PRESTBURY
The parish of Prestbury lies on the lower slopes of
the Cotswold escarpment 1½ mile north-east of
Cheltenham. Prestbury, which in the Middle Ages
had a market and fair, (fn. 1) has been overshadowed by
the growth of modern Cheltenham, and although
the village centre has preserved its identity the parish
has become largely a residential suburb of that
borough. The parish was compact and roughly
oblong in shape. In 1935, 300 a. of its 3,054 a., (fn. 2) in
the southern part of the parish, were transferred to
Cheltenham Borough; (fn. 3) the account given here
relates to the whole area of the parish as it existed
before the transfer. The former south boundary ran
south of the Cheltenham Municipal Cemetery in a
roughly straight line to Prestbury Road and from
there it followed Wyman's brook. (fn. 4) Hyde brook,
rising on the east side of the parish, marks the north
boundary. The parish includes the hamlet of
Noverton, formerly called Overton, (fn. 5) a small,
scattered settlement north-east of the main village.
The parish lies mainly on flat land at about 200 ft.
On the west side the land rises slightly at Marle Hill
and the east side rises steeply to 600 ft. A small
stream, called Mill brook in 1732, (fn. 6) runs across the
middle of the parish. Most of Prestbury is on the
Lower Lias, with alluvial soil near the streams. In
the west, on the slopes of the Cotswolds, the Lower
Lias is overlain by the successive strata of the Middle
and Upper Lias and Inferior Oolite, (fn. 7) and in this
part of the parish quarries were in use from the 16th
century or earlier until the early 20th. (fn. 8) It was said
that stone from Prestbury was used in the building
of Tewkesbury Abbey. (fn. 9)
Most of the parish was arable, lying in a number
of small open fields until inclosure in 1732 under an
Act of 1730, but over 600 a. of rough pasture was
inclosed at the same time. (fn. 10) A wood was recorded
at Prestbury in 1086 (fn. 11) but it was perhaps mainly in
Sevenhampton parish, and only small areas of wood
survived on the east side of the parish in 1964. By
1136 a large area in the north-west part of the parish
had been made into a park by the Bishop of Hereford. (fn. 12) The bishop was granted free warren in his
demesne in 1241. (fn. 13) Prestbury Park was stocked with
deer, rabbits, and other game, which was frequently
poached in the Middle Ages. (fn. 14) By 1535 the park had
been so neglected that the bishop considered
destroying it. (fn. 15) In the late 16th century there were
still about a hundred deer in the park, but they had
gone by 1611 when there was a long dispute among
lessees of the manor about cutting the timber. (fn. 16) In
the 18th and 19th centuries the park was used for
farm-land, (fn. 17) and later for the Cheltenham racecourse. (fn. 18) In the late 19th century the Cheltenham
Borough Cemetery, with a small Gothic chapel, was
opened in the south-east corner of Prestbury
parish. (fn. 19)
The suggestion that the name Prestbury derives
from its belonging to Cleeve Monastery, (fn. 20) whose
lands were given to the church of Worcester in 889, (fn. 21)
implies the existence of some sort of settlement by
that date. Shaw Green, by the moated site of the
Bishop of Hereford's manor-house, may mark an
early settlement, and it was there that the parish
pound was later located. (fn. 22) The church is ½ mile
further south, and it is likely that the main settlement
was round the church by 1136, perhaps by 1086. (fn. 23)
Between the west end of that settlement and Shaw
Green runs the street called the Burgage, (fn. 24) where
the market was held and which is likely to have been
developed about the time of the grant of a market in
1249. (fn. 25) Possibly the Cheltenham-Winchcombe road
once followed the line of the Burgage, but the decline
of the market and the establishment of the course of
the main road along the angled street south of the
church confirmed that street as the chief one in the
village. It was called Deep Street by the 14th
century; (fn. 26) later the eastern part was called High
Street while the southern part remained Deep Street.
The village, a big one even before it became part
of the suburbs of Cheltenham, contains a high
proportion of houses, of the 17th century and later,
that are larger than ordinary village houses. The
Burgage is a wide straight street with houses and
cottages lining the west side; on the east side former
burgage tenements (fn. 27) were replaced c. 1700 by a large
house and its grounds. (fn. 28) It is said that the Burgage
was destroyed by fire in the reign of Henry VII; (fn. 29)
the earliest houses there survive from the 16th and
17th centuries. They are of various materials and
styles: a few are timber-framed with rubble or brick
panels, some of stone, with stone mullions, dripmoulds, and dormer windows. One 16th-century
stone house has a later brick front, and a steep roof
with coped gable-ends, and stone-mullioned
windows; part of the Royal Oak Inn is also of stone,
with mullioned windows and gabled dormers. Roof
materials include Cotswold stone, thatch, and Welsh
slate. The later houses in the Burgage are of the
18th and 19th centuries, two late 18th-century
houses having the mansard roofs which are a common
feature in the parish.

Prestbury village, 1838
It was probably the tenants who did not hold by
burgage tenure who had their houses in Deep Street
in 1393. (fn. 30) In the 13th century a distinction was made
between the borough of Prestbury and the rest of
the village. The borough included the Burgage and,
by the 16th century, Bowbridge Lane. (fn. 31) On the
north side of Deep Street the older houses include a
row of three altered 16th- or 17th-century stone
houses with new Welsh slate roofs. The houses are
traditionally associated with Llanthony Priory's
property. Reform Cottage, a thatched cottage partly
weather-boarded, is probably a converted barn. It is
also associated with the priory, and may be the tithe
barn which stood at the entrance to the rectory from
the 16th century. (fn. 32) The King's Arms Inn (fn. 33) is a
restored 16th-century timber-framed and brick
house. It is said that up to the 19th century the
churchyard opened to Deep Street, (fn. 34) and several of
the houses on the north side of High Street are
19th-century buildings. One timber-framed house
(the Bakery Stores), originally of three bays, retains
a pair of large crucks internally, but tie-beam trusses
were later inserted to support the roof; at the west
end shortened cruck-blades have been re-used in
the gable of an additional timber-framed bay. A few
16th- or 17th-century timber-framed houses survive,
some with thatched roofs. The other houses in the
High Street are of the 18th and 19th centuries,
including a large 19th-century house with a stuccoed
front surmounted by a pediment. Mansard House,
a late 18th-century stone building of two stories and
attics, has a mansard roof of Cotswold stone, a bow
window on the ground floor, a plat band at floorlevel, and a cornice supported by pilasters. At the
east end of High Street are three substantial stuccoed
houses of the early 19th century standing in large
gardens. Mill Street, north-east of the church, Lake
Street, running west from the Burgage, and Bowbridge Lane contain farms and a few houses of the
17th and 18th centuries. A timber-framed cottage,
called the Manor House in the 20th century, at the
junction of Lake Street and Bowbridge Lane, was
partly faced in brick in the 18th century (fn. 35) and was
extensively restored in the 20th century; a small
two-light stone window and some 14th-century
tracery, perhaps from the church, have been incorporated in an outbuilding. The Hayes, a large
19th-century house on the west side of the main
road, north of the village, was at one time the
residence of the Baghot-De la Bere family. (fn. 36) At the
junction of Deep Street and Bouncer's Lane a
timber-framed, thatched cottage and a romantic
Gothic cottage of vermiculated stone were pulled
down c. 1960 to allow for road-widening.
There was presumably a house at Noverton by
the 13th century (fn. 37) when the name Overton occurs
as a personal name. In 1964 a large moated site was
visible at Lower Noverton, among mid-20th century
houses. (fn. 38) There is no other evidence, however, that
Noverton was more than a very small settlement
centred upon a few farm-houses, of which those that
survived in 1964 were of the 16th or 17th century.
Of the outlying farm-houses only Hyde Farm is
likely to have existed before the inclosure of 1732.
