BRILL
Brunhelle (xi cent.); Breohilla, Brohill (xii cent.);
Bruhulle, Brihull, Brehull (xiii cent.).
This parish, which, like Boarstall, lay within Bernwood Forest, and in the 13th century gave the
alternative name of the forest of Brill to part if not
the whole of it, (fn. 1) extends over nearly 2,940 acres,
of which 307 are arable, 207 woodland, and the
rest pasture. (fn. 2) The surface soil varies, but the subsoil
is Kimmeridge Clay and Portland Beds. At Muswell
Hill, which is partly in Oxfordshire, where there
are traces of Roman occupation, (fn. 3) and at the village,
the land rises to 600 ft., but elsewhere it rises to
400 ft. At the town of Brill, which was ravaged
by the Danes in 914, (fn. 4) Edward the Confessor
is said to have had a house. (fn. 5) At least one charter
of Henry I is dated from Brill, (fn. 6) and the early
Plantagenet sovereigns were not infrequently
resident here. (fn. 7) In the 13th century timber from
Bernwood Forest was constantly in demand for the
repair of the houses of the king's manor of Brill, (fn. 8)
and several records survive of the replenishing of
the royal cellars before the king's arrival. (fn. 9) The
site of the royal palace is thought to have been
near the church. (fn. 10)
The village, placed on the summit of a high hill,
consists of a long, wide street from which smaller
roads diverge. The church of All Saints stands at
the south-east end, with the almshouses and the
Wesleyan chapel, dating from 1841, close by. The
Congregational chapel a little further on was built in
1839. In 1644 Brill was selected as the winter
quarters for a thousand Parliamentarian foot-soldiers. (fn. 11)
A strong rampart and ditch north of the church and
another line of defence further down the hill were
probably constructed about this time.
The village contains a number of buildings dating
from the 17th century, including Manor Farm, the
Swan (fn. 12) and Red Lion Inns, and the windmill, but
most of them have been considerably restored and
altered in later years.
The manor-house, at the south end of the village,
appears to have been developed from a half-timber
house of the late 15th century. The structure, as it
now stands, is mainly of the late 16th century, and
the walls are of brick with stone dressings, the original
timber portion having been encased. Although it
has been a good deal altered and added to subsequently, much original detail remains, including several
panelled rooms.
Coldharbour Farm, about a mile north, and a
farm-house about a mile south of the village, are both
of 17th-century date; at Little London, a hamlet
near the south-west boundary of the parish, are
several cottages of the same period, but all have been
more or less altered at subsequent dates. There is
also a Congregational chapel here, built in 1847.
Pottery and tile-making were mediaeval industries
at Brill, (fn. 13) and continued to the latter half of the 19th
century. About a mile north of the village, beyond
the old brickfields and the common with its old
wooden mill, is Brill station, on the Brill and
Quainton Road branch of the Metropolitan and
Great Central Joint railway. Not far off lies Rushbeds
Wood, of which more than 100 acres were inclosed
about 1575, (fn. 14) a part, called Upper Rushbeds Coppice,
being still Crown land in 1651, when the Parliamentary commissioners reported that a sufficient
number of acres from it should have been given to
the late Sir John Dynham to compensate him for the
office of forester. (fn. 15) Other inclosures, against which
the people of Brill petitioned Queen Elizabeth, were
made at Clere Fields and Poole Trees, (fn. 16) names still
surviving in the north-east of the parish, Hale Hill,
Mollens, once probably Moleyns Wood and Godstow
or Costow Park. (fn. 17) At Godstow, part of which with
Clere Fields and Hale Hill had belonged to the
lords of Boarstall Manor since 1305, (fn. 18) it was said that
Mr. Dynham had inclosed 140 acres of the queen's
ground to make a park. (fn. 19) Another petition was
presented in 1610 against the inclosure of Godley
Common or Brill Hills. (fn. 20) In 1632 part of Godstow
was allotted to the poor of Brill and Oakley in lieu
of Cartbridge Waste. (fn. 21) Leap Hill, Hercumdean,
Leatherslade, Parkpale Farm and Well House, which
lie in the south-east of the parish, are names known
there since the 16th and 17th centuries. (fn. 22) Rid's Hill,
north-east of the village, is probably the Red's Hill
of 1634, (fn. 23) whilst Chinkwell Wood, to the east of it,
dates from 1681 (fn. 24) ; the Hutwood or Outwood of
1255 and later (fn. 25) does not occur in modern maps.
