KEMERTON
Kemerton lies 4 miles north-east of Tewkesbury
on the south-west slopes of Bredon Hill. It projected
from the northern boundary of Gloucestershire,
and in 1931 was transferred to Worcestershire. (fn. 1) The
parish, which contains 1,590 a., is long and narrow
in shape, being about 4 miles long and 1 mile across
at its widest part. In 1882 a detached part of Ashchurch parish containing Aston Mill with 10 a. of
land was transferred to Kemerton. (fn. 2) The north and
south boundaries of Kemerton have remained those
given in an 8th-century charter, the summit of
Bredon Hill and the Carrant brook. (fn. 3)
The southern part of the parish is low-lying at
c. 100 ft., there is a gradual rise to the foot of
Merecombe Hill, and from there the land slopes
steeply to the summit of Bredon Hill at 961 ft. The
Waterlet brook, (fn. 4) which provided power for 4 cornmills in the parish, enters the village from Overbury
on the east and then flows south to join the Carrant.
Below the 250 ft. contour the parish lies on the
Lower Lias, with a small area on the Upper Lias
above; the high ground is formed by the Inferior
Oolite. (fn. 5) There are several disused quarries on the
hill; the lower quarry near the boundary with
Overbury was that allotted as a public stone-quarry
at inclosure. (fn. 6) The land of the parish has been used
almost entirely for tillage and pasture. Until
inclosure in 1772 the lower and more gently sloping
land lay mainly in open fields, and the Bredon Hill
area of the parish was a large sheep-pasture. (fn. 7)
Bredon Hill is surmounted by an Iron Age hillfort, just inside the northern boundary of Kemerton
parish, where occupation is thought to have ceased
abruptly as the result of a considerable battle. (fn. 8) On
the north-west the ground falls steeply away providing a natural defence, but on the east and south the
fort is defended by a double line of ditch and rampart.
In a gully on the north-west side lies a large mass of
limestone known as the Banbury Stone from
'Baenintesburg', the name given to the fort in the
8th century. (fn. 9) On the inner rampart on the south
side is a square stone tower, probably built c. 1765
by John Parsons (d. c. 1805). (fn. 10) In 1791 it was described as a summer-house, (fn. 11) and it was known as
such in 1966, but earlier it was called Parsons's
Folly. (fn. 12) In 1966 the tower housed equipment of the
Midlands Electricity Board.
The village is strung-out from north to south
following the shape of the parish. Perhaps the
original settlement was the southern grouping, which
contained the two manor-houses, the church, and
two mills, but the northern extension of the village is
also ancient. At inclosure in 1772 the old inclosures
around the houses stretched up to near the Priory. (fn. 13)
The two parts of the village perhaps corresponded
with the division of the manor after the 13th century
into Upper and Lower Court: Wing Lane, which
links the two chief roads in the northern part,
apparently took its name from one of the tenants of
Upper Court in the late 15th century. (fn. 14) The shape
of the village was presumably determined by the
need for access to its fields and pastures; otherwise
it might have been expected to have developed along
its main thoroughfare, the Tewkesbury-Overbury
road. That road was, indeed, the focus of the village
in the 19th century. The Crown Inn was in existence
by 1836, (fn. 15) the blacksmith's shop and the common
pound were there in the 1880's, (fn. 16) and there was a
fair-sized village green, later reduced by roadwidening and the building of a war-memorial. (fn. 17)
Inclosure brought little change in the grouping of
the houses: only two outlying farmsteads had to be
built — Aston Mill Farm in the south, and the farm
buildings on the manorial land on the hill. (fn. 18)
The village contains cottages of all periods from
the 17th century. There are several 17th-century
cottages mainly timber-framed and brick, but the
earliest house in the village that is dated is of stone,
although much rebuilt. (fn. 19) The only large early 17thcentury house surviving is the house called the Old
Manor near Kemerton Court. It is a timber-framed
and brick structure with a tiled roof. There is no
evidence that it was formerly the manor-house of
Nether Court manor, although it was almost
certainly the home farm-house of the manor in the
late 18th century, (fn. 20) and until the diversion of the
road in 1825 it stood on the same side of the road
and in the same group of buildings as Kemerton
Court. (fn. 21) The general character of the village is set by
the stone, timber-framed, and brick cottages and
farm-buildings of the 18th and 19th centuries. The
council houses in Bayliss Road in Upper Kemerton
were built by the Evesham Rural District Council
just after the Second World War. (fn. 22)
Apart from the 17th-century Old Rectory (fn. 23) and
the two 18th-century manor-houses, (fn. 24) there are
several other large houses in the village. Bell's Castle
is a Gothic house with mock ramparts standing in a
prominent position on Merecombe Hill. It was built
between 1825 and 1838 by Edmund Bell, a retired
sailor whose supposed exploits as a pirate and
smuggler form the subject of many village legends. (fn. 25)
The house has three embattled towers — the one on
the west possibly an 18th-century folly already in
position — and incorporates on the east side two
earlier cottages, one reputed to have been a shepherd's
house in the 17th century. (fn. 26) The Priory appears to
have been an 18th-century house enlarged by
William Prior in the early 19th century; it has a stone
front with a pedimented doorway. In the garden
are the ruins of a smaller 17th-century stone
house, preserved as a garden feature, and on the
south-east of the Priory are the probable foundations of a stocking-factory. (fn. 27) Northwood was built by
the rector in c. 1890, and Merecombe just before the
First World War. (fn. 28) There are two large 20thcentury houses, one at the south of the village, and
the other north of the Roman Catholic church.
