ST. EDMUND'S PARISH.
This parish, which
was in area the largest of the medieval parishes, took
in most of the northern half of the city. Its boundary
on the east and north was the city rampart, running
from Milford Street northward to the present
Council House grounds and then westward, north
of St. Edmund's Church. In the north-west the
parish extended to include a number of houses built
outside Castle Street Gate. The boundary then ran
down the Avon to a point level with Scots Lane,
thence along the middle of Castle Street, diagonally
across the Market Place to take in the present
Guildhall, and eastward along Milford Street to the
rampart again. (fn. 1)
The rectangular pattern of streets seen in St.
Martin's parish is continued here by four lines
running from north to south and three lines from
east to west. Of the former, Greencroft Street, so
named by 1533, (fn. 2) took its name from the open
ground which bounds its northern part on the east
(see below). In the 15th century it was called
Melemonger Street. (fn. 3) Guilder Lane was known as
Gelderland in the 16th and 17th centuries; (fn. 4) the
street includes a group of 16th-century timberframed cottages with overhanging first floors (nos.
2–14), and a brick warehouse or workshop of the
18th century. St. Edmund's Church Street was no
doubt in use from the time of the building of the
church in or before 1264, (fn. 5) but the name has not
been noted before the 15th century. (fn. 6) It contains,
among smaller houses, two large 18th-century ones;
no. 41 is a brick house of seven bays, now used as
offices, and no. 24 is also brick, of five bays with a
projecting window above the porch. Pennyfarthing
Street, so-called by 1633, may have been once part
of Gigant Street. (fn. 7) Behind some buildings at the
corner of Pennyfarthing Street and Milford Street
stood the hall used by the Tailors' Company from
1533 to 1880. (fn. 8) Rollestone Street is said to have
derived its name from Rolf, who built a group of
houses in this area. (fn. 9) In the early 15th century it
was called Rollestone by Melemonger Street. (fn. 10) In a
similar way another group of houses nearby,
probably built or owned by the Nug or le Nugghe
family, had become known as Nuggeston by 1350,
although it did not give its name permanently to any
street. (fn. 11) The corporation brewhouse, established in
1623 as a measure of poor relief, stood in Rollestone
Street opposite the side of the 'Old George'. (fn. 12) Nos.
12–14 are large 18th-century houses of brick now
used as offices; adjoining them is the employment
exchange built in 1937. Endless Street, which
formed the northern part of the early High Street
(see above) originally extended as far south as
Milford Street, thus taking in the section skirting
the Market Place, now called Queen Street. (fn. 13) The
name, which was used in the 14th century, (fn. 14) was
perhaps given to the street in contrast to those
further east whose northern ends extended no
further than Bedwin Street. The weavers' company formerly had their hall in Endless Street
until 1784, when they moved to a new hall in
Rollestone Street. (fn. 15) From 1810 to 1878 the old
building was used as a bank by Everett, Seward and
Co. and their successors. (fn. 16) In 1883 it was demolished and a police station built which remained in
use until 1930, (fn. 17) when the present fire station was
built on the site. The police station was then moved
to a large 18th-century house on the west side of the
street, where it remained until 1956. The south end
of Endless Street is mainly occupied by shops and
commercial premises, including the Regal Cinema
and former County Hall, subsequently the Palace
Theatre, which was built in 1889 and was in 1960 a
garage. On the east side is the 'bus station, made in
the thirties. The part of Endless Street above
Bedwin Street contains a number of 18th-century
houses, including nos. 52–54, a pair of brick houses
each of five bays, three-storied with dormers above.
Nos. 60–74 are smaller 18th-and early 19th-century
houses. At the north end of the street Belle Vue is
a plain house of the early 19th century.
