FOWLMERE
The parish of Fowlmere (fn. 1) lies c. 13 km. south of
Cambridge and c. 8 km. north-east of Royston. (fn. 2) It
covered 2,272 a. until 1965, when 26 ha. were transferred from Chrishall, Essex, and thereafter 945 ha.
(2,335 a.). (fn. 3) The land rises gently from c. 23 metres.
in the north of the parish to 30 metres south of the
village and 55 metres further south. It lies on the
Lower Chalk in the north and the Middle Chalk in
the south, with small deposits of Taele Gravels
in the south-east and north-west corners. (fn. 4) The
parish is approximately rectangular, with a projection south-eastwards into Heydon parish. The
south-western boundary follows the Bran or Heydon
Ditch (fn. 5) and part of the north-eastern boundary the
Wallington brook, deviating eastwards near the village to include the Lynch, c. 15 a. projecting into
Thriplow parish. (fn. 6) The southern boundary follows
field boundaries and old trackways, (fn. 7) just touching
the Icknield Way at its southernmost point. Until
1965 the south-eastwards projection was a forked
shape, but when Chrishall Grange was brought
into Fowlmere parish the boundary moved to the
Chrishall road.
The south-eastern extremity was probably inclosed at an early date (fn. 8) as was the land around and
north of the village, but the rest of the parish was
not inclosed until 1845. Until then c. 60 a., and
earlier 90 a., in the south was heath land, a popular
venue for prize fights in the early 19th century. (fn. 9) In
the north-west the Great Moor and North Moor,
c. 200 a. of marshy ground fed by springs on the
Melbourn border at Black Peak, formed a mere
from which the parish took its name. (fn. 10) Until it was
drained after inclosure it provided food and fuel for
the parishioners and sport for visitors from Cambridge who shot duck, teal, and other waterfowl
there. The mere also harboured the edible frog. (fn. 11)
Part of the moor was not completely drained and
after use as watercress beds again became the
home of wildfowl, and in 1977 the R.S.P.B. bought
27 ha. (66 a.) there as a Nature Reserve. (fn. 12) Trees
have grown up around the springs in that area but
there is no other woodland in the parish.
In 1915 the War Office occupied 30 a. of land
south-west of the village on Fawden or Farthing
Hill as a landing station for aeroplanes, taking over
another 220 a. to the south, near the London road,
in 1917. By 1918 there were 700 R.A.F. staff there
but in 1919 it was abandoned and the buildings
were demolished in 1923. (fn. 13) In 1940 another airfield
was developed a little to the north. It was extended
in 1943 and in 1944 became a U.S.A.A.F. station;
soon after 1945 it reverted to farmland. (fn. 14)
Fowlmere is crossed by what was once the main
London-Kings Lynn road, already in use in 1260. (fn. 15)
It was turnpiked in 1725 and disturnpiked in 1872. (fn. 16)
There was a tollgate immediately east of the village. (fn. 17) The southern end of the parish is crossed by
the Royston–Newmarket road. (fn. 18) Before inclosure
many other roads and trackways ran across Fowlmere. (fn. 19) Ashwell Street, a prehistoric trackway
crossing it from Melbourn to Thriplow, probably
followed the old Melbourn Way, used until inclosure, west of Fowlmere village, then following
the modern road to Thriplow. An alternative route,
north of the marshy area and coinciding partly with
the modern Melbourn road before following King
Lane to a trackway in Thriplow, may have been used
after the Bran Ditch was made. (fn. 20) The old Norwich
Way, called Broadstreet in 1279, (fn. 21) which crossed
the south-western corner of the parish may have
been a northerly branch of the Icknield Way. (fn. 22)
The Old Walden Way formed part of the southern
parish boundary before turning northwards to cross
the Bran Ditch with yet another old track, Royston Joint Way, which ran west from the London
road. With other tracks they were closed in 1845
and the pattern of roads was much simplified. After
1845 only the Shepreth road, cut in 1811, (fn. 23) the
Melbourn, Chrishall, and Heydon roads, and the
turnpikes remained.
Thirty-six inhabitants were recorded in Fowlmere in 1086. (fn. 24) There were nearly 100 tenants, and
102 messuages, there in 1279 (fn. 25) but numbers had
declined by 1302 (fn. 26) and only 31 people paid the
subsidy there in 1327. (fn. 27) In 1447 there were at least
70 tenants, and 39 inhabitants paid the subsidy in
1523. (fn. 28) Thirty-four households were recorded in
1563, (fn. 29) and numbers thereafter rose gradually.
There were 45 families in 1665, and 50 in 1672. (fn. 30)
In 1676 139 adults were recorded, (fn. 31) but numbers
thereafter seem to have fallen a little and in 1728
there were 40 families, 183 people. (fn. 32) By 1794, however, there were c. 70 families and 350 people. (fn. 33)
The rise continued from 420 inhabitants in 1801 to
616 in 1841. Numbers fell thereafter, apart from a
slight increase in 1871 attributed to coprolite digging, to low points of 477 in 1901 and 452 in 1931.
A post-war refugee immigration brought them to
769 in 1951, before they fell to 587 in 1971. (fn. 34)
Fowlmere village, the only centre of settlement,
lies on the Cambridge–London road where it turns
eastwards near the eastern edge of the parish; some
houses at the east end of the village are in Thriplow
parish. Near the boundary, south-west of the
Lynch, is the Round Moat, probably an ancient
British earthwork, which may have been reoccupied
in medieval times. To its south is a square moated
area known as Crow's Parlour. (fn. 35) Houses in the village lie along High Street (the London road), Long
Lane (the Shepreth road), and a network of lanes
including Rectory or Moule's Lane north of High
Street, Lynch Lane south of it, partly stopped at
inclosure, and Brook, later Chapel, Lane east of it.
