OUTLYING TOWNSHIPS
BRADNOP
Bradnop was formerly a township in Leek
parish and later a civil parish 3,568 a. (1,444 ha.)
in area. (fn. 81) It is pasture and shares with Onecote
the south end of Morridge, formerly an area
of extensive waste. There is a small village
immediately north of the Leek-Ashbourne
road, which runs diagonally across the township.
Cartledge brook forms the northern boundary
with Tittesworth, Kniveden brook the western
boundary with Leek and Lowe, and Coombes
brook part of the southern boundary with Ipstones.
On the south-east the rest of the boundary with
Ipstones follows the line of a medieval road
called the Earl's Way. (fn. 82) The irregular eastern
boundary with Onecote probably reflects a division of pasture rights on Morridge. The
township included three detached portions,
which were added in 1934 to the adjoining civil
parishes: 53 a. including part of Thorncliffe
village to Tittesworth, 385 a. centred on
Hurdlow Farm to Heathylee, and 205 a. known
as Cawdry to Butterton. At the same time 57 a.
of Bradnop, mostly the wedge of land east of the
Onecote-Ipstones road, were added to Onecote
civil parish, and 417 a. of Onecote west of the
road running along the top of Morridge were
added to Bradnop from Onecote. As a result
Bradnop civil parish was reduced to its present
3,285 a. (1,329.4 ha.). (fn. 83) This article deals only
with the main part of the former township. The
detached portions at Thorncliffe and Hurdlow
are treated in the articles on Tittesworth and
Heathylee respectively, and that at Cawdry is
reserved for treatment under Butterton in a later
volume of this History.
The land beside Kniveden brook lies at 577 ft.
(176 m.) near Ashenhurst Mill Farm and at 702
ft. (214 m.) near Pool Hall Farm. Bradnop
village lies at 838 ft. (255 m.), and to the
north-east the land rises to 1,331 ft. (407 m.) on
Morridge. The underlying rock is sandstone of
the Millstone Grit series. It is overlain by Boulder
Clay, and the soil is mostly fine loam, with
poorer quality soil on Morridge. (fn. 84)
Twelve people in Bradnop were assessed for
tax in 1327 and 10 in 1333, the figures possibly
including Onecote township which lay in Bradnop manor. (fn. 85) Eighty-two people in the manor
were assessed for hearth tax in 1666 and a further
23 were too poor to pay. (fn. 86) The population of
Bradnop township in 1811 was 420, rising to 489
by 1821. It was 467 in 1831, 447 in 1851, 445 in
1871, and 450 in 1891. By 1901 it had fallen to
405. It was 432 in 1911, 423 in 1921, and 384 in
1931. The population of the reduced civil parish
was 315 in 1951, 283 in 1961, 275 in 197, 294 in
1981, and 305 in 1991. (fn. 87)
The name Bradnop, recorded in 1197, is derived from Old English words describing the
broad (bradan) enclosed valley (hop) which opens
to Cheddleton in the south-west. (fn. 88) Settlements
existed in that part of the township by the later
13th century at Ashenhurst, Apesford, and
Revedge, (fn. 89) and apparently at Middle Cliffe and
Wildgoose Farm. (fn. 90) There was a house at Longshaw
by 1343. (fn. 91) Cliffe Farm has a doorhead dated 1679
with the initials of members of the Fernihough
family, (fn. 92) and Revedge Farm has a date stone of 1691
with the initials possibly of Francis Hollinshead of
Ashenhurst. (fn. 93) Longshaw Farm on the south side of
the Leek-Ashbourne road is also of the 17th century.
Lower Lady Meadows Farm on the south-eastern
boundary is of the late 18th century.

BRADNOP 1992
Bradnop village stands in the centre of the
Bradnop valley, north of the present Leek-
Ashbourne road but on the line of the medieval
Earl's Way. (fn. 94) The oldest house in the village is
Sytch Farm, which incorporates at its east end
a cruck truss that was part of a medieval hall.
Buckley Farm is probably of the 17th century,
and School Cottages, a pair of houses east of
Sytch Farm, is dated 1750. Golden Farm was
built in the earlier 19th century. Brook Farm
east of the village existed as Bent Head in 1690, (fn. 95)
and the present house is probably of that date.
