WALTON CARDIFF
Walton Cardiff is a small rural parish which
adjoins Tewkesbury on the south-east. It was in fact
part of Tewkesbury parish until the 17th century,
when the inhabitants of Walton struggled for and
won parochial independence. (fn. 1) The parish was 649 a.
in area (fn. 2) and roughly square in shape, bounded on
the west by the River Swilgate and on most of the
north by the Tirle brook. (fn. 3) In 1935 the part of the
parish north of the Tirle brook, between the stream
and the main road running east from Tewkesbury,
was transferred to Tewkesbury, reducing Walton
by 44 a. (fn. 4) The account printed here relates to the
whole of the former area of the parish.
The land of the parish is flat and low, lying between the 30-ft. and 60-ft. contours. It is drained
by the Swilgate and the Tirle brook, and also by the
Moor brook, (fn. 5) running north across the middle of
the parish, and its tributary, the Dolmead brook, (fn. 6)
which had partly stopped flowing by the 20th
century. The soil is mostly the clay of the Lower
Lias, but a wide strip of alluvium covers the northwest corner of the parish. (fn. 7) Although a limestone bed
beneath the parish yields chalybeate waters, (fn. 8) most
references to Walton Spa (fn. 9) apparently belong to the
spa across the boundary in Ashchurch. (fn. 10)
The eastern and southern parts of the parish were
mainly open-field land until the 16th century, and
were thereafter permanent grass-land. (fn. 11) In the
Middle Ages there was an extensive wood, called
Waltons Wood, in the western part of the parish in
the angle between the Swilgate and the Tirle
brook. (fn. 12) In 1315 it covered 40 a. and was valued at
6d. an acre. (fn. 13) In 1369 it was a wood of great timber
trees, of no regular annual value because the
denseness of the oaks made it useless for pasture. (fn. 14)
The wood was divided in two, with the manor, in
1419, (fn. 15) and one of the two parts comprised 30 a. in
1544, (fn. 16) when there was a woodward to look after it. (fn. 17)
An estate of 30 a. pasture and 30 a. wood changed
hands in 1594, (fn. 18) but no later reference to extensive
woodland in the parish has been found.

Walton Cardiff village
The village of Walton Cardiff lies near the centre
of the parish, and is a small, relatively compact
group of farm-houses and cottages. The name
Walton suggests a farmstead within an embankment, (fn. 19) and the allusion is likely to be to the enclosure
round the large site of the manor-house at the
southern end of the village. The site was described
in 1419, and remained partly visible as earthworks
in 1965. In 1419 it was agreed that one road in the
village need no longer be maintained, and that
another should be made. (fn. 20) The surviving arrangement of roads indicates that the former village street
was replaced at some time by one further west.
Except for the manor-house and one cottage, the
houses of the village are all of brick and were built
in the 18th century and later. At the north end of the
village is a small, plain timber-framed cottage, much
altered and with a roof of corrugated iron.
A minor road runs north from the village across
the Tirle brook to the main road, where there is an
early 19th-century turnpike cottage, one of the few
isolated buildings of the parish. The lane from the
village to Waltons Wood crossed the Moor brook
by Wood Bridge, recorded in 1490 and 1545, and
either the minor road to Fiddington or that to
Tredington crossed the Dolmead brook by Broad
Bridge. (fn. 21) The road to Tredington was known as the
Ridgeway, (fn. 22) and it was presumably the bridge
carrying it across the Moor brook that was called
Elmore Bridge in 1553. (fn. 23)
In 1327 the population included 12 people who
were assessed for tax on their movable goods, (fn. 24) and
in 1419 the number of tenants and bondmen named,
22 or 23 in all, (fn. 25) suggests a fairly large population;
so also does the figure of 19 able-bodied males in
1608. (fn. 26) In 1672 ten households were assessed for
hearth-tax, (fn. 27) and in the early 18th century there
were said to be 14 houses and 56 inhabitants. (fn. 28)
Soon afterwards the population may have fallen,
for from 1735 it was usually stated to be 30, comprised in 5 or 6 families. (fn. 29) By 1801, however, there
were 62 inhabitants in 11 families. During the 19th
century the population varied between 50 and 70;
it fell to 43 in 1911 and rose to 57 in 1961. (fn. 30)
Manors and Other Estates.
