LINLEY
Linley was a small parish on the right bank of
the Severn c. 4 km. south-east of Broseley. Its
rural character was little altered by the enterprises of miners and ironmasters from the 17th
to the early 19th century. (fn. 97)
The 19th-century parish comprised 643 a.
(260 ha.). In 1934 the civil parish was enlarged
by the addition of Caughley from Barrow C.P.,
but Linley C.P. was absorbed by Barrow C.P.
in 1966. (fn. 98) This article treats the parish within its
19th-century boundary.
Linley's boundary was largely formed by
water: (fn. 99) the Severn on the east, Dean brook (fn. 1) on
the north, Linley brook on the south, and tributaries of Dean and Linley brooks on parts of the
west. In 1639 the parish boundary north-east of
Frog mill, which was on Linley brook, perhaps
included fields on the right bank of Linley brook
that were later in Astley Abbots. (fn. 2) The stream
called Hifnal ('Issnall') brook in 1775 was probably the lowest, 0.75-km., length of Dean brook. (fn. 3)
From Linleygreen at c. 140 m. the land falls
eastwards to the Severn at c. 34 m.; it also falls
north and south to Dean and Linley brooks. (fn. 4)
Geologically the parish divided into three: the
eastern half was on Coalport Beds of the Upper
Coal Measures; in the western half shales and
sandstones of the Temeside Group of the Downtonian Series lay south of the church, while to
the north were productive Middle Coal Measures consisting of shales, clays, and fireclays,
with sandstones, and coal and ironstone seams.
Some limestone occurs along Dean brook and
near Frog mill on Linley brook. (fn. 5)
The Broseley-Bridgnorth road, locally called
Linley Lane, ran north-south via Linleygreen
and the church and was a turnpike 1756-1867. (fn. 6)
In 1796 the owners of Preen's Eddy bridge (in
Broseley) built a new straight section of 1 km.
from Linleygreen to Lower Smithies, southwest of Linley church, in Willey and Astley
Abbots; the old road, east of the new, survived
as a drive to the Hall and church. (fn. 7) In 1639 a lane
ran east from Linley Hall to Hifnal, an area in
the north-east corner of the parish near the
Severn. It survived as a bridleway in 1983.
Another lane ran east from the Hem to the
Severn, passing through the area of Colliersworks and of the fulling mill and crossing
Linley brook to reach the Severn in Astley
Abbots parish. By 1814 the eastern part had been
diverted southwards via Frog mill; after 1949 the
section from the Hem to the mill site disappeared, but the rest of that route survived as a
track in 1983. (fn. 8)
The river was evidently the main outlet for
Linley's industrial trade in the later 18th and
early 19th century. In 1785 the lessees of mining
rights had permission to lay a railway to a wharf
on the Severn just in Astley Abbots parish. (fn. 9)
Along the Severn bank ran the CoalbrookdaleBewdley tow path, made c. 1800. (fn. 10) The Severn
Valley line of the West Midland Railway (later
G.W.R.), which opened in 1862, ran along the
river bank, with Linley station in Astley Abbots
parish. (fn. 11)
Linley's name, 'lime-tree wood', (fn. 12) attests its
wooded character in the Saxon period. The
earliest clearance was presumably in the area
around Linley church and the Hall; church and
manor were recorded in the 12th century. (fn. 13) By
the 14th century there was settlement in the
north at Darley, mainly in Caughley and Willey,
where a few houses remained in the 20th century. (fn. 14) By the early 17th century the modern
landscape had evolved. (fn. 15) Linley church stood
isolated, while 200 m. south one or two cottages
stood among the farm buildings around Linley
Hall. To the north of Linley hamlet, near the
Willey boundary, a few cottages clustered
around Linleygreen, mentioned as a place of
residence in 1538. (fn. 16) Probably the only substantial outlying farmhouse was the Hem, on the
southern parish boundary. (fn. 17) The open fields had
been inclosed. In the eastern half of the parish
there was a coal works, (fn. 18) its site apparently
covered by Colliersworks coppice by the early
19th century. (fn. 19) In 1729 Richard Lacon, lord of
the manor, built Linley Villa (fn. 20) at Linleygreen,
overlooking the Hall and church: of brick, its
main element a central canted and embattled
bay, the house was extended in the 18th and 19th
centuries. The pattern of settlement hardly
changed after 1800.