South-west of the village is a cluster of houses
called Stunsteads, a name recorded in the earlier
14th century as Tunstedes and meaning a farmhouse. (fn. 96) By 1834 there was an inn called the Hare
and Hounds on the Ashbourne road; it still
existed in 1868. (fn. 97) By 1850 there was another
roadside inn, the Blacksmiths Arms; it was
closed after a fire c. 1940. (fn. 98)
What was called 'the other Bradnop' in the mid
13th century and Upper Bradnop in the 1260s
was evidently a settlement at the north end of
the Bradnop valley. (fn. 99) Field House, recorded in
that area in 1342, may have been an earlier name
for Hare House, whose south front retains a
17th-century doorhead. (fn. 1) By 1343 Hulton abbey
had a grange at Upper Bradnop, and in 1345 it
gave a tenant permission to build on land in the
area called Colts moor. (fn. 2) In the earlier 16th
century a house called the Grange was held by
the Cokelee family of Coltsmoor, (fn. 3) and in 1666
what was called Coltsmoor House was assessed
for tax on four hearths. (fn. 4) The Grange and
Coltsmoor House probably stood near each
other, but their sites are unknown; the present
Coltsmoor Farm near the northern boundary
was built after the waste there was inclosed in
the later 18th century. Stile House Farm east of
Hare House is of the 18th century and has an
extension dated 1859.
There was a cottage called Pool Hall on the
Ashbourne road north-west of Bradnop village
by 1663. (fn. 5) It was rebuilt in Gothick style in the
earlier 19th century for William Critchlow, the
owner in 1839. (fn. 6) Lane End Farm further east
along the Ashbourne road, mentioned in 1675,
was an inn called the Red Lion in 1818; a coach
house on the opposite side of the road is dated
1821 and has the initials of the innkeeper, John
Cook. (fn. 7) It was still an inn in 1851 but no longer
by 1860. (fn. 8) Houses at Morridge Side east of Lane
End Farm and other houses to the south-west
probably stand on the sites of cottages built on
the waste in the 17th century and later. (fn. 9) One of
the largest is Gooseneck Farm, which is partly
of the 18th century.
The medieval Earl's Way, which formed part
of the route between Leek and Ashbourne,
entered Bradnop on the west near Pool Hall
Farm. It continued east through Bradnop village
and then turned south-east, leaving the township
along the line of the boundary east of Lower
Lady Meadows. (fn. 10) The road had evidently been
replaced by the present line of the LeekAshbourne road by the 17th century, when the
site of Lane End Farm was occupied. The
Leek-Ashbourne road was turnpiked in 1762.
There was at first a tollhouse over the Leek
boundary at Lowe Hill; an improvement in the
line of the road in 1828 included its replacement
by a new tollhouse east of Pool Hall Farm, in
Bradnop. Three cast-iron mileposts along the
road form part of a series made in 1834. The
road was disturnpiked in 1876. The Pool Hall
tollhouse was demolished in the 1970s. (fn. 11)
A railway from Leekbrook, in Leek and Lowe,
to Waterhouses was opened in 1905 with a
station near Bradnop village. The station was
closed in 1935 and later demolished, but the line
remained open for the transport of limestone
from quarries at Caldon Low until 1989. (fn. 12)
A spring called Egg well south-east of Ashenhurst Hall was believed to have curative powers.
It was provided with an oval, or egg-shaped,
stone surround bearing a Latin inscription
praising the water's powers and the monogrammed initials of William Stanley, the owner
of Ashenhurst between 1744 and 1752. In the
19th century the well was protected by a square
wall, later roofed over. (fn. 13) The structure remained
standing in 1992.
Bradnop village had a mains electricity supply
by 1940 and was connected to a mains water
supply in 1967. (fn. 14)
Part of the Coombes brook valley south of
Apesford is included in a nature reserve, most
of which lies in Ipstones. The reserve originated
in 1961 with the scheduling of 26 a. owned by
George Lovenbury at Clough Meadows, on the
Ipstones side of the brook; a further 200 a., some
of it in Bradnop, was bought by the Royal
Society for the Protection of Birds in 1962. The
reserve was open to the public and Mr. Lovenbury and his wife acted as honorary wardens. A
salaried warden was appointed in 1969, and since
1970 he has lived at Sixoaks (formerly Ballfields)
Farm, in Bradnop, where there is an information
centre. (fn. 15)
A Women's Institute was formed in 1970. (fn. 16) In
1992 the former school in Bradnop village was
used as a village hall.