Before the
Conquest Walton formed part of Brictric's manor
of Tewkesbury, and was thus in the king's hands in
1086. Three hides in Walton were held by minor
tenants, (fn. 31) and another three which had been held by
a radknight were held by one Ralph, perhaps the
Ralph who appears to have been the Crown's officer
in charge of the Tewkesbury estate. (fn. 32) Later in the
Middle Ages the land of the parish comprised the
manor called successively WALTON CARDIFF
and WALTON BASSET after the owners who
belonged to the families of Cardiff and Basset. Like
other parts of Brictric's Tewkesbury estate, Walton
remained part of the honor of Gloucester: in 1166
it was held by William of Cardiff as 1 knight's fee
of William, Earl of Gloucester, (fn. 33) and was held of
Gilbert de Clare, Earl of Gloucester, at his death in
1314. (fn. 34) In 1331 it was held of William la Zouche and
his wife Eleanor, one of the sisters and coheirs of
Gilbert de Clare, (fn. 35) but in 1349 it was said to have
been assigned to Hugh de Audley and his wife
Margaret, another of the sisters and coheirs. (fn. 36)
Afterwards the descendants of Hugh and Margaret,
through their daughter Margaret who married
Ralph de Stafford, Earl of Stafford, (fn. 37) were regularly
recorded as the overlords of Walton. (fn. 38)
The William of Cardiff who held Walton in 1166
was apparently succeeded by others of the same
surname, and Hamo de Valognes, who was in
possession of Walton in 1194 and 1195, had only a
temporary interest, (fn. 39) perhaps during wardship.
Shortly before or shortly afterwards Robert of
Cardiff gave to Tewkesbury Abbey tithes in Walton
which his father had promised to give. Robert was
succeeded by his son William of Cardiff before 1248,
when William and the abbey were disputing a right
of way in Walton. (fn. 40) In 1263 William of Cardiff,
perhaps another of the same name, was holding ½
knight's fee in Walton; (fn. 41) by 1296 the heir of William
of Cardiff had 1½ fee there. (fn. 42) Another William of
Cardiff held what was reckoned to be ¼ knight's fee
in Walton in 1303, (fn. 43) and died in 1308 or 1309. He
was succeeded by his son Paulinus, (fn. 44) who during
his father's lifetime had held land of the de Clares in
Glamorgan. (fn. 45) Paulinus died in 1315 holding Walton
as ¼ knight's fee, and was succeeded by his son
William, aged 16. (fn. 46) In 1325 William of Cardiff
granted Walton manor to Hugh le Despenser the
younger, lord of Tewkesbury, (fn. 47) in exchange for the
manor of Rockhampton, (fn. 48) but two years later, when
Walton along with other lands of the Despensers
was in the king's hand, (fn. 49) Hugh was said to have
taken the manor from William in 1322. (fn. 50) William
regained possession of the manor; at his death in
1331 he was holding it as 1½ knight's fee, and was
succeeded by his daughter Joan. (fn. 51)
Joan married John of Wincot and died in 1349,
when her heirs were said to be her daughters,
Margaret, aged 11, Elizabeth, aged 9, and Eleanor,
aged 7. (fn. 52) When the daughter Elizabeth died in the
same year the heirs to her lands in Worcestershire
were at first said to be her sisters Margaret, aged 8,
and Juette, aged 5, but a second return named her
mother's uncle, Edward of Cardiff, as her heir. (fn. 53) In
1363 a group of people including Robert Underhill
and his wife Juette settled both the Worcestershire
lands and Walton manor on Edward of Cardiff and
his wife Joan; (fn. 54) Edward died in 1369, holding
Walton jointly with Joan, and his heir was his son
Paul or Paulinus. (fn. 55) It seems, however, that the son
did not survive long and that the reversionary
interest passed to Margaret and Juette, the surviving