Lower and Upper Hill Farms, near the crest of the
escarpment, were built in the late 18th century. (fn. 39)
In spite of some fluctuations the population of
Prestbury remained fairly constant until the early
19th century when a rapid increase reflected the
change in the social structure of the parish. Thirtysix people were recorded in Prestbury in 1086. (fn. 40) The
29 people assessed for tax in 1327, and the relatively
high assessment, suggest that Prestbury was at that
time prosperous though perhaps not very populous. (fn. 41)
There may have been some decrease in population,
as alleged in the 16th century, with the decline of the
market and the supposed destruction of part of the
town by fire. (fn. 42) In 1551 there were said to be c. 160
communicants, (fn. 43) and in 1563 the number of households was 54. (fn. 44) The population had increased by
1603 when 300 communicants were recorded, (fn. 45) and
in 1650 there were 60 families. (fn. 46) The population was
estimated at 445 in the early 18th century, (fn. 47) c. 400
in mid-century (fn. 48) and between 400 and 500 c. 1775. (fn. 49)
In the early 19th century the population began to
increase rapidly, from 485 in 1801 to 906 in 1821 and
1,231 in 1831. The increase continued steadily and
accelerated in the late 19th century and early 20th,
the population rising to 2,154 in 1931. The continuing increase more than offset the loss in total
numbers resulting from the boundary change of
1935. Between 1951 and 1961 the population of the
diminished parish rose from 2,858 to 4,235. (fn. 50)
In 1824 the population was concentrated in the
village, (fn. 51) but in the earlier 19th century the number
of houses in Prestbury doubled (fn. 52) as Cheltenham
expanded into the south side of the parish. The
development followed, in the main, the line of roads
existing by 1824. The Cheltenham-Winchcombe
road, passing through the village south of Prestbury
church by 1675, (fn. 53) was probably the one referred to
in 1732 as the highway to Cheltenham through
Sandfield and to Winchcombe through Nuffield. (fn. 54)
The road was turnpiked under an Act of 1792. (fn. 55) The
part between Cheltenham and Prestbury became
known as Prestbury Road. The bridge on that road,
at the south boundary of the parish, was probably
the one called Cakebridge in 1699. (fn. 56) Bouncer's Lane
extended from the village to Charlton Park by
1824. (fn. 57) New Barn Lane, going west from Prestbury
village, was so called by 1828, (fn. 58) and Mill Lane and
Noverton Lane ran from the village to Noverton
by 1824. (fn. 59) The road from Cheltenham to Bishop's
Cleeve, crossing the west part of the parish, was
turnpiked in 1810. (fn. 60) The bridge by which the road
crosses the Hyde Brook, said in 1833 to be repaired
at the expense of Prestbury and Southam, (fn. 61) was
perhaps the bridge called Kellam Bridge in 1575. (fn. 62)
The main Midland railway line, opened in 1840, (fn. 63)
crosses the west of the parish. An electric tramway
through the village was completed in 1901 and was
in use until the thirties. (fn. 64)
In the mid-18th century a chalybeate spring in the
north-west corner of the parish was found to have
medicinal properties. By 1751 Lord Craven, on
whose estate the spring rose, had provided hot and
cold baths and lodgings for people taking the water.
Although the water was said to be stronger than that
of the Cheltenham spas, (fn. 65) the spa, called the Hyde
spa, never became very popular. (fn. 66) The spring,
visible in 1909, (fn. 67) could not be located in 1931. (fn. 68)
Before 1844 a centre known as the Prestbury
Establishment was opened to promote the use of
cold water for the cure of various diseases. The
Establishment had closed by 1846. (fn. 69) In 1904 a spring
on Marle Hill was found to have highly saline
medicinal water, and a chalybeate spring at Noverton
had a reputation for curing affections of the eye. (fn. 70)
At another spring, near the south boundary of the
parish, Joseph Pitt of Cheltenham in 1830 (fn. 71) opened
a spa with an elaborate pump room, as part of a
comprehensive development for a residential estate
incorporating a spa. As a spa the Pittville Pump
Room never achieved the expected success, and had
ceased to be profitable before 1889. Part of the
Pittville estate with its large Regency villas and
terraces was in Prestbury parish. The main feature
of the estate was the pump room, which has been
described as one of the best architectural works in
the Cheltenham area. It is a stone building, designed
by J. B. Forbes, standing on raised ground at the
north end of the Pittville estate overlooking a park
and lake. The pump room has a colonnade with
Ionic columns and cornices which are copied, on a
larger scale, from the Ionic temple on the bank of
the River Ilissus near Athens. The building consists
of a hall, with an apse in which the pump was
situated, surmounted by a dome and surrounded by
a gallery. Small rooms led off each end of the hall
and the gallery. The plaster ceiling of the dome was
elaborately decorated with coffering and rosettes;
the lantern light with canted windows is 70 ft. above
the ground. In the 19th century the pump room had
a card room, billiard room, reading room, and
library as well as the assembly room and spa; it was
used for balls, public breakfasts, and exhibitions. Its
popularity had declined by 1889, when it was bought
by the Cheltenham Borough Council. The pump
room was used occasionally for receptions, dances,
and exhibitions up to the Second World War, when
it was used by the Army. The building was extensively repaired after the war, and was re-opened
in 1960, when it was used mainly for private functions.
In 1962 a bar and a kitchen were added, flanking
each side of the apse. (fn. 72) The upper story was used in
1964 by the Gloucestershire College of Art (for
which a large new building was being erected in
New Barn Lane) for its school of architecture.
By 1838 houses had been built near the parish
boundary on Prestbury Road, and scattered houses
stood on Bouncer's Lane. (fn. 73) Typical of the development of the mid-19th century is a row, at the east
end of Prestbury Road, of detached three-storied
stuccoed houses with narrow frontages and coachhouses at the ends of their long gardens. In 1880
the Vicar of Prestbury said that the parish could
be divided into three parts: the village and Noverton,
the middle class population on Prestbury Road, and
the wealthy Cheltenham suburb of Pittville. (fn. 74)
By 1903 some large, detached brick houses had
been built in Prestbury Road, and smaller brick
houses in New Barn Lane and in Mill Street. On
the west side of the parish several large houses —
Rosehill, Marle Hill House, Cleevelands — were
built, standing in extensive grounds, in the 19th
century. (fn. 75)
Between the wars the number of houses again
increased rapidly, (fn. 76) and houses were built in Prestbury Road and in Coronation Road and Glebe Road
running east from Prestbury Road, in Bouncer's
Lane, in scattered groups along New Barn Lane,
and almost continuously along the north side of
Shaw Green Lane. A small estate was built at
Lower Noverton. The houses built at this period are
almost all of brick, mostly semi-detached or detached
suburban houses; the biggest are those in Park Lane,
running west from Bowbridge Lane. After the
Second World War a large estate was built between
Bouncer's Lane and Prestbury Road by the Cheltenham Borough Council. Between 1951 and 1961,
when the number of houses increased by about
half, (fn. 77) the main feature was the building of groups
of small semi-detached brick houses and bungalows,
though the building of larger detached houses in
various styles continued. By 1964 the parish was
almost entirely built-up between the centre of
Cheltenham and the village, but there had been
little extension north of the village.
The parish had an inn by 1668 (fn. 78) and three
licensed alehouses in 1755. (fn. 79) The number had risen
to five by 1831 (fn. 80) and to seven by 1891; (fn. 81) there were
five licensed houses in 1964. By 1784 a house in Mill
Street with a garden with grottoes, a pavilion, and a
Chinese temple was described as a tea-drinking
house. (fn. 82) In the early 19th century the Grotto tearoom was said to be one of the main attractions of
the village. (fn. 83) The house, which was decorated with
shells and fossils and had Gothic windows with
painted glass, was an inn by 1820. (fn. 84) The Grotto Inn
apparently acquired a bad reputation and was closed
by the late 19th century; the house was pulled
down. (fn. 85) In 1820 a Friendly Society met at the
Grotto Inn, (fn. 86) and in 1830 the Prestbury Friendly
Society, meeting at the 'King's Arms' had 90
members. (fn. 87) Prestbury had a working men's club
by 1879. (fn. 88) Extensive public playing fields on Prestbury Road were opened in the 1950's, and the parish
has two parish halls.
There was a race-course at Prestbury Park in the
1830's, (fn. 89) and during the 19th century Prestbury had
strong associations with horse-racing. Dr. Fothergill
('Fogo') Rowlands who, trained the Prince of Wales's
steeplechasers, had his headquarters at Prestbury.
