MARDEN
Marden, with an area of 1,286 a., lies in the
Vale of Pewsey 5½ miles south-east of Devizes. (fn. 1) A
long narrow parish typical of those which stretch
across the northern scarp of Salisbury Plain, it is
¾ mile wide near Marden Cowbag on the escarpment.
The river Avon forms the northern boundary of
the parish and from the river the land rises gradually
southwards for 3¼ miles across meadow land, up the
escarpment to the crest of the downs. From the
crest the land dips gently away over a mile-long
tract of downland known as Marden Down. The
village lies near the river in the north of the parish
along a secondary road known for part of its course
as Marden Street.
The extreme north of the parish lies at about 343 ft.
on the alluvial soils of the Avon bed. (fn. 2) Southwards
the land rises almost imperceptibly across the edge
of the greensand vale, which lies west of Marden
Street, and the bed of River and Valley Gravel,
which lies to the east. In 1970 these low-lying soils
were occupied by rich pastures, some of which were
used as water-meadows until the earlier 20th
century. (fn. 3) South of the village the land rises gently
across the Lower Chalk and at the junction of the
Lower Chalk and Middle Chalk a height of 400 ft. is
reached. The former open fields lay on the comparatively level chalk terrace and large unfenced arable
fields, sheltered to some extent by the scarp of
the Plain, still typified the area in 1970. At Marden
Cowbag the Middle and Upper Chalk rise steeply
in succession to form part of the north-facing scarp
of Salisbury Plain, which stands at over 600 ft.
Southwards from the crest the downs, formerly the
sheep-runs of the parish, drop away across the
Clay-with-flints and Middle Chalk to below 500 ft.
Here a stream, which anciently flowed eastwards to
join the river Avon north of Enford, has cut a shallow
valley, now dry, through the Clay-with-flints.
Evidence of early-Iron-Age settlement has been
found in the north-east corner of the parish. (fn. 4) A
ditch of unknown date, locally called 'the long ditch',
runs eastwards along the valley on Marden Down. (fn. 5)
A small univallate earthwork, also undated, lies to
the south. (fn. 6)
Marden made one of the smallest contributions
in Swanborough hundred to the fifteenth of 1334.
Such later taxation assessments as have been
examined were also low. (fn. 7) There were 162 inhabitants
in 1801, a number which increased until 1871 when
there were 247 people in the parish. Thereafter the
population declined until 1931 when there were 138
inhabitants. It rose to 148 in 1951 but had declined
to 90 in 1971. (fn. 8)
The main road between Devizes and Upavon
crosses the parish from west to east and the Ridge
Way runs through the south of the parish along the
crest of the downs. A secondary road leads northwards from the Devizes road through the village to
Beechingstoke and at the entrance to the village a
lane branches westwards to Chirton. That lane and
the road through Marden were turnpiked in 1840. (fn. 9)
Other roads which served the parish in the later
18th and earlier 19th centuries could be traced as
tracks in 1970. (fn. 10) Two formerly provided more
direct access to neighbouring villages: one, an
eastwards continuation of the Chirton-Marden
lane, led eastwards to Wilsford, while the other ran
north of the house called the Grange west to
Chirton Street, entering the village near the church.
The downland tracks, two of which were called
Hinder Way and Acre Ditch in the early 19th
century, ceased to be used after the War Department
bought Marden Down in 1898. (fn. 11)
The nucleus of the village clusters round the
church, which stands on slightly higher ground at
Marden Street's north-western end. Cob's Lane,
mentioned in 1772, can be identified with the
narrow track which runs north of Orchard Cottage
eastwards towards Wilsford. (fn. 12) It took its name from
the low cob wall which encloses the garden of
Orchard Cottage to the north. Marden Manor
stands in park-land west of the street at the entrance
to the village. The Green, which lay immediately
east of the Manor, is first mentioned in 1566. Part
was apparently taken into the manor park when the
house was built and its grounds laid out in the
early 19th century. (fn. 13) At the same time cottages
bordering the Green were apparently demolished.