A medieval hall with cross wings, once Jackson's
shop, in the centre of the village was demolished
after 1972. (fn. 36) A few houses, or parts of houses, survive from the 16th or early 17th century, but a fire
in 1634 seems to have destroyed much of the village. (fn. 37) By 1665 there were 45 houses, 33 of which
had only one or two hearths. (fn. 38) A number of surviving buildings date from the 18th century, including the Green, a timber-framed house of c. 1700,
long the home of the Wedd family. There were c. 75
houses in the village by 1801 and new building
brought the numbers to 120 by 1841. (fn. 39) Most were
then on the High Street, at the Cross, earlier called
the Townhead, where High Street joined Long
Lane, or on Lynch Lane. (fn. 40) That part of the village
north of High Street retains several old cob walls.
During the Second World War Nissen huts to
house American servicemen were erected near the
Round Moat and south of the village, bringing the
number of dwellings to 220 in 1951. After 1945
they were occupied by squatters and refugees; the
rural district council took them over as extra housing,
but by 1960 most had been demolished and replaced by purpose-built council houses elsewhere
in the village, (fn. 41) numbering 68 by 1972. (fn. 42) Twentiethcentury building, including a ribbon development
south along London Road, and houses north of
Rectory Lane, and south of the village on Ryecroft
Lane, has extended beyond the old village bounds,
and new houses have also filled in the area along
Chapel Lane, including old people's bungalows in
Dovehouse Close, and around the Round Moat
where extensive development began in 1976.
The mill on the north-west boundary near Black
Peak was long the only house in the fields, but
after inclosure Heath Farm, derelict by 1979, was
built south of the Newmarket road and Dottrell
Hall north of it.
Because of its position on the London–King's
Lynn road Fowlmere has long had several inns
which in 1686 provided 13 beds and stabling for
20 horses. (fn. 43) A tenement called the White Hart, recorded in 1629, (fn. 44) and the Cock, recorded in 1645, (fn. 45)
were probably inns, but the three longest surviving inns were the Chequers, the Swan, and the
Black Horse, said to have divided trade between
them by serving respectively post chaises, stage
coaches, and stage waggons. (fn. 46) The Swan, at the
corner of High Street and Long Lane, was recorded
from the 1630s. Rebuilt in the 18th century it was
known successively as the Black Swan, the Swan,
and the White Swan. It had ceased to be used as
an inn by 1912; it was a private house until 1972
when a restaurant still in business in 1979 was
opened there. (fn. 47) Samuel Pepys stayed in 1660 at the
Chequers, east of the Swan; (fn. 48) it incorporates a
large 16th-century room with a decorated brick
fireplace at its north end. The rest of the main
building is mostly 17th century, but was altered in
the 18th and 19th centuries. A 19th-century lessee
is said to have removed a window decorated with
carvings of the Virgin and child. (fn. 49) It was still (fn. 50)
used as an inn in 1979. The Black Horse, west of
the church, was recorded in 1776 and was still an
inn (fn. 51) in 1979. The two-storey building dates from
the early 18th century. The Queen's Head at the
south end of Long Lane may have been an inn by
1861, (fn. 52) as it was in 1979.
White Hall, a mid 17th-century house on the
north side of Chapel Lane, was a boarding school for
boys in the early 19th century and a mixed school
in 1847. (fn. 53) It was heightened by one storey c. 1840.
In 1818 there was also a girls boarding school,
and in 1833 a third, for boys, was recorded. (fn. 54)
A recreation ground on the Butts, west of Long
Lane, was allotted at inclosure in 1845, when the
inhabitants were concerned that it should be large
enough for a cricket ground. (fn. 55) In 1864 the village
had a flourishing choral society. (fn. 56) F. M. BeldamJohns, lord of the manor, in 1894 built a public hall
near the Cross, and also gave a reading room and
another cricket field for the use of the village. (fn. 57) In
1911 he put a pump with a brick shelter at the Cross,
in memory of his wife Edith: the village had no
piped water until after 1950. (fn. 58) In 1911 BeldamJohns gave 1 a. in the angle between the Melbourn
and Shepreth roads as a public burial ground, run
by the parish council as a burial board. A small
red-brick chapel was built there in 1912. (fn. 59) The
Fowlmere Festival, devoted to music, was held
annually between 1970 and 1975 and revived in
1979. (fn. 60)
Manors and other Estates.
FOWLMERE manor was held in 1066 by Aluric Campe
of King Edward and by 1086 by Robert Gernon (fn. 61)
(d. after 1118) whose lands were granted to William
de Munfitchet (d. after 1137). Fowlmere was held
until at least 1185 by William's wife Margaret de
Clare (fn. 62) and later descended with the barony of
Stansted Mountfichet, passing in turn to William's
son Gilbert (d. 1186x7), Gilbert's son Richard (d.
1204), and Richard's son, also Richard (d. s.p. 1267).
