LEIGH
The small parish of Leigh, known locally as 'the
Lye', (fn. 1) lies mainly between the River Severn and the
Gloucester-Tewkesbury road, 6 miles north of
Gloucester and 4 miles south of Tewkesbury. The
area of the parish is 1,504 a., (fn. 2) and it is triangular in
shape. The parish was divided between the hundreds
of Deerhurst and Westminster, the division
corresponding to that between the estates formerly
belonging to Westminster Abbey and Deerhurst
Priory, (fn. 3) and comprised the two tithings of Leigh
and Evington. In 1964 the name Evington survived
in names of houses, but was not normally used to
distinguish any part of the parish.
The parish is mainly flat and low-lying, but a
ridge runs through the eastern half and the land
rises to 100 ft. in the north-east corner at Coombe
Hill. The parish is bounded almost entirely by watercourses, the River Chelt and its tributaries, the
Morris brook (fn. 4) and the Leigh brook, on the southeast, south-west, and a short part of the north-west,
the Coombe Hill Canal (opened c. 1796 and closed
in 1876) (fn. 5) on most of the north-west. Before the
construction of the canal the north boundary with
Deerhurst was undefined. The parish stops short of
the River Severn but is close enough to be affected
by flooding, (fn. 6) particularly the north and east parts
which are intersected by streams. It is mainly on the
Keuper Marl (fn. 7) and, on the east side, the Lower Lias,
with extensive alluvial deposits beside the canal and
on the west side of the parish. (fn. 8) Until inclosure in
1815 Leigh included a large area of common pasture,
shared with Deerhurst parish, (fn. 9) and there has always
been a large proportion of pasture in the parish.
There was no woodland in the parish in 1964, and
the extensive orchards there were used mainly for
pasture.
It is said that an ancient track went west across the
south part of the parish, and that the moated site of
Leigh manor-house was made close to the track. (fn. 10)
It is probable that the main settlement in the parish
was there in the late 12th or early 13th century,
when the church was built near the moated site.
Leigh End, as the settlement was later called, (fn. 11) does
not, however, appear ever to have been a nucleated
village, and perhaps by the 14th century the larger
settlement was at Evington, (fn. 12) c. ½ mile north-east
of the church, on the edge of the common lying
between Deerhurst and Leigh parishes. The reason
for the site of the village at Evington is likely to have
been the proximity of the common, which provided
most of the pasture in the parish. (fn. 13) Evington has
more the character of a nucleated village than Leigh
End, with houses grouped around the inside of a
triangle of roads. One of the houses in Evington,
Cyder Press Farm, incorporates in an outbuilding
some herring-bone masonry that has been thought
to be Saxon, and tradition associates the wall with a
sheep-house belonging to Deerhurst Priory. (fn. 14) The
timber-framed farm-house is L-shaped: the smaller,
lower wing includes a pair of incomplete cruck blades
that may be re-used, while the larger four-bay wing
is of the 17th century but contains timber from an
earlier building, including smoke-blackened rafters.
Other houses in Evington were built in the 17th
century, timber-framed with wattle and daub or
brick panels. Three retained thatched roofs in 1964.
Thirty-four houses were recorded in the parish in
1672, (fn. 15) probably mainly in Evington village. Five
houses besides the manor-house were mentioned in
Leigh manor in 1757, (fn. 16) and by 1793 a farm-house
called the Great House, (fn. 17) later Leigh End Farm, (fn. 18)
had been built west of the church and manor-house.
A few thatched cottages near the church were
removed after the mid-19th century. (fn. 19) Scattered
cottages were built by the early 19th century along
the lane connecting Leigh End with Evington
village, (fn. 20) and scattered houses were built in the late
19th century and early 20th along the road linking
Leigh End with the Tewkesbury-Gloucester road.
Houses built in Evington in the late 18th century or
early 19th were of brick with slate or tile roofs and
segmental-headed windows, and more brick houses
including a few farm-houses were built in the late
19th century. East of Evington stands Brick House
Farm, and further east again Evington Hill Farm,
both of which are mentioned below. (fn. 21) By the stream
beyond Evington Hill Farm are earthworks that may
mark another settlement site.