Other cottages fronting the road on the east side of
the Green were replaced by red-brick ones in the
early 20th century by George Harris, then owner of
Marden Manor. (fn. 14) A range of 18th-century brick
cottages with thatched roofs abuts the east side of
the churchyard. A pair of brick cottages, also with
thatched roofs, stands, fronted by gardens, on a
bank behind the former school, and may have been
the parish houses mentioned in the early 19th
century. (fn. 15) North-east of the church a timberframed cottage of the 17th century originally
formed a range of three dwellings. A Swan inn,
mentioned in 1670 and 1765, is reputed to have
occupied a cottage near the church. (fn. 16) The New Inn,
a late-19th-century building, stands opposite the
driveway to Marden mill. South of the Vicarage a
late-18th-century brick house with thatched roof
has a brick extension on its west side which gives
the building a T-shaped plan. The Grange, which
stands to the south, was rebuilt on the site of an
earlier house of the same name after the Second
World War. (fn. 17) Manor Cottage, the farm-house of
Manor farm, stands on the east side of Marden
Street and is an early-19th-century cottage orné.
Marden House Farmhouse, an 18th-century building of chequered brick with a slated roof, stands at
the south-eastern end of Marden Street.
John Phillips (d. 1874), the geologist, was born at
Marden in 1800. He worked on the Geological
Survey of England from 1840 to 1844 and from 1854
until his death was Keeper of the Ashmolean
Museum, Oxford. His published works include
Guide to Geology (1834) and The Geology of Oxford
and the Valley of the Thames (1871). (fn. 18)
Manor and Other Estates.
An estate at
Marden held T.R.E. by Wenesi had passed to
Hugh son of Baldric in 1086. (fn. 19) By 1226 Marden
was apparently held of the honor of Leicester and
was included in that part of it allotted to Margaret,
countess of Winchester (d. 1235), sister and coheir
of Robert, earl of Leicester (d.s.p. 1204). (fn. 20) Marden
is last mentioned as a fee of the honor in 1242. (fn. 21)
In 1086 Walter de Rivers held Marden of his
father-in-law Hugh son of Baldric. (fn. 22) Before 1205
Robert de Bonezboz, a Norman, had held the manor
of MARDEN but by that date had forfeited it to
the Crown. (fn. 23) Thereafter two keepers, William de la
Ferté (d. c. 1216), appointed by the Crown in
1205, and Ralph Gernon, appointed as William's
successor in 1216, administered the estate. (fn. 24) In
1229 Marden was granted to Gilbert Basset and at
his death in 1241 he was succeeded there by his
brothers, Fulk Basset, bishop of London (d. 1259),
and Philip Basset (d. 1271). (fn. 25) Under the terms of a
royal grant of 1261 Marden was held for life after
Philip's death by his widow Ela (d. 1298). (fn. 26) On
Ela's death, Marden passed to Philip Basset's
grandson by his first wife, Hugh Despenser the
Elder (executed 1326). In 1327 the manor was
granted for life to Queen Isabel (d. 1358), and in
1359 to Queen Philippa (d. 1369) for life. (fn. 27) On
Queen Philippa's death it was let to farm for ten
years to Michael Skilling. (fn. 28) In 1373 Sir John
Dauntsey and his wife received a royal grant of the
manor. (fn. 29) Sir John died in 1391 and was succeeded
by his son John (d. 1405), and grandson Walter
(d.s.p. 1420). (fn. 30) Walter's heir was his sister Joan,
wife of Sir John Stradlyng, and on her death in 1457
she was succeeded at Marden by her son Edmund
Stradlyng (d. c. 1461), and grandson John (d.
1471). (fn. 31) John's heir was his infant daughter Anne
(d. 1539), later the wife of Sir John Danvers (d.
