CALDECOTE
Caldecote lies 6 miles west of Cambridge. In shape
the parish is a long, narrow rectangle, containing
1,007 a., (fn. 1) of which 59 a. at its north-western corner
were transferred from Bourn in 1949. (fn. 2) It may have
originated as a hamlet of Bourn, upon which it was
ecclesiastically dependent in the 12th century. The
parish is bounded on the north by the road from
St. Neots to Cambridge and on the south by the
Bourn brook. A tributary of the Bourn brook
running in a depression called Deep Dean forms
part of the western boundary and Hardwick wood
marks part of the eastern boundary. The land rises
fairly sharply from 100 ft. in the south near the
Bourn brook to 175 ft. and then gently to 225 ft.
in the north of the parish, which is flatter. (fn. 3) The
parish lies mainly on the gault, and has a heavy clay
soil. (fn. 4)
Until it was inclosed in 1854, Caldecote was
approached from the south by Strympole way, the
road from Kingston and Toft which ran northwards for over half the length of the parish into the
common in the north. (fn. 5) A number of paths and
tracks led eastwards and westwards from Strympole
way. Most of them were used for access to the
common fields, but Caldecote was linked with
Cambridge by Cambridge way which ran eastwards
to meet the track later called Port way in Hardwick
and Comberton. Further south, opposite the Fox
inn, Cambridge Lane ran eastwards to the boundary
of Caldecote with Toft before dividing into two
branches, one leading eastwards across Toft and the
other turning north to form the boundary beside
Hardwick wood before joining Cambridge way.
On the west St. Ives way ran north-westwards across
Bourn parish. Caldecote was linked to Bourn
village by a more southerly track called Bourn way. (fn. 6)
When Caldecote was inclosed in 1854, (fn. 7) St. Ives way
and Cambridge way became bridle ways, and Bourn
way a footpath. Strympole way was extended as
Broad way to join the road from St. Neots to Cambridge which formed the northern boundary of the
parish. Until the end of the 19th century, however,
Broad way was rarely used and within living
memory it was a grass-grown track. (fn. 8) With the
building of the Highfields estate access from the
north became equally important with that from the
south. A network of roads serving the estate grew
up in the north-west part of the parish (fn. 9) and the
other lateral roads in the south decayed until in
1962 they were all overgrown, rutted tracks used
mainly for access to fields.
The former extent of the village was indicated
before 1854 by the existence of old inclosures
stretching along each side of Strympole way, which
served as a village street. They extended northwards from the southern boundary for more than
half the length of the parish. The southern group
was separated by a stretch of open-field arable from
the middle group. There was a further group to
the north around Highfields. (fn. 10) Most of the old
inclosures had contained inhabited houses, and
probably dated from the 13th and 14th centuries
or earlier. As the population declined the buildings
decayed and the closes came to be used as groves
or pasture. (fn. 11) By 1851 the shrunken village was
concentrated about ½ mile north of the church,
which lay near the southern boundary. (fn. 12) The focus
of the concentration was the Fox inn, which was
closed in 1960. (fn. 13) The large farm-houses, Manor
Farm and Christ's College Farm were in the south
end of the parish, near the church and vicarage,
while Highfields, one of the Clare College farms,
was in the north. The pattern of settlement changed
in the 20th century, when a speculator bought a
strip of land in the north end of the parish and
divided it into individual smallholdings with
attached bungalows. (fn. 14) The centre of village life
moved from the south to the north end of the parish,
and a village hall, post office, and shop were built
to serve the new community.
Until the Highfields development Caldecote was
a village entirely devoted to agriculture. A few
substantial farmers employed the rest of the population as farm labourers. (fn. 15) The recorded population
was 15 in 1086, (fn. 16) and there were 62 occupiers of land
in 1279. (fn. 17) Numbers seem to have reached a peak
during the 13th and 14th centuries. Twenty-five
people paid tax in 1327, (fn. 18) and 78 contributed to
the poll tax of 1377. (fn. 19) Thereafter the population fell
sharply until in 1554 there were only 9 householders
and Caldecote was described as 'a very small
village'. (fn. 20) There were only 9 households in 1563. (fn. 21)
About 1632 it was reckoned that there were not
more than 20 families. (fn. 22) In 1638 there were only
16 families (fn. 23) and only 17 dwellings in 1666. (fn. 24) In
1728 Bishop Green thought there were 15 families,
which he estimated at 50 souls. (fn. 25) By 1801 there was
a population of 75. It increased gradually to 144 in
1851, but dropped sharply to 93 in 1861. By 1871
it was 120 but had fallen again to 92 by 1891. By
1911, when the first houses at Highfields had been
built, it had risen by more than 50 per cent since
1901 to 160. (fn. 26) The building of more bungalows at
Highfields made the population rise steadily to 396
in 1951, but it had declined to 368 by 1961. (fn. 27)
Manors and Other Estates.
Almar who
in 1066 held ½ hide in Caldecote had by 1086
become the man of Count Alan for that land. (fn. 28) Its
overlordship thereafter followed the descent of
Alan's honor of Richmond. (fn. 29) In the late 15th century
it was included in land of that honor held in dower,
being possessed in 1484 by Cecily, duchess of
York, (fn. 30) and in 1493 and 1506 by Margaret Beaufort,
countess of Richmond, (fn. 31) on whose death in 1509
the honor was finally united with the Crown.
Francis Hinde, tenant from 1550 to 1565, was said
to hold of the queen as of the honor of Richmond. (fn. 32)
A hide probably held of the Richmond fee was
owned by 1202 by a member of the Beach family.
