COMBERTON
The village of Comberton (fn. 1) is 4 miles south-west of
Cambridge. The long, narrow parish, covering
1,954 a., (fn. 2) stretches for 3 miles, widening towards the
south, between the road from Cambridge to St.
Neots and the Bourn brook. Its eastern and western
boundaries mostly follow ancient mereways dividing
its fields from its neighbours'. The eastern boundary
was partially altered at the inclosure of the parish in
1839. Comberton yielded to Barton certain land at
its south-east corner, across the Tit brook and the
turnpike road, receiving instead land across the
mereway in the centre of its eastern side, once
included in Barton's fields. (fn. 3) Comberton includes an
irregular, narrow strip along the north side of the
St. Neots road, which was once intercommonable
with Madingley. At inclosure it was assigned to
Sir St. Vincent Cotton, owner of the Madingley
Hall estate. (fn. 4)
The southern part of Comberton is nearly flat.
It lies on the gault, fringed along the brook with
gravel and alluvium. A narrow ridge of boulder
clay reaches eastwards from Toft parish between the
Bourn brook and the shallow Tit brook, which,
after following an irregular course across the
southern part of the parish, enters the Bourn brook
near Lord's Bridge at the south-east corner. To the
north the land, on gault and chalk mostly overlaid
by boulder clay, rises steadily towards a down c. 200
ft. high, and after dipping to a valley along which a
stream, there called the North brook, runs down
from Hardwick into Whitwell in Barton parish,
rises sharply to 200 ft. along the St. Neots road, to
form part of Madingley Hill. A belt of trees, called
Comberton Plantation, has been established along
the road since the 19th century. (fn. 5) Until the inclosure
Comberton was cultivated in four open fields, on a
three-course rotation. (fn. 6)
The village stands on a slight gravel rise north of
the Tit brook near the western edge of the parish,
where a road from Harlton, going north from Fox's
Bridge, crosses one from Toft to Barton, dividing
the village closes into four blocks. An ancient stone
cross formerly stood at the cross-roads, (fn. 7) where the
village pond remained in 1971. The village streets
were rather wider before the inclosure, when strips
of the roads were allotted to the owners of adjacent
crofts. The street leading north was the widest,
forming a green running into the pasture north of
the village. (fn. 8) By the 16th century it was divided in
two by a long narrow inclosure, leaving to the east a
lane called Small Street, (fn. 9) later Hines Lane, to the
west a narrower green which was further reduced at
inclosure. Its former western edge is visible as a dip
in some adjoining gardens. The old crofts lay north
and south abutting on the Toft-Barton road, except
in the north-east quarter where they ran east and
west. Round the south-east quarter ran a back lane
called Swayne's or Swine Street or Lane, (fn. 10) from
which other closes reached south to the Tit brook.
The manorial farmsteads were established in larger
inclosures away from the cross-roads, that of Greens
manor to the north, giving the area the name Green
End, that of Burdeleys manor to the south. A road
called the church causeway leads past Burdeleys to
Church End, where the church and the adjacent
Rectory Farm and vicarage stand on the ridge south
of the Tit brook, between two ancient ways across
the fields. It is not clear why the church is thus
separated from the village. Its siting may have been
affected by the position of the manor-house of
Burdeleys, since before 1100 the church belonged
briefly to the lord of that manor. The pre-inclosure
layout of fields and crofts does not suggest that there
was ever any substantial settlement near the church,
although a few houses stood in a close south-west of
it by 1800. (fn. 11)
The village was certainly upon its present site by
the 13th century, when encroachments upon the
commons were being made for building. In 1279 it
was said that several crofts, including the chief
messuage of Heveds fee, had been made by such
encroachment in King John's time. (fn. 12) Until the 19th
century most of the houses lay along West Street,
between the cross-roads and Toft. A smaller group
of houses stood along the middle part of Swayne's
Lane. (fn. 13) In 1841 27 out of 102 dwellings were in
West Street and 21 in Swayne's Lane. (fn. 14) Several
17th- and 18th-century cottages, timber-framed
and plastered, and some still thatched in 1970,
remained in those areas. One partly two-storey
house on the north side of West Street has its
timbering exposed. Another, further west, once part
of a larger house, retains a plaster fire-place surround with vine-scrolls, perhaps Elizabethan. A
mid-17th-century house, formerly the furthest west
on the south side, contains upstairs a contemporary
fire-place with arched overmantel and panelled
surround. By the 18th century the larger farmhouses were disposed along the other three streets,
mostly close to the cross-roads. Several retain 17thor 18th-century structures, as at Hawks Farm, where
in the 17th century a two-storey wing, with a gable
and attached chimney in brick, was added to a
medieval cottage. The Rosary in Green End Road
has a 17th-century farm-house, partly refaced in
brick, concealed behind 19th-century additions.
Cambridge Lane Farm, built c. 1800, was nevertheless timber-framed. (fn. 15) The closes further out
from the cross-roads to the east and north contained
no houses in 1800. Only after inclosure were farmhouses built out in the fields, as at Jaggards Farm,
newly erected in 1853. (fn. 16)
The village may have grown a little in the later
16th century. In 1601 leave was given to build two
cottages on the waste. (fn. 17) There were 52 houses in
1666, (fn. 18) and in 1715 51 messuages traditionally
enjoyed common rights. (fn. 19) The 53 houses recorded
in 1831 had doubled by 1841 to 102 dwellings. The
number again grew from 119 in 1921 to 164 in
1931, (fn. 20) several council houses being built along the
Barton road. (fn. 21) After the Second World War the
county council decided to make Comberton a centre
for growth in the surrounding district. That policy
was complemented by the establishment of the
Comberton village college, opened in 1960, (fn. 22) which
stands just across the boundary in Toft. Almost 100
houses were built between 1951 and 1961, (fn. 23) and the
village was greatly enlarged in the 1960s. Apart from
infill along the village streets, a council estate of 44
houses was built south of the east end of Swayne's
Lane. Almost 40 houses were erected at the western
edge of the village near the college. The largest
estate, about 300 houses, well supplied with garages,
was put up by private developers on 38 a. in the
angle between Barton Road and Long Road. Plans
for further building were under consideration in
1970. (fn. 24)
In 1086 Comberton had contained 43 peasants (fn. 25)
and in 1279 some 50 tenants. (fn. 26) In 1327 57 inhabitants
were assessed for tax, (fn. 27) and in 1377 152 people for
the poll tax. (fn. 28) The village contained 30 families in
1563 (fn. 29) and 50 c. 1625. (fn. 30) In 1676 there were 127
adults. (fn. 31) One hundred and ten people paid a poll
tax in 1692. (fn. 32) In 1728 44 households contained 200
people. (fn. 33) A population of 295 in 1801 occupied 45
houses. It rose sharply between 1811 and 1821 to
383, and then more gradually to 548 in 1851 when
there was almost double the number of households
recorded in 1801, 117 compared with 62. From a
peak of 619 in 1871 inhabiting 125 dwellings, the
population fell by a third to 419 in 1901, occupying
only 97 houses, then grew again slowly to 514 in
1931. After the Second World War it again rose
swiftly from 597 in 1951 to 812 in 1961, (fn. 34) and
doubled again through the new building to almost
1,650 by 1970. (fn. 35)
Comberton was linked with the highways from
St. Neots and from Arrington Bridge to Cambridge,
both turnpiked in the 18th century, (fn. 36) by field-ways, (fn. 37)
mostly stopped at inclosure. One ran northward
from the street called North or Green End Street,
over a wide common called the Offield, and curved
gradually east to pass into Whitwell beside the
North brook. From it Ducks or Dux way led to the
St. Neots road. (fn. 38) Another track, Great Offield or
Offal way, ran south-east from a gate, leading into
Hardwick field, across the road to Whitwell, to
enter further south into Barton, where it was called
Hardwick way. The road through the village east of
the cross-roads, called formerly the Portway, later
Cambridge lane or way (fn. 39) and in 1970 Barton
Road, entered Barton a little north of the modern
road. Southwards ran a road crossing the Bourn
brook at Fox's Bridge. Two ways ran across from
Toft to Barton south of the village. One, called
Millhill way west of that road, and Great and Little
Hodge way further east, met Priory way in Barton.
