HITCHIN HUNDRED
HITCHIN
Hicche, Hiz (xi cent.); Hicche (xiii cent.);
Huthe, Huche, Huchine, Hytchen (xiv cent.);
Lutchon (fn. 1) (xv cent.). The parish of Hitchin includes besides the town the three extensive hamlets
of Walsworth on the north-west covering 1,051
acres, Preston, a straggling village in the south, having
an area of 1,118 acres, and Langley still further south,
which extends over 1,626 acres. (fn. 2) The parish of
Ippollitts, which was a chapelry to Hitchin, lies
between the main portion of Hitchin and the almost
detached hamlet of Langley and is inclosed by them
on three sides. The parish of Hitchin exclusive of
its hamlets covers the upper portion of the basin of
the River Hiz, which rises at Well Head just beyond
the south-west border of the parish and flows north-east. The River Oughton, rising at Oughton Head
on the west, flows north-east, forming the parish
boundary and joins the Hiz. The River Purwell,
which has its source at Nine Springs in the parish of
Great Wymondley, flows across Walsworth Common
and joins the Hiz. The surface of the land near
these streams is only some 190 ft. above the ordnance
datum, but the ground rises to the south, east and
west, gradually reaching a height of 300 ft. on the
north-east border of the parish. The greater part of
Preston hamlet is considerably higher and lies on a
ridge of the Chilterns. In the centre of this hamlet
at its highest part the ground has a height of 507 ft.,
and from here there is a slight incline towards the
south-east which continues through the hamlet of
Langley down to a height of 309 ft.
The soil is chalk, (fn. 3) and is mentioned by Norden as
'a kinde of chalke which they call Hurlocke, a stonie
Marle more fit to make lime then to soyle the
grounde, yet beeing mixed with a more fragile and
gentle Marle, which also aboundeth there, they find
it very helpfull to their corne fields.' (fn. 4) The common
fields of Walsworth hamlet were inclosed in 1766–7, (fn. 5)
and those of Hitchin called Bury Mead and Cock
Mead in 1877 and 1886, (fn. 6) but there are several open
fields in Hitchin to this day.
In the 16th century a great quantity of malt was
made at Hitchin, (fn. 7) and brewing is still an important
industry of the town. Corn is the chief product of
the district, and there has been a famous corn market
here for more than 300 years. (fn. 8) Potatoes, peppermint, and lavender are also much cultivated.
Lavender is grown in the fields to the north of the
town and is distilled by two large firms, Messrs.
Perks & Llewelyn and Messrs. W. Ransom & Son.
Palaeolithic implements have been found in and
near Hitchin, (fn. 9) and pottery of the late Celtic period
has also been found in the neighbourhood. (fn. 10) A
barrow of pre-Roman date to the south of the Icknield
Way was opened and found to contain burnt bones,
a blade of copper, and a clay urn. (fn. 11) Coins of Offa
have been discovered and Roman objects have been
found.
Place-names which occur in records of this parish
in the 17th century are Cleypitts, Conigre, Ladder
Peece, Pattens, Hyover, Toyes, Saffron Close and
Silverstreet Close. (fn. 12)
The original plan of Hitchin followed that usual
in country market towns. It stands on an important
road and clusters around a large triangular market-place formed by the widening of the road. The
market-place originally extended from the south side
of Tilehouse Street on the south to Bancroft on the
north, and from the east side of Sun Street on the
east to the west side of Bucklersbury and High
Street on the west. The actual market-place is now
restricted to the small middle portion of this area,
the remainder as at St. Albans, Berkhampstead and
elsewhere having been built over at first by permanent stalls and then by shops. These encroachments
began probably in the 13th or 14th century, but by
1470 we have evidence of continuous tenure here by
the lease of two stalls for forty years. (fn. 13) By 1603
the market-place had evidently been built upon
for some time, (fn. 14) the courts being held in one
of the so-called 'stalls.' (fn. 15) Facing the market-place
stood the numerous inns which formerly existed in
the town, (fn. 16) and the houses of the townsfolk with
their back premises extending as now to the river on
the east side and to Paynes Park and Grammar
School Walk on the west. On the east side of the
market-place stands the church of St. Mary with its
large churchyard. The extension of the town along
Bridge Street and Tilehouse Street, and a little later
along what is now Queen Street, is of mediaeval
date, and was possibly made at the time of the
founding of the priory in 1317. The town has
been developing rapidly of late years. Houses have
been built on the higher land on the east and south
sides and near the railway station, which lies about
half a mile to the east of the town.
Hitchin is fortunate in having retained so many of
its ancient houses, though most of them have been
refronted and much altered in the 18th and 19th
centuries. In Bancroft or Bancroft Street, (fn. 17) at the
north end of the market-place, are many old houses.
On the west side is a house now known as the Croft,
which was built early in the 15th century, although
since much altered, and was occupied until recently
by the Tuke family. A little to the south on the
same side is 'The Brotherhood,' probably the hall of
the gild of our Lady, founded in 1475. It is a
building of the 15th century, covered with rough-cast, with a tiled roof. It was originally rectangular
in plan, and the ground floor, which was divided by
transverse partitions, is now used for shops, whilst the
upper floor, which formed the hall 48 ft. by 17 ft.,
with a fine open timbered roof, now ceiled, is
divided into rooms. Four trusses of this roof still
remain in position. They are of oak and have
moulded wall-posts with moulded capitals and bases,
wall-plates and purlins, cambered tie-beams and
queen posts, with curved spandrel pieces and wind-braces. The timbered mullioned windows have
apparently been renewed, as has also a great part of
the outer walls. At the apex of each of the two