Of the roads crossing the parish from east to west
Winchester Street, called Wyneman Street (fn. 18) until
the 16th century, was an important thoroughfare
leading from Winchester Gate directly to the
Market Place. The name Winchester Street, formerly used for the modern Milford Street, probably
replaced the name Wyneman Street because of a
change in the route to Winchester. (fn. 19) It is clear that
it is the present Winchester Street which was once
called Wyneman Street, for the building formerly
the Three Cups Inn in the modern Winchester
Street was said in 1484–5 to lie in Wyneman Street,
and in 1565 in Winchester Street alias Wyneman
Street. (fn. 20) The gate at its eastern end was called
Winchester Gate or Wyneman Gate in the mid-15th
century. (fn. 21) The first city workhouse was established
in this street in 1564. (fn. 22) At the north-east end stand
the almshouses established by Margaret Blechynden
in 1682. The site may have been chosen because
Margaret was a kinswoman of the Eyre family, one
of whom, Christopher, had left money in 1617 for
the foundation of the Eyre Almshouses nearby. (fn. 23)
Most of the western part of Winchester Street
consists of 18th- and 19th-century buildings converted into shops, but to the east it remains
residential. The former Three Cups Inn, now no. 47
Winchester Street, belonged to the city from 1431
to 1877. A renewal of the lease in 1671 included a
covenant to rebuild, and the present large brick
house dates from that time. In 1773 the building
was converted into a private house, and it was
probably then that it was refronted with mathematical tiling. (fn. 24)
Salt Lane is first mentioned in 1587; (fn. 25) in the 15th
century it was considered part of Chipper Lane. (fn. 26)
The name Salt Lane is now applied to the whole
length between Endless Street and Greencroft
Street, but the two western sections were sometimes
called Cow Lane and Hog Lane. (fn. 27) The Pheasant
Inn, a timber-framed building with overhanging
upper story dating in part from the 15th century,
stands at the corner of Rollestone Street and Salt
Lane. It was formerly called the Crispin Inn (fn. 28) after
the patron saint of the shoemakers' company, whose
hall adjoined at the back. (fn. 29)
Chipper Lane, mentioned as 'Chipperystrete' in
1331, (fn. 30) and Scots Lane, so called in 1343, (fn. 31) derive
their names from the Chipper and Scott families,
members of which were living in Market Ward at
least by 1306. (fn. 32) References to these streets indicate
the extent of the building north of the Market Place
during the first century of the city's growth. The
Public Library in Chipper Lane was built in 1905. (fn. 33)
Adjoining it is the Picture Gallery, containing local
water colours by Edwin Young, who presented the
gallery to the city in 1910. (fn. 34) Nos. 26–34 are threestoried brick houses of the 18th century.
Bedwin Street was mentioned in the 15th century
as Bedwin Row on the way from Scots Lane to St.
Edmund's Church, (fn. 35) which stands on its north side.
East of the church is the site of the college of priests
founded in 1269 to serve it. (fn. 36) After the college was
dissolved, its property in Salisbury was sold by the
Crown to William St. Barbe, a layman who had been
the last provost. In 1549 he sold it to John Beckingham, a Salisbury merchant who already held a lease
of the college premises from the former provost.
In 1575 Beckingham's son Henry sold the college
house to Giles Estcourt, whose descendants held it
until 1660. In that year Sir Giles Estcourt sold the
house to Sir Wadham Wyndham of Norrington in
Alvediston. (fn. 37) In 1670 the house still retained its
Elizabethan or Jacobean appearance, but c. 1700 the
long two-storied south front with its two projecting
staircase wings and central two-storied porch was
refaced in red brick with stone dressings. (fn. 38) In the
later 18th century a park of over 40 a. was made on
the north by Henry Penruddock Wyndham (d.
1819). (fn. 39) At the same time the house was extended
on the north side, the interior was remodelled and
the central feature was replaced by a classical porch.