The pattern of settlement has been determined
largely by the lines of communication running
through the parish. In 1287 the road from Gloucester
to Tredington and Tewkesbury passed through
Evington, (fn. 22) and in 1675 there were a few scattered
buildings along the Gloucester-Tewkesbury road
where it crossed the east side of the parish. (fn. 23) At
Coombe Hill, where that road was joined by the
Cheltenham-Tewkesbury road, there was a guidepost in 1726. (fn. 24) From Coombe Hill to the southern
boundary of the parish the Gloucester road was a
turnpike from 1764 to 1872. (fn. 25) The course of the
road through the parish was altered in the late 18th
century and early 19th. (fn. 26) Its earlier course was less
direct and lay west of the crest of the ridge. Between
1792 and 1795 a canal was built from the Severn,
at the south-west corner of Deerhurst parish, across
the undefined boundary between Deerhurst and
Leigh, to Coombe Hill. (fn. 27) Built at the expense of
three people, it was intended mainly for the carriage
of goods between Cheltenham and the Severn: with
the opening of the Gloucester-Cheltenham tramway
the traffic on the canal declined, (fn. 28) and in 1876,
despite a protest by the Sharpness New Docks and
the Gloucester and Birmingham Navigation Co., the
canal was closed. (fn. 29)
In the late 18th century some small brick cottages
were built at the Coombe Hill Canal wharf. During
the 19th century most of the new building in the
parish was along the main road, particularly at
Coombe Hill. (fn. 30) Leigh House, the largest house in
the parish, was built beside that road in the early
19th century, probably by the Hill family. (fn. 31) The
house is of brick, faced with stone at the front, with
a hipped slate roof and moulded eaves cornice,
altered and enlarged at different times. Brick stables
belonging to the house were being converted into a
house in 1964. Evington Villa, later Evington House,
which lay beside the old course of the road near
Coombe Hill was rebuilt for Sir Arthur Brooke
Faulkner in the early 19th century. A timber-framed
17th-century wing was retained, but the large brick
addition, described in 1847 as an 'Italian villa', (fn. 32)
was in a picturesque gabled style with Gothic
windows; further alterations and additions were
made in the late 19th century. Two farms and
several smaller houses, mostly detached or semidetached and of brick, were built along the road,
especially near Coombe Hill, in the late 19th century,
and a few more houses were built beside the road to
Cheltenham. Cheltenham Rural District Council
built two pairs of houses at Coombe Hill in the mid20th century. The growth of Coombe Hill as a local
centre of population in the 19th century was
recognized by the opening of a mission church (fn. 33) and
the building of the Methodist chapel there. (fn. 34) In 1964
the only shop in the parish was at Coombe Hill.
Twenty-eight people in the parish were assessed
for tax in 1327, and the comparatively high assessment suggests a substantial population at that time. (fn. 35)
In 1551 120 communicants were recorded, (fn. 36) and the
population seems to have increased thereafter; 40
families were recorded in 1563, (fn. 37) 52 adult males in
1608, (fn. 38) and 59 families in 1650. (fn. 39) In 1676 151 adults
were recorded (fn. 40) and in the mid-18th century the
population was said to be 256, (fn. 41) increasing to 303
by 1801. The population grew steadily, in spite of
the emigration of 22 people in 1841, to 470 in 1851.
Thereafter it declined rapidly until 1881, and then
more slowly to 281 in 1931. There was an increase in
population by 1951 but in 1961 it had decreased
again. (fn. 42)
Apart from the two main roads mentioned above
the only roads are those from the Gloucester road to
the church, called Leigh End road in 1815, and to
Evington village, called Leigh field road, (fn. 43) and one
between those two. The bridge carrying the
Gloucester road over the Leigh brook, called Stains
Bridge by the 18th century, (fn. 44) was made of wood in
1675; (fn. 45) it was later rebuilt in brick. Knight's Bridge,
at the boundary with Elmstone Hardwicke on the
Cheltenham road, was so called by 1497. (fn. 46)
There was an alehouse in Evington in 1755, (fn. 47) and
in 1839 the parish had four inns, (fn. 48) including the
'Swan' at Coombe Hill which was opened by 1824. (fn. 49)
The number had fallen to two by 1856, and the 'Swan'
was the only inn from c. 1923. (fn. 50)
After the school was closed in 1962 the building
was used as a church hall. The parish had in the
20th century a flourishing branch of the British
Legion which met in a small hut at Coombe Hill.
Manors and Other Estates.
