WILSFORD
The ancient parish of Wilsford lies on the west bank
of the River Avon, 2½ miles south of Amesbury.
The township of Normanton, which since 1885 has
formed the northern section of the modern civil
parish, was formerly a detached part of the parish of
Durnford. (fn. 1) The ancient parish extended some 2½
miles from east to west, and 1½ miles from north to
south. Its area in 1878 was 1,637 a. and that of the
civil parish in 1951 was 2,294 a. (fn. 2) The population
in 1801 was 99, and it rose slowly to 205 in 1951.
There was a corresponding increase in the number
of houses, from 23 in 1801 to 49 in 1951. (fn. 3)
The parish is made up of a narrow strip of land
along the Avon, some 200 ft. above sea level, and in
the west, of downland through which runs a valley,
usually dry, but in which there is said to have been
a stream in the 19th century, (fn. 4) which breaks through
to the Avon at Lake. The downland rises to over
400 ft. on Rox Hill. The meanders of the river below
Amesbury have left successive spurs of alluvium
and gravel on either side of the river, and the
meadows and fields of Wilsford and Normanton
occupy the northern, and those of Lake the southern
of these spurs in the parish. The footbridges at
Wilsford and Lake give access only to the meadows
of Durnford parish.
The road from Salisbury to Amesbury runs
between the river and the downs, and along it lie the
three settlements of Lake, Wilsford, and Normanton. The main road from Amesbury to Wincanton
runs across the north-west tip, and the old Salisbury-Devizes turnpike through the extreme west, of the
parish. (fn. 5) Several tracks converging on Stonehenge
from the south-west run across Lake and Wilsford
Downs. A line of pylons crosses the parish from
north to south along the ridge of the downs.
The soil over the greater part of the parish is a
light chalky loam on chalk subsoil, with a covering,
where uncultivated, of poor grass and scrub. (fn. 6)
Meadows occupy most of the narrow strip of alluvial
soils along the river. The valley gravels between the
meadows and the downs, and the lower slopes of
the downs, are well wooded, and there are plantations of beeches and conifers on the downs. (fn. 7)
The bottom of the dry valley, and the lower slopes
of the downs which surround it, are pasture. The
principal arable fields occupy the ridge behind
Wilsford, Rox Hill above Lake, and the level high
ground in the south-west of the parish beyond
Springbottom and Westfield Farms. In 1878 the
parish included some 900 a. of arable, 600 a. of
pasture, and 100 a. of woodland. (fn. 8)
The road coming north from Salisbury enters the
parish on the spur between Upper Woodford and
Lake, and drops by a steep winding hill among
trees into the valley at Lake. Lake House and its
gardens stand between the road and the river, (fn. 9) and
across the road from the house the dry valley, here
called Lake Bottom, forms a stretch of parkland.
Beyond Lake House, Lake Farm, now called the
Grange, and its former farm buildings lie on the
west of the road. The house is an 18th-century
building of brick with bands of flint. The former
farmyard has been grassed over to make a village
green by the roadside and one of the barns was
converted into a village hall in 1932. On the opposite
side of the road, close to the river, are a group of
houses of various dates including a thatched house
adjoining the site of the former mill. Beyond Lake
the road climbs again steeply among trees, and for a
short distance there is a sheer drop to the river some
50 ft. below. Where the road begins to fall towards
Wilsford there are some cottages with thatched
roofs, forming a picturesque group on the bank
of the river. Above these at the roadside the school
has been built, with a playground on the opposite
side of the road. Wilsford Manor, (fn. 10) the church, and
the former farmhouse, now called the Red House,
lie in trees to the east of the road. The farmhouse, a red-brick building, dates from about the
middle of the 19th century. Westfield and Springbottom Farms, about a mile west of Lake and
Wilsford respectively, each consist of two cottages
and a separate block of farm buildings. A pumping
house in Springbottom supplies the parish with
water.
John Duke of Lake (c. 1585–1671) was Sheriff of
Wilts, 1639–40. Two of his younger kinsmen took
part in Penruddock's rising, and weapons and armour
found in the river at Lake in the 19th century were
thought to belong to the clubmen of this period. (fn. 11)
The Revd. Edward Duke (1779–1852) was an
antiquary and friend of Sir Richard Colt Hoare. (fn. 12)
He built up a fine library and a collection of prehistoric and later antiquities, many of them found
in the neighbourhood. Many of the items were
bought by museums and learned societies when the
collections were dispersed. (fn. 13) Joseph Lovibond, who
lived at Lake from 1897 to his death in 1918, was a
successful brewer. He had been mayor of Salisbury
from 1878 to 1890. While at Lake he gained an
international reputation for his scientific work on
light and colour. (fn. 14)
Lord Glenconner, owner of Wilsford, 1902–1920,
a wealthy Scottish landowner and industrialist, (fn. 15)
was M.P. for Salisbury, 1906–20. His wife was
active in artistic and literary circles, writing a number
of books under the name of Pamela Tennant. (fn. 16)
Both of the Glenconners were interested in spiritualism and held spiritualist meetings at Wilsford with
a group of friends, among whom was Sir Oliver
Lodge, the occupant of Normanton Manor. (fn. 17) Lady
Glenconner's second husband was Viscount Grey of
Falloden, the former Foreign Secretary.
The parish is very rich in archaeological features.
Stonehenge stands at the head of the dry valley in
Amesbury parish, and on the slopes of this valley in
Lake, Wilsford, and Normanton there are more than
120 barrows. (fn. 18) The site of an Early Iron Age settlement has been identified on Rox Hill above Lake,
and on Rox Hill and Lake Downs there are traces
of an ancient field system which extends into
Woodford. (fn. 19) A system of ditches and banks on
Wilsford Down is thought to be similar to others
known to be of Roman construction. (fn. 20)
MANORS.
