ARLESEY
Alricheseia, Alriceseia (xi cent.); Ailricheseye (xiii
cent.); Alrilseye, Arleycheseye (xvi cent.); Arlesey,
Aldrichsey (xvii cent.).
The parish of Arlesey has an acreage of 2,344½
of which 1,564 are arable land, 256¾ permanent
grass, and 8½ woods and plantations. (fn. 1) The soil
is strong clay and gravel, the subsoil clay and gravel.
The parish is watered by the River Hiz, forming the
south-western boundary, and by a smaller tributary
on the north and east. The parish is particularly
long and narrow, the village being built along a single
street 3 miles in length, at the north end of which
stands the parish church, and close to it, on the west,
Arlesey Bury (Mr. H. Carter), the only large house
in the parish. At the south end of the long village
street is the new church of St. Andrew. The land
slopes slightly from south to north, and is well timbered. At the north end of the village the main road
branches off to Henlow on the west, and to Stotfold
on the east, the site of Etonbury manor lying on the
north of the road. The Great Northern Railway
runs due north through the parish to the west of the
village, Three Counties Station being at the south
end, and Arlesey Station at the north. The chief
industry is brickmaking, the large works of the
Arlesey Brick Company, the Arlesey Station Gault
Brickworks, and the London & Arlesey Brick Company being in the north of the parish. There are
also here the works of the Associated Portland Cement
Manufacturers, and the engineering works of Messrs.
S. Owens & Co. Arlesey was inclosed by Act of Parliament in 1804. (fn. 2) Ancient British coins of copper and
brass have been found in the parish. (fn. 3) Etonbury or
Stonbury is an ancient earthwork close to Arlesey
station, on the Great Northern Railway. (fn. 4)
Among place-names in Arlesey may be noted
Rogerhoyesholm in the fifteenth century, which in
the sixteenth century reappears as Hoyesmese. (fn. 5) Betwentwomen, or Tuomeen, in the thirteenth century becomes Twentemen in the fourteenth, and
Wenman's Close in the sixteenth. (fn. 6) Other thirteenthcentury place names are Portwei, Chalcputtes (whose
site can still be traced in the south of the parish),
Waleburgesholm, and Sibwinnesclade. (fn. 7)
Manors
The principal manor of ETONBURY
or ARLESEY was held prior to 1086 by
Alestan of Boscombe. At the time of
the Domesday Survey its extent was said to be 5½ hides
and two-thirds of 1 hide. It furthermore contained a
mill worth 10s. and a market of the same value. The
overlord of Arlesey was William D'Eu, from whom it
passed to the Earl Marshal. (fn. 8)
The history of this overlordship is identical with
that moiety of the overlordship of Edworth (q.v.)
which passed through female descendants of the Earl
Marshal to the Talbots, subsequently earls of Shrewsbury. (fn. 9) The overlordship is mentioned as late as
1636, at which date an inquisition describes the
manor as held of Henry earl of Kent and Elizabeth
his wife, one of the daughters of Gilbert earl of
Shrewsbury. (fn. 10)
At the date of the Domesday Survey Arlesey manor
was held under William D'Eu by Burnard, (fn. 11) whose
family continued in possession till late in the thirteenth century. They were liberal benefactors of
Waltham Abbey (who owned a manor in Arlesey), and
also of St. Neots Priory, and from an examination of
existing charters of these houses the Burnard lordship
in Arlesey can be traced. Roger son of Burnard gave
1 virgate of land in Arlesey and a tenement to St. Neots. (fn. 12)
Odo son of Roger granted 13s. 4d. rent and right of
way through his lands towards the canons' meadow
to Waltham Abbey. (fn. 13) The Testa de Nevill states
that in the thirteenth century Roger Burnard held a
knight's fee in Arlesey of the Earl Marshal, (fn. 14) and this
is the Roger son of Odo who confirmed to St. Neots
all the gifts of his ancestors. (fn. 15) In 1270 Stephen
Burnard of Edworth, probably a son of the above
Roger, was in possession of Arlesey manor, for in that
year he received the grant of a fair there. (fn. 16) He was
the last of his family to hold in Arlesey which, as in
the case of Everton, passed to Walter Langton, bishop
of Coventry and Lichfield, and followed the same
descent as that manor (q.v.) through the Peverels, de la
Poles, Cobhams, Brookes, and Tanfields, until late in
the sixteenth century. (fn. 17) In 1566–7 Clement Tanfield sold Arlesey manor to Henry Gylberd, a goldsmith