From the other, called from west to east Broad,
New Close, and Hensnest way, there forked Stallow
way, which meandered south-east towards the turnpike road near Lord's Bridge. (fn. 40) Its final section is
still marked by a field-path. At inclosure the existing
Long Road, south from the St. Neots road to the
Barton road and continued almost to the Bourn
brook by a bridle-way, was laid out, and other roads
straightened. (fn. 41)
In 1851 the village had four public houses: by the
cross-roads the Red Lion; in West Street the Plough,
still open in 1880, and the White Horse, closed
between 1912 and 1922, and the Tailor's Arms,
surviving in 1937. (fn. 42) The Three Horse Shoes in
South Street, opened by 1861, survived in 1970, as
did the Red Lion, then renamed the Oasis. (fn. 43)
At inclosure in 1839 4½ a. were allotted for a
recreation ground, (fn. 44) but their site was far from the
village and by 1898 was let, the income being used to
rent a playing field nearer the village. (fn. 45) The land was
sold in 1927, (fn. 46) and the proceeds, together with those
from the sale, in 1926, of disused parish gravel-pits, (fn. 47)
were used to buy a close in the village off Hines
Lane, (fn. 48) on which a sports pavilion was built in
1940. (fn. 49) During the Second World War an R.A.F.
unit was billeted in the village, and flat ground near
the brook was used in 1940 as an aircraft training
ground. (fn. 50)
In 1842 the remains of a Roman building,
occupied in the 2nd century A.D., were discovered in
a field a little east of Fox's Bridge. (fn. 51) The village
green formerly included by 1800 a maze by the
cross-roads. It was circular, and some 50 ft. across,
sinking towards the centre. Its windings were
separated by trenches and marked out with pebbles
which the villagers in the early 19th century renewed every three years. At the inclosure it was
allotted to the Sons of the Clergy, and soon after
was included in the playground of the National
school built in 1846, and though the school's trust
deed required its preservation it was gradually
trampled down. (fn. 52) In 1908 it was restored according
to an old plan, under the auspices of the Cambridge
Antiquarian Society, possibly on a new site, and
fenced round. Its foundations were visible in 1925 (fn. 53)
but it had again been obliterated by 1960 (fn. 54) and
was mostly covered by asphalt.
Manors and Other Estates.
In 1086 the
king had 2½ hides in Comberton which had long
been part of the royal demesne. (fn. 55) Subsequently the
estate became the manor of MERKS, later called
GREENS. It was included in the farm of the
county (fn. 56) until 1177 when Henry II granted it to
Esveillard de Seissun, who held it until 1195. (fn. 57)
Nicholas Mucenbote occupied it from 1196 to
1200. (fn. 58) In 1200 King John granted the manor to
John Merk, (fn. 59) who long served as a royal falconer (fn. 60)
and was to hold it by the same serjeanty as that by
which he already held White Roding (Essex), given
him by Henry II. (fn. 61) He had to keep two lanner
falcons and one retriever, trained to catch herons,
from Michaelmas to Candlemas, at the king's costs. (fn. 62)
The Exchequer occasionally alleged that Merk and
his heirs held their fee in Comberton by knightservice of the honor of Boulogne and so charged
them with scutages, (fn. 63) from which Henry III
ordered their discharge in 1246. (fn. 64)
John Merk died between 1212 and 1214, and his
son and heir William Merk (fn. 65) in 1217, when he was
succeeded by his brother Walter (fn. 66) (d. 1248). (fn. 67)
Walter, for his services to the Crown, secured his
discharge from tallage, (fn. 68) which had been levied on
the manor until 1207, (fn. 69) and from suit to the county
court. (fn. 70) William Merk frequently served King John
as falconer, (fn. 71) and Walter was still performing his
serjeanty in the 1240s, sometimes receiving gifts of
wine when the falcons that he kept were returned at
Candlemas. (fn. 72) His son and heir William died in
1254, (fn. 73) leaving as son and heir John who was still
under age in 1266. (fn. 74) John occasionally kept the king's
falcons. (fn. 75) In 1302 he was granted free warren at
Comberton. (fn. 76) Being childless, in 1297 he settled his
serjeanty lands, after his own and his wife Mary's
death, upon his sister Cecily, who had married
Humphrey Hastang. (fn. 77) John died in 1304. (fn. 78) His
widow Mary, who married Stephen Hovel in 1305
and survived until 1329, (fn. 79) granted Comberton c.
1307 for a rent to Cecily's son, Philip Hastang, to
whom Cecily had conveyed her own interest in
1307. (fn. 80) Philip settled Comberton on himself and his
wife Alice in 1310. (fn. 81) Both died in 1317, leaving three
daughters as heirs. (fn. 82) The wardship of Beatrice, the
eldest, was purchased after 1318 by John Longueville of Little Billing (Northants.), who married her
to his younger son Thomas. She and Thomas
entered upon Comberton when she came of age in
1330. (fn. 83) In 1336 the manor was settled upon them
jointly, (fn. 84) and after Thomas had died in 1346, leaving
as his heir a son John under age, (fn. 85) Beatrice brought
it to her second husband Sir William Quenton.
She and John probably died in 1349, but Quenton
retained her lands. By 1353 he had bought out the
rights of her kinsmen and heirs, Roger Greenmantle and John Wichebaud, and settled Merks on
himself and his second wife Joan (d. by 1362). (fn. 86)
In 1364 Quenton resettled the manor upon himself and his third wife Isabel for their lives, and sold
the remainder to Sir Henry Green, Chief Justice of
the King's Bench 1361–5 (d. 1370), for the benefit
of the judge's younger son Henry, upon whom it
was then entailed. (fn. 87) Quenton died in 1374, when
Comberton was said to be held by the serjeanty of
carrying a goshawk at the king's coronation, (fn. 88) and
Isabel in 1388, whereupon Henry Green succeeded
to Comberton. The manor was then and subsequently said to be held by knight-service. (fn. 89) Green
was beheaded in 1399 as one of Richard II's evil
counsellors. His lands were temporarily forfeited, (fn. 90)
but in 1400 Henry IV restored his entailed property,
including Comberton, to his eldest son Ralph
Green. (fn. 91) In 1414 Ralph settled Comberton and
other manors jointly on himself and his wife
Catherine, (fn. 92) who had livery after his death in 1417. (fn. 93)
She later married Sir Simon Felbrigge (d. 1443),
and survived until 1460. (fn. 94) Under Ralph's will, his
brother John claimed those lands, but may not have
recovered them before his death in 1433. (fn. 95) John's
son and heir Henry had livery in 1435, (fn. 96) and died in
1468, (fn. 97) when his heir was his daughter Constance.
She had married c. 1458 the third son of Humphrey,
duke of Buckingham, John Stafford, who entered
upon most of Henry Green's estates, (fn. 98) but Green's
widow Margaret retained Comberton until her
death in 1476. (fn. 99) John Stafford, created earl of
Wiltshire in 1470, died in 1473 and Constance in
1475, leaving as heir to the Green lands their son
Edward, (fn. 100) who came of age in 1484 and died in 1499, (fn. 101)
having devised Comberton to his wife Margaret for
life. (fn. 102)
The countess was soon ousted, however, by the
heirs to the Green lands, five girls descended from
Margery and Isabel, sisters of Henry Green (d.
1468). Two of the five shortly died, and the lands
were divided in 1505 between the three surviving
daughters and coheirs of Isabel's son, Sir Henry
Vere (d. 1493). Their wardships had in 1499 been
purchased by Sir John Mordaunt, (fn. 103) of Turvey
(Beds.), a councillor of Henry VII and Speaker in
1487 (d. 1504). (fn. 104) He married Elizabeth, the eldest
daughter, to his son John in 1499. Elizabeth's
sisters, Amy and Audrey, were c. 1505 married
respectively to Humphrey, the brother, and John,
the eldest son, of Sir John Mordaunt's brother-inlaw, Sir Wistan Browne. (fn. 105) Comberton, like other
Green manors, was divided among them into three
parts. (fn. 106)
Elizabeth's husband John was created Lord
Mordaunt in 1532 and died in 1562. Their son John,
Lord Mordaunt, was succeeded in 1571 by his son
Lewis, Lord Mordaunt, (fn. 107) who sold his third share
of the manor the same year to Dr. John Hatcher of
Cambridge. (fn. 108) Hatcher in 1585 bought the moiety of
another third of the manor, (fn. 109) and his son Thomas
(d. 1583) acquired a third part of the remaining
third in 1572. (fn. 110) Dr. Hatcher died in 1587 leaving his
various shares of the manor — a third, a sixth, and a
ninth — to his grandson John Hatcher (d. 1640) (fn. 111)
who in 1612 sold them to Thomas Pattenson of
Shelford. (fn. 112) Before he died in 1639 Pattenson had
also acquired two-thirds of one-third of the manor, (fn. 113)
later known as Pattenson's part, which descended as
indicated below, but had presumably alienated the
shares bought from Hatcher to Thomas Baron, who
was said c. 1625 to own the largest share of Greens
together with the court leet. (fn. 114) Thomas Baron and
William Brittan jointly owned the main part of
Greens, amounting to about two-thirds, in 1652, (fn. 115)
and William Brittan and Baron Brittan were joint
lords between 1657 and 1661. (fn. 116) Baron Brittan was
sole owner from 1665 to 1705, (fn. 117) and in 1707 he and
John Brittan conveyed their share to Edmund
Anderson, (fn. 118) lord from 1709 to 1732, (fn. 119) after whom
the estate was known as ANDERSON'S PART.