In 1086 two estates are described in
Wilsford, each of one hide, one held by Hamon de
Masci of Hugh de Avranches, the other by a certain
Hugh of Robert fitz Gerold. (fn. 21) The estates can only
be conjecturally identified with the later medieval
manors. Some of the lands of Hugh de Avranches,
part of the honour of Chester, including what was
probably Lake and Fisherton with 'Little Wilsford',
may have come into the hands of William, son of
Edward of Salisbury, in the early 12th century. He
gave the chapel of Lake with its tithes and appurtenances to his foundation, Bradenstoke Priory, and to
it Richard Cotel, probably the tenant of William's
son Patrick, Earl of Salisbury, added a virgate in
Lake. (fn. 22) Ten librates of land in Wilsford, which
William also granted to the priory, were returned
to Patrick in exchange for land in Wilcot. This land
may later have been granted to Richard fitz Aucher,
bailiff of William Longespée; (fn. 23) Bickton (Hants) and
Fisherton Anger, which together with part of
Wilsford later made up 1¼ fee, came into the hands
of the Auchers in this way, and Wilsford land was
held of them by the Theobold family in the early
13th century. (fn. 24) Lake manor continued to be held
by the Cotels of the Earls of Salisbury until the
14th century. (fn. 25)
Some of the lands of Robert fitz Gerold, the other
Domesday tenant in chief, were inherited by his
nephew William de Roumore, Earl of Lincoln, and
from him by Ranulph of Chester. (fn. 26) In 1229 Earl
Ranulph granted tithes in Wilsford, formerly held
of the Earl of Lincoln, to Roger, Succentor of
Salisbury. (fn. 27) The church of Wilsford was part of
the chapter's estate in the late 11th century. (fn. 28)
Shortly after Earl Ranulph's grant, the manor of
Wilsford was held by service at Salisbury Cathedral
and the bishop later appears as its overlord. (fn. 29)
The earls of Salisbury appear to have remained
overlords of LAKE in the 13th and 14th centuries.
In 1325 Alice, wife of Elias Lestraunge, suo jure
Countess of Salisbury, sold estates in Wilsford and
Lake, with many others to Hugh le Despenser. (fn. 30)
These were forfeit to the Crown after Despenser's
death, and may have been granted to William de
Montagu, together with the Earldom of Salisbury,
in 1337. (fn. 31) Before 1400 the manor was held of John
de Montagu. (fn. 32) After his rebellion and death in that
year the overlordship was forfeited to the Crown,
but it was recovered in 1409 by his son Thomas,
who held it by the service of one knight's fee. (fn. 33) A
knight's fee in Wilsford and Normanton remained
in the hands of Elizabeth, widow of William
Montagu, John's father, until 1415. (fn. 34) The lands were
still held of the earldom in 1428, (fn. 35) but in 1450 it was
said only that they were not held of the king, (fn. 36) and
the overlordship thereafter disappears.
In 1324 John de Montford and Walter of Sampford Peverell, in what was probably part of a series
of transactions, sold the tenancy of the manor, after
the death of Mary and Robert de Taleworth, her
husband, to Sir Elias Cotel and his wife Margaret,
the daughter of John of Peverell of Sampford
Peverell (Devon), with remainder to John Palton
and his heirs. (fn. 37) Before 1400 it was held by
Robert de Palton, who was succeeded in turn by
his sons Robert and William. (fn. 38) In 1405 William
settled his lands on another Robert de Palton,
probably his son, (fn. 39) but he was himself still holding
the manor by service of ¼ knight's fee in 1420, (fn. 40) and
in 1446 and 1448 William made a further settlement
of his estates, this time on himself and his wife
and the heirs of their body. (fn. 41) When he died without
issue in 1450 his heirs were his second cousins,
Joan wife of John Kelly, and Agnes wife of
Nicholas St. Lo. (fn. 42) In 1475 the manor was in the
hands of John Cheyne of 'Pynne' and three others,
who had received it from Richard Denshull, and it
was by them granted to Robert Willoughby de
Broke and 14 others. (fn. 43) In 1496 they in their turn
granted it to the wardens of the fraternity and guild
of St. Anne, Croscombe (Som.). (fn. 44) John Cheyne had
been one of the parties to the settlement of 1446–8,
and it is probable that these men were the executors
of William de Palton, whose principal manor was
Croscombe. In 1550 the dissolved guild's manor,
the capital messuage of which was leased to Michael
Duke, was sold by the Crown to Robert Thomas
and Andrew Salter, merchant tailors of London. (fn. 45)
They are said immediately to have sold it to John
Capelyn, (fn. 46) and he in 1579–80 sold it to George
Duke, the grandson of Michael. (fn. 47) Thereafter the
manor was owned and normally occupied by
members of the Duke family, in which it descended
for nine generations. (fn. 48)
In 1897 the estate was sold by Jane, widow of the
Revd. Edward Duke (1814–95), to Joseph
Lovibond. (fn. 49) In 1912 when Lake House was largely
destroyed by fire, Lovibond was living in a smaller
house on the estate, called the Pleasaunce. (fn. 50) After
Lovibond's death in 1918 the estate was purchased
by Lord Glenconner and united with that of
Wilsford. (fn. 51) The house was afterwards occupied by
Capt. C. King and later by Lt. Col. F. G. G. Bailey,
who acquired the combined estates after the death
of Lord Glenconnor's widow, Lady Grey. (fn. 52) In 1956
the estates were in the hands of Col. Bailey's widow,
Lady Janet Bailey.