MANOR AND OTHER ESTATES.
In 1168-9
the Crown confirmed a grant to John Lestrange
of Ness (Salop.) of unnamed pasture in Staffordshire, (fn. 17) probably at BRADNOP and held by
grant of one of the earls of Chester. The earl
seems to have objected when in 1197 John
Lestrange's son, also John, gave land at Bradnop
and at Mixon, in Onecote, to his cousin Margery
(or Margaret) Lestrange and her husband
Thomas Noel, (fn. 18) and in 1199 the earl was accused
of trying to eject Lestrange and Noel. (fn. 19) There
was no mention of overlordship when in 1218
Margery and her second husband, Thomas of
Whitchurch, granted what were styled the manors
of Bradnop and Mixon to Henry de Audley. (fn. 20) In
1223 Henry de Audley gave Bradnop and Mixon
to his newly founded abbey of Hulton. (fn. 21) He
renewed the grant after the death of Ranulph,
earl of Chester, in 1232, requiring the monks to
celebrate a daily mass for the earl and himself. (fn. 22)
It was presumably because Ranulph was
Henry's personal lord that the overlordship of
the manors passed to the earl: in 1252 the Crown
claimed the overlordship on the grounds that it
had once belonged to Ranulph. The service then
owed to the Crown by Hulton abbey comprised
a rent of 5s. 2d. and four loads of hay to be
delivered to the royal manor of Penkhull, in
Stoke-upon-Trent. The service, however, was
being withheld. (fn. 23) In 1275 it was stated that the
abbey formerly held Mixon, presumably with
Bradnop, of the Crown in fee farm for a rent of
5s., one cartload of hay, and an iron fork. (fn. 24)
Penkhull manor had by then been absorbed into
the royal manor of Newcastle-under-Lyme, (fn. 25)
and the overlordship passed to the earls (later
dukes) of Lancaster as lords of Newcastle; they
were still the overlords in 1469. (fn. 26)
Hulton abbey was dissolved in 1538, and in
1546 the Crown granted Bradnop manor to
Edward Agarde, a London speculator. In 1547
he was licensed to transfer it to Sir Edward
Aston of Tixall, (fn. 27) in whose family (from 1628
Barons Aston) the manor descended, passing on
the death in 1751 of James, Lord Aston, to his
daughters Mary and Barbara jointly. Barbara
married Henry Thomas Clifford, and Mary
married Sir Walter Blount, Bt. (fn. 28) In 1770 an Act
was secured to allow the division of their property, (fn. 29) and later the same year both parts of the
manor were sold to John Sneyd of Bishton, in
Colwich. (fn. 30) Sneyd was succeeded in 1809 by his
son William (d. 1851). William's son, the Revd.
John Sneyd, of Ashcombe Hall, in Cheddleton,
still held the manor in 1868, but manorial rights
were probably extinguished when a sale after his
death in 1873 broke up the estate into its constituent farms. (fn. 31)
An estate at ASHENHURST was held by
Henry of Ashenhurst in 1275. (fn. 32) Ranulph of
Ashenhurst probably held it in 1318-19, and by
1327 it had probably passed to William of
Ashenhurst. (fn. 33) The later descent is uncertain
until the mid 16th century. John Ashenhurst,
the owner in 1552, had been succeeded by his
son, another John, by 1560, and the younger
John was succeeded by his son Ralph in 1597. (fn. 34)
Ralph died c. 1629, having settled Ashenhurst
on his son Randle in 1616. Randle was still alive
in 1662, when he was living at Glossop (Derb.). (fn. 35)
He was succeeded by his son John, who sold the
estate in 1667 to his cousin, Francis Hollinshead
(or Hollingshed) of Gawsworth (Ches.). (fn. 36) Hollinshead's son, also Francis, held the estate in
1675 (fn. 37) and was succeeded in 1717 or 1718 by his
son Thomas, who died childless in 1744 with his
nephew William Stanley as his heir. (fn. 38) William
was succeeded in 1752 by his son Thomas,
Thomas in 1765 by his brother Lawrence, and
Lawrence in 1772 by his sister Frances, wife of
the Revd. George Salt. George died in 1797 and
Frances in 1808. She left Ashenhurst to her
god-daughter, Margaret Leigh, who in 1824 sold
it to Richard Badnall, son of Richard Badnall of
Highfield Hall, in Leekfrith. (fn. 39)
Richard Badnall was declared bankrupt in
1826, and in 1828 the 143-a. Ashenhurst estate
was bought by Samuel and William Phillips,
brothers and Leek silk manufacturers. (fn. 40) Samuel
died in 1851 and William in 1871. William's heir
was his nephew Capt. (later Maj.-Gen.) Thomas
Phillips. (fn. 41) Thomas died in 1913 and his widow
Jessey in 1940, when a life interest passed to
their daughter, Elsie Boynton. Elsie died probably in the early 1950s. (fn. 42) Her son Thomas had
Ashenhurst Hall demolished in 1954, and its site
and 72 a. were sold to the present owner, Mr.
