URCHFONT

Urchfont, 1784
Urchfont lies at the extreme south-western end
of the Vale of Pewsey about 5 miles south-east of
Devizes, and measures 3¾ miles across the clays in
the north and 4¾ miles from north to south. (fn. 1) An
inverted pear-shape, the parish lies at the centre of
Swanborough hundred and, reckoned in 1961 at
4,893 a., is the largest parish in it. (fn. 2) The hamlet of
Wedhampton lies 1¼ mile to the east of Urchfont
village.
By the later 12th century the parish was divided
lengthwise into three tithings, Eastcott, Urchfont,
and Wedhampton. (fn. 3) Each stretched from north to
south across clay, greensand, and chalk soils
and contained a settlement which probably originated in Saxon times in woodland clearances made
where springs rose on the Upper Greensand about
½ mile north of the chalk escarpment. (fn. 4) Urchfont
tithing was subdivided into Yardland, Cosset, and
Urchfont (later Eastcott Urchfont) tithings by the
later 16th century, but formed a single tithing
again in the 19th century. (fn. 5) Lydeway, represented in
1969 by a few houses strung out along the road of
that name leading to Devizes, was considered a
tithing in the 19th century. (fn. 6) The ancient parish of
Stert, always part of Urchfont for ecclesiastical
purposes, was named as a tithing in 1841 but by
1881 formed a separate civil parish. (fn. 7) In 1891
Urchfont, then made up of the tithings of Eastcott,
Urchfont, and Wedhampton, contained 6,285 a. (fn. 8)
In 1934 Eastcott tithing (1,392 a.), representative of
the former manor of Eastcott, was transferred to
the civil parish of Easterton. (fn. 9) Thereafter Urchfont
contained 4,893 a. (fn. 10)
The north of the parish lies on the Gault Clay at
300–400 ft. (fn. 11) Formerly well wooded, but probably
cleared and inclosed in the 17th century, the land in
1969 was given over to permanent pasture on which
dairy cattle were maintained. (fn. 12) To the south a milewide belt of Upper Greensand, formerly devoted to
market-gardening, (fn. 13) lies at over 400 ft. It has been
penetrated by the clay at Eastcott, Peppercombe,
and Urchfont bottom, a process which has resulted
in the formation of deep curving valleys enclosed on
either side by densely-wooded 'hangings'. The area
was known as 'Northcombe' by the 17th century. (fn. 14)
The greensand gives way southwards to a gentlyrising expanse of Lower Chalk, devoted to large
arable fields: at its junction with the Middle Chalk,
the northern scarp of Salisbury Plain rises steeply
and reaches over 600 ft. on Urchfont Hill. Two outcrops of Upper Chalk there rise above 700 ft., while a
ridge of Upper Chalk curves southwards over Great
Fore Down, Little Hill, and Urchfont Down. To the
west of the ridge the downland drops away over
the Middle and Lower Chalk to below 500 ft., and
to the east slopes gently away to the Clay-with-flints,
which lies at over 600 ft. The wide treeless expanse of
downland in the south of the parish was formerly
sheep pasture. The War Department bought some
1,000 a. of downland south of the Ridge Way in
1897, 1900, and 1911, and the land in 1969 formed
part of one of the firing ranges of the Salisbury
Plain area. (fn. 15)
The course of the Lydeway, as its name suggests,
marks the water-shed between the Bristol and
Christchurch Avons. (fn. 16) A head-water of the Bristol
Avon forms part of the north-western boundary of
the parish, while a head-stream of the Christchurch
Avon marks part of the north-eastern boundary. (fn. 17)
A number of streams rise on the Upper Greensand
on either side of the water-shed: one flows northwestwards through Peppercombe, where the land
is marshy and overgrown, and joins the northwestern boundary stream east of Crookwood Mill
Farm. A small head-water of the Bristol Avon rises
north-east of Wedhampton. The copious spring
whence Urchfont derives its name rises north-west
of Rookery Farm and is reputed never to fail, even
in the driest season. (fn. 18)
The Ridge Way runs on an east-west course
along the crest of the northern scarp of Salisbury
Plain and ample evidence of prehistoric occupation
has been found nearby, including a late-Bronze-Age
plain socketed axe, an iron brooch, and a haematitecoated bowl of the early Iron Age. (fn. 19) Two (possibly
three) bowl-barrows lie on either side of the Ridge
Way at Urchfont Hill. There are two smaller bowlbarrows on Great Fore Down and a field system on
Penning Down. (fn. 20)
The course of roads and tracks in the parish has
altered little since the 18th century. The northern
part of the parish was then served by a network
of roads which remain as tracks or green lanes. (fn. 21)
The most important ran south-eastwards from
Crookwood Farm through the deep coomb in Folly
wood to Wickham Green whence it turned
sharply eastwards and ran immediately south of
Urchfont Manor, where its course was clearly
visible in 1969, and into the village at the Green.