gables are terra-cotta figures of a man on horseback,
which have been copied from the originals still
remaining in one of the shops.
On the east side of Bancroft is a large 15th-century house (fn. 18) of timber and plaster, with a tiled
roof. It is L-shaped in plan with a hall in the main
wing facing the street. To the north was a solar
wing, beyond which was a high archway. During
the latter half of the 16th century an upper story
was formed in the hall by the insertion of a floor
projecting on the west front and a gable built at the
north end, the roof being raised to give additional
height. At the same time a chimney-stack was
added at the north end. Nothing beyond one tie-beam of the oaken hall roof now remains, with
mortise holes for curved angle brackets. A little
further south is the 'Hermitage,' now a portion of
the residence of Mr. Frederic Seebohm, LL.D.,
which mainly consisted of two houses converted into
one in the 18th century with additions of that time.
Another large 15th-century house, now divided into
three and numbered 86, 87, 88 Bancroft, stands a little
to the south. It was much altered in the 19th century,
and has now a timber frame filled in different parts
with plaster, rough-cast, weather-boards and brickwork.
It is L-shaped in plan with a hall of four bays about
12 ft. each and 20 ft. span, facing the street. The
solar wing lies to the north and has an archway with
a room over. The upper story projects and has
a gable at each end with a modern bay-window
between them. At the north end of the hall is a
panelled canopy of a dais divided into square panels
by ogee-moulded ribs with bosses at the junctions
which are now lost. There is some 17th-century
panelling in the solar, and at the back are some old
buildings, probably of the same date as the house.
Numbers 89 and 90 at one time apparently formed
one house of a similar type, but were very much
altered and refronted in the 18th century. Portmill
Lane branches off here to Queen Street. A little
way down is the 'Grange,' a 17th-century house
much altered in the next century. Beyond Portmill
Lane stands the church. Lower down, on the north-east corner of the market-place, to the south of the
church, are the remains of a 15th-century house of
the court-yard plan, now used as a dwelling-house
and shops. The east wing was rebuilt in the 17th
century and altered in the 18th century, but the west
wing of the original building remains. The over-hanging gatehouse, with an entrance archway having
heavy moulded timbers with curved brackets, still
exists. Traces of the north wing have been discovered, but the south wing has been entirely
destroyed. Sun Street contains on its eastern side
several houses of the 17th century and earlier; they
have, however, been mostly refronted in the 18th
century. The more important are the Angel Inn,
mentioned in 1632, (fn. 19) which is of two stories of
timber and plaster and has a tiled roof. It has remains
of mediaeval work, although its appearance has been
much changed by later alterations. It was originally
an L-shaped building facing on to the market-place.
It may have had shops on the ground floor facing the
street and a hall and small chamber over them. In
the 17th century a staircase was added in the angle
between the wings and a small addition made at the
back. The upper story projects both in front and at
the back. An archway of a type usual in old coaching
inns leads into the yard, and is supported on 16th-century brackets carved with birds and flowers. The
gables at the back have carved barge-boards—the one
more elaborately carved is of the 15th century, and
the other of the early 17th century. There is a good
17th-century staircase with moulded hand-rail and
turned balusters. A little southward is the Sun Inn,
which was apparently built in the last few years of the
16th century and is of brick and plastered timber with
a tile roof. It was refronted in the 18th century and
later much altered. At the back is a courtyard,
which is approached by an archway from the street.
It was here that the Commissaries' Court was held in
1639, (fn. 20) when Joseph Wigg of North Mimms refused
to remove his hat upon admonition of the judge,
saying he would put off his hat if the judge would
lend him a cap; 'he knew where he was: in a
place made of wood, stones and other things.' Wigg's
example was followed by John Clarke. A new
assembly room was built at the 'Sun' in 1770. (fn. 21)
At this inn, too, the courts of the manor of Portman
and Foreign are still held at Michaelmas. Further
on, near to Bridge Street, is an old 17th-century
brick house with a tile roof. It is rectangular in
plan; the windows on the first floor have wooden
mullions and transoms, but those on the ground
floor were altered in the 18th century. On the
north side is a three-centred arch leading into a yard at
the back. On the western side of the market-place
there are also many houses of the 17th century or
possibly earlier, but here again they have been
refronted in the 18th century. In High Street,
formerly known as Cock Street, is the Cock Hotel,
built of timber with plaster and brick filling of
probably the 16th century. It is an L-shaped building
with a large yard at the back. It is mentioned in the
Hitchin Registers in 1617. In Bucklersbury, which
probably takes its name from a house which is referred
to in the 17th century, (fn. 22) is the George Inn, a two-storied building originally built in the 16th century
or possibly earlier, but now much changed owing to
frequent alterations. It has in the middle facing the
street a high archway leading into the yard, with a
high ove-rhanging gable above. The upper story
projects. A little further south is the Hart Inn,
probably of the last few years of the 16th century.
It is of two stories of plastered timber with a tiled
roof, and was much altered in the 19th century.
It has a projecting upper story and an archway leading
into the yard behind, around which are plastered
timbered buildings with projecting stories. At the
front of this archway is a pair of 17th-century gates.