LINLEY 1901
Eight people paid to the subsidy of 1327, (fn. 21) and
16 men were mustered in 1542. (fn. 22) By 1642 there
were 20 men over 18 in the parish. (fn. 23) In 1672,
apart from the Hall and the Hem, six houses
paid tax on three hearths or fewer. (fn. 24) In the earlier
19th century the parish's population was usually
c. 100, though reaching 131 in 1811. In 1851
there were 19 inhabited houses in the parish.
The population declined in the later 19th century, particularly in the 1880s, to 55 in 1891, at
which level it remained in 1931. (fn. 25)
Three alesellers were presented in 1666. (fn. 26)
Between the later 18th and mid 19th century
there were two inns in the parish: the Britannia,
in the north-east corner of the parish near the
Severn, and, at Linleygreen, that known in the
1850s as the Duke of Wellington. (fn. 27) Both had
closed by 1882, the Britannia having become
Wrensnest Farm. (fn. 28)
Linley Union friendly society was founded in
1802 (fn. 29) but may have been dissolved by 1818. (fn. 30)
Rowland Hunt (d. 1943), M.P. for the Ludlow division 1903-18 and in 1917 a founder
member of the National Party, lived at Linleygreen from 1925. (fn. 31)
MANOR AND OTHER ESTATES.
Between
the early 12th century and 1495 or later,LINLEY was held in socage of the prior of
Wenlock. (fn. 32) In the later 1130s Richard of Linley,
son of Baldwin, was lord, (fn. 33) and it was presumably Richard or members of his family who were
mentioned later in the century: Richard and
Ralph of Linley (c. 1150), Richard of Linley
(1154-61), Walter of Linley (1177), and Richard
of Linley (1180). Philip of Linley, lord in 1196
and 1200, was succeeded by two heiresses, (fn. 34) one
who married William le Forcer (fl. 1216) (fn. 35) and
Iseult, wife of Guy of Farlow (fl. 1221-c. 1235). (fn. 36)
The manor was probably reunited by William's
son Henry le Forcer, lord by 1255; he died in
1272 seised of a messuage and carucate charged
with a rent due to the heirs of Guy of Farlow's
son Philip. (fn. 37) Henry le Forcer's son William (kt.
by 1310) died c. 1330 and was succeeded by
Thomas le Forcer, presumably his son. (fn. 38) Later
the manor was again divided, for in 1361 Ralph
Darras (de Arras) was succeeded in a third of
the manor by his son John, a minor. (fn. 39) John
Darras had interests in the manor in 1395. (fn. 40)
The manor's further descent has not been
traced with certainty (fn. 41) before 1460, when John
Talbot, earl of Shrewsbury, died seised of half
of the manor and leaving his son John as heir. (fn. 42)
A moiety of Linley was held in dower by
Margaret, countess of Shrewsbury (d. 1467), the
1st earl's widow, and passed to the 3rd earl in
1468. (fn. 43) He died in 1473, (fn. 44) and his uncle Sir
Humphrey Talbot (fn. 45) died seised of the whole
manor in 1493. (fn. 46) The manor then descended
with Aston (in Munslow) until 1542 or later. (fn. 47)
Linley probably passed to Sir John Smith's
son Edmund, whose daughter and heir Anne
married William Powlett. (fn. 48) In 1581 Powlett sold
his interest in Linley to Rowland Lacon. (fn. 49) Lacon
settled the manor c. 1603 on his daughter-in-law
Mary, with remainder to her husband Thomas
Lacon and his heirs male. (fn. 50) Thomas died in
1640 (fn. 51) and by 1649 Linley belonged to his son
Richard. (fn. 52) Richard Lacon (d. 1676) (fn. 53) was succeeded by his son Thomas (d. 1725), and
Thomas by his sons Richard (d. 1751) (fn. 54) and
Rowland (d. 1756) (fn. 55) successively. Rowland was
succeeded by his sons Richard (d. 1803) and
Walter (d. 1814) in turn. Walter's son Thomas
died unmarried in 1815 and Linley passed to
Thomas's nephew Walter Lacon Atkinson (fn. 56)
(Lacon from c. 1828), (fn. 57) a 'regular spendthrift' (fn. 58)
who sold the encumbered estate to J. G. W.