The most important change was the closure, as a
result of military manœuvres, of the former main
Devizes-Salisbury road, which ran by way of
Redhorn Hill over Salisbury Plain; thereafter the
main route to Salisbury followed the road which
runs via West Lavington, Tilshead, and Shrewton.
Part of the former main road, known as early as the
16th century as Lydeway, follows the course of the
water-shed between the head-waters of the Bristol
and Christchurch Avons (see above). It was turnpiked in the early 1760s and formed part of the
main road from Devizes to Amesbury and Salisbury
in 1969. The hundred courts met at Foxley Corner
on the Salisbury road. (fn. 22) The Berks. & Hants Extension Railway, opened in 1862, ran across the
northernmost tip of the parish but that section was
closed in 1966. (fn. 23) In 1900 the G.W.R. constructed a
line branching off the Hungerford-Devizes line at
Patney which passed through the parish on its
course to Westbury. The line was still in use in
1969 as part of the main route to the west of
England. (fn. 24)
Urchfont, Eastcott, and Wedhampton together
were assessed at £8 14s. for the fifteenth of 1334,
the highest payment recorded for the small hundred
of Studfold. (fn. 25) In 1377 the entire parish had 310
poll-tax payers, of whom 209 lived at Urchfont, 65
in Wedhampton, and 36 in Eastcott. (fn. 26) The contribution made by the three tithings to the benevolence of 1545 was the highest in the combined
hundred of Swanborough, King's Rowborough, and
Studfold. (fn. 27) There were nineteen contributors from
the parish to the subsidy of 1576. (fn. 28) By 1801 the
parish had 1,190 inhabitants, of whom 899 lived
in Urchfont, 173 in Wedhampton, and 118 in
Eastcott. (fn. 29) The population continued to expand
until 1841 when there were 1,711 inhabitants, a rise
attributed in part to the inclusion of the ancient
parish of Stert as a tithing of Urchfont (see above).
Thereafter, probably as a result of unemployment
and the consequent drift away from rural areas, the
population declined. (fn. 30) Urchfont and its hamlets
had only 683 inhabitants in 1951. By 1971 the
population had risen to 820. (fn. 31)
Urchfont village had a street called 'Dengestret'
in the later 14th century and another known as
'Molys Lane' in 1547, but their locations are
unknown. (fn. 32) By the later 16th century, however, the
village, centred then as now on 'the street' (in 1969
called High Street), was flanked to the west by an
extensive area of common land by then known as
the Green. (fn. 33) By the earlier 17th century the village
covered a considerable area east of the high street
and extended about ½ mile to the east as far as
Townsend (known by that name in 1621). (fn. 34)
Townsend Cottage, which stands on the south side
of the road, is a 17th-century timber-framed house,
while directly to the north a group of small cottages,
externally of 19th-century date, retains an earlier
cruck on the west side. Rookery Farm, which lies
¼ mile east of Townsend, is a 16th-century house
partly timber-framed and partly with stone walls.
The ground floor contains an entrance passage and
three rooms, the central one of which has elaborately moulded beams. The house was extensively
altered in the 18th century and again c. 1960. During
the 17th and 18th centuries the high street and the
lane, known by 1784 as Back Street, which branched
off it to the west and led to a small triangular space
then known as Lower Green, were built up. The
18th-century houses in the high street, which
contemporary maps show with back gardens
encroaching westwards on to the Green, are mostly
of brick, although a few are colour-washed. (fn. 35) Many
of the cottages around Lower Green and the lane
formerly known as Back Street are of 17th-century
origin but have subsequently been extended and
some encased with brick. From the high street a
lane, known variously along its course from west to
east in 1784 as Friars Lane, the Knapp, Ram Alley,
and Frog Alley, runs to Urchfont bottom. Friar's
Cottage, which stands at the lane's junction with
High Street, is a 17th-century timber-framed house
of one storey and attics above a rubble-walled
basement. (fn. 36) The date 1633 in the plasterwork of
a bedroom wall may be that of the house's construction. It appears to have consisted originally of
two rooms, one of which has a fire-place in a rubblebuilt gable wall. There are a number of 17th- and
18th-century cottages at Urchfont bottom. (fn. 37) 'The
Baish', which leads north-westwards from Urchfont
bottom, was known as 'Fish Way' in 1784. (fn. 38) At the
junction of the high street and the former Back
Street the road widens and skirts a pond, around
which lie, from west to east, Manor Farm, Mulberry
House, and the Vicarage. Mulberry House completely obscures the church, which lies to the north.