View in Bankcroft, Hitchen
The houses in Bridge Street are mostly of brick,
but there are a few timber and plaster buildings.
No. 2 is a small 16th-century house covered with
rough-cast and having a tiled roof. Its principal
interest is two early 16th-century barge-boards, one
with a guilloche pattern and the other with dragons
in low relief. On the opposite side Nos. 21 to 23
are interesting old timber and plaster houses with
tiled roofs, which may be of about the year 1600.
The middle house has a bay window and probably
an original door. Nos. 18 and 19 originally formed
one 16th-century house of timber and plaster with a
tiled roof. On the west side the upper story projects
over the river, and on the north over the street. It
has a framed archway to the yard behind. At the
east end of Bridge Street, looking on to what is
called the Triangle, is an interesting timber and
plaster house of the 15th century, now much altered
and divided into several houses. It is L-shaped
in plan with an archway to the yard at the back.
The upper story overhangs and had originally an
open roof.
Nos. 8 to 11 on the south side of Tilehouse (fn. 23)
Street were originally one house dating from the
early part of the 17th century, but have been much
altered. The Three Tuns Inn with the house
adjoining it, numbered 11, formed another house of
the same date, which has the usual archway leading
into a yard. No. 19 is also of the same date and
contains some original panelling reset. On the north
side is the Coopers' Arms Inn, said to have been the
Tilers' Gild Hall. It is built of stone with a tiled
roof and dates back to the middle of the 15th century.
It was originally of the courtyard type, but only the
south and west wings of it now remain. The south
wing, which faces on to the street, contains what
remains of the hall, which had an open timbered roof,
two trusses of which are still in existence. An
additional story, however, was made by the insertion
of an upper floor which projected into the street,
probably in the 17th century. There is an archway
from the street to the yard behind.
The old Free School at the west end of Tilehouse
Street, now a dwelling-house, was built about 1650, (fn. 24)
but has been much altered. It is of two stories of
plastered timber and brick with a tiled roof.
There are many old and interesting houses in
Queen Street, formerly Dead Street and later Back
Lane, with arched entrances into the yards behind.
Amongst them may be specially mentioned No. 6, a
small 17th-century house of timber and plaster and
tiled roof, with an over-hanging gabled front. Nos.
103 and 104 were formerly one house, probably the
earliest house now remaining in Hitchin. This was
built at the end of the 14th or beginning of the
15th century, and has masonry foundations with a
plaster and timber superstructure and tiled roof.
Originally it had a central hall with a kitchen wing
on the north side, which, together with a part of the
hall, has been destroyed; and a solar wing of two
stories on the south, the outlines of which can still be
traced. No early details of the interior remain
except parts of two trusses of the hall roof, of the
hammer-beam type, 19 ft. span, with moulded wallplates. The next two houses, which originally formed
one house, are of a little later date, being of the 15th
century. The hall appears to have been in the
upper story which projects over the street. On the
over-hanging gable above the archway on the south is
the date 1729 in the plaster, but the posts supporting
the beam of the arch have 15th-century moulded
capitals supporting the curved angle brackets.