In that year one John son of William granted Alan
de Feugeres a 20s. rent coming from it. (fn. 33) In 1222
Christine, widow of Robert de Feugeres, claimed
that rent as dower, 15s. from Geoffrey Bere and 5s.
from Geoffrey of Elington (fn. 34) from whom the whole
rent was claimed in 1227 by Alan de Feugeres. (fn. 35)
By c. 1235 the Richmond fee was divided between
John of Elington and John son of Roger, each
holding ½ hide, the latter for 1/16 knight's fee. (fn. 36) The
fate of Elington's fee is uncertain. It may be
identical with the 180 a. held by villeins of Henry
of Walpole in 1279. Henry held it for 20s. a year
from the heir of Godun le Bere, who held of
Robert de Feugeres's heirs, and they in turn of
Philip de Colville. Philip, however, held of the heirs
of Werry de Caen of Croxton, who were tenants
in chief. (fn. 37) Walpole's land may therefore represent
the 50 a. held in Caldecote in 1066 by Sigar, man of
Earl Waltheof, and in 1086 by David de Argentine,
lord of Croxton. (fn. 38) The family of Caen had land at
Croxton in the late 12th and early 13th centuries. (fn. 39)
The half-hide held c. 1235 by John son of Roger,
who may have been son of the Roger of Duxford
whose widow released dower in land at Caldecote
in 1198, (fn. 40) was later styled, as the principal fee in
the parish, CALDECOTE manor. By 1279 it was
held by John le Lord of Caldecote (fl. 1260) from
William Sudbury, who was tenant of the Richmond
fee in Bourn. (fn. 41) In 1302 Thomas of Caldecote,
probably John's son, held 1/16 knight's fee there. (fn. 42) He
probably granted his lands, including some 120 a.
and 5 marks rent in Caldecote, Toft, and Hardwick,
to John son of Henry Scot of Abbotsley in 1313–14. (fn. 43)
John sold them in 1319–20 to Luke of Over, who
owned them in 1327. (fn. 44) Philip of Barton held the
estate in 1344–5, for the life of his wife Alice, and
was returned as lord in 1346. (fn. 45) John son of Luke of
Over was disturbing his possession in 1347. (fn. 46) In
1348 Robert Stratford, bishop of Chichester,
declared that the manor, held for Alice's life by her
husband, had descended to him on the death in
that year of his brother John, archbishop of
Canterbury, and was to pass on Alice's death to
Robert Thorp and his heirs. (fn. 47)
The manor, identifiable by its tenure of the honor
of Richmond, came after 1359 (fn. 48) to the Avenels, also
lords of Leventhorpe's manor in Toft. John
Buckingham, bishop of Lincoln, claimed that Sir
John Avenel (d. 1383) had granted Caldecote manor
to him in 1363, presumably as a trustee. (fn. 49) In 1383
Buckingham purchased the wardship of Avenel's
infant son Robert, (fn. 50) which he granted that year to
Sir Robert Bealknap, settling the manor on Bealknap
for 15 years, with reversion to Robert Avenel
(d. 1387) and Bealknap's daughter Gillian whom
Avenel was to marry. (fn. 51) Upon Bealknap's forfeiture
in 1388 for counselling Richard II against the lords
appellant, (fn. 52) the manor was temporarily committed
to Thomas, duke of Gloucester. (fn. 53) When Bealknap's
estates were divided in 1391, most of Caldecote
manor was granted to William Wenlock, John
Stukeley, and others and part to Sir William
Castleacre. (fn. 54) It was later recovered by Gillian and
her second husband Nicholas Kimbell, (fn. 55) who held
it in 1412. (fn. 56) His son John Kimbell sold it in 1416
to Nicholas Coningston, John Meppershall, John
Stanford, and William Breton, (fn. 57) three of whom
quitclaimed it in 1424 and after to Meppershall, (fn. 58)
who thus became sole owner. His daughter and heir
Joan brought his estates to her husband John
Butler, and their son John died in 1482, leaving as
coheirs his daughters Joan and Florence. (fn. 59) Caldecote
was assigned to Joan (d. 1489), who married first
John Leventhorpe and then John Stanford who
retained the estate by the curtesy (fn. 60) until his death
in 1493. Caldecote then passed to Thomas Leventhorpe, Joan's son by her first husband, (fn. 61) who died
in 1498 leaving as heir a son John aged 10. (fn. 62)
Caldecote had however come, under a use, to
Florence, formerly married to John Ashfield, before
her death in 1506. (fn. 63) Her heir was her grandson
George, who conveyed it in 1514 to feoffees to the
use of Sir Robert Peyton (d. c. 1518). (fn. 64) Peyton's
second son John sold the manor in 1540 to Sir
John Hinde (fn. 65) (d. 1550) of Madingley, (fn. 66) whose son
Sir Francis sold it in 1565 to Robert Pecke, a
yeoman of Caldecote who rose into the gentry. (fn. 67) In
1595 Pecke's son Thomas sold the manor to Adam
Thorogood, yeoman, of Eltisley, (fn. 68) who died in 1598
leaving his estate encumbered with debt. (fn. 69) His son
Thomas also borrowed heavily, especially between
1615 and 1621. (fn. 70) In 1619–20 he made the manor
over to his three principal creditors, North Harrison,
Jeremy Chace, and Simon Folkes, who divided it
between them. Folkes took the manor-house and
the courts and services belonging to it and 191 a.,
Chace received Pecke's farm of 110 a., and Harrison had Dean's farm of 104 a. (fn. 71) which he sold to
Chace in 1625–6. (fn. 72) The manorial rights followed
the descent of Folkes's portion, which he owned in
1632. (fn. 73)
Edward Newman was described as lord of
Caldecote manor under Charles I. (fn. 74) By 1664 it
belonged to William Green. (fn. 75) Thomas Green,
owner in 1673, (fn. 76) conveyed it in 1679–80 to John
Edwards, (fn. 77) who was in possession in 1705. (fn. 78) The
manor was offered for sale in 1768. (fn. 79) From the
Hardiman family, perhaps lords about that time, it
passed in 1788 to James Butler. (fn. 80) In 1810 it was
conveyed to Joseph Westrope (d. 1851) of Ashwell
(Herts.), (fn. 81) who married Elizabeth Butler in 1813. (fn. 82)
The estate remained with the Westropes, who were
the largest landowners in Caldecote apart from the
colleges, (fn. 83) until 1894, when it passed to Joseph
Clarke, nephew of Joseph Westrope. Clarke was
succeeded in 1944 by his son Leslie, who owned the
manor in 1962. (fn. 84) Manor Farm has a late-16thcentury farm-house, timber-framed in two storeys,
which was enlarged to the east in the 19th century. (fn. 85)
The half of Caldecote manor assigned to Jeremy
Chace in 1625, (fn. 86) passed to his son John who sold it
in 1671 to Richard Mills of London, lessee since
1666. (fn. 87) Richard Mills, probably his nephew, sold
the estate in 1680 to Dr. Samuel Blythe of Clare
Hall. (fn. 88) Blythe died in 1713 leaving his property in
trust for the college, which leased it as Blythe's
benefaction (fn. 89) separately from the other estate
which it had in Caldecote, known as Crisp's lands.
