MANORS.
In 1086 STANWELL was held by
William fitz Other and in the time of King Edward
it had belonged to Azor. (fn. 94) The estate recorded in
Domesday Book probably comprises most of the
ancient parish except the manor of West Bedfont,
which was already separate. It included the subsidiary estates of two knights, which may have corresponded to two of the three later manors which
grew up in Poyle, Rudsworth, and Hammonds and
comprised most of the parish west of Stanwellmoor. (fn. 95) In 1796 there were 539 acres copyhold of
the manor, nearly all lying east of Stanwellmoor. (fn. 96)
In 1279 the demesne arable of Stanwell manor was
estimated at 124 acres and in 1328 at 200. (fn. 97) From
then until 1535 it was generally reckoned at between
230 and 280 acres, while the lord's meadow increased from about 50 acres in the 13th and 14th
centuries to about 90 in 1535. The demesne pastures
and woods seem to have grown in proportion. (fn. 98) The
manorial estate was increased by various purchases
from the 15th to the 18th centuries, notably by the
acquisition of West Bedfont manor in the 15th
century and of Hammonds in the 18th. (fn. 99) Stanwell
had some appurtenant land or rights in adjoining
parishes and in the 17th century these included a
farm-house in Horton, together with 48 acres in the
open fields there. (fn. 1) In spite of the increase in their
land, however, the lords of the manor owned few of
the cottages in the village. (fn. 2) In the late 18th century
over 300 acres were sold to Edmund Hill, the owner
of Poyle. (fn. 3) By 1844 the lord of the manor owned
Hammonds farm (252 a.), Merricks farm (238 a.,
later known as Southern farm), and Park farm
(247 a., later Stanhope farm), as well as about 84
acres around his house and a few other small areas. (fn. 4)
The manorial rights, house, and lands were separated
in 1933. (fn. 5)
William fitz Other, the Domesday tenant, was
constable of Windsor castle and his descendants
took the name of Windsor. They held Stanwell of
Windsor castle for over four centuries, together with
lands principally in Buckinghamshire and Berkshire. (fn. 6)
William of Windsor is recorded as holding Stanwell
in 1166 and in 1185 Hawise of Windsor held it in
dower. (fn. 7) She had only one son, so that it may have
been his two sons, Walter and William, who in 1198
divided the estates of their grandfather William of
Windsor. William, presumably the younger brother,
was to hold his share of Walter. It included Stanwell
together with the neighbouring manor of Horton
(Bucks.) and West Hagbourne (Berks.). (fn. 8) Walter's
estate became divided between coheirs in the 13th
century and Stanwell was always considered to be
held in chief by William's successors. Throughout
the Middle Ages it was held generally as half a
knight's fee and owed 16s. 8d. to Windsor for castle
guard every 40 days. (fn. 9) This sum was due from the
whole Windsor barony, of which Stanwell became
the head. Quit-rents were owed to Stanwell from
former Windsor lands in several counties until the
19th century at least. (fn. 10) It was the appurtenance to
Stanwell of these services which has led writers to say
that Stanwell manor extended into several counties.
In 1212 William of Windsor recovered Stanwell
which had been seized by the king. (fn. 11) He was
succeeded apparently by his son, another William, by
1248. (fn. 12) In 1266 Stanwell was settled upon William of
Windsor and his son William. (fn. 13) One of these two
died c. 1275 (fn. 14) leaving a minor son Richard (d. 1326). (fn. 15)
Following a settlement of 1305 Richard's widow
retained Stanwell until she died in 1328. (fn. 16) It then
passed to their son Richard who was succeeded in
1367 by his grandson Miles. (fn. 17) Miles gave his grandfather's widow the whole of Hagbourne (Berks.) in
exchange for her dower in Stanwell. (fn. 18) He died in
1387 and his wife Anne, who held part of Stanwell
in dower, died in 1395. (fn. 19) His son Brian (d. by 1412)
left two sons of whom the elder, Miles, had died by
1415. (fn. 20) The younger, Richard (d. 1439), (fn. 21) left a son,
Miles, who died in Ferrara on his way to the Holy
Land about 1452. (fn. 22) His son Thomas (d. 1485) (fn. 23) left
a widow, Elizabeth, who held Stanwell with her
second husband Sir Robert Lytton. (fn. 24) Thomas's son
Andrew was summoned to parliament as Lord
Windsor from 1529. (fn. 25) The story of his loss of Stanwell has often been told: (fn. 26) in spite of Windsor's
previous favours from the Crown, Henry VIII
compelled him in 1542 to surrender Stanwell in
exchange for monastic lands in Gloucestershire and
elsewhere. (fn. 27)
Sir Philip Hobby was made chief steward of the
manor in 1545. He apparently leased the demesnes
from then until 1547 at least. (fn. 28) Sir Thomas Paston
was granted a 50-year lease during Edward VI's
reign, and Edward Fitzgarret in 1588 secured a
lease to run for 30 years from the end of Paston's
term. (fn. 29) In fact Fitzgarret was in possession when he
died before 1590. His estate was much embarrassed
and after litigation Stanwell passed to his son
Garret subject to certain rent-charges to his daughter. (fn. 30) In 1603 the freehold was granted to Sir
Thomas Knyvett, who became Lord Knyvett in
1607. (fn. 31) The Crown reserved a rent of £68 19s. 11¼d.