Borough
There seems to be no doubt that a
royal borough at one time existed at
Brill, but by the mid-13th century it
had been merged in the manor. At the eyre of 1241
the borough of Brill came by twelve men, and the
town (villata) made fine of 20s. before judgement. (fn. 26)
At an eyre of uncertain date, probably not much
later, Brill again appeared by twelve men, but they
had nothing more to present than had been said
elsewhere by the representatives of the hundred. (fn. 27)
As late, however, as the year 1316 Brill and Boarstall
were returned as royal boroughs. (fn. 28) These indications
are strengthened by the 13th-century extents,
which show half-acre and acre plots of 'land built
upon' (terra edificata), which may represent the early
burgages. (fn. 29) The growth of the borough was arrested
early, though in the reign of John we hear of the
'legales' or 'probi homines' of Brill. (fn. 30)
Manors
BRILL, formerly one of the manors of
Edward the Confessor, belonged to the
Conqueror in 1086, (fn. 31) and until the 14th
century remained in the Crown, (fn. 32) of which it was
held in chief as one knight's fee from 1337 to
1634. (fn. 33)
Grants of the whole or part of the manor, generrally during the royal pleasure or for a term of years,
were made by Henry II and his successors. (fn. 34) Certain
lands here of the king's gift were held by William de
Rochelle from 1168 to 1178, (fn. 35) and in 1204 John
granted the manor of Brill to Walter Bustard, servant
of his chapel, in fee farm. (fn. 36) Many other grants of
custody were made during the reign of Henry III. (fn. 37)
The Bishop of Bath and Wells was tenant for seven
years from 1266, (fn. 38) and in 1275 the manor of Brill
was assigned to Queen Eleanor in dower. (fn. 39) Other
grants of short duration (fn. 40) were followed by one made
in 1317 to Richard Lovel and his wife Muriel, in
return for a manor exchanged. (fn. 41) Richard, who
petitioned the king, about four years later, against the
malicious withholding of his dues in Brill by 'le
Mestr' de Smityngfeld, (fn. 42) retained possession until
1337, when, on a grant of the manor in fee by
Edward III to John de Moleyns, he released his
rights to the new lord. (fn. 43)
The manor of Brill then descended with Stoke
Poges (q.v.), with a few divergencies noticed below,
until Francis Earl of Huntingdon sold it to Thomas
Dynham in 1554. (fn. 44) Since then it has followed the
descent of Boarstall Manor, Mr. Henry L. AubreyFletcher being now lord.
The custody of Brill Manor was committed in
1358 to Gilbert Chastellyn, (fn. 45) and the bailiwick in
1384 to Richard Wilcocks, (fn. 46) a John Wilcocks farming
the manor in 1397. (fn. 47) A settlement of Brill appears
to have been made on Thomas Chaucer, said in 1435
to have been seised of the same. (fn. 48) Mortgages of the
manor were made in 1539 and 1549 by the Earl of
Huntingdon. (fn. 49) Frideswide daughter of Eleanor de
Moleyns by her second husband Sir Oliver de Mannyngham (fn. 50) apparently brought Brill to her husband Sir
Thomas Oxenbridge, who held in 1489, (fn. 51) but in 1493
they surrendered all claim, for a life annuity of £10
to Frideswide, to Sir Edward Hastings and Mary his
wife, daughter and heir of Thomas Hungerford. (fn. 52)
Frideswide's daughter and heir Dorothy, wife of
Sir Thomas Digby, afterwards unsuccessfully sued the
trustees of Edward and Mary for the recovery of
Brill, (fn. 53) and her grandson Everard Digby of Long
Stratton revived the claim c. 1565 (fn. 54) against Thomas
Dynham's trustees. (fn. 55) In 1592 a grant of Brill
Manor was made to the fishing grantees Tipper and
Dawe. (fn. 56)
There appears to have been a rectory manor of
Brill, the rector holding assize of bread and ale for his
tenants in 1276. (fn. 57)
The manor had a mill in 1086. (fn. 58) Two centuries
later a windmill was built here of timber from
Bernwood Forest, (fn. 59) probably on the site on which
John de Moleyns, about 1345, constructed another
with oaks felled in his demesne woods. (fn. 60) From
that time until 1733 a windmill appears amongst
the appurtenances of the manor, (fn. 61) of which the
ancient windmill now standing may be the survival.