The Three Tuns Inn, Tilehouse Street
To the west of Queen Street, near the River Hiz,
are the Biggin Almshouses, built in the early part of
the 17th century. They consist of four wings built
round a small courtyard, on the west side of which is
a wooden colonnade forming a cloister. Each wing
contains a small set of rooms on each floor. They are
of two stories and an attic and are built of timber and
plaster and brickwork. They have been much altered
at different dates.
There is a Corn Exchange in the town, erected in
1851. The new town hall in Brand Street is dated
1901. This has superseded an older one built in
1840. Among other public buildings may be noticed
the Mechanics' Institute and public subscription
library adjoining the old town hall. There is a
large infirmary called the North Herts and South Beds
Infirmary in the Bedford Road, which was erected in
1840. The Home for girls of weak and defective
intelligence, in the Triangle, was built in 1893.
The Girls' Grammar School, which was built at
the cost of £13,000, was opened in July 1908. The
Boys' Grammar School is a continuation of the Free
School founded by John Mattock in 1650 and
removed to new buildings about
twenty years ago.
Among the past inhabitants of
Hitchin was George Chapman the
poet. He is best known as translator of Homer's Iliad and Odyssey,
but also wrote other poetry and
plays. In Euthymiae Raptus, or the
Tears of Peace, he alludes to having
spent his childhood in the neighbourhood of Hitchin. (fn. 25) William
Drage, a believer in astrology and
witchcraft, and Maurice Johnson,
the antiquary, lived here in the
17th century. (fn. 26) The 19th century claims Sir Henry Bessemer,
the inventor of a new process for
making steel, and Robert Bentley,
botanist, who was born here.
James Hack Tuke, philanthropist,
spent a part of his life at Hitchin.
Samuel Lucas, a well-known
amateur artist, belonged to an old
Hitchin family. Good examples
of his art are to be seen in the
town hall at Hitchin and in the
British Museum. Frederick Chapman, publisher and originator of
the Fortnightly Review, was born in
Cock Street in a house said to have
belonged to his collateral ancestor
George Chapman the poet.
BOROUGH
Hitchin was
undoubtedly an important manor and
soke before the Conquest, but
there is no evidence from the
entries in the Domesday Survey
that it was a borough. It was
probably not till the middle of
the 12th century, when the Baliols
were lords, that it developed into an inchoate
borough. (fn. 27) This was the time when so many such
market towns arose in consequence of the prosperity
of the wool trade, which enabled the townspeople
to purchase rights from the nobles and other landowners impoverished by the civil wars. The market
at Hitchin was held by prescription, and the right to
hold a fair was obtained in 1221. (fn. 28) By 1268 we
have evidence that the borough was farmed to the
burgesses at a rent of 8½ marks. (fn. 29) As we find at the
same time a distinction between tenants of the
borough and those of the manor, we may infer there
was then the borough or portmote court as well as
the manor or foreign court organized in the same
manner as we find them later. A reference to a
fulling mill at this date (fn. 30) possibly indicates one
source of wealth of the burgesses, but the position
of the town on the road to the north may give a
more important reason for its prosperity.
Hitchin continued to be called a borough in
1375–6, (fn. 31) and it appeared before the justices in eyre
as other boroughs by twelve jurors apart from the
county in 1248, (fn. 32) 1287 (fn. 33) and 1341. (fn. 34) But it was
not a fully developed borough, for we find no evidence of burgage rents; it never received a charter of
incorporation and never returned a member to Parliament. It was one of those numerous little manorial
towns which existed throughout England with varying liberties which bordered upon borough rights.
The town was divided into three wards—namely,
Bancroft Ward, Bridge Street Ward and Tilehouse
Street Ward—and was governed by a bailiff appointed
at the lord's court, and two constables for the town
and two for the foreign and two head boroughs for
each ward. Besides these there were in 1819 two
ale conners, two leather searchers and sealers, one
bellman, who was also watchman and town crier. (fn. 35)
In 1883 the Crown sold its market rights to the
local authorities for £4,000, adding the land on
which the market was held as a gift. (fn. 36) The market
was always celebrated for its corn, (fn. 37) and it is said
that corn was always free of tolls there. (fn. 38)
A fair, as mentioned above, was granted to the
lord of Hitchin in 1221. At the beginning of the
next century another fair was granted to Robert de
Kendale, this fair to be held on the vigil, day and
morrow of the Decollation of St. John the Baptist
(28–30 August). (fn. 39) In 1475 a grant was made
to the fraternity or gild here of two fairs, each
of three days' duration, with courts of pie powder.
These two fairs were held on Wednesday in
Easter week and the feast of the Translation of
Edward the Confessor (13 October) and the days
immediately preceding and following. (fn. 40) After the
Dissolution they were granted to Ranulph Burgh and
Robert Beverley. (fn. 41) At the end of the 16th century
three fairs were held, in Easter week, on St. Edward's
Day, and at Michaelmas. (fn. 42) These fairs were leased
to John Fitz Acherley with the mills. (fn. 43) By 1792
two annual fairs only took place, each lasting one
day. The fair days at this time were Easter Tuesday
and Whit Tuesday. (fn. 44) Fairs are now held on these
days and on one day following each. There are also
two fairs at Preston held on the first Wednesday in
May and on the Wednesday before 29 October. (fn. 45)