from the manor (fn. 32) and also retained the rents due
from the subsidiary manors. (fn. 33) Knyvett and his wife
both died in 1622, leaving their property to be
shared between John Cary, the grandson of one of
Knyvett's sisters, and Elizabeth Leigh, the granddaughter of another. Elizabeth married Sir Humphrey Tracy, Bt., and she and Cary held Stanwell
jointly until her death. (fn. 34) In 1678 the Knyvett
estates were divided between Cary and Sir Francis
Leigh, who was apparently Elizabeth's heir. (fn. 35) Cary
retained Stanwell, which he left to his great-niece
Elizabeth Willoughby on condition that she married
Lord Guildford; otherwise it was to pass to Lord
Falkland. After Elizabeth's marriage to James Bertie
she held the manor under a chancery decree until
her death in 1715. It then passed to Lucius Cary,
Viscount Falkland (d. 1730), who sold it in 1720 to
John, Earl of Dunmore (d. 1752). (fn. 36) His trustees sold
it in 1754 to Sir John Gibbons, Bt. (fn. 37) It descended in
the Gibbons family with the baronetcy (fn. 38) until 1933,
when the manorial rights were sold to H. Scott
Freeman, clerk of Staines urban district council, (fn. 39)
who still held them in 1956. (fn. 40) In 1931 Stanhope farm
(261 a.), and in 1933 Stanwell Place (90 a.), were
sold to J. W. Gibson. (fn. 41) By 1937 all the Gibbons
property in the parish had been sold; 346 acres,
including Hammonds farm, were purchased by the
Metropolitan Water Board in 1936, while most of the
remainder went in a number of small parcels. (fn. 42) In
1948 Sir John Gibson (knighted 1945) sold Stanwell
Place with 22 acres to the King of Iraq, to whom it
still belonged in 1956. (fn. 43) Sir John Gibson's sons then
still owned about 17 acres of Stanhope farm. (fn. 44)
There was a manor-house at Stanwell by the 14th
century. Some of the rooms and farm-buildings were
described in 1367. (fn. 45) Later in the 14th century the
buildings were in bad repair. (fn. 46) Most of the Windsor
lords of the manor seem to have lived at Stanwell. (fn. 47)
James I's daughter Mary died there while under
Lord Knyvett's care. (fn. 48) Sir Humphrey Tracey was
living at Stanwell in 1648, (fn. 49) but the other jointowner, John Cary, was in possession of the house in
1664, when he paid tax on 32 hearths. (fn. 50) By this
time, and presumably before, the manor-house stood
on the site of the present Stanwell Place. (fn. 51) Except for
a few years from 1909, when it was used as a golf and
country club, (fn. 52) the house has been occupied by all
its owners since the 18th century. (fn. 53) The main block
of the present building was probably erected in the
early 19th century. (fn. 54) It has two stories and is cementrendered with a low-pitched slate roof behind a
parapet. The later west wing is of red brick. Part of
the outbuildings are older than the house itself. The
park was laid out in the 18th century. The southward
bend in Park Road at the main gate is probably due
to the diversion of the road by Sir John Gibbons
(d. 1776) in 1760. (fn. 55) In 1771 Gibbons inclosed
Borough Field so that the park extended to Oaks
Road in the east and Borough Green in the north and
contained over 300 acres. (fn. 56) Much of it was leased by
1844 and it has since been reduced to about the
size it was before 1771. (fn. 57)
WEST BEDFONT was already a separate estate
in 1086, when it contained land for 4 ploughs. (fn. 58)
In the 13th century it comprised 2 carucates. (fn. 59) By
the 14th century there were 212 acres of arable in
demesne, together with meadow (10 a.) and woodland. (fn. 60) The lord of the manor had a house in the
13th century, referred to as his court. (fn. 61) Its position
is unknown, but it may be relevant that there were
lands called Bedfont Court in the 17th century (fn. 62) and