The Tewkesbury-Overbury road was turnpiked
in 1755–6. (fn. 29) The road running south from the village
to the Bredon-Cheltenham road was designated only
as a private waggon-road at inclosure. (fn. 30) The BredonCheltenham road crossing the south-west of the
parish was turnpiked in 1826. (fn. 31) The road through
the lower village past the church formerly ran west
of Kemerton Court and was joined north-west of
the house by a road which crossed the meadow in
front of the house. (fn. 32) In 1825 the road across the
meadow was stopped up and the road past the
church diverted round the east side of Kemerton
Court. (fn. 33) A road in the north of the parish which
followed the line of the track from Westmancote
across Bredon Hill was a public road in 1772 and
was described as the road from Tewkesbury to
Evesham. (fn. 34) It was probably the ancient ridgeway
running over Bredon Hill mentioned in Saxon times
and used when the valley was flooded. (fn. 35)
Twenty-two inhabitants of Kemerton were
enumerated in 1086, (fn. 36) and there were 33 taxpayers
in 1327. (fn. 37) In 1551 there were c. 113 communicants, (fn. 38)
and 127 in 1603. (fn. 39) In 1650 there were said to be 46
families in the village, (fn. 40) and in 1712 150 persons. (fn. 41)
In 1743 the population was estimated at 200; (fn. 42) in
1779 at 225; (fn. 43) and in 1801 at 427. (fn. 44) By 1831 there
had been a further increase to 599, (fn. 45) but then a
slight decline in population began. Houses in the
village were being pulled down in the 1840's, (fn. 46) and
in 1851, when the population was down to 521, 9
were unoccupied. (fn. 47) There was a slight rise by 1861
but then a gradual fall to 434 in 1921. The population then remained steady and was 426 in 1961. (fn. 48)
In the late 19th century a water-supply was
brought to the village from a spring on Bredon Hill
in pipes laid down by John Hopton (d. 1891). (fn. 49) The
Hopton family leased the right to draw from this
supply to other large houses in the village, (fn. 50) and
taps were placed at intervals for the use of the
villagers. (fn. 51) In 1902 the water-supply was taken over
by the Tewkesbury Rural District Council, (fn. 52) but the
supply never completely met the needs of the
village, (fn. 53) and in 1965 the East Worcestershire Water
Company agreed to build a larger reservoir. (fn. 54) A
sewerage scheme was started in the village in 1905. (fn. 55)
There was an alehouse in the village in the 16th
century. (fn. 56) In the mid-19th century there were 4
public houses in Kemerton, (fn. 57) and of these the
'Crown' on the village green had been in existence
in 1836, (fn. 58) and the 'Waggon and Horses', north of
the Roman Catholic church, in 1838. (fn. 59) In 1903
there was also the 'Gardeners' Arms'. (fn. 60)
The life of the village was greatly influenced by
the Parsons (later Hopton) family, resident landlords from the early 17th century. (fn. 61) In the 19th
century village life was apparently affected even
more by the local incumbents, particularly Archdeacon Thomas Thorp, rector 1839–79, who rebuilt
the church and helped to found the school. (fn. 62) By
1966 the village had become largely a residential
area for retired people, many of whom lived in
converted cottages. There were few children in the
village, the village school had closed, and a Youth
Club and Guide company were kept going only with
members from neighbouring villages. (fn. 63) The Victoria
Hall was built in 1902 on land given by the Hopton
family. (fn. 64)
Part of a manuscript of Wycliffe's De Ecclesia was
transcribed at Kemerton in the early 15th century
by two Bohemians. (fn. 65) The writer John Moore, many
of whose books have a local background, lived in
Kemerton in 1966. Whitsun games were held on
the summit of Bredon Hill until c. 1876. (fn. 66)
Manors and Other Estates.
About 760
Uhtred, under-king of the Hwicce, granted to the
thegn Ceolmund 8 hides at a place called 'Habene
Homme' which, from the evidence of the boundaries
given, was the equivalent of the later manor of
KEMERTON. (fn. 67) In 840 lands in Kemerton were
among those restored to the church of Worcester
by Beorhtwulf, King of the Mercians. (fn. 68) In 1066 8
hides in Kemerton, presumably the 'Habene
Homme' estate, were held by Let, one of the landowners who had commended themselves to Brictric,
son of Algar, and the estate was held in 1086 by
Girard the chamberlain, who transferred it from
Deerhurst to Tewkesbury hundred. (fn. 69) Three other
small, half-hide estates were mentioned in 1086,
two held from the abbey of Westminster, and one
from St. Denis, Paris. (fn. 70) The overlordship of the
estate held by Girard the chamberlain passed from
Brictric to the Crown, and from the Crown to the
Earls of Gloucester, (fn. 71) and in the mid-14th century
on the division of the honor of Gloucester Kemerton
was assigned to Hugh de Audley and his wife. (fn. 72)
During the 14th century an intermediate lordship
between the tenants-in-demesne and the lords of
honor seems to have been held by John of Dixton
and his heirs. (fn. 73)
In 1190 John de Bonville held 2 knight's fees in
Kemerton, presumably the whole of Girard's former
estate, (fn. 74) but by the early 13th century the manor
seems to have been divided between two branches of
the Fécamp family. One part, described as half the
manor and 1 knight's fee, was held by Nicholas de
Fécamp. (fn. 75) It passed to the Crown by reason of the
escheat of the Normans, (fn. 76) and in 1240 was granted to
Robert de Mucegros, lord of Boddington, (fn. 77) who in
1235 had held the land at farm from Nicholas de
Fécamp, (fn. 78) and later from the Crown during the
minority of Nicholas's heirs. (fn. 79) Robert died in 1254 (fn. 80)
and his half of the manor passed to his son, John
(d. c. 1275), (fn. 81) and then to John's son, Robert who
died in 1280, (fn. 82) leaving as his heir a daughter Hawise
aged 4 years. Hawise married three times: first
William de Mortimer (d. c. 1297), (fn. 83) then John de
Ferrers, who held the fee in 1303, (fn. 84) and thirdly,
before 1316, John de Bures. (fn. 85) Hawise's inheritance
was later disputed between the children of her
second and third marriages, and although John de
Bures (d. 1350) (fn. 86) was recorded as holding the
Mucegros half of Kemerton manor, (fn. 87) the fact that
in 1346 John de Ferrers, grandson of Hawise and
her second husband, was given as the holder of the
fee (fn. 88) suggests that the title was even then in dispute.
In 1357 an agreement was reached by which the
Mucegros manors were divided between the two
families, Kemerton being confirmed to the daughter
and son-in-law of Hawise and John de Bures,
Katherine and Giles Beauchamp (d. 1361), son of
Walter Beauchamp of Powicke. (fn. 89)
The other half of the manor was held in the early
13th century by Henry FitzGerald. In 1218 he was
granted a market at Kemerton, (fn. 90) and in 1229
disputed the advowson of the church with Nicholas
de Fécamp. (fn. 91) Henry had acquired the estate by
marriage with Ermentrude Talbot, whose interest
may have stemmed from an earlier division of the
manor between members of the Fécamp family.