There is record of a water mill in Hitchin in
1248, which was held by William de Lindlegh, (fn. 46) and
had been held by William his father. In the 16th
century there were two water mills on the demesne
lands there. (fn. 47) They were called le Shotting Mill
and le Porte Mill, and were leased in 1594–5 to John
Fitz Acherley for thirty-one years, (fn. 48) and other leases
were made later. (fn. 49) There are still two mills known
by these names. (fn. 50) Shotting Mill seems to have been
known also as Sheekling Mill. (fn. 51) At the beginning
of the next century there appears to have been
another water mill called 'le Malt-milne,' which was
granted to Edward Ferrers and Francis Phelipps. (fn. 52)
In 1670 a suit arose on account of a windmill
belonging to Sir Edward Papworth in Charlton, built
some thirteen or fourteen years before, which was
said to take away some of the trade from the king's
two water mills. (fn. 53) This may have been on the site
of the mill in Charlton, mentioned as early as 1177, (fn. 54)
which in 1329 was held by Walter de Nevill. (fn. 55) In
the 19th century there was a mill called Grove Mill,
which was previously known as Burnt Mill. (fn. 56)
Hitch Wood, in the south of the parish, was once
far more extensive than it is at present. By the end
of the 16th century the part of this wood near the
town had begun to disappear, (fn. 57) but it still extended
into Ippollitts, Langley, Minsden and Preston, (fn. 58) and
its area must have been very considerable, for the
woods and underwoods were then granted to the
copyholders for the large sum of £266 16s. (fn. 59)
MANORS
Hitchin
The manor of HITCHIN was the
head of the group of Hertfordshire
manors held by Earl Harold, to which
William I succeeded after the Conquest. These at
the time of the Domesday Survey were farmed out
together by the sheriff, and treated for some purposes
as one integral manor. (fn. 60) The manors which belonged
to or 'lay in' the manor of Hitchin were Wymondley,
Mendlesdene (Minsden), Welei, Westone, Waldenei
(King's Walden), Wavedene (Wandon), Cerletone
(Charlton), Deneslai (Temple Dinsley), Offley, Welle
(Wellbury in Offley), Wilei, Flesmere, Hexton,
Lilley, Flexmere, Leglege (fn. 61) (Ley Green in King's
Walden [?]), assessed in all at a total of some
37½ hides. Of these manors two were attached to
Hitchin by Harold himself. These were Wymondley,
which he stole from the nuns of Chatteris, as the
shire mote testified, (fn. 62) and Hexton. (fn. 63) King's Walden,
Charlton and Offley were attached after the Conquest
by Ilbert Sheriff of Hertfordshire, (fn. 64) while Dinsley,
Wellbury and Welei were attached by Peter de
Valoines, his successor. (fn. 65)
Hitchin itself was assessed at 5 hides only, although
there was land for thirty-eight ploughs (including the
land belonging to the minster). (fn. 66) The total value
of Hitchin and its appurtenances was £106, whilst
the sokes belonging to the manor were worth £40. (fn. 67)
The services known as 'avera' and 'inward,' rendered
by some of these manors, as due from the sokemen of
the king, point to Hitchin's having been once ancient
demesne. (fn. 68) The services, which were carrying services
performed with a horse and cart, are distinctive of
the two counties of Hertford and Cambridge, and in
Hertfordshire the inward (inguard) is peculiar to
Hitchin and its sub-manors. (fn. 69) Extents of the manor
in the 13th and 14th centuries mention the services
as owed by the customary tenants of the manor. (fn. 70)
According to the legend of the foundation of
Waltham Abbey, as related in the 12th-century tract
'De Inventione sanctae Crucis,' Hitchin, or a part
of Hitchin, (fn. 71) was held with Waltham, co. Essex, in
the time of Canute by Tovi 'Pruda,' staller to
Canute, a man of great importance, ranking second
only to the king. He is said to have granted both
Waltham and Hitchin to the church he founded at
Waltham for the reception of the Holy Cross. (fn. 72) After
the death of Tovi, however, his son Adelstan, who
succeeded to the lands his father held as staller, forfeited these possessions, which were granted by King
Edward the Confessor to Earl Harold. (fn. 73) A grant of
Waltham was made by Harold to his new foundation
there, and confirmed by Edward the Confessor. (fn. 74) The
charter of confirmation mentions Hitchin as also in
the possession of the abbey, but whether it was given
by Harold at the same time as Waltham is not clear. (fn. 75)
No further trace, however, of any connexion with
the abbey has been found. It is certain from the
Domesday Survey that Earl Harold had held the
manor, but in 1086 it was in the hands of William
the Conqueror.
In the 13th century it was deposed by the jurors
of the hundred that Hitchin
was granted by William Rufus
to Bernard de Baliol. (fn. 76) Nothing, however, is known of
this Bernard before the reign
of Stephen, and it seems more
likely that the grant, if made
by William II, was to Guy
de Baliol, the founder of the
English house, who is said
to have received lands from
William. (fn. 77) Bernard de Baliol
was certainly holding before
1153. (fn. 78) The Bernard de
Baliol, one of the northern barons who raised the
siege of Alnwick and took William the Lion prisoner,
was apparently his son. (fn. 79) The younger Bernard was
succeeded by his son Eustace, and Eustace by Hugh,
his son. (fn. 80) Hugh de Baliol mortgaged the manor to
Benedict, a Jew of London, about 1204. (fn. 81) It
descended to his son John de Baliol, who died in
1268, (fn. 82) after which his widow Devorgilda held it in
dower. (fn. 83) His two elder sons Hugh and Alexander
died without issue before 1278, and a younger son
John then succeeded to the lands. (fn. 84) This John was
crowned King of Scotland in 1292. He lost the
kingdom in 1296, and his lands were forfeited.