Assize of bread and ale was a liberty granted to John
de Moleyns in 1338, when he also received view of
frankpledge. (fn. 62) According to a later record, free
warren and the right of erecting gallows on his land
were included in the grant of the manor to him. (fn. 63)
The tolls of a market and fair held at Brill at the
beginning of August were accounted for by John
Norton about 1317. (fn. 64) In 1347 John de Moleyns was
authorised to hold a fair at his manor of Brill on the
eve, day and morrow of the Translation of St. Thomas
the Martyr (fn. 65) (7 July). One or more dovecotes were
amongst the appurtenances of the 16th and 17th
centuries. (fn. 66)
In 1563 there was a capital messuage on the lands
called Harehill, (fn. 67) Halehill, (fn. 68) or the Hall Hill. (fn. 69) The
site of the manor and lands were sold by John Dynham
to William Belson in 1587, (fn. 70) and he and his heirs
had a capital messuage here in the 17th century. (fn. 71)
An appurtenance of Brill Manor in the 13th and
14th centuries was a bowl of honey due from the
Abbot of Woburn for land in Swanbourne. (fn. 72) Before
1535 this had been commuted for an annual payment
of 13s. 4d. (fn. 73)
In 1305 Edward I granted John de Handlo 138
acres in Les Clers, on the borders of if not within the
boundaries of Ludgershall parish. (fn. 74) This seems to
have been the nucleus of what was known from 1362
to 1527 as the manor of CLERESPLACE or CLEREFIELD, and descended with Boarstall (q.v.), being
held in the 16th century of the lord of Brill as of his
manor of Brill. (fn. 75)
In the 16th century the Abbot of Nutley, to whose
house King Henry II had given two cartloads of fuel
a day from Bernwood Forest, (fn. 76) a grant rescinded by
Edward III, (fn. 77) held a considerable property in Brill. (fn. 78)
The promise of a lease of a valuable part of this,
Brill Closes or Wellfields, was obtained from the
abbot for Richard Cromwell by Sir Robert Dormer
in 1536. (fn. 79) In 1540 they were granted, with other
lands formerly of Nutley Abbey, to John Williams, (fn. 80)
whose possessions in the parish were augmented by
another grant six years later. (fn. 81) All were left under
the title of the manor of Brill by John, then Lord
Williams, at his death in 1559 to his servant John
Place for life, (fn. 82) and at the beginning of the 17th
century were held by the heirs of his daughter
Margery wife of Henry Lord Norreys. (fn. 83)
The brothers of the hospital of Santingfeld, near
Wissant in Picardy, paid 60s. a year into the royal
exchequer for lands in Brill from 1154 to 1199. (fn. 84)
These were perhaps part of the 3 hides in the
neighbouring parish of Ludgershall granted by
Henry II to this house, for which the Master of
Santingfeld owed suit at the court of Brill. (fn. 85)
Church
The church of ALL SAINTS consists
of a chancel measuring internally 18 ft. by
15 ft., nave 58 ft. 6 in. by 21 ft. 6 in.,
north aisle 13 ft. 6 in. wide, south aisle 14 ft. wide,
west tower 11 ft. by II ft. 6 in., and a timber south
porch. The walling is principally of rubble and the
roofs are tiled.
The chancel and nave date from
the early 12th century. Beyond
the addition of the tower in the
early 15th century and the insertion of windows at various dates
in the Middle Ages, the plan of
the fabric remained practically unchanged till 1839, when the north
aisle was added. In 1889 the south
aisle and porch were built, and the
chancel, which had been reroofed
in the early 17th century, was ex
tended eastwards about 6 ft.
The east window of the chancel
is modern, and has three lights
under a traceried head. Above it
is a reset and retooled two-light
window of about 1400. In the
north wall are a late 13th-century
trefoiled light and a small blocked
window of about 1120, and in
the south wall a pointed doorway
and a two-light window, both
probably of the 13th century, the
latter much restored and altered.