It has been suggested that Lake House was
re-built by George Duke soon after he acquired
the manor in 1579–80. (fn. 53) The building has been
considerably altered and enlarged but the character
of the original work supports this suggestion.
The house is of two stories, basement, and attics,
and has stone mullioned and transomed windows,
gabled roofs, and diagonally-set chimneys. The
external treatment of stone and flint chequerwork
is an outstanding example of this technique. The
original building was L-shaped, the principal block
facing west and the shorter arm running back
behind its northern end. It has been suggested that
this north wing may incorporate part of an earlier
house. A parallel wing, partly filling the internal
angle of the L, is said to have been built in the late
18th century to accommodate a Georgian staircase.
The principal west front facing the road is symmetrical and has a projecting porch flanked by
semi-octagonal bay windows, all three features being
two-storied and surmounted by embattled parapets.
At roof level is a line of five small gables. A shield
above the doorway is blazoned with the three
annulets of the Duke family. When the house was
bought in 1897 by Joseph Lovibond (see above) it
was thoroughly restored under the direction of
Detmar Blow with the advice of the Society for the
Protection of Ancient Buildings. It was considered
to be a showpiece of restoration at a time when
methods of restoring were the subject of much
controversy. (fn. 54) At that time a room called the
Justice Room existed, and it was said that there had
formerly been a drawbridge across the stream
behind the house. The collections and library of
Edward Duke, which had formed a small museum,
and had been visited by the Wiltshire Archaeological and Natural History Society, had been largely
dispersed. (fn. 55) In 1912 the house was completely
gutted by fire, destroying some fine internal fittings
of the original period. (fn. 56) It was carefully restored,
again under the direction of Detmar Blow. After
the property had been acquired by Col. F. G. G.
Bailey (see above) some important additions were
made in the same style by the architect Mr. Darcy
Braddell. A single-story dining hall with a large
oriel window was built at the south-east corner,
while the 18th-century wing adjoining it was given
a gabled treatment. At the same time kitchens and
offices on two levels, extending across the east
part of the house, were added to the north of the
dining hall.
Before 1247 the manor of WILSFORD was in
the hands of the Verdun family, who were to
maintain a taper continually burning before the
high altar of Salisbury Cathedral. (fn. 57) Later in the
century it was held by Theobald de Verdun of
Theobald his father by the service of a ¼ knight's
fee. (fn. 58) In 1316 the manor was held of the Bishop of
Salisbury for a rent of 7 marks a year. (fn. 59) It was said
to be held later in the 14th century by the service
of maintaining a candle, (fn. 60) but in 1428 again as
¼ fee. (fn. 61) In 1426–8 the manor was held of the bishop
but by what service was not known. (fn. 62) Thereafter
the overlordship disappears.
Rose de Verdun held Wilsford before 1247, at
which date the manor was in the hands of a keeper. (fn. 63)
In 1258 it was held by John de Verdun; (fn. 64) he was
succeeded by his son Theobald in 1274. (fn. 65) Theobald
transferred the manor to his son Theobald, (fn. 66) who
died in 1316 leaving four female heirs. (fn. 67) Wilsford
was held in dower by Elizabeth de Burgh, his
widow, until 1360, when it reverted to Thomas de
Furnival, son of Joan one of the heirs of Theobald. (fn. 68)
Thomas's son William died in 1383 and the manor
was held in dower by his wife Thomasine. (fn. 69)
William's only child, Joan, married Thomas de
Neville, who became Lord Furnival, and their only
daughter, Maud, married John Talbot, Lord
Furnival and later Earl of Shrewsbury. (fn. 70) The manor
descended with the Talbot earldom of Shrewsbury
in the 15th and 16th centuries. (fn. 71) In 1570 John
Duke took from George Talbot a lease of a farm in
Wilsford for the lives of himself and his children
John and Agnes. (fn. 72) The manor apparently came into
the hands of William Herbert, Earl of Pembroke,
through his marriage with Mary, co-heir of Gilbert
Talbot, for on his death in 1630 he was said to be
holding the manors of Wilsford and Stoke Verdon,
and the jurors did not know of whom he held it. (fn. 73)
In 1553 his father had bought part of the Bradenstoke land, (fn. 74) and in 1560–1 had sold land at Wilsford
to William Daniel. (fn. 75)
In 1766 the manor of Wilsford was sold by
William Hawkins to John Pinkney. (fn. 76) John and his
successor Philip Pinkney were owners and tenants
of other holdings in the parish and united the
remaining freeholds with the manor. (fn. 77) Philip
Pinkney was still holding the manor in 1832, but he
was succeeded before 1846 by Giles Loder. (fn. 78) In the
1880's the estate was owned but not occupied by
Robert Loder, and in 1889 it was put up for sale.
The owner in 1890 was said to be Sir Edmund Giles
Loder. The estate was acquired in the 1890's by
Arthur Newall. (fn. 79) In 1903 Walter Young was lord
of the manor and the estate was leased to Sir
Edward Priaulx Tennant, Bart., created Lord
Glenconner in 1911. (fn. 80) Glenconner shortly after
bought the estate and after Lovibond's death in
1918 also became lord of the manor of Lake. (fn. 81)
After Glenconner's death in 1920 his widow married
Viscount Grey, (fn. 82) who lived principally at Wilsford
until his wife's death in 1928. Thereafter the estate
was in the hands of Glenconner's trustees until it
was sold to Lt. Col. Bailey. (fn. 83) In 1932 the house was
occupied by the Hon. David Tennant and his wife,
the actress Hermione Baddeley. (fn. 84) Since their departure it has been occupied by the Hon. Stephen
Tennant.
