RINGWOOD
Rincveda (xi cent.); Ringwud (xii cent.);
Ringwode, Rinkewode (xiii cent.).
Ringwood, including the tithing and parochial
chapelry of Bisterne, is an extensive parish comprising
11,842 acres, of which 2,809 acres are arable land,
2,321 acres permanent grass and 2,385 acres woods
and plantations. (fn. 1) The parish lies low round the
River Avon, which frequently overflows the neighbouring meadows. The river is spanned by a stone
bridge of three arches. In the neighbourhood of
Hightown and Crow in the east the land rises to
200 ft. Ashley Heath, joined at the south by
Barnsfield Wood and Leybrooke Common, forms most
of the parish between Moors River and the Avon;
while eastwards copse and moorland merge in Burley
Walk and the New Forest.
The town of Ringwood, to which the captive
Monmouth was brought after Sedgemoor, lies on the
east bank of the Avon, where the river is widest.
The town is built along the Christchurch road
about an open market place, around which stand the
church and the Town Hall erected by Mr. John
Morant in 1868. There are a Lecture Hall in Christchurch Street, built in 1874 by Miss Carter of Ringwood, and an iron theatre given to the town in 1888 by
Mr. Hay Richards Morant. There is a large linen
collar and cuff factory, while 'Ringwood' woollen
gloves are famous.
Ashley lies to the west just across the river near
the Ringwood Union Workhouse; Moortown is a
mile south of the town on the Christchurch road
and Kingston a mile south of that, with North
Kingston a little to the north-east. Hightown
and Crow are in the east and Poulner and North
Poulner in the extreme north-east, reached from
Ringwood by Poulner Lane.
St. Ives, the seat of Dr. William James
Russell, F.R.S., stands on a hill a mile south-west of
the town. Avon Castle, a modern house, the property of Colonel Ralph Peacock, V.D., C.E., stands
in picturesque grounds on the banks of the Avon.
The tithing and chapelry of Bisterne, which
includes the hamlet of Sandford, is in the south.
The manor-house stands in a park of 150 acres.
The civil parish of Burley, covering 11,311 acres, is
nearly as extensive as Ringwood. It was formed
in 1868 from Burley Walk and Holmsley Walk,
extra-parochial parts of the New Forest, together
with the ancient vill of Burley. The ecclesiastical
parish was formed in 1840 out of Ringwood. In
1876, by an Order of the Local Government Board,
part of Ringwood was transferred to Burley. The
parish has a soil of sandy loam and a subsoil of
gravel and sand. The height above sea level varies
from 150 ft. to 300 ft. There are 163 acres
of arable land, 877 acres of permanent grass and
1,690½ acres of woods and plantations, (fn. 2) but by
far the greater part of the parish is forest land.
Burley Manor House, now occupied by Mr. Ellis
Cunliffe Lister-Kay, stands in a park of 85 acres.
Near Burley Lodge are some fine oak trees, known as
the 'Twelve Apostles,' though not half that number
now remains. Picket Post is the residence of Lord
Lucas of Crudwell, and Old House, hard by, belongs
to his sister, Miss Herbert. It was here that their
father, Auberon Herbert, author of A Politician in
trouble about his Soul, put into practice his theories of
the open-air life.
Among other notable people connected with Ringwood may be mentioned Joseph D'Arcy Sirr (1794–1868), author of a Memoir of Archbishop Trench, a Life
of Archbishop Usher, and other works, who held the
living; George Williams, the topographer of Jerusalem, who was vicar from 1869 until his death in
1878; and Joseph Ivimey, the Baptist minister and
historian, born there in 1773.
There was an inclosure award in Ringwood in
1807. (fn. 3)
Manors
Earl Tostig held RINGWOOD before
the Conquest, when it was assessed at
28 hides. In 1086, however, when it
was royal demesne, it was assessed at nothing: all
but 6 hides had been taken into the New Forest. (fn. 4)
Part of the holding was in the hie of Wight.