1514). (fn. 32) She was succeeded by her grandson Silvester
(d. 1551), whose heir was his son John (d. 1594). (fn. 33)
Sir John was succeeded in turn by his three sons,
Sir Charles (d. 1601), Henry, earl of Danby
(d. 1644), and Sir John (d. 1655). (fn. 34) The manor descended like that of Market Lavington to Sir John's
daughter Anne (d. 1659), wife of Sir Henry Lee of
Ditchley. (fn. 35)
Her coheirs were her daughters Eleanor and Anne,
and Marden was apparently allotted to the elder,
Eleanor (d. 1691), wife of James Bertie, Lord
Norreys (cr. earl of Abingdon 1682 and d. 1699). (fn. 36)
Marden thereafter descended with the earldom of
Abingdon until the death of Willoughby, the 3rd
earl, in 1760. (fn. 37) In accordance with the terms of his
will, Marden manor was sold c. 1764 and was
apparently bought by George Willy (d. 1770). (fn. 38) He
was succeeded there jointly by his nephews Willy
Sutton (d.s.p. 1775) and James Sutton (d. 1801). (fn. 39)
After 1801 Marden was owned by James Sutton's
widow Eleanor, who held the estate c. 1812. Shortly
afterwards it appears to have been divided and
sold. (fn. 40) The land lying west of Marden Street (362
a.), and known in 1970 as Manor farm, was acquired
by John Young (d. 1837), who was succeeded there
by his daughter Elizabeth (d. 1840) and son-in-law
Stephen Richmond Neate (d. 1874). (fn. 41) Stephen
Young Neate succeeded his father but before 1898
had sold the farm to Thomas Harris, who in 1898
sold 133 a. of downland to the War Department. (fn. 42)
Mrs. George Harris owned the farm in 1907 and in
1912 sold it to Mrs. James Wells. (fn. 43) In 1970 Manor
farm, worked from Manor Cottage, was owned by
Captain G. P. Stradling. (fn. 44) The land east of Marden
Street, known in 1970 as Marden House farm, was
acquired c. 1812 by Joseph Gilbert. (fn. 45) It was owned
in 1841 by Ernle Warriner (d. 1850), and by 1855
by Giles Loder (d. 1871) of Wilsford House, near
Salisbury. (fn. 46) Giles Loder was succeeded by his son
Robert (later Sir Robert) Loder (d. 1888), who in
1874 sold it to William Fulbrook Atherton. (fn. 47) By
1898 Marden House farm had passed to William
Thomas Richens Atherton, who that year sold
217 a. of downland to the War Department. (fn. 48) In
1970 it was owned by Mr. J. H. Noble and farmed in
conjunction with Puckshipton farm (in Beechingstoke). (fn. 49)
Marden Manor, known as Marden House in 1841,
was reputedly built on the site of some cottages by
John Young, who, as described above, acquired
that half of the manorial estate later known as Manor
farm in the early 19th century. (fn. 50) The house was
attached to Manor farm until 1912 when Mrs.
George Harris sold it separately from the farm to
Mr. J. W. Kingstone, who had tenanted it for some
years. (fn. 51) The house, which stands in wooded parkland in an angle formed by Marden Street and the
lane to Chirton, is a square early-19th-century
brick house with a hipped slate roof. Although
apparently all of one build, the back half contains
three storeys and the front half two storeys of much
taller rooms, with a large central staircase hall lit
from above by a domed lantern. The south entrance
front, which comprises three wide bays, is faced
with ashlar. The central bay, which projects slightly,
contains a doorway with a fanlight and a Doric
porch, approached by three steps; above the porch
a cast-iron balustrade forms a balcony to the firstfloor French window. On the north side of the house
a lean-to wing of red brick may have formed part
of an earlier farm-house. Gardens enclosed by a
thatched cob wall lie to the north.