Wilsford Manor was built between 1904 and 1906
on the site of an older house. The architect was
Detmar Blow, who had already worked on the
restoration of Lake House, (fn. 85) and the interior
woodwork was carried out by Ernest Gimson. The
older house on the site was said to have been small
and of no architectural importance, but the surrounding grounds suggested that a larger house had
once stood there. Foundations of this larger house
were found when the present house was being built,
and some pieces of masonry from it were incorporated in the new structure. (fn. 86) The present house
is a reproduction of a gabled 17th-century manor
house with stone mullioned windows and walls of
stone and flint chequer-work.
LESSER ESTATES.
The small estate granted to
Bradenstoke Priory by the earls of Salisbury was
held by the priory until the Dissolution. In 1409
property of Bradenstoke in Wilsford was being
leased to the Prebendary of Wilsford and Woodford
at 14s. a year and half a hide in Lake for 16s. a year. (fn. 87)
The property consisted in 1535 of a tithe portion in
Wilsford worth 14s., a barn, and land in Lake rented
at 14s. a year. (fn. 88) In 1545 tithes from lands in Wilsford
and a barn in Lake both in the tenure of Robert
South, and all other possessions of Bradenstoke
Priory in those places were granted to John Pope. (fn. 89)
Pope conveyed the site of the chapel and land to
John Lambard in 1546. (fn. 90) In 1570–2 William
Lambard sold to William and Robert Partridge the
barn and parcels of land in Lake which had belonged
to Bradenstoke Priory, all of which were held by
Robert South. (fn. 91) George Duke bought the site of
the chapel and a virgate of land from the Partridge
family in 1599. (fn. 92) A messuage and land in the
tenure of Edward Walter which had formerly
belonged to Bradenstoke were acquired by William
Earl of Pembroke and William Clerke in 1553. (fn. 93)
The prebendal estate in Wilsford and Woodford
may be presumed to have existed in the early 13th
century, by which time the two parish churches
had been jointly appropriated to a prebend in
Salisbury Cathedral. (fn. 94) A prebend was in existence
by 1187 when £4 4s. 9d. was paid into the Exchequer
from the income of the prebend of Woodford during
the vacancy of the see of Salisbury. (fn. 95) The prebendal
estate was transferred to the Ecclesiastical Commissioners in 1838. (fn. 96) The prebend was endowed
with lands and with the tithes of grain and hay in
the two parishes except in the part of Lake from
which all tithe belonged to Bradenstoke Priory. (fn. 97)
The endowment presumably included the tithes
granted to the chapter in 1229. (fn. 98) In 1291 and 1428
the prebend was said to be worth £20 (fn. 99) and in 1535
£28. (fn. 100) In 1405 the prebendal estate consisted of a
mansus prebende occupied by the prebendary's
farmer and his familia, two virgates and two
tenements worth together 32s. a year, and meadow
and grazing-rights, all in Wilsford, a hall and a barn
in Woodford, and the tithes of grain and hay. (fn. 101) In
1650 the prebend was worth about £300, including
36s. rent in Woodford and 32s. rent-charge in Lake
on land held by John Day. The prebendal estate
had, however, been leased to John Bowles by
indenture of 1632 for a term of three lives for £24 a
year, and in 1650 the income arising from Woodford
was said to be received by Bowles and that from
Wilsford by John Duke of Lake. The estate then
included tithes of grain and hay worth £280. (fn. 102) In
1813 the rectorial tithes of Wilsford and Woodford
parishes, together with a barn and ½ acre of meadow
in Woodford, were held for a term of three lives,
for £24 a year, by the owner of the Heale estate in
Woodford parish; the tithes of Wilsford and Lake
were received by the owners of those estates who
paid £6 and £3 a year respectively to the owner of
Heale. (fn. 103) At the time of the Tithe Award of Woodford
(1839) the rectorial tithes there were payable to the
Ecclesiastical Commissioners. They were commuted
for £640. There was one acre of rectorial glebe in
Woodford which probably became submerged in
Woodford manor when that property was transferred to the commissioners. In 1846 and 1847 the
rectorial tithes of Wilsford and the prebend's part
of the tithes of Lake were commuted for £150;
they were then under lease from the Ecclesiastical
Commissioners. There were at that time 29 acres
of rectorial glebe in Wilsford, which were purchased
by Giles Loder after the confirmation of the
Tithe Award. (fn. 104)
In 1203 Ralph Tebbald held a free tenement in
Wilsford of Henry son of Richard, (fn. 105) and in 1243 John
Theobold held 1/5 of a knight's fee in 'Little Wilsford'
of Richard son of Richard Aucher, who held it of
the Earl of Salisbury. (fn. 106) In 1330–1 a holding consisting
of two carucates and other land in Lake, Wilsford,
Normanton and Great Durnford was settled by John
Aucher the elder and James Croye on John son of
Thomas Aucher and then on Walter Norreys and his
children. (fn. 107) In 1409 the Earl of Salisbury, in addition
to the fee in Lake, held 1¼ fee in Bickton, Fisherton
and Wilsford and ¼ fee in Normanton and Wilsford, which probably represent the former Aucher
holding. (fn. 108)
A small holding in Wilsford was among the
property granted by Henry II to the refounded
priory of Amesbury, but its later history is unknown. (fn. 109) In 1490 a group of feoffees granted
Normanton manor and land in Amesbury and Lake
—all said to be held of 'the abbess' but by what
service was not known—to Sir John Trenchard and
his heirs. (fn. 110) Trenchard held the land in 1494 and
was said to be holding it of 'the abbey of Amesbury'
at his death. (fn. 111) Richard Trenchard held Normanton
manor, and lands in Durnford and Lake leased to
John Day. (fn. 112) In 1579–80 William Trenchard was
said to have conveyed a messuage and 40 acres
with appurtenances, to George Duke, who at the
same time bought Lake manor. (fn. 113) There is no
evidence that this land was in fact connected with
Amesbury priory and it has been suggested that it
was the former Aucher holding. (fn. 114)
ECONOMIC HISTORY.