The Crisp family held land in Caldedote from the
late 13th until the early 16th century, (fn. 90) when
Henry Hornby bought 85 a. of it and devised them
to Clare by will dated 1517. (fn. 91) In 1814 the college
bought a third estate, Gregory's farm, and in 1815
divided the three between two farms, Chapman's
and Highfields. (fn. 92) In 1932 H. Game, a land speculator, bought Highfields and divided the land into
plots for bungalows, extending the earlier development in the north part of the parish, and Mr. A.
Clarke, brother of the owner of Caldecote manor,
bought Highfields, (fn. 93) which included a house rebuilt in 1808 in the Georgian style. (fn. 94)
In 1066 two sokemen held 100 a. under Eddeva
the fair, which by 1086 had come to Hardwin de
Scalers. (fn. 95) The overlordship passed to the senior
branch of Hardwin's family, descended from his son
Richard, (fn. 96) which held it until the heiress Lucy de
Scalers married Baldwin de Freville (d. by 1257). (fn. 97)
Their son Richard was overlord of the Caldecote
manor in 1279. (fn. 98) His rights probably descended
with the Freville manor in Caxton, to which land
at Caldecote belonged when it was being partitioned in 1532–3. (fn. 99) That property was sold in the
early 17th century to the Cage family. (fn. 100) In 1086
two knights held the Caldecote land under Hardwin. (fn. 101)
In 1166 Robert le Guiz held ½ fee, partly there, of
Stephen de Scalers. (fn. 102) He or a namesake survived
until 1199. (fn. 103) By c. 1235 ½ hide in Caldecote held for
1/8 fee, belonged to Tibbald son of Fulk. (fn. 104) By 1279
it had been divided into numerous fragments. The
largest, 42 a., belonged to William Mortimer of
Kingston, who also held 6½ a. of the Peverel fee. (fn. 105)
William's son Constantine was returned as lord of
Kingston with Caldecote in 1316. (fn. 106) His rights
descended with Kingston manor to the Fitzralphs
and Chamberlains. (fn. 107) In 1603–4 the estate was held
of Fitzralph Chamberlain's manor of Kingston. (fn. 108)
The connexion was maintained throughout the
17th century. (fn. 109) The land itself was held at that
time by William Richardson. (fn. 110) At inclosure in
1854 four Caldedote landowners held by copyhold
of Kingston manor. (fn. 111)
The fee in Caldecote associated with the barony of
Bourn may have derived from lands later incorporated into Caldecote, held by Picot, lord of
Bourn in 1086, as part of that vill. After the division
of his lands following the death of William Peverel
c. 1147, (fn. 112) the overlordship of Caldecote would in
that case have come to Asceline, wife of Geoffrey de
Waterville, of whose grandson and coheir Roger
Torpel (fn. 113) (d. 1225) (fn. 114) a fee there and at Girton was
held in 1225 by Roger de Quincy, earl of Winchester. (fn. 115) Quincy's interest may have come through a
grant to his ancestors by his great-uncle Saher de
Quincy (d. 1190), who had been Asceline's second
husband. (fn. 116) Although the earl died in 1264, (fn. 117) he was
nevertheless returned as a tenant-in-chief at
Caldecote in 1279, (fn. 118) but there is no evidence that
his coheirs had any interest there. The manor there
was said c. 1235 to be held of the Peverel fee in
Orwell, then owned by Roger Torpel's grandson
William. (fn. 119) Torpel's heir held that fee in 1279 of the
earl of Winchester's heirs under the earl of
Gloucester. (fn. 120) Everard of Trumpington was mesne
lord c. 1235, (fn. 121) under the Peverel heirs, and Roger
of Trumpington in 1279 under the 'earl of Winchester'. Roger's kinsman Michael held 67 a. of the fee
in demesne and had tenants occupying probably
another 42 a. (fn. 122) A mesne lordship remained with the
Trumpington family until at least 1428. (fn. 123)
By 1236 John Croxy was holding 1 virgate of that
estate for ¼ knight's fee of Everard of Trumpington. (fn. 124)
His estate passed to John Carpenter and Gillian of
Whitwell, who held 2 virgates of Roger in 1279, but
owed suit to the honor of Richmond's court held
at Babraham. (fn. 125) Walter Carpenter held the ¼ fee in
1302–3, and had by 1346 been succeeded by Thomas
son of William of Caldecote and John son of
Stephen. (fn. 126) Roger Faceby was tenant in 1428. (fn. 127) By
1603–4 property called Faceby's belonged to Roger
Smith, (fn. 128) but it has not been traced later.