The whole
of Leigh had apparently belonged in the early 11th
century to the monastery of Deerhurst. In 1066,
after the division of the monastery's lands, the abbey
of St. Denis had an estate of 1 hide in Leigh. (fn. 51) In
1227 Ivicia, lately wife of Adam de Paris, claimed
dower in an estate of one plough-land and more in
Leigh against John de Paris, (fn. 52) who presumably held
of the abbey. Later the manor of LEIGH was held
as of Deerhurst Priory, (fn. 53) a tenure that was recorded
up to 1604. (fn. 54)
In 1283 William of Coleville granted the manor,
subject to the life tenancy of Simon of Deerhurst, to
Edmund, Earl of Lancaster. (fn. 55) In 1336 Gilbert of
Kinnersley granted Leigh manor to Joan of Rodborough of Notgrove, (fn. 56) wife of Thomas of Rodborough (d. 1308). (fn. 57) Although in 1338 an Edmund
of Kinnersley was dealing with the manor, (fn. 58) Joan's
descendants retained it. In 1377 William of Rodborough, great-grandson of Joan, died seised of an
estate of two plough-lands in Leigh. (fn. 59) William's son
and heir, John, died in 1382 while still a minor, and
the manor passed to his sisters, Agnes wife of John
Browning, and Alice who later married John
Winter. (fn. 60) The Brownings' moiety was delivered in
1415 to their daughter Cecily and her husband Guy
Whittington (fn. 61) (d. 1441 or 1442), (fn. 62) and the other half
of the manor may have passed to them also: the
Whittington estate was usually referred to as the
manor (fn. 63) of Leigh, and no evidence has been found
of the descent of the other half. The manor probably
descended to Richard, the second son of Guy and
Cecily, who was described as of Leigh; (fn. 64) John
Whittington, clerk, who held the manor when he
died in 1503, was perhaps Richard's son. John's
heirs were the infant daughters of his brother
Richard, (fn. 65) and from them the manor seems to have
passed to John Whittington of Pauntley, grandson of
Guy's and Cecily's eldest son Robert, who had land
in Leigh at his death in 1525. (fn. 66) John's son and heir,
Thomas Whittington of Pauntley, died in 1546
leaving six daughters and co-heirs. (fn. 67)
It was said that Richard Browne died seised of the
manor in 1572 or 1573 and his grandson Thomas
Browne had livery of it five years later. (fn. 68) William
Rudhall died seised of a manor of Leigh in 1609, (fn. 69)
but in 1634 Richard Browne of Bishop's Norton
owned Leigh manor, which passed to his younger
son, also Richard, after his death in 1638. (fn. 70) The
second Richard was perhaps the Mr. Browne who
was living in Leigh in 1672 (fn. 71) and sold Leigh in
1691. The purchaser was William, Viscount Tracy
of Rathcoole, (fn. 72) who in 1705 sold it to Stephen
Cooke. (fn. 73) By his will of 1727 Stephen Cooke left the
manor to his son, Thomas, with contingent remainder
to his daughters Anne and Susannah. By 1755 the
manor had been divided between Anne Cooke and
Sophia Dalton, daughter of Susannah Cooke, (fn. 74) and
by 1779 both parts were held by Edmund Probyn
of Newland, (fn. 75) who in 1757 had married Sophia
Dalton, (fn. 76) and was the owner in 1815. By 1820 the
manor had passed to Charles Hammond, the owner
in 1832. (fn. 77) Most of the land belonging to the manor
was held by two tenants in 1793. (fn. 78) In 1964 the
owners were Mr. A. G. Troughton and Mr. S.
Chandler whose families had owned the land since
the late 19th century. (fn. 79)
A moated site at Leigh Court, south-west of the
parish church, marks the position of the ancient
manor-house, where presumably Agnes and John
Browning were living in 1389. (fn. 80) In the late 17th
century Richard Browne lived in a different house;
Leigh Court was nevertheless regarded as the chief
house in 1757, (fn. 81) and in 1793 had four rooms on each
floor and extensive outbuildings built of brick and
stone with roofs of tile and thatch. (fn. 82) The house was
rebuilt in the mid-19th century (fn. 83) as a two-storied
brick farm-house and later enlarged. It stands on
the west part of the moated site.
The other part of the parish, 1¼ hide, belonged in
1066 to Westminster Abbey, and was held of the
abbey by a radknight, Elwi. (fn. 84) Westminster Abbey
retained the manor of EVINGTON until the
Dissolution, (fn. 85) and, although it was not mentioned in
the grant of the abbey's property to the Dean and
Chapter of Westminster, (fn. 86) from the 17th century it
formed part of the manor of Deerhurst or Plaistow. (fn. 87)
An allotment of 32 a. for manorial rights was made
at inclosure in 1815, (fn. 88) and although in the late 19th
century and early 20th the dean and chapter, and
later the Ecclesiastical Commissioners, were said
to be lords of the manor, (fn. 89) no manorial rights
survived. A manor-house may be represented by
Evington Hill Farm, which is mainly a cruciform
timber-framed building of which part is of the 16th
century or earlier. The south-east wing, which has
a jettied gable-end with some decorative timberframing, is probably an addition of the early 17th
century. In the 19th century the north-west end was
largely rebuilt in brick.
In 1285 Bevis de Knoville, Westminster Abbey's
under-tenant in Evington, was granted free warren
in his demesne land there, (fn. 90) and in 1303 he was said
to hold ¼ fee in Evington. (fn. 91) A William Wyffield, who
had the highest assessment for tax in Evington in
1327, (fn. 92) was probably the William of Wightfield who
held Bevis de Knoville's ¼ fee in 1346. (fn. 93) The descent
of Evington manor in the later Middle Ages cannot
be traced in detail. It may be represented by the
estate of 2 messuages and 2 plough-lands in Evington
called Derneford and Devereux held by Joan, late
the wife of Edmund Toky, at her death in 1436.