The topography of the
parish suggests that Lake and Wilsford, like
Normanton, were in origin no more than farms
lying along the river and the valley road, and that
from the yard of each farm a track ran to the arable
fields and the pastures on the downs. The manor-houses stand a short distance from the farmsteads.
A small community has developed at Lake, where
the mill is situated, but Wilsford has remained
little more than a farm and a string of labourers'
cottages.
In each of the Domesday manors there was land
for one plough. (fn. 115) In one, possibly Lake, this was in
demesne and there were only two servi and three
cottagers. In the other, possibly Wilsford, there
were one villein and three cottagers. Each estate
included stretches of pasture, eight furlongs by one
furlong and nine furlongs by two respectively,
probably on the later Lake and Wilsford Downs.
In each there were 6 a. of meadow. The first was
worth 40s. and the second 60s. The mill was then
attached to the second.
The land in Wilsford granted for a time to
Bradenstoke Priory in the 12th century was worth
£10. (fn. 116) The manor of Wilsford was described in
inquisitions of 1274, 1316 and 1360. (fn. 117) There were
in demesne in 1274 80 a. each worth 5d., in 1316
60 a. each worth 4d., and in 1360 60 a. each worth
3d. only when it was sown, two-thirds being sown
every year. The acreage of demesne meadow also
declined, the 9 a. of 1274 falling to 3 a. in 1316 and
4 a. in 1360, and its value fell from 1s. 6d. an acre to
1s. 3d. and 1s. The pasture for 6 oxen and 300 sheep
of 1274, worth at the rates given 14s., was in 1316
valued at 5s. and in 1360 was said to be for 160
sheep.
The evidence about rents at this time is difficult
to interpret. In 1274 the rents amounted to £3 4s.
a year. By 1316 this had fallen to a little under £3,
made up of nearly £1 from one free tenant, 6s. 8d.
each from 3 other free tenants, and 3s. 4d. each
from 6 'cottagers', who each held a third of a
virgate. In 1360 the rents were worth £5 16s., but
the large free tenant was giving only a render of
pepper, and the other free tenants and the cottagers
had been replaced by 4 virgaters each paying 16s.,
3 half virgaters each paying 8s., and 4 cottars each
paying 5s. In 1316 the manor was worth nearly
10 marks, of which 7 were paid to the bishop.
Nothing was said about this rent payment in 1360.
In 1324 100 marks were given as consideration
for the settlement of Lake manor on John de
Palton, (fn. 118) and in 1400 £10 annual rent was paid for
it. (fn. 119) In 1450 the manor consisted of 60 a. presumably
in demesne, and 6 messuages. (fn. 120) Its annual value in
1496 was £12 6s. 8d., (fn. 121) and in 1548 was £12 15s. 4d.
including heriots worth 12s. (fn. 122)
In 1548 the capital messuage of the guild of
St. Anne of Croscombe at Lake was held for life by
Michael Duke and others, together with the pasture,
common, and other appurtenances of the manor,
except the heriots, for £3 6s. 8d. rent, and 6s. 8d.
for the render of a swan. Alice Duke held the arable
lands of the demesne for £3 13s. rent. The free
tenants paid £1 7s. 4d., and the customary tenants
£3 9s. 8d. (fn. 123)
The lands of the glebe and the smaller holdings
lay in both villages and included regular villein
tenements. The Aucher holding in 1330–1 included
two messuages and virgates both held by tenants
for life. (fn. 124) The glebe in 1405 included an area of
meadow and pasture for 100 sheep and 15 oxen, and
2 virgates, the tenants of which paid the same rent,
16s. each, as those of Wilsford manor in 1360. (fn. 125) In
1846 the acreage of the tithing of Lake, then 438 a.
of arable, constituted 16 yardlands, or about 27 a. to
a yardland; (fn. 126) the glebe in Lake at that time consisted of 29 a. The Bradenstoke land in Lake was
described as half a hide in 1409. (fn. 127)
In the 14th century there was a three-course
rotation of crops in Wilsford, and the meadows
were common after the haymaking. (fn. 128) The existence
of villeins and yardlands, and the crop rotation
suggest that there was some kind of open field
system. Both the fields and the numbers of tenants
were, however, small, and inclosure by the gradual
taking in hand of tenements by the lord would have
been comparatively easy there. (fn. 129) No Inclosure
Award for the parish has been found.
The 16 yardlands of Lake in 1846 were made up
of 9 yardlands from which tithes were paid to the
lord of the manor of Lake, and 7 from which they
were paid to the prebendary and his successors, and
to the vicar. (fn. 130) The tithing was divided territorially
for this purpose, the 9 yardlands occupying the
southern half, and the 7 the northern half of the
tithing next to Wilsford. It is possible that this
division represents a distinction of estates existing
before 1599 when George Duke acquired the
Bradenstoke land and with it apparently its tithes. (fn. 131)
During the subsequent centuries Lake formed a
unified estate with a landlord normally resident in
the manor.