The original late-17th-century house was enlarged
and refronted in the early 18th century by the
addition of a range to the south. The house was
refitted in the early 19th century and a new service
wing added to the north-west. Church Farm, which
stands west of the church, probably dates from the
16th century. The original single-range building
had a two-bay hall framed with cruck trusses and
two smaller rooms at either end, of which the
eastern one incorporated a passage entry. The hall
fire-place, which is against the passage, and the
ceiling may be later insertions. In 1972 the stabling
north of the house had been converted into living
accommodation and the house itself considerably
modernized.
The Green remained common at inclosure in 1793
but during the 19th century part became divided
up into allotments. (fn. 39) In 1969 it was transected by
Romains Lane. (fn. 40) Urchfont, although always a large
and prosperous village, remained rural and undeveloped until just before the Second World War.
A row of council houses, facing the Lavington road,
was built soon after the First World War on that
part of the Green previously occupied by allotment
gardens. Another council estate was built east of
Rookery Farm in the 1950s. After the Second
World War the village became a dormitory for
Devizes. Subsequently much private housing
development took place and a number of cottages
were converted into middle-class residences. Sewage
disposal works were opened at Peppercombe in
1959. (fn. 41) The first private housing estate, known as
Manor Close, was built behind the council houses
at the south-west corner of the Green. At roughly
the same date a few houses were built behind the
church at the north-eastern end of Church Lane.
Other private housing estates are of fairly recent
construction and include developments, known as
the Orchard and Peppercombe estates, to the west
and north-west of Peppercombe Lane. Estates
called the Croft and Walnut Close have been built
at Townsend. An unusual brick house, designed
by the Architects' Design Unit of Devizes, has been
built along Crookwood Lane at Cuckoo Corner, and
a few houses of more conventional design were in
the process of being built in Peppercombe in 1969. (fn. 42)
Despite the considerable expansion of Urchfont in
the 1960s the village itself contains no more than a
post office and one or two shops.
The hamlet of Eastcott, separated from Urchfont
by Wickham Green, has no recognizable centre and
consists of a few buildings strung out along the
Market Lavington road and of several cottages
scattered along the east side of the lane which runs
northwards past Eastcott Manor.
Eastcott House, which lies north of the manorhouse, may originally have been attached to one of
the small estates which once existed within the
tithing. (fn. 43) Its western range incorporates part of a
late-16th- or early-17th-century building with stone
walls and a surviving buttress. The house, which
by 1842 was part of the manorial estate, was refronted to the east in the earlier 19th century by
the addition of a brick range which provided new
principal rooms. (fn. 44)
The large compact hamlet at Wedhampton is
grouped round a semi-circular lane running off
Lydeway and contains some timber-framed houses,
mostly of the 17th and 18th centuries. North of
Wedhampton Manor, which stands at the hamlet's
south-east corner, a large two-storeyed 17th-century
house with a thatched roof is timber-framed and has
the remains of carved oriels below a gable on the
west front.
Manors and other Estates.
T.R.E. the
abbey of St. Mary, Winchester (Nunnaminster),
held an estate at Urchfont which then apparently
covered the entire ancient parish but which later
divided to form several distinct estates, all held of
the abbey (see below). (fn. 45) Nunnaminster retained the
manor of URCHFONT until it was suppressed in
1536. Although some of the house's possessions
were restored the same year, Urchfont was expressly excluded from the grant. (fn. 46)
In 1536 the manor was granted in tail male to
Edward Seymour, later duke of Somerset, and his
second wife Anne. (fn. 47) It was forfeited on the duke's
execution in 1552, but in 1553 Seymour's son-inlaw, John Dudley, styled earl of Warwick (d. 1554),
was granted custody. (fn. 48) The manor was not restored
to the duke's son Edward, earl of Hertford (d. 1621),
until 1582. (fn. 49) It thenceforth descended with the
Hertford and Somerset titles until 1671, when, on
the death without issue of William, duke of
Somerset, it passed to Elizabeth (d. 1697), William's
sister, wife of Thomas Bruce, earl of Ailesbury. (fn. 50)
Elizabeth was succeeded by her son Charles, the 3rd
earl (d. 1747), who in 1720 sold the estate to his
cousin Henry Boyle, Lord Carleton (d. 1724). (fn. 51)
Henry devised the manor in tail male to his
nephew, Charles, duke of Queensberry (d.s.p.s.