daughters of Joan of Wincot, or their representatives:
in 1379 Robert Underhill and his wife Juette
conveyed to a group of trustees the reversion of half
Walton Cardiff manor, then held by Henry Greyndour and his wife Joan for the life of Joan, (fn. 56) who was
presumably the widow of Edward of Cardiff. In
1382 Henry Greyndour and Joan conveyed their
rights to three people who included one of the
trustees of 1379 in return for an annuity payable
to Joan. (fn. 57) The trustees granted the half-share of the
manor to Tewkesbury Abbey in 1383, (fn. 58) and in 1386
the abbey kitchener accounted for pigs, capons, and
fowls from Walton. (fn. 59)
The settlement of 1363 concerned John Baudrip
and his wife Elizabeth; (fn. 60) Elizabeth is thought to have
been identical with Juette's sister Margaret, and her
grandson John Basset, who at his death in 1396 left
as his heir his brother Thomas, (fn. 61) may have held the
other half of the manor. Thomas Basset and his wife
Elizabeth held half Walton manor in 1419, when
they agreed a partition with Tewkesbury Abbey. (fn. 62)
In 1482 and 1491 another John Basset held the
Basset estate in Walton, (fn. 63) Elizabeth Basset held it in
dower in 1505 and 1523, (fn. 64) and William Basset held
it from 1528. (fn. 65) William Basset sold his estate in
Walton to James Gunter in 1545, and in 1553
Gunter sold it to Thomas Berrow and his wife
Margaret. (fn. 66) The Berrows were licensed in 1559 to
grant the estate to their son John Berrow, (fn. 67) who in
1562 settled the estate in trust for himself and his
wife Maud. (fn. 68)
John Berrow successfully resisted a claim by the
Exchequer for arrears of rent: (fn. 69) it was said that Sir
Thomas Heneage and William Willoughby, Lord
Willoughby, who in 1548 had granted their estate in
Walton to the Crown, (fn. 70) had bought half of the
manor from James Gunter, (fn. 71) but in fact their interest
in Walton appears to have been limited to a farm
of the estate. (fn. 72) In 1578 Berrow sold the larger part
of his estate to the occupier, Nicholas Smithsend. (fn. 73)
Nicholas was the son of Richard and grandson of
Nicholas Smithsend, who was constable of Walton
in 1505, (fn. 74) received manumission from the Abbot of
Tewkesbury in 1528, (fn. 75) and held a copyhold estate
from William Basset in 1530. (fn. 76) John Smithsend had
held a house and 6 a. in Walton as a customary
tenant of Tewkesbury Abbey in 1419. (fn. 77)
The estate remained in the Smithsend family until
1832, and was enlarged in the 16th and 17th
centuries. (fn. 78) The Nicholas Smithsend who had
bought it in 1578 died in 1614 and was succeeded by
his son, another Nicholas, who died in 1627. (fn. 79) The
estate passed from father to son: Nicholas Smithsend, who disclaimed arms in 1683, (fn. 80) died in 1697,
his son Nicholas in 1727; the next Nicholas died in
1746 and was succeeded by Nicholas Smithsend, of
Worcester, who died in 1790. (fn. 81) The last Nicholas
was succeeded by his widow, Mary, (fn. 82) and four
daughters of whom the survivor, Elizabeth, owned
the estate in 1826. (fn. 83) Elizabeth, who died in 1833, by
her will gave it in trust for a cousin, Robert Phelps, (fn. 84)
subject to the life interest of Nicholas Smithsend; (fn. 85)
Nicholas may have been connected with Edward
Smithsend, of London, who after 1790 claimed the
estate as heir male under an entail made by the
Nicholas who died in 1627. (fn. 86)
In 1841 the Walton Cardiff estate of 205 a. was
put up for sale by order of the mortgagees, (fn. 87) and
was bought by Edward Dangerfield. Dangerfield sold
it in 1853 to Mary Anne Capper (d. 1861). The
estate was sold in 1869 to John Edward Hyett (d.