Many of the water-meadows are said to have been
made during the time of John Duke of Lake
(c. 1585–1671). (fn. 132) In the lawsuit of 1679 about
the making of the water-meadows in Woodford,
George Duke, John's successor, said that although
it damaged the excellent fishing, John had condoned
the building of the bay and weir there. (fn. 133)
Another substantial family, the Days, held
property in Wilsford in the later 16th and 17th
centuries. (fn. 134) John Day held land of the Trenchard
holding, (fn. 135) and a John Day senior of Wilsford died
in 1574. (fn. 136) A John Day was a party to the transaction
by which George Duke bought Lake, (fn. 137) and another
was tenant of the glebe in 1650. (fn. 138) The last Day to
appear in the parish registers was the John, who
died in 1753. Some of the family's interests may have
passed to the Pinkney family by marriage, for the
Pinkney, who bought Wilsford manor in 1766, was
John Day Pinkney.
In 1780, (fn. 139) in addition to the vicar's holding
(taxed at about £3), the Lake estate (£42), and
Wilsford manor (£20), there were two other
tenements in the parish (£8 and £6). J. D. Pinkney
was the part owner and tenant of one of these and
united it with Wilsford manor in 1788. He and his
successor, Philip Pinkney, were tenants of the other
holding, and this Philip bought out in 1796–9.
These purchases may represent the last stages in
the absorption of the medieval freeholds and
copyholds into the gentlemen's estates.
During this period Lake farm was leased to
successive farmers, Richard, Joseph, and Thomas
Chandler, Robert Pinkney, William Hutchins, and
James Gray, but Wilsford was farmed by the
Pinkneys, who were also tenants of the two small
holdings until they acquired the freehold of them.
The owner of Wilsford and the tenant of Lake were
normally the joint tenants of the vicar's holding.
The Pinkneys were probably connected by marriage
with the Loders, who succeeded them before 1846, (fn. 140)
the Loder born in 1786 being christened John
Pinkney. (fn. 141) Loder broke with the Pinkney tradition
of not leasing the estate, (fn. 142) but it was resumed by
Lord Glenconner, who employed a farm bailiff, (fn. 143)
and was continued in 1956 when an agent managed
the combined estates.
There were 53 poll-tax payers in Wilsford and
Lake in 1377. (fn. 144) Nineteen men of the village took
the protestation oath in 1641–2. (fn. 145) There were in
the 18th century about 20 families living in the
parish, but the number of baptisms rose steadily
towards the end of the century. (fn. 146) The 23 houses in
Wilsford and Lake in 1801 were occupied by the
same number of families; (fn. 147) 57 people were employed
in agriculture, and only 4 in trades and manufactures. In 1831 there were still 23 families; of the
31 males over 20, 2 were occupiers employing
labour, 23 were labourers employed in agriculture,
and 2 were engaged in retail trades or handicrafts.
There were also 6 female servants. (fn. 148) There were in
1841 11 houses and 49 people in Wilsford, and 13
houses with 74 people in Lake. Only 3 people in the
parish had been born outside Wiltshire. (fn. 149)
The Tithe Award for Wilsford manor of 1846 (fn. 150)
gives the acreage of the estate as 828 a., of which
324 a. were arable, 22 a. water-meadow, 13 a.
pasture, and 410 a. downland. The whole was
owned by Loder and 769 a. were leased by John
Long, who occupied Down Farm, the modern
Springbottom Farm. In Lake (fn. 151) there were 791 a.,
of which 438 a. were arable, 30 a. water-meadow,
291 a. meadow and pasture, and 22 a. plantations.
The whole was owned by the Revd. Edward Duke
(1814–95), 356 a. being leased to John Rawlence,
who occupied the homestead opposite Lake House.
The principal arable fields of Lake in the 19th
century (fn. 152) were the West Field, called Waste field
in the Tithe Award, the North field, with a piece of
arable called the Penning, Rox Hill, which probably
included the piece known as the Brake Ground, and
South, Middle and Inner Hams in the valley below
the village. The down, sometimes called Maiden
Down, was referred to as a sheep sleight or walk.
In Wilsford the principal fields were known only
as 'that towards Normanton', 'that towards Lake'
and 'the Down arable.'
The parish became more heavily wooded in the
19th and 20th centuries. (fn. 153) Trees covered a long
strip of water-meadows below Lake, plantations of
beeches were made on several pieces of arable, such
as Starveall Plantation in Wilsford, and Middle
Ham in Lake, and wind breaks of conifers were
planted along paths and boundaries. Scattered
trees and bushes appeared on the meadows, and on
the pastures in the west of the parish where no
deliberate planting took place. This change may have
been connected with a decline in the numbers of
sheep kept in the parish.
Few businesses, other than the mill, (fn. 154) have been
carried on in the parish. There was a smith in Lake
in the early 19th century, (fn. 155) and a building near the
mill was still known as the smithy in 1956. For a
short time in the 1880's a maltster of Bishop's
Cannings had premises in the parish, (fn. 156) and about
the same time John Brock, the miller, became a
sub-postmaster. In the 1890's George Brock was
postmaster and carrier to Salisbury.
Soon after her father bought Lake House in 1897,
Miss Lovibond, who had been trained as a designer,
became interested in spinning and weaving.
Prompted by Mr. Lovibond's desire to find some
means of checking the rural depopulation of that
time, (fn. 157) she set up looms and other machinery in
an upper room of Lake House. The village women
were given the opportunity to learn the various
processes, and a small industry was established.