Anderson died probably in 1740 and his infant heir
Edmund Anderson was then owner until 1746. (fn. 120)
By 1756 Anderson's part belonged to the Revd.
William Jefferies and his wife Judith, (fn. 121) who together
conveyed it in 1759 to Hale Wortham the younger (fn. 122)
who having, as described below, succeeded to the
other shares of the manor, reunited its various parts.
Amy's third share passed under the will of her
husband Sir Humphrey Browne, a Justice of the
Common Pleas who died in 1562 and whose son
George died a month later in 1563, to Humphrey's
three daughters by his third wife, Mary, Christian,
and Catherine, (fn. 123) among whom his Comberton
estate was divided into thirds of thirds. Mary entered
on her purparty in 1564 (fn. 124) and married Thomas
Wilford. In 1572 they conveyed it to Thomas
Hatcher, (fn. 125) and as mentioned above it thereafter
descended with what was later called Anderson's
part. Christian and Catherine Browne and Christian's husband John Tufton in 1576 sold their two
shares to Robert Angier of Comberton (fn. 126) (d. c.
1610), (fn. 127) who in 1597 transferred his Comberton
lands to his son Michael. (fn. 128) Michael died in 1608,
leaving as heir his son Robert, a minor, who had
livery in 1620. (fn. 129) Those two-thirds of a third of
Greens manor were later acquired by Thomas
Pattenson (d. 1639) and passed to his posthumous
son John, (fn. 130) becoming known as PATTENSON'S
PART. John was alive in 1664 but apparently dead
by 1668. (fn. 131) His share possibly escheated, being held
in 1678 under grant from the Crown by Thomas
Gerrard, still owner in 1680. (fn. 132) It was later acquired
by Thomas Holder, (fn. 133) who already owned Turner's
part, mentioned below; he was succeeded c. 1706 by
his widow Mary (d. after 1714). (fn. 134) Thomas Holder,
probably their son, held Pattenson's and Turner's
parts in 1723 and 1730 (fn. 135) but had become bankrupt
by 1735, (fn. 136) and Pattenson's part passed in or before
1733 to Elizabeth Young. Elizabeth was styled lady
of the manor from 1736 to 1741 and her husband
Hale Wortham of Royston was styled lord from
1743. (fn. 137) Wortham subsequently acquired Turner's
part, and died in 1755. His son and heir Hale
Wortham (fn. 138) reunited Greens manor by acquiring
Anderson's part also, as mentioned above.
Audrey's third share was held in 1540 by her
husband John Browne, (fn. 139) who died c. 1550 and whose
son and heir George died c. 1558. (fn. 140) It may then
already have passed to Edward Slegge of Cambridge, farmer of the rectory since 1536, (fn. 141) whose
son Edward was said at his death in 1572 to own a
third and half of a third of a third of Greens manor.
The younger Edward's minor son Edward was dead
by 1578, leaving as his heirs his sisters Elizabeth and
Margaret. (fn. 142) Elizabeth had married by 1582 John
Flowerdew of Hethersett (Norf.), (fn. 143) who sold his
half share of a third to Dr. Hatcher in 1585, (fn. 144) so
that it was subsequently merged in his estate, later
called Anderson's part. Margaret Slegge had by
1585 married Robert Turner, (fn. 145) and married secondly
John Baker, with whom she held her share between
1617 and 1632. (fn. 146) She died in 1637, leaving as heir a
son Robert Turner (fn. 147) whose sixth of the manor came
to be known as TURNER'S PART. (fn. 148) It had been
acquired by 1654 by Robert Holder, of a local
family, who owned it until after 1659 (fn. 149) and was
succeeded c. 1676 by Thomas Holder (fn. 150) who later
acquired Pattenson's part. On the bankruptcy of
another Thomas Holder, mentioned above, Turner's
part was apparently separated from Pattenson's,
being owned in 1743 by John Day of Eversden, but
by 1748 was reunited with Pattenson's in the
ownership of Hale Wortham, (fn. 151) whose son Hale
Wortham came to own the whole of Greens manor
as mentioned above.
The younger Hale Wortham died in 1778 (fn. 152) and
his son and heir Hale Wortham in 1828, leaving the
manor estate of c. 400 a. to his brother James, (fn. 153)
who died in 1844. James's son Biscoe Hill Wortham (fn. 154) sold it in 1849 to Ebenezer Foster, a Cambridge banker (d. c. 1851). (fn. 155) Foster's son George
Ebenezer died between 1868 and 1870, leaving his
property to his three sons, E. B., G. E., and C. F.
Foster, and a son-in-law, (fn. 156) who were jointly lords
until 1876 when the Comberton estate was settled
on E. B. Foster. (fn. 157) He added to it c. 1887 Kent's
farm of c. 180 a. by the St. Neots road and died c.
1907. His heir P. G. Foster sold the estate in 1911,
when it was broken up. (fn. 158) The lordship of the
manor belonged by 1907 to Mary F. Raynes, wife
of a Cambridge solicitor, who held it until 1935. (fn. 159)
In 1937 W. L. and E. G. Raynes of Cambridge and
S. W. Pain were lords. (fn. 160)
The manor-house of Merks manor probably
stood originally within a moat beside the road 65
yd. north of the modern farm-house. Its eastern
ditch is still filled with water. A larger ditched
enclosure west of it was probably its farmyard. (fn. 161) In
1664 Robert Holder occupied a house with 8
hearths, perhaps the then manor-house. (fn. 162) It was
replaced by an L-shaped red-brick farm-house with
gabled and dormered roofs and a tall chimney at the
south end of its east wing. It was probably built in
1687 by Thomas Holder, whose initials with his wife
Mary's appear with that date in a panel in the north
wall. Holder also probably built part of the range of
red-brick cottages south of the farm-house, inscribed TH 1706, and his widow reconstructed the
cottages opposite, labelled 1711 MH, once called
Old Farm. (fn. 163)
The other substantial manor, BURDELEYS,
the name being later corrupted to BIRDLINES,
was derived from 2 hides, expropriated from four
sokemen, which two men held of Picot the sheriff
in 1086, and which probably depended, then as
later, on his manor of Madingley. (fn. 164) The overlordship had passed with Picot's honor of Bourn by
1110 to Pain Peverel of Dover, who died after 1130. (fn. 165)
Upon his successor William's death c. 1147, (fn. 166) the
honor was divided among four sisters and coheirs,
Comberton being included in the part assigned to
the eldest sister, Maud, wife of Hugh of Dover, (fn. 167)
of whom Eustace Picot probably held it in 1166. (fn. 168)
Hugh died c. 1174 (fn. 169) and Maud in 1185. (fn. 170) When her
purparty was shared among her sisters, the overlordship of Comberton was apparently assigned to
Asceline, who had married Geoffrey de Waterville (d. c. 1162). (fn. 171) Their son Ralph having died in
1175, (fn. 172) it was inherited by their eldest daughter,
Maud, who married William de Dive (d. c. 1181) (fn. 173)
and survived her son by him, Hugh (d. c. 1206). (fn. 174)
When she died in 1228 her coheirs were Hugh's three
daughters. The overlordship of Comberton was
assigned to Maud, one of them who had by 1224
married Saher of St. Andrew (fn. 175) (d. after 1253), (fn. 176)
and probably remained with their descendants, (fn. 177)
although occasionally ascribed after 1250 to the
Pecches, (fn. 178) barons of Bourn who represented the
Peverels' senior coheirs. (fn. 179) The Burdeleys family,
mesne tenants of Comberton, held of the Pecches,
moreover, at Madingley and Rampton. (fn. 180) Maud St.
Andrew died in 1273 (fn. 181) and her son Robert in 1274. (fn. 182)
His heir was his son Roger St. Andrew (fn. 183) (d. 1327)
whose son Richard (fn. 184) died in 1330. Richard's son
John (fn. 185) (d. 1360) left as heir a son John, (fn. 186) who dying
in 1368 was succeeded by his brother Edmund. (fn. 187)
The family continued at East Haddon (Northants.)
until the late 16th century, (fn. 188) but no record of its
overlordship of Comberton has been found later
than the 14th century.