Isaac Hudson. (fn. 43)
In 1666 John Ashenhurst was assessed for tax
on four hearths. (fn. 44) His house may have been
rebuilt or remodelled by his successor. (fn. 45) A new
house designed by Joseph Sanderson was built
for William Stanley in or soon after 1745. (fn. 46)
Facing east and approached from the north, (fn. 47) the
house had an irregular plan which was partly
concealed by symmetrical elevations on the
north and east, giving it the appearance of a
double-pile house. The earlier house may have
survived behind the new elevations, for there
was no direct relationship between the elevations
and the arrangement or uses of the rooms behind
them. The principal elevation was of seven bays
with Corinthian pilasters at either end; the three
central bays projected and were surmounted by
a pediment. A central doorway on that elevation
had been abandoned in favour of an entrance
beneath a porch on the north elevation by the
early 19th century. By then there were plantations around the house and a landscaped park to
the north and east. (fn. 48) The north side of the house
was remodelled in 1910 to the design of R.
Scrivener & Sons of Hanley. (fn. 49)
Ashenhurst Hall Farm was built in 1981 on a
site north of the former hall with stones from
the dairy and one of the stable blocks. In 1992
the remaining stable block, which was originally
a barn and retained its 17th-century roof, was
being converted into a house.

The Ashenhurst Brass in St. Edward's Church, Leek
ECONOMIC HISTORY.
Agriculture.
Pasture on Morridge was included in Henry de
Audley's endowment of Hulton abbey in 1223. (fn. 50)
Its use was disputed by Dieulacres abbey, which
had been established a few years earlier in
Leekfrith and possibly resented Hulton's intrusion into the area. By an agreement made in the
early 1230s Dieulacres was given pasture rights
in the Birchall area, on the west side of Kniveden
brook in Leek and Lowe, while Hulton was
given pasture rights in the Bradnop valley, as
long as it paid tithe to Dieulacres, as rector of
Leek. For any land under cultivation on Morridge, Hulton was liable to pay great tithe to
Dieulacres, along with a goodwill offering of 5s.
at Easter. (fn. 51) By a further agreement, made in 1237
and relating chiefly to Hulton's grange at Mixon,
in Onecote, Dieulacres was allowed pasture
rights on Morridge for pigs 'without number'
and in the summer for 200 dry cattle. (fn. 52)
By 1343 Hulton abbey had a grange in the
north part of the township. It let it that year to
William Gonne, along with pasture rights on
Morridge for all animals except goats. (fn. 53)
A wood called Witherwood, which was included
in Hulton's endowment of 1223, lay on the slope
of Morridge south-east of Bradnop village: land
called Weather Woods was recorded in 1827
near Lane End Farm. (fn. 54)
In the 1550s Sir Edward Aston, lord of Bradnop, tried to extinguish the rights of common
claimed on Morridge by men from Grindon and
Waterfall. (fn. 55) About 1634 Walter, Lord Aston (d.