Joan's heir was her son Thomas Toky. (fn. 94) That estate,
however, was later held of the manor of Boddington
and in 1586 was called the manor of DERNEFORD. (fn. 95)
An estate of 100 a. in Evington held of Westminster
Abbey by John Deane at his death in 1493 may have
been Evington manor. John Deane's heir was his
nephew John Moore. (fn. 96) The estate that was held at
his death in 1497 by William Twinhoe in right of
his late wife Katherine, daughter of John Solers,
was probably Evington manor although it was
described as the manor of Leigh. William Twinhoe
was succeeded by his son Walter, (fn. 97) and in 1548 a
William Twinhoe and his son Edmund demised
Evington manor to Richard Atwell. The manor
passed to Richard's son, Thomas Atwell, (fn. 98) and a
Richard Atwell or Wells was living at Evington in
1608. (fn. 99) Richard Wells died in 1612 and the manor
passed to his son John, (fn. 100) perhaps the John Wells
who died in 1663. (fn. 101) A Mr. Wells living at Evington
in 1672 (fn. 102) may have been the William Wells of
Evington who disclaimed arms in 1682. (fn. 103) A Robert
Wells died in 1686, and a John Wells was buried at
Leigh in 1731. (fn. 104) Another John Wells, of Evington,
owned a considerable estate there in 1757, when
Isaac Maddox, Bishop of Worcester, and a Mr.
Francombe each owned a slightly larger one. (fn. 105)
The Wells estate evidently passed to a family
called Hill, and by his will of 1808 John Hill left
the Wells or Evington manor-house estate to his
brother Richard Hill and then to the children of his
brother William Hill. The estate was divided after
Richard Hill's death between the daughters of
William Hill, Frances, wife of Edmund Rudge, and
Eliza Ann Hill, who bought her sister's share in
1842. (fn. 106) By 1874 the estate belonged to Joseph
Higgins, who had married Eliza Ann Hill. (fn. 107) About
1948 a house and c. 40 a. land, which may represent
the manorial estate, were bought by Mr. A. G.
Griffiths, (fn. 108) the owner in 1964. The house, a twostoried brick building with a symmetrical front of
five bays, was called Evington Manor Farm in
1824 (fn. 109) and Brick House Farm from 1883. (fn. 110) It was
built of brick in the early 18th century, and contains
a staircase and a panelled room of that period; a
large rubble barn of an earlier date was destroyed by
fire in 1962. (fn. 111)
A piece of pasture in Leigh that had belonged to
the Carmelite Friars of Gloucester was granted in
1544 to Thomas Bell. (fn. 112) In 1612 Richard Wells's
estate included 3 a. of pasture formerly belonging
to the Carmelite Friars. (fn. 113)
The great tithes of Leigh belonged to Deerhurst
Priory, which paid a portion from them to the vicar. (fn. 114)
In 1573 the Crown granted the tithes to Richard
Pate, (fn. 115) who conveyed them to Corpus Christi
College, Oxford, for the maintenance of the free
school in Cheltenham. (fn. 116) At inclosure in 1815 Corpus
Christi College received 96 a. for tithes; (fn. 117) some of
the land was sold in the 19th century, and in 1964
the college owned 36 a. at Leigh. (fn. 118)
Several small parts of the parish belonged to
manors in the surrounding parishes. The manors of
Apperley in the 15th century, of Elmstone Hardwicke and Deerhurst Walton in the 16th, and of
Staverton in the 17th included land in Leigh. (fn. 119)
Economic History.
In 1086 Deerhurst
Priory's estate in Leigh was only one hide and no
details of tenants were given. In Evington one hide
and one yardland had been held by a radknight in
1066. (fn. 120) Some land in Evington was held in demesne
by Bevis de Knoville in 1285. (fn. 121) In Leigh manor two
plough-lands and two messuages in Leigh and
Heydon were demesne in 1379, (fn. 122) and the demesne
was perhaps the same in 1525 when John Whittington had two messuages in Leigh. (fn. 123)
If the two hides and one yardland recorded in
1086 represents the whole of the two estates there
was an increase in arable, presumably from assarted
land, in the 12th and 13th centuries. The number of
people assessed for tax in 1327 — 17 in Evington
and 11 in Leigh — and the fairly high assessment
of Evington (fn. 124) suggest a number of large landholders
at that date. The highest individual assessment was
that of John de Paris, who may have been connected
with the man of the same name holding land in
Leigh in 1227. (fn. 125) Roger of Eston who held ½ ploughland in 1241 (fn. 126) was probably a free tenant, and
Thomas of Aston who held land in Leigh in 1322
may have belonged to the same family. (fn. 127) In 1536
a tenant of Elmstone manor had 34 a. arable, 11 a.