The Comberton estate was held under those
lords by tenants probably descended from Michael
Picot, who held of William Peverel at Madingley. (fn. 189)
Eustace Picot (fl. 1166) (fn. 190) left a daughter Lauretta,
who married Hugh Burdeleys (d. by 1181). (fn. 191) Their
son William died between 1214 and 1219, (fn. 192) and
when Lauretta died in 1224, her heir was her
grandson William (d. 1233). He was succeeded in
turn by his brothers Hugh (fn. 193) (d. 1251) and Geoffrey (fn. 194)
(d. 1264), whose son John died in 1283. (fn. 195) By the
early 13th century their manor at Comberton was
subinfeudated, being occupied successively by
Walter of Cottenham (fl. 1200–15), (fn. 196) John of
Cottenham (fl. 1235–60), (fn. 197) and Gilbert of Cottenham (fl. c. 1272). (fn. 198) In 1279 it was said to be held by
Gilbert's heirs, (fn. 199) presumably meaning his widow
Alice (fl. 1282–1304). (fn. 200) By 1300 the manor was held
in demesne by John Burdeleys's son Geoffrey (fn. 201)
(d. 1324). (fn. 202) Geoffrey's son and heir John granted it
for their lives to Thomas Pateshull (d. by 1335) and
John Francis (d. 1337), (fn. 203) and died in 1329. Comberton reverted to his son John, a minor, upon Francis's
death. (fn. 204) John died in 1347, still under age, (fn. 205) and his
lands were thereupon divided between his sisters,
Elizabeth, wife of Thomas Marshal, and Joan,
wife of Gilbert Chamber of Epping (Essex). (fn. 206) They
were reunited when Elizabeth died without issue in
1361. (fn. 207) After Gilbert's death in 1360 (fn. 208) Joan married
John FitzJohn or Middleton. Because he would not
fulfil undertakings to perform Gilbert's will and
maintain his children, she left him and apparently
occupied Comberton until her death in 1375,
whereupon her son Edmund Chamber entered
upon it. (fn. 209) Fitzjohn, however, claimed to hold her
lands by the curtesy, and may have occupied those
in Cambridgeshire as well as those in Norfolk
until his death in 1394. (fn. 210) Edmund Chamber died in
1400, leaving a son John, (fn. 211) who came of age in 1411. (fn. 212)
His mother Margaret, however, retained the manor,
perhaps as dower, and married Ralph Gernon of
Boston. In 1419, as his widow, she conveyed it to
feoffees including William Baker of Clare (Suff.), (fn. 213)
who may have been the William Baker returned as
lord in 1428. (fn. 214) The lordship is uncertain for some
years: John Chamber had released it to his mother's
feoffees in 1419 and no longer held it at his death in
1448. (fn. 215)
A later lord, perhaps William Baker, conveyed it
to Thomas Pouncy, whose will devised it to John
Denston of Denston (Suff.), (fn. 216) who occupied the
manor in 1457. (fn. 217) He died in 1462, (fn. 218) leaving it to his
wife Catherine for life, with remainder to his
daughter Anne. (fn. 219) She married John Broughton of
Denston (d. 1479), (fn. 220) and died in 1481. Burdeleys
manor was then and later said to be held of the
honor of Clare in Suffolk. (fn. 221) Anne's eldest son John
died under age in 1483. (fn. 222) His brother and heir
Robert came of age in 1487 and died in 1506,
leaving a son John, (fn. 223) of age in 1510, who died in
1518. (fn. 224) In 1514 he sold Burdeleys manor to the
bishop of Winchester and others, (fn. 225) who included it
in the endowment of the hospital which they were
founding, as executors of Henry VII's will, in the
Savoy palace. (fn. 226) The Savoy hospital, established in
1517, (fn. 227) was temporarily dissolved in 1553, (fn. 228) when
certain of its lands, including those at Comberton,
were granted to the mayor and corporation of
London to found a new hospital. (fn. 229) They assigned
Comberton to St. Thomas's Hospital, as whose
governors they remained titular lords of the manor
in 1970. (fn. 230)
The farm-house of Birdlines is a brick building
of the 18th century, of two storeys with hipped
roofs. A moat in an enclosure to the south, once
called Moat close, probably indicated the site of an
earlier manor-house, (fn. 231) said to be ruinous in the 14th
century. (fn. 232) The southern ditch, the last remaining,
was filled in 1960. (fn. 233)
The third manor in Comberton was also linked
with a serjeanty. In 1086 Erchenger the king's baker
held 5/6 hide there, once held by 3 sokemen, and also
1 hide in Toft, (fn. 234) later called HEVEDS FEE. The
service by which his successors held it was that of
rendering to the king, from corn that he provided,
one hot simnel loaf daily for his morning meal. (fn. 235)
Under Richard I the serjeanty land was held by
Arnold, son of Robert son of Guy, who recovered
it under John, after Simon, chamberlain to Archbishop Hubert Walter, had briefly occupied it c.
1198. (fn. 236) Later it was held by Robert Head (Heved)
of Hardwick (d. 1250). (fn. 237) Most of its demesne, c.
121 a., had been alienated to Barnwell Priory which
in 1250 had the bakery service arrented at 6s. 8d. a
year. (fn. 238) Other fragments, amounting to 17 a., had
also been alienated before 1279, to the Hospitallers
of Shingay, the nuns of Swaffham Bulbeck Priory,
St. John's Hospital, Cambridge, to which Arnold
son of Robert had granted 3 a. c. 1210, and Stourbridge leper hospital, which by 1200 owned land in
Comberton later confirmed to it by King John. (fn. 239)
Robert's son, Alexander Head, nevertheless retained
in 1279 and 1284 a small holding and lordship over
tenants of 46 a., (fn. 240) to which John son of William
Head succeeded on coming of age in 1312. (fn. 241) In
1319 John Head sold 13 a. and certain rents to John
Burdeleys (d. 1329). (fn. 242) The land then remained
joined to Burdeleys manor until on Joan Chamber's
death in 1375 it was claimed by the Crown, with
other lands alienated from the serjeanty without
licence. (fn. 243) It was subsequently occupied by a series
of keepers (fn. 244) until its sale in 1553. (fn. 245)
The serjeanty lands acquired by Barnwell Priory
were united with the glebe of the appropriated
rectory to form the RECTORY manor, which the
priory retained until its dissolution in 1538. (fn. 246) The
Crown held Rectory manor until 1562, when in an
enforced exchange it was granted to the bishop of
Ely. (fn. 247) Successive bishops were lords until the
transfer of the estate in 1864 to the Ecclesiastical
Commissioners. (fn. 248) Under the bishops the manor
and parsonage were occupied by lessees, usually for
terms of three lives, at a rent of £19, which was
unchanged from the late 15th to the 19th century. (fn. 249)
The lease included the court with its profits, and
the courts were held in the lessees' names. (fn. 250) In
1536 Edward Slegge had obtained from Barnwell
Priory a lease (fn. 251) in reversion, probably for 70 years.
It was held successively by his son Edward (d. 1572);
from 1581 by Edward's daughter's husband, John
Flowerdew (d. 1588); from 1588 to c. 1601 by
Edward Lucas of Thriplow, Flowerdew's uncle and
executor; (fn. 252) and from 1602 by Flowerdew's younger
son William. (fn. 253)
In 1604 Bishop Heton leased the rectory to Sir
Thomas Smith, clerk to the Privy Council, and in
1606 to Smith's servant, Robert Finney. (fn. 254) By 1617
the lease had passed to Thomas Motham of Drinkstone (Suff.), who transferred it in 1634 to his son
Isaac (d. 1657). (fn. 255) In 1650 John Motham conveyed it
to Thomas Muriell of Cambridge. (fn. 256) Robert
Muriell was styled lord in 1668. (fn. 257) By 1670 the
rectory lease was possessed by Edward Neville of
Grove (Notts.) (cr. Bt. 1675, d. 1686). (fn. 258) His widow
Elizabeth had sold it by 1691 to Henry Dry. Henry
Dry, a lawyer of Lincoln's Inn, renewed the lease in
1724 and 1735 and died in 1740, leaving it to his son
Henry who again renewed it in 1743. (fn. 259) In 1749 his
trustees held the lease. (fn. 260) In 1772 the estate was
conveyed to George Milner of Poole (Dors.), (fn. 261)
who had married Sarah, sister of Henry Dry the
younger. (fn. 262) Milner died in 1795, and his son George
just before his death in 1825 (fn. 263) transferred the lease
to his cousin James Stephen (fn. 264) (d. 1832), a distinguished lawyer and opponent of slavery. Stephen's
son, Sir James Stephen (d. 1859), Under-Secretary
for the Colonies, was succeeded by his widow Jane
(d. 1875). His sons James Fitzjames Stephen, the
Indian judge and controversialist, and Leslie Stephen
the essayist, first editor of the D.N.B., were styled
lords down to 1886. (fn. 265) In 1876, however, they
surrendered the remainder of an unexpired lease of
1825 to the Ecclesiastical Commissioners, (fn. 266) who
thenceforward owned the rectory farm directly. In
1964 they sold 103 a. out of 159 a. of it to John
Baker of Church Farm. (fn. 267)
Rectory Farm, standing north of the parish
church, probably represents the parson's former
dwelling, used by Barnwell Priory as its farmstead
after the appropriation. In 1339 the prior had a hall
and grange there. (fn. 268) In 1638 there was a parsonage
house with two barns. (fn. 269) The present red-brick
house was built in the early 18th century. (fn. 270)
The Milners or their predecessors as lessees had
acquired other property for which at inclosure in
1839 44 a. were allotted to George Milner's widow
Elizabeth Mary (fn. 271) (d. 1844). (fn. 272) That land belonged c.