that the later Bedfont Court Farm, which was copyhold of Stanwell manor, stood until the 20th century
on the west corner of Long Lane and Bedfont Road,
some way east of the present factory of that name. (fn. 63)
In Edward the Confessor's reign West Bedfont
was apparently divided into three parts. Half belonged to Brithman, who was Earl Harold's man, and
the other half belonged to two sokemen who held of
Azor, the lord of Stanwell. Brithman could dispose
of his land freely but the sokemen needed their lord's
permission to do so. By 1086 the whole estate was
held of William fitz Other and the overlordship continued with his descendants, the lords of Stanwell. (fn. 64)
At the division of the Windsor estates in 1198 the
service due from West Bedfont was assigned to
William of Windsor, who also received Stanwell,
and was to hold of his brother Walter. (fn. 65) On several
later occasions William's heir was said to hold this
manor of Walter's heirs, (fn. 66) but this overlordship was
generally ignored. (fn. 67)
In 1086 Walter de Mucedent held West Bedfont
of William fitz Other. (fn. 68) By 1166 his estate had
passed to Walter of Bedfont who held I knight's
fee. (fn. 69) This continued to be the service owed, and
by the 14th century Walter's successors also owed
6s. 8d. every 40 days for castle-guard at Windsor. (fn. 70)
Walter of Bedfont may have been succeeded by his
brother Torold but by 1198 Henry of Bedfont was
in possession. (fn. 71) Torold, who was still living, claimed
the manor on the ground that Henry was Walter's
stepson, not his son. (fn. 72) This claim evidently failed,
since Torold's son Robert in turn challenged Henry's
title in 1200. (fn. 73) Robert and Henry came to an agreement whereby the whole vill of West Bedfont was
given to Richard of Herriard. (fn. 74) Richard granted it in
turn to Thomas of Haverhill, but Richard's heirs
continued to be mesne tenants. His granddaughter
Maud was mesne tenant in 1243, (fn. 75) and his grandson
Richard de Sifrewast and Richard's son were on
several occasions distrained to perform the services
due. (fn. 76) By the 14th century the mesne tenancy seems
to have lapsed. (fn. 77)
Thomas of Haverhill, who had received the manor
by 1205, was succeeded between 1219 and 1222 by
James son of William of Haverhill. (fn. 78) James granted
West Bedfont to Andrew Bukerel in or before 1234. (fn. 79)
Before 1238 Andrew granted it to Newark Priory
(Surr.). (fn. 80) It remained in the possession of Newark
until 1415, when, as a result of a complicated exchange involving the Crown and Chertsey Abbey, it
passed to Richard Windsor, lord of Stanwell, who
was already overlord of West Bedfont. (fn. 81) West
Bedfont was not referred to as a separate estate after
1452. (fn. 82)
The manor of POYLE seems to have become an
independent estate in the late 12th or early 13th
century. Before this it was probably part of Stanwell
manor and may have been one of the two subsidiary
estates held by knights in 1086. (fn. 83) Its component
lands varied from time to time. In the 13th century
its owners bought and sold land in Poyle and Stanwell (fn. 84) so that whereas Poyle manor comprised 1
carucate in 1265, (fn. 85) by 1299 it included 50 acres of
demesne arable, 72 acres held by free-tenants, and a
house and mill. At this time the component lands
were held of several lords. (fn. 86) By the 15th century it
comprised a house and 200 acres of arable, together
with 40 acres each of pasture and meadow. (fn. 87) Poyle
was united to Stanwell manor in the 16th and early
17th centuries and when it became detached again
it seems to have lost its manorial status. No courts or
copyhold tenants are recorded and it was often
referred to as Poyle farm in the 18th century.