Tom Oliver, who rode three Grand National
winners, trained at Prestbury. (fn. 90) The 'King's Arms'
in High Street was a popular meeting-place for
sportsmen in the mid-19th century, (fn. 91) when William
Archer, himself a jockey and the father of Frederick
Archer the jockey, was landlord there. (fn. 92) The
Cheltenham Racecourse Company bought Prestbury
Park in 1902. (fn. 93) A grandstand and club-house were
built in 1908 (fn. 94) and a race-course station was opened
in 1912 (fn. 95) on the main railway line. The course has
been described as the finest steeplechase course in
the world and since 1924 the race for the Cheltenham Gold Cup has been held there. (fn. 96)
In September 1643 the Parliamentary Army
camped at Prestbury and a garrison occupied the
manor-house formerly belonging to the Bishop of
Hereford. Royalist soldiers had been in Prestbury
the day before the Parliamentary Army arrived, (fn. 97)
and bullet holes found in the walls of some of the
houses in the village support the tradition that
fighting took place there.
Manors and Other Estates.
It has been
suggested that land in Beckford and Cheltenham
claimed in 803 by Wulfheard, Bishop of Hereford,
from Denebeorht, Bishop of Worcester, included
the 30 hides at Prestbury and Sevenhampton (fn. 98) which
the Bishop of Hereford held in 1066 and 1086. (fn. 99) The
bishops of Hereford continued to hold PRESTBURY manor until 1560, (fn. 100) when, during a vacancy
of the see, Prestbury manor was taken by the queen
and retained by the Crown. (fn. 101)
The manor, which had been leased to John
Harford for 80 years in 1533, (fn. 102) was leased by the
Crown in 1564 to Thomas Chamberlayne and in
1574 to Robert, Earl of Leicester; in the early 17th
century it was disputed who the rightful lessee was. (fn. 103)
By 1612 Prestbury manor was said to be held in
chief by Reginald Nicholas (d. 1612), (fn. 104) who was
apparently a servant of John Chamberlayne, (fn. 105)
Thomas's son. Thomas Nicholas, son and heir of
Reginald Nicholas, conveyed Prestbury to Elizabeth
Craven, widow of Sir William Craven, and others
in 1622. In 1630 it passed to her son William Craven, (fn. 106)
though Thomas Nicholas was said to be seised of
the manor at his death in 1639 (fn. 107) and his co-heirs were
dealing with the manor-house in 1647. (fn. 108) William
Craven, created baron in 1627 and earl in 1665,
owned Prestbury in 1646 (fn. 109) and until his death in
1697, when it passed to his cousin William, Lord
Craven (d. 1711). The younger William was
succeeded by his sons, William (d. 1739) and Fulwar
(d. 1764), in turn. (fn. 110) The manor-house or site was
apparently retained by the Chamberlayne family
and at inclosure in 1732 Edmund Chamberlayne
received a small allotment. (fn. 111) In 1762 he conveyed
the manor-house site to Fulwar, Lord Craven. (fn. 112)
Fulwar was succeeded by his cousin, William (d.
1769), and then by William's nephew, another
William (d. 1791). (fn. 113) The manor then passed to a
younger son, Henry Augustus Berkeley Craven, on
whose death in 1836 (fn. 114) it passed to his nephew
William, Earl of Craven, who sold it in 1853 to
F. T. Cudden. Cudden sold Prestbury in 1859 to
Walter Justice who in turn sold it the following year
to John Walker of Cheltenham. In 1889 the
executors of John Walker's will sold Prestbury
manor to Frederick Worsey of Cheltenham. At the
time the manor included only quit rents and two
cottages in Shaw Green. Worsey's son, Frederick
William Worsey, sold the manor in 1906 to William
Horsley, (fn. 115) and in 1925 the owner was K. G. Fisher
of Cheltenham. (fn. 116) By 1963 any claim to manorial
rights had apparently lapsed. (fn. 117)
The Bishop of Hereford had a manor-house at
Prestbury by the 13th century when it was one of
his residences, (fn. 118) and pottery found on the site
suggests there may have been a house there in the
11th century. The large moated site, at Shaw Green,
was excavated in 1951 and revealed part of the plan
of the house. The house was of stone with possibly
a timber-framed upper story. It included a hall
aisled in two bays with an open hearth, and a large
kitchen. (fn. 119) The repair of a drawbridge was recorded
in 1289. (fn. 120) Extensive repairs were made in 1344 when
the chapel, on the west side of the house in the upper
story, was rebuilt. (fn. 121) In the 1530's the manor-house
was described as 'a fair place'. (fn. 122) When the manor
was leased in 1531 the bishop kept the house for his
own use, except the south side of the gatehouse. (fn. 123)
The manor-house was evidently altered in the 16th
century after it passed out of the bishop's hands,
probably by Thomas Chamberlayne, who may have
lived there. (fn. 124) The chapel became a living room and
was given a stone fireplace and a decorated plaster
ceiling. A fireplace was built against the west wall
of the hall. (fn. 125) Thomas Nicholas occupied the house in
the early 17th century, and in 1647 Robert Brereton
held it by lease. (fn. 126) The manor-house had probably
fallen into disrepair by 1698, when stone from it
was being used for repairing the church. (fn. 127) The house
had gone by 1777, (fn. 128) and no other house has been
associated with the manor. Although none of the
outbuildings survives, documentary references suggest they were once extensive. In 1344 there were
several stables and sheds, a granary, a grange for hay,
a brewhouse, and a dairy. (fn. 129)
Land held by Durand of Gloucester and said to
be in Sevenhampton in 1086 may represent part of
the estate in Prestbury later held by Llanthony
Priory. (fn. 130) Another part of the priory's estate derived
from the gifts of Ernald, a tenant of the Bishop of
Hereford, and his descendants. Before 1144 Ernald
gave 1 yardland to Llanthony Priory, his son Ralph
gave another ½ yardland, and Ralph's son Philip
gave more land. (fn. 131) Further grants in fee were made
to the priory by other tenants in Prestbury. (fn. 132) About
1164 Bishop Robert of Hereford granted to
Llanthony the small tithes of Prestbury and the
tithes of the demesne except for a portion held by
the dean and precentor, and Bishop William confirmed to Llanthony all the land and tithes belonging
to Prestbury church except the same portion. (fn. 133) In
1292 the prior was granted free warren in his
demesne in Prestbury. (fn. 134) In the late 15th century the
prior's demesne and the rectory were farmed
together. (fn. 135) By the mid-16th century Llanthony's
estate was referred to as the manor of PRESTBURY,
and the priory's house next to the church was called
the manor-house or rectory. (fn. 136)
In 1520 the prior leased the manor and rectory
for 50 years to Robert Atwell, to whose son John
the Crown renewed the lease for 21 years in 1553. (fn. 137)
The reversion in fee of the manor only was granted
in 1557 to Thomas Gratwick and Anselm Lamb, (fn. 138)
but by 1558 it had evidently passed to William
Baghot, who held a court in the manor in that year. (fn. 139)
By the 1540's William Baghot had a 'fair house' at
Noverton called Hall Place, (fn. 140) which may have
belonged to Llanthony Priory. In 1569 William
Baghot's manor of HALL PLACE was described as
lately belonging to Llanthony Priory. (fn. 141) The Baghot
family's estate was usually treated as a single manor
after that time. The rectory, including the house,
was in 1608 granted in fee by the Crown to Francis
Phillips and Richard Moore, (fn. 142) who sold it in the
same year to William, Earl of Pembroke. In 1622 the
earl sold the rectory, then occupied by George
Baghot, to Thomas Baghot, George's brother, (fn. 143) and
it afterwards descended with the rest of the Baghot
family's estate until the 19th century. The first
William Baghot was succeeded in 1579 by his son
Richard, the father of another William whose son
was the George Baghot alive in 1622. The estate
passed to George's son Edmund (d. c. 1657), to
Edmund's son Edward (d. 1673), and to Edward's
son William (d. 1724). William Baghot married
Anne, daughter of John de la Bere of Southam, and
their son William (d. 1764) added de la Bere to his
surname. William's son Thomas died without issue
in 1821, (fn. 144) and his estate passed to Thomas's sisters,
Sarah Baghot-De la Bere and Grace, wife of Richard
Webb, (fn. 145) both of whom apparently died without
issue. By 1838 the estate was owned by John
Edwards, (fn. 146) the great-grandson of Thomas, brother
of William Baghot-De la Bere (d. 1764). Edwards,
who later took the name Baghot-De la Bere, died in
1886, and his son, another John Edwards (later
Baghot-De la Bere), in 1909. Each was Vicar of
Prestbury. The estate passed to the second John's
son Cyril (d. 1909), to Cyril's son, also Cyril (d.
