LAPWORTH
Acreage: 2,984. (fn. 1)
Population: 1911, 853; 1921, 885; 1931, 975.
The parish forms a roughly rectangular block
measuring 4 miles from north to south with a width of
about 2 miles. The eastern boundary is formed by a
small stream running south, at first just west of the
Birmingham-Warwick Canal and then, from Kingswood Junction to Lowsonford, parallel with and just
east of the Stratford-on-Avon Canal. At Kingswood
Junction the two canals are connected by a cut and the
Stratford Canal makes a right-angle turn to the west,
rising by thirteen locks in a mile from 350 ft. to 432 ft.
Another stream, running south down the middle of the
parish, forms the western boundary of Bushwood.
From Lowsonford, at the south-east angle of the
parish, Lapworth Street runs north-west to Birmingham by way of Packwood and Hockley Heath, where
it is joined by another road running north, from
Henley-in-Arden, close to the west boundary of the
parish. A road connecting these two gives off a branch
southwards to the small group of buildings round the
church and school, which includes one 17th-century
timber-framed cottage. On the east the main Birmingham line of the Great Western Railway runs for a mile
through the parish, with a station at Kingswood.
The country is undulating, mostly between 400 and
450 ft., but with a belt of lower land, around the 300 ft.
contour line, on the east and south. It is good grazing
and dairy farming land, well treed but with no large
blocks of woodland. Half a mile south-west of Kingswood station are the scanty remains of a large earthwork known as Harborough Banks. (fn. 2) Immediately
south of this is Brome Hall, one of four or five medieval
moated sites in the parish.
Although Lapworth lies physically within Barlichway Hundred, it has always been reckoned as part of
Kineton Hundred, and it is probable that in preConquest times it was unsettled woodland and was
assigned to certain manors at a distance. Even at the
time of the Domesday Survey Lapworth had arable
only sufficient for one plough, but woodland 2 leagues
long and 1 league broad. (fn. 3) The eastern half of the parish
is mostly occupied by Bushwood (correctly Bishop's
Wood), (fn. 4) which was considered part of the Bishop of
Worcester's manor of Stratford-on-Avon, (fn. 5) though in
recent years it has been attached to Lapworth for
ecclesiastical purposes, and Kingswood. Assarts in
'Wulvurunewude' are mentioned in a deed of the late
13th century, (fn. 6) and in 1408 Simon Felton had a lease
of woodland in 'Yarkedich Neuwelond,' Little Herbery (Harborough Banks), and adjoining Neuewast
and Neuwehorchart. (fn. 7) In the 13th century Luke Sorel
granted to William le Oiselur land at Ulelega for a
rent of 3s and 4 woodcocks. (fn. 8) This was held c. 1290 by
Robert the Falconer of Henley, and in 1349 half the
land of Walter le Fowler was held by John Sweyn for
1s. 6d. and 2 woodcocks yearly. (fn. 9) This render of woodcocks was still due in 1488, (fn. 10) and the land appears on
the tithe map as Fowler's close and meadow. (fn. 11)
Thomas Assheby was said to have put out of cultivation a messuage and 30 acres in Lapworth called
Barnys place, evicting six persons, in 1497; (fn. 12) and John
Bewffo similarly inclosed and wasted a messuage and
60 acres in Kingswood in 1508. (fn. 13) There was some
inclosure at Kingswood in 1808, (fn. 14) and 21 acres at
Harborough Banks were inclosed in 1863 under an
Act of 1860, (fn. 15) but as late as 1904 land at Claycroft was
still under open-field cultivation. (fn. 16)
Lapworth Park, about a mile south of the church,
now a farm-house, is a 16th-century structure much
altered externally. The original plan is rectangular
facing nearly east, including a flush cross-wing at the
south end which is gabled front and back. The south
side of it is of square timber-framing with brick nogging,
and the east and west gable-heads are cemented. The
remainder has been rebuilt with 18th-century brickwork, as has the plain chimney-stack at the junction of
the two parts, which has two wide fire-places back to
back. The ceilings have heavy chamfered beams and
wide flat joists; the ceiling of the north room is plastered. The north partition of the middle room in the
upper story is of fine heavy close-studding. Behind the
north part is an 18th-century wing, and another south
of it is modern.
Bushwood Hall, half a mile east of Lapworth Park, is
said to date from 1708 but, if so, it must have been con
siderably altered in the 19th century. A lower wing or
outbuilding at the back shows some timber-framing, as
does also a small farm-building with brick nogging.
There are remains of a moat south of the house. A
cottage at Copt Green, midway between Lapworth
Park and Bushwood Hall, now two tenements, is of
17th-century timber-framing with brick nogging. It
has a rebated central chimney-stack with wide fireplaces, and the ceilings are open-timbered.
Hole-house Farm, 5/8 mile south of the church, is of
a T-shaped plan. The head of the T, which is the west
cross-wing, has a fair amount of mid-16th-century
close-set studding in its side walls, but the gabled south
end has vertical timbers set wider apart, and the north
end is of late-18th-century brick. The stem of the T
is lower, and of square-framed heavy timbers in the
upper story. It has a good central chimney-shaft of
X-plan; this has wide fire-places: the ceiling-beams are
widely chamfered. In the cross-wing is a late-17thcentury staircase. The roof-timbers of the wing are
rather rough but are probably Elizabethan.
There is no village. A cottage owned by the rector
a few yards south of the church and west of the road is
of square timber-framing of c. 1640. Farther south is
'Greenacres', a much rebuilt house in which ancient
timbers have been re-used in the walls, &c. The north
part is said to have been an ancient cottage but, if so, it
has lost its identity in later alterations. Mountford
Farm, ¼ mile north of the church to the west of the road
to Packwood and Darley Green, is a 16th-century
house. The main block is of rectangular plan, facing
east, with an 18th-century wing projecting from the
north half of the front. The walls are mainly of 18thcentury bricks but at the south end of the front is some
earlier brickwork with remains of 16th-century diaper
ornament in the lower part: this half also has a gablehead with painted imitation timber-framing. The
gabled south end wall is also of 16th-century (plain)
brickwork and has a fine chimney-stack with two shafts
of eight-pointed-star shape. Its wide fire-place has been
reduced: over it is a row of recesses forming lockers.