Baliol. Gules a voided scutcheon argent.
The manor of Hitchin was shortly afterwards
granted by Edward I to Roger l'Estrange, formerly
justice of the forest for the south of Trent, for the
term of his life. (fn. 85) In 1306 the reversion of the manor
was granted to John of Britanny, the king's nephew,
together with the other Baliol lands, (fn. 86) but two years
later the reversion was granted
to Robert Kendale while John
of Britanny was still living. (fn. 87)
Robert Kendale, who was
Constable of Dover Castle
and Warden of the Cinque
Ports, (fn. 88) held the manor with
his wife Margaret until his
death in 1330. (fn. 89) His son
Edward succeeded to the property on the death of his
mother in 1347. (fn. 90) Edward
Kendale died in January
1372–3, (fn. 91) and was succeeded
by his eldest son Edward, who,
however, only survived his father by about two years,
dying in July 1375. (fn. 92) Elizabeth his mother and
Thomas his brother and heir both died in the following September. (fn. 93) Elizabeth widow of Edward, who
married Thomas Barre, received dower in one third
of two thirds of the manor. (fn. 94) Beatrice wife of
Robert Turk was her brother's heir, (fn. 95) but could
not inherit Hitchin, as it was held in tail-male. The
two thirds of the property therefore reverted to
the Crown and were granted to Alice Perrers, the
king's mistress, for her life. (fn. 96) She forfeited in 1377
under an Act of the Good Parliament, (fn. 97) and in 1380
the manor was granted to Hugh de Segrave for life. (fn. 98)
In 1382 he further received a grant of an annual
payment in compensation for the third still held by
Elizabeth widow of Edward Kendale. (fn. 99) After the
death of Hugh de Segrave the manor was granted in
1387 to Edmund Duke of York, (fn. 100) and confirmed to
him by Henry IV in 1399. (fn. 101) The duke died in
1402, his widow Joan surviving until 1434, when the
manor descended to Richard Duke of York, grandson
of Edmund, (fn. 102) who was killed at the battle of Wakefield in 1460. His son Edward Duke of York was
crowned King of England in 1461. In the same year
he granted Hitchin to his mother Cicely Duchess of
York for life. (fn. 103) The reversion was granted by
Henry VII to his queen Elizabeth in 1491. (fn. 104) In
1509 Henry VIII granted the manor to the Princess
Katherine of Arragon on his marriage with her, (fn. 105) and
in 1534 it formed part of the dower of Queen Anne
Boleyn. (fn. 106) Ralph Sadleir, gentleman of the King's
Privy Chamber, was appointed steward and bailiff of
the lordship in 1539 in place of William Coffyn
deceased. (fn. 107) In 1603 James I granted the manor to
his queen Anne, (fn. 108) and in 1619 it was conveyed by
the king to trustees for the use of the Prince of
Wales. (fn. 109) A Parliamentary survey was taken of it in
1650, as having lately belonged to Queen Henrietta
Maria. (fn. 110) From the survey it appears that quit-rents
were payable to the manor from tenants in Hitchin,
Offley, Walden, Preston and Kimpton. The freeholders paid for relief one year's quit-rent, but nothing
on alienation; the copyholders paid half a year's quitrents on alienation and were admitted for a term of
forty years, renewable on the payment of another
quit-rent, but owed no heriots. The woods on the
manor had been granted in 1619 to trustees to the
use of the copyholders for a sum of £266 16s. The
courts baron and leet were kept in one of the stalls
in the market-place belonging to the lord of the
manor. The common fines, law-day money, headsilver, and tithing silver paid at the Michaelmas leet
amounted to £1 15s., the fines, &c., from the courts
to £6. In the same year the trustees for the sale
of the royal lands conveyed the manor to Samuel
Chidley. (fn. 111) After the Restoration the queen mother
resumed possession. (fn. 112) It was held by Catherine,
queen of Charles II, and after her death was granted
on a lease to Francis Lord Holles for seventy-five
years. (fn. 113) Leases of the manor continued to be
made down to 1843, (fn. 114) when the last expired, and
Hitchin has since remained in the hands of the
Crown.