1916), and to a younger son of the first Cyril,
Wilfrid, (fn. 147) for whom the estate was held in trust by
his sister, Mrs. R. F. W. Cumming, in 1964. (fn. 148)
The rectory was sold in 1823 by Sarah Baghot-De
la Bere and Grace Webb to James Agg (fn. 149) (d. 1828).
It passed to James's son, William John Agg, (fn. 150) who
received a corn-rent for his part of the great tithes
in 1838. (fn. 151) The rectory later reverted to the owners of
the Baghot-De la Bere estate, probably at the same
time as the advowson. (fn. 152)
The Prior of Llanthony had a house in Prestbury
by the mid-13th century, when it was called the
court; (fn. 153) it was perhaps the house on the moated site
at Lower Noverton. (fn. 154) By 1538 the house belonging to
the priory stood beside the church and was called
the manor-house or rectory. A tithe grange, recently
built, stood near the gate, (fn. 155) and it was still there in
1823. (fn. 156) After the rectory house passed to the Baghot
family it was called Prestbury Farm. (fn. 157) Later the
house became known as the Priory. It was described
as a fair and spacious house c. 1700 when the Baghot
family had moved there from Noverton. (fn. 158) In 1860
John Edwards, Vicar of Prestbury, was living at the
Priory because the vicarage was not big enough for
his large family. (fn. 159) In the early 1950's the house was
divided and sold. (fn. 160) The older part of the house is a
long rectangular structure of timber-framing and
stone with a Cotswold stone roof. It incorporates a
14th-century hall of four bays, formerly singlestoried and open to the roof. Most of the arch-braced
collar-beam trusses were later cut back to receive
plaster, but one brace on the south side retains a
boltel moulding and springs from a semi-octagonal
wall-post with a moulded capital. At both ends of
the hall are additional two-storied bays, probably of
the 16th or early 17th century. The insertion of a
floor in the hall and a chimney in its easternmost
bay presumably took place during the same period.
In the 18th century the house was largely cased in
stone, concealing most of the timbering, sash
windows and dormers were inserted, and a stone
wing was added on the north side. In 1886 the north
wing was extended, (fn. 161) and later the sash windows on
the south front were replaced by casements, some
of the external timbering was restored, and a
Georgian porch was removed. (fn. 162) A square stone
dovecot with a Cotswold stone roof stands west of
the house.
Hall Place was probably built by the Baghot
family in the early 16th century, (fn. 163) but appears to
have been altered during the next 100 years. The
house stands at the foot of the Cotswold escarpment
at the east end of the hamlet of Noverton, (fn. 164) and is a
long two-storied building of stone with a Cotswold
stone roof. It has stone-mullioned windows with
segmental-headed lights, and near the centre the
north and south doorways to the former screens
passage survive; they have four-centred arches and
the massive oak doors appear to be original. A small
room to the west of the passage, traditionally said to
have been a chapel, has two blocked square-headed
openings in the north wall. Externally there is a
diagonal buttress beyond this room, suggesting that
the west end of the house is an addition. In the roof
above the former hall, which presumably lay east of
the passage, is an arch-braced collar-beam truss
which may have belonged to the hall or to a room
above it. Gables on the north and south sides of the
house do not appear to be original features. Below
the north gable a blocked opening perhaps marks
the position of an outside staircase. The stone porch
to the north doorway was added in the 19th century.
By the end of the 17th century the Baghot family
apparently no longer lived at Noverton, (fn. 165) and the
house became a farm-house, called Upper Noverton
Farm.
By 1672 William Capel had a house in Prestbury
which had five hearths, (fn. 166) and it was perhaps the one
said to be on the west side of the Burgage in 1679. (fn. 167)
During the 18th century the Capels continued to
live in Prestbury and to buy land and houses in the
parish. (fn. 168) In 1737 13 people held estates as tenants
of Christopher Capel. (fn. 169) By 1831 the Capel family
had 327 a. in the parish, (fn. 170) and up to the Second
World War remained one of the principal landowners. (fn. 171) Major Christopher Capel (d. 1964)
gradually sold off most of the estate, and at his death
only the house and grounds surrounding it still
belonged to him. (fn. 172) The grounds occupy almost the
whole east side of the Burgage and reach nearly to
the churchyard. The house, known as Prestbury
House, was probably built c. 1700, but it may
incorporate part of an earlier house. It is a square
three-storied building, partly of rubble-stone faced
with roughcast and partly of ashlar, with a moulded
string at first-floor level and a hipped roof of Welsh
slate. On the north and east sides some mullioned
and transomed windows survive, but elsewhere there
are sash windows, probably inserted in the late 18th
century. Of the same period is an added east wing
of two tall stories with a projecting bow. The house
contains some reset oak panelling of the 17th century.
Economic History.
Prestbury had a market
in the Middle Ages and was sometimes called a
borough, but agriculture was the main occupation
until the 19th century, and even in the 19th and 20th
centuries, as Prestbury became increasingly a
residential suburb of Cheltenham, the greater part
of the parish remained farm-land.
Agriculture. The Bishop of Hereford had 3
ploughs on the demesne in 1086. (fn. 173) In the 12th
century the bishop's demesne included pasture for
400 sheep, (fn. 174) and in 1240 there were 30 head of cattle
on the demesne. (fn. 175) There was apparently an increase
in arable during the 13th century, for in 1292 the
bishop had 4 plough-lands. (fn. 176) About the same time
the demesne was said to comprise 390 a. arable,
101 a. meadow, and 15 a. pasture, besides the park
and a dovecot. (fn. 177) The bishop's arable land in Prestbury at that time was valued at 6d. an acre, compared
with 4d. an acre in his demesne land elsewhere. (fn. 178)
Llanthony Priory's demesne was one plough-land
in 1291. (fn. 179) In 1289 the prior had claimed against the
bishop 5 a. land and pasture in the park for 8 oxen;
he retained the 5 a. and surrendered the pasture. (fn. 180)
Small parts of the priory's demesne were being
leased in 1365, (fn. 181) and by 1481 the whole was farmed
with the rectory at £16; (fn. 182) it was valued at the same
figure in 1538. (fn. 183) Before 1389 several pieces of arable,
presumably enclosed, on the Bishop of Hereford's
demesne had been converted to meadow or pasture. (fn. 184)
Parts of the demesne were leased in the 16th century,
and in 1575 there were 11 tenants of the demesne
apart from the lessee of the manor-house. The size
of their holdings varied from 2 yardlands to a few
acres, and one included all the demesne pasture in
Puckham — partly in Prestbury and partly in
Sevenhampton — and a sheep-house with eight
separate rooms. The demesne land leased in 1575
included closes and ridges in the open fields. (fn. 185) The
part of the demesne which was not leased was
presumably the 4 yardlands held by John Chamberlayne in 1602 with several pieces of meadow and
pasture. (fn. 186) The park had apparently been separated
from the rest of the demesne and was claimed by
Reginald Nicholas at that time, (fn. 187) but when Thomas
Nicholas conveyed the manor to Elizabeth Craven
in 1621 he held all the demesne, including the park,
the pasture called Great Hyde, 30 a. of pasture and
20 a. of meadow in the Hyde, and several smaller
closes of meadow and pasture, in addition to arable
land. (fn. 188) The greater part of the demesne was evidently
inclosed by 1732, when Lord Craven received only
a small allotment under the award of the inclosure
commissioners. (fn. 189)
In 1086 the Bishop of Hereford's manor included
a radknight with 2 ploughs, and 18 villani and 5
bordars with 9 ploughs. (fn. 190) The large increase in the
number of tenants in the next two hundred years
was partly the result of new land being brought into
cultivation. About 1280 there were 24 free tenants
whose holdings were mostly assarts. The manor
included also 33 tenants said to be holding pro basta,
30 burgage tenants, 16 customary tenants, 6 cottars,
15 mondaymen, and 5 tenants described as buchi; the
nature of tenure pro basta and of that of the buchi
is unclear.