Another chimney-stack, at the junction of the main
block and 18th-century wing, has two 17th-century
diagonal shafts: it has a wide fire-place, and the room it
serves has an open-timbered ceiling. Other rooms have
plastered ceilings with chamfered beams. The upper
rooms have generally been modernized. The roofs are
tiled. A back wing was a bakehouse and has a great
fire-place: the upper story is a granary and said to have
a good ancient roof. Malt House Farm, ½ mile northnorth-east on the same road as the last, is a 17th-century
house of T-shaped plan, the head of the T being the
south front, which is faced with 18th-century brick; the
gabled east end shows timber-framing in the head. The
central chimney above the tiled roof has two diagonal
shafts: it has a tall wide fire-place to the west room,
which also has an open-timbered ceiling. The back
wing shows most of its original timber-framing and has
a north plain chimney-stack with a wide fire-place.
Pound Cottages, ¾ mile east of the church at the corner
of the Rowington road, is a 17th-century house showing
some half-timbered work in the gabled north end. The
lower rooms have open-timbered ceilings. A ¼ mile
farther south, at the corner of a loop-road near Harborough Banks, is another 17th-century house, facing
west, with original square timber-framing exposed in
the upper story. The plan is rectangular; the north
bay is gabled front and back. The roof is new-tiled and
has a modern chimney: it has a wide fire-place to the
middle room which also has an open-timbered ceiling.
East of it, south of the loop-road, is a timber-framed
barn of three bays of the 17th century and a west bay
of two stories which is earlier—16th century—having
curved braces in the framing and wide flat ceiling-joists.
A little farther south on the west side of Lapworth
Street is another 17th-century barn. The farm-house is
modern.
Tan House, ¾ mile east of the church, south of the
Rowington road, has been much renovated and enlarged. The ancient part is of a modified T-shaped
plan. The stem, facing east, is probably of mid to late
16th-century origin, the head, facing north, being an
addition of 1691. An inscribed stone with the date was
found in the east gable-head during restoration and is
now preserved inside in the upper story. The walls of
the wing are of square timber-framing with brick nogging. The east room has an open-timbered ceiling with
light joists. The northern bay of the south range (the stem
of the T) is of similar half-timber work on the east front
and has a modern porch; the remainder is of 18thcentury brickwork. The north entrance-hall has light
ceiling-joists like the cross-wing but in the middle and
south rooms the joists are wide, laid flatwise, and the
chamfered beams are fairly massive. The tiled roofs
have been much repaired and the chimney-stacks rebuilt. Large modern additions have been built to south
and west. A square garden west of the house marks the
former tan-yard. Farther west is a good brick barn of
1801.
Brome Hall, 3/8 mile south-east of the last, is a farmhouse probably reduced from its original size and has
the remains of a moat north-east of it. The surviving
plan of the oldest part seems to have been L-shaped,
the shorter, broader, and taller part extending southwest and dating from about the middle of the 16th
century; its gabled south-west end is rough-casted and
probably extended farther in the original building. The
narrower, wing extends north-west and was a 17thcentury addition, and against the south-east side of the
older wing is another low addition of the 18th century.
Apart from a little timber-framing in the inner side of
the narrower wing and the rough-cast, the external
walls are of brick of various periods. The north-west
side of the broader wing has late-17th-century brickwork and a tall coeval window in each story, each of
two lights with a transom; they light the 16th-century
room and chamber over. The room has a stop-chamfered beam and a wide fire-place; its north-east partition
wall is of close-set studding. The outer north-east side
of the narrower wing has a projecting chimney-stack
with two diagonal shafts above; its fire-place is reduced.
The inner partition between the 17th-century room and
the stair-hall is of heavy square framing. In the farther
partition, also of like framing, is a doorway with an
ovolo-moulded frame. The upper room in the 17thcentury wing has a coved ceiling.
The Punch Bowl Inn, at a corner about ½ mile north
of Tan House, shows 17th-century beams and a wide
fire-place, but externally is entirely disguised with
rough-cast and cement. About ½ mile west of it, on the
south side of the road, is Gospel Oak Cottage, a Tshaped building with 17th-century timber-framing in
all the walls and a central chimney above the tiled roofs.
It has a wide fire-place and the ceilings are opentimbered.
High Chimneys, 3/8 mile east of Bushwood Hall, on
the east side of Lapworth Street, is a building of Tshaped plan, the head facing north. It is an Elizabethan
house that has been very much modernized externally,
the only really interesting features being the two
chimney-stacks. That in the middle of the north crosswing has three octagonal shafts of brick. Above the
south wing is a more massive shaft of eight-pointed-star
shape. The former has a wide fire-place in which a
smaller fire-place is constructed: this has an interesting
and ingenious early-18th-century polished steel firegrate with movable hobs and a crane, said to have been
removed from elsewhere in the house. The ceilings are
plastered but show stop-chamfered beams. A little
timber-framing is exposed in the east wall of the south
wing above a pentice. North-east of the house is a
rather derelict barn of timber-framing.
Bushwood Common Farm, about ½ mile south of
High Chimneys on the same side of the road, is a low
building facing west and suggests an early Tudor origin
with a 15-ft. one-storied hall in the middle and north
and south cross-wings—two-storied and gabled, the
upper floors being inserted later in the hall and a
chimney-stack built out on its east side. The north
wing projects about 6 ft. in front and the south wing
similarly at the back. Both have original timber-framing
exposed in the outer walls but most of the east and west
ends of the north wing and the front of the middle part
are of modern brick. At the back is a projecting
chimney-stack with a wide fire-place to the middle
chamber, which also has an open-timbered ceiling with
a chamfered beam and stop-chamfered joists. The north
wing has open-timbered ceilings with chamfered beams
and early wide flat joists. In the upper story is a highly
cambered middle tie-beam and wind-braced sidepurlins. The south wing has an 18th-century angle
fire-place in the front room with carved and plaster
ornament. The chamfered ceiling-beam in this room
has broach-stops. The back room has an open-timbered
ceiling and the room above has a coved ceiling. Timberframing shows in many of the walls inside. A staircase
in the south wing has 17th-century turned balusters.