During the 19th century the title of manor finally
disappeared. (fn. 88) In the late 18th century the estate
was enlarged, but in 1831 the house and 69 acres,
together with Poyle farm (187 a.) were detached
from the rest of this property. The Poyle House
estate occupied most of the land between the western
boundary of the parish, the Bath Road, the Wyrardisbury River, and Poyle Road. (fn. 89)
In 1235-6 Walter Poyle (fn. 90) held half a knight's fee
in Poyle of Richard of Windsor. (fn. 91) He had held land
in Horton (Bucks.) of William of Windsor in 1212. (fn. 92)
In 1242-3 William Poyle held half a knight's fee
in Stanwell, (fn. 93) and in 1251 and 1267 he also held
land there of other persons. (fn. 94) Walter Poyle died in
1299 having already given Poyle manor to his son
John. (fn. 95) It was then said to be held of Sir Thomas de
Huntercombe, who had inherited that half of the
Windsor barony which had been assigned to Walter
of Windsor in 1198. (fn. 96) This overlordship was also
recorded in 1317, 1353, and 1423, though at other
times Poyle was said to be held of the Windsors of
Stanwell. (fn. 97) In 1299 John Poyle held 40 acres in the
manor of Stanwell in addition to Poyle itself. When
John died in 1317 the manor was leased for life to
Richard de Walden. John's heir was his daughter
Isabel but whether she held the manor is uncertain. (fn. 98)
In 1353 it was held by Nicholas de la Despence, (fn. 99)
but by 1423 it had reverted to the Poyle family and
passed from John Poyle to his grandson Robert. (fn. 1)
Like Tongham manor (Surr.), also held by the
Poyles, (fn. 2) it passed to John Gaynesford who held it in
1452 and 1480, (fn. 3) and whose wife is said to have been
in possession in 1490. (fn. 4) By 1542 it had passed to Lord
Windsor who conveyed it to Henry VIII along with
Stanwell manor. The Crown leased it in 1575 to
Robert Holmes and in 1587 to Nicholas Hilliard the
miniaturist, (fn. 5) while in 1591 a lease was assigned from
William Daye to Thomas Ridley. (fn. 6) Thomas, Lord
Knyvett, acquired Poyle from the Crown in 1613 and
it descended with Stanwell until it was assigned to
Sir Francis Leigh on the partition of the Knyvett
estates in 1678. It was then in the occupation of
Francis Swayne. (fn. 7) In 1754 (fn. 8) it was leased by Jane,
widow of Francis Leigh and her son Francis to
Henry Bullock (d. 1762) who already owned Poyle
mill. (fn. 9) Poyle manor, which was often known as
Poyle farm by this time, (fn. 10) was bought from the
Leigh family by Sir William Gibbons who sold it
to John and Henry Bullock, the sons of the original
lessee, in 1781. (fn. 11) John died soon after and Henry
mortgaged some of his property to Edmund Hill and
then sold it outright to him, including, in 1800,
Poyle House. (fn. 12) Hill had acquired other land in the
parish from various persons. (fn. 13) He owned gunpowder
mills and much property in the neighbourhood. (fn. 14)
When he died in 1809 he left about 1,000 acres in
Stanwell to John Hambrough. (fn. 15) Most of this property remained in the Hambrough family until 1925
at least. (fn. 16) It was sold by 1956. (fn. 17) In 1844 and 1910 it
included Moor farm, Hithermoor farm, Town farm
east, and Town farm west. (fn. 18) Neither Hill nor any of
the Hambrough family lived in Stanwell and from
the time when Hill bought Poyle House it was leased
to its former owner Henry Bullock. (fn. 19) In 1831 it was
purchased from Hambrough with about 250 acres
by Bullock's grandson George Paterson. (fn. 20) After his
death in 1866 (fn. 21) the house passed through various
hands and in 1956 belonged to Mr. M. Parkhouse. (fn. 22)
Poyle House stands on a partly moated site. It is a
brick house of two stories with a steeply pitched
hipped roof and dormer windows to the attics. It
contains a staircase, fireplaces, and panelling of c.
1700, and the house was probably built at about this
time. An earlier stone fireplace in the east wing may
have been brought from elsewhere, and the same is
probably true of other internal features. (fn. 23) The south
front, which has a central pediment, dates from
later in the 18th century. Additions and alterations
have been made to the house at later periods.
The manor of HAMMONDS or SHEPCOTTS
was probably always centred upon Hammonds farm
in the south-west of the parish, though it originally
held lands scattered over the common fields. (fn. 24) It
seems to have extended into Staines and in 1511 was
said to contain 200 acres of arable, together with
houses, meadow, and pasture, &c., though by 1564
the demesne arable was said to be 400 acres. (fn. 25)
Although by the late 16th century Hammonds was
referred to as a farm, (fn. 26) it still had 30 free and 8
copyhold tenants in 1651. (fn. 27) In 1844 Hammonds farm
contained 252 acres. (fn. 28)
Hammonds manor can be traced back to the
holding of half a knight's fee by Roger Tichborne
and Guy Brian in 1353 and to one of 10 marks'
worth of land by John Tichborne about 1335. (fn. 29) In
1353 (fn. 30) the holding was identified with the half-fee
held by Ernest Malemains in 1235-6. (fn. 31) Both Ernest
and Roger held as of the manor of Stanwell, and
Hammonds continued to owe half a knight's fee and
6s. 8d. for castle-guard to Stanwell. (fn. 32) It seems likely
that Ernest's holding was connected with the 20
acres of land which were claimed in 1229 by Isabel,
daughter of Robert Palmer, who had purchased them
from Serlo Malemains. (fn. 33) Isabel secured her lands,
but there is no later history of this holding until 1353.