During the 12th and early 13th centuries Ringwood,
like other manors of which John and Henry III had
the immediate overlordship, was frequently in new
hands. Roland de Dinan, a Breton lord, was holding
in 1167 (fn. 5) ; and he appears to have been succeeded
by his nephew and eventual heir, Alan de Dinan,
whose lands, however, were subsequently taken into
the king's hands. (fn. 5a) In 1204 King John gave the
manor to his servant, Theodoric the Teuton, (fn. 6) and in
the following year a further mandate was issued to
the sheriff to re-deliver seisin to Theodoric in case he
had been disseised. (fn. 7) Before this, however, the manor
had been held by Robert Fitz Parnel Earl of Leicester,
after whose death in 1204 it passed to Joel de
Meynell. (fn. 8) In March 1217 it was given to William
Marshal the younger, afterwards second Earl of Pembroke, as part of the possessions of Seyer de Quinci
Earl of Winchester, (fn. 9) who had married Margaret, one
of Robert Fitz Parnel's daughters and co-heirs. A
month later Marshal was
ordered to restore the manor
to Theodoric the Teuton, (fn. 10)
and in 1223 the knights and
free tenants of Ringwood were
bound to answer to Waleran
the Teuton during the king's
pleasure. (fn. 11) In February 1226,
however, the manor was restored to Richard Marshal
third Earl of Pembroke, as
the right of his wife Gervaise
daughter and heir of the
above-mentioned Alan de
Dinan. (fn. 12) The earl's tenure
was intermittent. In 1227 and again in 1231 he
had fresh seisin, (fn. 13) because the manor had been in the
king's hands, and in 1234, after Earl Richard's death,
it was given to Simon de Steyland, king's clerk, until
restored to the right heirs. (fn. 14) In the following year
Gilbert Marshal fourth Earl of Pembroke assigned
the issues of Ringwood to his sister-in-law, the
Countess Eleanor, in part payment of £400 due to
her (fn. 15) ; but in 1237 Simon de Steyland, who a year
previously was receiving compensation for the loss of
the manor, (fn. 15a) had a fresh grant, (fn. 16) and in 1238 he was
pardoned the rent of £10 yearly previously exacted. (fn. 17)
Next year the manor was granted to Simon for life at
the yearly rent of a sore sparrow-hawk. (fn. 18) In 1240
it was given to John son of Geoffrey and his heirs,
being described as 'of the lands of the Bretons.' (fn. 19)
This grant was repeated in 1257, with the addition
of a provision for compensation in case the manor
should be restored to the right heirs (fn. 20) ; but the
Marshals never again seem to have had an interest in
the manor. John son of Geoffrey died about 1272,
and his son John subsequently sold it without licence
to Nicholas of Ely, Bishop of Winchester, (fn. 21) on
which account it was taken into the king's hands, (fn. 22)
but afterwards, in 1275, restored to the bishop, who
did homage for the same. (fn. 23) Nicholas of Ely died in
1280, and in February of that year, during the voidance of the see of Winchester, the custody of the manor
was given to Queen Eleanor of Castile. (fn. 24) In December
John le Boteler surrendered his claim to it for £60
worth of land yearly, (fn. 25) and in 1292, Eleanor being
dead, John son of Thomas was appointed custodian. (fn. 26)
On the marriage of Edward I with Margaret the French
king's sister in 1299 Ringwood was part of the dower
of the new queen. (fn. 27) Margaret died in 1318 and the
manor was assigned to Isabel queen of Edward II. (fn. 28)
In January 1331 Ringwood and other manors which
Isabel had previously surrendered were granted to
William de Montagu, subsequently created Earl of
Salisbury, (fn. 29) whose descendants
with some intermission held
it for more than two centuries.
The earl died seised of the
manor in 1344 (fn. 30) and the
issues were in 1344 restored
to his widow, the Countess
Katherine, who died so seised
five years later. (fn. 31) William de
Montagu second Earl of Salisbury died seised in 1397 (fn. 32)
and was succeeded by his nephew John, a zealous partisan
of Richard II. He was beheaded in 1400 and his lands
were escheated, but in 1404 Ringwood was restored
for the maintenance of his son Thomas, a minor,
afterwards restored as fourth Earl of Salisbury, and
Eleanor his wife. (fn. 33) Meanwhile the manor had been
farmed out for £200 a year to Thomas Earl of Kent,
whose widow Alice was pardoned £100 of arrears in
December 1405. (fn. 34) In 1427 Thomas Earl of Salisbury settled the manor (fn. 35) and died in 1428, (fn. 36) leaving
an only daughter and heir Alice, whose husband Sir
Richard Nevill was acknowledged Earl of Salisbury. In
1431 the manor was again
conveyed to trustees. (fn. 37) Richard
Earl of Salisbury, who was
beheaded in 1460 on the day
after the battle of Wakefield,
was succeeded by his son
Richard, the famous 'Kingmaker,' already Earl of
Warwick by right of his
wife. (fn. 38) After his death on
Barnet Field in 1471 his
estates were divided between
his two daughters, and Ringwood passed to Isabel wife of George (Plantagenet)
Duke of Clarence. (fn. 39) She died seised in 1476 (fn. 40) and
the duke in February 1478, after being attainted. (fn. 41)
Their son Edward Plantagenet was barely three years
old at his father's death, and within a month William
Berkeley, squire of the body, was appointed steward
of Ringwood and Christchurch during his minority. (fn. 42)
In 1480 Berkeley was succeeded in office by Thomas
(Grey) Marquess of Dorset, (fn. 43) but in 1484 the stewardship was given for life to the king's servant John
Hoton. (fn. 44) Edward Plantagenet, who succeeded to the
earldom of Warwick in 1492, became implicated in
Perkin Warbeck's conspiracy and was beheaded on
Tower Hill in November 1499, being subsequently
attainted in 1504. (fn. 45) Ringwood thus came to the
Crown, and in July 1510 William Belus was appointed
bailiff, while in the following October Sir William
Sandys was appointed steward. (fn. 46) In 1513 Warwick's
sister, the Lady Margaret Pole, was restored in the
earldom of Salisbury and the Montagu inheritance, (fn. 47)
and at once appointed Sir Thomas Englefield steward
of all her castles and lordships with a yearly rent of
40s. out of the manor of Ringwood. (fn. 48) After her
attainder the stewardship was given in February 1541
to Sir Thomas Wriothesley. (fn. 49) In July 1547 the manor
and hundred of Ringwood were given to Edward
(Seymour), the newly created Duke of Somerset, to
hold of the king by the fortieth part of a knight's
fee. (fn. 50) This grant was repeated in 1550 after Somerset had been deprived of the office of Protector by
Act of Parliament. (fn. 51) However, in 1553, after his
attainder and death, Ringwood was given to Sir John
Gates, a favoured servant of Edward VI. (fn. 52) Gates
was not long to enjoy possession, however. By helping the cause of Lady Jane Grey he early in the new
reign fell a victim to the fate that had overtaken so
many of the lords of Ringwood. (fn. 53) Queen Mary at
once granted the lands to Francis (Hastings) second
Earl of Huntingdon, in virtue of the fact that his
wife, Catherine Pole, was one of the heirs of the
Countess of Salisbury. (fn. 54) The remainder was to the
issue of Catherine with contingent remainders to the
Countess Margaret's heirs. The earl died in 1561
and the countess, seised of the manor, in 1576. (fn. 55) In
1592 the manor and hundred of Ringwood were
re-granted to their son Henry third Earl of Huntingdon and his heirs, (fn. 56) and he in the same year sold it
to Richard Branthwayte, (fn. 57) who died in 1594, leaving a son and heir Thomas Branthwayte. (fn. 58) The
history of the manor of Ringwood in the 17th
century is uncertain, but it undoubtedly passed to the
Arundells of Wardour and in 1728 was in the
hands of Henry (Arundell) sixth Lord Arundell of
Wardour. (fn. 59) His grandson Henry eighth Lord
Arundell of Wardour (fn. 60) sold it in 1794 to John
Morant of Brockenhurst (fn. 61) (q.v.),whose great-grandson,
Mr. Edward John Harry Eden Morant of Brockenhurst, is now lord of the manor.