The latter left three sisters and the barony was
divided between them c. 1274, Fowlmere passing
to the descendents of Philippa (d. c. 1232) who had
married Hugh de Plaiz. (fn. 63) In 1279 the manor was
held by her grandson Ralph de Plaiz (d. s.p. 1283). (fn. 64)
He was succeeded by his brother Sir Giles Plaiz
(d. 1302), (fn. 65) summoned to Parliament as was his son
Richard (d. 1327). Richard was succeeded in turn
by his sons Giles (d. s.p. 1334) and Richard,
(d. 1360), and Richard's son John, all Lords Plaiz. (fn. 66)
John (d. 1389) was succeeded by his daughter
Margaret (d. 1391) whose husband Sir John
Howard (fn. 67) held Fowlmere by the curtesy until
his death in 1438. He was then succeeded by Elizabeth, daughter of their son John and wife of John
de Vere, earl of Oxford (fn. 68) (executed 1462). In 1473
Elizabeth was made to grant Fowlmere to Richard,
duke of Gloucester, later Richard III, (fn. 69) who in 1477
gave it to Queens' College, Cambridge. (fn. 70)
The college held Fowlmere manor in 1484, (fn. 71) but
following Henry VII's accession (fn. 72) it was restored to
John de Vere, earl of Oxford, who held it at his
death in 1513. (fn. 73) It thereafter descended with the
earldom (fn. 74) until 1583 when Edward, earl of Oxford,
sold it to Thomas Skinner. (fn. 75) On Skinner's death in
1596 Fowlmere passed to his youngest son Richard,
and on Richard's death in 1597 to his elder brother
Sir John Skinner. (fn. 76) After mortgaging Fowlmere
several times Skinner sold it in 1600 to Edward
Aldred, (fn. 77) a member of a Fowlmere yeoman family
who was sheriff of Cambridgeshire in 1614. (fn. 78)
Edward (d. by 1619) was succeeded by his son
(d. 1629) and grandson, both Edward. (fn. 79) The latter
sold Fowlmere in 1635 to John Lamott, a London
merchant (d. 1655). (fn. 80) The manor seems to have been
settled on Lamott's elder daughter Hester, who
married as her second husband Sir Thomas Honywood. (fn. 81) Their son John Lamott Honywood died
without issue in 1693 and his sister and heir Elizabeth married Sir John Cotton, Bt. (d. 1702), lord in
1695. Their son Robert Cotton of Steeple Gidding
(Hunts.) (fn. 82) sold Fowlmere in 1703 to James Mitchell,
a London merchant. (fn. 83)
Mitchell (d. 1728) was succeeded by his son
William Mitchell of Hemingford Greys (Hunts.)
(d. 1745). William's three sons William (d. c. 1764),
James (d. 1768), and Knight (d. 1798) inherited the
manor in turn. (fn. 84) Knight was probably succeeded
by Knight George Coote Mitchell (fl. 1801), (fn. 85) and
the Revd. James Mitchell held Fowlmere in 1820
and at his death in 1838. (fn. 86) His daughters and heirs
Mary, wife of Capt. Henry Sholto Douglas, and
Anne were allotted over 1,350 a. in Fowlmere in
1845. (fn. 87) In 1862 Anne was found to be of unsound
mind; Douglas was made committee of her estate,
and in 1867 his and his wife's title to the whole
Fowlmere estate was registered. (fn. 88) In that year the
estate was sold to Henry Perkins of Thriplow, who
immediately resold much of the land (fn. 89) to John
Mortlock of Melbourn and William Nash Woodham
of Shepreth. By 1871 Mrs. Nash Woodham's son
Frederick M. Beldam-Johns owned his stepfather's
estate, as he did until his death in 1919 (fn. 90) when it
was sold to J. M. Coleman. (fn. 91) Capt. Douglas had
however retained the lordship of Fowlmere manor,
and he was succeeded in it in 1892 by his son
Lieut.-Col. H. M. S. Douglas (fl. 1932). (fn. 92) Lieut.
H. J. S. Douglas was lord in 1934. (fn. 93)
The manor house, recorded from the early 14th
century, (fn. 94) probably stood on the site of the later
house west of the Townhead. The Old Manor
House was probably built by the Aldreds in the
earlier 17th century and extended later in that century. By 1919 it had been divided to form three
tenements and a village reading room and remained
so in the 1950s, (fn. 95) but by 1979 it had been restored
as one house. In 1865 farm buildings north of the
house were burned down and after 1867 a new
brick Manor House was built there (fn. 96) which survived in 1979.
Part of Robert Gernon's estate in Fowlmere
remained with a branch of his family. In 1166
Ranulph Gernon held a half fee of William de
Munfitchet (fn. 97) and in 1220 Cecilia, widow of Richard
son of Ralph, claimed dower in the land in Fowlmere
which Richard had held of Ranulph Gernon. (fn. 98) In
the 1230s and 1240s however William son of Richard, presumably her son, was said to hold his half
fee directly of Richard de Munfitchet. (fn. 99) By 1279
moieties of Gernon's half fee were held by Mabel,
widow of John son of John, and Gilbert of Barrington and others. (fn. 100) They may have been reunited to
form the manor later known as HESLARTONS
or HUTTONS which seems to have descended in
the Barrington family, being held in 1332 by Sir
Thomas Heslarton, husband of Alice, the Barrington heiress. (fn. 101) It was settled with Heslartons manor,
Barrington, on Sir John Salvayn, perhaps Alice's
son-in-law, but by 1382 it was held by Sir John
Engaine (d. c. 1395), husband of a granddaughter
of one of Alice's aunts who had challenged her
claims to those lands c. 1325. Engaine's will directed
that the Fowlmere land should be sold on his
second wife's death. (fn. 102) In 1417 his son William sold
it to William Cavendish and Thomas Roos. (fn. 103) By
1494 it belonged to Thomas Childe who was then
succeeded by his daughter Alice, wife of John
Hutton. (fn. 104) She was succeeded after 1537 by her son
Thomas Hutton (d. 1552) (fn. 105) who by 1547 was disposing of fractions of Heslartons. (fn. 106) Most of it was
later bought by Edward Aldred and subsequently
descended with Fowlmere manor. (fn. 107) It has been
suggested that Bury Farm, which stood west of
the church and the Black Horse, was Heslartons
manor house. (fn. 108)
Land in Fowlmere given c. 1181 by Richard de
Munfitchet to the monks of Stratford Langthorne
(Essex) was probably the 80 a. which William of
Stratford claimed there in 1201. (fn. 109) In 1268 the abbot
of Stratford held land of Richard de Plaiz, (fn. 110) presumably in Fowlmere, but it has not been traced
later.
In 1228 Tilty abbey (Essex) acquired land in
Fowlmere (fn. 111) and in 1251 it was confirmed in its
possessions there held of Richard de Munfitchet, (fn. 112)
which in 1291 were said to be worth £8 a year. (fn. 113)
After the abbey's dissolution its Fowlmere land
descended as part of Chrishall Grange (fn. 114) to Thomas
Brand, Lord Dacre, who held c. 150 a. in the south
of Fowlmere in 1845. It was sold with Chrishall
Grange by Viscount Hampden in 1925. (fn. 115) The
Grange, which since 1965 has been in Fowlmere
parish, is now detached from most of the land. It
is an early 18th-century house of red brick with a
main front of five bays and two storeys with attics,
and side elevations of three bays with ornamental
gables. There were some alterations, mostly to windows and doorways, in the early 19th century and
again in the later 19th century when the back service wing appears to have been added or rebuilt.