Marden rectory was appropriated by Bradenstoke
Priory in 1267. (fn. 52) Its value consisted of all the great
tithes of the parish except those allotted to the
vicar. (fn. 53) It was worth £6 13s. 4d. in 1291 and 1341. (fn. 54)
At the Dissolution it passed to the chapter of Bristol
cathedral. In 1588 the appropriators were entitled
to 3 a. of glebe in the common meadows of Patney
and to a smaller quantity in those of Marden. (fn. 55) The
rectory was valued at £58 13s. 8d. above its customary letting value of £8 in 1649; the tithes were then
worth £44 3s., and the glebe amounted to 38 a.,
a total which comprised, as before, land in the
common meadows of Marden and Patney, and in
addition a large parcel of arable land in the open
fields of Marden. (fn. 56) At inclosure in 1812 the appropriators were allotted 37 a. in place of glebe in
the open fields of Marden. (fn. 57) The glebe was estimated at 45 a. in 1841, and in the same year the
appropriators were allotted a rent-charge of £206 to
replace their tithes. (fn. 58) Bristol chapter's property was
vested in 1862 in the Church Commissioners, who
were authorized to sell. (fn. 59) In 1873 they sold the
rectorial glebe (43 a.) to Robert Pile and Stephen
Richmond Neate, owner of the estate later known as
Manor farm. (fn. 60)
In 1534 the prior of Bradenstoke let the rectory to
Thomas Carpenter at £8 yearly, a rental which
remained constant throughout the 16th and earlier
17th centuries. (fn. 61) Earlier lessees of the estate included
Nicholas Hobbs, vicar 1544–c. 1554, who, with
John Hoode of Chirton, was granted a lease in
1539. (fn. 62) In 1627 a lease was granted to Edward
Green, a London goldsmith. (fn. 63) William Gunn,
vicar 1636–c. 1685, was lessee for some years in
the later 17th century. (fn. 64) Thereafter, throughout
the later 17th, 18th, and earlier 19th centuries the
rectory was leased to successive members of the
Hayward family. (fn. 65)
Economic History.
In 1086 Marden was
reckoned at ten hides and contained land for eight
ploughs. An unspecified number of demesne hides
were worked by two ploughs, while the tenant lands
supported five ploughs. There were 24 a. of meadow
and pasture three furlongs long and two furlongs
broad. The value of the estate had increased from
£7 T.R.E. to £10 in 1086. (fn. 66)
The manorial estate was leased out certainly from
the 16th century. In 1551 the demesne and three
smaller farms (see below), all held by undertenants, were leased to Robert Nicholas. (fn. 67) Other
lessees were Roger Dune of Cirencester (1566–7),
and Thomas Browne (1567–9), who in 1569 sold his
interest therein to William Lavington (d. 1590). (fn. 68)
In 1579 Lavington negotiated a new lease which
specifically excluded the three small farms mentioned
above. (fn. 69) The land then leased is probably identifiable with that known in the 18th century as the
'great farm'. That estate continued to be leased as a
whole and in 1765 was reckoned at 371 a. (fn. 70) By 1780,
however, it was farmed in moieties of 134 a. and
136 a. each. One moiety was then farmed in hand by
the lord of the manor, while the other was leased
out. (fn. 71) The moieties, probably much enlarged by the
acquisition of copyhold land, were sold as separate
farms shortly after 1812. (fn. 72) One farm, reckoned then
at 362 a. and including the 'little farm' (see below),
was known as Manor farm in 1970, while the other,
reckoned at 550 a. c. 1812, was known as Marden
House farm in 1970. (fn. 73)
Four serfs worked the demesne in 1086 and elsewhere on the estate there were 10 villeins, 14 coscez,
and 2 bordars. (fn. 74) In 1331 five tenants held yardlands
and there were in addition fifteen unspecified
customary tenants. All tenants owing works had by
that date commuted them for money payments. (fn. 75)
In 1765 and 1780 there were, besides the 'great
farm', the three small farms mentioned above,
and another small leasehold, formerly copyhold. (fn. 76)
There were also ten copyhold estates. The three
small farms were known as Butler's farm, 'Gony's',
and 'Watt Robins' in 1551. (fn. 77) Butler's farm was
known as the 'little farm' in 1765 and 1780. By the
later date it was farmed in hand by the lord of the
manor, (fn. 78) and subsequently came to be merged in
Manor farm.