Marshal, Earl of Pembroke. Party or and vert a lion gules.

Montagu, Earl of Salisbury. Argent a fesse indented gules of three points.

Nevill, Earl of Salisbury. Gules a saltire argent and a label gobony argent and azure.
An extent of the manor made at the end of the
13 th century records the services due from the
customary tenants. They paid £9 tallage. Their
services included mowing the lord's meadow, haymaking on 8 acres in 'Muchelmershe,' carting the
hay and making a rick; they were to repair the mills
and the houses within the court. (fn. 62)
A 15th-century custumal quotes a lost Pipe Roll
of the eighth year of Henry I to the effect that the
tenants of the 'manor of Ringwood and Harbridge'
had common rights in the New Forest, among the
knights and esquires, for their farm beasts and plough
beasts between 'Teg att Brokelisford' and 'Ostaven'
and in the vill of Beaulieu for all their live stock
except goats and geese: for this they paid the king
an annual agistamentum called 'lesse.' (fn. 63)
The principal views were at Martinmas (11 November) and Hockday (Monday and Tuesday following the second Sunday after Easter). (fn. 64)
A mill in Ringwood is mentioned in the Domesday
Survey and later there were two. (fn. 65) There was also
a fulling-mill. (fn. 66) At the present day there is a cornmill at the north of the town.
In the March of 1226 Henry III granted a
weekly market in Ringwood on Wednesdays to
Richard Marshal Earl of Pembroke and Gervaise his
wife to hold until the king should come of age. (fn. 67) A
market for corn, cattle and pigs is still held on
Wednesdays.
In 1337 the Earl of Salisbury, as lord of Ringwood
Manor, was granted a yearly fair on the vigil, feast
and morrow of St. Andrew (30 November). (fn. 68) There
was also another fair held on the feast of St. Peter
(29 June) in the 16th century. (fn. 69) Fairs are now
held on 10 July and 11 December.
BISTERNE (Betestre, xi cent.; Bettesthorne, xiii
cent.) was held under the
Confessor by Godric Malf in
parage and by his sons in
1086. Of the 3 hides at
which it was formerly assessed,
one had been taken into the
Forest. (fn. 70) The place gave its
name to its early lords, (fn. 71) and
the history of the manor is
practically identical with that
of the Bettesthorne or Bisterne
moiety of Minstead (q.v.) until
1792, when John Compton
sold the manor to William
Mills. (fn. 72) The latter, who died
in 1820, was followed at Bisterne by his son John
Mills, verderer of the New Forest. To him succeeded
in turn his sons, John, who died in 1899, and the
Rev. Cecil Mills, M.A., who died in 1908, and was
succeeded by his son, Mr. John Digby Mills, the
present lord of the manor.

Mills of Bisterne. Gyroned of six pieces argent and azure a millrind sable.
There is a legend, for the truth of which the name
of 'Dragon Fields' would once have been held
ample proof, that at Bisterne Sir Maurice Berkeley,
son of Sir John Berkeley and Elizabeth de Bettesthorne, killed a dragon which had its home on Burley
Beacon and greatly vexed the surrounding country.
A document at Berkeley Castle, of a date earlier than
1618, tells the story.