In 1615 Christ's College, Cambridge, held c. 46 a.
in Fowlmere. (fn. 116) The college was allotted 65 a. in the
south of the parish in 1848 (fn. 117) which it still held in
1873. (fn. 118) The land was sold to Whittome Estates
Ltd. in 1938. (fn. 119)
The little land held of Fowlmere rectory was
reckoned as a manor from the 15th century; (fn. 120) the
hide in Fowlmere said in 1086 to belong to Count
Alan is treated under Foxton.
Economic History.
Half of the ten hides in
Fowlmere in 1086 was in demesne. There were 2½
demesne ploughteams with four servi and sufficient
meadow and pasture. The remaining five hides
were cultivated by 22 villani and 10 bordars with
8½ ploughteams. The estate had retained its preConquest value of £12. (fn. 121) About 1185 the demesne
was worth £16, but it was said that it could carry
more ploughs and stock and yield £20. (fn. 122) In 1279
of c. 1,225 a. of arable in Fowlmere, 350 a. formed
Ralph de Plaiz's demesne, with 2 a. of meadow
and 3 a. of several pasture. (fn. 123) In 1302 that demesne
had 360 a. of arable and 3 a. each of meadow and
pasture, (fn. 124) but in 1327 only 214 a. of arable and 11 a.
of pasture were recorded. (fn. 125) The demesne arable
continued to contract: in 1361 there were 180 a.,
with 28 a. of meadow and pasture, (fn. 126) and by 1438
120 a.; the demesne then included 300 a. of pasture
and heath, but only 100 a. of it were worth anything. (fn. 127)
In 1086 there were 80 sheep on the demesne,
8 cattle, and 34 pigs. (fn. 128) By 1185 there were only
40 sheep in the demesne flock, but the land was
said to be able to support 200, and 21 pigs. (fn. 129)
In 1279 c. 20 tenants held c. 90 a. of free land of
Fowlmere manor, including one yardland of 30 a.
and one half-yardland. Twenty-four customary
tenants held half-yardlands: they owed one work a
week between Michaelmas and Easter and between
Midsummer and Lammas, two a week during harvest, but paid 15d. in commutation of all works
between Easter and Midsummer. Besides other
usual labour and carrying services they owed two
harvest boonworks, a small rent in money and kind,
and heriot and gersum. Eight more customary
tenants held half-yardlands for reduced labour services and higher rents; ten had customary holdings
of 10 a., and 16 had holdings of 5 a. for proportionately reduced services, and 16 cottars held 1 a.
each for a money rent. Of Gernon's fee were held
two estates of 40 a. by knight service, two customary
yardlands by labour service and rent, and three
small freeholdings. (fn. 130) In 1302 four free tenants of
Fowlmere manor held 75 a. between them, and
there were 22 half-yardlanders, eight tenants holding 10 a., two holding 5 a., and 38 cottagers, all
owing rents and services similar to those of 1279. (fn. 131)
By 1361, and perhaps by 1327, some further works
had been commuted. (fn. 132) In 1446 there were c. 70
tenants of Fowlmere manor. Some demesne and
customary land was then leased for terms of nine
years, (fn. 133) and in 1483 all the demesne seems to have
been leased. (fn. 134) In 1523 only two inhabitants were
taxed on their land. The largest taxpayers, Richard
Hicks, Robert Austin, Robert Payn, and John
Putterning, all paid on over £10 of goods, six men
paid on goods worth between £10 and £5, nine on
goods worth between £5 and £1, and 18 on wages
only. (fn. 135)
The number of sheep kept in Fowlmere, partly
on the heath in the south, had increased by the 16th
century. Robert Austin (d. 1524) had a flock of at
least 60 (fn. 136) and Heslartons manor had right of sheepfold for 300. (fn. 137) The heath also supported a coney
warren, which in 1623 was hindering the king's
sport on Royston heath. (fn. 138)
In the 16th and 17th centuries barley was the
main crop, followed by rye, oats, wheat, pease, and
lentils, grown on a three year rotation based on the
three open fields: North or Moor field, West, Barr,
or Fawden field, and South field, sometimes divided
into Heath and Waterdrain fields, all sub-divided
into named shotts. (fn. 139) In the early 17th century
South field covered c. 755 a., perhaps including the
heath, West field 440 a., and North field 245 a. (fn. 140)
In 1757 there were c. 1,270 a. of arable and 370 a. of
heath land in Fowlmere. (fn. 141) There was also the common moor in the north-west, periodically cleansed
by the parish. Inclosed pasture near the village (fn. 142)
included parcels of up to 7 a. in the open fields;
similar encroachments had been made on the
heath. (fn. 143) In the later 18th century most of the
arable was cultivated on a three-course rotation, but
until 1795 half of Heath field was always reserved
for sheep, each half being cropped for 3 years and
then left fallow. (fn. 144)
From the 16th century the lord of Fowlmere
manor owned almost all the parish, but some copyholders and lessees had estates of 100 a. or more and
the Aldred family rose from that group of farmers. (fn. 145)
The Sweet, Finckell, and Hicks families were also
prominent and John Morden, rector from 1610, had
a farm there. (fn. 146) In the mid 18th century the main
landowners, apart from the lord and the rector,
were Christ's College and William Hicks. (fn. 147) The
concentration of ownership had probably allowed
considerable consolidation of estates by the early
19th century, (fn. 148) when most of the 1,200 a. of arable
was divided between two or three large farms
growing in addition to the accustomed crops trefoil, clover, and turnips. In 1794 there were still only
c. 60 a. of inclosed pasture, but 200 a. of heathland
and 200 a. of badly drained common or moor. The
latter provided game for the Cambridge market,
and reeds for thatching; the former fed at least 500
Southdown sheep. (fn. 149)
In 1830 the agricultural labourers struck for
higher wages; constables from Royston had to be
summoned to suppress the resultant riots. In 1834
the 60, out of c. 85, in regular work were paid 10s.