At the west end two stone-mullioned windows
survive from the original building. The property
remained in the Wyndham family until 1871, when
the greater part was sold. Two years later the house
and some land was bought by the Revd. George
Hugh Bourne who used it for some years as a school,
and later as a private house. In 1927, two years after
his death, the corporation purchased the house and
its extensive grounds to commemorate the 700th
anniversary of the foundation of the city, (fn. 40) and it has
since been used as the Council House. In the
grounds are the 15th-century porch removed by
Wyatt from the cathedral in the 18th century, and
the only remaining portion of the city rampart. The
houses in Bedwin Street are mainly of the 18th and
19th centuries, but nos. 36–38 are a pair of cottages
under one half-timbered gable, probably of the 16th
or 17th century. Larger 18th-century houses are
Croft House (no. 60) and no. 33; Taylor's almshouses (1698, rebuilt 1886) and Frowd's almshouses
(1750) are on the south side of the street. (fn. 41)
In the 15th century land called Martin's Croft lay
to the north-east of the city; the name was perhaps
derived from an owner rather than from the fact that
it was in St. Martin's parish. In 1399 a garden
there was described as opposite the graveyard of
St. Edmund, (fn. 42) and in 1455 it included a number of
courtyards, gardens, and racks let to several
tenants. (fn. 43) In that year a croft called Greencroft in
Melemonger Street was mentioned separately. (fn. 44) In
1456 William Carent and others let a croft there
with hedges and ditches in Melemonger Street
opposite St. Edmund's house and churchyard to the
mayor and commonalty for 99 years at 8s. rent. (fn. 45)
The lessors were no doubt feoffees for the Ashley
family, for chamberlains' accounts of later in the
century record a rent for the farm of the Greencroft
paid to Edmund Ashley. (fn. 46) In 1550 Henry Ashley
renewed the lease for a further 21 years, when the
pasture was described as bounded by the town ditch
on the east, Melemonger Street on the west, the
highway leading out of the city to St. Edmund's bars
on the north and other property of the Ashley family
on the south. (fn. 47) It is not known when the city
acquired the freehold of the Greencroft, but it was
probably fairly soon after this date. In 1566 the city
let it, reserving liberty of playing and walking, but
five years later it was decided that it should henceforth be held by the chamberlains and not leased
out. (fn. 48) In spite of this it was let again in 1572 and
again in 1578 and 1595. (fn. 49) In 1619 Richard Pain
leased the croft together with Winchester Gate, the
ditches he already held and certain market rights,
subject to covenants as to the burial of the poor in
time of plague, and the city's right of use for the
execution of criminals. (fn. 50) An obligation to level the
Greencroft within two years was not carried out by
Pain. In 1624 it was decreed that it should be
levelled, and the next year Pain was forbidden to
graze any cattle other than sheep on it. (fn. 51) In 1663
Thomas Hancock, brewer, leased the herbage of the
Greencroft, a house used as the hurdle house, and
the profits of the sheep fair there on condition that
he rebuilt the house, inclosed the ground and put up
three stiles and one pair of bars, allowing public
use for walking and lawful recreation. (fn. 52) Subsequent
leases to members of the Wyndham family, or their
trustees, continued to reserve these amenities, which
included shooting and bowling. (fn. 53) This family also
had the freehold of a triangular piece of ground
between the present London Road and the city
rampart which, together with the lease of the main
part of the Greencroft, was acquired by the Revd.
George Hugh Bourne in 1873 when he bought St.
Edmund's College (see above). Ten years later
Bourne conveyed both freehold and leasehold to the
city. (fn. 54)
In the north-west corner of St. Edmund's parish
many inhabited plots (fn. 55) along Castle Street outside
the bars formed a suburb which from the 13th century
was always included in the liberty of the city (see
above). One property there, known as 'Buntysplace'
or 'Burntesplace', probably took its name from the
family of Robert le Bont, mayor in 1368 and 1370,
who held several cottages in Minster Street beyond
Castle Street bars. (fn. 56) In the following century it was
held by John, Lord Stourton (d. 1462) and his
grandson John, Lord Stourton (d. 1485); it then
comprised a messuage with 12 cottages and 47 a. of
land, meadow, and pasture in New Salisbury, Old
Salisbury, and Stratford. (fn. 57) In 1553 Charles, Lord
Stourton, conveyed the site of the manor of Bountes
Courte alias Bownes Courte 'lying within the city
without the gate … called le Castell Gate' to Giles
Atclough of Salisbury, innholder. With it went four
houses nearby in Castle Street and four in Catherine
Street. (fn. 58) In the following year Atclough conveyed
the property to William Moggeridge, (fn. 59) who held it
in 1585 (fn. 60) and died c. 1588. His grandson Leonard
Moggeridge held the property at his death c. 1619,
but no further reference to the estate has been
found. (fn. 61)