Sr Moris Barldey the sonne of Sr John Barkley, of Beverston,
beinge a man of great strength and courage, in his tyme there
was bread in Hampshire neere Bistherne a devouring Dragon,
who doing much mischief upon men and cattell and could not
be destroyed but spoiled many in attempting it, making his den
neere unto a Beacon. This Sr Moris Barkley armed himself
and encountered with it and at length overcam and killed it but
died himself soone after. This is the common saying even to
this day in those parts of Hampshire, and the better to approve
the same his children and posterity even to this present do
beare for their Creast a Dragon standing before a burning
beacon. Wch seemeth the rather more credible because Sr
Morice Barkley did beare the Miter with this authentic seale of
his armes as is heare underneath one of his own deedes exprest
bearing date ye 10 of Henry 6 An Dni 1431. (fn. 73)
Like Bisterne CROW (Croue, xi cent.) was held
of the Confessor by Godric Malf and by his sons of
the Conqueror. (fn. 74) The subsequent descent was, however, different. There is no early record of a
manor, but John de Burley, Sir Hugh Cheyne, Sir
John Berkeley, and Humphrey Duke of Gloucester,
all held there in the 13th and 14th centuries. (fn. 75)
Richard Milbourne died seised of four messuages in
Crow in 1451, (fn. 76) and was succeeded by his son Simon,
who died in 1464, leaving a son Thomas, aged
fifteen. (fn. 77) At Sir Thomas Milbourne's death in 1492
the estate, for the first time called a manor, was held
of the manor of Ringwood. (fn. 78) Crow thus followed
the same descent as Tangley (q.v.), passing at the
death of Richard Milbourne, Sir Thomas's grandson,
in 1532 (fn. 79) to his second cousin William Fauconer of
Drayton (co. Bucks.). In 1543, however, the manors
again parted company, Fauconer selling Crow to
William Button, (fn. 80) who died seised in 1547. (fn. 81) He
left a son and heir of the same name, who dying in
1591 left a son and heir Ambrose, but settled Crow
on his second son William. (fn. 82) William Button the
third died seised of the manor in 1599. (fn. 83) He also
left an heir William Button, but Crow subsequently
passed to the Comptons of Minstead (q.v.) and
Bisterne and thence with Bisterne to William Mills
in 1792. (fn. 84) The two manors are now considered
practically one. (fn. 85)
The history of NORTH ASHLEY, distinguished
generally from the other Hampshire Ashleys as
'Ashley by Ringwood,' is somewhat obscure. The
earliest certain reference to the place is in 1276,
when a grant of the lands of the late Roger de
Longford, to be held during the minority of the
heirs of Walter de Longford, was made to Walter de
Helyun. (fn. 86) Walter, however, shortly surrendered this
custody, (fn. 87) which in 1280
was given to Hugh de Escote. (fn. 88)
Who were the heirs of Longford does not appear. The
Escotes themselves long held
lands here, and Walter de
Helyun may have been hen
to that Geoffrey Hulon who
was one of the three holders
of the vill in 1316. (fn. 89)

Button. Ermine a fesse gules.
Neither Hugh de Escote
nor his heir is named in the
Nomina Villarum, but about
that date (1316) his wife Joan
died seised of the manor of North Ashley, said to
be held of Alan Plugenet. (fn. 90) She left a son and heir
Walter de Escote, who died in 1341 holding land
in North Ashley of Elizabeth de Burgh. (fn. 91) In 1350
his son Sir Hugh de Escote granted the manor
to William de Overton, (fn. 92) who died seised about
1361. (fn. 93) He left a son and heir Thomas (vide West
Tytherley), but North Ashley was carried by his
daughter Isabel to her husband Thomas Warner, and
in 1379 it was settled on him and his second wife
Joan and the heirs of their bodies. (fn. 94) Accordingly, at
Warner's death in 1407 the manor passed to his
grandson Thomas Sandys the son of Walter Sandys
and Agnes his daughter by
Joan, (fn. 95) instead of to his other
grandson and heir, Thomas
Tawke, (fn. 96) who really had the
better claim to it, being the
son of one of Isabel de Overton's daughters. From Thomas
Sandys, who died seised in
1442, (fn. 97) the manor descended
to his heirs the Lords Sandys
of the Vyne, (fn. 98) who held of
Thomas Brune and his heirs. (fn. 99)
It appears, however, to have
been made over to the Okedens, lords of neighbouring manors, for in 1604,
when William Okeden sold the manors of Somerley
and North Ashley to Sir William Dodington, a
yearly rent-charge of £12 0s. 11d. was to be paid
for North Ashley to William Lord Sandys. (fn. 100)

Sandys of the Vyne. Argent a ragged cross sable.
About 1310 Richard de Bucksgate died seised of
the manor of North Ashley, held of Hugh de
Escote, (fn. 101) leaving a son and heir Adam, who six years
later was one of the three parcenaries of the vill. (fn. 102)
He died in 1333, holding by the same tenure, and
leaving three daughters, Joan wife of Thomas de
Byndon, Helen wife of Richard de Bettesthorne and
Katherine wife of Giles de Escote. (fn. 103) Of their
portions nothing certain can be said concerning that of
Katherine; that of Helen de Bettesthorne is presumably
the land in Ashley of which Margaret de Bettesthorne
died seised in 1350. (fn. 104) It was afterwards considered
a whole manor and followed the same descent as
Bisterne (q.v.).
In 1336 Thomas de Bindon and his wife Joan,
Adam de Bucksgate's eldest co-heir, fined with Richard
de Kingston to the intent to entail their land in
Ashley on their heirs. (fn. 105) In 1390 Edith, the widow
of their eldest son Thomas de Bindon, granted the
manor of North Ashley to Thomas de Godyton of
Chale and Alice his wife and the heirs and assigns of
Alice. (fn. 106)
The Ludlows were holding this manor in 1492,
when William Ludlow and Elizabeth his wife granted
therefrom an annuity of 5 marks to Thomas Ludlow
and Magdalen Lambard. (fn. 107) In 1570 John Ludlow
settled it on himself, his wife Dorothy and his heirs,
and died seised at North Ashley in 1614. (fn. 108) His
heir was his kinsman, Joshua Aylmer, but the manor
appears to have been immediately disposed of, for in
1619 Edward Curll of the Middle Temple sold it to
Samuel Lynch of Whiteparish. In 1627 Samuel
Lynch again sold it to Herbert Dodington, after
whose death it was held by his father, Sir William
Dodington, who died in 1638, (fn. 109) and the manor henceforward followed the same descent as Somerley in
Harbridge (q.v.).