of London, (fn. 18) from whom it was purchased a year later
by John Andrews. (fn. 19)
The Andrewses did not long retain it, however, for
William son of John conveyed it to Thomas Emery in
1593. (fn. 20) Thomas Emery left six daughters at his
death in 1636, one of whom, Florence widow of
Henry Goodwin, received Etonbury or Arlesey manor
as her inheritance. (fn. 21) She subsequently married
John Farwell, and they alienated the estate in 1646
to Samuel Browne. (fn. 22) Like Astwick (q.v.) this manor
remained with the Brownes during the seventeenth
and eighteenth centuries, passing to John Schutz on
his marriage with Mary daughter of Thomas Browne. (fn. 23)
In 1775 John Schutz was holding the manor, for in
that year he conveyed it by fine to Edward Kynaston. (fn. 24)
Lysons, writing early in the eighteenth century, says
Arlesey was then in the possession of John Jackson, who
had made a recent purchase. (fn. 25) In 1820 Mr. Jackson
sold this property to Samuel Bedford Edwards, whose
son, also Samuel Bedford Edwards, again sold it to
Messrs. Lycett, Inskip & Co., solicitors, of Bristol. (fn. 26)
They have cut the estate up and sold it to various
persons, but do not appear to have parted with the
manorial rights. (fn. 27)
The manor of ARLESEY BURY formed part of the
original endowment of Waltham Abbey by Harold,
and a confirmation of his grant is first found in a
charter of Edward the Confessor, bearing the date
1062. (fn. 28) By the time of the Domesday Survey, in
common with other Waltham Abbey lands, this manor
is to be found in the tenure of the bishop of Durham.
It consisted of 8 hides and contained two mills. (fn. 29) It
would seem, however, to have been very quickly restored to its original owners, for it reappears as part of
the endowment of the abbey
in charters of Henry II and
Richard I. (fn. 30) The thirteenthcentury history of this manor
is marked by numerous small
grants of land in Arlesey to
the abbey by the Burnards and
others, (fn. 31) but, nevertheless, the
Testa de Nevill states that the
abbot held 3 hides only in
Arlesey, as opposed to the 8 of
the Survey. (fn. 32) The abbey retained the possession of the
manor until the dissolution of
the religious houses, at which
time the yearly rents were £35 6s. 8d., whilst the profits
of court were worth £3 13s. (fn. 33) In the year 1514 the
abbot and convent had leased
Arlesey Bury (with all its appurtenances save pleas of court)
to John Henneage, (fn. 34) and
Thomas Henneage on the
seizure of the manor by the
crown secured their title by
purchase in 1544. (fn. 35) On his
death in 1559 Thomas Henneage left as heiress his daughter
Anne, wife of John Luke. (fn. 36)

Waltham Abbey. Argent a cross engrailed sable with five crosslets fitchy or thereon.

Luke. Argent a hunting horn sable.
Nicholas Luke, their son,
held the manor for his life, (fn. 37) but
his son Oliver who succeeded him in 1613, and who
was certainly holding in 1625, (fn. 38) appears to have alienated it, for by 1659 Arlesey
Bury with Lanthony had passed
to the Edwards family, as in
that year Richard Edwards
recovered the manor from
Richard Hampson and George
Edwards. (fn. 39)

Edwards of Arlesey. Party bend sinisterwise sable and ermine a lion or.
Richard Edwards was succeeded by a son Richard who
died in 1746, (fn. 40) and whose
son Richard, dying without
issue in 1789, left the Arlesey
estates to a nephew William
Bedford who took the name
Edwards by royal licence in 1792. (fn. 41)
In 1820 his son Samuel Bedford Edwards held the
manor, (fn. 42) and as in the case of Arlesey manor (q.v.) his
son sold Arlesey Bury Manor to Messrs. Lycett, Inskip
& Co. Arlesey Bury House with 40 acres of land
was bought by Colonel Fyler who died in 1903, and
has since been purchased by Mr. Howard Carter, who
lives there. (fn. 43)
The nucleus of LANTHONY MANOR is to be
found in the 3⅓ virgates of land which Nigel de
Albini owned in Arlesey at the time of the Domesday
Survey, and which were held of him by a certain
Erfast. (fn. 44) The next mention is to be found in a
charter of King John to the prior of Lanthony in
Gloucestershire, which confirms the gift of Nigel son
of Hordfast (the Erfast of the survey) made with the
permission of his overlords Henry de Albini and
Robert his son. (fn. 45) This manor remained with the
priory till the Dissolution, when it passed to the crown.