1860 to Sir James Stephen's brother, H. S. Stephen
(d. 1864), serjeant-at-law, and part of it descended to
his daughter Sarah, who owned it until c. 1883. (fn. 273)
In 1086 William de Keynes held 1½ virgate in
Comberton given him by Odo, bishop of Bayeux,
with his manor in Barton, with which it presumably
descended. (fn. 274) St. John's College succeeded St.
John's Hospital, Cambridge, as owner of land at
Comberton for which 4½ a. were allotted at inclosure in 1839. (fn. 275) In 1506 Thomas Hutton, clerk,
died holding of Barnwell Priory 60 a. which he had
purchased at Comberton, and which he devised to
his nephew, Thomas Hutton of Dry Drayton, (fn. 276)
who in 1536 conveyed 87 a. there to several members
of the Baron family. (fn. 277)
Economic History.
Before the Norman
Conquest Comberton, apart from the royal manor,
was occupied by nine sokemen who had 3½ hides
between them and could freely dispose of their land.
By 1086 they had been succeeded by 19 villani who
with 24 bordars occupied about half the vill. Of
twelve plough-lands seven belonged to the demesne
and only five to the peasantry. The yield of the
manors had then, at £10, been restored almost to the
level of 1066. (fn. 278)
Most of the peasants held in villeinage in 1279,
when 11 free tenants occupied only c. 90 a., while
34 men held 385 a. by villein services, which, if
exacted, were not light. On Merks manor halfyardlanders did three week-works and even cottagers
two, both also rendering three harvest-boons. On
Burdeleys manor tenants of 9 a. owed 140 works,
those of 5 a. c. 100 works. A tenant of 9 a. of Barnwell Priory also did three week-works. The demesnes almost equalled the tenants' land in area.
Barnwell Priory had probably 160 a. in demesne in
1279, when the demesne of Merks was reckoned at
two carucates. (fn. 279) In 1346 the latter was said to
contain 140 a., but in 1374 360 a. of arable. (fn. 280) In the
mid 14th century Burdeleys manor had 120 a. to
140 a. of demesne. In 1337 and 1347 the customary
works on that manor were valued as rent-yielding. (fn. 281)
On Merks manor too they had been put to rent by
1346. (fn. 282) The priory's land was perhaps in hand in
1339. (fn. 283) In 1341 much of the parish was said to be
lying waste because the tenants were not sufficient to
cultivate it. (fn. 284)
By 1347 the land was being farmed on a threecourse rotation, (fn. 285) although by the 16th century there
were four fields. South of the village West field lay
between the boundary of Toft and the road to Fox's
Bridge, east of which was Stallan or Stallow field.
North of the Barton road Harborough field extended
as far as the North brook. North field lay between
that brook and the St. Neots road, but included on
the west some furlongs south of the brook. (fn. 286) In
1715 Comberton was supposed to include 1,446 a.
of arable. (fn. 287) It also had extensive pastures. It was
estimated c. 1830 that the commons, including 126 a.
of Midsummer and Lammas lands, covered 325 a.,
compared with 1,400 a. of open-field arable. The
floodable land along the Bourn brook was used as
meadow. In Stallow field wide strips of pasture lay
along the Tit brook, and further north on both sides
of the Barton road. A wide common, called the
Aldefeld, and later the Offield or Offal, lay west of
Harborough field and north of the village, continuing the green northward. Curving north-east it
divided Harborough field from a southern extension,
c. 38 a., of North field, and joined a wide belt of
pasture running beside the North brook. (fn. 288)
The formal structure of Merks manor survived
well into modern times. In 1562 as in 1279 it
contained, besides 6 cottagers, 20 customary holdings of 15 a., which paid yearly rents of 10s. each.
In 1279 their works had been valued at 9s. (fn. 289) By the
17th century even the entry fines had long been
fixed at double the annual rent. (fn. 290) On the other
manors such fines remained arbitrary. (fn. 291) There had,
however, been much engrossing of holdings by 1562,
when two men each had three half-yardlands of
Greens manor, and two others each had two. (fn. 292) On
Burdeleys manor 80 a. of copyhold remained in
1567, of which Nicholas Angier held 45 a. and
Robert Angier 21 a. (fn. 293) At inclosure Greens manor
included 277½ a., by local measure, of customary
land, compared with c. 315 a. in 1279, and Burdeleys 65½ a. compared with 87 a. Of 50 a. copyhold
of the Rectory manor, however, the Worthams,
lords of Greens manor, held 30 a. from the 18th
century. (fn. 294) The demesnes continued as in 1086 to
include about half the village's arable. The farmer
of Greens manor was said to occupy 240 a. in 1562. (fn. 295)
In 1578 its demesne arable was reckoned as 400 a., (fn. 296)
and in 1839 as 357 a., besides 48 a. of pasture,
mostly inclosed. (fn. 297) The Burdeleys estate contained
in 1567 175 a. of arable and 16 a. of pasture, and in
the 18th century 191 a. altogether. (fn. 298) In 1638 the
rectory demesne covered 173 a. (fn. 299)
The villagers who obtained leases of those
demesnes grew to surpass their neighbours in
wealth. When in 1524 13 men paid the subsidy on
goods worth in all £132 and 12 others only on their
wages, Thomas Baron, farmer of the Barnwell land
since 1498, was assessed at £56, and John Baron,
who succeeded him, and another kinsman at £27 6s.
8d. Richard Angier and three relatives paid tax on
c. £30. (fn. 300) Richard and Nicholas Angier had farmed the
Burdeleys demesne in the early 16th century. (fn. 301) In
1538 John Angier leased it for 50 years, (fn. 302) and was
followed by Nicholas Angier, his son, in or before
1567, (fn. 303) and by Thomas Angier, who received a new
lease in 1587. (fn. 304) From c. 1604 to 1640 it was occupied
by Thomas Motham, also lessee of the rectory. (fn. 305) In
1692 Birdlines farm came again on lease into the
hands of a local man, Thomas Holder, (fn. 306) whose family
had acquired parts of Greens manor and who
probably succeeded his father Robert in farming all
of that estate. (fn. 307) His kinsman Charles Holder
occupied Birdlines farm in 1781. (fn. 308) The farm had
formerly been let for 21-year terms at a rent raised
from £9 6s. 8d. in 1538 to £20 between 1606 and
1721, the fine for renewal being increased from £120
in 1587 to £280 from 1677. (fn. 309) After 1735 the beneficial lease was replaced by one at a rack-rent of £66. (fn. 310)
In 1774 the farm was worth £90 a year. (fn. 311) On the
rectory farm beneficial leases continued until the
19th century; (fn. 312) the farm was sublet for £40 in
1591, (fn. 313) and was worth £170 in 1650, including £117
from the tithes. (fn. 314) In 1838 it was worth £435. The
last fine charged had been £2,500. (fn. 315)
There was enough land outside the demesnes to
support several yeoman families owning substantial
farms. In 1715 there were five such farmers, each
with over 75 a. (fn. 316) One farm of c. 80 a., including land
acquired from the Baron family in 1625, descended
through the Barretts and from 1741 through the
Dodsons of Swavesey to Elizabeth Dodson (fn. 317) who
c. 1780 married Joshua Mann, (fn. 318) and with her son
John owned c. 152 a. in 1839. (fn. 319) Another farm,
owned by a branch of the Angier family in the 17th
century, had passed by marriage by 1716 to the
Chapmans of Longstowe, whose heiress in 1813
married Thomas Hawkes. In 1839 he sold the
property, c. 95 a., to the Corporation of the Sons of
the Clergy. (fn. 320)
In the 16th and early 17th centuries the villagers
showed resentment against the lessees of the rectory
and their subtenants for their attempts to inclose
part of the common near the rectory farmstead.
The lessees' servants were sometimes attacked,
and their banks and hedges demolished. (fn. 321) The
villagers were careful to conserve their commons.