The third part of the vill of North Ashley held in
1316 by John Marshal was parcel of, if not identical
with, the manor of Somerley in Harbridge and
followed the same descent. (fn. 110)
There was a water-mill in the manor of North
Ashley held by Richard de Bucksgate and his heirs
and afterwards by the Ludlows and the Dodingtons. (fn. 111)
Two mills are mentioned in a fine, dated 1398, of
land which probably belonged to the same manor,
as also in an earlier fine to which Thomas de Bindon
and Joan, Adam de Bucksgate's co-heir, were parties. (fn. 112)
In 1313 William de Laybrooke had licence to
grant a messuage, 32 acres of land, 27 acres of
meadow, 6 acres of pasture, 5 acres of wood, 200 acres
of heath and 5 marks rent in Ringwood, held in
chief, to Walter de Feryngford and for Walter to
regrant the same to William and his wife Eustasia
and his heirs, (fn. 113) which was accordingly done. (fn. 114) This,
doubtless, was the manor of LAYBROOKE which in
1480 Thomas Semer (Seymour) and Joan his wife
quitclaimed to William Boket and his heirs. (fn. 115) This
manor was not long afterwards in the possession of
Henry Brydges, who in 1519 settled it on himself and
his wife Margery and their heirs, with remainder
in default to the heirs of Margery. (fn. 116) Henry Brydges
died about 1538, (fn. 117) leaving a son and heir Sir
Richard, who by his will proved in 1558 (fn. 118) left Laybrooke to his son and heir Anthony. In 1575
Anthony Brydges sold the manor to Richard Lyne, (fn. 119)
to whom in 1586 Roger Lyne quitclaimed. (fn. 120)
Richard Lyne, nephew apparently of the Richard
just mentioned, (fn. 121) died seised of the manor in 1599. (fn. 122)
From this date onwards Laybrooke Manor disappears
from the records until 1830, when it was held by
James Edward (Harris) Viscount Fitz Harris, afterwards third Earl of Malmesbury. (fn. 123) It is now merged in
the Heron Court estate. The
Lynes, however, had land
here well on in the 18th
century. (fn. 124)

Harris, Earl of Malmesbury. Azure a cheveron erminois between three hedgehogs or and a chief argent with the black eagle of Prussia therein.
BURLEY was anciently
royal demesne and a bailiwick
of the New Forest. (fn. 125) The
manor is said to have been in
the king's hands down to the
time of James I, but after
that there are no evidences
for its history. To whom it
was first granted is uncertain,
but in 1624 the king gave
William Holt and William
Gwynn, for thirty-one years,
all swainmote courts and their profits and all rents
called 'le lees rents,' that is to say, money, oats and
eggs which the inhabitants of the hundreds of Christchurch, Ringwood and Fordingbridge and Burley
vill were accustomed to pay yearly for their cattle,
pigs, &c., depastured in the lordship and bailiwick of
Burley. (fn. 126)
The bailiwick of Burley was held in the 18th
century by the Paulets, Dukes of Bolton and Marquesses of Winchester, (fn. 127) and is now claimed by the
Earl of Portsmouth. (fn. 128)
In 1551 John Mill died seised of a moiety of the
manor of Burley, leaving a son and heir George, (fn. 129)
and less than four years later John Batten died seised
of the other moiety, leaving a son and heir William. (fn. 130)
These moieties came to be known as the manors of
BURLEY MILLS and BURLEY BATTEN and
both were in the hands of William Batten at his
death in l607. (fn. 131) They have since been held
together. William Batten left a son and heir
Anthony, and although records are scanty during the
17th century it is evident that the Battens continued
to hold the manor. Another William was holding
early in the 18th century, (fn. 132) and in 1723 Frances
Batten his widow, William Batten and Judith his
wife, and James Batten conveyed the manors to John
Powell. (fn. 133) Some years later they became the property
of Sir Thomas Ridge, and by 1776 of Colonel John
Carnac. (fn. 134) In 1852 Charles Shaw-Lefevre, afterwards
Viscount Eversley, sold the Burley Manor estate to
Colonel Esdaile, whose nephew, the Rev. William Esdaile,
is now lord of the manor. (fn. 135)

Esdaile. Gules a lion's head razed between three six-pointed molets or.
In 1251 it was notified
that whereas Richard de Burley, sometime bailiff of the
bailiwick of BURLEY, was
adjudged to have forfeited the
same for trespass, the king
had of his special grace regranted him the bailiwick,
together with all lands both
of the old enfeoffment as or
the purprestures made by
Richard in the royal demesne,
to be held by him and his
heirs during good conduct. (fn. 136) In 1316 the vill of
Burley, part of the dower of Queen Margaret, was
held by Richard de Burley, (fn. 137) and in 1361 John de
Burley died seised of tenements there held in chief
and paying rent at the manor of Lyndhurst. (fn. 138) His
possessions were divided between his daughters
Margery and Alice wife of Henry Old. (fn. 139) The
moiety belonging to the latter was probably the socalled manor of OLDES, which made its appearance
in the 17th and 18th centuries. (fn. 140)
There was a water corn-mill belonging to the
manors of Burley Batten and Burley Mills. (fn. 141) This
seems no longer to exist, but is probably commemorated in Mill Lawn and Mill Lawn Brook.