A valuation taken in the reign of Philip and Mary
assesses it at 38s. 4½d. (fn. 46) By 1559 it had been granted
to Thomas Henneage to whom Arlesey Bury (q.v.)
belonged, and in this manor it becomes henceforward
merged. (fn. 47)
Dealing with the land of the burgesses of Bedford
the survey states that Ulsi, a prebendary of the king,
held two-thirds of a virgate of land in Arlesey. (fn. 48)
This holding is probably to be found again in the
half-hide of land which, as stated in the Testa de
Nevill, Warin de Claidich held from the king at a
yearly rental of 4s. (fn. 49)
In 1302 John de Claidich was holding the same
land of the king, (fn. 50) and an inquisition taken in 1356
states that one John de Claidich, who died three years
previously, had held a messuage
and land in chief at a rental
of 4s. (fn. 51) He left a son John
Claidich, but no further trace
has been found of this fee.
During the fourteenth and
fifteenth centuries the Greys
of Wilton held property in
Arlesey. John de Grey (who
died in 1323) received 9s. 4d.
yearly rent from freemen there,
and also two pounds of pepper
valued at 9d. (fn. 52) In 1371 his
grandson Reginald de Grey of
Wilton died seised of an annual
rent of 9s. 0¾d., a clove and a
quarter of a pound of pepper in Arlesey appertaining
to the manor of Eaton. (fn. 53) His son Henry held the
same rents at his death in 1396, (fn. 54) as did also his son
Richard in 1442, but no further history has been found
of this property. (fn. 55)

Grey of Wilton.Barry argent and azure with three roundels gules in the chief and a label argent.
The lord of Etonbury manor, and the abbot of
Waltham, as lord of Arlesey Bury, both obtained
charters granting them free warren, the former in
1307, (fn. 56) the latter in 1253. (fn. 57) They also both included
view of frankpledge among their manorial privileges. (fn. 58)
The Survey specially states that the lord of the
manor of Arlesey (afterwards Etonbury) possessed a
market which was valued at 10s. (fn. 59) In 1270 the lord
of the manor, Stephen de Edworth, obtained a grant
confirming a weekly market on Wednesday, and a
yearly fair on the vigil of the feast and morrow of
Sts. Peter and Paul. (fn. 60) In 1820 Samuel Bedford
Edwards, lord of the Arlesey manors, claimed, as
attached to his property, the right to hold two fairs
and six markets, (fn. 61) but there is no evidence of such
having been held since the thirteenth century.
Three mills are mentioned in Arlesey at Domesday.
Of these one, which was then 10s. in value, belonged
to the land of William d'Eu and was held by Burnard. (fn. 62) This mill was still in existence during Walter
de Langton's tenure of Arlesey manor, (fn. 63) but at the
death of his successor Edmund Peverel in 1332 the
water-mill is mentioned as having fallen into decay,
and is not again referred to. (fn. 64)
In the early thirteenth century Henry son of Odo
Burnard 'for the health of his soul and those of his
predecessors and successors,' granted to the men of
Arlesey and all those passing by those parts a piece of
land for a free road, 12 feet broad, between his
messuage and that of Henry de Wennesli. (fn. 65)
A messuage in Arlesey called Poyntells originally
belonging to Waltham Abbey passed at the Dissolution to John Smythe. His grandson Jasper Smythe
sold it in 1556 to Michael Cowper for £88. (fn. 66) A
few years later John son of Michael Cowper sold it
to John Luke who owned Arlesey Bury manor, with
which it thus became absorbed. (fn. 67)
Church
The church of ST. PETER consists
of a chancel 26 ft. by 16 ft., nave
64 ft. 6 in. by 17 ft., north aisle 10 ft.
wide, south aisle 9 ft. wide, south porch and a
modern western tower 12 ft. square, all measurements
being internal.