About 1650 the court leet made strict orders against
ploughing up the sward. (fn. 322) The farmers in 1827
inspected the fallow field to check damage from
ploughing. (fn. 323) It was found in 1672 that the commons
were being overburdened through the traditional
stint of 3 cattle for each commonable messuage, and
3 more and 15 sheep for each half-yardland. Rules
were made against setting up by-herds, or letting
cow- and sheep-gates to outsiders unless no villager
would take them. By 1715 the stint had been
reduced to 1 cow and 10 sheep for each 15 a.
Cottagers might keep no sheep, unless they owned
no cow. There were then rights of pasture for
275 cattle and 1,004 sheep. (fn. 324) The tenants of Greens
and Birdlines manor farms were still keeping up
manorial folds in the late 18th century, and no byflocks might be kept outside them, although farmers
and copyholders could send their sheep to whichever fold they preferred, irrespective of whose
tenants they were. George Milner revived an
allegedly disused rectory fold c. 1775, and in 1801 a
substantial farmer with 262 a. proposed to set up a
private fold for his own sheep. (fn. 325) The traditional
rotation and cropping was then still largely in force.
In 1801 218 a. each of wheat, barley, and peas were
sown, and 255 a. of oats. (fn. 326)
Comberton was inclosed under an Act obtained,
like that for its neighbour Barton, in 1839. (fn. 327) The
allotment of lands was effected that year, and the
award legally executed in 1840. (fn. 328) James Wortham,
lord of Greens manor, was allotted 376 a., besides
his 32 a. of old inclosures. St. Thomas's Hospital
emerged with 189½ a., and the bishop of Ely's
lessee with 158 a. The Sons of the Clergy obtained
134 a., adjoining their estate in Whitwell, and Jeremiah Kent 178 a., also in the north part of the
parish. Of locally resident farmers, Robert Whittet
had 161 a., Elizabeth and John Mann 166 a., James
Wootten, Wortham's tenant, 49 a. in his own right,
and Thomas Hallack 50 a. Two outsiders, Mary
Burbidge and Elizabeth M. Milner, received 60 a.
and 45 a. Nine others, mostly local inhabitants,
had allotments of 10 a. to 30 a., amounting to 161 a.,
and another fourteen with smaller properties shared
55½ a. Twenty-two acres were allotted to seven
persons with rights of common only. (fn. 329)
Several smaller properties were let to the tenants
of the larger farms. Just before inclosure James
Wootten occupied four farms covering c. 530 a.
After it he was farming 358 a., owned by 5 persons,
from Wortham's Lordship Farm. William Bonnett,
lessee of Rectory farm, occupied 238 a. in 1839. (fn. 330)
Comberton continued to include also a good number
of farms. In 1841 there were 13 farmers, in 1851 14,
of whom only three occupied over 200 a., while
another four had between 100 a. and 200 a. James
Wootten and three relatives then occupied altogether c. 1,030 a., (fn. 331) but that predominance ceased
on his death in 1853. (fn. 332) In 1861 there were 17 farmers,
of whom four had over 200 a. and two others had
over 100 a., not including the land of the Sons of the
Clergy farmed from Whitwell. (fn. 333) The property of
John Mann (d. 1870) lying beside the boundary
with Barton was mostly acquired c. 1887 by R. R.
Holben of Barton, whose family owned it until c.
1918. (fn. 334) In 1888 there were seven substantial farms,
in 1908 eight. (fn. 335) Following the sale of the Sons of the
Clergy's estate in 1911, (fn. 336) and the breaking up of the
Greens manor estate the same year, (fn. 337) most of the
land in Comberton was by 1936 owned by the men
farming it. (fn. 338) In 1922 there were ten farms, in 1937
twelve. (fn. 339)
Comberton long remained almost entirely dependent on agriculture, providing work in 1801 for 78
men, compared with only 12 in crafts. In 1831 13
farmers employed 69 labourers, while only 12
families were supported by trade or crafts. (fn. 340) In 1841
there were 82 farm-workers, but only 28 craftsmen,
including 5 wheelwrights, 4 collar-makers, and 3
blacksmiths and carpenters. (fn. 341) In 1861 14 men were
working in the coprolite diggings. (fn. 342) In the 1920s
almost three-quarters of the population were still
farm-labourers. (fn. 343) From 1908 the village contained
a cycle-maker's, which developed in the 1930s into a
garage, and a small building firm. (fn. 344) With the
increasing population after the Second World War
there were more opportunities for local employment, even though many inhabitants commuted to
Cambridge. In 1960 there were in Comberton a
works making glass-houses, and a branch of a
children's clothes factory. (fn. 345)
In the mid 14th century Merks and Burdeleys
manors both possessed windmills. (fn. 346) The Burdeleys
mill was ruinous in 1347. (fn. 347) Its site may be indicated
by the name of Millhill way which led westwards
from Burdeleys manor-house. A windmill was still
in use in the parish in the 19th century, being owned
after 1861 by Robert and William Beldam in
succession. It had been converted to steam by 1900,
and was closed between 1912 and 1922. (fn. 348)
Local Government.
In 1279 John Merk
enjoyed on his manor view of frankpledge with the
assize of bread and ale, and a pillory and gallows
used by the view of the king's bailiff. (fn. 349) In 1299 he
claimed to hold them by prescription, explaining
that, though not entitled to infangthief, he might
have convicted thieves brought back to his estate
and hanged there. (fn. 350) That manor's court remained
the only court leet in the parish, (fn. 351) and may be the
'court of Highall' to which a verdict in Burdeleys
manor court was postponed in 1523. (fn. 352) From the
later 17th century, however, courts for the subdivisions of Greens manor were usually styled courts
baron. Court books, virtually registers of copyhold
title, survive for Anderson's part from c. 1652 to
1848, for Turner's part from 1617 to 1850, and for
Pattenson's part from 1708 to 1855. Court books for
the reunited manor run from the 1850s to 1937. (fn. 353)
For Burdeleys manor there are court rolls for 14861505, 1521–31, and 1550–1741, and court books
for 1645–1936; (fn. 354) for the rectory manor there are
court books for 1668–1937. (fn. 355) Both courts were only
courts baron held irregularly. The Burdeleys manor
court was electing a 'messor' in 1493, (fn. 356) and making
minor regulations concerning commoning in the
16th century. (fn. 357) In the 17th and 18th centuries
regulations made by the agreement of the farmers
to prevent encroachment on common pasture land,
or fix stints, were usually recorded in the court
books of Greens manor. Field-reeves were being
appointed in 1762, (fn. 358) and in the 1830s when they
jointly owned a close. (fn. 359) In 1793 new rules on stocking were made by a general vestry. (fn. 360)
In the early 19th century parish affairs were
managed by a vestry open to all ratepayers. (fn. 361) The
poor-rate rose from £50 in 1785 to £268 in 1803,
when 25 persons were permanently and 11
occasionally relieved. (fn. 362) By 1813 the cost of relief
had increased to £417, but had fallen to £296 by
1816, although the number on permanent relief
remained constant around 14. The cost rose steadily
again to £472 in 1820, and, though reduced to £302
in 1823, increased again from 1824 (fn. 363) to reach £425
in 1830. Seven or eight men were maintained as
roundsmen, the overseer paying their wages, and
some 30 others were on relief, of whom six or seven
worked on the parish roads. (fn. 364) About 1834 the poorrate was absorbing half the yearly value of the farms.
The vicar had thwarted plans to let allotments rentfree to some paupers by demanding tithes from
them; and the tithe-occupier obstructed a scheme
for apportioning the labourers among the farmers. (fn. 365)
In 1836 the parish was included in the Chesterton
poor law union, (fn. 366) and remained in the Chesterton
R.D. in 1970.
Church.
A church existed at Comberton before
1100. Picot the sheriff granted it to his foundation of
Austin canons, later transferred to Barnwell Priory,
and the gift was confirmed by Remigius, bishop of
Lincoln, (d. 1092), and by Henry I. (fn. 367) In 1247 John
of Cottenham, tenant of Burdeleys manor, released
the advowson of the church to the priory. (fn. 368) In the
mid 12th century Robert son of Guy granted twothirds of the tithes of his bakery serjeanty lands to
St. Albans Abbey. Before 1208 the abbey had
granted them to Barnwell Priory in exchange for
tithes in Girton and Great Eversden. (fn. 369) The church,
taxed at 12 marks in 1217 and 1254 and at 30 marks
in 1276 and 1291, (fn. 370) had been appropriated to the
priory by c. 1275 and a vicarage had been ordained. (fn. 371) The priory took the great tithes, (fn. 372) the
parsonage house, and most of the glebe, which were
all incorporated in its rectory manor. (fn. 373) The vicar
probably obtained the small tithes, with a glebe
reckoned at c. 7 a. in 1615, (fn. 374) and a pension of 2
marks charged on the rectory. (fn. 375) The priory retained the advowson of the vicarage until its
dissolution, (fn. 376) and in 1554 John and Nicholas Knight
presented under a grant of the next turn made by
the priory in 1532. (fn. 377) The advowson subsequently
belonged to the rectory manor, held by the bishops
of Ely from 1562. (fn. 378) In 1557 Bishop Thirlby induced
the queen to give the advowson to Jesus College, (fn. 379)
but her grant did not take effect for many years.