Churches
The church of ST. PETER AND
ST. PAUL is a large modern structure built upon the site of an older
one in 1853, and consisting of a chancel with a
north vestry, a central tower, north and south transepts, nave with aisles, and a south porch, the whole
building being of late 13 th and early 14th-century
design. The chancel is lit by ranges of large lancet
windows to north and south, with polished marble
detached shafts common in each case to the jambs of
a pair of windows, and in the east wall are three
grouped lancets. The transepts contain large galleries,
and in that to the north is the organ. The nave is
of four bays. There is no clearstory. The windows
of the aisles have plain geometrical tracery. The
tower rises above the roof two stages, and has an
embattled parapet pierced with quatrefoils. The
second stage is reached by a vice in the angle of the
chancel and south transept. The belfry has a pair
of traceried and shafted two-light windows on each
side.
At the south-east of the chancel is a large double
piscina of late 12th-century date, with an arch of
two orders, the outer being heavily moulded and
having a label and jamb shafts, while the inner order
has a trefoiled head. It was removed from the old
church and reset. At the south-west of the chancel
is a brass of 15th-century date somewhat mutilated,
and having lost its inscription. It is that of John
Prophete, Dean of Hereford and York, 1416; his
figure is nearly perfect, and wears an alb and almuce,
over which is a cope fastened at the throat with a
morse ornamented with a vernicle. The orphreys of
the cope are embroidered with niches in which are
the figures of St. George, St. Bartholomew, St. Christopher, St. Peter, St. Paul, St. Winifred (the only
one whose name is inscribed), St. Catherine, St. Mary,
and St. John the Baptist. Over the head of the
figure.is a mutilated cinquefoiled canopy, and the
slab has the indents of the rest of the canopy, a
marginal inscription and four shields. There are
also a number of 18th-century monuments removed
from the old church. In the north transept is a
large marble wall monument of the composite order
to John Willis 1727, Anne his wife 1716, also
Elizabeth and Robert, their son and daughter; also
John Willis 1729, the second son, who erected the
monument; James Willis 1755, and John his son
1779. There is a shield of their arms Party fessewise
gules and argent three lions countercoloured and a
border ermine. In the same part of the church is
another large monument with a shield of his arms
to Henry Compton, 1724; Eleanor his widow, who
afterwards married Charles Bave, 1742; Henry
Compton, his nephew, heir of the above Eleanor,
1786, and Lucretia (Mills) his wife 1771. In the
gallery over is a well-designed wall monument, with
plain pilasters and a broken curved pediment, to
Mr. Bartholomew Layton of London, merchant,
1681, and Anne his wife 1702; also Joseph their
son, 'late vicar of this parish.' Of his arms only a
fesse between three crosslets fitchy remains. In the
south transept is a large plain monument to George
Bright 1768, Elizabeth his wife 1725, and their
sons George 1753, Francis 1782, John 1725, and
their daughter Elizabeth 1723; and also to other
later members of the family.
The tower contains eight bells, the treble and
tenor cast, the other recast in 1764 by Mears &
Stainbank.
The plate consists of a silver chalice of the late
16th century, a paten, pair of flagons and almsdish
of 1664, all given by Richard Branthwayte; a chalice
of 1836 and two other patens, one of 1871 and the
other of 1900.
The registers are as follows: (i) all entries 1561
to 1684 (last entries incomplete); (ii) baptisms 1692
to 1761, marriages 1688 to 1754, and burials 1682
to 1761. Marriages are continued in four printed
books, 1754 to 1767, 1767 to 1787, 1787 to 1800,
and 1800 to 1812; baptisms and burials in two
further books, (1) both entries 1762 to 1782; (2)
baptisms from 1784 to 1812, and burials 1782 to
1812.
The church of ST. JOHN THE BAPTIST,
Burley, is a plain brick building, consisting of chancel,
nave, vestry, south porch and western bell-cote containing one bell. It was built in 1839 and added to
in 1886–7.
The church of ST. PAUL, Bisterne, was built in
1842 of brick with stone dressings in the Gothic
style of the period. It consists of clearstoried nave
of five bays, aisles, north porch and tower with spire
containing one bell.
Advowson
The church of Ringwood is mentioned in the Great Survey as having
half a hide in almoign belonging to
it. (fn. 142) The advowson was at first held by the lord of
the manor, and in 1219 the king was presenting by
reason of the lands of the Bretons (vide supra) being
in his hands. (fn. 143) In 1273 John son of John, to whose
father the manor had been granted in 1240 (vide
supra), was disputing the royal right. (fn. 144) Judgement
was given in favour of Edward I, and he and his successors presented for the next fifty years. (fn. 145) In 1329,
by the intervention of Roger de Mortimer Earl of
March, the advowson of Ringwood was granted to
the monks of Beaulieu to find four monks to pray for
the soul of Edward II. (fn. 146) This was revoked in 1332 (fn. 147)
and the advowson went like the manor to the Montagus. There was an echo of this affair in 1351
when the Earl of Salisbury brought a suit against the
abbot for hindering him from presenting and judgement was given for the earl. (fn. 148) In 1336 William de
Montagu founded his priory at Bisham (co. Berks.)