1778), although apparently the entail was subsequently barred. (fn. 52) Thus the manor, augmented in
1767 by the purchase of the former Pynsent estate
in Urchfont (see below), passed to his kinsman and
heir William, duke of Queensberry (d.s.p. 1810),
who c. 1788 sold the estate, then reckoned at some
4,000 a., to William Salmon of Devizes, who in turn
sold it in 1825 to George Watson-Taylor (d. 1841). (fn. 53)
He was succeeded by his son Simon (d. 1902), who
sold much of the estate. In 1863 he sold 1,233 a. in
Urchfont and Wedhampton, including Manor and
Dairy farms at Lydeway (known in 1969 as Lydeway
farm), Manor and Manning's farms at Wedhampton
(known in 1969 as Manor farm), and Manor farm at
Urchfont, to the trustees of Heytesbury Hospital,
who in 1969 sold off their estate in lots to the
tenants, Mrs. I. Plank, Mr. M. G. Willis, and Mr.
F. J. Snook. (fn. 54) The War Department bought 970 a.
more in 1897. (fn. 55) Simon Watson-Taylor was succeeded
by his son George S. A. Watson-Taylor (d. 1942),
who in 1920 sold Crookwood farm to the tenants
Messrs. R. Allen and M. Giddings. (fn. 56) The rest of the
estate, c. 800 a. comprising Church, Green, Breach,
Cuckoo, New End, Wickham Green, and Bishop's
farms, was sold in 1928 to Hamilton Rivers Pollock
(d. 1940). (fn. 57) The remaining farms were sold in lots
in the 1930s and in 1946 the county council bought
the Manor, built for Sir William Pynsent and
described below, with c. 100 a. from H. R. Pollock's
executors. Since 1947 the house and its grounds
have been used as an adult education college. (fn. 58)
A manor-house is first mentioned in 1487, when
a new chamber was added to the hall. (fn. 59) About 1500
it was much repaired with its outbuildings. (fn. 60) Manor
Farm, which lies at the northern end of the high
street to the west of Mulberry House, incorporates
one range of a tall 16th-century building with at
least two rooms on each floor. The ground-floor
room at the east end has an elaborately moulded
ceiling whilst the room above it was originally open
to the roof where the arch-braced collars and two
tiers of curved wind-braces would have been visible.
The house was encased in brick in the earlier 19th
century. It was also extended to the north: a beam in
the roof of the new portion bears the date 1845.
In the garden, to the south-west, a tall two-storeyed
timber-framed barn stands clear of the ground on
staddle stones. It was once a store for horse corn and
casual labourers employed on the farm at harvest
were housed in its loft. (fn. 61)
By the end of the 16th century Robert Noyes
(d. c. 1614) had built up an estate of some 300 a.
in Urchfont and Eastcott. Some 90 a. of this total
were bought from Thomas and Alice Sherar in
1567 and in 1570 70 a., known as Sloper's Hold,
from Richard and Elizabeth Sloper. (fn. 62) In 1573
Noyes acquired 70 a. in Urchfont and Eastcott
from Roger and Joan Willis and in 1589 bought
20 a. there from Robert's son Nicholas. (fn. 63) He also
bought 50 a. known as 'Northcombe' from Sir
William Eyre in 1595. (fn. 64)
In 1610 Robert Noyes settled in fee his newlyacquired estate on his son William, and on William's
wife Anne, the daughter of Michael Ernle (d. 1594).
William died in 1618 leaving a son, William, to
whom the lands were delivered in 1633 when he
came of age. (fn. 65) The younger William died before
1645, and since his brothers Robert and Richard
had predeceased him, he was succeeded by three
coheirs, his sisters Susan (d. c. 1655–6) wife of
Henry Eyre (d. before 1649), Elizabeth wife of John
Richards, and Anne wife of Edward Howard. (fn. 66)
In 1649 they conveyed 296 a. in Urchfont, Eastcott,
and 'Stockweeke' to Edmund Proby, presumably a
trustee for the settlement of their lands. (fn. 67) In 1678
Edward Howard, widower of Anne Noyes, and his
wife Lucy, both of whom seem to have acquired
Susan Eyre's share, conveyed 184 a. in Urchfont,
Eastcott, and 'Stockweeke' to John Richards, who
then conveyed the land to William Pynsent (cr.
baronet 1687). (fn. 68) It seems likely that Richards may
have conveyed his first wife Elizabeth's share to
William Pynsent at about the same time.