Weld-Forester, Lord Forester, in 1834. (fn. 59) Linley
then descended with Willey (fn. 60) as part of the
Forester estate. (fn. 61)
Linley Hall stands c. 150 m. south of Linley
church. The thick stone walls of the stair hall
and the east wing may survive from the medieval
house. That building was heightened and remodelled early in the 17th century, when the hall
was part of an extensive group of buildings. The
hall was extended south in the 18th century
when it was given a brick front of three bays,
the end bays being slightly recessed. About 1830
the south front was extended west by two bays
and given a new centre of three bays surmounted
by a pediment. About the same time the east
elevation was cased in red brick; the interior was
remodelled, a large stair hall being made within
the area of the medieval hall; and a new service
wing was added behind the stairs. The Roman
Catholic Lacons had a chapel in an attic room
lit by a gothick window at its north end. (fn. 62) North
and west of the house is a courtyard surrounded
by a wall reduced in height in the 20th century
but retaining a base, possibly medieval, of large
stone blocks and an upper section of early 17thcentury red bricks decorated with lozenges of
black headers. The former gardens, which in
1717 included a bowling green and a summer
house, (fn. 63) are on the falling ground south of the
house and are bounded on the west by a brick
wall of the later 18th or early 19th century. A
dovecot stood west of the church in 1639. (fn. 64) The
farmhouse east of the Hall is early 19th-century.
By 1625 John Slaney, merchant tailor of
London and brother of Richard Slaney (fl. 1603)
of Linley, (fn. 65) apparently owned most of the southern half of Linley: THE HEM (164 a.) and
Ruckleys farm (138 a.). (fn. 66) Richard's estate may
have been acquired from the Lacons, some of
whose lands lay interspersed among John
Slaney's. (fn. 67) John (d. 1632) left the estate to
Richard's son John (fn. 68) who sold it in 1652 to
Michael Stephens, of Little Stretton. From
Stephens (d. by 1680) (fn. 69) the property descended
to his son Lancelot, probably the man who, as
Lancelot Stephens the elder, of the Hem, died
in 1711. His son Lancelot was probably the man
of that name who died c. 1738, leaving the Hem
to his son Peter. (fn. 70) In 1761 Peter Stephens,
travelling in Italy, sold the property to his
second cousin Thomas Stephens of Broseley, on
whose death in 1787 (fn. 71) it passed to his younger
son John (d. 1830). (fn. 72) Another John Stephens was
a principal landowner in the parish until, probably c. 1870, his property was sold to Lord
Forester. (fn. 73)
The house is early 17th-century and timber
framed. (fn. 74) The main range originally had two
rooms on each floor, with a lower kitchen or hall
wing behind its south end. The framing is of
high quality, close studded on the ground floor
and square framed above, and the west front is
symmetrical. A detached building to the south,
perhaps a dairy, was joined to the house in the
later 17th century, possibly when a staircase was
built into the southern rooms of the main range.
Single-storeyed brick additions were made to the
east in the 19th century.
In 1910 the only landowner besides Lord
Forester was W. H. Foster of Apley Park, who
had 104 a. (fn. 75)
ECONOMIC HISTORY.