The first specific mention of WINSLOW'S
estate in Caldecote occurs in 1384–5 when John
Winslow of London granted land there. (fn. 129) It was,
however, closely connected with Crochman alias
Beaufeu manor in Trumpington. The William
Crochman who paid 3s. 4d. tax, the third largest
sum in Caldecote, in 1327, (fn. 130) may have been the
William Crouchman who held a manor in Trumpington in 1346, (fn. 131) or his father who held land in
Thriplow in 1302, when the Trumpington manor
was held by William Beaufeu. (fn. 132) Mary, daughter of
William Beaufeu's son John, married William
Winslow. (fn. 133) In 1387 John Winslow held 'the manor
of Trumpington called Crochman's and Beaufeu'
and a tenement in Caldecote. (fn. 134) It is not certain when
the Winslow estate in Caldecote became a manor,
but it was probably some time during the 15th
century. A deed of 1420 mentions land in Caldecote
fields abutting on land 'belonging to the manor
called Crochmans' but it is not clear whether the
manor referred to was in Trumpington or Caldecote. (fn. 135) The Caldecote manor, with a court, was
certainly in being by 1461. (fn. 136) It passed to William
Huntingdon, (fn. 137) and in 1550 John Huntingdon of
Sawston sold the estate, described as the manor of
Winslow's, to Robert Pecke, yeoman, of Caldecote. (fn. 138)
Pecke's son, Thomas, sold the property to George
Downam, Randolf Eardley, Robert Snowden,
Thomas Gray, and William Bolton in 1592. (fn. 139) In
1622 Downam and Gray conveyed the estate to
Christ's College. (fn. 140) The college sold it in 1938 to
Mr. L. Gordon, owner in 1962. (fn. 141)
Barnwell Priory held a small estate in Caldecote
by 1279, including ½ virgate of the Scalers fee (fn. 142)
and another ½ virgate of the Richmond fee given in
alms long before. (fn. 143) The priory's temporalities in
Caldecote were valued in 1291 at £2 8s. 10d. (fn. 144) It is
uncertain whether Barnwell lost the property before
the Dissolution. It was not separately mentioned
after 1343–4, (fn. 145) and may have been confounded with
land of the rectory. Rent of 10s. a year, perhaps
from such land, came with the rectory and advowson to the Crown at the Dissolution and was sold
to Francis Wise and John Tebold in 1552. (fn. 146) They
in turn granted it to Christ's College in 1553. (fn. 147)
William Richardson, however, held land c. 1553
that was described as 'late Barnwell's'. (fn. 148)
The preceptory of the Knights Hospitallers at
Shingay held by 1282 ½ virgate in alms of the
Richmond fee. (fn. 149) It still held 13 a. in demesne in
1279 (fn. 150) but by 1540 when the order was suppressed
all the property was put out to rent. (fn. 151) The preceptory was granted to Sir Richard Long in the
same year. (fn. 152) Quit-rents were still due to the manor
of Shingay in the 18th century. (fn. 153)
St. John's Hospital in Cambridge held land in
Caldecote in 1279, (fn. 154) which, when the hospital was
converted into St. John's College in 1511, was
transferred to the college. (fn. 155) For 1 a. which it owned
in Caldecote, leased out from the 17th to the 19th
century, (fn. 156) the college was allotted at inclosure in
1848 a narrow strip on the eastern side of Broad
way, in the northern part of the parish, (fn. 157) which it
sold in 1932. The village hall was built on the site. (fn. 158)
Economic History.
In 1086 Caldecote
comprised 4½ ploughlands, two on the Scalers
manor, one on Argentine's, the rest on Almar's
estate. All were in demesne, except on the last
where 3 bordars provided half a team. There was
meadow enough for all the plough-teams, and wood
for fencing. The peasantry consisted of 13 bordars
and cottars, besides 2 servi on Almar's land. The
manors, which had together been worth £5 12s. in
1066, had maintained their value, save for a 5s.
reduction on Argentine's manor. (fn. 159)
By 1279 (fn. 160) the manors in Caldecote were much
split up. Of the two Richmond fees one was held
by rent-paying mesne tenants and was almost
entirely divided between villeins and a few free
tenants. On the other John le Lord held ½ hide in
demesne. Another 62 a. were held by his undertenants for money rents. The Peverel fee was held
by John Carpenter and Gillian of Whitwell who had
one virgate in demesne. Their rent-paying tenants
held 152½ a. and an under-tenant of one of those
held 43½ a. The Scalers fee consisted of 161 a.
which in 1279 was divided among tenants, many of
whom paid scutage.
As elsewhere in south Cambridgeshire, free
rent-paying tenants predominated over customary
tenants in Caldecote. That was probably due in
part to the smallness of the estates and to the
absence of large ecclesiastical manors. Several
small estates had been carved out of the larger fees.
Barnwell Priory had 19½ a. in demesne, 13 a. held
from it by Geoffrey Crisp, and rent from 4½ a. By
1295 rent-paying free tenants held 37½ a. from it. (fn. 161)
The Knights Hospitallers of Shingay had 13 a. in
demesne and 28 a. held by rent-paying tenants with
rent from a further 10 a. Stourbridge and St.
John's hospitals in Cambridge also had small
properties. Of the three lay estates of over 30 a., the
largest consisted of c. 110 a. held by Michael of
Trumpington, probably related to Roger of
Trumpington, and therefore a member of the
knightly class, as was William Mortimer who held
48½ a. Robert of Bourn had 36 a. held of seven
different lords, and probably belonged to a rising
peasant family.