Henry died c. 1231 and his lands reverted to the
Talbots. (fn. 92) Euphemia Talbot, presumably the
daughter of Robert de Fécamp, (fn. 93) who was probably
the Euphemia of Kemerton mentioned in 1210, (fn. 94)
held the estate at her death in 1240 when she was
succeeded by her son, Gerard Talbot. (fn. 95) Earlier, in
1237, Gerard's brother William Talbot had had an
interest in the advowson of Kemerton church. (fn. 96) In
1263 Robert de Stuteville held the fee, (fn. 97) and in 1281
rights in it were exercised by Nicholas of Mitton,
who was described as the partner of Robert de
Mucegros in the town. (fn. 98) By the end of the century,
however, the Talbot inheritance seems to have been
divided between the two sons of William Beauchamp, who was lord of the near-by manor of
Elmley Castle (Worcs.). The elder son, William
Beauchamp, Earl of Warwick, held lands in demesne
in Kemerton as early as 1287 when his claim to free
warren in them was upheld, (fn. 99) and at his death in
1297 he was seised of a quarter of the manor. (fn. 100) The
other quarter of the manor was held by his brother,
Walter Beauchamp of Powicke, in 1303; (fn. 101) it was
later claimed that Walter had been granted his lands
in Kemerton by his father, (fn. 102) but part at least was
granted by Simon the chamberlain c. 1300. (fn. 103) After
Walter's death his estate was held in dower by his
wife, Alice, (fn. 104) and after her death it presumably
passed to their son, Giles Beauchamp, who through
his wife, Katherine de Bures, had acquired the
Mucegros half of the manor. (fn. 105)
The estate of the Earl of Warwick, later known as
UPPER COURT, (fn. 106) passed by direct descent to his
great-grandson, Thomas Beauchamp, Earl of
Warwick (d. 1401), (fn. 107) but was held after 1401 by
Thomas's younger brother, William Beauchamp,
lord of Bergavenny, and after William's death in
1411 by his wife Joan in dower. (fn. 108) On Joan's death
in 1435 it reverted to the Earl of Warwick's
descendants and was held in dower in 1447 by
Cecily, late wife of Henry Beauchamp, Duke of
Warwick. (fn. 109) It presumably passed to Henry's niece,
Isabel, whose husband, George, Duke of Clarence,
presented to Kemerton church in 1471. (fn. 110) On
Clarence's death in 1478 his lands passed to the
Crown, and Henry VII on his accession reinstated
Anne, Countess of Warwick, Isabel's mother. (fn. 111) In
1488 Anne granted the lands back to the king, (fn. 112)
who next year re-granted them to her for life. (fn. 113) In
1489 William Cole farmed the estate, (fn. 114) and in 1542
the Crown leased the demesne to John Cole. (fn. 115) In
1557 the Crown granted the manor to Thomas
Hughes for his service as one of the royal physicians. (fn. 116)
In 1605 Thomas's son, also Thomas, obtained a
grant of the reversion of the manor, (fn. 117) which he
leased in the same year to John Pace, William Pace,
and Nicholas Dance. (fn. 118) Hughes was recorded as joint
lord of Kemerton in 1608, (fn. 119) but by 1614 he had
granted his half of the manor to George Horniold of
Bredon. (fn. 120) In 1684 another George Horniold sold
the estate to John Parsons, who already held the
other half of the manor. (fn. 121)
The manor-house, which had been leased
separately since 1606, was purchased by John
Parsons (d. 1757) in 1723. (fn. 122) His son, also John
Parsons, completely rebuilt Upper Court house
some time between 1757 and 1773. (fn. 123) The house
remains a mainly 18th-century stone building, with a
bow window added to the east wing in the late 19th
century. The stable block, with a central archway
surmounted by a pediment, is probably contemporary with the rebuilding of the house.
The Mucegros estate, later known as the manor
of NETHER COURT, passed from Giles Beauchamp and his wife to their descendants, the
Beauchamps of Powicke. (fn. 124) Giles's son, John Beauchamp of Powicke (d. by 1401), presented to the
church in 1383, (fn. 125) and his son, William Beauchamp
(d. by 1431) in 1414. (fn. 126) The next heir John Beauchamp, lord of Powicke, held this part of Kemerton
manor in 1451, (fn. 127) and at his death in 1475 was
succeeded by his son, Richard, Lord Beauchamp of
Powicke. At Richard's death in 1503 his lands were
divided among three coheirs, his daughter Anne, the
widow of Richard Lygon, and his grandsons Edward
Willoughby and Richard Read, the sons of his
daughters Elizabeth and Margaret. (fn. 128) The Kemerton
estate passed to Anne's son, Richard Lygon (d.
1556). (fn. 129) Richard's son William died in 1567 having
settled the manor on his wife Mary and his son and
heir Richard. (fn. 130) Richard died in 1584 having settled
the manor on his wife Margaret and his second son
Henry, (fn. 131) whose son, Sir Arnold Lygon, was recorded
as lord in 1608. (fn. 132) Henry Lygon's elder brother, Sir
William, however, in 1589 conveyed the manor and
advowson to Conan Parsons. (fn. 133) Conan Parsons, who
was acquiring land in Kemerton during the last
decade of the 16th century, (fn. 134) and lived at Kemerton
and had 4 servants there in 1608, (fn. 135) was in possession
of Nether Court manor by 1616, (fn. 136) and the manor
was later described as having earlier been in the
possession of Sir William Lygon. (fn. 137)
Nether Court remained in the possession of the
descendants of Conan Parsons for the next three
hundred years. (fn. 138) Conan's son, John Parsons, died
c. 1632 leaving an infant son, also John. (fn. 139) The
younger John, who died in 1704, (fn. 140) purchased the
other manor or part of the manor from George
Horniold. (fn. 141) The united manor then descended to
successive sons: John Parsons (d. 1721), (fn. 142) John (d.
1757), (fn. 143) and John (d. c. 1805). (fn. 144) The last John's
brother and heir, (fn. 145) the Revd. William Parsons,
inherited the Canon Frome estate (Herefs.) from his
cousin, Richard Cope Hopton, and in 1817 assumed
the surname and arms of Hopton. (fn. 146) He died in 1841,
his son, the Revd. John Hopton, in 1870, and John's
son John in 1891. (fn. 147) The last John Hopton's daughter
Bertha and her husband, Walter Mynors-Baskerville,
then held the estate. (fn. 148) Bertha died in 1892, and her
husband in 1897, when he was succeeded by his
daughter, Sybil Maud. Sybil married Col. John
Dutton Hunt, who assumed the name of Hopton, (fn. 149)
and after his death, in 1918, his widow put the
estate up for sale. Some 300 a., about half of the
estate, were purchased by the Holland-Martin family
of Overbury, who had acquired the hill land of the
estate in 1903. In 1919 the former glebe land of
Kemerton rectory and in 1925 another farm in the
parish were added to the Overbury estate, which
comprised 1,215 a. in Kemerton in 1966. (fn. 150) Kemerton
Court, with which went the manorial rights, and the
remainder of the estate were purchased in 1918 by
John Till, who had been tenant of the house for
several years previously, (fn. 151) and he was succeeded by
his son, Mr. J. G. W. Till. (fn. 152) In 1949 Col. C. G.
Darby bought Kemerton Court and its land, and in
1964 made it over to his son Adrian Darby, who also
purchased one of the other farms in Kemerton. (fn. 153)
The house called Kemerton Court, formerly
known as Lower Court, is a rectangular stone
building. In 1662 it had 5 hearths. (fn. 154) The house was
largely rebuilt in the early 18th century, when the
elaborate west front with its parapets surmounted by
ball finials was added. (fn. 155) The porch on the east side
may survive from the earlier 16th- or 17th-century
house.
From the early 16th century an estate in Kemerton
was owned by Brasenose College, Oxford. In 1535
the principal was said to be a free tenant owing suit
to Tewkesbury hundred court. (fn. 156) During the late
17th century the land was leased to Thomas Farmer
for a rent in cash and kind, (fn. 157) in 1717 to William
Lanman, (fn. 158) and from 1724 to members of the
Parsons family. (fn. 159) At inclosure the college received an
allotment of 98 a., (fn. 160) which continued to be leased
to the Parsons family during the 19th century. (fn. 161) In
1939 it was purchased by the Overbury estate. (fn. 162)
Economic History.