1870), who was succeeded by his widow Anne. (fn. 88) In
1889 and 1906 the estate, known as Manor Farm,
belonged to the trustees of W. Kettlewell. N. P.
Milne owned it in 1914 and was described as lord of
the manor, as in 1923. In 1923 the house, then called
the manor-house and formerly Manor Farm, was
occupied by William Shakespeare, who was afterwards described as lord of the manor. (fn. 89) In 1948
Shakespeare sold the house to Mr. E. Furley, the
owner and occupier in 1965. (fn. 90)
The house retains part of a 17th-century timberframed building, which was cased in brick in the
early 18th century. In the 19th century the western
end was rebuilt and enlarged with a stuccoed front,
and the south front was given a brick porch with the
arms of, apparently, S. P. Peacock, the occupier in
1856. (fn. 91) In 1875, when it was up for sale, the house
was described as a substantial family residence,
being the old manor-house modernized. (fn. 92) It is
presumably to be identified with the house with 5
hearths, the largest in the village, occupied by
Nicholas Smithsend in 1662, (fn. 93) and it may incorporate
some of the fabric of that house.
The site of the manor recorded in 1419 comprised
an enclosure of 10 a. immediately west of the modern
manor-house. At the partition the larger, southwestern part was allotted to the Bassets and contained a hall, chambers, kitchen, and byre; the
abbey's part contained a granary and byre. (fn. 94) The
south-western part in 1965 included an apparently
moated area within which were the church and the
grass-covered remains of what is likely to have been
the hall. (fn. 95)
The half of the manor belonging to Tewkesbury
Abbey was granted by the Crown to William Read in
1553. (fn. 96) Read died holding half the manor in 1558,
and his son and heir Giles, (fn. 97) described as lord of the
manor in 1608, (fn. 98) died likewise in 1611. By his will
Giles Read gave his chief house and a farm in
Walton to one of his younger sons, Edward, and his
other lands there to another younger son, Fulk. The
eldest son, John, (fn. 99) assigned an estate in Walton to
Fulk in 1611, in accordance with the will. (fn. 100) Fulk
Read, by his will dated 1658, gave his lands in
Walton and elsewhere in trust for the children of his
sister Elizabeth, wife of Richard Brent, and by an
agreement of 1661 the Walton lands were assigned
to three of the sons and two of the daughters of
Elizabeth. (fn. 101) Fulk Read's estate has not been traced
afterwards, and is likely to have been divided. (fn. 102) It
may have included the land owned by Mrs. James
in 1824, which was farmed from Walton Farm. (fn. 103)
In 1927 Mr. R. A. Morgan bought Walton Farm,
with c. 150 a., which in 1965 belonged to his son,
Mr. A. J. Morgan. (fn. 104)
Edward Read sold his estate of 75 a. in Walton to
Sir Baptist Hicks in 1614. (fn. 105) It later passed with
Hicks's estate in Tewkesbury, (fn. 106) and was enlarged: it
included 112 a. in Walton in 1632, (fn. 107) was valued at 2/5
the total for Walton c. 1640, (fn. 108) and amounted to 186 a.
in 1824 when Lord Essex sold it. (fn. 109) It appears then
to have been divided. The house belonging to the
estate stood opposite the church, west of Manor
Farm, and was pulled down soon after the sale of
1824. (fn. 110)
The tithes of Walton, which had belonged to
Tewkesbury Abbey and were accounted part of
Tewkesbury rectory, (fn. 111) were divided among various
owners after the Dissolution. Fulk Read gave his
share of the tithes as an endowment for the church
in 1658, (fn. 112) and some tithes belonged to the owners of
the land from which they arose. When the tithes
were commuted in 1842 there were three other
tithe-owners, who were awarded rent-charges of
£51 10s. 6d., £26, and £2 18s. (fn. 113)
Economic History.