The roofs are tiled. A barn of four bays south-west
of the house has some 17th-century framing in the walls
but is mostly of later brickwork. Original trusses
divide the bays.
Manors
LAPWORTH was one of a scattered
group of estates granted by Coenwlf, King
of the Mercians, to Deneberht, Bishop of
Worcester, in 816. (fn. 17) Bishop Brihteah gave
it to Herlwin, probably a Fleming, who accompanied
him in 1036 when he escorted Cnut's daughter Gunnild to 'Saxony' for her marriage, and this Herlwin was
evidently the father of Baldwin who was holding Lapworth in the reign of the Confessor. (fn. 18) In 1086 the
estate was held by Hugh de Grentemaisnil, as half a
hide. (fn. 19) Hugh's lands came into the hands of the Count
of Meulan (fn. 20) and the overlordship therefore passed to
the Honor of Leicester and so to the Duchy of Lancaster. (fn. 21)
About the end of the 12th century Ralph Marshal
granted ½ virgate of land in Lapworth to Geoffrey
[Prat] son of Alexander, (fn. 22) and when Ralph's son Geoffrey confirmed this grant to Henry, son of Geoffrey
Prat, he is styled dominus terre. (fn. 23) The Marshals continued to hold land in the parish, but apparently the
lordship passed to the family of Pipard. Ives Pipard,
son of Sir Robert Pipard of Bishampton (Worcs.),
granted to Henry Palmer and Agnes land in his waste
of Wolvernewode, 'with all liberties and free customs
existing in the territory of Lapworth'; his deed being
witnessed by Geoffrey Marshal and Robert Pipard. (fn. 24)
In 1236 John Comin, with Geoffrey Corbezun and
Juliana his wife, conveyed to Henry Pipard and Nichole
his wife and her heirs 2 virgates in Lapworth, (fn. 25) and
about the same time Sir Henry Pipard is called chief
lord of the fee there. (fn. 26) He died c. 1258 leaving two
daughters, of whom Denise was wife of Sir Robert de
Harecurt and Cecily wife of Sir Thomas de Bishopsdon. (fn. 27) The main manor seems to have been assigned to
Denise, as in 1265 Simon de Montfort, Earl of Leicester, held the manor of Lapworth, valued at £24, during
the minority of the heir of Robert de Harecurt, whose
marriage he had granted, with a lease of the manor, to
Peter le Porter. (fn. 28) Robert's son William de Harecurt
granted most of his demesne land, including part of his
court and chief mansion, and also his bond tenants to
Master Henry de Brandeston. (fn. 29) Henry, who is presumably the Archdeacon of Dorset who became Bishop
of Salisbury in 1287, conveyed Lapworth to his brother
Hugh and his wife Margaret in tail. (fn. 30) This must have
been in or before 1282, in which year Ives Pipard,
rector of Lapworth, granted all his lands in the manor
to Sir Hugh de Brandeston, (fn. 31) as did Leger Pipard, son
of the late Robert Pipard, and his mother Margery. (fn. 32)
Hugh had a grant of free warren in his demesnes at
Lapworth in 1292 (fn. 33) and died in 1299 seised of the
manor with 3 carucates of land, held of the Honor of
Leicester as half a knight's fee. (fn. 34) His son Henry was
then aged 16; he in 1317 settled the manor on himself,
his wife Pernel, and their son Hugh, reserving a life
interest in certain estates to his daughter Lettice. (fn. 35)
Hugh is mentioned as lord of Lapworth in 1348, at
which date his wife was Christine, (fn. 36) and in 1359, (fn. 37) and
1361, (fn. 38) when his wife's name was Sybil. He died in
1362 leaving three daughters, of whom one, Beatrice,
was a nun at Wroxall; (fn. 39) his estates were therefore
divided between the other two—Rose, who married
Richard de Montfort, and Agnes, who married first
Philip de Aylesbury and afterwards John Buckmore. (fn. 40)
The two coheirs and their husbands agreed in 1364 to
bring a joint suit for the manor against Sir John [?] and
John Page (presumably Hugh's executors) and on its
recovery to divide it. (fn. 41)
Sir Philip de Aylesbury and Agnes his wife in 1376
settled 'the manor' of Lapworth on themselves for
their lives, with remainder to their son Roger in tail. (fn. 42)
Philip died in 1390 and his widow Agnes is then styled
lady of the manor. (fn. 43) She married John Buckmore
probably in 1394, when what is here correctly called
a moiety of the manor was settled on them and her
heirs. (fn. 44) Next year they conveyed to her sister Lady
Rose, then widow of Richard de Montfort, their moiety
of a dovecot at Lapworth. (fn. 45) In 1395, also, Agnes's son
Roger Aylesbury confirmed their life interest to her and
her husband, (fn. 46) and after her death
he extended it in 1413 to John
Buckmore, (fn. 47) who in 1418 leased
the moiety of the manor to John
Catesby for life at 12 marks. (fn. 48)
Roger's grandson John Aylesbury
died in 1492 seised of Lapworth,
valued at £3, and held of the
Duchy of Lancaster as 1/10 knight's
fee. (fn. 49) His daughter and heir Joan,
widow of Thomas Somerville,
held a manorial court here in
1520, (fn. 50) but no later reference to this manor has been
found.

Aylesbury. Argent a cross azure.
Hugh de Brandeston's other daughter Lady Rose de
Montfort survived her husband and was still living at
the end of 1420, (fn. 51) but in 1427 a settlement was made
by which her moiety of the manor of Lapworth was
conveyed to Margaret, the elder of her two granddaughters, and John Catesby her husband in tail, with
contingent remainders to Richard Merbrook, formerly
husband of Margaret's sister Ellen, (fn. 52) and his son
William. (fn. 53) Margaret, as a widow, was lady of the
manor in 1439 (fn. 54) and with her son Sir William Catesby
made a lease of crofts in Haseleholt, to be assarted, in
1451. (fn. 55) In 1458 Sir William was dealing with the
moiety of the manor. (fn. 56) He married Philippa, daughter
and eventually heir of Sir William Bishopsdon, (fn. 57) and
thereby acquired another manorial estate in the parish.