to 12s. a week. (fn. 150) Before 1845 (fn. 151) all parishioners had
the right to feed cattle, pigs, and poultry on the
open fields for one month after harvest, and to feed
cattle on the balks without stint. They could also
pasture cows on c. 60 a. of heath in the south, but
that right had little value as sheep were also run
there. On Great and North Moors parishioners
could pasture cattle without stint, cut sedge and
reeds, gather dung, and dig clay. In 1831 the poor
had also been given 15 a. or 20 a. of waste land to
cultivate as allotments. Valentine Beldam and Lord
Dacre claimed rights of sheep walk on their lands,
and the lords of Fowlmere claimed sheep walk for
their tenants' sheep over all land in the parish,
subject to some customary limitations. (fn. 152)
Inclosure was undertaken in 1845 (fn. 153) when the
tithes were also commuted, but the inclosure award
was not enrolled until 1850. (fn. 154) As a result all common
rights were extinguished, but the major divisions
of landholding were changed little, Lordship, Bury,
Brook, Mill, and Papworth's farms all surviving
from the early 19th century. (fn. 155) The award covered
180 a. of old inclosures around the village, and
another 150 a. in the south of the parish belonging
to Chrishall Grange, and 1,880 a. of open and
common land. Of the 46 allottees 12 received less
than one acre and 17 between 1 a. and 5 a. By far
the largest estate, c. 1,350 a., went to the ladies of
the manor. The only other estates over 100 a. were
Lord Dacre's 150 a., Thomas Nash's 185 a., and
Octavius Wedd's 100 a. The rector received 82 a.,
Christ's College 65 a., Richard Papworth c. 50 a.,
and William Nash Woodham 45 a. Most of the land
was freehold, but c. 380 a. were copyhold of Fowlmere manor, and c. 4 a. of the rectory manor.
The manorial estate was divided into two large
farms. Manor farm, c. 670 a., was farmed by
Octavius and William Wedd who also owned c.
125 a., and Bury farm, c. 645 a., by Thomas Nash
who also owned Brook farm, 185 a. Octavius Wedd
also farmed the Christ's College land. Only a small
proportion of the large farms was pasture. (fn. 156) The
arable was farmed on a four-course rotation including as well as wheat, barley, rye, and oats, clover
and trefoil, peas, coleseed, mangolds, swedes, turnips, and kohlrabi. (fn. 157) Sheep were still kept: six shepherds lived in Fowlmere in 1861, (fn. 158) and there were
over 1,200 sheep in the parish in 1866. (fn. 159) In 1896
Lower farm had a flock of c. 150, and in 1901
Dotterel Hall farm had over 200 sheep. Between
1905 and 1925 most flocks disappeared. Lower farm
kept c. 90 pigs and Dotterel Hall large numbers of
poultry. (fn. 160) In 1905 about a tenth of the land returned
was permanent pasture. (fn. 161)
Brook farm, with a 16th-century farmhouse on
Chapel Lane, extended in the 18th century, was
owned by the Nash family well into the 20th century. (fn. 162) Bury farm had been divided into Bury,
Heath, and Lower farms: Heath farm, c. 320 a., had
a homestead south of the Newmarket road by 1867,
and Lower or North farm had c. 170 a. north of the
village. Manor farm was held by the Wedd family
until the 1870s. (fn. 163) It was then farmed by Frederick
Beldam-Johns until 1912, while the Wedds continued to farm Heath farm and other land from the
Green. (fn. 164) During the First World War over 200 a.
of Manor farm were taken over by the War Office
and in 1918 only 265 a. of it were being cultivated. (fn. 165)
It was subsequently farmed by the Jackson and
Sheldrick families: Jacksons started a hatchery there
by 1933 which survived in 1960. (fn. 166)
Mill farm, near Black Peak, remained part of the
manor estate. (fn. 167) In 1968 the farmstead and 6 a. were
sold to Wall's Livestock Ltd. who developed a pig
artificial insemination unit there. In 1979 when it
had 30 boars it was the largest such centre in the
United Kingdom. In that year it became a subsidiary of B.O.C.M. Silcock. (fn. 168) Nearly 100 a. near
Black Peak were laid down as watercress beds
c. 1890 and their produce was exported to London,
Manchester, and other cities. They ceased to be
cultivated between 1960 and 1965. (fn. 169) In 1977 apart
from the specialist poultry and pig units most farms
concentrated on cereals, barley and wheat remaining
the principal crops. (fn. 170)
A water mill was recorded in Fowlmere in 1086,
in the 13th century, (fn. 171) and continuously until the
17th century. (fn. 172) An early mill may have stood near
the village but by the 1680s the water mill stood in
the west corner of the parish, on the Melbourn
boundary. (fn. 173) It was in use in 1825 (fn. 174) and 1845, and
passed with Mill farm, but by 1859 the old mill had
been converted into corn-drying chambers (fn. 175) and
was later demolished.