Most other free tenants, however, had much
smaller farms. Only one had more than 20 a., 6 had
between 12 a. and 16 a., 3 between 6 a. and 9 a.
while 31 had less than 6 a., of whom 7 had units of
4 a. Other holdings also consisted of 4 a. units.
Thirteen comprised only an acre or less, probably
consisting of a messuage and croft. Most of that
land was held for money rent, though the amount
was seldom proportionate to the acreage of their
land.
The only two villeins on John le Lord's estate
held 13 a. each for 3s. a year, rendering a loaf and
2 hens at Christmas and paying merchet. Thirteen
acres, perhaps a half-yardland, was the normal unit
for villein holdings in Caldecote. Twelve villeins (fn. 162)
of Henry of Walpole on the second Richmond fee,
who had 13 a. each, owed 3s. 10d. for harvest
works, 1½d. for mowing, and food renders at Christmas, and paid merchet and tallage at their lord's
will. By 1279 their services had been commuted for
14s. 8d. a year. Two others of Henry's men, one of
whom was probably the village blacksmith, were free
tenants, holding by charter and money rent. Two
villeins also held land freely from other mesne lords
in Caldecote.
Of the thirty-six families represented among the
names of free peasant tenants in Caldecote in 1279,
four were probably related to the nine families which
held in villeinage only. Since children often held
land during their fathers' lifetime, family holdings
could be fragmented into very small units. Even the
brothers and son of John le Lord held small
plots.
The 14th century saw Caldecote tolerably prosperous. The population was not to be so high again
until the 19th century. A few peasant families were
already accumulating land, a tendency furthered by a
decline in population after 1377. (fn. 163) The Bourn
family owned land in Caldecote at least from 1273
to 1347 (fn. 164) while the Kimwells flourished from 1273
to 1415. (fn. 165) The Gelyn family was recorded at
Caldecote from 1327 to 1464. (fn. 166) From the 1440's to
the early 16th century, the Adam, Roger, and
Eversden families were prominent in land dealings. (fn. 167) Even more important in the period were the
Days and Crisps. Geoffrey Crisp was in 1273 a
small free tenant of Barnwell Priory, and in 1279
held 13 a. of the Scalers fee for rent and scutage. (fn. 168)
John Crisp paid 1s. 9d. for the 1327 tax. (fn. 169) A
namesake was still adding to his land at the end of
the 14th century. (fn. 170) The family fortunes probably
reached their height in the next century under
Robert Crisp (d. 1472). (fn. 171) Richard Crisp, who sold
the Crisp lands, (fn. 172) was dead by 1525, after which his
family disappeared from Caldecote. (fn. 173) Nicholas
Day (fn. 174) paid 1s. 10d. for the tax of 1327. (fn. 175) Several
members of the Day family bought and sold land
throughout the 14th and 15th centuries. (fn. 176) By 1472
there were two probably related families. (fn. 177) Thomas
Day (d. before 1525) left his property to his daughter
Elizabeth, who married William Richardson. (fn. 178) The
other line, descended from John Day (fl. 1472),
continued to hold land in Caldecote until the late
17th century. (fn. 179)
Of the 9 householders in Caldecote in 1554
three, Thomas Smith, William Richardson, and
Richard Angood, though husbandmen, were
described as 'men of great substance'. (fn. 180) Thomas
Smith paid £20 towards the loan of 1522. (fn. 181) He
leased Winslow manor from John Huntingdon who
accused him c. 1548 of altering his landmarks so
that Huntingdon could not distinguish his lands
from Smith's own. (fn. 182) Thomas's grandson Robert
at his death in 1603–4 held 110 a. in Caldecote,
Bourn, and Kingston. (fn. 183) Another Robert Smith was
holding land in Caldecote in 1625–6. (fn. 184) William
Richardson in 1525 owned land in Caldecote
through his marriage with Elizabeth, daughter and
heir of Thomas Day, (fn. 185) and his descendants
accumulated land throughout the 16th century. (fn. 186)
By the early 17th century the Richardsons had a
substantial estate in Caldecote, but were not
mentioned after 1624. (fn. 187) Richard Angood's family
flourished in Caldecote from c. 1525 to c. 1564. (fn. 188)
The most notable inhabitant in 1554, however, was
Robert Pecke, grandson of William Pecke (fl. 1510). (fn. 189)
Robert became a clerk of the peace and was eventually
recognized as a gentleman, though described as a
yeoman in 1550 when he bought Winslow manor. (fn. 190)
He also bought Caldecote manor from Sir Francis
Hinde in 1565. (fn. 191) Robert Pecke was accused in 1554
of seizing the chalice belonging to Caldecote church
and of extorting money for the duke of Northumberland's rebellion. He explained that in 1549 Caldecote
was required to supply four men for the army
against the Norfolk rebels under Ket. Since it was
too poor to do so the whole town agreed that Pecke
should pawn the chalice at Cambridge. The
inhabitants later refused to redeem it. In 1553 Sir
Francis Hinde, as lord of the manor, appointed
Richardson, Smith, and Angood to find and equip
three men for the duke. They gave Pecke 4 marks to
give to Hinde to discharge them of the obligation.