The earliest details in the church belong to the
first twenty years of the thirteenth century. At some
time in that period the first bay of the north arcade
of the nave and the four complete bays of the south
arcade were built, pointing to the enlargement of a
previously aisleless nave, probably of twelfth-century
date, by the addition of a north-east chapel and a
south aisle. The nave after the alterations was about
55 ft. long, and may perhaps have been lengthened in
the process. The chancel seems to have been rebuilt
soon afterwards, outside the lines of the former
chancel, which was then entirely removed. At some
time also in the thirteenth century the north chapel
was lengthened a bay westward, and a second arch in
consequence added to the north arcade. It is of a
wider span than the east arch, and rather clumsily
built, with its springing a little lower than that of
the earlier bay. The reason of the difference in span
can only be guessed at; perhaps it was regulated by
the position of the north doorway of the nave, the
west wall of the bay being built as close to it as
possible, in order to get as much space as might be in
the addition.
About 1330 the north aisle was again extended
westward, an arcade of two more bays being introduced; this seems to have carried the west wall of
the aisle beyond the line of the then existing west
wall of the nave, and the nave and south aisle were
then lengthened westward to the new line. The two
new bays of the north arcade were not set out continuously with the two already existing, probably to
avoid the removal of the west wall of the thirteenthcentury aisle until the extension was finished, and in
consequence the spacing of the north arcade did not
correspond with that of the south. The extra length
obtained by bringing the west wall of the south aisle
into line with that of the north was not enough for
an arch of a span corresponding to the rest of the
south arcade, and so to avoid a long blank space of
wall here a half-arch was turned in continuation of
the arcade. The chancel arch was widened at or
about this date, and several minor alterations made,
which are noted later. The structural alterations of
the fifteenth century included the building of a
western tower, the addition of a clearstory to the nave,
and the making of the rood stair at the south-east of
the nave.

Plan of St. Peter's Church, Arlesey
In modern days the church has undergone various
repairs, the most important of which was the entire
rebuilding of the tower in 1877.
The east window of the chancel, c. 1330, has three
trefoiled lights with net tracery over. There are two
lancets in the north and south walls, c. 1220, and
near the north-west angle a low side window of fourteenth-century date.
The chancel arch has semi-octagonal jambs with
moulded capitals, c. 1330; the arch is of two chamfered orders and the capitals have been cut off flush
with the inner order on both east and west faces. In
the nave the four bays of the south arcade and the
eastern bay of the north have octagonal piers and
semi-octagonal responds with moulded bases and
capitals of a simple and early form, the abaci being
square above and chamfered below, and the neck
moulds chamfered on both edges. The arches are of
two chamfered orders with a plain chamfered label,
all being more or less out of the perpendicular; in
the west face of the second pier in the south arcade
is a rudely-cut niche with an incised cross above it.
The second bay of the north arcade has capitals somewhat similar to those of the eastern bay, but of less
depth, and the springing of the arch is about 2 in.
lower; it is also of two chamfered orders. Most of
the chamfers in the thirteenth-century arches are
stopped out square above the capitals, some of the
stops being ogee-shaped, some a plain chamfer, and
two of them broach stops. The two western arches
of the north arcade, and the half-arch opposite, follow
the design of the earlier bays, but show their fourteenth-century date in the treatment of their capitals
and bases. The clearstory has five windows a side,
each of two cinquefoiled lights; a moulded string of
fifteenth-century section runs at the level of the
window-sills. At the south-east of the nave is the
lower door to the rood stair, a fifteenth-century insertion, and above it is a wide stone corbel to take
the south end of the loft.
All the windows in the aisles, except the west
windows, are insertions in fifteenth-century style,
each of three cinquefoiled lights with tracery in a
four-centred head.
The west window of the north aisle dates from the
first half of the fourteenth century, and is of two trefoiled lights, and the west window of the south aisle
is a modern copy of it.
The north doorway is of fifteenth-century date,
and has a two-centred arch under a square head; the
stops to the label take the form of large human heads,
and may have done duty as corbels to a porch roof
now gone.
The south doorway has an arch of two continuous
wave-moulded orders, and is of early fourteenthcentury date, contemporary with the wall in which
it is set. Over it a modern porch is built.
The east end of the north aisle retains a number of
interesting details.
In the east wall north of the inserted fifteenthcentury east window is a fourteenth-century trefoiled
niche for an image with roll cusps and a crocketed
label flanked by pinnacled shafts. In the north
wall is a plainer cinquefoiled niche of the same
date, and close to it in the north-east angle a much
smaller niche with a trefoiled head. All have
brackets for images, but it is possible that the two
latter are not in their original positions, and were,
perhaps, moved when the wide east window was
inserted. Below them is a square recess, perhaps
sepulchral, with a filleted edge-roll round head and
jambs, ending on moulded bases. The sill of the
recess has a projecting edge, on which is a diaper
pattern of fourteenth-century style; it is incomplete,
and obviously old material re-used and cut down to
suit its present place. Below is a panelled front with
four quatrefoils; the whole is probably a fifteenthcentury insertion. Opposite to it in the south wall
is a trefoiled piscina recess of late thirteenth-century
style, which formerly had a projecting bowl, now cut
back to the wall face.