A west field and a north and an east mead within
the manor are mentioned in the later 16th century. (fn. 79)
By 1705 the east and west fields had apparently been
subdivided, and a west field by Acre Ditch, a little
east field, and a barley field are mentioned. (fn. 80) In
1780 the common pastures included 314 a. on the
downs, formerly known as the Cow and Old Farm
downs, and another 156 a., which probably lay in
the north of the parish and comprised Gooseham
common, Lakes common, Ruslet common, and
Greenhill. The common meadows were known as
Lammas meadow, Lot meadow, and Midsummer
ground. The 556 a. of open arable land stretched
from the southern outskirts of the village up to the
scarp of the downs, and comprised Every Year's
land (93 a.), Wheat field (129 a.), Hitching field (155a.),
Barley field (148 a.), and Summer field (121 a.).
Only 100 a. within the manor had been inclosed
by 1780 and each tenant then held a few acres within
the old inclosures. (fn. 81) Most of the parish, therefore,
was inclosed in 1812, when 1,052 a. were allotted to
Eleanor Sutton as lady of the manor. The open
arable fields were then known as Clay, Sand, and
Hill fields, and Greenhill cliffs, the common meadows
as Lot, North, and Gooseham meadows, while the
pasture remained as in 1780. (fn. 82)
A shepherd, drover, carter, and ploughman
worked on the manor in 1331. (fn. 83) Then, and until the
19th century, the parish's economy was based on
corn and sheep. In 1331 350 sheep were pastured
on the down, a small number which may represent a
tenant flock. (fn. 84) In 1705 there was a flock of 1,300
sheep in the parish. (fn. 85) Tenants in 1765 were allowed
to pasture 40 sheep for each yardland they held.
Leasehold tenants then had a total of 880 sheep and
the copyholders 340 sheep. The farmer of the 'great
farm' was entitled to pasture 520 sheep and the
farmer of the 'little farm', 200 sheep. (fn. 86) Similar
numbers of sheep were maintained in 1780, when
they were divided between the down flock and the
smaller field flock. (fn. 87)
Besides the later Manor farm (447 a.) and Marden
House farm (549 a.), there were two other fairly
large freeholds in Marden in 1841. One of 63 a.
probably identifiable with the later Grange farm
was owned by Joseph Hayward (d. 1851), and another
of 89 a., probably to be identified with Hawthorn
farm, by Henry Hayward. That of 63 a. included two
water-meadows: one, known as the common mead,
lay on the south bank of the river Avon and another
called Home close lay directly west of the house
known in 1970 as the Grange. Another two watermeadows near the common mead were known as
the upper and lower meads in 1841. (fn. 88) No woodland
was accounted for in 1086. (fn. 89) Presumably Marden,
like its neighbours, was sparsely wooded, and in the
18th century parishioners were presented for felling
trees and enjoined to plant trees on the common
land. (fn. 90) By 1841 some 29 a. of woodland had been
planted on the downs and much could still be seen
there in 1970. (fn. 91) In 1898 all the downland in Marden
south of the Ridge Way, which amounted to 340 a.,
was sold to the War Department. (fn. 92) The land formed
part of one of the Salisbury Plain firing ranges in
1970 and was then leased to Mr. Henry Horton of
Wilsford. (fn. 93)
There were four farms in the parish in 1970 as
in 1841: Manor farm, Marden House farm (in 1970
farmed in conjunction with Puckshipton farm in
Beechingstoke), Grange farm, and Hawthorn farm.
Large unfenced arable fields, on the site of the
former open fields, then stretched southwards from
the village to the scarp of Salisbury Plain. A few
people were employed on farms within the parish in
1970 but most then worked outside it.