Under Elizabeth vicars were presented by Edward
Slegge, John Flowerdew, and Edward Lucas,
successively farmers of the rectory, whose lease
probably included the advowson, and once, in 1590,
by the Crown, probably through the wardship of
Flowerdew's eldest son. (fn. 380) In leases from 1604 onwards the patronage of the vicarage was regularly
excluded. (fn. 381) At the next vacancy, in 1619, Jesus
College presented one of its fellows, and remained
patron thenceforth. (fn. 382)
The vicarage was worth £4 3s. 4d. in 1291, (fn. 383)
£6 18s. 10d. in 1535, (fn. 384) and £18 in 1650. (fn. 385) Bishop
Gunning (1675–84) substituted for the former
pension of 2 marks £10 a year, payable by the lessees
of the rectory in addition to their rent. (fn. 386) In 1721
the benefice was valued at £38 9s. 6d. (fn. 387) and c. 1830
at £153. (fn. 388) In 1839, simultaneously with the inclosure, the tithes were commuted into rentcharges, the bishop as impropriator or his lessee
receiving £328 15s. a year, the vicar £104 of which
£7 10s. was exchanged (fn. 389) for an allotment of 2½ a.
The vicar was also allotted 4 a. for his glebe. (fn. 390) The
vicar's income in 1873 was £160. (fn. 391) In 1878 and
1882 the vicarage received further endowments, (fn. 392)
raising the income to £294 in 1894. (fn. 393) The vicar
still owned a glebe of 5½ a. in 1970. (fn. 394)
In 1373 the vicar was given a half-acre toft held
of Barnwell Priory on which to build a new house: (fn. 395)
the Old Vicarage, south of the church, preserves the
timber-framed structure of a medieval hall and
cross-wing. (fn. 396) Although in fair repair in the 18th and
19th centuries, it was looked on as a mere labourer's
cottage. (fn. 397) The vicar was usually non-resident (fn. 398) and
even the curates lodged elsewhere. (fn. 399) From 1872 to
1874 the Ecclesiastical Commissioners gave £850 to
build a new vicarage house. (fn. 400) The old house was then
sold, and a new vicarage built in grey brick nearer
the main road, where the vicar lived in 1884. (fn. 401)
In 1489 there were two guilds of Our Lady in
Comberton. (fn. 402) In 1571 a guildhall was discovered
and sold by the Crown. (fn. 403)
Vicars are occasionally recorded from the early
14th century. (fn. 404) Only one before 1500 may have had a
university degree. (fn. 405) In 1379 the vicar had two
chaplains and two clerks working with him. (fn. 406) Three
incumbents spanned the period 1458–1554. (fn. 407) The
king's commissioners in 1552 found little plate or
vestments at Comberton. (fn. 408) In 1554 the churchwardens said that waste had lately been made in the
church. Edward Slegge, who occupied the rectory,
had appropriated the best censers, claiming that the
churchwardens had sold them to him, which they
denied. He also refused to admit that he was a
parishioner, and to pay the parish clerk's wages as
his customary duty. (fn. 409)
Edward Robinson, vicar in 1560, was considered
incapable of preaching and had no university
degree. (fn. 410) His successors had mostly studied at
Cambridge, and from 1619 normally were or had
been fellows of Jesus College. (fn. 411) Curates were
occasionally employed between 1579 and 1625. (fn. 412)
In 1638 Bishop Wren directed that the reading desk
be removed from the centre aisle, the seats made to
face east, and the chancel arch reopened. (fn. 413) John
Masters, presented in 1641, retained his living
throughout the Civil War and Commonwealth,
although in 1650 he was thought to be of unsound
mind. (fn. 414) In 1658 he was attending meetings of the
Cambridge Presbyterian Classis. (fn. 415) He resigned in
1659. (fn. 416) In 1721 and 1724 the vicar was non-resident,
probably living in college, and employed a fellow of
Jesus to serve the cure. In 1728 there were two
Sunday services and communion thrice yearly,
when only five partook. The children were catechized only in the summer. (fn. 417)
Richard Warren, vicar 1709–18, held Comberton
in plurality with Hinxton, another Jesus living, and
Richard Oakley held it with Harlton from 1756 to
1775. (fn. 418) In 1783 the vicar was again resident at
Jesus and was still absent in 1807; (fn. 419) then, as from
1775, there was a curate, who held two Sunday
services, preaching at one. Many of the Methodists
in the parish also attended the church. (fn. 420) James
Fendall, vicar from 1833, was in 1836 holding
services and preaching in person. From 1839 he
was also rector of Harlton, where he lived, employing a curate at Comberton. (fn. 421) The church contained
300 sittings in 1851, when 60 people attended the
morning and 200 the afternoon service, besides 80
Sunday-school children. (fn. 422) When Essays and Reviews
appeared in 1860, Fendall wrote against it and in
1862 promoted a suit in the Court of Arches against
H. B. Wilson, one of its authors. (fn. 423) By 1873 Fendall's
successor was celebrating communion monthly,
instead of four times a year as in 1836, and had up to
20 communicants. In 1896 there were 43 communicants and c. 285 church-goers, double the number of
dissenters. The vicar, Peake Banton, was then
saddled with a pension to his predecessor, who had
retired to two livings in the Scottish Episcopal
Church. (fn. 424) Banton later became insane. From 1906
to 1915 the living was served by curates-in-charge,
who found difficulty in meeting church expenses
because the Lunacy Commissioners controlling the
vicar's income would pay only those legally obli-
gatory on him. (fn. 425) Between 1952 and 1960 the vicar of
Comberton was also priest-in-charge at Harlton. (fn. 426)
The church of ST. MARY, which until the
Reformation was dedicated in honour of THE
ASSUMPTION, (fn. 427) is mostly of field stones and
freestone, and has a chancel, aisled and clerestoried
nave with south porch, and west tower. Nothing
survives from before the 13th century, when the
chancel, nave, and south aisle were built. The
south wall of the chancel was rebuilt in the early
14th century, possibly by Geoffrey Burdeleys (d.
1324) whose name and arms once appeared in one
of the windows there, (fn. 428) the tower was added about
the same time, and probably also the south porch.
In the 15th century the windows in the south aisle
were replaced, and early in the next century the
east window, the north aisle, and the clerestory
were added. A bequest to glaze one of the clerestory
windows was made in 1520. (fn. 429) Other windows once
contained requests for prayers for those who had
had them made, including Thomas Baron (d.
1525), John Angier, and others who flourished
between 1500 and 1550. (fn. 430) The nave roof and that of
the clerestory are contemporary. The similar roof in
the north aisle had along its embattled cornice
carved angels, later defaced so that only their
wings or wing-tips remain. They were perhaps
victims of William Dowsing, who in 1643 ordered
the removal of six cherubim, besides destroying 69
superstitious pictures, (fn. 431) presumably in the windows.
A broken figure of St. Barbara survived him and
was extant in 1748, as was a painting of St. Christopher by the north door. Other windows then
contained representations of a tree growing through
a tun, and a ladder, perhaps rebuses. (fn. 432) The roodstair is of the early 16th century although the screen
might, on stylistic grounds, be earlier. There are
several early-16th-century pews and stalls with
carved figures, some defaced, including a seated man,
a lion, an eagle, and two men fighting or dancing, and
the initials TB suggest that they were the gift of
Thomas Baron (d. 1525).