Sir William died in 1719 and was succeeded by
his son William the younger (d.s.p.s. 1765). He
devised his lands at Urchfont to William Pitt (later
earl of Chatham and d. 1778), who in 1767 sold
them, then reckoned at 400 a., to Charles, 3rd duke
of Queensberry. (fn. 69) They were subsequently merged
in the capital manor of Urchfont.
The house known as Urchfont Manor was built
for Sir William Pynsent (d. 1719) directly north of
the common known as Upper Green, from which it
was separated by the lane which formerly led from
Eastcott to Urchfont. (fn. 70) It was called Urchfont
House until the earlier 19th century. (fn. 71) The house,
of local brick with stone dressings, (fn. 72) is apparently
of c. 1680 but incorporates a 16th-century fire-place
and associated chimney stack. Although the
architectural details of the various elevations differ,
the house nevertheless appears to have been the
product of a single building operation. The west
side, with its mullioned and transomed windows,
may have been completed before the seven-bay east
elevation. The east front's central projection is
crowned with a pediment containing a cartouche
inscribed 'W.P.' and appears always to have had
sashed windows. (fn. 73) The south elevation, which had
seven irregularly spaced but symmetrical bays,
originally had mullioned and transomed windows
but those were replaced by sashes probably in the
18th century. The house was much altered internally by Simon Watson-Taylor (d. 1902), who
lived there from about 1850 to 1862. (fn. 74) The rearrangements chiefly resulted in the conversion of
the east elevation from an entrance to a garden
front. Of the 17th-century fittings, the principal
staircase and some fire-places and panelling in
upper rooms survive. Contemporary oil paintings
on wood are set into the panelling above some of
the fire-places. One, in the library, gives a detailed picture of the east front at the turn of the
17th century, when the house was fronted by
formal walks between an avenue of cypresses. (fn. 75)
The grounds were later landscaped and an avenue
of trees planted across Upper Green to provide a
southerly vista. (fn. 76)
Land at Eastcott was probably included in the
Domesday assessment for Urchfont and apparently
later became divided into at least two estates, which
were acquired by the rector and convent of Edington
in the 14th century.
The most substantial estate at Eastcott was held
of the abbey of St. Mary, Winchester, in the 14th
century but afterwards the overlordship appears to
have lapsed. (fn. 77) The estate is first mentioned in
1304 when Michael of Eastcott was granted free
warren in his demesne lands at Eastcott. (fn. 78) These
lands may be identified with the manor of
EASTCOTT held in 1310 by Hugh of Eastcott,
probably Michael's heir, and his wife Joan. (fn. 79) Hugh
died at an unknown date and was succeeded by his
son Walter (d. 1341), whose heir was his son Hugh
(II). (fn. 80) Before 1351 Hugh (II) had conveyed the
fee simple to John de la Roche, who had already
acquired a life estate in the manor in 1349. (fn. 81)
In 1351 Roche conveyed the manor to William
Overton (d. 1352), who was succeeded by his son
Thomas. (fn. 82)
In the 13th and 14th centuries another branch of
the family had an estate which included land at
Eastcott. A John of Eastcott had an estate which at
an unknown date passed to his son Richard. On his
death, also at an unknown date, the land passed to
four coheirs, his sisters, who partitioned the lands
in the early 14th century. That part of the estate
situated in Eastcott was allotted to Margery of
Eastcott and her sister Gillian, wife of Lawrence
Wylye. (fn. 83) No more is known of the Wylye portion,
which was possibly acquired by Margery, who in
1335 conveyed 70 a. in Eastcott to Nicholas of
Rollestone and his wife Katharine. (fn. 84) The lands
passed at an unknown date to their son Henry,
rector of Orcheston St. Mary, who in 1363 conveyed the estate to Thomas Overton. (fn. 85) The lands
thenceforth became merged in the manor of
Eastcott and in the same year Overton conveyed
it to the rector and convent of Edington. (fn. 86) The
Eastcott estate was further enlarged in 1366 when
Michael Skilling and William Wroughton conveyed three virgates in Eastcott and Urchfont to
the convent. (fn. 87) The manor continued to be held
by Edington until the house was dissolved in
1539. (fn. 88)
In 1545 Nicholas Hame and James Tutt received
a royal grant of the manor of Eastcott. (fn. 89) Tutt
presumably released his interest to Nicholas Hame,
who in 1546 conveyed Eastcott to John Hame,
possibly his son. (fn. 90) In 1572 John Hame and his wife
Joan sold the manor, then reckoned at over 400 a.,
to Robert Flower (d. 1577), who was succeeded
there by his son John. (fn. 91) John Flower died in 1595
leaving a son William, who received the estate
when he came of age in 1609. (fn. 92) He died in 1613 and
was succeeded by his son James, aged three years,
to whom the manor was delivered when he came of
age in 1633. (fn. 93) James Flower died in 1651 and was
apparently succeeded by coheirs, presumably his
daughters. Elizabeth and her husband William
Knapton, Mary and her husband Thomas Arnold,
and Sarah and her husband Robert Heming, who
each held a third of the estate, conveyed it at an
unknown date to Sir Walter Ernle (d. 1682). (fn. 94) The
land descended in the Ernle and Drax families like
the manor of Etchilhampton to Lady Dunsany. (fn. 95)
During the later 19th century the large manorial
estate was divided into Manor and Eastcott farms.