The fine 17th-century roof is
supported by three trusses and
plastered below the collar-beams.
The middle truss has an elaborate
arch above the tie-beam filled with
pierced balusters radiating from a
central pendant; the eastern truss,
which stands away from the wall
and marks the position of the
original east end, has curved struts,
while the tie-beam of the western
truss has been cut away and only
the ends remain. The pointed
chancel arch dates from the 13th
century, the label on the east
side and the north abacus being re-used from the
12th-century arch. On the north side are notches
for the rood screen, and the arch is rebated on
the east, doubtless for a wood tympanum; the
south jamb has been considerably restored. On the
soffit are 14th-century paintings of St. Peter holding
a book and a key, and St. Paul holding a book and
a sword.
In the west wall of the nave is a 15th-century
pointed arch opening to the ground stage of the
tower; the inner order rests upon corbels, and above
it is a round-headed light of the 12th century. The
arcades and the clearstory are modern, but the north
and south doorways, though restored, are both of the
early 12th century, and, with some windows and
fittings taken out of the original side walls of the
nave, have been rebuilt in the walls of the modern
aisles. The doorways are alike, each having a round
head of two orders supported by detached shafts. In
the east wall of the north aisle is a late 13th-century
window of four uncusped lights with tracery, while
the south aisle has an early 16th-century window of
two cinquefoiled lights in the east wall, a three-light
window, probably of the same period, in the west
wall, and in the south wall a two-light traceried
window of about 1320, from which many of the
modern aisle windows have been copied. A roundarched recess, and a moulded pillar piscina, the shaft
of which is modern, have also been re-used. Some
old white glass in the head of the 14th-century
window is probably original.

Brill Church: The Chancel Roof
The low tower, which hardly rises above the ridge
of the nave roof, is of two stages, the upper being
slightly diminished in size, and has diagonal buttresses
at the western angles. On the south side is a
clock dial. The lower stage has a two-light traceried
window on the west, and there are traces of a late
doorway, now blocked, on the north. The bellchamber is lighted from each side by an original
window of two lights, the western one being repaired
in oak, and there are original gargoyles on the stringcourse below the parapet.
The font, which dates from the 14th century, has
a traceried panel on each of the seven sides of the
bowl, and an octagonal stem and base, the base being
prolonged to form a step. The communion table
dates from the 17th century. In the chancel and
nave are six mediaeval oak benches and in the tower
is a rail supported by 17th-century balusters. On the
south wall of the chancel is an early 16th-century
brass inscription to John Hood and his wife Maud.
The tower contains a ring of six bells recast by
William & John Taylor of Oxford in 1825, and a
sanctus by James Keene, 1624, inscribed round the
lip 'Pe Newman Ier Sergeant.'
The communion plate includes a silver cup and
cover paten of 1569, the latter inscribed 'B 1570'; a
cup and cover paten of 1689 given by Robert Hart;
a flagon given by Sir Thomas Snell in 1751; a small
modern pewter chalice and paten; and a modern
silver-gilt chalice, paten, and pyx.
The registers begin in 1569.
Advowson
The church of Brill from the 12th
to the 16th century was a chapel of
Oakley Church (fn. 86) (q.v.), with which
it seems always to have descended. According to a
charter of Stephen it had belonged to the priory of
St. Frideswide, Oxford, since the time of Edward the
Confessor. (fn. 87) In the 13th century and the early years
of the 14th, presentations, which included Oakley,
were made to the church of Brill, (fn. 88) the importance
of the latter parish as containing a royal manor and
residence and the position of Oakley Church within
its boundaries (fn. 89) apparently obscuring the real relationship between the mother church and its chapel.
Brill had two other chapels in the 13th century.