Although agriculture has
been predominant in Kemerton, the parish had 4
mills and the village served as a minor centre of
industry and trade. No later record has been found,
however, of the market granted in 1218. (fn. 163)
Agriculture. In 1086 the demesne of Girard the
chamberlain's 8-hide estate was cultivated by 8 servi
with 3 teams, and 14 villani had 5 teams. (fn. 164) In 1274
the demesne of the Nether Court manor was
described as 2 plough-lands, (fn. 165) and in 1297 as 30 a.
of arable with pasture. (fn. 166) In the early 16th century
the Nether Court demesne included 2 yardlands of
arable with another yardland leased, 200 sheeppastures, meadow and pasture land, and extensive
closes. (fn. 167) In 1682 the demesne on that part of the
manor included 65 a. in the open fields, 3 yardlands
in the common meadow, and other meadows and
closes. (fn. 168) The demesne of the Upper Court manor
comprised 54 a. and some pasture in 1298; (fn. 169) in the
mid-16th century it comprised 2 yardlands of arable,
16 a. of meadow, and a few closes. (fn. 170)
The rent of the free tenants of Nether Court was
almost the same in the late 13th century (fn. 171) as that of
5 tenants in the early 16th century. (fn. 172) In 1682 there
were 6 freehold tenants. (fn. 173) The Upper Court estate
had 2 free tenants in 1298 (fn. 174) and in 1490 there were
6: (fn. 175) only two of those freeholds were of any size,
and the largest — a house and 2 yardlands — and
one of the others formed the estate held by Brasenose
College in the mid-16th century. (fn. 176)
In 1297 5 yardlands and 27 half-yardlands were
held in villeinage of Nether Court manor at rents of
12s. a yardland and 6s. a half-yardland. The total of
the rents with those of 4 cottagers was just under
£12. (fn. 177) In the early 16th century, in spite of the
probable addition in the 14th century of Walter
Beauchamp's lands to that part of the manor, (fn. 178) both
the number of yardlands and the rent of the customary lands had fallen. There were then 11 copyholds,
3 of 1½ yardland, 6 of 1 yardland, and 2 of ¼ yardland, at a total rent of £7 6s. 4d. (fn. 179) Some of the former
customary land may be represented by the large
number of closes enumerated with the demesne at the
time, one of which was later said to contain 71 a. and
another 20 a. (fn. 180) By 1682 there had been little change
in the number and size of holdings: 2 of the 1½yardland farms were then held by a widow, Mary
Cole, and one of them leased by her to an undertenant. Nine of the farms were still copyholds for
terms of up to 4 lives, but two were held on leases
for lives determinable after a period of years. (fn. 181) Some
labour-services were apparently still owed by the
Nether Court tenants in the 16th century when they
had to be done on warning given overnight and on
pain of forfeiture of the tenants' copyholds. The
services then consisted of a day's ploughing at
wheat-sowing, a day's harrowing at barley-sowing,
and the provision of two labourers and carriage of a
load of the crop at the hay and corn harvests. At
that time a customary tenant holding two messuages
— as most did at the time — on the Nether Court
manor was liable to two heriots. (fn. 182) In 1659 a former
copyhold estate was leased on condition that a cash
heriot should be paid and suit performed at the
manor court. (fn. 183)
On Upper Court in 1298 there were 14 customary
tenants and there also the usual rent for a yardland
was 12s. (fn. 184) In 1490 22 customary tenants held 14½
yardlands and all the farms were a yardland or halfyardland. (fn. 185) About 1555 there were 16 tenants
holding 11½ yardlands. (fn. 186) At that time all were copyholds, but at the beginning of the 17th century the
lord of the manor, Thomas Hughes, converted some,
and probably all, of the copyholds to leaseholds. (fn. 187)
A 16th-century copyholder of the manor claimed
that all the copyholds were heritable and that,
although he had been presented in the manor court
as the next heir to his father's holding, by the
influence of the deputy of the steward of the manor
it had been awarded to one of the steward's servants.
Widow's freebench was also the custom. (fn. 188)
Before inclosure the main arable land in Kemerton
lay on the south of the village in three large fields
and two smaller ones, and two more fields flanked
the village on the east and west. The common
meadow land lay in the south-west corner of the
parish bordered by the Carrant brook, and the
common pasture in the Hog-pasture in the southeast, the Moors on the east of the village, the three
Lower Hills (in the 18th century), and, stretching
up to the summit of Bredon Hill, the great sheeppasture known as the Green Hill. (fn. 189) A large freehold
estate owned by James Mumford in 1772 comprised
2 yardlands of arable in the common fields, 2 yardlands of meadow in the common meadow, pasture
for 5 cows and 20 young sheep in the Hog-pasture
and the Moors, 5 cow-pastures on the Lower Hills,
82 sheep-pastures on the Green and Upper Hills,
and lots of hedge and green ground. (fn. 190)
Agreements made in 1692 and 1736 to convert the
Lower Hills — called Tueswell (later Seven Acres),
Middle, and Merecombe Hills — from arable to a
cow-pasture for four-year periods provide the main
information about the communal organization of the
open fields and pastures. Under the 1692 agreement
the conversion was to take the place of an old pasture
in the south of the parish called the Herd, and those
who formerly held both common in the Herd and
land on the Lower Hills were allotted pasture on the
hills at the rate of 2 cows and 4 yearlings to the
yardland, those with either land only or common
only at half that stint. The Herd was to be stocked
during the four years with sheep at the rate of 8 to a
yardland, and 2 beasts to the yardland were to be
allowed on the Moors and the Cow-Pasture. (fn. 191) The
later agreement was similar except that the Herd
was to be sown with turnips, (fn. 192) and after the period
of the later agreement the Lower Hills appear to have
remained pasture until inclosure. (fn. 193) The agreements
also provided for the appointment of a communal
shepherd, husbandman, and hayward, and laid down
penalties for overstocking and failure to maintain
fencing. The four-year periods of these agreements
indicate that a four-course rotation was followed in
the open fields, probably with the crops mentioned
in the 16th century — wheat, barley, and peas and
beans. (fn. 194)
Sheep played an important part in the preinclosure economy of the village partly because of the
large amount of suitable pasture available on Bredon
Hill. The earliest known reference to sheep at
Kemerton concerns a dispute in 1312 when the men
of Kemerton were accused of driving off and
impounding 400 sheep belonging to the tenants of the
Bishop of Worcester at Bredon. (fn. 195) The importance of
sheep in the 16th century is reflected by presentments at the Tewkesbury hundred court for overburdening the common, (fn. 196) and by the detailed
customs for tithing their purchase, sale, and
summering. (fn. 197) The demesne of Nether Court in the
15th century included pasture for 200 sheep on the
hill, (fn. 198) and c. 1490 the farmer of Upper Court built
a new sheepfold. (fn. 199) The allowance on the Green Hill
in 1736 was 30 sheep to the yardland, (fn. 200) but c. 1772
a larger stint was allowed. (fn. 201)
Fruit-growing benefited from the position of the
village at the foot of a southward-facing slope.