meadow, and 13 a. pasture in Evington and Leigh. (fn. 128)
Rents of free and customary tenants of Leigh manor
were recorded in 1535, (fn. 129) but no other evidence of
customary tenants before the Dissolution has been
found. The 90 a. of arable, 30 a. of meadow, and 40
a. of pasture which Richard Wells held in 1612 was
presumably all demesne land. (fn. 130)
Although the demesne of Leigh manor was
extensive in 1691, (fn. 131) only 4 a. of meadow were
associated with the manor-house in 1757, (fn. 132) and that
may have been all the demesne land to survive the
changes in ownership. About 70 a. was associated
with the former Evington Manor Farm in the 20th
century, (fn. 133) but the farm buildings suggest that the
farm had been larger.
A freeholder had a small estate in Evington in
1619, (fn. 134) and the 17 people in Evington distinguished
from the customary tenants as 'residents' in 1673
may have been freeholders; (fn. 135) during the 17th and
18th centuries, however, the majority of tenants in
Evington seem to have been copyholders, and in
Leigh copyholders or leaseholders. (fn. 136) Seven copyholders were recorded in Evington in 1673. (fn. 137) They
held on the same conditions as the tenants of
Plaistow manor elsewhere. Rent and heriots were
normally owed, and estates were often granted for
three lives. The usual unit of a holding, as in Deerhurst, seems to have been a messuage and ½ yardland. (fn. 138) Two copyhold estates of Boddington manor in
Leigh in 1586 and 1601 were held for three lives;
heriots and rent, in one case in cash and hens and
geese, were owed. (fn. 139) In 1757 Leigh manor had 15
tenants with 17 holdings. Two were tenants at will
and the others were leaseholders; all the leaseholders
owed heriots as well as rent. Estates were held for
one, two or three lives. The largest holding was
43 a. arable and 5 a. meadow, four were between
20 a. and 36 a. and the rest were under 20 a. (fn. 140) By
1793, however, the whole of the Leigh manor estate
was divided into two farms of 164 a. and 157 a. held
by two leasehold tenants. (fn. 141)
The arable land perhaps never amounted to more
than about half the parish. Little evidence of openfield agriculture has been found, but it seems that
Evington and Leigh had at one time separate field
systems; in the 18th century Evington had its own
hayward. (fn. 142) In 1584 the vicar's glebe lay in three
fields, Leigh field, east of Leigh village, Longdown,
and Woefield, which may have been all in Leigh
manor. (fn. 143) Church field or Dodworth, lying between
the two villages (fn. 144) may have been shared by the two
manors, and Lowlands field in the north-east part of
the parish apparently belonged to Evington manor
alone. (fn. 145) The lands or ridges of the glebe in 1584
were each between ¼ a. and ⅓ a., and some were
grouped in twos and threes. (fn. 146) By the early 18th
century some holdings comprised consolidated units
of about 10 lands. (fn. 147) Pasture-land described as lying
in high ridges in 1793 may have been formerly part
of the open fields. (fn. 148) At inclosure in 1815 open arable
land remained in Lowlands field, Dodworth field,
Leigh field, Surridge field, Woefield, and Asterleigh
field (south of Leigh End road). (fn. 149)
Landowners in the parish had common of pasture
in the large common which lay between Deerhurst
and Leigh. (fn. 150) In 1761 the people of Leigh parish
made a ditch to divide the common of the two
parishes, which was destroyed by a riotous mob. (fn. 151)
The common was apparently used mainly for
sheep. (fn. 152) Cow-commons lay in Incham Moor, (fn. 153) in
Cobney meadow (partly in Deerhurst) which was
61 a. in 1793, (fn. 154) and in Wickham. (fn. 155) Morris mead
and Great and Little Small mead were perhaps used
only by Evington, (fn. 156) and some tenants had common
of pasture in Boddington Moor. (fn. 157) One estate of only
a few acres had 8 sheep-commons in 1752, (fn. 158) but
others were recorded as having only beast- or cowcommons. (fn. 159) Of the 19½ a. belonging to the vicar's
glebe in 1584 c. 10 a. were meadow. (fn. 160) By 1757 some
common had evidently been inclosed. (fn. 161)
In 1757 Leigh was said to be famous for cider,
and the practice of using land for both pasture and
fruit trees was widespread by the late 18th century. (fn. 162)
The common was described as rich pasture in 1779, (fn. 163)
but as in Deerhurst it was probably not being fully
used (fn. 164) and, with other land in the parish, could have
been improved by drainage. (fn. 165) Only 266 a. in the
parish were returned as sown in 1801, mainly with
wheat, barley, and beans, (fn. 166) and in 1803 the parish
was described as mainly pasture. (fn. 167)
In 1815, by a joint award with Deerhurst, the
common and the remaining open fields in Leigh
were inclosed. The award, which also dealt with
some old inclosures, covered about two-thirds of the
parish. The largest allotments were 126 a. to the
vicar, 115 a. to Edmund Probyn, 96 a. to Corpus
Christi College, Oxford, and 82 a. to William Hill.