As already stated, Henry Pipard's younger daughter
Cicely married Sir William de Bishopsdon. Their
grandson Sir John made a contract for the building of a
gatehouse at his manor of Lapworth in 1313 (fn. 58) and had
a grant of free warren in his lands here in 1319. (fn. 59) In
1320 Henry de Brandeston granted his manor of Lapworth to Sir John, (fn. 60) who held a court there in 1334. (fn. 61)
Apparently, however, Hugh's grant was in the nature
of a settlement, as the manor was to revert to him and
his heirs on Sir John's death, (fn. 62) and meanwhile Sir John
leased the estate to him. (fn. 63) Moreover, in both 1330 (fn. 64)
and 1361 (fn. 65) the Lancaster fee of Lapworth was held by
Hugh de Brandeston 'and his parceners' (i.e. the
Bishopsdons). Sir John's great-grandson Sir William
Bishopsdon made a settlement of the manor in 1439 (fn. 66)
and died in 1447, leaving two daughters—Elizabeth,
wife of Thomas Palmer (who apparently died without
issue), and Philippa who, as already mentioned, married
Sir William Catesby. (fn. 67)
By this marriage the manor of Lapworth was reunited. Sir William's son William forfeited his lands
for treason in 1487, but they were restored to his son
George in 1495. (fn. 68) He died in 1505, leaving an infant
son William, then aged 2, and a widow Elizabeth, on
whom he had settled the manor. (fn. 69) William died young
and his brother, Sir Richard Catesby, died seised of the
manor in 1554, his heir being his grandson William,
aged 6, (fn. 70) who, on attaining his majority in 1568, had
livery of the manor of Lapworth, worth £26. (fn. 71) His
son Robert, afterwards attainted for his share in the
Gunpowder Plot, sold the manor to Sir Edward Grevill of Milcote, from whom it was bought by Sir
Thomas Holte of Aston, (fn. 72) who was lord of the manor
by 1598. (fn. 73)
Lapworth remained in the Holte family until the
death of the sixth and last baronet, Sir Charles Holte,
in 1782 when the estates passed to his only child Mary
Elizabeth and her husband Abraham Bracebridge. (fn. 74)
They made conveyances of the manor in 1798 and
1809, (fn. 75) but, apparently under the will of Sir Lister
Holte, 5th baronet, (fn. 76) Heneage Legge exercised the
rights of lord of the manor from 1782 to 1813. (fn. 77) In
1817 an Act was obtained for the sale of the Holte
estates (fn. 78) and the manor was bought by Sir Charles
Cockerell, bart., (fn. 79) who held it until about 1830, when
he sold it to W. H. Cooper, (fn. 80) whose widow was lady
of the manor in 1850. (fn. 81) It subsequently passed to
George Miller and then to Richard Dolphin. (fn. 82) In
1932 John Edmond Watts was said to be lord. (fn. 83)

Catesby. Argent two lions passant sable crowned or.

Holte. Azure two bars or in chief a cross formy fitchy.
When Edmund, Earl of Lancaster, died in 1296 a
carucate within the fee of Lapworth was held of him
by Robert de Brome at a rent of 4s. (fn. 84) Robert died in
1318, (fn. 85) leaving a widow Pernel and a son Paulin who
was under age and therefore a ward of Earl Thomas. (fn. 86)
In 1343 Paulin settled a number of tenements in Lapworth, including 'the waste of Erbury', on himself and
his wife Margaret. (fn. 87) He died, probably during the
Black Death, before September 1350, when Sir Hugh
de Brandeston granted the custody of his lands during
the minority of his heir to Thomas Scut. (fn. 88) His son and
heir John dated a conveyance from 'le Moreheye' in
Lapworth in 1369 (fn. 89) and is probably the John Brome
who, with Margery his wife, sold 'Little Herbery' and
other lands in 1408 (fn. 90) and in the same year conveyed all
their lands to Sir Thomas Burdet and others in trust for
Margery, after whose death the Lapworth lands were
to be used to endow a chantry at the altar of St.
Katherine in the parish church, while lands in Henley
and Studley were to remain to Margery's daughter
Elizabeth. (fn. 91) It was presumably
through this conveyance that
in 1419 Sir Thomas Burdet
released to Sir William Bishopsdon all his rights in the manor of
LAPWORTH HALL. (fn. 92) Most,
however, of John Brome's lands
descended to his daughter
Elizabeth, who married Thomas
Audeley of Packwood. (fn. 93) Their
son John released his rights in
these estates to John Brome the
younger, of Warwick, in 1436, (fn. 94)
and he, as John Brome alias Brown of Baddesley Clinton,
with Beatrice his wife, made a settlement thereof in
1466. (fn. 95) His son Nicholas Brome made conveyances in
trust of the manor of BROMES or BROMEN in 1495
and 1501. (fn. 96) The second conveyance seems to have been
concerned with the sale of the manor to George Catesby
in that year. (fn. 97) The manor then descended with Lapworth, being called 'Bromesland' in 1505, (fn. 98) 'Bromeham' in 1554, (fn. 99) and usually after that date, (fn. 100) though in
1739 it appears as 'Bromeham or Bromon or Bromeshall'. (fn. 101) It was probably sold by Robert Catesby about
1600, and in 1657 it was conveyed by Edward Atkyns,
senior and junior, Robert South and Elizabeth his wife,
and Clement Farmer to Sir Richard and Francis Lucy. (fn. 102)
The later history of the manor is obscure: John Camden,
who died in 1724, is called 'lord of the manor of Bromham Hall' on his monument in the church; (fn. 103) in 1730 the
manor of Bromehall was said to belong to 'Mr. Francis
Chernock of Wedgenock Park'; (fn. 104) Timothy Stoughton
appears as lord of the manor in 1743, Robert Basket in
1750, Benjamin Parnell in 1785 and 1805, and George
Ross of London in 1822. (fn. 105)

Brome. Sable a cheveron argent with three sprigs of broom thereon.