Apples, pears, and crabs were mentioned in 1579, (fn. 202)
and cherries in 1680. (fn. 203) Two houses mentioned in
1624 each had orchards, (fn. 204) in 1682 there were 12
orchards on the Nether Court estate, (fn. 205) and at
inclosure 14 houses in the village all had orchards
adjoining. (fn. 206) A new orchard was planted on the Nether
Court demesne in the late 17th century. (fn. 207) Other
crops grown in the 16th century included hemp and
hops. (fn. 208) A hemp-plot adjoined one of the houses in
the village in 1739. (fn. 209) There were hopyards on the
Upper Court demesne in the early 17th century, (fn. 210)
and a hopyard gave its name to one of the large open
fields in the south of the parish. (fn. 211)
There is little evidence of early inclosure at
Kemerton and in the late 17th century the arable land
of the various farms lay scattered in the fields. The
199 strips of the Brasenose College estate lay in 33
separate parcels, (fn. 212) and Mary Cole's land at the same
time was scattered among at least 23 furlongs. (fn. 213) The
65 a. arable in the open fields belonging to Nether
Court demesne, however, had been consolidated into
very few parcels by 1678. (fn. 214) Ample pasture on
Bredon Hill made unnecessary any large-scale
inclosure of arable for increased sheep-farming in the
16th century, although some of the Nether Court
closes may represent inclosure from that time. A
few small inclosures in the south of the parish away
from the demesne and home closes were mentioned
in the award of 1772, perhaps indicating some private
inclosure, and one of them, in Hopyard Field, was
elsewhere stated to have been inclosed by exchange
by John Parsons (d. 1757). (fn. 215)
Inclosure in 1772 affected c. 1,300 a. — almost all
the agricultural land in the parish — leaving untouched only the central belt of houses and ancient
closes running from Merecombe Hill to c. 500 yards
south of the lower village. John Parsons, the lord of
the manor, and his mother were allotted c. 400 a.,
and the rector c. 300 a. There were three other large
allotments of c. 100 a.: the Brasenose College land
which was leased to John Parsons, James Mumford's
land on the west and north-west of the village, and
William Cole's on the east and north-east. Two
other allotments were c. 60 a., two were c. 30 a., and
the allotments of the other 16 proprietors ranged
from 20 a. to 2 roods. (fn. 216)
The manorial estate, although farmed by one
tenant, was made into two farms after inclosure.
The hill land, with the Brasenose College allotment,
occupied almost the whole of the parish north of
Hopton's Buildings and this made a farm of over
300 a., which was all arable in 1791, although the
upper 140 a. were said to be stony and subject to
furze. The vale land of the estate, comprising the old
demesne closes and the common meadow in the
south of the parish, was half orchards and pasture at
the time. (fn. 217) In 1819 the Hill farm was growing barley,
wheat, oats, and turnips, the Vale farm was still
largely meadow with some barley, wheat, and beans. (fn. 218)
The rectory land, leased as a single farm, had 80 a.
of meadow in 1822, the rest of the land growing
mainly barley and wheat. (fn. 219) Twenty years after the
inclosure it was said that the produce of the land of
the parish was more than doubled. (fn. 220) Wheat and
barley were the main crops grown in the parish in
1801, and turnips and oats, peas, and beans were
also grown; about half of the land inclosed in 1772
was arable. (fn. 221) The land in the valley was badly
drained and liable to flooding in the late 18th
century. After inclosure the rector is said to have
complained of the commissioners' treatment of him
because all his allotment lay in that area of the
parish. (fn. 222) By 1791 some drainage had been done on
the Vale farm of the manorial estate, (fn. 223) and by the
late 19th century the rectory land had been well
drained. (fn. 224) Drainage may account for the increase by
c. 200 a. in the arable land during the 19th century. (fn. 225)
In the late 19th century there were 6 farms in
Kemerton, including the rectory farm and the
manorial estate, then divided into 4 farms. (fn. 226) In
1923 there were 8 farms in the village, 5 of over
150 a., (fn. 227) and in 1940 there were 3 large farms, 5
smaller ones, 2 market-gardens, and a poultry
farm. (fn. 228) In 1908 37 a. of the manorial estate were
acquired by the Gloucestershire County Council and
let as smallholdings. (fn. 229) In 1966 farming was mainly
arable, with cereals, roots, and green vegetables.
There was also some stock-rearing and two farms
had dairy herds.
Mills. There were 3 mills on Girard the chamberlain's estate in 1086, (fn. 230) and all three probably had a
continuous working existence until the late 19th
century. At the division of the manor in the 13th
century two mills went with Nether Court manor, (fn. 231)
and they can be identified as Aston Mill in the south
of the parish, (fn. 232) and Lower Mill at the south end of the
village. There was a bakehouse adjoining Aston Mill
in 1838, (fn. 233) and in 1918 the miller of Lower Mill was
also a baker and farmed 34 a. belonging to Lower
Mill. (fn. 234) The two mills were both said to be in good
working condition when sold with the manorial
estate in 1918. (fn. 235) Lower Mill, a stone building with
a bakehouse, was working until c. 1936, (fn. 236) but later
was incorporated into a private house. Aston Mill,
a 19th-century brick structure with an earlier
timber-frame building adjoining, continued working
until the early 1960's. (fn. 237) The third medieval mill was
part of Upper Court manor; there was a miller
among the tenants of that manor in 1298, (fn. 238) and in
1490 timber was purchased for the repair of the
mill. (fn. 239) It can be identified with Middle Mill just
south of Upper Court manor-house. By 1822 Middle
Mill had been sold away from the manorial estate; (fn. 240)
in 1838 it was owned by William Baylis, (fn. 241) and his
son Caleb was the miller in 1856. (fn. 242) Middle Mill
continued working until c. 1939. (fn. 243) In 1966 a low
ruined wall and the mill-wheel remained. A fourth
mill, Upper Mill, near the end of Overbury village,
may have been the mill sold in 1583. (fn. 244) It is not
marked as a working mill on two maps of 1824, (fn. 245) but
in 1838 it was apparently working and was owned
by the Tidmarsh family. (fn. 246) It was working in the late
19th century and until c. 1945. (fn. 247)
Industry and trade. One of the free tenants of
Upper Court in 1298 was Adam the smith, (fn. 248) and he
may have held the Redgrove in that manor from
which a rent of 10d. or 10 horseshoes was owed in
the 16th century. (fn. 249) In 1608 there were two smiths
of the same name, probably free tenants of Nether
Court. (fn. 250) In the 19th century a smithy stood at the
western corner of the central triangle of roads, (fn. 251) and
the village had a blacksmith in 1940. (fn. 252)
There were brewers at Kemerton in the late 15th
century. (fn. 253) In the early 19th century there were at
least three malt-houses in the village. (fn. 254) One had
probably been working in 1783, (fn. 255) and seems to have
gone out of use in 1822. (fn. 256) Another had been converted into cottages by 1840, (fn. 257) but a third, owned by
William Baylis, (fn. 258) was still working in 1856. (fn. 259)
In the early 19th century a branch of the Tewkesbury stocking industry was located at Kemerton in a
small factory adjoining the house called the Priory.