Five people received between 20 a. and 40 a., and
six between 8 a. and 20 a. About 30 people received
smaller allotments, most of them less than 1 a. (fn. 168)
In the 19th century the pattern of land ownership
did not alter significantly. Leigh manor continued
to be divided into two large farms held by lessees,
and Evington had a few large estates and several
small holdings. Up to 1844 there were still estates
in Evington held by copyhold of Plaistow manor. (fn. 169)
In 1839 51 people had estates in the parish, mostly
occupied by tenants. The largest farms were 165 a.
and 151 a., and six others were over 50 a. (fn. 170) In 1834 it
was said that c. 50 agricultural labourers were
employed in the parish, (fn. 171) and in 1831 less than half
the farmers employed labour. (fn. 172) In 1874 Leigh Court
and Leigh End remained the largest farms, and there
were seven others over 50 a. and c. 20 smallholdings. (fn. 173) By 1964 the number of small-holdings
had decreased, and four farms were over 100 a. (fn. 174)
In 1834 the parish had 1,105 a. pasture and 300 a.
arable, (fn. 175) and c. 1901 only 131 a. arable were recorded. (fn. 176) In 1964 the land was used mainly for
dairy cattle; the orchards in the villages were largely
neglected or had been ploughed up.
There were four carpenters, three tailors, and a
smith in the parish in 1608, (fn. 177) a carpenter was
recorded in 1831, (fn. 178) and in the later 19th century
Leigh had smiths, carpenters, and a tailor. (fn. 179) A
smithy remained in use until c. 1940. (fn. 180) The parish
had a baker in 1662, (fn. 181) a butcher in the late 18th
century and early 19th, (fn. 182) and a shopkeeper, a grocer,
and a haberdasher in the 1930's. (fn. 183) In 1964 the only
shop was on the main road, where there was also a
café and three petrol stations. Inhabitants of the
parish recorded as millers (fn. 184) appear to have been
connected with Slate Mill in Boddington parish. A
quarry was mentioned in 1839, (fn. 185) and a small brickworks was in use in 1824. (fn. 186) Some employment
outside agriculture was provided by the Coombe
Hill Canal. In 1811 trade and industry supported
7 out of 48 families. (fn. 187) In 1964 a large part of the
population travelled outside the parish to work, and
several retired and professional people lived there.
Local Government.
Although in the 17th
century and early 18th view of frankpledge and
courts leet and baron were often mentioned with the
manor of Leigh, (fn. 188) and the lord of the manor was said
to have the right to hold a court, (fn. 189) no evidence that
he in fact held one has been found. The tithing of
Leigh had its own constable in 1716. (fn. 190) Evington
attended the view of frankpledge and court baron
of Westminster Abbey at Deerhurst or Hardwicke.
In the mid-16th century Evington was apparently
treated as part of the tithing of Deerhurst, (fn. 191) and does
not appear separately in the rolls of Deerhurst
court; (fn. 192) but by 1678 it was a separate tithing with
its own constable and tithingman. (fn. 193)
Churchwardens' and overseers' accounts survive
for 1703–36, and overseers' accounts for 1776–1801.
There is no evidence of separate overseers for the
two tithings; the parish normally had two overseers, (fn. 194)
but by 1834 there was only one. (fn. 195) A parish clerk
was paid out of the income from the church lands
charity. (fn. 196) Expenditure on poor relief doubled
between 1776 and 1803, when 23 people were
receiving regular relief and 85 occasional relief. (fn. 197)
Expenditure was at its highest in 1814, when £216
was spent on relief and £69 on lawsuits, but the
numbers receiving occasional relief had fallen to
28. (fn. 198) In 1834 it was said that between 3 and 5
labourers received regular relief in the winter. (fn. 199) In
1835 Leigh became part of the Tewkesbury Poor
Law Union, (fn. 200) and in 1935 was transferred from the
Tewkesbury to the Cheltenham Rural District. (fn. 201) The
parish council has met regularly since 1894. (fn. 202)
Churches.
The parish of Leigh was originally
within the area served from Deerhurst Priory church.