Mill. A mill at Marden paid 7s. 6d. in 1086. (fn. 94) It
was probably attached to the manorial estate during
the earlier Middle Ages. (fn. 95) Before 1426 Henry
Sparrow had acquired the mill and in that year his
widow Alice granted it to John White. (fn. 96) In 1457 he
conveyed it to his daughter Maud and her husband
Robert Crocher. (fn. 97) The mill passed to their cousin
and heir John Crocher alias White, who in 1496
conveyed it to Gregory Morgan. (fn. 98) By 1509 Robert
Rogers had acquired the mill and it apparently
passed, like land at Oare (in Wilcot), to William
Button (d. 1547) and descended to his son, another
William. (fn. 99) The mill remained in the Button family
and descended, like the manor of Lyneham, to
their successors, the Walker-Heneages. (fn. 100) John
Walker-Heneage (d.s.p. 1806) owned the mill in
1780. (fn. 101) By 1841 George Hutchins was owner. (fn. 102)
Jasper Wells had acquired the mill by 1855 and
owned it until 1894 when it was sold to George
Hibberd. (fn. 103) Edgar M. Hamlin was owner in 1907
and was still miller in 1923. (fn. 104) By 1927 A. J. Brown
had bought the mill and established a pig-breeding
concern, the Marden Pedigree Pig Company Ltd.,
there. (fn. 105) Frederick Taylor was owner in 1939, and
shortly after the Second World War, the mill was
bought by Mr. E. Plank, who produced animal
feeding stuffs there in 1970. (fn. 106)
In 1970 Marden mill, approached by a drive
running north-west from the Marden-Beechingstoke road, lay among former water-meadows on the
south bank of the river Avon in the north of the
parish. It comprised an early-19th-century dwellinghouse, the mill building to the east with a datetablet inscribed 'G.H. 1842', and another building
to the west bearing a tablet inscribed 'J.W. 1876'.
The mill could be operated by steam power in
1894. (fn. 107) The water-wheel was removed in 1932 and
replaced by a water turbine. (fn. 108) Corn was ground
electrically in 1970. (fn. 109)
Local Government.
Courts for Marden
manor are recorded for 1561–3, and for 1751–90 in
a series of rough drafts with gaps at intervals.
Drafts for 1767–72 have been entered in a court
book. (fn. 110) A grant of view of frankpledge had apparently
been made by 1331. (fn. 111) The 18th-century courts
are generally designated views of frankpledge and
courts baron. Views and manorial courts were held
on the same day, generally yearly, and their business
recorded together. At the views tithingmen were
appointed while at the manorial courts officials
such as haywards, beast-tellers, and sheep-tellers
were appointed, small agricultural matters presented,
and manorial customs recited. The lord of the manor
was frequently asked to provide new stocks in the
1750s. In 1754, 1755, and 1756 Richard Hayward
was presented for felling trees in Gooseham and for
inclosing common land, and in 1772 a bridge was
ordered to be placed at the end of Cob's Lane. (fn. 112)
Parish rates were levied for unknown purposes in
1673, 1690, and 1693. (fn. 113) Marden became part of
Devizes poor-law union in 1835. (fn. 114) In 1844 the
Devizes guardians administered some parish houses
which stood east of the church. (fn. 115) It is not known how
long they were used as such.
Church.
There is architectural evidence of a
12th-century church at Marden and a reference to it
occurs in 1205, when the king granted it for life to
John de Wells. (fn. 116) The following year he granted it to
a priest, William Gernon. (fn. 117) It seems probable that
the church was included in a royal grant of the manor
to Gilbert Basset in 1229, and descended eventually
to Philip Basset, who between 1259 and 1267
granted it to Bradenstoke Priory. That house
appropriated it in 1267 and at the same time a
vicarage was ordained. (fn. 118)
The prior of Bradenstoke is first recorded as
presenting a vicar in 1305 and the priors presented
until the Dissolution, except in 1443 when the
bishop of Salisbury collated through lapse, and
in 1524 when the right was delegated to John
Andrewes alias Barbour. (fn. 119) The advowson was
transferred to the chapter of the newly-founded
cathedral at Bristol in 1542. (fn. 120) The chapter presented
vicars until the 20th century, except in 1544 when
the executors of John Baker presented, in 1554
when Walter Gleson presented, in 1563 when the
bishop of Salisbury collated through lapse, and in