A letter of 1801 asked the name of the London agent
of the manufacturer of 'Kemerton stockings', (fn. 260) and
in 1821 the occupant of the Priory, William Prior,
sold two stocking-frames at Tewkesbury. (fn. 261) In 1827
Prior's possessions, including apparently much of
the factory's equipment, were sold, (fn. 262) but he was still
living at the Priory in 1838 (fn. 263) and the factory was still
employing women of the village c. 1840. (fn. 264) Silkbleaching is also associated with the Priory, (fn. 265) and
Henry Franklin, who in 1832 was a lessee from the
owner of the Priory, (fn. 266) was described as a bleacher in
1856 and 1863. (fn. 267) In the late 13th century one of the
mills in the village was being used as a fulling-mill, (fn. 268)
and a John the walker lived at Kemerton in 1327. (fn. 269)
In the mid-19th century many of the labourers'
wives in Kemerton supplemented the family income
by stitching gloves for Worcester firms. (fn. 270)
In 1608 there were 4 tailors and 2 collar-makers
in the village. (fn. 271) There was a shoemaker in 1772 (fn. 272)
and 1834, (fn. 273) and 4 in 1863. (fn. 274) In the late 18th century
a family of masons called Peart lived in the village, (fn. 275)
and there was one mason in 1863. (fn. 276) There was a
carpenter in the village c. 1800, (fn. 277) and in the mid-19th
century 3 wheelwrights and a cooper were mentioned. (fn. 278) A wheelwright was working in the village
in the late 1920's. (fn. 279) A grocer's shop was recorded in
1822. (fn. 280) In 1831 40 families were supported by trades
compared with 65 by agriculture. (fn. 281) By 1966 only
c. 12 villagers were employed on the land. About 20
worked at Dowty's and Smith's factories. (fn. 282)
Local Government.
The two manors or
parts of the manor had their separate courts from the
13th century. Records of four courts held for the
Upper Court manor in 1531–3 survive. (fn. 283) The courts
dealt with copyholds, the neglect of houses, and
agricultural offences. The court of Nether Court
manor was mentioned in 1297, and as the yearly
profits were then put at only 12d. it presumably
dealt, like the court of Upper Court, only with
matters of tenure and the organization of agriculture. (fn. 284) In 1659 a lease was granted on condition
that the lessee performed suit at the court of Nether
Court manor and paid any fines imposed by it,
which suggests that the court was still active in
matters other than tenure. (fn. 285) In the 13th century
frankpledge jurisdiction over the whole of Kemerton
was exercised by the Earls of Gloucester at their
court at Tewkesbury, (fn. 286) and Kemerton appears in the
Tewkesbury hundred court rolls for the late 15th
and early 16th centuries. (fn. 287) A constable is mentioned
at Kemerton in 1381, (fn. 288) and a tithingman was elected
in the court of Upper Court manor in 1532. (fn. 289) In
1640 the constable of Kemerton was cited to appear
before the Council. (fn. 290)
The division of the manor until the late 17th
century probably hastened the decline in the agricultural functions of the manor courts, and in 1736
the organization of agriculture was being decided at
the parish meeting; it was probably there that the
shepherd, husbandman, and hayward mentioned in
the agreement of that year were appointed. (fn. 291)
No records of parish government before 1836 are
known to have survived. At the 1540 episcopal
visitation 4 men were sworn, (fn. 292) and in 1572 there
were 3 churchwardens and one sidesman, (fn. 293) but later
there were always only 2 churchwardens. (fn. 294) Overseers are not recorded until inclosure when an
allotment for the poor was given in trust for them. (fn. 295)
In the late 18th and early 19th century Kemerton
had roughly the same rise in expenditure on the
poor as neighbouring parishes, but in 1815 an
unusually large amount was expended on law-suits. (fn. 296)
In 1835 Kemerton became part of the Tewkesbury
Union. (fn. 297) In the early 19th century the opponents of
a church-rate for rebuilding the church claimed that
some of the rector's supporters were unqualified to
vote, so there was presumably some property
qualification. (fn. 298) Although Kemerton had a parish
council under the Act of 1894, in 1899 it was stated
that no parish councillors had been elected for the
last two years and an order was made for holding a
parish meeting, presided over by the rector. (fn. 299) In
1966 the parish council usually held four meetings a
year. (fn. 300) Kemerton was then in the Evesham Rural
District.
Church.
Whereas no documentary reference to a
church at Kemerton has been found earlier than a
mid-12th century mention of demesne tithes held by
Tewkesbury Abbey, (fn. 301) part of the fabric of the church
before restoration was said to be early Norman. (fn. 302)
Kemerton church has remained a rectory from the
time of the earliest references to incumbents. (fn. 303)
The advowson passed with the lordship of the
manor, and from the early 13th century was shared
by the owners of the two parts of the manor. In 1281
the Mucegros family and Nicholas of Mitton were
said to present alternately; (fn. 304) in the 14th and 15th
centuries members of the family of Beauchamp of
Powicke and the Earls of Warwick and their heirs
took turns, (fn. 305) and in the mid-16th century, the Crown
and the Lygons. (fn. 306) The division of the advowson
caused frequent uncertainty and dispute. In 1229
the advowson was disputed by Nicholas de Fécamp
and Henry FitzGerald, (fn. 307) and two later agreements
were necessary between the 13th-century owners of
the two halves of the manor. (fn. 308) In 1313 Hawise de
Mucegros and Alice, widow of Walter Beauchamp,
were disputing the advowson, (fn. 309) and in the course
of the next two centuries two inquiries into the
right of presentation were ordered. (fn. 310) Further
uncertainties in the 16th century culminated in 1597
in a double presentation by members of the Hughes
and Lygon families. (fn. 311) In 1627 Godfrey Goodman,
Bishop of Gloucester, obtained a grant of the
patronage from the Crown, (fn. 312) and he granted it in
1637 to the Mayor and Corporation of Gloucester
as trustees of the Hospital of St. Bartholomew in
that city on condition that the corporation presented
members of the Goodman family or, failing that, the
eldest son of the mayor or senior alderman. (fn. 313) During
the next two hundred years presentations were made
by the corporation, (fn. 314) but their right to present when
a vacancy occurred in 1839 was contested by the
bishop under a provision of the Municipal Corporations Act. (fn. 315) It is perhaps also significant that the
dispute followed the incumbency of a very old and
infirm absentee member of the Goodman family. (fn. 316)
Although the bishop's right was upheld in the first
instance, (fn. 317) the dispute continued until at least 1856, (fn. 318)
and evidently a distinction was finally made between
the right of the corporation and the right of the
trustees of St. Bartholomew's, since the trustees of
the hospital presented in 1877 and 1901. (fn. 319) In 1902
the advowson was purchased from the trustees by
Mrs. J. J. Mercier, and in 1929 her son, the Revd.