Linley was in Shirlett forest but was disafforested by 1301. (fn. 76)
Woodland management was probably always
part of the local economy; in 1717 49 oaks were
sold from the Frith (or the Thrift), in the
north-west corner of the parish, and in the 19th
and 20th centuries the parish had large coppices (fn. 77) and was home to Lord Forester's head
forester. (fn. 78) Thomas Barrett ran a small nursery
1828-44, growing fruit and other trees, shrubs,
and plants for sale. (fn. 79)
The open fields, whose former existence is
suggested by field names, were apparently inclosed by 1639. (fn. 80) Hemp butts then lay c. 0.5 km.
east of the church, and further east, in the centre
of the parish, there had formerly been a rabbit
warren. (fn. 81) In 1910 Linley home farm comprised
223 a. and the Hem farm 135 a. (fn. 82)
Of the recorded arable acreage of 170 a. (a
quarter of the parish) in 1801 about half was
wheat, with barley, oats, and peas the other main
crops. (fn. 83) In the late 19th and early 20th century
the proportion of arable declined. It increased
after the Second World War when more barley
was grown. Pig keeping increased, and in the
1930s intensive poultry keeping was tried. (fn. 84)
In 1625 Littlefords mill was on Linley brook
south of Linley hamlet and Frog mill was farther
downstream. (fn. 85) Both were in Astley Abbots parish in 1842. (fn. 86) In 1639 a fulling mill, possibily
inactive, stood downstream on the Linley side
of the brook. (fn. 87) It was probably Doveys mill,
which stood near fields called Walkmill leasow
and closed before 1765. (fn. 88) In 1770 Needhams mill
stood on the same side of Linley brook but
nearer the Severn. (fn. 89)
In 1639 an area of 'colliers works' occupied
the later site of Colliersworks coppice. (fn. 90) In the
later 18th century coal and ironstone were mined
on the Stephens estate in the eastern part of
Linley. (fn. 91) There was opencast coalmining around
Linleygreen c. 1948. (fn. 92)
Table XXI Linley: Land use, livestock, and crops
|
|
1867 |
1891 |
1938 |
1965 |
| Percentage of grassland |
71 |
82 |
84 |
59 |
| arable |
29 |
18 |
16 |
41 |
| Percentage of cattle |
22 |
30 |
22 |
14 |
| sheep |
62 |
50 |
56 |
47 |
| pigs |
16 |
20 |
22 |
39 |
| Percentage of wheat |
50 |
41 |
57 |
42 |
| barley |
32 |
30 |
15 |
52 |
| oats |
6 |
29 |
28 |
6 |
| mixed corn & rye |
12 |
0 |
0 |
0 |
| Percentage of agricultural land growing roots and vegetables |
8 |
3 |
4 |
8 |
Sources: P.R.O., MAF 68/143, no. 15; /1340, no. 5; /3880,
Salop. no. 262; /4945, no. 262.
Clay was dug to make bricks from the earlier
17th century or before, (fn. 93) and later some gravel
was extracted. (fn. 94)
There were iron smithies along Linley brook
before 1639. (fn. 95) In 1765 George Matthews, a
Broseley ironmaster, took a lease of the former
Doveys mill and in 1770 also had Needhams
mill, previously let to the Madeley Wood Co.,
ironmasters. By 1770 Matthews had built a
rolling and slitting mill and a forge, both in the
area of Doveys mill, (fn. 96) and in 1775 Needhams
mill was a boring mill. In 1775 the partners John
Wright and Joseph and Richard Jesson, who had
recently developed the 'Shropshire' method of
producing wrought iron, (fn. 97) took over the premises with additional land on the south side of the
brook near the Severn, in Astley Abbots parish,
where they built a forge and ironworks called
Wrens Nest forge. (fn. 98) In 1808 the sites along the
lower Linley brook were collectively called
Wrens Nest forges. (fn. 99) Two large ponds on the
brook were associated with them, the upper in
Linley parish, the lower mainly in Astley Abbots
at the hamlet of Wrens Nest (fn. 1) (later Apley Forge).