The church at Leigh may have been built by the late
12th century (fn. 203) as a chapel of Deerhurst, and it
continued to be referred to as a chapel up to 1540. (fn. 204)
By 1316 the cure was served by a vicar presented by
the Prior of Deerhurst. (fn. 205) There were burials in the
churchyard of Leigh by 1511. (fn. 206) In 1953 the benefice
was united with the benefice of Norton with which
it had been held in plurality for some years. The
parishes remained distinct. (fn. 207)
The advowson of Leigh was said to have been
held by John Throckmorton (d. 1472) by descent, (fn. 208)
but in 1540 George Throckmorton held it with the
great tithes on a lease from Deerhurst Priory. (fn. 209) The
Crown retained the advowson after the Dissolution, (fn. 210)
and when the benefice was united with Norton the
patronage belonged in turn to the Lord Chancellor
and the former patrons of Norton. (fn. 211)
The vicarage was endowed with glebe and a
portion of the tithes, valued together in 1535 at
£7 13s. 2d. (fn. 212) The value had risen to £36 by 1650 (fn. 213)
and to £50 by 1750. (fn. 214) The glebe land was 20 a. in
1535, (fn. 215) and it was the same in 1584 when there was
also a glebe house consisting of three bays of
building with barns, stables, and a sheep-house. (fn. 216)
At inclosure in 1815 the vicar received an allotment
of 106 a. for tithes and 20 a. for glebe. (fn. 217) The value
of the living was £240 in 1851 (fn. 218) and remained about
the same in the late 19th century. (fn. 219) The glebe was
sold in the early 20th century. (fn. 220) The glebe house in
Evington was in 1812 described as a cottage not fit
for a clergyman to live in, and the vicars lived elsewhere. (fn. 221) In 1840, when the house was let to a
butcher, the curate lived in a cottage in the parish. (fn. 222)
A new vicarage was built c. 1847, (fn. 223) a large brick
house with a slate roof near the junction of the main
road and the road to Leigh End. The vicar in the
mid-20th century lived at Norton, and c. 1950 Leigh
vicarage was sold. (fn. 224)
John Sheriff, vicar from 1565, (fn. 225) was said to be
'perfect in Latin and scripture', (fn. 226) and whereas his
successor was neither a graduate nor a preacher, (fn. 227)
the next vicar was both. (fn. 228) The vicar from 1648 to
1664 was Robert Huntington, father of Robert
Huntington, the orientalist and Bishop of Raphoe
(d. 1701). The father was probably resident, and
died at Leigh. (fn. 229) Some of the later 17th- and early
18th-century vicars were probably resident, as they
were buried at Leigh, but in the later 18th century
and until the new vicarage was built the parish was
usually served by curates, who sometimes lived outside the parish. (fn. 230) Services were held alternately in
the morning and evening in 1750, (fn. 231) when Daniel
Bond was vicar. (fn. 232) In the earlier 19th century at least
one parishioner, Sir Arthur Brooke Faulkner of
Evington, was dissatisfied with the way the parish
was served, and wrote several letters to the bishop
before writing in 1840 to the archbishop. He complained that there was no resident priest, and in 15
years only two curates had lived in the parish, for
short periods only. When the parish had a resident
vicar he was 'of a scandalously low standard'. Only
c. 30 people ever went to church, while the Methodist
congregation was increasing. The churchyard was
neglected and used for grazing animals. (fn. 233) After the
new vicarage was built the parish had a resident
vicar, and John Southgate Austin, presented in 1851,
held the living for 42 years. (fn. 234) In 1890 a mission
church, known as St. Stephen's, was opened at
Coombe Hill in a small wooden building and afternoon services were held there. (fn. 235) In 1964 a morning
service was held every Sunday at the parish church,
and another morning service and an evening service
were held alternately at the parish church and the
mission church.
By the early 17th century the parish owned the
church house, (fn. 236) which until 1840 or later stood in
the churchyard. (fn. 237) Land given for the poor before
1683 (fn. 238) was held in 1768 with the church house and
other tenements in trust for the repair of the church,
the churchwardens' expenses, and the poor; in 1826
the income of £44 was used mainly for church
repairs, (fn. 239) and in 1964 the income of £48 was spent
entirely on the church. (fn. 240)
The church of ST. CATHERINE, so called since
the restoration of the church in 1885, (fn. 241) perhaps
because of a 15th-century, decapitated statue of the
saint over the west door of the tower, was called St.
James's from the early 16th century. (fn. 242) It comprises
nave, chancel, west tower, south transept, and south
porch; it is of coursed rubble with a Cotswold stone
roof. Some of the masonry in the north wall of the
nave is thought to survive from the late 12th
century. (fn. 243) The nave, not separated by a chancel
arch from the chancel, with which it has a continuous trussed rafter roof, has the appearance of
being long and narrow. On the south side a transept,
opening from the nave through a plain chamfered
arch, was probably built in the 14th century; the
east wall has a small ogee-headed lancet, the west
wall a larger lancet thought to be reset from another
part of the church; (fn. 244) the south wall has a plain
piscina and a window of two lights. In the chancel
is a 14th-century piscina with a shelf and crocketed
opening, and in the south wall a blocked doorway and
window behind the organ are visible from the outside.