Wool was bought or taken in exchange for cloth
direct from neighbouring farmers. Part of the
cloth produced was retained by the women and
part sold. Difficulties were experienced in disposing
of the cloth and the project was not at first successful. (fn. 158) In 1900, however, cloth of the 'Stonehenge
Woollen Industry' was exhibited at the Albert
Hall. (fn. 159) It was said that some of the fabrics were
facsimiles of those which the neighbourhood had
produced a century before. (fn. 160) At first the cloth was
not dyed, but by 1912 when the cloth had become
fashionable, wool was being specially selected and
part of it was dyed. (fn. 161) In 1919 there was a spinning
and weaving class in Lake for disabled servicemen
and another for the mentally defective, and it was
said that there was work for everyone. Shortly
afterwards the concern moved to Stratford-sub-Castle and to Amesbury, (fn. 162) and thence to Salisbury,
where it had a shop until c. 1959. Three shops in
London were still maintained in 1960.
By 1911 the postmaster at Lake kept a shop, and
there were two shops in the parish in 1920. (fn. 163) Of
the 24 people listed in a local directory in 1916, (fn. 164)
however, 6 were carters, 4 labourers, 3 shepherds,
and 2 dairymen. The only substantial group in the
population besides the farm labourers were the
domestic servants of the manor houses.
By 1880 a post office was established at Lake, (fn. 165)
and the railway had reached Porton, 5 miles away. (fn. 166)
Electricity was supplied to Wilsford in 1932 but the
supply was not extended to Lake until 1948. (fn. 167)
Water pumped from wells was still supplied by the
landowner in 1956, and sewage disposal was entirely
by septic pits. The thrice-weekly carrier service
to Salisbury was replaced before 1939 by a regular
bus service between Amesbury and Salisbury. (fn. 168) In
1956 tradesmen delivered by van from Amesbury
and Salisbury, and the village shops and the post
office had disappeared. There has never been an
inn in the parish. It was estimated in 1956 that
since 1951 the population had fallen to 146. (fn. 169) The
villages were still small and the parish sparsely
populated.
The parish is far enough from Amesbury and
Salisbury to have escaped suburban and council
estate development (1956). New cottages were
built in the 19th century, and others have been
rebuilt of more durable materials, but further
increases in population have been met by the
conversion of former farm buildings and the mill.
During the first half of the 20th century the two
estates have been united, Westfield Farm sold, and
Lake Farm buildings become disused, and private
residents, with private incomes or pensions, now
live in the farm houses and the mill. In 1956,
however, the two manors were still occupied by
members of families which have owned land in the
parish, and little appeared to have changed outwardly
since the 19th century.
In 1086 the mill in Wilsford was worth 10s. (fn. 170) It
was in existence in 1340 and was part of Lake
estate in 1579–80. (fn. 171) In 1727 Robert Duke was tenant
of the mill as well as of the farm at Lake. (fn. 172) In the
19th century the miller was tenant of the house and
the mill buildings, three meadows called Mill
Meadows and a withy bed. (fn. 173) The miller between
1846 and 1867 was David Brock. In 1880 John
Brock & Sons were the millers. (fn. 174) By 1895,
however, when George Brock, the postmaster and
carrier, was no longer said to be a miller, the mill
may have become disused. (fn. 175) In 1956 there was still
a weir at the mill, but the buildings had been
converted into a private house.
CHURCH.
Wilsford church was among the
possessions of the dean and chapter of Salisbury in
the late 11th century. (fn. 176) The church has always been
closely connected with that of Woodford. In 1599
the inhabitants of Wilsford, claiming that they were
not receiving proper spiritual attention, said that
Wilsford was the mother church and that the church
of Woodford was a dependent chapel. (fn. 177) Woodford
church had been appropriated to a prebend by
1187, (fn. 178) and the churches of Woodford and Wilsford
are known to have formed the endowment of a single
prebend in Salisbury Cathedral soon afterwards: the
prebend of Woodford and Wilsford is first mentioned by that name in 1312, (fn. 179) but it is clear that by
the early 13th century at latest the endowments of
the two churches were united: the prebend was
referred to sometimes as of Woodford (fn. 180) and sometimes as of Wilsford, (fn. 181) the number of prebends
being constant. (fn. 182)
The prebend was in the gift of the Bishop of
Salisbury. (fn. 183) Although Wilsford and Woodford
were, and remain, distinct parishes for all purposes,
the cure of souls in both has been the responsibility
of a single vicar since the 13th century at latest.