Pig iron doubtless came from Wright & Jesson's
furnaces at Barnett's Leasow in Broseley, but
other suppliers were Bishton & Onions's Snedshill furnaces (1799) and the Coalbrookdale
Co.'s Horsehay furnaces (1801-3). (fn. 2) The forges
perhaps fell victim to the depression in the iron
trade after 1815. (fn. 3) A pair of cottages called Upper
Forge remained in 1979 near Colliersworks coppice. (fn. 4)
In the earlier 1850s Edward Owen of Linley
Villa was proprietor of Owen's pills and drops. (fn. 5)
LOCAL GOVERNMENT.
Linley had a highway surveyor by 1722, and the parish was a
highway authority until 1889 when that responsibility passed to the borough of Wenlock's
Barrow district committee as urban sanitary
authority. (fn. 6)
In the period 1812-15 there was no-one on
permanent poor relief, (fn. 7) but expenditure on the
poor rose from £93 in 1817 to £177 in 1818
before settling at its earlier level in the 1820s and
1830s. (fn. 8) The parish was in Madeley poor-law
union 1836-1930 (fn. 9) and Madeley rural sanitary
district from 1872 until 1889 when it was included in the Barrow ward of Wenlock
borough. (fn. 10) On the borough's dissolution in 1966
Linley, as part of Barrow civil parish, was
transferred to Bridgnorth rural district, (fn. 11) and it
was in Bridgnorth district from 1974. (fn. 12)
Linley was within the jurisdiction of the
Broseley court of requests from 1782 (fn. 13) until the
court's abolition under the County Courts Act,
1846. (fn. 14)
CHURCH.
Architectural evidence suggests that
Linley chapel was built in the later 12th century;
it provided sanctuary in 1203.
In the Middle Ages the chapel was in Holy
Trinity parish, Much Wenlock, (fn. 15) but by 1528 it
was considered a parish church and then became
united to Broseley rectory, although Broseley
itself was not entirely independent of Holy
Trinity until 1595. (fn. 16) In the 1920s, by arrangement with the rector of Broseley with Linley,
the rector of Willey with Barrow took charge of
the parish. (fn. 17) In 1930 the living of Linley was
separated from that of Broseley and united to
Astley Abbots rectory, the patrons of Astley
Abbots becoming patrons of the united living. (fn. 18)
From 1961 until that union was dissolved in
1976 Linley was served by priests in charge: the
rector of Willey with Barrow 1961-72, the rector
of Broseley 1972-6. (fn. 19) Linley remained an ecclesiastical parish until 1976 when the parish and
benefice of Linley with Willey and Barrow were
created (fn. 20) with Lord Forester as patron. (fn. 21)
Linley's tithes were appropriated to Wenlock
priory, 2 marks a year being assigned from them
to the priory kitchen. In 1274 the kitchen's
portion and the demesne tithes were reserved
when the priory granted the rest of the tithes to
the vicar of Holy Trinity, Much Wenlock. (fn. 22) The
chaplain of Linley mentioned in 1416, (fn. 23) and
probably in 1343, (fn. 24) may have been endowed with
the demesne tithes, (fn. 25) though by 1528 the living
was too small to support a parish priest. (fn. 26)
By 1577 the Crown had seized Linley chapel,
the chapel yard, and the tithes as concealed
property, and in 1577 granted them on successive days to John Farnham and to Peter Grey
and his son Edward. (fn. 27) They were probably
recovered by Rowland Lacon (d. 1608), (fn. 28) lord of
Linley and patron of Broseley. (fn. 29) In 1846 the
rector of Broseley with Linley, who received
moduses of £2 each for the tithes of the WeldForester and Stephens estates in Linley, had 1
a. of glebe there. (fn. 30) The glebe had gone by 1910. (fn. 31)
A monthly service was held by the rector in
the 1730s, the rector of Willey was curate in
1797, and the curate of Broseley took the
monthly service in the earlier 19th century. (fn. 32)
About 1818 the church was said to be regularly
repaired by two inhabitants 'of considerable
property'. (fn. 33) In 1851 it drew an average congregation of 40. (fn. 34) A stipendiary curate was
sometimes appointed to serve Linley in the later
19th century. (fn. 35) After the church was restored in
1858 there was a weekly service. That was due
to the efforts of W. Layton Lowndes, the new,
Anglo-Catholic, tenant of the Hall: he taught,
trained, and led the singers, accompanying them
at services on his concertina in place of 'the usual
instrument'. Ascension Day, restored as a
church festival, was also celebrated as a village
holiday. (fn. 36) By 1883 the eucharist was evidently
celebrated with a degree of Anglo-Catholic ceremonial. (fn. 37)
The small church, dedicated to ST. NICHOLAS in the 18th and early 19th century but to
ST. LEONARD by 1856, (fn. 38) comprises chancel,
nave, and west tower and is of local sandstone. (fn. 39)
Chancel and nave are probably later 12th-century. The blocked north doorway has a
tympanum displaying a green man. The south
doorway, which may originally have been almost
opposite that on the north, has a tympanum with
zigzag decoration. The tower, externally as wide
as the nave, was added late in the 12th century.