Of the free tenants two held by military service
7 and 2 yardlands respectively, another held one
yardland by military service and rent and another
yardland in socage, and the others held smaller
holdings for rent. The military tenants owed suit of
court, heriots, relief, and scutage. A number of the
free tenants held 'forelet' land (fn. 191) with their freehold
estates. It was land granted only for the life of the
bishop and could be taken back by his successor;
it was normally held for money rent only. (fn. 192) The 15
customary tenants held a yardland or ½ yardland
each, the cottars each held ½ yardland, the buchi
apparently 1 yardland each, and the mondaymen ¼
yardland. All owed labour services. The customary
tenants apparently owed only the service of carrying
the demesne grain. The services of the other tenants
were not proportionate to their holdings, the cottars
owing a total of 114 days' work a year each, the
buchi 146, and the mondaymen 61. (fn. 193) The cottars
had also to mind the demesne pigs and cows. (fn. 194) In
1506 the labour-services of three customary tenants
had been commuted, and some were demised to the
Prior of Llanthony. (fn. 195)
The grant of a market in 1249 presumably helped
to increase the number of tenants, and the burgage
tenants formed one of the largest groups c. 1280.
They apparently held no land; (fn. 196) their rent of 3s.
was higher than the usual rent of burgage tenants, (fn. 197)
and they owed suit of court at the bishop's will.
In the late 13th century several customary tenants
were allowed to live in the Burgage. (fn. 198)
The holdings of the tenants of Llanthony Priory's
manor, which numbered at least 9 in 1365 (fn. 199) and
perhaps 6 in 1539, (fn. 200) seem to have been small. In
1437 two tenants, one of whom owed a heriot, had
holdings of ¼ yardland. (fn. 201) That may have been the
usual size of holdings.
The number of tenants on the Bishop of Hereford's manor had decreased by 1575, and the kinds
of tenure had been simplified. Only three kinds of
tenant were distinguished in 1575: free tenants,
lessees of the demesne, and copyholders. Nineteen
free tenements were held by 13 tenants, one having
6 holdings. Burgages were included among the free
tenements, some being held with larger free estates
and others with cow pastures only. Apart from the
burgages free tenements ranged in size from 3 butts
to 3½ yardlands. All were said to be held freely in
socage for rent and relief. (fn. 202) Three of the 11 lessees
of demesne land also held free tenements. (fn. 203) About
1587 six messuages and c. 500 a. formerly copyhold
were held in fee by Reginald Nicholas. (fn. 204)
Twenty-five copyholds in 1575 were held by 23
tenants, several of whom also held free tenements
and demesne land. The commonest holdings were
1 or ½ yardland, and none was more than 1½. Several
copyholders had small pieces of forelet land for which
they paid money rent only. (fn. 205) All other customary
tenants paid heriots of one beast for each messuage;
there is no evidence that labour-services were
performed in 1575. Customary estates were granted
to a single tenant, to several tenants jointly, to a
tenant and his heirs, or for 3 lives, but all customary
tenants had the right of inheritance. The fine on
surrender or exchange of property was limited to 3
years' rent or 20d.; an estate could be surrendered to
another tenant out of court in the presence of two
customary tenants, and the surrender presented at
the next court. Widows had freebench. (fn. 206) Forelet land
was held for life. (fn. 207) The same customs may have
existed in Llanthony Priory's manor, for in 1558 the
son of a customary tenant of 4 messuages claimed
3 of them by virtue of a grant made to him by his
father and the other by the custom of the manor;
another tenant forfeited a copyhold granted to him
and his sons because he had sold it and had not
presented the sale at the next court. (fn. 208)
Most of the arable land in Prestbury presumably
lay in the open fields at one time, and the newly
assarted land, though it may sometimes have been
inclosed, was also incorporated into the existing
open fields. (fn. 209) By the 16th century the fields were
divided into eight parts: Westfield in the west of the
parish, Ryefield and Linworth south-east of the
village, Sandfield south-east of the road to Cheltenham, Berryfield north-west of the village, Watershoot field west of the village, Nuffield north of
Noverton, and Drinkseed field. (fn. 210) Another, called
Awfield, was mentioned in 1732, when it was only
29 a. (fn. 211) By the late 16th century, when some land had
been inclosed, (fn. 212) each field was quite small. The
fields were divided into furlongs. (fn. 213) By 1575 most
holdings had been consolidated into pieces of a few
acres. (fn. 214) In the late 16th century it was said that a
yardland was 24 field-acres, (fn. 215) but in 1575 several
yardlands were as much as 36 field-acres. (fn. 216)
Puckham Wood and Prestbury Hill afforded
permanent commonable pasture, (fn. 217) and there was
common meadow among the open fields, apart from
closes of several meadow. (fn. 218) In the 16th century the
proportion of permanent grass-land to arable was
high, with 14 cow-pastures and 80 sheep-pastures
for each yardland. Burgage tenants had normally
one cow-pasture in the common meadow for each
burgage. (fn. 219) Towards the end of the 16th century
tenants were allowed to inclose part of the common
meadow and hold it in severalty in the proportion
of 2 a. to a yardland. (fn. 220) The meadow concerned may
have been within the open fields, and in 1575 some
tenants held closes of meadow in the fields. (fn. 221)
Puckham Wood, in Sevenhampton and Prestbury,
comprised 214 a., divided in the 16th century into
13 coppices. (fn. 222) In 1575 the tenants of Sevenhampton
denied the right of the tenants of Prestbury to
common of pasture there, (fn. 223) and in 1652 an agreement was reached between the two parishes for the
division of the wood into three parts, for the tenants
of Sevenhampton, the tenants of Prestbury, and the
farmer of the demesne of Prestbury. (fn. 224) The number
of animals that could be commoned for each yardland
was reduced in 1726 from 50 sheep, 4 cows, and 4
horses to 35 sheep, 3 cows, and 3 horses. (fn. 225)
Crops grown at Prestbury in the Middle Ages
included wheat, barley, and oats. (fn. 226) On the demesne,
where there was a high proportion of meadow, (fn. 227)
dairy farming may have been as important as arable:
in 1275 cheese was sold from Prestbury. (fn. 228) Pigs were
perhaps particularly numerous in view of the
pannage provided by the park. (fn. 229) Some estates may
have been mainly pasture, and in 1641 John
Chamberlayne, who had 1,002 lambs at Prestbury,
seems to have used his pasture there for wintering
sheep from other estates. (fn. 230) In the 1620's tobacco was
being grown at Prestbury, (fn. 231) and in 1664 in spite of
orders to destroy it, some was still grown. (fn. 232)
By the early 18th century large parts of Prestbury
had been inclosed: the parliamentary inclosure in
1732 dealt with 630 a. of waste and common on
Prestbury Hill and in Puckham Shrubs and 725 a.
in the open fields and common meadow. Seventyseven people received allotments, of whom 25 had
only small pieces on the waste and common, and two
had land only in the open fields. The largest allotments were those of William Baghot, 310 a., Thomas
Baghot, 162 a., and Lord Craven, 100 a. for his
manorial rights and 10 a. for his land in the open
fields. Five people received allotments of between
50 a. and 100 a., eight others received allotments
of between 20 a. and 50 a., and the rest had less
than 20 a. The land allotted lay in the same 8 parts
of the fields as in 1575, and also in Smith's mead,
on Prestbury Hill, and in Puckham Shrubs. (fn. 233)
After inclosure the land continued to be divided
into a large number of small holdings held as leasehold, freehold, or copyhold (fn. 234) of the three principal
landowners, Lord Craven, the Baghot family, and
the Capel family, with a few large farms. Christopher
Capel had 13 tenants in 1737. (fn. 235) Copyhold tenants
of Lord Craven continued to pay heriots and their
estates were granted usually for three lives. After
1858 copyholders were enfranchised. (fn. 236) Of the larger
farms Prestbury Park farm was 519 a. in 1768, Hyde
farm was 149 a., and Puckham farm (partly in
Sevenhampton) was 208 a. (fn. 237) Piccadilly farm was
271 a. (fn. 238) When Thomas Baghot sold Hewlett's farm,
in Prestbury and Cheltenham, to James Agg in 1797
it included 342 a. (fn. 239) In 1831 two farms were over
300 a., six were between 100 a. and 200 a., and there
were c. 67 small holdings of 50 a. or less, most being
only a few acres. (fn. 240) During the late 19th century and
in the 20th many of the smaller holdings became
building land. (fn. 241) The parish had 11 farmers in 1856,
and the number remained about the same at the end
of the century. Seven farms were recorded as over
150 a. in 1923, and three, Piccadilly farm, Hunting
Butts farm, and Hyde farm, in 1935. (fn. 242) In 1964
Prestbury had some 11 farms, of which 4 belonged
to the Baghot-De la Bere estate, and a few small
holdings; they employed only a very small proportion of the population.