In 1554, through the default of Edward Slegge,
the glazing of the chancel was in decay, and two
graves dug there for his family were left unpaved. (fn. 433)
In 1561 the chancel was in disrepair. (fn. 434) In 1665 the
town plough was kept in the church, (fn. 435) which was
filled in 1685 with stones, lime, and rubbish. In
1728 and 1783 church and chancel were in tolerable
repair. (fn. 436) About 1820 the tower was in decay and had
to be partially rebuilt. (fn. 437) A grant from a church
building society enabled the church to be repaired
c. 1850. Open seating replaced the pews and a new
pulpit was installed. (fn. 438) Restoration, said to be needed
for the exterior in 1873, was carried out by the
Ecclesiastical Commissioners in 1874–9, and again
in 1884–5. (fn. 439) The south porch was almost entirely
rebuilt. In the 1890s the vicar raised £700 for
further repairs. (fn. 440) A new chancel roof had been built
by 1898. (fn. 441) There were fresh repairs in 1902–3,
and the tower was again restored in 1921 (fn. 442) and
1967. (fn. 443)
The church plate includes a chalice by Thomas
Buttell of c. 1570 and a paten of 1701. (fn. 444) The tower
contained three bells in 1552. (fn. 445) The churchwardens
sent them to be recast at St. Ives c. 1630, but after
the parishioners demanded that they be remade into
four bells, the bellfounders would not return them
for some time. (fn. 446) There were four bells in 1900 and
in 1968, in an ancient bell-frame: (i) 1633, Miles
Gray; (ii) 1655, Christopher Gray; (iii) 1711;
(iv) modern. (fn. 447) The registers begin in 1560 and are
complete. (fn. 448)
In the 18th century the rent of 12 a. of arable and
two closes was by tradition devoted to repairing the
church and a causeway leading to it. In 1813 the
land yielded £14 a year. (fn. 449) In 1839 8 a. were allotted
to the churchwardens for it at inclosure; (fn. 450) 2 a. were
sold in 1957 and 1965 for a pumping station. (fn. 451)
Nonconformity.
Fifteen Independents were
recorded in 1728 (fn. 452) and two dissenting families in
1783. (fn. 453) By 1807 there were many Methodists, who,
however, also frequented the parish church. (fn. 454) A
house was registered for dissenting protestant
worship in 1818, and two barns in 1823, (fn. 455) one of
which may have been the 17th- or 18th-century
barn, formerly a nonconformist chapel, in Barton
Road, demolished between 1960 (fn. 456) and 1970. A
meeting-house was registered in 1830, and another
in 1843 and 1845, apparently for Independents. (fn. 457)
In 1851 there was a small Baptist meeting in a
converted stable, seating 50, where 'occasional
ministers' held evening services. It had a congregation of 30. (fn. 458) C. F. Foster, lord of Greens manor, (fn. 459)
in 1868 gave a site by Green End Road near the
manor-house for a chapel. (fn. 460) It was built in 1869 (fn. 461)
and used during the 1870s by Baptists and Paedobaptists, but was a 'subordinate station' with no
settled minister. (fn. 462) By 1895 it was called the Union
Chapel. (fn. 463) In 1897, when the parish contained 140
dissenters, (fn. 464) the chapel was owned by the Village
Preachers Association. (fn. 465) In 1898 it served as a
mission station of the Cambridge Mill Road
Baptist Church, (fn. 466) and in 1930 formed part of the
West Group of the Cambridge Village Preachers
Association. (fn. 467) From the early 20th century it was in
membership with the Baptist Union, (fn. 468) usually
sharing a minister with Barton, Coton, and Grantchester. Membership was 20 in 1898, 25 in 1921, 36
in 1940, and 18 in 1969; (fn. 469) in 1964 an extension to
the chapel was built. (fn. 470)
In 1842 Great Eversden Congregational church
established a mission station in Comberton. (fn. 471) There
were 200 sitings in 1894; it is not mentioned after
1903. (fn. 472) A Primitive Methodist chapel is recorded in
1873, (fn. 473) but not subsequently. The Cambridge
Primitive Methodists had a preaching station there
in 1828. (fn. 474)
Education.
There was a schoolmaster in 1601, (fn. 475)
1610, (fn. 476) and 1616. In 1787 there were two private
schools and a newly started Sunday school, (fn. 477) which
23 children attended in 1807. (fn. 478) Nearly 60 children
attended two or three 'common village schools' in
1818, when there were two Sunday schools with 19
and 20 children respectively. All the children were
said to go to school. (fn. 479) Some small schools were
kept without a licence in 1825. (fn. 480) A day-school
started in 1830 had 23 pupils in 1833, taught at their
parents' expense. (fn. 481) There were two private schools
in 1836, one for boys and one for girls. (fn. 482) A Sunday
school was started in 1831; (fn. 483) it was supported
principally by the vicar in 1836. (fn. 484) Attendance was
70 in 1833 (fn. 485) and 1845, when the school was held in
the church. (fn. 486)
A National school with a teacher's house, built
with the aid of grants from the government and the
National Society, was opened in 1846. (fn. 487) The site,
north-east of the main cross-roads, was given in
1845 by St. Thomas's Hospital and their copyholders, the Corporation of the Sons of the Clergy. (fn. 488)
The school received about £15 from school pence in
1847–8. (fn. 489) An unofficial school board, or parish
committee to manage the school, was formed in 1875
to build a classroom and obtain a certificated
teacher, (fn. 490) both of which were done in 1876. (fn. 491) School
pence produced about 8s. in 1893, but had ceased by
1899. (fn. 492) Attendance at an evening school recorded
from 1882 to 1902 fluctuated between 10 and 20. (fn. 493)
The school site was extended northwards in 1902. (fn. 494)
In 1928 the bishop of Ely dedicated a new school
building with three classrooms for 80 junior and 40
senior children. The senior school was intended for
the children of Comberton, Barton, Toft, and Hardwick, and it was 'the first Church of England senior
school to be opened under the new grouping system
in this county and one of the first in East Anglia.' (fn. 495)
The cost was met by local subscriptions, the Ely
Diocesan Board of Education, and the National
Society. By 1930 the old building had been converted into a room for teaching woodwork and
domestic economy, and there were 17 children aged
over 11. Although the original plan for the new
senior school was apparently modified, in 1944 the
senior classes took children from the Church of
England schools at Barton, Toft, and Caldecote. (fn. 496)
Average attendance was 56 in 1849, (fn. 497) 92 in 1879, (fn. 498)
74 in 1908–9, and 81 in 1937–8. (fn. 499)
Comberton village college (fn. 500) was opened just inside
Toft parish in 1960. In 1968 the Meridian County
Primary School replaced the Church of England
school, which was then closed, and in 1970 had
360 children including those from Little Eversden,
Toft, and Hardwick. (fn. 501)
By his will proved in 1847 Thomas Baker gave
£100 to the trustees of the National school. (fn. 502) By 1850
that sum together with further donations had been
invested in £200 stock, and the interest was applied
to support the school. (fn. 503) Income was about £6 in
1962. (fn. 504)
Charities for the Poor.
Shortly before
1521 John Newman gave for the use of the township certain land, copyhold of Burdeleys manor,
which the churchwardens held in 1550. (fn. 505) Being
charged with an obit it was confiscated by the Crown
in 1553. (fn. 506) The churchwardens and constables had
recovered it by the 1590s, (fn. 507) but again lost it c. 1617,
the lord resuming it because they claimed it as
freehold. (fn. 508)
The township owned land called Herring land in
1567. (fn. 509) In 1783 8 a. bearing that name were let for
£5 4s. which was given to the poor on Easter day. (fn. 510)
In 1837 the tradition was that the land had been
given for purchasing herrings for the poor in Lent.
The £9 rent was in that year distributed on Good
Friday among the settled poor, whether resident or
not, in proportion to the size of their families. At
inclosure in 1839 the vicar and churchwarden
successfully claimed to have the land vested in them
as trustees for the poor; (fn. 511) 6 a. were then allotted for
the Herring land, (fn. 512) which were intended for letting
as allotments to labourers, (fn. 513) and were so used
between 1900 and 1940. (fn. 514) In 1864 the rent of £15
15s. was distributed to the poor. (fn. 515) In 1929 the
Herring land was combined with the Town land
charity, mentioned next below.
In 1788 fuel for the poor was provided with £1
rent from land (fn. 516) called the Town land in 1837, when
the rent was paid to the overseers, who spent £2 or
£3 a year, partly raised from the rates, on coal for
poor widows. At inclosure ½ a. was allotted for the
Town land, (fn. 517) which also included two town houses
by the cross-roads. (fn. 518) In 1850 the rent was distributed in the same way as that of the Herring land. (fn. 519)
In 1864 £8 10s. was distributed. (fn. 520) The Herring land
and Town land were combined under a Scheme
of 1929. Rent had declined to c. £2 10s. by 1938,
when almost all the land was unoccupied. In 1964
£8 14s. of the gross rent of £10 was available for
distribution.
Edward Baron by will dated 1603 gave a £1 rentcharge for distribution to 10 of the poorest householders of the parish on May-day. (fn. 521) In 1788 the
money went to 10 poor widows not receiving alms, (fn. 522)
and it was called May Money in 1837, when the
constable, after giving each poor widow 1s. of it,
distributed the rest indiscriminately. The land
charged with the payment could not then be
identified. The last distribution was made in 1891
and after the land that was thought to be charged
had been sold in 1894 the charity was lost.