Kindale. Argent a bend vert and a label gules.

Edmund Duke of York. The royal arms of EDWARD III with the difference of a label argent with three roundels gules on each pendant.

Richard Duke of York. FRANCE quartered with ENGLAND differenced with the same label.

Elizabeth of York. Or a cross gules, for De Burgh, quartered with Barry or and azure a chief or with two piles between two gyrons azure therein and a scutcheon argent over all, for Mortimer.

Anne of Denmark. Or powdered with hearts gules three leopards azure having golden crowns.

Henrietta Maria of France. Azure three feurs de lis or.
In the 13th century Devorgilda de Baliol claimed
assize of bread and ale, but on what grounds was not
known, as this privilege had previously always been
in the hands of the king. (fn. 115) Free warren was granted
to Robert de Kendale and his heirs by Edward II in
1318. (fn. 116)
In the survey of 1650 the boundaries of the manor
are given as follows: 'The bounds of Hitchin begin
at Altonheade, thence to a place called Burford Ray,
thence to a water-mill called Hide Mill, thence to a
hill called Welberry Hill, thence to a place called
Bosrendell, thence to a water-mill called Purwell Mill,
thence to a river called Ippolletts Brook, thence to
Maiden Croft Lane, thence to a place called Wellhead, thence to Stubborne Bush, thence to Offley
Cross, thence to Fiveborrowe Hill, and thence to said
Altonheade.'
In the time of Edward the Confessor the manor
of DINSLEY (Deneslai, xi cent.; Dineslea, Dineslega, xii cent.; Dunsle, Dynesle, Dinglo, xiii cent.;
Dyonyse, xvii cent.) was in the possession of Earl
Harold, and in 1086 it was held by King William. (fn. 117)
It was assessed at the time of the Survey at 7 hides.
It had been held of Harold by two sokemen as two
separate manors, but when it came into King William's
hands he gave it to Ilbert his sheriff for his term of
office, and he held the two manors as one. (fn. 118) Each
of these two manors rendered the service of 2 'averae'
and 2 'inwardi.' (fn. 119) At the end of this time Ilbert
refused to find the customary 'avera' due from the
manor, and it was forcibly taken from him by Peter
de Valoines, his successor, and Ralph Taillebois, who
laid it to the king's manor of Hitchin. (fn. 120)
Dinsley was apparently included in the grant of the
manor of Hitchin made to Guy or Bernard de Baliol
(see above), for in the reign of Stephen Bernard de
Baliol granted 15 librates of land at 'Wedelee' (a
name used elsewhere for Dinsley), a member of his
manor of Hitchin, to the Master and Brothers of the
Knights Templars. (fn. 121) Other grants of land were made
to this order, and together formed the manor of
TEMPLE DINSLEY. A grant of free warren there
was made to them in 1253. (fn. 122) They also claimed
view of frankpledge, assize of bread and ale and
gallows there. (fn. 123) In 1309 Ralph de Monchensey
and John de Kyreton were appointed to report on
the state of the manor (fn. 124) preparatory to the suppression of the order, which took place shortly afterwards. (fn. 125) With the other lands of the Templars it
passed to the Knights of the Hospital of St. John of
Jerusalem, and in 1330 the prior of that order demised
it to William Langford for life. (fn. 126) The priors held
the manor of the lords of the manors of Hitchin,
Dinsley Furnival and King's Walden by finding two
chaplains annually to celebrate divine service in the
chapel of the manor for the souls of the former lords
of those manors who had been the feoffors of the
Templars. (fn. 127) At the suppression of the Hospitallers
the manor of Temple Dinsley came to the Crown,
and was granted to Sir Ralph Sadleir in March
1542. (fn. 128) He settled the manor on his son Edward
Sadleir and Edward's wife Anne. (fn. 129) Sir Ralph died
in 1587, when it descended to Lee son of Edward, (fn. 130)
the latter having died in 1584. Anne, widow of
Edward, who married Ralph Norwich, retained a
life interest. (fn. 131) Lee died in 1588, and was succeeded
by his son and heir Thomas, (fn. 132) from whom the manor
descended to his eldest surviving son Edwin, (fn. 133) who was
created a baronet in 1661. (fn. 134)
He died in 1672. His son Sir
Edwin Sadleir sold the manor
in 1712 to Benedict Ithell of
Chelsea. (fn. 135) His son Benedict
died without issue in 1758,
when the property passed to
his sisters Elizabeth and
Martha. The former died in
1766 and Martha one year
later. Neither left any children, and Martha bequeathed
the estate of Temple Dinsley
to her steward, Thomas Harwood, who at his death in
1786 left it to a nephew, Joseph Darton. (fn. 136) It is
now the property of Mr. H. G. Fenwick.

The Knights Templars. Argent a cross gules and a chief sable.

The Knights Hospitallers. Gules a cross argent.

Sadleir. Or a lion parted fessewise azure and gules.
Maidecroft
The manor of MAIDECROFT (Medcroft, xiii
cent.; Maidecroft, xiv cent.) or DINSLEY FURNIVAL was another part of the manor of Dinsley
which is said in the 13th
century to have been granted
by William Rufus to Richard
de Loveceft. In 1268 it was
in the tenure of Thomas de
Furnival, who conveyed to
his younger brother Gerard
de Furnival two parts of the
manor. (fn. 137) In 1287 Gerard de
Furnival son of Gerard de
Furnival granted the manor
to William Hurst, with remainder in default of issue to
Gerard son of William de
Eylesford and of Christine
Gerard Furnival's daughter, then to Loretta daughter
of Gerard de Furnival, wife of John de Useflet. (fn. 138) In
1315–16 Gerard son of William de Eylesford (fn. 139)
recovered the manor against John son of William
Hurst. (fn. 140) Soon after this the manor came into the
hands of the overlord, Robert Kendale, who in
March 1317–18 received a grant of free warren in
his demesne lands there, (fn. 141) and it descended with the
manor of Hitchin (q.v.) until the death of Edward
Kendale the younger in 1375. (fn. 142) It then passed to
his sister Beatrice, wife of Robert Turk, as apparently it was not held like Hitchin in tail-male.
Beatrice and her husband conveyed the manor in
the following year to Sir William Croyser, kt., and
Elizabeth his daughter, (fn. 143) apparently in confirmation
of an earlier grant made by Edward Kendale in
1372. (fn. 144) A life interest in the manor was retained by
Elizabeth widow of Edward Kendale. (fn. 145) In 1379 Sir
William Croyser received a grant of free warren. (fn. 146)

Furnival. Argent a bend between six martlets gules.
In 1377 Croyser conveyed the reversion of the
manor to Reginald Lord Grey of Ruthyn. (fn. 147) In 1391
John Grey and Elizabeth his wife, on whom apparently
a settlement had been made by Lord Grey, (fn. 148) granted
the manor to trustees for conveyance of the reversion
after the death of Elizabeth to Sir Thomas Beaufort,
kt., who was created Earl of Dorset in 1411 and
Duke of Exeter in 1416. He died in 1426, when
the manor passed, according to a settlement, to his
nephew John Beaufort, created Duke of Somerset
in 1443. (fn. 149) The manor descended to his daughter
Margaret, wife of Edmund Earl of Richmond, and
to her son King Henry VII, (fn. 150) and thus became vested
in the Crown. In 1524 a lease of the manor was
made to Morgan Morice (fn. 151) and afterwards to Henry
Morice, probably his son. (fn. 152)

Grey of Ruthyn. Barry argent and azure with three roundels gules in the chief.