It has pilaster buttresses, and the two-light
windows in the upper stage are set in recessed
fields on the north, south, and west faces. The
south doorway may have been moved to the west
end of the nave when the tower was built. In the
14th or 15th century new windows were put in
the nave.
In the 1830s the church was poorly lit and
seemed like a 'dungeon'. (fn. 40) It was restored in
1858, through Layton Lowndes's exertions and
generosity, to designs of A. W. Blomfield. The
nave windows were presumably restored then,
those on the south being enlarged, and new
lancets were put into the west end of the chancel
whose east wall was rebuilt and provided with
three round-headed lancets. The south door was
blocked. The tower was restored and one of the
two bells recast, while internally new ceilings
were inserted, benches replaced the old pews
(whose wood was used to panel the chancel), and
the elaborate 12th-century font was moved from
the east end of the nave to the tower. (fn. 41) In 1862
Layton Lowndes gave a new set of silver-gilt
plate, receiving in exchange the old plate marked
'BL to Lindly Church'. The rector paid for glass
by William Warrington for the east window. (fn. 42)
An oak pulpit was brought from Monkhopton
church in 1948. (fn. 43) The blocked north doorway of
the nave contains a memorial slab to Francis
Anderton (d. 1779) and George Johnson (d.
1803), monks of Douai who died at Linley while
on the English mission. (fn. 44) The hatchment of
Richard Lacon (d. 1803) hangs in the nave.
In the 1850s the church stood in a field near
a 'venerable' yew, with no burial ground. (fn. 45) The
iron fencing around the churchyard was put
there in 1858. (fn. 46)
Baptisms and marriages at Linley were entered in the Broseley register, as were burials of
Linley people. (fn. 47) Separate registers of baptisms
and marriages at Linley were begun in 1859 and
1860, (fn. 48) though marriages and burials were said
c. 1903 to take place at Broseley. (fn. 49)
NONCONFORMITY.
Eleanor Ridley was a
recusant in 1604. (fn. 50) Richard Lacon was one of
two men in Linley who refused to take the
Protestation in 1642, (fn. 51) and the Lacons were
papists in the 1660s and 1680s. About 1685
Edward Lacon, priest, uncle of the lord of the
manor who died in 1725, left money to endow a
priest to assist at Linley and thereabouts; later
there were other endowments, much disputed in
the mid 18th century. The Lacons were a notable
recusant family in 18th-century Shropshire, and
from the attic chapel in Linley Hall a resident
priest (sometimes a Douai monk on the English
mission) served an area that extended as far as
Beobridge (in Claverley). (fn. 52) In 1767 about half of
the parish's Roman Catholics lived in the Hall. (fn. 53)
Wesleyans met at Linley in 1841. (fn. 54)
EDUCATION.
By 1820 Linley children attended Barrow school. (fn. 55) Mrs. Jane Lowndes, of
Linley Hall 1857-83, (fn. 56) kept a school for Linley
children. (fn. 57) By the 1890s they attended Barrow
or Broseley schools (fn. 58) and Miss C. Brown was
then keeping a private preparatory school at
Linley. (fn. 59)
CHARITIES FOR THE POOR.
None known.