KINGSWOOD, in Lapworth and Rowington, was
attached to the distant manor of Wellesbourne, which
was held in 1279 by Sir Peter de Montfort, whose
tenants had common in Kingswood, with right of
pannage and of taking fuel therein. (fn. 106) It descended with
Wellesbourne, in which constabulary it was still reckoned in the 17th century. (fn. 107) It passed from the Montforts to the Botelers of Sudeley, and Kingswood was one
of the manors of which William Boteler made a settlement in 1417. (fn. 108) The Boteler estates were divided
between two coheirs, and at his death in 1487 Henry
Belknap held a moiety of the manor of Kingswood. (fn. 109)
His son Edward was dealing with the manor in 1499, (fn. 110)
about which time he is said to have sold it to Nicholas
Brome of Baddesley Clinton (q.v.), by the marriage of
whose daughter it passed into the family of Ferrers. (fn. 111)
It seems to have been absorbed into their estates and
to have lost its manorial identity.
At the time of its dissolution the Augustinian Priory
of Caldwell in Bedfordshire held an estate in Lapworth
which was farmed for £1 10s. (fn. 112) This was granted in
1545 to Thomas Badger and others, being then in the
tenure of John Berell. (fn. 113)
There were evidently two parks in Lapworth by the
end of the 13th century, as Ives Pipard, rector of Lapworth, remitted to Mr. Henry de Brandeston his pasturage rights in 'the greater park' of Lapworth. (fn. 114) In
1361 Hugh de Brandeston sold timber at 'Otereshul'
within his park of Lapworth, (fn. 115) and in 1420 Richard
Merbrooke and Thomas Grene released to John
Catesby their rights in 'the Little Park'. (fn. 116) During the
time that Lapworth was in the king's hands after the
forfeiture of William Catesby, John Williams was
appointed keeper of the park in 1486, (fn. 117) as was William
Tudder in 1492. (fn. 118) As late as 1602 Lapworth Park was
among the estates settled by Robert Catesby at the time
of his marriage with Katharine Leigh. (fn. 119)
Church
The parish church of ST. MARY is
a short and broad building consisting of
a chancel, north chapel, north and south
aisles, south porch, a small western parvise, and a north
tower, once detached but now connected up with a
vestibule, and with a spire.
The nave dates from the early 12th century, when
it had no aisles; one window survives over the north
arcade. Early in the 13th century a north aisle was
added, with an arcade of four bays, inserted in the earlier
wall a bay at a time. The south aisle was added about
the middle of the century. The chancel was rebuilt and
the north chapel added probably at much the same
time but their windows were enlarged subsequently.
The tower, detached from the church, was built at
the end of the 14th century to the north of the east end
of the north aisle. Probably the boundary and roadway
west of the churchyard were more or less as now and
therefore there was no room for the usual west tower.
The spire was probably later.
The whole building was remodelled in the 15th
century; the clearstory was raised above the nave, and
the aisle walls, except for parts of the south, were
rebuilt. The 13th-century chancel arch was reconstructed to make it as wide as possible, as well as higher,
the 13th-century material being re-used. The north
arcade also shows signs of a later rebuilding.
The west parvise or muniment room, also added in
the 15th century, is a rare feature and may indicate that
the church then possessed some highly esteemed sacred
relic which could be visited by pilgrims. There was
just room for it in this position, but its lower story had
to be arched for processional purposes.
The chancel was repaired in 1860, when the east
window, which had been blocked, was renewed. Other
restorations were carried out in 1872–3 and the top of
the spire was rebuilt in 1884. The vestibule leading
to the tower is modern but it is
probable that there was some sort of
corridor preceding it.
The small chancel (about 20½ ft.
by 15 ft.) has an east window of
1860 of three trefoiled lights and
tracery of 14th-century style. In the
north wall at the east end is a trefoiled pointed light with an external
hood-mould. The jambs are of two
orders, the inner ovolo-moulded, all
of grey-white freestone. West of it
is a round-headed 10½ ft. archway,
of the 13th century, opening into the
north chapel; it is of two chamfered
orders. The responds have halfround shafts with moulded abaci and
chamfered bases.
In the south wall are two short
and wide windows of the early 14th
century, each of three trefoiled lights,
the middle reaching to the apex of
the two-centred main arch, the others
at the springing level, with cusped
piercings above them. The segmental
rear-arches are chamfered.
The lower part of the east wall,
above the modern plinth, is of thin
uncoursed grey rubble, with a few
brown stones, of the 13th century,
the upper part is of squared grey rubble, mostly of
larger stones and probably of the 14th century. The
modern gable-head is of similar stone. The diagonal
buttresses have modern dressings but some of the rubble
in the sides is old like the lower rubble of the wall. The
interior is plastered. The north wall outside is of irregular rubble below the window. The upper part flanking
the window is of roughly squared and later stones.
Inside, the ancient uncoursed rubble is exposed. The
south wall externally is of fairly evenly coursed squared
rubble, perhaps modern refacing; inside it is of modern
fine ashlar in the east half, except above the window,
which is plastered, as is also the west half.
The roof is a modern steep-pitched gable and has
a barrel-vaulted boarded soffit; it is covered with tiles.
The chancel arch shows obvious signs of a medieval
rebuilding to widen it as much as possible, and its
responds encroach on the side-walls of the chancel. The
responds are square with plain chamfered abaci, quite
possibly the late-12th-century masonry re-used. The
head is of peculiar shape, the lower half being of good
arcs with medium-small voussoirs and the upper half
straight-sided to a sharp point with very small voussoirs.
The original masonry above the arch is rubble-work
and has a sloping straight joint in the south half marking
the original nave-roof. In the north half the joint is
broken by the ashlar which was added when the
clearstory was built.
The north chapel (about 14½ ft. east to west by 17 ft.)
has a modern east wall with a recess for the altar. To
the north of the recess are two semi-octagonal image
brackets refixed as capitals, probably of the early 14th
century, on long slender engaged shafts. One capital
has a series of mouldings and the shaft is carried on a
human-head corbel; the other has a moulded abacus
and beaded edges to the bell, and its shaft has a moulded
base on a moulded pointed corbel.
In the north wall is a 14th-century window of two
cinquefoiled pointed lights and a foiled spandrel in a
two-centred head with an external hood-mould having
returned stops. In the west wall, opening into the north
aisle, is a 13th-century narrow pointed arch of two
chamfered orders with plain chamfered abaci. The
voussoirs of the head are mostly larger than those of the
chancel arch but there are a few very small voussoirs.