Pecke denied that he had kept it for himself or
supported Lady Jane Grey. (fn. 192) What was left of his
estate after his eldest son Thomas had sold Winslow
manor in 1592 and Caldecote manor in 1595 (fn. 193) had
been sold by William and John Pecke before 1610. (fn. 194)
In 1728 there were six farms in Caldecote, (fn. 195) a
pattern apparently dating from the division of
Caldecote manor after 1620. The farms were
Caldecote manor farm, owned in 1625–6 by Simon
Folkes; Chace's portion of the manor, later called
Blythe's benefaction; Christ's College farm; Clare
College farm; (fn. 196) and two farms derived from the
accumulation of holdings by prosperous peasants
in the 16th century. One of them, owned by Robert
Smith in 1590, James Coppin in 1695, (fn. 197) Thomas
Cocksedge in 1788, (fn. 198) and John Haggerston in
1809 when it contained 122 a. in Caldecote, Bourn,
and Toft, (fn. 199) was possibly the estate which passed to
Dr. Webb, master of Clare, in 1841 and which
remained in his family until 1910. (fn. 200) The other,
owned in 1590 by William Richardson, (fn. 201) passed to
the Peast family (fn. 202) and then to Thomas Gregory who
sold it to Clare College in 1814. (fn. 203) Since almost all
the owners were absentees, the six farms were
normally leased.
From 1674 to 1721 Christ's College leased its
estate for 21-year terms for £20 a year and a
'well-fed and fat boar for bacon' or £4 every five
years. (fn. 204) Subsequent leases were for varying terms. (fn. 205)
In 1730 the lessee, Nathan Peast, sub-leased the
farm. (fn. 206) For most of the 18th century the Clare
estate was held on 21-year leases. (fn. 207) With the
acquisition of the Blythe lands in 1713 Clare became
the largest landowner in Caldecote. (fn. 208) None of the
Caldecote estates seems to have been very profitable
either to the landlord or the tenant. Although the
landlords bore the full cost of repairs, (fn. 209) several
tenants were unable to pay their rents and were
forced to sell to the landlord in liquidation of their
debts. (fn. 210) The landlords derived a profit from timber
which was reserved for them in all leases. (fn. 211) In 1828
Christ's sold 90 trees for £171. (fn. 212) Nevertheless
profits were meagre. From 1848 to 1899, following
a sharp drop in its rents, Clare College made a net
profit of only £265 in 51 years. (fn. 213)
Caldecote before inclosure had three open fields,
Brook field west of the main street, Dams field
(or North field) in the north and west and extending
across the street to the north-east, and Hardwick
field (or East field) in the east. Hardwick field may
have been divided into two, the southern portion
being called Croft field. (fn. 214) By 1851 there were 620 a.
of arable, 100 a. of meadow or pasture, and 30 a.
of woodland. (fn. 215) By 1805 the meadow or dean was
confined to a strip called Deep Dean along the
western borders of the parish, and to Callow Dean,
which joined Deep Dean. (fn. 216)
The common pasture lay in the north and west
parts of the parish and either side of the northern
part of the main street. (fn. 217) In 1743 Christ's College
had rights of common at the rate of one cow for
every 20 a. of arable. (fn. 218) Despite the heavy nature
of the clay soil, cattle were a relatively minor part
of the farming economy. Arable farming was the
most important item. In 1671 the principal crops
were barley and oats. (fn. 219) Pigs and sheep were kept in
considerable numbers. In 1698 a man with only 2
heifers kept 16 pigs. (fn. 220) Landowners might common
one sheep for every 2 a. they owned. (fn. 221) Each manor
had foldage and sheep-walk. In 1592 Winslow manor
had sheep-walk for 200 sheep. (fn. 222) When Caldecote
manor was divided, the right of foldage was also
divided. (fn. 223) By 1767 the college manor had sheepwalk for 70 sheep, and all the profit was then in
sheep-walk since the arable lands were very poor. (fn. 224)
In 1671 there were 80 sheep on John Chace's farm,
which contained 160 a. of arable of which 43 a.
were fallow. (fn. 225)
Several of the old closes, especially Highfields and
those in the south-east, were pasture. (fn. 226) Others
contained wood: the college timber came from old
inclosures. (fn. 227) A few were ploughed. (fn. 228) Many of them
retained the names of their former occupants. (fn. 229) In
1805 they were described as small, dispersed, and
expensive. (fn. 230) The parish was inclosed by an award
of 1854 under the annual Act of 1848 and the general
Act of 1845. The old inclosures were reallotted by
the award. The largest allotments were those to
Clare College with 367 a., of which 298 a. belonged
to the Blythe benefaction estate, Joseph Westrope
with 177 a., Christ's College with 141 a., and Dr.
William Webb with 90 a. There were six allotments
of less than 10 a. (fn. 231)
Farming has remained the main occupation of
the people. Most of the land is under grass for
cattle or given over to wheat and barley. Scientific
pig-farming under the auspices of Cambridge
University has recently been undertaken in the
parish. (fn. 232) The settlement at Highfields was built
in the early 20th century for self-supporting smallholders, but few of its inhabitants are entirely
supported by the produce of their holdings: some
have stalls in markets in Cambridge and St. Neots,
but many work in a variety of occupations outside
the village, and use their land as gardens or allotments. (fn. 233)
There was a windmill in Caldecote in 1252–3, (fn. 234)
and Laurence the miller of Caldecote was mentioned
in 1285–6. (fn. 235) No further record has been found of a
mill in Caldecote. (fn. 236) Mill Hill balk, in Brook field,
was probably so called because it connected
Caldecote with Mill Hill in Bourn. (fn. 237)
Local Government.