Beaufort. FRANCE and ENGLAND with the difference of a border gobony argent and azure.
In 1544 John Cock (Cokke, Cooke) bought the
manor of Maidecroft from the king, and with it a
wood called Weyndon (Wendon Wood). (fn. 153) John
Cock by his will of 1553 left the estate to his two
sons William and Thomas. A partition was made
after 1558, by which William held the capital
messuage and some of the land, while Thomas had
the residue of the property, including the manorial
rights. (fn. 154) Thomas conveyed his share of the estate in
1606 to Ralph Radcliffe, (fn. 155) who ten years later had a
grant of a court leet there. (fn. 156) From this date the manor
has descended with that of Hitchin Priory (q.v.).
The capital messuage was held by William Cock
at his death in 1610, and probably passed to his wife
Elizabeth, who survived him, and after her death to
her daughter Anne, wife of William Fryer, (fn. 157) but this
portion of the estate is not further traceable.
In the time of Edward II there was a park at
Maidecroft which was visited on one occasion by
Isabella his queen and her daughter the Queen of
Scotland. (fn. 158)
Charlton alias Moremead
The reputed manor of CHARLTON alias MOREMEAD was at the time of the Survey in the
possession of King William. Before the Conquest it
had been held by two sokemen of Earl Harold, but
had been attached by the sheriff Ilbert to Hitchin,
in which its soke lay. (fn. 159) The history of this manor
is scanty, (fn. 160) but apparently it came into the possession
of the Knights Templars, who received a grant of
free warren there in 1269. (fn. 161) It was probably held
by the Templars (fn. 162) and then by the Hospitallers with
the manor of Temple Dinsley (q.v.) until the
suppression of the latter order. The manor subsequently came to Edward Pulter, who sold it in 1582
to Ralph Radcliffe, (fn. 163) from which time it has descended
with Hitchin Priory (fn. 164) (q.v).
Mendlesden, Minsden, or Minsdenbury
The manor of MENDLESDEN, MINSDEN, or
MINSDENBURY was a member of Hitchin, and
passed with that manor from Earl Harold to the
Conqueror. (fn. 165) In the 12th century Minsden seems
to have been held by Guy de Bovencourt, whose
heir (unnamed) forfeited his lands in the reign of
John. It was then granted to Hugh de Baliol, (fn. 166) the
lord of the manor of Hitchin. After the forfeiture
of John de Baliol (see Hitchin) the manor of Hitchin
was granted to Robert Kendale, and on the strength
of this grant he took possession of Minsden. A
suit in Chancery was brought by the king against
Edward Kendale, his son (to whom the manor descended), who contended that Minsden was not a
separate manor but a hamlet within the manor of
Hitchin. (fn. 167) The result of the suit seems to have
been that the king recovered Minsden, for in 1366
the king's esquire John de Beverle was holding the
manor and received a grant of free warren. (fn. 168) He
held it with his wife Amice until his death in 1380,
leaving as heirs his two daughters Anne and Elizabeth. (fn. 169)
The mother and two daughters appear to have taken
one-third of the manor each. Elizabeth married
John Dauntesey, who died in January 1404–5. (fn. 170)
She had died in 1395, (fn. 171) leaving a son and heir Walter,
then aged twelve, who on reaching his majority
received his mother's third, which had been given
by the king after John Dauntesey's death to John
Cockayne. (fn. 172) Anne's husband, William Langford, who
survived her, died in 1411. Their heir was their
son Robert. (fn. 173) Amice married as her second husband
Robert Bardolf. (fn. 174) Probably Dauntesey sold his share
in the manor to Langford, for in 1419 Robert Langford died seised of the whole, and was succeeded
by his son Edward. (fn. 175) At his death in 1474 his son
Thomas inherited the property (fn. 176) and held it for some
twenty years. It passed at his death in 1493 (fn. 177) to
his son John, who was afterwards knighted. In
1501–2 he and his wife Katherine sold the property
to William Lytton, (fn. 178) who died in 1517, leaving as
heir his son Robert, aged five years. (fn. 179) Robert at his
death left three daughters, of whom Ellen wife of
John Brockett bought up the shares of the other
two. (fn. 180) From this date the manor descended with
the manor of Almshoe in Ippollitts (q.v.).
There was a small religious house in this parish
called NEW BIGGING, belonging to the order of
St. Gilbert of Sempringham. (fn. 181) This house was
founded by Edward de Kendale before 1363, when
he obtained licence to divert a grant made by his
mother Margaret de Kendale of a rood of land at
Orwell, co. Cambridge, and of the advowson of the
church there to the warden and chaplains of the
chapel of St. Peter within the parish church of Hitchin,
for the benefit of the prior and canons of this house. (fn. 182)
In 1372 two chaplains granted to them, probably on
the behalf of Edward de Kendale, certain lands in
Willey and Hitchin. (fn. 183) The lands of the priory were
valued in 1535 at £13 16s. (fn. 184) After the Dissolution
the priory was granted in 1544 to John Cock,
together with a messuage called Barkers Dalles Place
in Bancroft Street and nineteen messuages in Hitchin. (fn. 185)
It apparently descended with his manor of Maidecroft
(q.v.), as this is the last mention of it. In the
17th century the manor-house called the Biggin
was in the possession of Joseph Kemp, schoolmaster,
who in 1654 devised it for charitable purposes (see
under Charities). There was also a free chapel at
Bigging, of which Robert Turk (lord of the manor of
Maidecroft in right of his wife) died seised in 1400. (fn. 186)