In the early 14th century
nearly half the area of Walton belonged to the lord
of the manor's demesne, which comprised 240 a. of
arable land, 30 a. of meadow, and 40 a. of woodland. (fn. 114) The proportions were mostly the same in
the early 15th century, although the acreage of
demesne meadow was much larger; (fn. 115) the demesne
lands may already have been let to tenants by then.
In the 14th century there were both bond and free
tenants, the bond tenants producing the higher total
of rents; (fn. 116) the tax-list of 1327 indicates a fairly
uniform level of prosperity among the eleven tenants
assessed. (fn. 117) The agreement of 1419 for the partition
of the manor did not specify any free tenants, but the
land of the other tenants did not account for more
than a quarter of the whole area of Walton, while the
land of the demesne accounted for about half. There
were 12 customary tenants, one who held either by
indenture or by copy of court roll, one tenant at will,
and 9 bondmen. (fn. 118) The existence of bondmen was
recorded up to 1528, when Nicholas Smithsend
received his manumission. (fn. 119)
In 1540 there were 10 tenants of Tewkesbury
Abbey's half of the manor, all holding at least some
land as customary copyhold; (fn. 120) the Bassets' half of
the manor in 1546 was held by four tenants, (fn. 121) and at
that period the demesne of both halves was apparently let to tenants. On the Bassets' half copyholds
were sometimes granted in reversion, (fn. 122) but the
abbey's successor would not acknowledge that this
could be done. (fn. 123) A widow had the right to hold by
freebench so long as she remained chaste. (fn. 124) The
typical holding was one of a house and c. 25 a., (fn. 125)
25 a. being the average size of a yardland. (fn. 126) The
copyholders of the Bassets' half of the manor bought
their freeholds in 1578; (fn. 127) those of the abbey's half
may have become freeholders or yearly tenants about
the same time, but anyhow the traditional structure
of the manor was broken in 1590 when the major
landholders made a series of exchanges for the
purpose of consolidating their lands. (fn. 128)
Before 1590 the arable land of Walton had lain
scattered in open fields. In 1419 the arable of the
demesne lay in 17 different furlongs, (fn. 129) and pieces of
open-field land were usually identified only by the
furlongs in which they lay. The furlongs were,
however, grouped into fields which were specified
in a mid-16th century survey: to the east and northeast of the village was Tirle field, to the south-east
was Elm field, to the south was Lyde field, and to
the south-west was Wood field. Tirle field was
divided into north and south parts, Wood field into
east and west, (fn. 130) so that there were six main parts of
the open fields. The division may correspond with a
three-course rotation of crops, suggested by an
undated terrier recording open-field land divided
nearly equally between the furze field, the barley
field, and the wheat field. The terrier, which records
a much greater amount of inclosed than of uninclosed land, (fn. 131) appears to have been made after the
exchanges of 1590, and later references to yardlands (fn. 132)
also suggest that the consolidation effected by the
exchanges was not comprehensive. No evidence has
been found, however, that open-field land survived
after the mid-17th century. The small size of the
ridges in the open fields, which were often as small
as ¼ a., (fn. 133) and the suitability of the flat and wellwatered land for meadow and pasture provided
sufficient stimulus for inclosure; before inclosure
the proportion of meadow had been fairly high, and
the tenants' common of pasture had amounted to
20 sheep and 10 beasts for each yardland. (fn. 134) In the
early 18th century the parish was said to consist of
rich meadow and pasture, (fn. 135) and in the early 19th
was mainly in pasture. (fn. 136) In the 19th century the
arable was much less extensive than the grass-land, (fn. 137)
and by 1901 only 89 a. were arable. (fn. 138) In the early
20th century the decline of arable continued, (fn. 139) and
there was none in 1933. (fn. 140) In 1965, however, nearly
half the land was arable, and the farms raised corn,
dairy-cattle, sheep, and pigs.