In 1207 Richard de Munfitchet's guardian was
granted the right to hold a three-day fair at Fowlmere at Midsummer, and a weekly Thursday market. The fair was not recorded later but the market
was probably held until the 14th century, its value
gradually declining. (fn. 176) In 1298 corn was sold there,
and the market revenues were farmed by the lord's
bailiff. (fn. 177) In the early 17th century Edward Aldred
(d. by 1619) or his son Edward (d. 1629) acquired
a new grant of a market at Fowlmere, but the
proximity of established markets at Cambridge,
Royston, and Saffron Walden soon forced it to
cease. (fn. 178)
Fowlmere has long been predominantly agricultural, but in the mid 18th century it was said to be
much occupied in the wool trade. (fn. 179) In 1776 there
were at least two woollen manufacturers there (fn. 180) and
in the 1790s many women and children were employed in spinning at home for a small wool factory
which produced woollen and worsted cloth for
Norwich and northern markets until c. 1800. (fn. 181)
There was still one wool stapler in Fowlmere in the
mid 19th century. (fn. 182)
In 1811 seventy families depended on agriculture
and 19 on other trades, most of which served the
agricultural community. In 1841 there were eight
retailers, ten makers of clothing and shoes, seven
men in the building trade, four blacksmiths, and
five other craftsmen. (fn. 183) In the 1870s coprolite digging provided some alternative employment, (fn. 184) but
numbers in other trades declined during the 19th
century. (fn. 185) William Jackson and Sons kept a grocer's
and general stores at the Cross from the 1870s. In
1948 it became a co-operative store, and it closed
in 1972. (fn. 186) In the 1970s the village was still a minor
centre for the surrounding countryside. Most inhabitants travelled outside the parish to work, (fn. 187) but
there was some light industry there.
In 1965 Welding Alloys Ltd. was started in Fowlmere. In 1969 new premises were opened in the
village, including by 1970 a mineral-grinding plant.
After continued expansion the company had 34
employees in 1973. (fn. 188) Analytical Instruments Ltd.
started making scientific instruments at Fowlmere
in 1968 in premises shared with Welding Alloys.
By 1974 the company employed 50 people there.
The need for further expansion caused them
to move to Pampisford in 1976. (fn. 189) In 1972 two
other Fowlmere firms, Fowlmere Engineering and
J. E. K. Barnes Engineering, designers of plant
for the plastics industry and of dust extraction and
ventilation equipment, merged to form a new
company called Barmere. (fn. 190)
Local Government.
In the 1270s and in
1299 the lord of Fowlmere manor claimed view of
frankpledge, the assize of bread and of ale, and a
pillory, tumbrel, and gallows. (fn. 191) The manor's courts
leet and baron were mentioned from the early 14th
century to the 19th. (fn. 192) Court books and minutes survive for 1695–1725, 1747–99, and 1820–1934. They
dealt solely with tenurial business, and record
courts held at irregular intervals, at the manor
house in the mid 18th century, and at the Swan inn in
1873. (fn. 193) Courts were also held for the rectory manor.
Court books survive for 1762–1938, recording
tenurial business. Courts met occasionally in
the rectory house. From 1898 the enfranchisement
of copyholds was recorded. (fn. 194)
A churchwarden was recorded in 1446. (fn. 195) In the
early 18th century the parish was served by two
churchwardens, two constables, and two overseers.
In the mid 18th century annual expenditure on
poor relief was £80–£100. Coals were given to the
poor, and weekly doles to c. 8 people, and money
was also spent on clothing and medical aid. In the
early 19th century the parish paid a man to keep the
common herd, some others were employed digging gravel, and some wages were supplemented. (fn. 196)
Repairs were recorded to a town house, presumably the workhouse of 1793 where a small wool
factory was perhaps run until c. 1800. (fn. 197) William
Metcalf, rector 1814–50 and an overseer for Fowlmere, developed a method of accounting which was
adopted by many other Cambridgeshire parishes. (fn. 198)
Expenditure on poor relief rose to c. £285 in 1803
when 18 adults received permanent relief. (fn. 199) In the
next 30 years it fluctuated between £570 and £270. (fn. 200)
By the 1830s c. 10 labourers were usually unemployed. (fn. 201)
In 1835 Fowlmere became part of the Royston
poor law union. In 1894 it joined the Melbourn
rural district and in 1934 the South Cambridgeshire
R.D. (fn. 202) From 1974 it was part of the South Cambridgeshire district.
Church.
Architectural evidence testifies to the
existence of a church in Fowlmere in the 12th century. (fn. 203) It was presumably endowed by a lord of
Fowlmere manor whose successors held the advowson of the rectory until the 18th century. In 1353
Richard, Lord Plaiz (d. 1360), granted the advowson
to Bury St. Edmunds abbey (Suff.), (fn. 204) but the grant
did not take effect. The Crown presented during
minorities in 1313, 1361, and 1570, (fn. 205) as did the duke
of Norfolk in 1517. (fn. 206) In 1604 John Brampton was
patron for one turn (fn. 207) and the Crown presented
through lapse in 1610 and 1662. (fn. 208) The advowson
was sold with the manor in 1703 to James Mitchell,
but in 1719 the patron was Thomas Rumbold, perhaps for one turn. (fn. 209) About 1750 the advowson was
acquired by Pulter Forester, who sold it before 1753
to Anthony Stephenson, who was presented as
rector in 1757 by William Kilborn. (fn. 210) The advowson passed, probably in 1780, from Thomas Parker
to Freshney Ginnis who sold it to John Haggerston,
patron in 1789. (fn. 211) Haggerston sold it before 1808 to
the earl of Hardwicke and it descended with his
estates until 1896. (fn. 212) From 1897 the patrons were
the trustees of J. Martineau, who in 1920 transferred the advowson to the bishop of Ely. (fn. 213)
In the late 12th century the nuns of Ickleton
unsuccessfully claimed a pension of 40s. out of
Fowlmere church. (fn. 214) Fowlmere rectory was worth
19½ marks in 1217, 36 marks in 1254, and 45 marks
in 1291. (fn. 215) It was valued at £29 14s. 2d. in 1535; (fn. 216)
by 1650 it was worth £168 and by 1728 £200. (fn. 217) In
the late 18th century it was said to be worth £260 (fn. 218)
and by 1831 the net income was £675. (fn. 219) The living
retained its value until the 1880s. (fn. 220) In 1897 it was
charged with a pension of £140 for H. M. Lower
(d. 1900) who had resigned the rectory. (fn. 221)
In the late 18th century tithes were still paid in
kind. In 1845 they were commuted for a rent
charge of £640. (fn. 222) The rectory estate included a
manor with some copyhold. (fn. 223) In the early 17th century there were c. 105 a. of glebe; (fn. 224) almost all the
82 a. allotted to the rector in 1845 (fn. 225) were retained
by the incumbent until 1978 when they passed to
the Ely Diocesan Board of Finance. (fn. 226) In the mid
17th century the rectory house, opposite the church,
was in such decay that the patron was allowed one
third of the benefice's income to repair it for a new
incumbent. (fn. 227) In the 1660s it had 8 hearths. (fn. 228) It was
kept in reasonable repair until the mid 19th century. In 1853 the rector started to build a large new
brick house south of the older one, to a design by
H. E. Kendall the younger. The old house, possibly
a medieval aisled hall altered in the 17th century, (fn. 229)
was sold and later demolished. (fn. 230) A new rectory
house was built west of the 19th-century one in
1973. (fn. 231) Both survived in 1979.