and Ringwood Church and an acre of land were
among the premises with which he was to endow it. (fn. 149)
He seems to have changed his mind, however, and
Ringwood remained in the gift of his family until
1445, when Richard Nevill Earl of Salisbury and his
wife Alice sold the advowson to the provost and
scholars of King's College, Cambridge, to whom it
now belongs. (fn. 150)
In 1291 the church of Ringwood was assessed at
£66 13s. 4d. (fn. 151)
In 1541 certain yearly pensions from Ringwood,
in common with many other churches, which had
formerly belonged to St. Swithun's, and been known
as the 'penticostalls,' were granted to the Dean and
chapter of Winchester. (fn. 152)
In 1409 Sir Edward Berkeley and Elizabeth his
wife founded a chantry in the chapel of the Blessed
Mary at Bisterne, endowing it with lands in Bisterne
and Poulner. (fn. 153) The advowson remained in the
hands of the lord of the manor of Bisterne. (fn. 154) In
1535 the clear yearly value of this chantry was
£6 5s., (fn. 155) the sum being given later as £6 0s. 8d. and
£6 2s. 8d. (fn. 156) It was situated 2 miles from the parish
church and was used as a
chapel of ease. (fn. 157) In 1550 it
was given to William Winlow
and Richard Feld, (fn. 158) and in
1578 lands belonging to the
chapel of Bisterne were granted
to Sir Edward Horsey. (fn. 159)
The modern living of Bisterne is a chapelry annexed
with the rectory of Harbridge
to the vicarage of Ringwood
and is in the gift of King's
College, Cambridge.

King's College, Cambridge. Sable three roses argent and a chief party azure and gules with a fleur de lis of France in the azure and a leopard of England in the gules.
The ecclesiastical parish of
Burley was created in 1840,
the living being in the gift of
the Bishop of Winchester,
from whom it was transferred
in 1872 to the vicar of Ringwood, the present
patron. (fn. 160)
The Nonconformist cause in Ringwood dates from
1662. The present Congregational church was
erected in 1866, the Wesleyan chapel in 1872.
There are also a Unitarian chapel, Salvation Army
barracks and a mission hall. At Crow is a Wesleyan
chapel, at Kingston a Congregational chapel with
schools attached, and at Poulner a Baptist chapel.
There is a Congregational chapel at Burley, where
is also the Moorhill Ministers' Home of Rest open to
ministers, evangelists, missionaries and ministerial
students of the Congregational, Baptist and Presbyterian denominations.
There is an elementary (mixed) school, built in
1848 for 560 children. It is partly supported by
the endowment of the old Free school (see Charities),
where Bishop Stillingfleet was educated. (fn. 161) There is
also another elementary school for 300 children. At
Bisterne is a school built in 1840 for 40 girls and
infants. The boys attend at Ringwood.
The school at Burley was built in 1854 to accommodate 120 children.
Charities
Charities for the poor.—Thomas
Lyne by will dated 7 May 1621
(inter alia) devised an annuity of £3
for the poor charged on the tithes of a farm at Bradford and land called Whitehall, Burley, applied in
the distribution of bread or clothing.
In 1722 Richard Lyne (as appeared from the
church tablet) gave an annual sum of 25s. to the poor
of Hightown and Poulner, which is now paid by
the Rev. William Esdaile, the owner of a piece of land
in Burley charged therewith.
The same tablet also mentioned that John Lyne
gave £14 yearly arising out of an estate at Kingston
called Waterman's, applicable in the payment of 10s.
monthly to the vicar for preaching a sermon preparatory to receiving the sacrament, and 10s. monthly to
poor communicants, and £2 yearly for the poor of
Bisterne Closes in Burley. The annuity is paid by
Mr. John Morant of Brockenhurst Park.
Charity of Thomas Brown founded by will 4 February 1667 and re-established by deed of 11 May
1802 executed under the direction of the Court
of Chancery (see under Christchurch). The share
of this parish amounts to about £10 a year, of which
10s. is paid to the incumbent for a sermon and the
residue in clothes, bread or otherwise.
John Dodington's Charity.—(See under Breamore.)
The churchwardens receive from Sir Edward Hulse
the sum of £5 every fourth year, which is applied as
the occasion requires in binding of poor children
apprentice.
John Thaine, as mentioned in the church tablet,
gave to the poor an annuity of 5s. charged on land in
Upmead, now the property of Mr. John Morant.
In 1621 Richard Garrett by will gave an annuity
of 20s. for providing three coats for three poor men
yearly. It is paid by the tenant of Bradford Farm
and applied in clothing.
In 1660 Jane Burch by will left £20 for the poor
to be invested in land, with which was purchased
a rent-charge of 20s. on 23 and 25 Butcher's Row,
Salisbury.
The charities founded by William Clark.
1. The Ringwood almshouses, founded by deed,
dated 20 April 1833 (enrolled) and endowed by
will and codicil, proved in the P.C.C. 14 April
1842, consist of six houses, with four rooms in
each, erected on land in Crick Lane, containing
la. or. 4op., each house being occupied by one
married couple or two women, who receive 2s. 6d.
a week each. The endowment fund consists of
£2,632 15s. 10d. consols, with the official trustees,
of which £231 9s. 9d. is held as a repairing fund.
2. The Bread Charity Fund.—Trust fund,
£313 9s. 10d. consols; dividends are applicable in
the distribution of bread twice a year in January and
February.
3. The Blanket Charity Fund.—Trust fund,
£438 consols; dividends are applicable in the distribution of blankets every winter among such poor
residents as the ratepayers in vestry assembled should
elect as fit and proper objects.
4. The Great Coat and Cloak Charity.—Trust
fund, £279 15s. 3d. consols; dividends applicable
in the distribution of great coats and cloaks.
5. The Apprenticing Charity.—Trust fund,
£943 12s. 11d. consols; applicable in providing
premiums not exceeding £10 each to apprentice to
some trade or profession children of poor persons.