For the service of one, 'the chapel of the king's
court,' John in 1205 granted Robert the hermit of
St. Werburgh and his successors 50s. a year and the
site of the hermitage. (fn. 90) A single chaplain seems to
have been in charge of the hermitage or 'priory of
St. Werburgh' (fn. 91) and the royal chapel (fn. 92) until the
annexation of the former to Chetwode Priory in
1251. (fn. 93) The prior was then required to supply two
chaplains, one for the chapel of St. Werburgh at the
hermitage, the other for the royal chapel, receiving
in lieu of the 50s. formerly paid him for the latter
21 acres of the king's assart in Brill. (fn. 94) The service
of both had probably been long intermitted before
the middle of the 15th century, when it was proposed
to resume certain lands in Brill held by the Prior of
Chetwode on the unfulfilled condition of maintaining
a chaplain to celebrate there on Sundays, Wednesdays,
and Fridays. (fn. 95) In 1460 the advowsons of the chapels
of St. Edmund and St. Werburgh were included in
the surrender made by the prior to the Bishop of
Lincoln, (fn. 96) which was followed the next year by the
annexation of his house and possessions to Nutley
Abbey. (fn. 97)
In the 16th century there were lands in Brill
devoted to the maintenance of certain lamps in the
church, and the rent of a close supported an obit. (fn. 98)
Charities
Eleemosynary Charities.— The
charity formerly known as the Poor
Folks' Pasture, which was founded
in or about the year 1623, is regulated by a scheme
of the Charity Commissioners of 26 April 1912.
The trust estate consists of 149 acres, or thereabouts,
in Boarstall, known as the Pasture Farm, and 29 acres
of allotment land, producing £126 yearly. The
income, augmented by the letting of the shooting
rights thereon, is applicable under the scheme for the
general benefit of the poor in one or more of the
modes therein specified. In 1912 the sum of £3
was given to each of thirty-four recipients.
Alice Carter's almshouse charity, stated in the
Parliamentary Returns of 1786 to have been founded
by deed in 1591 for poor widows, consists of the
almshouse, close, cottages and gardens containing about
3 acres, let to various tenants, producing about £30
a year.
John Hart, by his will proved in the P.C.C. 15 May
1665, devised (inter alia) an annual rent-charge of
£5 issuing out of Easington Manor, Oxfordshire,
for binding one poor boy to some good trade. In
1912 a premium of £10 was paid for apprenticing
a boy.
Edward Lewis, by his will proved 26 February
1674, directed a sum of £300 to be laid out in the
purchase of a yearly rent for the benefit of the poor.
The endowment consists of a yearly rent-charge of
£8 issuing out of lands belonging to Mr. Henry L.
Aubrey-Fletcher, which is applied in the distribution
of coal.
Miss Mary Elliott, by her will 1864, bequeathed
£100 consols, the annual dividends of £2 10s. to be
applied in the distribution at Christmas of gowns,
flannel and calico among three poor women members
of the Established Church.
Samuel Turner, by his will proved at London
14 November 1873, bequeathed £400, the income
to be distributed annually at Christmas in money,
food, fuel, or clothing to the poor. The legacy, less
duty, is represented by £360 consols, producing £9
yearly.
The sums of stock are held by the official trustees.
Educational Charities.—In 1637 John Pym by
deed gave an annuity of £10 to be paid to a schoolmaster for teaching ten poor children. In 1710 a
sum of £300, representing arrears of the annuity,
was laid out in the purchase of 12 acres called Spar
Closes, which are let at £20 a year. By a scheme of
the Charity Commissioners of 1 February 1895 the
income is made applicable in the maintenance of
evening classes and in prizes and exhibitions.
In 1825 Sir John Aubrey gave £2,200 stock, the
dividends, subject to the payment of 20s. to the parish
clerk and of £5 yearly for keeping in repair the
family monuments in the church, to be applied for
educational purposes. In 1904 there was set aside
with the official trustees a sum of £240 consols as the
ecclesiastical branch, to provide the annual sum of
£6 for the clerk and repair of the monuments, and
£1,960 consols as the educational branch of the charity.
In 1910 the sum of £980 consols, part of the lastmentioned sum of stock, was sold out to provide the
cost of altering and improving the Church of England
schools, for the replacement of which a sum of £660
consols, further part there of, was set aside and accu
mulated, leaving a sum of £320 consols with the
official trustees on current account. The dividends
of £8 a year are applied towards the upkeep of the
school premises. The stock on the investment account
amounts to £715 6s. 7d. consols.
Church Acre.—There is in the parish an acre of
land, so called, let at £2 5s. a year, which is carried
to the churchwardens' account.