The earliest named rector, James of Berkhamstead, was in 1317 dispensed to hold a canonry of
Beverley (Yorks.) and the deanery of the chapel
royal at Wallingford (Berks.) with Fowlmere. (fn. 232)
Robert of Henley, rector 1342–61, was frequently
licensed for absence, (fn. 233) and the rector in 1397 was
allowed three years absence for study. (fn. 234) A guild of
St. Mary was recorded in 1488. (fn. 235) Chaplains and
curates occur throughout the 14th and 15th centuries. (fn. 236)
Matthew Knightley, rector 1517–61, lived at
another benefice in Northamptonshire, and although
he employed successive curates, one of whom served
for over 20 years, the churchwardens reported in
1554 that they had no priest. The site of the altar
had not been levelled by 1561, and repairs had been
neglected. (fn. 237) Edmund Freake, rector 1562–70, an exAugustinian canon, also held Fowlmere in plurality,
but resigned it before his elevation to the see of
Rochester in 1572 in favour of his son John, rector
of Fowlmere until 1604, and of Purleigh (Essex),
and archdeacon of Norwich. (fn. 238) Both employed
curates at Fowlmere, (fn. 239) one of whom, Henry Brampton (d. 1609), became the next rector. (fn. 240) In 1605 it
was said that he did not read the necessary services. (fn. 241)
In 1610 the Crown presented Samuel Nicholls, but
Edward Aldred presented John Morden, whom
Nicholls accused, unsuccessfully, of simony. (fn. 242) Morden seems to have been on bad terms with some
parishioners by 1622, and 14 of them in 1644 testified against him and his Laudian sympathies. (fn. 243) He
was ejected, but remained in Fowlmere and tried
to prevent the payment of tithes to his successors, (fn. 244)
even though one fifth of the rectory's income had
been granted to his wife and children. Ezekiah
King, rector from 1646, was a member of the Cambridge classis and was ejected in 1660. (fn. 245) His successor Simon Potter, ejected from a Cambridge
fellowship c. 1644, held Fowlmere in plurality (fn. 246)
until 1666 when he was succeeded by John Crackenthorpe, rector until 1719. Crackenthorpe was a
puritan sympathiser and most of his children became nonconformists, one daughter marrying
Benjamin Wedd, a prominent Fowlmere dissenter. (fn. 247)
Anthony Stephenson, rector 1757–88, lived on one
of his two Essex benefices and kept a curate at
Fowlmere who in 1775 held two Sunday services
and communions at least thrice yearly. (fn. 248) W. L.
Mansell, rector 1788 to 1814, was also master of
Trinity College, Cambridge, where he lived, and
from 1808 bishop of Bristol. He served Fowlmere
through a curate who in 1810 kept a small boarding
school there. (fn. 249) Mansell's successor served the cure
himself. He held two Sunday services and quarterly
communions, the number of communicants at
which had risen from c. 3 in 1814 to 30 by 1825. (fn. 250)
Arthur Savile, rector 1850–70, a grandson of the
earl of Hardwicke, also served the cure himself. In
1851 c. 50 adults attended Sunday morning services and c. 95 the afternoon ones. (fn. 251) Savile's successor came to Fowlmere from Canada. By 1873 he
was holding monthly and by 1885 weekly communions. (fn. 252) A surpliced choir was introduced in
1875. (fn. 253) A. C. Yorke, rector 1897–1925, nephew of
another earl of Hardwicke, had spent his early
career in Australia and New Zealand. He was a
keen student of Fowlmere's history. (fn. 254) Since 1939
Fowlmere has been held with Thriplow, the incumbent living at Fowlmere. (fn. 255)
The church of ST. MARY THE VIRGIN, so
called in 1455, (fn. 256) is built of rubble with ashlar dressings and consists of a chancel with north vestry, a
central tower, north and south transepts, and a nave
with a north aisle and porch. The coursed rubble
walls of the nave survive from a 12th-century
church. Presumably it had a chancel, but c. 1300
that was replaced by a central tower and a new
chancel was built. Early in the 14th century the
chancel was extended eastwards, and a three-bay
north aisle was built. A little later transepts were
added or rebuilt north and south of the tower. In
the later 15th or early 16th century the nave was
heightened to receive a clerestory and a roof of
lower pitch, and given a new west doorway and
window. The north porch and the upper stage of the
tower, which has the Vere arms on its battlements,
were added at about the same time. Altars in the
transepts may have been dedicated to St. Mary,
St. John the Baptist, and St. Christopher. (fn. 257)

The Church of St. Mary, Fowlmere
In 1644 William Dowsing removed several pictures and carvings from the church and ordered
the altar steps to be levelled. (fn. 258) The steps had been
restored by 1742. (fn. 259) Routine repairs were regularly
undertaken, (fn. 260) and may have included the renewal
of the tracery in many of the windows. In 1857 a
new facsimile west window was put in, and by 1859
the transept roofs had been repaired and a vestry
and buttress built north of the chancel. In 1863
part of the north transept was rebuilt and in 1864
much of the clerestory was renewed. (fn. 261) In 1869 a
thorough restoration was undertaken by Thomas
Whitehead including much rebuilding of the
chancel, tower, and north porch. (fn. 262) It was probably
then that the medieval pews, which had survived
in 1853, (fn. 263) were replaced. Extensive repairs and
renovation were also undertaken in 1956. (fn. 264)
The rood screen dates from the 14th century. (fn. 265)
In the early 17th century there survived in the
chancel a brass to Henry Walter, rector (d. 1392),
and some memorial glass. The brass had disappeared
by 1742. (fn. 266) The chancel contains several monuments
to members of the Mitchell family including one
against the north wall to William (d. 1745) by
Thomas Ady, which replaced an older monument,
perhaps an Easter sepulchre. (fn. 267) In the mid 18th
century there hung in the chancel pennons,
escutcheons, shields, swords, surcoats, and helmets
bearing the arms of Mitchell and Benet. After
1869 most were too decayed to be replaced, but two
helmets and swords remained in the late 1890s, (fn. 268)
and two helmets in 1979.