6. The Infirmaries Charity.—Trust fund, £283 2s.
consols; applicable in sending poor persons to the
infirmaries at Salisbury, Winchester and Bath, any
surplus to go to the Blanket Charity.
The several sums of stock of the Clark charities
are held by the official trustees.
In 1855 Mrs. Mary Baldwin by will, proved at
London 28 February, left £50 to the vicar and
churchwardens to be invested and interest applied
equally amongst sixty of the oldest women (widows
preferred) on St. Thomas's Day. The legacy was
invested in £50 9s. 10d. consols, producing yearly
£1 5s. 2d., which is usually applied in gifts of 6d.
each to poor widows.
In 1875 Miss Sarah Carter by deed (enrolled
27 October) conveyed to trustees land in Christchurch Street and buildings thereon as a lecture hall
and reading room, which is maintained by the rents
received from various societies using the same.
Charities connected with the Protestant chapel called
St. Thomas', situated in Meeting House Lane.—The
above-mentioned William Clark by his will left
£1,500 for the minister of this chapel, £200 for the
poor in bread on Christmas Day, £400 for the
organist, .£400 to be called the Charity School Fund
and £100 for providing Testaments, psalms and
hymn books. As the result of proceedings in the
Court of Chancery in 1845 in the cause of the
' Attorney-General v. Clark and another' a sum of
£2,304 18s. 3d. consols was arrived at as belonging
to the charities, and in 1867 was transferred to the
official trustees, of which fifteen-twenty-sixths, or
£1,329 15s. 3d. consols, is apportioned for the
minister on condition that such minister should
declare his belief in the pre-existence of Jesus Christ
before His birth, failing such declaration to buy
bread, blankets or clothes or fuel for the poor of
Ringwood; two-twenty-sixths, or £177 6s., for
bread; four-twenty-sixths, or £354 12s., for organist;
one-twenty-sixth, or £88 13s., for books; and fourtwenty-sixths, or £354 12s., for education (see under
Educational Charities below).
In 1872 Mrs. Sarah Adams by her will proved at
Winchester 19 December bequeathed certain charitable legacies for purposes connected with the same
chapel. The trust funds are now represented by
£1,011 4s. India 3 per cent, stock, producing annually £30 6s. 8d., of which five-elevenths is payable
to the minister, provided that he shall not be a
Trinitarian, two-elevenths for the support of the day
school (see under Educational Charities below), twoelevenths for the repairs and decorations of the chapel,
and one-eleventh to be distributed in money among
poor and indigent members of the congregation,
and one-eleventh for extraordinary repairs of the
chapel or otherwise towards promoting the cause of
religion therein.
The trustees also receive the dividends of a sum
of £179 4s. 8d consols, arising under the will of
Christopher Lake, dated 6 December 1735, which is
applied towards the support of the minister and
'supplies.'
Wesleyan Methodist Chapel at Crow Hill.—George Pittman Shorey by deed dated 24 November
1865 settled certain real estate for the benefit of the
Wesleyan Methodist Missionary Society in connexion
with this chapel and for the poor of the society and
congregation of the said chapel, in moieties for each
purpose, in trust for which the official trustees hold
the sum of £97 6s. 3d. India 3 per cent. stock,
arising from sale of land. In 1908 new trustees
were appointed and the legal estate vested in the
official trustee of charity lands.
Educational Charities.
The following endowments are now applied in
connexion with the Ringwood School, namely,
Richard Lyne's Charity, will proved in the P.C.C.
1587, consisting of £414 10s. 2d. consols, representing the redemption in 1850 of a rent-charge of
£13 6s. 8d., (fn. 162) an annuity of £5 given in 1712 by
John Pitt, paid by the owner of a farm at Bisterne
in this parish; a sum of £451 12s. 2d. consols
arising under will of John Atrill, 1799, subject to
the payment of 10s. a year for repair of testator's
tomb; £149 1s. 4d. consols representing a gift of
£50 and a legacy of £100 by will of William Jones,
proved in the P.C.C. 9 June 1854; £354 12s.
consols, William Clark's School Fund (see above);
and £183 2s. 6d. consols, Mrs. Sarah Adams' School
Fund (see above), producing a total income of
£57 3s.
Thomas Lyne by will of 7 May 1621 charged the
tithes of a farm known as Bradford Farm in Wimborne Minster and lands called Whitehall at Burley
with an annuity of £6 for a poor scholar from Ringwood Free School at Oxford or Cambridge for four
years, or failing such, a scholar from Wimborne
Minster or Sherborne Grammar Schools.
Hamlet of Burley.—In 1716 James Etheridge by
will charged a farm at the Street, Burley, with an
annuity of £3 to be applied in money or goods unto
the honestest or poorest sort of people in Burley or
in the parish of Ringwood. The annuity is paid by
Mr. C. Thomas, the owner of the property charged.
The poor of Bisterne Closes in this parish are also
entitled to an annuity of £2 (see under Ringwood).
The Burley Chapel Charity.—The official trustees
hold a sum of £1,000 consols, the dividends under
a scheme of 31 October 1905 being applicable for
the repair of the Meeting House, &c., and also for
a minister being a Calvinist.
Charities of Thomas Eyre.—The official trustees
hold a sum of £90 consols for educational purposes
in Burley, and a further sum of £90 consols for
clothing, &c, for twelve poor women or girls worshipping at Established Church or Meeting House.
The official trustees likewise hold £325 6s. consols
in trust for the Charity of Flower Etheridge, the
dividends being applicable in clothing and bread.