J. A. B. Mercier, Rector of Kemerton, gave it to the
Society for the Propagation of the Gospel. (fn. 320)
The rectory was valued at £13 6s. 8d. in 1291, (fn. 321)
and Tewkesbury Abbey's portion of the tithes, for
which a composition had been made from at least
the early 13th century, (fn. 322) at £1 6s. 8d. In 1535 the
total value was assessed at £17 13s. (fn. 323) In 1650 its value
was put at £140, (fn. 324) but in 1712 at £130, (fn. 325) and in the
mid-18th century at £100. (fn. 326) In 1863 the living was
worth £600. (fn. 327) In the late 13th century the rector
had one plough-land of glebe. (fn. 328) In 1579 a wide
variety of produce was tithable including hemp,
hops, and fruit, and a composition was paid for milk
and garden produce. (fn. 329) In 1680 the rector collected
personal tithes on servants in the village. (fn. 330) In the
same year he challenged the parishioners' statement
of several of the tithing customs and also their claim
that he had to provide a bull and boar. He also claimed
to be entitled to a payment called 'smockpay' from
each house in the village. (fn. 331) At inclosure in 1772 the
rector was allotted 1/5 of the arable and 1/9 of the
common — 187 a. in all — for his tithes, 83 a. for his
glebe, 22 a. for the tithes of cottages in the village,
and various money rents for the tithes from certain
cottages and orchards for which compositions in land
could not be made. (fn. 332) In 1540 the rectory was being
farmed by William Cole who paid the salary of a
curate, (fn. 333) and in the late 16th century the parishioners
complained that the farmer, Christopher Modie,
had introduced by intimidation the custom of
paying mortuary fees. (fn. 334) In 1597 the rectory was
leased to Thomas Hughes and in 1612 sub-let to
Nicholas Dance, one of the lessees of Hughes's half
of the manor. (fn. 335) In 1807 the tenant of the rectory
lived at the rectory house, which was divided into
two tenements. (fn. 336) Since c. 1890, when the rector of
the day built Northwood, (fn. 337) the old rectory has been a
private house. (fn. 338) In the mid-20th century a new
rectory was built.
The rectory, which had 5 hearths in 1662, (fn. 339) was
almost entirely rebuilt in 1678 by the rector,
Nathaniel Lye. (fn. 340) It is a two-storied L-shaped
building of stone faced with roughcast, and has a
shell porch and some of the original sash-windows.
The east wing incorporates part of an earlier building.
The first known incumbent of Kemerton mentioned was Geoffrey de Erlegh in 1237, (fn. 341) and the
next was Richard de Mucegros, probably the cousin
and presentee of Robert de Mucegros. (fn. 342) Gerbert de
St. Clare was perhaps presented by Nicholas of
Mitton since he acted as one of the executors of
Nicholas's will. (fn. 343) It was probably the same Gerbert
who in 1270 was given leave of absence for study for
two years; (fn. 344) in 1313 and 1314 John King, Rector of
Kemerton, was licensed to study at an English
school. (fn. 345) In 1378 John Strech, the parson, was said
to abet malefactors. (fn. 346) Three 16th-century rectors
were pluralists. William Clinton, who was said to be
non-resident in 1563 and to have let the parsonage
became ruinous, (fn. 347) was later declared contumacious
and his living sequestrated. (fn. 348) George Swett (c.
1568–82), who held another cure in Worcestershire,
was said to neglect reading the homilies and teaching
the young. (fn. 349) Ralph Ecton, who was residing at Wick
Rissington in 1584, was stated to conform, (fn. 350) but in
the same year 'papist books' and a 'massing cake'
were found at his parsonage house at Kemerton. (fn. 351)
Bishop Goodman presented himself to the benefice
in 1627, at the same time as he obtained the patronage, on the grounds of the simony of the then incumbent, John Fownes, but Fownes successfully
prevented the bishop from taking possession, and he
seems not to have been admitted until 1631. (fn. 352) In
1650 the rector, John Hinman, was described as a
preaching minister. (fn. 353) In 1675 Nathaniel Lye was
presented to the living, which he held together with
the rectory of Cowley; (fn. 354) he was rector of Kemerton
for 62 years. (fn. 355) The six incumbents between 1738 and
1839 were all members of Bishop Goodman's family,
in accordance with the terms of his grant to
Gloucester corporation. (fn. 356) In 1839 the corporation
presented another Goodman descendant, (fn. 357) but
Thomas Thorp, Archdeacon of Bristol, was collated
by the bishop. Because of the dispute over the
advowson, Thorp did not reside until 1844. (fn. 358) Backed
by his churchwardens, he promoted the complete
rebuilding of Kemerton church in the 1840's, but his
aim aroused the opposition of some of his parishioners who, fearing a burdensome rate, wanted
only repair. In 1845 the churchwardens began the
demolition of the nave and south aisle without
obtaining a faculty. Their action, (fn. 359) and the fact that
the main opponents of the rebuilding were Charles
Tidmarsh and George Mumford of the leading
Roman Catholic and Wesleyan families of the
village, (fn. 360) aggravated the controversy. After it
seemed that a compromise had been reached, the
discovery that the north aisle and tower also needed
repair prolonged the dispute. (fn. 361)
Archdeacon Thorp, a supporter of the Oxford
Movement, established a high-church tradition at
Kemerton. He was a friend of John Keble, who is
said to have preached in the church several times,
and the choir at Kemerton is said to have been one
of the first in the country to wear surplices. (fn. 362) The
high-church tradition was continued by the archdeacon's successor as rector, J. J. Mercier, but in
1901 the trustees of St. Bartholomew's Hospital,
Gloucester, presented one of the hospital chaplains,
a low churchman, George Mallet. His views were
disliked by many of the parishioners, and that was
one of the reasons that caused Mrs. J. J. Mercier, the
wife of the previous rector, to buy the advowson in
1902. On Mallet's death in the same year, Mrs.
Mercier's son, the Revd. J. A. B. Mercier, became
rector and held the living for the next 30 years. (fn. 363)
The church of ST. NICHOLAS comprises aisled
nave, chancel, south porch, and west tower. It was
almost entirely rebuilt in the 1840's in the Decorated
style by R. C. Carpenter. (fn. 364) The rebuilt church
follows the basic plan of the original building but is
higher and slightly larger. The south aisle is said to
have been widened 8 ft. at rebuilding, (fn. 365) and the
number of sittings was increased from 300 to 374. (fn. 366)
A description of the original church made just
before the rebuilding shows that it dated from
various periods. (fn. 367) The north arcade was early
Norman, the south arcade and the tower arch 14th
century. The windows on the south were of the 13th
and 14th centuries (fn. 368) with a 15th-century window at
the west. The south porch added in the 15th or
early 16th century had fan-vaulting. Above the
porch was a small chamber used for vestry meetings
and the Sunday school. (fn. 369) The piscina, of which a
fragment survives, was of the 14th century. (fn. 370) A small
chapel formerly stood at the east end of the north
aisle over the vault of the Parsons family. There was
a staircase turret at the north-east angle of the
tower. (fn. 371) The two lower stages of the tower, which
was not rebuilt, are of the 12th or early 13th century;
in the 15th or 16th century buttresses and an upper
stage with embattled parapet and angle pinnacles
were added.