1614 when Giles Thornborough presented. (fn. 121) In
1923 the vicarage was united with that of Chirton. (fn. 122)
Thereafter Bristol chapter presented alternately
with the patron of Chirton until 1950, when the
chapter's right of alternate presentation was vested
in the bishop of Salisbury. (fn. 123) From 1951 the united
benefice was held in plurality with the rectory of
Patney and in 1963 the three livings were combined
to form the united benefice of Chirton with Marden
and Patney. The patron of the living was the bishop,
who, as explained elsewhere, had acquired the
patronage of Chirton in 1958. (fn. 124)
The vicarage was valued at £9 1s. 4d. in 1535 and
at £40 in 1649. (fn. 125) In 1724 the appropriators and
others augmented the benefice by £200 to match a
grant of £200 from Queen Anne's Bounty. (fn. 126) The
net average yearly value for the three years ending
in 1831 was £168. (fn. 127) In 1880 £35 was allotted from
the common fund. (fn. 128) The benefice was further
augmented by Thomas Turner, who by will proved
1900 bequeathed £500 for the purpose. (fn. 129)
When the vicarage was ordained in 1267, besides
all the small tithes of the parish, the vicar was allotted
the great tithes arising from land farmed by John of
Marden. (fn. 130) The land, known in the 16th century as
Butler's and in the 18th century as 'little farm', was
part of Manor farm in 1841 and then reckoned at
166 a. (fn. 131) The vicarial tithes were commuted for a
rent-charge of £175 in 1841. (fn. 132)
The acre allotted to the vicar in 1267 had by 1588
probably become two closes, one next the churchyard
and another, called Pond close, near the mill. (fn. 133) The
same small estate is recorded throughout the 17th
and 18th centuries. (fn. 134) It was reckoned at 1½ a. in
1841 and at 1 a. in 1887. (fn. 135)
Two houses were allotted to the vicar in 1267 and
one of them may be the vicarage-house of 1588,
mentioned throughout the 17th and 18th centuries. (fn. 136)
The Vicarage was empty in 1783 when the vicar was
non-resident and his curate lived at Urchfont. (fn. 137)
From the later 19th century the vicars of Chirton
also served Marden and the Vicarage, which stood
south-west of the church, was apparently let to
tenants for some years. (fn. 138) In 1922 the house, which
was probably built in the last decade of the 18th
century and added to in the earlier 19th century, was
offered for sale. (fn. 139) It was a private residence in
1970.
Some time before the 16th century 3 a. in the
East Sand and a cow leaze in Horsecroft were given
for a lamp in the church. (fn. 140) They were leased out
by the Crown in the later 16th century and are last
mentioned in 1651. (fn. 141)
Nicholas Hobbs, vicar 1544–c. 1554, was also
vicar of Chirton. (fn. 142) Samuel Creswick, vicar 1737–66,
did not reside after 1739 when he became dean of
Wells. (fn. 143) William Williams, vicar 1782–93, was headmaster of Colfe's Grammar School at Lewisham
(Kent) and employed a curate who lived at
Urchfont. (fn. 144) Although the vicars were thenceforth
apparently resident, curates were employed in the
earlier 19th century, two of whom later became
Roman Catholics. (fn. 145) During 1829–31 the curate had
a stipend of £50 yearly. (fn. 146) In 1783 services were held
once on a Sunday alternately in the morning and
afternoon. Congregations were reported to be small.
Holy Communion was celebrated at three of the
great festivals, and there was an average of ten communicants. (fn. 147) On Census Sunday 1851 59 people
attended the morning and 64 the afternoon service. (fn. 148)
In 1864 services with sermons, at which some 50 or
60 people attended, were held each Sunday morning
and afternoon. There were then reported to be
sixteen communicants. (fn. 149)
The church of ALL SAINTS stands on a hillock
north-west of Marden Street and is approached by
a flagged stone path. It is built of sarsen rubble with
freestone dressings and has a chancel, nave with
south porch, and west tower. The nave is of 12thcentury origin and retains the original chancel arch
and south doorway, both of which are elaborately
decorated. The chancel was probably enlarged in
the 14th century and has at least one window of that
date. The Perpendicular tower, which is entirely of
freestone, has diagonal buttresses with pinnacles at
the offsets and belfry windows with ogee hoodmoulds. It is connected to the nave by a tall tower
arch.