The whole vill lay
within the geldable c. 1235, but by 1260 part had
been withdrawn into the liberty of the honor of
Richmond. In 1273–4 the men of the liberty and
the geldable were separately charged with paying
an amercement. (fn. 238) The officers of the honor may have
held a court leet and view of frankpledge for
Caldecote manor, at least from 1334 to 1457. (fn. 239) The
right to hold such a court may have passed to the
owners of that manor before 1594, (fn. 240) but no court
rolls survive. The manor of Winslows, later owned
by Christ's College, also had a court. One court roll
for 1461 survives. (fn. 241)
There were two constables in 1377. (fn. 242) In 1638
there were two churchwardens, (fn. 243) but apparently
only one in 1679. (fn. 244) There was still only one in 1825
but two were appointed in 1849. (fn. 245) There were two
overseers in 1700. (fn. 246) There were two overseers, two
surveyors of the highway, and one constable for
most of the 19th century. (fn. 247) Owing to the smallness
of Caldecote's population it was difficult to fill
parish offices. In 1638 the clerk was illiterate but
'cannot be supplied otherwise because of the
scarcity of people in the town'. (fn. 248) Often the same
men served for many years. (fn. 249) Sometimes one man
held more than one office. J. Chapman was a
surveyor of the highways as well as constable in
1862. (fn. 250) In 1863 the vestry meeting was held at the
Fox inn. (fn. 251)
Surprisingly, in view of Caldecote's remoteness
from the main roads, the burials of several vagrants
appear in the parish registers. (fn. 252) Some of them may
have received relief from the parish, though in 1700
John Day 'a lame and very aged man, having but
one hand' and a member of a family that had been
in Caldecote for centuries, was refused relief by the
overseers. They were overruled by a local magistrate and ordered to allow Day 2s. a week and to
provide him with a house. (fn. 253)
Poor-relief was costing only about £25 a year in
the 1770s and 1780s, but the expense had risen to
£69 by 1803 when 7 persons were occasionally and
7 permanently relieved, besides 11 children. (fn. 254) In
1813 £76 was spent on maintaining 7 people on
permanent relief and 3 others who were casually
relieved. By 1815 the expense had been cut to
£68. (fn. 255) In 1835 Caldecote was included in the
Caxton and Arrington poor law union, (fn. 256) and in
1934 was transferred from the Caxton and Arrington
R.D. to the Chesterton R.D. (fn. 257)
Church.
Picot the sheriff included the chapel of
Caldecote, and 2/3 of the tithes of his knights'
demesnes there, with the church of Bourn, among
his grants to his foundation of St. Giles, later
Barnwell Priory. (fn. 258) By c. 1200 the chapelry had
become an independent parish, and was taxed as
such in 1217. (fn. 259) It was for a time lost by the priory,
to which it was restored by Bishop Longchamp
between 1189 and 1196, and was perhaps then
appropriated. (fn. 260) A vicarage had certainly been
established by c. 1275. (fn. 261) Its advowson remained
with the priory until the Dissolution, although under
Henry VIII turns were occasionally granted to
others, as in 1526 to William Richard and Thomas
Fitzhugh of Eton, (fn. 262) and later to Richard Cokman
and John Badcock, whose nominee claimed the
living c. 1544. The advowson had, however, by
then come to the Crown, which had presented in
1543. (fn. 263) In 1552 it was sold to Francis Wise and
John Tebold (fn. 264) who a year later granted it to Christ's
College, who have since remained patrons. (fn. 265) The
impropriate rectory passed with the advowson.
The vicarage was valued at 5 marks in 1217 (fn. 266)
as also in 1254, (fn. 267) and at £8 in 1291. (fn. 268) It was
probably always a poor living, and was thought in
the 15th century insufficient to support a resident
vicar. (fn. 269) In 1535 it was worth only £3 11s., (fn. 270) although
Barnwell Priory had for many years allowed the
vicar to receive all the tithes, great and small. In
1537 the priory formally augmented the vicarage
by granting it all tithes and oblations, (fn. 271) but after
the Dissolution certain tithes were attached to
the impropriate rectory, and came with it to Christ's
College. (fn. 272) When the tithes were commuted, however, by an award of 1844, confirmed in 1851, the
incumbent was said to be entitled to all of them, and
was allotted £135. (fn. 273) The vicarage had been worth
£43 17s. 6d. in 1728 (fn. 274) and £78 7s. 2d. in 1786 when
it was united with the rectory of Toft, another
Christ's College living. It was then said that their
combined incomes would be no more than sufficient
to maintain the incumbent decently. (fn. 275) Thereafter
only the combined value is recorded. About 1830
it was £287. (fn. 276) In 1853 Christ's assisted the incumbent, E. A. Powell, by leasing its Caldecote
farm to him at a nominal rent, so long as he continued
to hold the benefice. (fn. 277)
In the 17th century there were 32 or 34 a. of
glebe, usually styled parsonage land, which was
probably vicarial glebe, (fn. 278) built up from grants to
vicars and chaplains of Caldecote, such as those
made by Simon Carpenter in 1343–4, (fn. 279) or Roger
Faceby in 1424–5. (fn. 280) That glebe was still in existence
c. 1800, (fn. 281) but when the tithes were commuted in
1851, the incumbent had only 1½ a., called rectorial
glebe, (fn. 282) perhaps because he was also rector of Toft.
The original rectorial glebe had probably been
absorbed in the estate of the appropriator, Barnwell
Priory. (fn. 283) Its successor, Christ's College, however,
included the vicarage house and Church close in a
lease to the vicar in 1853. (fn. 284)
A vicarage house, which had been damaged by
fire before 1607, had not yet been rebuilt in 1615. (fn. 285)
By 1664 the vicar had a dwelling-house standing by
the churchyard, (fn. 286) said in 1728 to be 'in pretty
good order' and let with all the other dues. (fn. 287) After
the union of Caldecote with Toft in 1786 it became
the curate's residence. (fn. 288) The former Vicarage
stands just north of the church. Its south wing,
dating from c. 1500, is timber-framed in two storeys.