Inclosure was perhaps not immediately followed
by any significant increase in pasture and meadow,
and during the 18th century it seems to have been
usual for farms to have more arable than pasture. (fn. 243)
In 1779, however, it was said that the parish
consisted of rich pasture with a small amount of
arable. (fn. 244) In 1801 581 a. were returned as sown,
mainly with wheat, barley, and beans, (fn. 245) and in 1838
there were 1,090 a. of arable and 1,760 a. of meadow
and pasture. (fn. 246) Some of the farms in the late 19th
century were dairy farms, (fn. 247) and c. 1901 only 408 a.
was arable compared with 1,785 a. of permanent
grass. (fn. 248) One of the larger farms in the 1920's was for
poultry, (fn. 249) and there was still a poultry farm in 1964.
Farming was then mixed, with an emphasis on dairy
farming; Noverton farm, comprising about 150 a.
in Prestbury, was a dairy farm retailing its own milk. (fn. 250)
A feature of the village in the 19th century was the
number of orchards surrounding the houses, (fn. 251) and
there was still a number of orchards in the parish in
1933. (fn. 252) From the mid-19th century market-gardens
became increasingly numerous. There were 3 in
1856, 6 in 1889, and 8 in 1906, and the number
remained about the same until 1935. (fn. 253) After the
Second World War the number of market-gardens
declined, probably because of the growing need for
building land.
Market and fair. In 1249 the Bishop of Hereford
obtained a grant of a weekly market at Prestbury
and an annual fair for three days at the beginning of
August. (fn. 254) The market was by a main road, (fn. 255) and the
number of burgage tenants suggest that the market
was flourishing c. 1280. (fn. 256) The grant of the market
and fair was confirmed in 1394. (fn. 257) It was said that the
market declined in the 15th century partly because
of a fire which destroyed the greater part of the
Burgage. In the early 16th century the market was
revived, (fn. 258) but it apparently remained small and by
c. 1700 it had lapsed. (fn. 259)
Mills. In 1292 the Bishop of Hereford had a
water-mill at Prestbury. (fn. 260) It was held in demesne in
1344. (fn. 261) The Prior of Llanthony was leasing a mill
from the bishop in 1389; (fn. 262) it may have been the
Lower Mill, standing close to the church and
Llanthony Priory's manor-house, on the small stream
that runs through the village and gave the name to
Mill Street. In 1506 and 1536 the bishop's mill was
held by a lessee. (fn. 263) William Baghot was lessee of the
demesne water-mill in 1575. (fn. 264) The Lower Mill,
so-called by 1832, (fn. 265) went out of use between 1885
and 1894. In 1919 it was being used as a laundry,
which had apparently closed before 1923, (fn. 266) and the
building became a private house.
Upper Mill, higher up the stream at Noverton,
was in use by 1722, when William Cook conveyed it
to Thomas Etherton, miller, of Prestbury. The Mrs.
Dinah Adderton who had the mill in 1793 was
perhaps a member of the same family. She sold the
mill to Bridges Hughes, and Thomas Hughes sold
it in 1836 to William Stephens. (fn. 267) In 1870 the mill
was called Noverton Mill and under that name
continued in use until c. 1910. (fn. 268) The buildings, of
stone with a Cotswold stone roof, formed a private
house in 1964.
Industry and trade. The name Scop Street used
in 1398 may indicate shops, and a house in the
Burgage at that time was called Bakehouse. (fn. 269) A baker
and a butcher were recorded in 1608, and the parish
then had a weaver and three tailors. (fn. 270) A cordwainer
was working in Prestbury in 1768, (fn. 271) and by 1831
Prestbury had a number of shops and workshops
including three bakehouses. (fn. 272) In 1836 5 butchers
and 3 cordwainers were recorded. (fn. 273) From the late
19th century Prestbury has had grocers, butchers,
bakers, shoemakers, coal dealers, and general shops,
and a post office from 1889. Other occupations
included dressmaking, shirtmaking, and hairdressing. (fn. 274) In 1964 the south side of High Street was
mainly occupied by shops, and there were several
general stores outside the village.
The bishop's manor included a forge c. 1290, (fn. 275)
and there were probably smiths working in Prestbury
from that time. One recorded in 1608 kept a
servant. (fn. 276) A smith was working in the parish in
1836, (fn. 277) and one or two smiths were recorded in the
late 19th century. (fn. 278) A smithy, which gave the name
to Blacksmith Lane, running east from the junction
of Bouncer's Lane and Deep Street, was in use in
1903. (fn. 279) The smithy had gone by 1927. (fn. 280) There
were three carpenters in Prestbury, two of whom
employed servants, and a slatter in 1608, (fn. 281) and a
mason was living in the parish in 1654. (fn. 282) The place
name Ironmongers occurs in the early 17th century. (fn. 283)
In 1836 5 carpenters, 7 plasterers, a bricklayer, a
cooper, and 6 painters were recorded, (fn. 284) and from
1870 Prestbury had a variety of building workers. (fn. 285)
A noticeable feature of the parish from the early
19th century was the increase in the professional and
leisured classes and the corresponding decline in the
proportion of the population employed in agriculture,
trade, and industry. In 1811 87 families were
employed in agriculture, 37 in trade and industry,
and there were 14 other families; by 1831 the figures
were 65 in agriculture, 68 in trade and industry, and
71 others. (fn. 286) After the Second World War a few light
engineering works and small factories were opened,
mainly in Bouncer's Lane, but the greater part of
the population in 1964 worked outside the parish,
mainly in Cheltenham. Professional people, particularly civil servants and teachers, then formed a
considerable part of the population.
Local Government.
In 1287 the Bishop of
Hereford claimed view of frankpledge and quittance
of his men from suit of shire and hundred court,
with all pleas except pleas of the Crown, in his manor
of Prestbury by virtue of a grant of Henry III. (fn. 287) The
bishop was granted in 1394 assize of bread, wine,
ale, and other victuals, and assay and sealing of
weights and measures. (fn. 288) A court was held once every
three weeks in the 14th century. (fn. 289) In 1506 there were
apparently two separate courts bi-annually, for the
borough and for the rest of the manor. (fn. 290) View of
frankpledge and court baron were held at the same
court, and in the 18th century they were held
together once a year in October and a court baron
only was held more frequently. Court rolls survive
for 1529, 1535, 1537, 1552, and 1570, and a court
book for 1726–1871. A constable and tithingman
were elected at the court in the 18th century. (fn. 291)
Llanthony Priory's manor of Prestbury had a
court baron by the 14th century; court rolls survive
for 1365, 1385, 1387, 1426, 1428, 1434, 1436, 1437,
1441, 1443, 1558, and 1575. The court, to which
the priory's tenants in Sevenhampton were subject,
was apparently held twice a year. (fn. 292) No record of a
court after 1575 has been found.
The parish had two churchwardens and two
overseers. Churchwardens' accounts from 1674 and
overseers' accounts from 1684 survive. (fn. 293) Expenditure
on poor relief, which was comparatively low for the
size of the parish in 1776, rose less steeply than in
many parishes between 1776 and 1803, from £128
to £167. The number of people receiving relief in
1803, 20 regularly and 20 occasionally, (fn. 294) had not
changed significantly during that period. (fn. 295) In 1815,
when the number receiving occasional relief had
fallen, expenditure on relief had decreased slightly
from the amount in 1803. (fn. 296) A select vestry was set
up in 1824 and a workhouse was opened in the same
year. The parish provided yarn and spinning-wheels
to employ the women and children in the workhouse,
and a committee was set up to visit the workhouse
weekly. (fn. 297) Expenditure on poor relief had risen to
£493 by 1826. (fn. 298) The vestry complained that the
parish was infested with vagrants, and asked the
parishioners not to give them help. (fn. 299) By 1834
expenditure had fallen to £400. (fn. 300) The workhouse was
closed in 1835 (fn. 301) when Prestbury became part of the
Cheltenham Poor Law Union. (fn. 302) In 1964 the part of
the ancient parish of Prestbury outside Cheltenham
Borough remained in Cheltenham Rural District.