Four estates accounted for ¾ of the total value of
the lands in Walton c. 1640, (fn. 141) and in 1775 7/8 of the
land-tax was paid on 4 holdings. (fn. 142) In 1831 there were
4 agricultural occupiers, each of them employing
labour. (fn. 143) There were four farms up to the late 19th
century, but for most of the early 20th Walton
Cardiff has been divided mainly between three
farms. (fn. 144)
Agriculture has been almost the only economic
activity of Walton. A windmill that produced 6s. 8d.
rent for the lord of the manor in 1315 (fn. 145) is not otherwise recorded, though it gave a name to the mill
acre in 1419 (fn. 146) and to Windmill Hurst furlong in
1590. (fn. 147) In 1608 two weavers were living in Walton, (fn. 148)
but in the early 19th century no men were employed
there other than in agriculture. (fn. 149) In the early 20th
century a coal-merchant had premises in the village. (fn. 150)
Walton remained a small agricultural community
in 1965, although the housing estate on the main
road at Newtown was only ¼ mile from the village.
Local Government.
Draft rolls of the court
held for the abbey's half of the manor survive for the
years 1545–6, (fn. 151) and there is a transcript of a court of
survey held in 1553 after that half had been granted
to William Read. (fn. 152) The only known records of a
court for the other half are copies of court roll of
1530 and 1565. (fn. 153) Neither court is likely to have
survived the agricultural and tenurial changes,
described above, of the late 16th century.
Walton Cardiff achieved the status of a separate
parish in the 17th century. Earlier, it was a hamlet
within Tewkesbury parish, (fn. 154) and the appointment of
constables or tithingmen for it at the hundred court
in the early 16th century (fn. 155) made it in no way different
in status from the hamlets that remained part of
Tewkesbury parish. (fn. 156) From 1647, however, the
inhabitants of Walton refused to pay rates to
Tewkesbury, and it was suggested that the building
of Walton church in 1658 and the acquisition of
rights of burial at Ashchurch resulted from an
unwillingness to share in the parochial burdens of
Tewkesbury. (fn. 157) It may be significant that Fulk Read,
who built the church, represented the inhabitants of
Walton in an agreement with the bailiffs and
burgesses of Tewkesbury in 1651 which temporarily
settled the dispute about whether Walton was
rateable to Tewkesbury. For 11 years, without
prejudice to legal action thereafter, the inhabitants of
Walton were to maintain their own poor and not pay
rates to Tewkesbury, and the officers of Tewkesbury
and Fulk Read and Nicholas Smithsend were to be
reimbursed by a levy on Walton for what they had
spent on the poor there in the preceding year. (fn. 158)
From 1678 there were repeated attempts to make
Walton rateable to Tewkesbury, but they were
abandoned in 1683. (fn. 159)
Afterwards Walton's parochial officers were one
churchwarden or chapelwarden and one overseer:
no more than one of each signed the rate-assessments
of 1675, 1699, and 1706, (fn. 160) the terriers of 1807 and
1828, (fn. 161) the overseer's accounts from 1826, (fn. 162) and the
petition for a faculty of 1866. (fn. 163) The parish became
part of the Tewkesbury Poor Law Union in 1835, (fn. 164)
and was transferred to the Cheltenham Rural
District in 1935. (fn. 165)
Church.
There was a chapel of Walton Cardiff
by 1249, when the chantry belonging to it was
disputed between Tewkesbury Abbey and William
of Cardiff. (fn. 166) When the abbey and Thomas and
Elizabeth Basset partitioned the manor in 1419, it
was agreed that the chapel, which lay in the Bassets'
part of the manor-house precinct, on the south side
of the road, should be in common. (fn. 167) The medieval
chapel was not endowed, and no later evidence of it
has been found. In 1658 Fulk Read built a new
chapel of ease, (fn. 168) and gave the tithes that he owned
in Walton to Richard Wilkes, clerk, for his life and
afterwards to the minister who should from time to
time be appointed to officiate in Walton chapel by
the Warden and Fellows of All Souls', Oxford. (fn. 169)
In the late 17th century the inhabitants of Walton
were afforded burial rights at Ashchurch, (fn. 170) and
thereby became independent of Tewkesbury in
ecclesiastical as in civil affairs. The living came to
be regarded as a perpetual curacy, and the patronage
passed from All Souls' to the Bishop of Gloucester in
the 1890's. (fn. 171) In 1928 the living was merged with the
vicarage of Tewkesbury, (fn. 172) by whose successive incumbents it had been held since 1847. (fn. 173)
The living was valued at £17 10s. a year, with no
house, in 1743, (fn. 174) and the income came presumably
from offerings and the curate's share of the tithes.