1639), planned to inclose Morridge, then stated
to cover 2,000 a., (fn. 56) and in 1638 the Crown
apparently gave permission. (fn. 57) The freeholders of
Bradnop objected to such large-scale inclosure,
although they agreed that the waste needed to
be protected from outsiders. In 1653 they proposed that Walter, Lord Aston (d. 1678), should
inclose 200 a. only and let it to them at 2s. 6d.
an acre. (fn. 58) The rights of poor cottagers already
settled on Morridge were protected in 1655 by
the county justices, who ordered that each cottage was to have 4 a. of common allotted to it. (fn. 59)
About 240 a. seems to have been inclosed,
mainly at the south end of Morridge. (fn. 60) The
Astons, however, remained intent on large-scale
inclosure. In the early 18th century Thomas
Hollinshead of Ashenhurst claimed that Lord
Aston in 1660 had made an agreement with the
freeholders not to inclose further and not to
grant any right of pasture to people who had no
land in the manor. Despite the alleged agreement Aston and his son Walter, Lord Aston (d.
1714), had in fact inclosed a further 600 a. and
had settled cottagers on the land. (fn. 61) A draft
agreement of 1688, evidently drawn up by the
freeholders but not ratified, acknowledged Lord
Aston's right to inclose up to 2,000 a., half of
which was to be assigned to the freeholders. (fn. 62)
Despite the Astons' efforts much of Morridge
remained open, and full-scale inclosure did not
take place until 1769 when 3,139 a. in Bradnop
and Onecote were inclosed under an Act of
1766. (fn. 63)
To counter the problem of trespassers, or 'out
men', using Morridge as pasture, the freeholders
in 1653 proposed that a moor keeper be appointed; any fines that he collected were to be
shared equally among Lord Aston, the poor of
Bradnop manor, and the keeper himself. (fn. 64) In
1683 the freeholders further proposed that they
should be allowed to prosecute trespassers in the
Aston's name, although at their own expense. (fn. 65)
A more complex means of policing was drawn
up in 1691, whereby householders in both Bradnop and Onecote were divided into six groups
of 20 (three for Bradnop and three for Onecote),
each group providing by rota a hayward to deal
with the trespassers; the haywards had the duty
of inspecting the common at least once a month
between 21 April and Michaelmas. (fn. 66)
In pursuing the policy of inclosure Lord Aston
(d. 1714) was associated with others, including
Humphrey Perry and William Greene, both of
Stafford, George Gatacre of Cannock, and
Joshua Potts of Park House Farm, in Leekfrith. (fn. 67)
It is possible that those men arranged for cattle
from other parts of the county to be pastured on
Morridge and then sold them to butchers.
Of the 1,160 ha. of farmland returned for the
civil parish in 1988, grassland covered 1,054 ha.
and there were 85.5 ha. of rough grazing. The
farming was chiefly dairy and sheep, with 2,441
head of cattle and 2,422 sheep and lambs. There
were also 2,162 pigs and 1,847 hens. Of the 50
farms returned, 31 were under 20 ha. in size, 14
were between 20 and 49 ha., and 5 were between
50 and 99 ha. Woodland covered 10.2 ha. (fn. 68)
Mills.
About 1600 a mill at Ashenhurst was
run by John Brindley of Wildgoose Farm. (fn. 69) Run
by James Brindley in 1834, Ashenhurst mill
apparently stopped working in the mid 1880s. (fn. 70)
Gorstead mill on Coombes brook east of Apesford was described in 1815 as lately built. It
apparently stopped working in the late 1890s. (fn. 71)
Industry.
Land called the Smelting Mill beside Kniveden brook in the south-west part of
the township in 1687 (fn. 72) suggests iron smelting at
some date.
In 1825 Richard Badnall licensed a partnership
of stone merchants to dig for stone on his estate
at Ashenhurst. The quarry, whose site is unknown, produced stone suitable for the
manufacture of cement. Work probably stopped
with the sale of Ashenhurst in 1828. (fn. 73)
LOCAL GOVERNMENT.
In the earlier 1370s
the duchy of Lancaster, as overlord, held a great
court for Bradnop manor attended by two frankpledges, one presumably representing Bradnop
tithing and the other Onecote tithing. (fn. 74) The
duchy still held a great court for Bradnop in
1469. (fn. 75)
The abbot of Hulton held a small court for his
tenants at Bradnop in 1317, and a twice-yearly
court in 1342. (fn. 76) The abbot still held a court at
the Dissolution. (fn. 77)
A view of frankpledge for Bradnop manor was
held by Walter, Lord Aston, as lord of the manor
by the late 17th century. (fn. 78) In 1744 the customary
meeting place was in Onecote. (fn. 79) The court was
last recorded in 1868 when the lord, the Revd.