The parish council has met regularly since 1894.
Church.
A priest was recorded at Prestbury in
1086, (fn. 303) and in 1136 Bishop Robert of Hereford gave
the church of Prestbury with its dependent chapel
of Sevenhampton to Llanthony Priory. (fn. 304) The priory
evidently appropriated the rectory, for the parish
priests presented by the priory in the 13th and 14th
centuries were vicars. (fn. 305) In 1395 the priory was
licensed to appropriate the vicarage also, and to
nominate one of its canons to serve the cure. (fn. 306) In
1403, 1422, and 1425, however, vicars presented by
the priory were instituted. (fn. 307) If the appropriation of
the vicarage was afterwards revived, it lapsed at the
Dissolution. The Crown was said to be patron of the
vicarage between 1539 and 1584, (fn. 308) and the Baghot
family presented from 1581 (fn. 309) although the advowson
was not apparently owned by that family until 1622.
The advowson was sold with the rectory in 1823, (fn. 310)
but by 1860 John Edwards was patron, (fn. 311) and the
patronage has since descended in his family. In 1964
Wilfrid Baghot-De la Bere was patron. (fn. 312)
Bishop Robert's grant of the church to Llanthony
Priory included all the tithes except those of the park
and a portion of the demesne tithes belonging to the
Dean and Precentor of Hereford. (fn. 313) In the 13th
century the prior granted his tithes to the priest
serving the cure with half a yardland and half a
house. (fn. 314) Of the £6 13s. 4d. at which the church was
valued in 1291 the vicar's portion was £4 6s. 8d. (fn. 315)
and the vicarage was valued at the same amount
when it was appropriated to Llanthony Priory. (fn. 316) The
vicarage was said to be worth £12 6s. 8d. in 1535, (fn. 317)
and £50 in 1650. (fn. 318) In 1635 the glebe included c. ½
yardland and a house in Deep Street. (fn. 319) At inclosure
in 1732 the vicar received 14 a., and in 1807 he had
a few other closes also. (fn. 320) The glebe amounted to 21 a.
in 1838 (fn. 321) and in 1964 two small fields still belonged
to the vicar. (fn. 322) In 1704 the vicar had half the great
and small tithes, except for the tithes of the former
demesne of Llanthony Priory and the portion
belonging to the Dean and Precentor of Hereford. (fn. 323)
In 1838 the tithes were commuted for a corn-rent. (fn. 324)
The gross income of the benefice was £370 in 1851 (fn. 325)
and fell in the later 19th century. (fn. 326)
In 1704 it was said that the vicarage had been very
ruinous and had been lately largely rebuilt. (fn. 327) Part of
the earlier house may survive as the central part of
the house existing in 1964. There were six bays of
building in 1704, with a brewhouse, barn, stable,
and cowhouse. (fn. 328) The house was apparently rebuilt
again later in the 18th century, for in 1807 the
rebuilding was said to have been about 40 years
ago. (fn. 329) The 18th-century house, two-storied and with
dormers, is of ashlar with a Cotswold stone roof and
moulded stone eaves cornice. The windows retain
some mid-18th-century sashes with heavy glazingbars. The doorway is flanked by pilasters and
surmounted by a niche which once contained the
Madonna and Child, carved in the 1830's, that were
moved c. 1955 to the outside of the new vicarage.
From 1835 the vicar, John Edwards, was allowed to
let the house because it was too small for his family, (fn. 330)
but in 1866 (fn. 331) he enlarged the vicarage, building at
the back of the house a stone wing with dormers
and mullioned windows. The barn was pulled down,
and brick stables were built. The vicarage, afterwards,
called the Three Queens, was sold c. 1955, and a
new brick vicarage was built on part of the garden. (fn. 332)
The vicar in 1551 could not repeat the Commandments or prove the Articles. (fn. 333) Edmund Lightfoot,
vicar 1555–81, (fn. 334) was resident and a satisfactory
scholar. (fn. 335) In 1563, however, people complained that
services were not said at convenient times; (fn. 336) in 1580
the churchwardens presented that there had been
only three sermons in seven years, that the vicar
did not hear the catechism, that he neglected the
reading of the scriptures, and that he had bought his
vicarage. (fn. 337) The next vicar was neither a graduate
nor a preacher, and his successor was not a graduate. (fn. 338)
Francis Welles, vicar 1699–1756, held another
benefice from 1714, (fn. 339) but he lived at Prestbury and
it was he who rebuilt the vicarage before 1704. (fn. 340)
In the mid-18th century Prestbury was served by
curates, (fn. 341) but from 1779 when John Baghot-De la
Bere became vicar Prestbury was normally served
by the vicar, who often employed a curate also. (fn. 342)
In 1825 John Edwards (later Baghot-De la Bere),
who afterwards held the advowson, became vicar;
he retained the living until 1860 (fn. 343) and was followed
by his son, also John, who was vicar until 1884. (fn. 344)
The younger John Edwards (later Baghot-De la
Bere) had come under the influence of the Oxford
Movement and his incumbency was marked by
controversy. He appointed a curate of similar
leanings, and in 1869 hand-bills attacking the curate
were pasted on parishioners' doors. (fn. 345) The curate
afterwards became a Roman Catholic. In 1868
Edwards introduced the use of vestments and candles
during Communion services. (fn. 346) There were three
morning services and one evening service on
Sundays, a daily Communion service, and weekly
confessions. (fn. 347) In 1878 Edwards was suspended,
ostensibly because of his use of vestments and
candles. (fn. 348) The opposition to him came from
Evangelicals in Cheltenham, and he apparently had
the support of most of his parishioners. On a few
occasions riots occurred during services and the
congregation had to be protected by the police. In
1880 Edwards was deprived, but he refused to accept
the sentence and continued to serve the cure until
1884 when he resigned. (fn. 349) The elder John Edwards
was still patron of the living, and the next vicar,
Frederick Gurney, described as a Ritualist in 1888, (fn. 350)
evidently shared the opinions of his predecessor.
In 1924, when the vicar was another member of the
Baghot-De la Bere family, permission was given for
the reservation of the sacrament, (fn. 351) and the sacrament
was reserved in 1964. In 1964, when Prestbury was
served by the vicar and a curate, there were three or
four services on Sundays and a daily Communion
service. A small temporary wooden building in
Swindon Lane was used as a chapel of ease, and a
morning and evening service were held there. (fn. 352)
The church of ST. MARY (fn. 353) comprises chancel,
nave, north and south aisles, west tower, south porch,
and north and south vestries. The church appears to
have been largely rebuilt in the 14th century when
the north and south aisles were perhaps added to an
earlier building. The church was so thoroughly
restored in 1864–8 that the date of the medieval work
is difficult to determine. In 1578 a south chapel was
mentioned; (fn. 354) it apparently opened off the chancel,
for before 1864 two pointed arches could be seen
built into the south wall of the chancel. (fn. 355) The west
tower was begun in the 13th century: it has small
lancet windows on each side of its two lower stages.
The chancel arch and the north and south two-light
windows of the chancel were built in the 14th
century. The north aisle arcade consists of four
pointed arches on octagonal pillars; on the south side
a similar arcade of only two bays opened to the south
aisle which did not reach to the west end of the nave.
The four two-light windows of the north aisle, two
of the south aisle and one in the south wall of the
nave near its west end (fn. 356) were of the 14th century.
In the late 14th century the tower was completed
or partly rebuilt, giving it four stages with an
embattled parapet and gargoyles at the angles, the
top stages of the tower being narrower than those
below. It may have been in the 15th century or later
that a clerestory was added to the nave with three
small square-headed windows on the north side
only, and that two square-headed windows, one
above the other, were inserted in the south wall of
the nave west of the south aisle. The bellcot on the
east gable of the nave is of the 15th century, as was
the former three-light east window of the chancel.
