coleman, before
1743, gave £20 for the poor of Smeeton Westerby. (fn. 39)
The income was originally used to apprentice poor
parishioners. In about 1823 the principal was lent
to the parish, and the gift was afterwards represented
by £1 a year distributed to the poor out of the poor
rate. The principal was replaced in 1862, when
£21 6s. 9d. stock was bought. (fn. 40) Distributions were
still being made from the charity in 1957. (fn. 41) Smeeton
Westerby also benefits from the Goodman, Haymes,
and Norman charities, the income from which is
shared with Kibworth Beauchamp and Kibworth
Harcourt. (fn. 42)