The chancel was reported out of repair in 1556 (fn. 150)
and subsequently extensive repairs and alterations
were carried out to remedy structural faults which
have been attributed to poor foundations. (fn. 151) The
upper stage of the tower was removed and the nave
walls were largely rebuilt to include new windows,
probably in the 17th century. At about the same time
a timber-framed porch was built against the south
doorway. The tower was rebuilt and heightened
under the direction of C. E. Ponting in 1885, (fn. 152) and
in the course of further 19th-century restorations
tracery was inserted in the nave windows, the east
wall was rebuilt to incorporate a new window in
14th-century style, and the porch was replaced in
stone. The nave roof appears to be of the 19th
century but may be a copy of its late-15th-century
predecessor. The plain octagonal font is probably of
13th-century date. The early-17th-century pulpit
retains its original backboard and tester. The royal
arms, dated 1772, hang above the chancel arch.
The north-west nave window, representing St.
Peter and St. Paul, was designed and made by Mr.
and Mrs. J. W. Kettlewell and inserted in 1958. (fn. 153)
The chancel contains some wall tablets to members
of the Hayward family.
The parish retained a chalice in 1553. (fn. 154) In 1891
and 1970 the plate comprised a chalice given by the
Revd. Francis Simpson in 1812, a paten, given also
in 1812 by John Young (d. 1837), and a flagon of
silver parcel gilt given by the Revd. James Bliss
(curate c. 1844). (fn. 155) There were three bells in 1553.
In the early 20th century, as in 1970, there was a
peal of five, of which the third, dated 1627, was
cast by John Lott of Warminster. The treble,
tenor, and fourth, all of 18th-century date, are also
by local founders, while the second was added in
1886. (fn. 156) Registrations of baptisms run from 1685,
burials from 1687, and marriages (lacking 1750–3)
from 1693. (fn. 157)
Nonconformity.
Bishop Compton's census
of 1676 records sixteen nonconformists in Marden. (fn. 158)
They were undoubtedly Quakers, of whom there
had been a number in the parish since the mid
17th century, and among whom members of the
Moxon, Amor, and Smith families predominated. (fn. 159)
The Amors refused payment of tithes in 1660. (fn. 160)
From 1657 to 1687 William Moxon refused to pay
tithes and, according to his own statement, was
frequently imprisoned over a period of 22 years. (fn. 161)
Members of the Smith family remained Quakers in
the earlier 18th century. (fn. 162) In 1783, although a few
people did not attend church, there was said to be
no dissent in the parish. (fn. 163) In 1852 a cottage by the
churchyard, occupied by William Wise, was registered for worship by Primitive Methodists, but
apparently the meeting did not flourish, and in 1864
there were no dissenters in Marden. (fn. 164) Particular
Baptists registered a house occupied by Thomas
Smith in 1871 but no more is known of it. (fn. 165) A
General Baptist chapel, probably a daughter chapel
of the New Baptist chapel at Devizes, stood along
Marden Mere south of Church Mill (in Chirton) in
1887. (fn. 166) It was replaced by a chapel dated 1899 which
stood on the west of Marden Street opposite
Manor Cottage. (fn. 167) It was closed c. 1951 and was
afterwards converted into a house. (fn. 168)
Education.
In 1808 a charity school in the parish
was supported by contributions. (fn. 169) A day-school,
supported by subscriptions and by payments from
pupils, was opened at Marden in 1820. Eighteen
boys and the same number of girls were taught
there in 1833. (fn. 170) In 1844 the Devizes guardians conveyed land east of the parish houses and a school,
united with the National Society, was built. (fn. 171) Here
in 1859 20 children were taught by a mistress who
received a salary of 6s. a week. Instruction was considered poor, and it was suggested the school should
be closed. (fn. 172) It continued, however, and an average
of 28 pupils attended in 1906. (fn. 173) In 1922 Marden
children were transferred to the school at Chirton on
reaching 11 years. (fn. 174) The school was closed in 1925. (fn. 175)
The premises were sold in 1947 and subsequently
converted into a cottage. (fn. 176)
Charities for the Poor.
None known.