From that date Hammonds, which was also called
Tichborne in 1542, followed the descent of Tichborne (Hants.) (fn. 34) until 1638, when it passed to John
Hyde. There is no evidence that any member of the
Tichborne family ever lived there, and in 1594
Richard Hatchman had a 70-year lease of the manor. (fn. 35)
It apparently passed through the hands of various
mortgagees to John Maculloch, who conveyed it in
1735 to the Earl of Dunmore. (fn. 36) From that time it has
been held with Stanwell manor. Copyhold of the
'manor of Stanwell and Hammonds' was mentioned
in 1795, but Hammonds evidently soon ceased to be
considered a manor. (fn. 37)
The farm-house was pulled down when the King
George VI Reservoir was built. It was a brick
building of about 1700, (fn. 38) standing on the east of
Bonehead Ditch, just above its confluence with the
Colne and a little way west of the corner of the
reservoir. (fn. 39)
It is not certain how far CLEREMONT or
CLERMUNDS was ever really a manor, or what the
estate comprised, though it seems to have lain in the
west of the parish. From 1235 until 1275 Pain de
Cleremont held half a knight's fee in Stanwell of
William of Windsor. (fn. 40) In 1277 Hugh de Cleremont,
probably Pain's son, (fn. 41) owned a weir in Rudsworth. (fn. 42)
Pain de Cleremont had granted part of his estate
away and this became Rudsworth farm, the property
of Eton College. (fn. 43) The greater part, however,
evidently passed to John, son of Simon Fuller, who
held Pain's half-fee in 1353. (fn. 44) In 1428 Richard Wyat
was said to hold this property, now assessed at a
whole fee. (fn. 45) Wyat had secured property from Ralph
atte Mill and Richard Lovell, between whom it had
been disputed for some time. (fn. 46) By 1534 Cleremont
manor had come into the possession of George Bulstrode (d. 1558) of Horton. (fn. 47) His estate extended into
Staines and apparently comprised about 200 acres of
arable together with over 200 acres of meadow, pasture, and wood. Edward Bulstrode of Hedgerley,
George's father, had owned a farm of 140 acres here in
the late 15th century. (fn. 48) Thomas Bulstrode (d. c. 1561)
and his son Edward (d. 1598) both held property in
Stanwell and Rudsworth. (fn. 49) The last member of the
family known to have held property in the parish
was Edward's son Henry (d. 1632), who sold land in
Stanwell in 1619 and 1627. (fn. 50)
About 1335 Thomas atte Knolle had lands in
Stanwell worth 40s. (fn. 51) and in 1391 William atte
Knolle, son of John, held property there. (fn. 52) This
seems to have become the estate or manor of
KNOLLERS, which was conveyed in 1546 with
lands in Staines to Robert Good, by Thomas
Windsor, the son of Andrew Lord Windsor. It was
then occupied by Henry Winter. (fn. 53) By 1620 Good's
lands had been split up and part of them were alleged
to have been part of a farm called Knowlers, sometime held by Henry Pigg. (fn. 54) A house formerly called
Knowles was purchased by Edmund Hill in 1797,
apparently from the Gibbons family trustees. (fn. 55) It
then had 152 acres attached and may have been the
same as Stanwell Town farm east which comprised
153 acres in 1844: both were held by members of
the Pott family. (fn. 56)
Another estate at one time reputed to be a manor
was THE PARK or STANWELL PARK. Richard
son of Jocelin held land in Stanwell by 1231. (fn. 57) At an
unknown date he granted to Philip of Bedfont rights
of common in a field and in his wood called the
Park. (fn. 58) About 1252 Richard Jocelin, son of Ralph,
leased the Park to Westminster Abbey and in 1271
Ralph Jocelin gave his house, a close called the Park,
and a carucate to Ankerwyke Priory (Bucks.). (fn. 59) In
1267 he had granted some rents to the priory, which
had also acquired about 50 acres each from Ralph
Argent and William Passavaund, in 1266 and 1285
respectively. (fn. 60) At the Dissolution Ankerwyke held a
property called Stanwell Park manor, which had been
leased since 1516, if not before, to Andrew Windsor,
to whom it was granted when the priory was dissolved. (fn. 61) It was thereafter merged in Stanwell
manor and its position is unknown, though lands
called Great and Little Park lay north of London
Road, near Hammonds farm, in the 18th century. (fn. 62)
Ankerwyke held another property in Stanwell of
about 12 acres, which was separately leased before
the Dissolution but also probably became merged in
Stanwell manor afterwards. (fn. 63)