The wall above the west face of it thickens on a chamfered corbel-course which nearly clears the apex of the
extrados.

Plan of Lapworth Church
The north wall is of coursed squared rubble in grey
stone and has an old chamfered plinth. The gable-head
is modern. At the north-east angle is an old diagonal
buttress. The low-pitched roof is modern.
The nave (about 42½ ft. by 19 ft.) has arcades of
four 10 ft. bays. The north is of early-13th-century
date but not all of exactly the same period, the bays
having been inserted singly after the easternmost two.
Later repairs have caused inequalities and distortions.
The pillars are cylindrical (26 in. diameter) in small
courses, average 7 to 8 in., and have moulded capitals
of varying sizes and contours and at different heights
above the floor, the lowest being the middle pillar
(c. 6 ft. 9 in.) and the highest the eastern pillar (7 ft.
5 in.). The eastern respond has been cut back and has
a modern capital like that of the first pillar; that of the
low second pillar is of simple form, that of the third a
little more elaborate. The west respond is semi-octagonal with a chamfered outer order and has a simply
moulded impost of old grey stone, capped by a later
mould of white stone. Its base, of simple roll-form like
the east respond, is old. The 14 in. bases of the east and
middle pillars are moulded and look like old restorations. That of the third pillar approaches the 'holdwater' type. All have square sub-bases.
The arches also vary; all are of two chamfered orders,
the chamfers of the easternmost being very small, the
others of more normal size. The two eastern arches are
of one build, judging from the jointing above the first
pillar, but the easternmost has been rebuilt, mostly with
the original small voussoirs, and widened to fit the
present east respond, the east half having a few modern
stones and the west half having a distorted curve. Its
apex is lower than the others. The second arch is
sharply pointed and of medium to small voussoirs; the
extrados of the outer order is of even concentric curves,
but that of the third arch, also sharply pointed, is of
a rough and broken line, and the jointing above the
middle pillar shows that this arch was built after the
eastern arches. It is possible that the pillar, which is
lower and has a capital differing from the others, was
inserted in place of a respond when the arch was built.
The east half of the arch is rather distorted. The
westernmost arch was a still later insertion and has many
rough-backed voussoirs in the outer order; but this arch
was obviously rebuilt subsequently and is very distorted
in the west half.
In the haunch over the easternmost pillar is a small
early-12th-century window, now opened out, with
splays towards the nave. The wall is 2 ft. 7 in. thick
and the masonry in the haunches is of roughly squared
rubble. The two or three courses above the apices are
of the clearstory period.
The south arcade is a more finished product of one
build, and the wall above must have been entirely rebuilt, as it is only about 26 in. thick. The pillars are
slender (16½ in. diameter) and of very small courses,
mostly less than 6 in. each; the middle pillar is circular,
the others are octagonal, and the responds semi-octagonal. The capitals of the pillars vary a little and are of
good, typical mid-13th-century form. The bases are
more or less of 'hold-water' form, on chamfered subbases, but appear to have been restored or retooled.
They diminish slightly in height from east to west,
probably because the floor then sloped down to the
west. The half-octagon of the east respond has been
cut right away except for the three top courses, but the
old moulded base, of different section from those of the
pillars, still remains. Its capital is really only an impostmould like that of the north arch of the chancel and has
a later piece of white stone inserted below it to make it
look more like a capital. The west respond has an
abacus of approximately the same contour, but the bell
of the capital has a small roll-mould that dips in a
peculiar manner in the south-west rebate between the
two orders. The abacus ignores the two chamfered
orders below. The pointed arches, of two chamfered
orders, are of very small voussoirs. The walling in the
haunches is of rubble.
In the west wall are two large 13th-century trefoiled
lancet windows with chamfered jambs and rebated
heads, wide rubble splays and segmental-pointed reararches of square section. The wall sets back considerably inside above these windows for the clearstory. At
the angles of the nave are low square buttresses of ashlar,
and the wall is of rubble.
The tall clearstory has four large windows on each
side, of two hollow-chamfered orders, and each of three
cinquefoiled lights under a square head; they have
labels inside and out with carved stops, some human
heads but mostly grotesques, and those outside badly
perished. The walls set back a little inside and are
ashlar-faced; they are divided into four bays internally
by hollow-chamfered pilasters rising from the hollowmoulded base-course, where they are carved with
grotesque figures, and have cap-figures of angels with
shields to carry the roof-trusses. Externally the ashlar
bars are marked by square pilasters of white stone, those
at the angles being diagonal. The parapets are embattled with return copings to the merlons and have
moulded string-courses. Above the pilasters are panelled
and crocketed pinnacles (restored), which rise from
carved gargoyles at the parapet string-course level. In
the west wall is a large four-centred window of five
cinquefoiled lights and tracery with a hood-mould and
carved stops. The low-pitched east and west gables
are also embattled. The whole is of late-15th-century
date.
The low-pitched roof, of the same period, is of four
bays with five trusses having moulded cambered tiebeams with wall-posts and curved braces having carved
spandrels with rose centres, &c. The ridge-pole and
purlins are moulded, and under the former are (or were)
carved bosses where it meets the trusses. The roof is
covered with slates.
The north aisle (8 ft. wide) has at the east end the
13th-century archway into the north chapel and next it,
in the north wall, a modern archway into the vestibule.
West of this are two north windows, the eastern of two
trefoiled lights and 15th-century tracery in a twocentred head which had a hood-mould now cut away.
The western is of two similar lights and a plain spandrel
in a four-centred head with a much-perished hoodmould. Both have like wide casement hollows in the
jambs and heads. Below the second is the blocked
north doorway with wave-moulded jambs, four-centred
arch in a square head with foiled spandrels, and a
moulded label with head-stops. It has a four-centred
rear-arch.
In the west wall is a window of three trefoiled ogeeheaded lights and tracery in a four-centred head; the
hood-mould has square voluted stops.