It was much added to later, and the northern part
is 19th-century. (fn. 289)
A guild dedicated to All Saints was mentioned
in 1472. (fn. 290)
Many vicars were absentees, while their cure
was served by chaplains and curates. (fn. 291) In 1338
the vicar, Andrew, was indicted but acquitted for
assaulting a man at Caldecote, and other crimes had
been alleged against him. (fn. 292) After Caldecote became
a Christ's College living, the practice grew of
appointing college fellows to the vicarage, (fn. 293) and
many of them were non-resident. (fn. 294) After the union
of 1786 the joint incumbent usually resided at
Toft. (fn. 295) About 1830 the curate at Caldecote was
paid £80 a year. (fn. 296)
Despite the poverty of the living, Caldecote
before the Reformation had a good collection of
service books, plate, and vestments, (fn. 297) some of
which were still in use in 1552. (fn. 298) Puritanism does
not seem to have affected Caldecote before the
1640s. Bishop Wren probably found the altar at the
east end in 1638. (fn. 299) Thomas Sanders, presented in
1638, was an uncompromising royalist and Laudian.
He was a 'constant practiser of ceremonies and
innovations'; he had railed in the communion table,
bowed to the east and at the name of Jesus, and told
those who refused to take the sacrament at the rails:
'you are all damned, you are none of this congregation'. He said that papists were the king's best
subjects, and read the king's proclamations, but
refused to read those of parliament. Sanders's
congregation, however, probably did not share his
views, for fear for his life drove him c. 1643 from
the parish, which was left for six months without a
minister. (fn. 300) Caldecote was visited by William Dowsing
in 1644 and 'superstitious pictures', a crucifix, and
a picture of Christ were destroyed. (fn. 301) The same year
Sanders was ejected as a 'scandalous minister'. (fn. 302)
The liturgical books were scattered, the holy table
removed from the church to a private house for
domestic use, the font overturned, and the poor box
broken. George Biker, who was not in holy orders,
became minister. (fn. 303) When Sanders died in 1650,
Thomas Smith, a fellow of Christ's, was presented. (fn. 304)
After the Restoration, Caldecote fell into neglect
and apathy. Vicars were absentees, fellows of
Christ's notable mainly for their interest in college
politics. William Towers, vicar 1716–24, a zealous
Whig, became master of Christ's College and vicechancellor of Cambridge. He was described as
having a 'morose, sour, and rough manner', but as
being honest and a good historian who spent his
summers travelling, adding to his knowledge of
the families and villages of England. (fn. 305) Three vicars
were benefactors of the parish. Thomas Sitwell
(1731–7) and John Preston (1807–27) founded
charities. (fn. 306) E. A. Powell (1843–92) augmented a
charity and generally enriched the parish during
his long incumbency, the latter part of which was
spent at Caldecote vicarage. (fn. 307) In 1825 a service was
regularly held by the curate on Sundays, and also
on Good Friday and Christmas Day. Communion
was administered three times a year to about 10
communicants and the children were taught the
catechism in a Sunday school. (fn. 308)
The church of ST. MICHAEL AND ALL
ANGELS has a chancel, nave with north and south
porches, and west tower. It is built mostly of field
stones. There was a chapel at Caldecote in the 12th
century, but if anything remains of that building
it cannot be more than parts of the north and east
walls of the nave. Late in the 14th century the nave,
south porch, tower, and possibly the chancel were
built. The screen is 15th-century and there is no
provision for a stair to a rood loft, although there
was in the 18th century an overthrow in the chancel
arch. (fn. 309) There was a medieval north porch.
In 1678 the chancel was said to be 'ruinous and
likely to fall', (fn. 310) and subsequently its south side was
rebuilt. In 1743 the altar was not railed in or raised
'but lies in a very indecent manner'. (fn. 311) In 1859 the
chancel and north porch were completely rebuilt
by Kett and in 1899 the remaining medieval portions
of the building were extensively restored. (fn. 312)
In 1962 Caldecote retained the three bells which
it had had at least as early as 1552: (fn. 313) (i) no inscription,
probably medieval; (fn. 314) (ii) a coin bell, probably cast
at Reading by John White c. 1550; (fn. 315) (iii) inscribed
with a king's head, attributed to John Rufford of
Toddington (Beds.)c. 1360. (fn. 316)
The registers are complete from 1662. (fn. 317)
Nonconformity.
In 1676 2 dissenters were
reported, but none in 1679. (fn. 318) There were 15
Independents at Caldecote in 1728. (fn. 319) Houses were
licensed for worship by protestant dissenters in
1741 and 1820. (fn. 320) There were no dissenters, however,
in 1825 (fn. 321) and no further mention has been found of
nonconformity in Caldecote.
Education.
No school existed in Caldecote
until 1963 when one was built at Highfields. Before
that time children at the southern end of the village
had attended Toft school, and those at the northern
end the Childerley Gate school in Bourn. When
the second was demolished in 1942, the children
were taught in halls, at least one of which seems to
have been at the northern tip of Caldecote. (fn. 322)
Charities for the Poor.
From at least
1590 the parish owned town lands, described in
1837 as the common property of the parish from
time immemorial. They consisted of 4 a. freehold in
scattered parcels, (fn. 323) for which 3 a. were allotted at
inclosure. (fn. 324) In 1837 the lands were being let and the
proceeds distributed with Sitwell's charity in coal
for the poor.
By will dated 1736, Thomas Sitwell, then vicar,
gave £20 in trust to Christ's College to invest and
administer as they thought fit. It yielded 16s. in
1786–8, (fn. 325) and £1 by 1837, when the churchwardens
distributed the income with that of the town lands.
In 1952 18s. 4d. was paid out to three recipients,
the income from both charities being £1 12s.
An unknown person left £10 to be used for the
poor, which may have yielded the 17s. a year being
given to them in 1728, but that charity was probably
sunk in a bankruptcy c. 1757, and no more is
known of it. (fn. 326)