The vicarage of the two churches together was in
the gift of the prebendary of Wilsford and Woodford
until 1842, when the advowson was transferred to
the Bishop of Salisbury. (fn. 184) In the 16th century the
advowson of the vicarage was three times granted
out for one turn. (fn. 185) The vicarage was first mentioned
in 1291 when it was valued at £6; (fn. 186) it was worth
£6 in 1428 (fn. 187) and £13 10s. in 1535. (fn. 188) In 1340 the
vicarial estate appears to have been valued at
£11 8s. 2d., but there seems to have been some
confusion between the vicarage and the prebend, for
that sum included a valuation of what was probably
later rectorial glebe. (fn. 189) The church was assessed
twice in 1650. The first assessment, made by official
surveyors, valued the vicarage at £60 a year, (fn. 190) the
second, based on the evidence of parishioners, at
£7. (fn. 191) Tithes constituted almost the whole endowment of the vicarage. In 1340 small tithes and tithes
of the mill, including some hay, were worth £7
3s. 2d. (fn. 192) From at least 1405 (fn. 193) the vicars collected all
tithes in Wilsford and Woodford except those of
grain and hay and those from the lands of Bradenstoke Priory in Lake. The vicar's tithes from Woodford were commuted in 1839 for £180 5s., those
from Wilsford manor in 1846 for £35, and those
from Lake in 1847 for £17 10s. (fn. 194) Between 1842 and
1866 the benefice was augmented by the Ecclesiastical Commissioners out of the common fund with
sums amounting to £207 a year, including £120 for
a curate. (fn. 195) In 1953 the net annual income of the
benefice was £496. (fn. 196)
In the early 15th century the vicar appears to
have served the church of Woodford, and a chaplain
that of Wilsford, and in 1405 a clericus parochie is
named for Woodford. (fn. 197) Churchwardens' presentments from the 16th to the 19th century show that
there was frequently, though not always, a curate
in addition to the vicar, but they do not make it
clear whether he was associated with one church or
both. (fn. 198) In 1861 it was stated that until 1830 there
had been no vicar resident in the parish for 300
years. (fn. 199) Edward Aubery, curate of Woodford in the
early 1780's, complained of the poverty and inconvenience of his life in 'this fog-ridden bottom'. (fn. 200)
R. M. Chatfield, vicar from 1830 to 1882, wrote
of the poor condition of church property and church
life in the two parishes in 1830. (fn. 201) but both improved
during his residence at Woodford. Curates for
Wilsford were licensed in 1844, 1884, 1893 and
1907. In the mid-19th century Edward Duke
(1814–95), lord of Lake manor, acted as curate in
both parishes and took the services in Wilsford
church. (fn. 202) His son Edward acted as curate for
Wilsford in 1890–3, (fn. 203) and was sometimes referred
to locally as the Vicar of Wilsford. In recent times
both parishes have been served together by the
vicar, resident in Woodford. Religious activity in
the two parishes in the first half of the 20th century
seems to have been stimulated by the zeal of a
number of distinguished residents. (fn. 204)
The church of ST. MICHAEL, Wilsford, stands
in a small graveyard between Wilsford Manor and
the Red House, formerly Wilsford Farm. There is a
war memorial and a seat at the roadside near the
entrance to the churchyard. In 1852 the church,
with the exception of the tower, was completely
rebuilt in Early English style at the expense of Giles
Loder. (fn. 205) It comprises chancel, nave, small north
transept, south porch, and west tower, and is built
of flint and stone. The tower is Norman, but has
been extensively restored. On its west front is a
semi-circular arch of two orders and attached shafts;
it has round-headed windows and a large rounded
arch leads from the tower to the nave. Inside the
church are a number of monuments to the Duke
family. (fn. 206)
The church, then called a chapel, had a graveyard
and a baptistry in the early 15th century. Glass
windows in the chancel and the walls of the belfry
were among the items said to be in need of repair
in 1405 and 1412. (fn. 207) There were three bells in 1553.
The three existing bells are dated 1572, 1585 and
1601. (fn. 208) In 1408 the church had all the necessary
plate and vestments, but a gradual and a manual
were lacking among the books. (fn. 209) No plate was
recorded in 1553. The present plate was given by
Giles Loder in 1857 and is of that date. (fn. 210) The parish
registers begin in 1681 and are kept in a safe in the
church. A new graveyard was laid out after the
rebuilding of the church in 1857. There has never
been a vicarage house, but the Red House may
stand approximately on the site of the medieval
prebendary's house.
The chapel and tithes at Lake were given to
Bradenstoke Priory in the early 12th century. (fn. 211) The
appropriation of this chapel by the priory was confirmed by Lucius III in 1182 and 1184. (fn. 212) The chapel
fell into disuse before the 16th century, and its site,
the tithes and some land were sold after the dissolution of the priory and came into the hands of
the Dukes. (fn. 213) Its remains were thought to have been
found in the garden of Lake House in the 19th
century. (fn. 214)
NONCONFORMITY.
No dissenter, either
Protestant or Roman Catholic, was at any time
reported to be living in the parish and no nonconformist chapel is known to have existed. The
Prophet Barrows on Lake Down are so called because in 1710 a group of exiled Huguenots set up a
standard on the largest of them and preached to the
country people, who called them the French
Prophets. The Huguenots are believed to have
settled at Crockerton. (fn. 215)
PARISH GOVERNMENT.
In the mid 19th
century courts leet for the half hundred which
included Wilsford and Lake were held at Woodford,
and 10s. for law day silver was paid by the two
tithings. (fn. 216) No manorial rolls for the parish are known
to exist. In 1405 a churchwarden (custos) was
responsible for supervising repairs to the church
fabric. (fn. 217) Between 1856 and 1894 a guardian and two
overseers were normally elected with the two
churchwardens at vestry meetings. (fn. 218) In 1894 and
1895 three parish meetings were held at which
protests were made against what was thought to be
the merger of the parish with Amesbury. (fn. 219) Since
then no parish meetings have been held but general
parochial matters are frequently discussed by the
parochial church council.
SCHOOL.
An unendowed day school for 14
children existed in the parish of Wilsford in 1819. (fn. 220)
A Sunday school was opened in 1831. It was
attended by 17 boys and 15 girls in 1835. Nine
boys and 6 girls also attended a day school. (fn. 221)
Wilsford and Lake Church of England School
was erected in 1857 by the owner of Wilsford
Manor. (fn. 222) By 1859 it was regularly attended by
some 20 children, who were taught by a mistress. (fn. 223)
The first parliamentary grant was paid in 1876. (fn. 224)
The accommodation was 28 in 1910. (fn. 225) The construction of an additional class-room in 1915
increased it to 54. (fn. 226) Average attendance between
1876 and 1937 was never much over 30. (fn. 227) The
school became a voluntary aided school under the
Education Act of 1944. (fn. 228) In 1956 there were two
mistresses, one of them part time, and two classes,
for infants and juniors. The average attendance
in 1956 was only 18. (fn. 229) In 1960 it was proposed to
close the school and transfer the children to the
school at Woodford.
CHARITIES.
None known.