The walls are of large white ashlar with a chamfered
plinth and embattled parapets. The narrow buttresses,
the western diagonal, change at half-height to V-shaped
faces and are carried up as crocketed pinnacles, as in
the clearstory, but set diagonally. The west wall meets
that of the nave with a straight joint above the low
buttress of the nave. The flat lean-to roof is modern.
The south aisle (8 ft. wide), which preserves some
of its 13th-century details, has generally had much the
same 15th-century treatment as the north aisle but its
windows may be a little earlier; they are of simpler
mouldings but are more lavishly carved. The east
window is of three trefoiled lights and tracery in a fourcentred head with a hood-mould enriched with crockets,
and with a foliage finial carved in the string-course of
the parapet. The stops are carved; the southern as a
griffin, the northern as a scaly pair of winged monsters.
The jambs outside have a shallow hollow and the
hood-mould is of simpler section than those on the
north side. In the south wall are three similar windows
of two trefoiled lights with quatrefoiled spandrels in
four-centred heads and with internal and external hoodmoulds with carved stops, partly human heads and
partly grotesques; the finials are similarly incorporated
with the parapet string-course. Level with the sills on
either side of the porch are also carved winged monsters
as corbels for the weather-course of the former porch.
Below each of the two eastern windows inside is a
recess formed by a 13th-century single light that has
lost its rear-arch except for a few springers. Their ledges
are 3 ft. 9 in. above the floor.
Below the western window the wall is thickened
outside and contains a pair of similar lights complete
with pointed heads and segmental-pointed rear-arches,
the ledges 1 ft. 11 in. above the floor. There are no
traces of them externally.
The south doorway is probably of the 14th century
and has chamfered jambs and high segmental-pointed
arch with a hood-mould with head-stops. In the reveals
are the sockets for a draw-bar. The west window is
probably of the late 13th century and is of two plain
pointed lights under a two-centred head with a hoodmould with returned stops.
The east and south walls are of ashlar outside, and
are treated in three bays with similar buttresses, parapet,
and pinnacles as the north aisle. The west wall is
partly of the earlier rubble-work, and the interior of the
south wall is of squared rubble.
The roof and the south porch are modern.
The vestibule (12 ft. wide) leading to the tower has
a modern west window of two lights and a modern
low-pitched roof, but on the south wall of the tower
is the line left by a much lower roof of about the same
pitch and the filled-in sockets for its purlins.
The north tower (about 12½ ft. square), of three
stories, is undivided by string-courses; the walls are of
grey-white ashlar and have a plinth with a moulded top
course and chamfered lower. At the angles, except the
north-west, are old diagonal buttresses of four stages,
reaching nearly to the parapet string-course and having
moulded offsets. The parapet is embattled and has
straight-cut merlons. The north-west angle is a projecting stair-vice showing five sides of an octagon and
having a pointed stone roof just above the parapet. The
entrance to the tower is by a four-centred doorway in
the south wall, of two wave-moulded orders and a
hood-mould that has return stops well above the springing level. In each of the other three walls is a tall
narrow window of two trefoiled ogee-headed lights and
a quatrefoil in a two-centred head. They have transoms,
below which the lights have trefoiled pointed heads.
The rear-arches are four-centred. A bellringers' floor
has been inserted and cuts across these windows.
The second story has east and west windows of one
trefoiled ogee-headed light and plain piercings in a
square head, probably 14th century. The bell-chamber
windows are each of two trefoiled ogee-headed lights
and a quatrefoil in a two-centred head without a hoodmould. Above the window are modern clock-faces.
The octagonal spire of ashlar has at the base, behind
the parapets, four windows of two plain lights under
a four-centred head. A little above these is a stringcourse and higher are four small spire-lights. The top
10 ft. or so of the spire is modern.
The small and low two-storied parvise at the west
end has no direct communication with the church.
Because of its close proximity to the west boundary of
the churchyard, open arches were provided in the lower
story for processional purposes. (fn. 120) These arches have
moulded jambs and four-centred heads; only the
southern was rebated for a door and still retains in the
west jamb the two hooks for the hinges. The 6-ft. way
through was originally quadripartite vaulted and has
the springing stones of four hollow-chamfered ribs in
each angle as well as the four-centred wall-ribs, all on
carved corbel caps. The ceiling is now boarded. West
of this corridor are two small vices leading to the upper
story and entered by four-centred doorways. The gangways of the stairs are only 2 ft. wide. The rectangular
upper chamber has north and south windows of three
cinquefoiled pointed lights under a square head and
a west window of three similar lights under a threecentred head, and there is a recess in the north end of
the east wall large enough for a door or window but
probably a cupboard. There are three-centred doorways from the vices. Near the east end of the south
wall is a semi-octagonal bracket-basin without a drain,
presumably a stoup for holy water.
The walls are of large white ashlar with a chamfered
plinth, the west wall having a low-pitched gable; below
the west window is a trefoiled niche for an image. The
side walls have hollow-moulded eaves-courses, probably parapet string-courses originally. The roof is
modern and covered with slates. The building is set
south of the axis of the nave and partly covers the
southern lower window. The boundary walls at the
top of the sharp slope west of it meet the side walls.
The high altar and chancel screen are modern. The
north chapel has an Elizabethan communion-table
5 ft. 8 in. long with turned and carved bulbous legs.
It was formerly in the chancel.
On the west wall of the chapel south of the west archway is a patch of the original late-13th- or early-14thcentury mural painting, consisting of red roses and black
tendrils with tri-lobed leaves. Another patch is higher
up on the south wall on the east haunch of the archway
to the chancel.
The font of white stone has an octagonal bowl of
the early 14th century; it has a moulded top member
and a moulded and hollowed lower with a carved head
at each angle, some with wimples. The stem is plain
and the base chamfered.
In the tower is a plain dug-out chest 3 ft. 7 in. long
by 1 ft. 10 in. and 1 ft. 11 in. high; it has a plain lid
with three strap-hinges and had one lock.
There are five bells; the third is of pre-Reformation
date inscribed: Sancta Katherina ora pro nobis; the
fourth is dated 1600, the second (by Brian Eldridge)
1656, the other two dated 1786.
The communion-plate includes a cup of 1664 and
a paten of 1643.
The registers date from 1561.