A rector gave a new chalice in the later 14th
century. (fn. 269) In 1552 there were two silver chalices
and patens. (fn. 270) The plate in the 20th century included
a cup and paten dated 1569. In 1685 the church
was required to provide a silver paten (fn. 271) and there
is one dated 1706. (fn. 272) The registers are continuous
from 1561, save for a break in the 1650s. (fn. 273)
Nonconformity.
William Sherwin, a puritan divine, lived in Fowlmere where his son-in-law,
John Crackenthorpe, was rector in the 1660s. (fn. 274) In
1676 eleven nonconformists were recorded there, (fn. 275)
by 1728 almost half the parishioners were Independents, (fn. 276) and in 1768 the parish was said to
abound with them. (fn. 277) In 1758 an Independent
meeting had been licensed in a house belonging to
the Wedd family. (fn. 278) A large brick meeting house was
built in 1780 at the southern end of the village
opposite White Hall, on land given by Benjamin
Wedd, and licensed the following year; (fn. 279) it became
a centre for dissenters in neighbouring parishes. (fn. 280)
It was well attended in 1825 when there was also a
Sunday school. In 1836 dissenting opposition to the
church rate jeopardised the parish clerk's salary. (fn. 281)
In 1851 the chapel was attended by c. 250 adults on
Sunday mornings, 300 in the afternoon, and 80 in
the evening, more than three times the numbers
attending the parish church. (fn. 282) The meeting belonged to the Congregational, and later to the
United Reformed Church. From c. 1866 it had an
outstation at Thriplow. (fn. 283)
In 1870 an apse was added to the east end of the
chapel which was restored in 1878. In 1881 a bell
tower with a clock was added. (fn. 284) In 1885 just under
half of the parishioners were thought to be dissenters. (fn. 285) In 1905 the congregation had 88 members,
80 in 1935, and 25 in 1973. (fn. 286) The chapel remained
in use in 1979.
Education.
Schoolmasters were recorded in
Fowlmere in 1593, 1618, and c. 1664. (fn. 287) In 1783 a
schoolmistress taught some poor children there. (fn. 288)
By 1818 there were two private boarding schools,
church and dissenting Sunday schools, and day
schools which taught 24 children, and some girls
learnt needlework. (fn. 289) By 1825 there were two church
Sunday schools teaching c. 50 children to read and
write. (fn. 290) In 1833 a further 34 children were taught
at dame schools, 90 at the dissenting Sunday school,
15 at an industrial school, and six boys at Melbourn
school. (fn. 291)
In 1861 the ladies of the manor gave land east of
the recreation ground at the Butts for a National
school which was opened with accommodation for
100 children in the same year. (fn. 292) The children paid
school pence in 1871 when the average attendance
was 75. The school was under the direct management of the rector who helped to support it. (fn. 293) Numbers fluctuated between 75 and 90 until the 1930s. (fn. 294)
The school had been transferred to the county
council in 1912 and enlarged in 1913 to accommodate 78 juniors and 46 infants. The seniors were
transferred to Melbourn in 1954 and to Melbourn
village college in 1959. (fn. 295) Fowlmere school was
further extended in 1957 and 1974. (fn. 296) In 1972 c. 75
children attended from Fowlmere, Heydon, and
Great and Little Chishill. (fn. 297)
Charities for the Poor.
Fowlmere was
one of the parishes to benefit from Lettice Martin's
charity. (fn. 298) In the 1760s the income, 26s. 8d., was distributed in bread; by the 1830s it was given every
five years and from the 1840s was apportioned with
other parish charities. (fn. 299) By the mid 20th century its
income, £1 6s. 4d. a year, was distributed every
few years in cash.
In the 1830s it was thought that the church and
town estate, comprising 8 a. of open-field land, the
town close of 1½ a., and seven cottages, (fn. 300) had been
given by Thomas Wesley in the late 17th century.
The income was to be devoted to the repair of the
church, any surplus going to the poor, but in the
18th century it was regularly carried to the poor
rate; (fn. 301) by 1816 it was distributed with Martin's
dole. (fn. 302) In the 1830s most of the cottages were inhabited by paupers and the income from the land
was applied first to church repairs, which by 1863
took the full income of £25. (fn. 303) The cottages, in poor
repair by the 1830s, had disappeared by the 1890s.
A Scheme of 1898 confirmed that the income from
the land should go first to the church, and the surplus to the poor. In 1965 the gross income was
nearly £60 and £1 was given to each of 45 people.
In 1837 the profits from the five-yearly lopping
of the town willows growing on the waste were distributed with Martin's dole. At inclosure two allotments of 14 a. each were made to the poor in place
of that and other common rights. (fn. 304) The land was
let to parishioners in small parcels, and the income,
c. £18 10s. in 1856, was given among 80–115 poor
people in coal or in cash doles. (fn. 305) In 1976 the income
was £318, and 60 doles of £3.50 were given to
pensioners and widows in Fowlmere.