The windows of the nave and chancel were
replaced in the 15th century. The west tower, in
three stages separated by string courses, was built
in the 15th century, buttressed, embattled, and
pinnacled, with gargoyles at the angles. The west
face and parts of the others are ashlar. In the northwest angle is an octagonal, pinnacled stair-vice. A
wooden north porch was built in the 15th or 16th
century. (fn. 245) The church had a gallery by 1736, (fn. 246) and
a north vestry was added before c. 1850. (fn. 247) The
church was restored in 1885 when the gallery was
removed and a carved wooden screen put between
the nave and tower, the former north and south
doorways were replaced by windows, the north
porch was moved to give access to a new doorway
on the south side, and the plaster ceilings were
removed. (fn. 248) It may have been then that the statue
of St. Catherine, perhaps brought from another part
of the church, was placed above the west door of the
tower. (fn. 249) The pews were replaced by open seats. (fn. 250)
A large stone slab, thought to have been a medieval
altar slab, (fn. 251) has been used in the churchyard wall,
opposite the west entrance. The octagonal font is
15th-century. (fn. 252) Small fragments of 14th-century
glass survive in the east window of the transept, and
of 15th-century glass in the nave windows. (fn. 253)
Monumental inscriptions of the 17th century
recorded in the early 19th century, (fn. 254) and one to
Robert Huntington (d. 1664) mentioned in 1884, (fn. 255)
had been removed by 1964. The church has six
bells: a 16th-century bell, two of 1619 and one of
1628 by Henry Farmer of Gloucester, one of 1667
by Richard Keene of Woodstock, (fn. 256) and one of
1908. (fn. 257) The plate includes an Elizabethan chalice,
a paten of 1664, and a flagon dated 1760. (fn. 258) The
registers begin in 1560 for marriages and burials,
and in 1569 for baptisms, but the early ones are not
complete.
Nonconformity.
One nonconformist was
recorded in Leigh in 1676 (fn. 259) and six in the mid-18th
century. (fn. 260) In 1810 a private house was registered for
religious worship by Methodists, and another in
1819 was also probably used by Methodists. (fn. 261) A
Methodist chapel was built at Coombe Hill in 1820, (fn. 262)
and in 1887 it was replaced by a new chapel, also on
Coombe Hill, a red brick building to which a schoolroom was added in 1902. (fn. 263) In 1964 Coombe Hill
Methodist Chapel was part of the Tewkesbury
circuit and was served from Tewkesbury. (fn. 264)
In 1826, 1837, 1838, and 1841 nonconformists,
presumably not Methodists, were using private
houses in the parish for religious worship. (fn. 265)
Schools.
In 1818 Leigh had a Sunday school
with 30 pupils and one or two small day schools
attended by c. 15 children. (fn. 266) In 1833 a mixed day
school, started in 1828, had 8 pupils, and another
day school twenty. (fn. 267) A British school was apparently
opened in 1839 in a brick house on the south side of
the road to the church, (fn. 268) but it may have closed soon
after. In 1840 it was alleged that the schoolmaster
was a farm labourer with no education and that the
vicar believed that the poor should not be educated. (fn. 269)
In 1846 there was a day and Sunday school with 44
children taught by a mistress. (fn. 270)
A National school was established in the 1850's
and was held in a single brick-built schoolroom. The
teacher was not trained or certificated in 1858. (fn. 271)
A new school with a teacher's house was built in
1862 (fn. 272) not far from the vicarage on the road to the
church. Average attendance was c. 40 in the late
19th century, (fn. 273) 37 in 1907, (fn. 274) and 20 in 1938, when
the school had two departments, junior mixed and
infants, (fn. 275) the older children going to schools in
Tewkesbury. In 1962 Leigh school was closed and
the children went to school in Norton. (fn. 276)
Charities.
Land given before 1683 for the poor
was merged in an estate used primarily for the repair
of the church, (fn. 277) and by 1855 the poor received no
benefit from this charity. (fn. 278) By 1683 Robert Butt
had given a rent-charge of 6s. to the poor of Leigh
End, and Mrs. Leech one of 20s. to the poor of
Leigh. (fn. 279) Before 1702 Benjamin Huntington gave £5
stock for the poor; (fn. 280) it had been lost by 1826. Further
sums of £2 and £1 a year, given by John Fluck
and Elizabeth his wife before 1826, (fn. 281) were invested
in land. Leigh shared with Deerhurst Dr. Robert
Huntington's charity for apprenticing poor boys. (fn. 282)
In 1954 the incomes from the Elizabeth Fluck, John
Fluck, Butt, and Leech charities were respectively
£3, £6, 18s., and £5 13s. (fn. 283) The charities were jointly
administered in 1964, and the income was distributed in January to old age pensioners and widows. (fn. 284)