John Sneyd, advertised a view with court leet
and court baron for Bradnop to be held at the
Blacksmiths Arms in Bradnop in November. (fn. 80)
Bradnop manor formed a constablewick by
1377 and still in the later 17th century. (fn. 81)
The township was part of the Bradnop quarter
of Leek parish, and in the 1660s its poor were
relieved by the quarter's overseer. (fn. 82) The township had its own overseer by 1743. (fn. 83) It became
part of Leek poor-law union in 1837. (fn. 84)
CHURCH.
People from Bradnop attended the
church built in Onecote in the earlier 1750s, and
the township was included in a parish created
for Bradnop and Onecote in 1862. Services were
also held in the school opened in Bradnop village
in 1862. (fn. 85) The school was closed in 1978, but
the building was still used for services until they
were transferred in 1990 to the Methodist
church in Bradnop village, where they were held
fortnightly in 1992. (fn. 86)
NONCONFORMITY.
Two Quakers from
Bradnop, John Bloor and Ann Bottom, were
married at a meeting of Friends at Whitehough,
in Ipstones, in 1701. (fn. 87)
A Methodist society of eight members met at
Stile House Farm in 1784. It still met there in
1790 but may later have used a house in Bradnop
village which was registered for protestant worship in 1802. (fn. 88) Apparently later disbanded, the
society had been revived by 1813, and in 1829
there was a weekly Sunday service in Bradnop. (fn. 89)
A chapel was built in the village in 1840, and on
Census Sunday 1851 the attendance was 32 in
the afternoon and 40 in the evening, besides
Sunday school children. Enlarged in 1890, the
chapel was still open in 1992. (fn. 90)
Primitive Methodists apparently met in a barn at
Cliffe Farm from the later 1830s. In 1890 they
opened a chapel on the Ashbourne road. It was
closed in 1970, and the building was derelict in
1992. (fn. 91)
EDUCATION.
A schoolmaster was recorded at
Bradnop in 1681. (fn. 92) The pair of houses in Bradnop village called School Cottages is probably
identifiable as the School House, so called in
1783. (fn. 93) In 1876 it was claimed that a school had
been maintained in the township since the
1790s. (fn. 94) A school which in the earlier 1830s had
30 boys was by then endowed with a house and
garden worth £5 a year. Also in the earlier 1830s
there was a girls' school with 20 pupils and a
Church of England Sunday school at which 23
children were taught free. (fn. 95) The Sunday school
was possibly replaced by a school which was set
up as a branch of Leek Sunday school in 1835
with an attendance of 43 children. That school
still existed in 1861. (fn. 96)
A school-church was built in the village in
1862. (fn. 97) The site was given by the Revd. John
Sneyd, the lord of the manor; the building and
its furnishings were paid for by local subscribers,
and free carriage of materials was provided by
Bradnop farmers. (fn. 98) The school was run by a
committee of local people as a public elementary
school and was considered to be the successor to
the earlier parish school. From 1876 the school
received a government grant, and a board of
managers was set up in 1904. (fn. 99) The decision in
1930 that what was then an all-age school with
30 children on its books should become a junior
school took effect in 1937, the senior children
being transferred to Leek. (fn. 1) Bradnop school took
controlled status in 1959. (fn. 2) It was closed in 1978,
and the children were transferred to Leek. (fn. 3) In 1992
the school building was used as a village hall.
CHARITY FOR THE POOR.
By will of 1693
John (or Thomas) Stanley left the interest on
£84 to be distributed after the death of his wife
among the poor of Bradnop on 24 December
each year. The beneficiaries were probably residents in the Bradnop quarter of Leek parish. In
1743 the capital was invested in 5 a. at Sheen,
and it was agreed that the poor of both Bradnop
and Onecote townships should benefit equally.
The rent received from the land was £3 10s. in
the later 1780s and had increased to £10 by the
earlier 1820s. (fn. 4) By a Scheme of 1928 the charity
was amalgamated with that of Joan Adsetts for
Onecote, and the income in 1976 was £22. (fn. 5)