The church was said to be in a state of decay in
1572, (fn. 372) but in 1807 to be in very good repair. (fn. 373) At the
time of the rebuilding, however, it was said to be
ruinous, (fn. 374) and some of the mullions of the windows
had been destroyed. (fn. 375) The rebuilding was carried out
in a piecemeal fashion because of the opposition
mentioned above. At the time of the reconsecration
of the church in 1847 the nave, south aisle, and
chancel had been completely rebuilt. (fn. 376) The cost,
over £4,000, was said by the rector to have been
swollen by legal expenses resulting from his dispute
with the parishioners. (fn. 377) About 1/10 of the cost came
from the church-rate, the rest from other sources
including donations by friends of the rector, who
paid for the rebuilding of the chancel. (fn. 378) The
rebuilding of the north aisle was completed in 1849
and paid for by the Hopton family. (fn. 379) A plan to pull
down the tower and rebuild it with a spire, which it
was hoped would overtop that of Bredon church,
was never carried out, and the existing tower was
restored in 1879. (fn. 380)
Six new bells were cast by Rudhall in 1754; one
was replaced in 1844. (fn. 381) The original plate had
vanished by the early 19th century, (fn. 382) and was
replaced by a new set dated 1843, one of the earliest
manufactured under a scheme of the Cambridge
Camden Society. (fn. 383) The registers are complete from
1572 except for the period 1589–95. (fn. 384) In the late 17th
century the church possessed 8 a. granted for its
upkeep, (fn. 385) and the 9½ a. allotted for the 8 a. at
inclosure (fn. 386) were sold in 1885 and the money
invested. (fn. 387)
Roman Catholicism.
In both 1603 (fn. 388) and
1676 (fn. 389) it was reported that there were no recusants
at Kemerton, and in the early 18th century only 2
reputed papists were recorded. (fn. 390) St. Benet's Roman
Catholic church was built in 1843. (fn. 391) The cost of the
church and a priest's house was met by subscription
among local Roman Catholic families, which
included the Eystons, of whom Ferdinand Eyston
signed the certificate for the new church, (fn. 392) and the
Tidmarshes, important landowners in Kemerton,
who gave the land on which the church was built. (fn. 393)
The morning congregation in 1851 was said to
number 140. (fn. 394) The priest who was appointed in
1844 remained for 51 years and his successor
resigned in 1944 after a ministry of almost the same
length. The church, designed by a partner of
Weightman & Hadfield of Sheffield, (fn. 395) is a stone
building in the Gothic style consisting of nave,
chancel, and porch, with a bellcot over the east end
of the nave. The priest's house is attached to the
church and a school building stands on the northwest.
Protestant Nonconformity.
There
was a community of 9 Presbyterian dissenters at
Kemerton in the early 18th century. (fn. 396) In 1800 the
house of an apothecary in Wing Lane was being used
by a Quaker meeting. (fn. 397) During the first twenty years
of the 19th century a community of Wesleyan
Methodists held meetings in private houses, including that of Thomas Mumford. (fn. 398) The Mumfords,
who had lived at Kemerton since the 16th century,
from the late 18th to the mid-19th century were the
largest landowners in Kemerton after the rector and
lord of the manor, (fn. 399) and they retained the leadership
of the Methodist community. In 1819 a Wesleyan
chapel was built on a plot adjacent to the house of
William Mumford, (fn. 400) and presumably at his expense, (fn. 401)
and in 1851 George Mumford was the local
Methodist preacher and class leader. (fn. 402) The chapel,
the original structure of 1819, is a small stone
building with a tiled roof; the schoolroom adjoining
is of brick. In 1851 it served an evening congregation of 83, (fn. 403) and by that date had its separate burial
ground. (fn. 404) Since 1836 the chapel has been served by a
minister from Tewkesbury. (fn. 405)
Schools.
In 1818 there were two schools in the
parish: a Sunday school on the National plan,
supported by the rector and with an attendance of
40 children, and a dame school attended by 12
children. (fn. 406) It was stated at the time that more schools
were needed, and by 1833 there were four schools
besides the Sunday school, teaching a total of 99
children. All were supported partly by private
charity and partly by payments from the parents. (fn. 407)
By the late 1840's the Sunday school had been
expanded to be a day school also and was supported
by a small endowment of land, school pence, and a
subscription from the Hopton family, members of
which visited the school daily. A new building was
erected in 1847, (fn. 408) and an infants' department was
started in 1850 when it was held in a near-by
cottage. (fn. 409) The school was run by the local clergy
and the rector met the deficiency in costs. The
average attendance in 1847 was 71, (fn. 410) and 65 at the
beginning of the next century. (fn. 411) In 1965, when
attendance was down to 15, the school was closed
and the children transferred to Overbury school. (fn. 412)
A Roman Catholic school was built near the chapel
in 1851 and supported by pence and voluntary
contributions. In 1857 it taught children from the
surrounding parishes, (fn. 413) and in 1906–7 had an
average attendance of 49, (fn. 414) but the school was closed
in 1943 when only 2 children were attending. (fn. 415) The
Wesleyans also had a day school, started in 1843 in a
room built on to the Wesleyan chapel, and with an
income from school pence. It had an attendance of
c. 26 children in 1864, (fn. 416) but later record of the
school has not been found.
John Wright by deed of 1635 gave
a rent-charge of 10s. for bread. (fn. 418) The charity was
not recorded in 1683, when there was a different
rent-charge of 6s. 8d. for the poor and the rent of ½ a.
given by Richard Buston. (fn. 419) Charles Parsons by will
dated 1735 gave a rent-charge of £1 for bread. (fn. 420)
Only Buston's and Wright's charities were recorded
in 1828. (fn. 421) In 1864 the 6s. 8d. rent-charge was thought
to be Wright's; it had earlier been distributed in
bread in the church, but the distribution then took
place elsewhere, in accordance with the wishes of
George Mumford, a Wesleyan (fn. 422) and the owner of the
land charged. In the late 19th century Wright's
charity was again identified as the 10s. rent-charge,
but in 1902 it was said to be the £1 rent-charge that
was in fact Parsons's charity, of which knowledge
was denied. By 1931 Wright's charity was lost, (fn. 423) and
nothing is recorded of the 6s. 8d. rent-charge after
1918. (fn. 424) In 1930 Buston's charity, called the Poor's
Piece and yielding £1 5s. from stock, and Parsons's
charity were together distributed in cash doles of 5s.
A charity founded by the rector Thomas Thorp
(d. 1879) (fn. 425) then produced £5 15s., distributed in cash
to 10 people over 70, from £230 stock, and a charity
founded by Caleb Baylis by will dated 1884 produced £2 10s., distributed in bread, from £100
stock. (fn. 426) The Baylis charity was distributed in the
form of vouchers in 1966. (fn. 427)