In 1753 and 1801 Queen Anne's Bounty augmented
the living with capital sums of £200, (fn. 175) and in 1851
the income comprised £18 a year from land and
£48 from tithes, (fn. 176) commuted in 1842. (fn. 177) In 1895
Queen Anne's Bounty gave £400 to match £384
raised by subscription to augment the living. (fn. 178)
Because of the poorness of the living Walton got only
a small share of the attention of its incumbents. The
first, Richard Wilkes, was also master of the grammar
school in Tewkesbury; many of his successors
employed stipendiary curates to officiate at Walton,
and the stipendiary curates usually lived in Tewkesbury and had other churches in their care. (fn. 179) The
last perpetual curate who was not also Vicar of
Tewkesbury was William Prosser, master of the
grammar school there, who also had two other
ecclesiastical livings near-by; (fn. 180) in his early years he
did duty at Walton, but afterwards employed
curates to serve Walton along with other churches. (fn. 181)
The church had services once a month in 1743, (fn. 182)
once a fortnight in 1750, (fn. 183) and once a week in 1825 (fn. 184)
and 1851. (fn. 185) Monthly services were held up to 1963, (fn. 186)
when the church was closed.
The church of ST. JAMES, (fn. 187) stands in a meadow
apparently on or near the site of the medieval chapel.
There is no burial ground, and the fence round the
church, evidently not put up until 1892, (fn. 188) is within
a few feet of the walls. The church built in 1658,
described in the early 18th century as small, like a
chapel, with a little western turret, (fn. 189) may have
incorporated some of the medieval fabric, for in 1865
it was thought to have been built in the early 14th
century. (fn. 190) It was subject to flooding, (fn. 191) and, although
the interior had recently been entirely repaired, (fn. 192)
by 1863 it was so dilapidated that the roof and some
of the walls collapsed. Services continued in a house
in the village, and in 1869 a new church was built
on the same site to designs by John Middleton (fn. 193) as a
Gothic building of brick entirely faced with stone
on the outside and rendered on the inside, with a
tiled roof, and comprising small apsidal chancel,
nave, and bellcot. A cusped opening over a pillar
piscina may survive from the medieval chapel. In
1908 and 1909 Miss Jessie Steward of Northway
gave an oak pulpit and reredos, richly carved by
herself. (fn. 194) Until c. 1963 the church had the Elliott
organ on loan from Tewkesbury Abbey. (fn. 195) The
bellcot contains one blank bell. (fn. 196) There is a chalice
of 1699, a paten-cover of the same date, and a paten
of 1720, (fn. 197) which in 1965 were kept at Tewkesbury. (fn. 198)
The registers begin in 1677 for baptisms and 1697 for
marriages. (fn. 199)
Nonconformity.
Between 1735 and 1750
Walton contained a family of six Baptists, (fn. 200) but no
record has been found of a meeting there. (fn. 201)
School.
No school has been recorded in the
parish; in the 19th and 20th centuries the children
went to school in Tewkesbury. (fn. 202)
Charity.
By her will proved 1833 Elizabeth
Smithsend gave £50 to be invested in stock, the
income to be spent on blankets for the poor. (fn. 203) In
1856 the income was £1 13s., distributed in
blankets. (fn. 204) Up to c. 1950 the income was distributed
in cash, but thereafter, for want of suitable recipients,
was allowed to accumulate. (fn. 205)