At the north-west of the same aisle is a tombrecess with a segmental arch and a label with stops
carved as human heads, of fourteenth-century date.
The west tower, as already noted, was rebuilt in
1877, but its east arch is of fifteenth-century detail,
flanked by two large buttresses projecting into the
nave, after a fashion common in the district. The
west window is modern, of three lights, and the tower
is of three stages with an embattled parapet and twolight belfry windows.
Most of the roof timbers of the nave and aisles are
of fifteenth-century date, and have contemporary stone
corbels; two of these, at the east end of the north
aisle, are carved as priests' heads, the others are winged
angels with shields. The chancel roof is modern.
At the east end of the south aisle is a fine early
seventeenth-century pew with an open arcade of
round-headed arches on Ionic columns, above which is
a deep frieze of dolphins in open work, very boldly and
effectively treated. There are no other old wooden
fittings in the church.
The font is a good but somewhat mutilated example
of late fourteenth-century work. The bowl is octagonal, and has panelled sides in which are carved
subjects representing the Fall of Man and the Atonement. They are as follows:—1. The Creation
of the World. 2. The Creation of Adam. 3. The
Creation of Eve. 4. The Temptation. 5. Adam
and Eve driven from the Garden. 6. Eve spinning
and Adam delving. 7. The Jaws of Hell gaping
to receive two shrouded figures, probably meant for
Adam and Eve. 8. The Crucifixion. Round the
panels are rosettes, which are complete in every
respect in the first panel, but gradually become more
unfinished as they go round the font, until in the
seventh they are only marked out for carving, and in
the eighth they do not appear at all. The stem of
the font has at its angles four figures, the first a
priest, the second a deacon, and the third St. John
the Baptist, while the fourth is too damaged to be
identified.
In the nave floor is a brass to Richard Edwards
with his coat of arms above.
There are six modern bells by Warner of Cripplegate.
The plate consists of a communion cup of 1730,
and a paten, probably of much the same date, but
with an illegible date-letter.
The registers begin in 1538, and the first book
contains baptisms, marriages, and burials up to 1692;
the second book continues the baptisms and burials to
1809, and the marriages to 1754; the third book is
the marriage register, 1754–1812, and the fourth has
baptisms and burials, 1809–12
Advowson
Before the dissolution of the religious houses the advowson of Arlesey
church belonged to Waltham Abbey (fn. 68)
In 1225 John archdeacon of Bedford recognized the
right of the abbot to claim freedom from visitation in
this church, (fn. 69) and in 1254 a dispute between the
prior of Strigul (Chepstow) and the abbot of Waltham concerning tithes was settled in favour of the
latter. (fn. 70) At the Dissolution the value of the impropriate rectory was assessed at £8 10s. 6d. (fn. 71) The
advowson and rectory, which have never been
separated, were sold, together with the manor of
Arlesey Bury, by Henry VIII to Thomas Henneage,
and followed the same descent as that manor (q.v.),
until in 1630 the Lukes transferred them by fine to
William Buckby. (fn. 72) Five years after the latter alienated
the rectory and advowson to Samuel Browne, (fn. 73) who
owned Etonbury, and down to the nineteenth century
it went with that manor (q.v.). (fn. 74)
In the nineteenth century it appears to have passed
through various hands; in 1822 M. A. Taylor owned
the advowson, (fn. 75) and seven years later R. Houston. (fn. 76)
F. Sapte presented between 1836 and 1850, (fn. 77) and it
then belonged to the Rev. Roger Smythe, (fn. 78) who in
1860 sold the advowson and rectory to James Curtis,
from whom it passed to his grandson, the Rev. R. F.
Scott. His son, the Rev. R. C. F. Scott, sold Arlesey
Rectory in 1898 to the Rev. G. J. Mayhew, in whose
gift it is at present. (fn. 79)
The mission church of St. Andrew at Three
Counties, which serves as a chapel-of-ease, was erected
in 1900. There are also here a Wesleyan Chapel,
built in 1850, and a Primitive Methodist, built in
1875, and a Salvation Army room.
There are no endowed charities in this parish.