A doorway and steps leading to the roodloft survive
on the south side of the chancel arch. The church
had a north entrance and porch in 1698, when they
were being repaired, (fn. 357) and the roof-line of a former
north porch could be seen in 1964. Also in 1698
buttresses were added to the tower. (fn. 358)
By the 19th century the church was too small for
the congregation; a west gallery had been built by
the end of the 18th century, (fn. 359) and in 1827 a north
gallery was added. (fn. 360) More buttresses were added to
the tower, which had a large crack on its south side,
c. 1824. (fn. 361) A new vestry at the north-east end of the
church was used for the first time in 1840. (fn. 362) A new
west gallery was built above the existing one in
1843, (fn. 363) when an organ was installed, (fn. 364) and c. 1849
the south aisle was extended to correspond to the
north aisle. (fn. 365) A south gallery, built some time before
1864, was approached by an exterior staircase on the
east side of the south porch. A small window above
the doorway was presumably to give light to the
gallery. (fn. 366)
Between 1864 and 1868 the church was thoroughly
restored under the direction of G. E. Street. (fn. 367) The
north and south aisles were extended eastwards to
flank the chancel, and the small window from the
south gallery was inserted in the east wall of the
south chapel. A perpendicular window, probably
from the chancel, was inserted at the east end of the
north aisle, which became the organ chamber. The
chancel was given a new east window of five graded
lancets, and the roofs were rebuilt. In the clerestory
four windows corresponding to those on the north
side were added on the south. Half-arches acting as
buttresses to the chancel arch were inserted between
the north and south aisles and their eastward
extensions. The galleries and a stone rood-screen
were removed. A vestry was built near the east end
of the church on the south side.
The windows once contained painted glass which
by c. 1700 had mostly been broken, and only a lower
window on the south side of the chancel retained the
image of John Wyche, Prior of Llanthony (1409–
1436); (fn. 368) the initials J.W. survived in the early 19th
century. (fn. 369) All the windows were given stained glass
in 1864, (fn. 370) but some of it had been removed by 1964.
Several of the monuments were removed in the
restoration of 1864, (fn. 371) and in 1964 only a few 18thcentury and later memorial tablets could be seen in
the church. The plain octagonal font was replaced in
1864 by one of coloured marble with inlaid panels,
and the church was re-seated; until then the chancel
had contained 'carved ancient pews and desks'. (fn. 372)
A new organ was installed after 1864. (fn. 373) Six of the
bells are dated 1748 (fn. 374) and two more were added in
1886. (fn. 375) A chalice and paten of 1638 recorded in
1906 (fn. 376) were apparently missing in the mid-20th
century, when a tankard flagon of 1734 was the only
pre-19th-century plate. (fn. 377) The parish registers are
complete from 1633.
Nonconformity.
Ten nonconformists were
recorded in 1676 in Prestbury; (fn. 378) in 1684 there was a
Quaker in the parish; (fn. 379) and in 1735 ten nonconformists were described as Anabaptists. (fn. 380) Eight
houses were registered for nonconformist meetings
between 1798 and 1838, one at least, in 1838, being
for a Methodist meeting. (fn. 381) There were Methodists
at Prestbury by 1835, and also in 1849 when services
and a Sunday school had for some time been held in
private houses. By 1850, however, plans for a
Methodist chapel in Prestbury had been dropped. (fn. 382)
A Congregational church in Deep Street was
opened in 1866, (fn. 383) a building of variegated brick
with an angle tower and a schoolroom. There was a
resident minister by 1878, (fn. 384) and membership at
the end of the century was c. 18. (fn. 385) In the 1960's,
when the membership was 31, the church was served
from Cheltenham. (fn. 386)
In 1964 Roman Catholic services were held on
Sundays at the Women's Institute hall in Prestbury;
the centre was served from St. Gregory's church,
Cheltenham. (fn. 387)
Schools.
Two people were presented in 1634 for
teaching a school without licence. (fn. 388) In 1704 it was
said that there was no free school in the parish, but
about two years before some of the parishioners had
set up a school to teach poor children reading,
writing, religion, and accounts. (fn. 389) In 1818 there was
a Sunday school financed partly by voluntary
contributions and partly by the rent from the Poor's
Ground. There were 50 pupils and a master and a
mistress. At the same date another Sunday school
had 50–60 pupils. A day school, presumably financed
by the parents, was attended by c. 20 children of
farmers and tradesmen. A few children attended the
National school at Cheltenham. (fn. 390) In 1833 Prestbury
had three day schools, one for c. 50 infants, and a
boys' and a girls' school with 62 pupils between
them. A boys' day and boarding school was started
in 1830 and had 35 pupils in 1833, and a girls'
boarding school, begun in 1824, had 17 pupils. (fn. 391) The
girls' school was perhaps the 'establishment for
young ladies' called Field House. (fn. 392) All were financed
by the parents, except the infants' school and the
Sunday school, which received support from
charity. (fn. 393) There was a private girls' school in the
late 19th century, (fn. 394) and in the mid-20th century two
private schools. (fn. 395)
In 1836 a National school was built in Bouncer's
Lane. It was a red-brick building with a slate roof
comprising two schoolrooms and a teacher's house.
It was supported partly by subscription and partly
by school pence. (fn. 396) In 1847 73 children were taught
by a master and mistress, with 23 extra children on
Sundays. (fn. 397)
By 1908 the school had mixed and infants'
departments with an average attendance of 115 and
36 respectively. Between 1936 and 1938 the school
was re-organized as a junior mixed and infants'
school, the older children attending schools in
Cheltenham. Average attendance in 1938 was 71. (fn. 398)
In the early 1950's the school was extended by the
addition of four new classrooms. In 1964 there were
c. 300 children. (fn. 399)
Pate's Grammar School for Girls, the Cheltenham
girls' grammar school, (fn. 400) moved in 1939 to new
buildings in Albert Road, (fn. 401) within the ancient parish
of Prestbury. In 1964 there were over 700 girls. (fn. 402)
Charities.
All the parochial charities of Prestbury
were regulated by a Scheme of 1891, under the name
of the Prestbury Parochial Charities. Before 1700 a
house in the Burgage known as the church house
belonged to the parish and was let at 14s. for the
benefit of the poor. (fn. 403) Pasture called Culver Breach
or the Poor's Ground, apparently bought by the
parish with money left for the poor, produced
£2 10s. a year in 1700. The church house was then
falling down, (fn. 404) but by 1779 had been rebuilt and
produced 40s., while the Poor's Ground was let for
£7. (fn. 405) In 1826 the income of £25 was used for the
Sunday school, to repair almshouses, and for coal
for the poor. (fn. 406) The Poor's Ground charity, presumably including the church house, was regulated
by a scheme of 1866, (fn. 407) and in 1889 it was said to
include 6 a. and six cottages producing £38 a year. (fn. 408)
The cottages were sold in 1905 for £550. (fn. 409) In 1720
Anne Goodrich gave an almshouse of six rooms in
High Street for the use of the 'religious poor'; (fn. 410) in
1856 there were 10 people in the almshouse, (fn. 411) but in
1889 only 3 men and 3 women, (fn. 412) and later only 3
people in all. (fn. 413) The almshouse was sold to the Rural
District Council c. 1958, and replaced by old people's
flats.
By will proved 1805 Mary Ellis gave £150 stock
for 20 poor men and women, and in 1820 Thomas
Baghot-De la Bere gave £50 stock for the poor.
Further sums of £50 stock were given by Hester
Anne Durham and Mary Durham by wills of 1849
and 1854, £449 by John Surman Surman by will
proved 1880, and £1,793 by George Perton by will
proved 1881. The income from the charities in 1888
was £185. The Scheme of 1891 was opposed by
those who thought that the Congregational minister
should be one of the trustees, and that the charities
had been used to persuade people to attend the
parish church. (fn. 414) By will dated 1923 Mrs. Margaret
Ryley gave the trustees of the Prestbury Parochial
Charities £200, and in 1950 Miss Urling Smith
conveyed three cottages called York Row in High
Street to the trustees. The cottages were modernized
and converted into two in 1956. In the 1960's the
trustees distributed c. £100 a year mainly in cash to
the sick and to old people. (fn. 415)