In 1615 it was stated that William Askew had
carried out of the churchyard the stonework of 'a verie
fayer cross built with arches wherin a dosen men might
have stood dry if occation had served and was a verie
convenient cross for a preacher, wich stones William
Askewe did growndsill his house with'. (fn. 121)
Advowson
About 1270 William de Harecurt,
lord of the manor of Lapworth, gave
the advowson of the church to John
son of Peter de Glen, who transferred it to the House
of Scholars of Merton at Oxford. The scholars, under
their warden Peter de Abindon, granted it in 1275 to
King Edward, who bestowed it upon the Provost and
canons of Mont Cenis, in Piedmont. (fn. 122) In June 1277,
however, the king revoked this grant and restored the
advowson to Merton, (fn. 123) and the college has retained it
ever since.
The rectory was valued at £11 13s. 4d. in 1291, (fn. 124)
but at only £9 9s. 7d. in 1535. (fn. 125)
In 1373 Richard de Montfort endowed a chantry
of one chaplain celebrating daily in the chapel founded
in honour of the Blessed Mary, St. Thomas the Martyr,
and All Saints. (fn. 126) The Earl of Warwick when giving
his consent to the alienation of lands in Tanworth for
this purpose stipulated that if the male heirs of Montfort failed, the patronage of the chantry should come to
him and his heirs. (fn. 127) Accordingly, after the death of
Richard's widow Lady Rose, on whom the patronage
had been settled for life, (fn. 128) presentations were made by
the Earls of Warwick or their representative. (fn. 129) When,
however, the forfeited lands of William Catesby were
granted by Henry VII in 1488 to Sir John Blount the
grant included the advowson of the chantry; (fn. 130) and it
was evidently restored with the manor to George
Catesby, as he died seised of it in 1506. (fn. 131) It was valued
in 1535 at £5. (fn. 132) In 1539 Thomas Garett wrote to
Mr. [Richard] Catesby asking for a grant of the next
vacancy of the chantry, for which the Lord Chancellor
had recommended him. (fn. 133) With other chantries it was
suppressed in 1547, and in 1553 the dwelling-house of
the chantry-priest, with an orchard and garden, and
two parcels of land belonging to the chantry were
granted to Edward Aglionby. (fn. 134)
John Brome in 1421 settled lands on his wife Margery for life, after which they were to be used to find
a chaplain to celebrate at the altar of St. Katherine in
the parish church of Lapworth for a hundred years. (fn. 135)
This chantry seems never to have become effective, and
by 1464 the lands in question were in Sir William
Catesby's hands. (fn. 136)
On 1 January 1439 George Assheby the elder had
licence to alienate lands and rents to the value of 4
marks yearly to the rector of Lapworth for the support
of a light in the church and such works of piety as he
should ordain; (fn. 137) and the following year he alienated
some 100 acres of land, pasture, and meadow to the
estimated value of 26s. 8d. (fn. 138) This property was seized
as 'concealed lands' and granted to one Grey in 1576. (fn. 139)
There is also said to have been an endowment in
1278 for two lamps and two candles to burn before the
altars of St. Mary, in the chancel, and St. James, (fn. 140) but
of the later history of this endowment nothing is known.
Charities
The Lapworth Charity otherwise
the Combined Charities. It is stated in
the Report of the former Commissioners
for Inquiring Concerning Charities, dated in 1826,
that a tablet in the church of Lapworth recorded the
following benefactions to that parish, viz.:
1440. George Ashby sen. gave lands for the maintenance of the church.
1479. John Hill, rector of the parish, purchased
lands and tenements in Lapworth, Nuthurst, and
Beaudesert, for the maintenance of the church.
1454. Elenor Ford, widow, gave two closes and a
meadow (called the Ford Fields) to the church.
1511. Thomas Underwood and Catherine his wife
gave lands to the church, poor, and highways.
1527. Roger Sly gave a cottage and lands to the poor
and highways.
1568. John Collett of Nuthurst gave a close for
either the relief of the poor or repair of the highways and churches of Lapworth and Nuthurst.
1579. John Mountford gave three messuages and
a close for the relief of the poor.
1599. Richard Thorneal of Shrewley gave 5s. a year
to the poor of the parish.
1701. Isaac Morteboys of Nuthurst gave 5s. a year
to the poor of the parish.
1729. Humphry Shakespear gave 20s. a year for
the poor of the parish.
The charities, known as the Lapworth Charity or the
Combined Charities, (fn. 141) are regulated by a Scheme of the
High Court of Chancery dated 27 June 1845, as varied
by Schemes of the Charity Commissioners. The
schemes provide for a body of trustees to administer
the charities, and the Court Scheme contains directions
for the application of the income. The endowment
now consists of 180 acres or thereabouts in Lapworth
and other places, and investments, the whole producing
a yearly income of £550 (approx.), which is applied
towards the upkeep of the parish church and for the
benefit of the needy and deserving poor in accordance
with the trusts.
Edith Mary Hudson by will proved 13 March 1937
gave to the parochial church council the sum of £500,
the income to be applied in keeping the parish church
and graveyard in good order. The legacy was invested
and the income, amounting to £15 per annum, is
applied as directed.
The Henry Billing Trust. Henry Billing by will
proved 18 June 1912 bequeathed £500, the income to
be distributed by the trustees of the Lapworth Charity
Estates in gifts of blankets and coals to deserving poor of
the parish irrespective of creed. The endowment now
produces £17 5s. annually in dividends, which is distributed in accordance with the trusts.
Melson Memorial Park. Alfred Duckworth Melson
by his will dated 1 Aug. 1928 gave land in Lapworth
containing 17 acres or thereabouts for a public recreation ground to be called 'Melson Memorial Park' for
the parishioners of Lapworth, to be under the management and control of his trustees jointly with the rector
and churchwardens. The will contains rules and regulations with regard to the use of the land as a recreation
ground.
The same testator also (1) bequeathed the small
piece of land containing 2 roods adjoining the site of
the War Memorial at Lapworth to the Birmingham
Diocesan Trustees to be used as part of the site for the
War Memorial, and (2) gave to the rector and churchwardens the sum of £100 as an endowment for keeping
the said piece of land in good order.