In 1900 and 1911 land totalling 250 a. was sold to
the War Department. (fn. 96) Manor farm was sold off
at an unknown date and by 1920 had passed to the
Revd. Charles F. W. T. Williams. (fn. 97) On the death
of Lady Dunsany in 1916 Eastcott farm passed to
her second son the Hon. Reginald Plunkett-ErnleErle-Drax, who sold it in 1918 to a Mrs. Strong of
Bath. (fn. 98)
Eastcott Manor is set back north of the Urchfont to
Market Lavington road on a greensand embankment
and is enclosed by a walled garden. The original
house, probably of c. 1600, was made up of a westfacing rubble-walled hall range of one storey and an
attic. Some years later the house was extended on
the south, perhaps to provide service accommodation: at the same time displayed timberframing was also added to the hall range. A room
built of stone was added to the east of the hall range
and a new staircase built within the old house
c. 1690. In the mid 18th century a new kitchen wing
was constructed at the north-west corner, and the
south wing panelled to form parlours and principal
bedrooms. A new garden wall incorporating a
gazebo and a western entrance with ornamental
gate-piers were also added. The last main structural
alterations were made c. 1800 when the attics of the
hall range were raised to form a complete second
storey and the south wing partly under-built with
brick.
It is possible to identify land held of the abbey
of St. Mary, Winchester, by the Malwain family
in the 14th century with the later manors of
NORTHCOMBE and WEDHAMPTON. (fn. 99)
In the earlier 14th century John Malwain
the elder had lands in Urchfont, Eastcott, and
Wedhampton. He was dead by 1376 when trustees
delivered seisin to John the younger (d. after 1412). (fn. 100)
John the younger was succeeded by his son Roger
who settled the estate on his wife Avice (d. 1473)
for life. Roger and his heir, his daughter Joan, both
died at unknown dates and the estate passed to
John Ernle (d. 1519), great-grandson of John
Malwain the younger, who was seised by 1507. (fn. 101)
On his death he was succeeded by his son John
(d. 1555), grandson John (d. 1572), and greatgrandson Michael (d. 1594). (fn. 102) Michael Ernle died
seised of the manor of Northcombe in Urchfont,
including a farm called 'Duellis', held of the main
manor of Urchfont, and the farm of Wedhampton. (fn. 103)
Thereafter Northcombe and Wedhampton descended
separately until 1656.
Northcombe, which, as its name suggests, comprised land in the north of the parish, descended
to John Ernle (d. 1648), Michael's eldest son by
his first marriage to Mary Finnamore. In 1624
John and his wife Margaret conveyed Northcombe
to Robert Whoode, (fn. 104) who in 1634, with his wife
Alice, reconveyed it to trustees. (fn. 105) The following
year Robert and Alice Whoode sold the manor
to John Hampton. (fn. 106) Hampton soon resold the manor,
as William Jeay and his wife Anne held it in 1637
when they sold it to Walter Ernle (d. 1682). (fn. 107)
In 1577, on the occasion of his second marriage
to Susan Hungerford, Michael Ernle settled his
Wedhampton estate on the heirs male of the
marriage. (fn. 108) At his death in 1594, Michael was
succeeded at Wedhampton by his sons Walter
(d.s.p. 1618) and Edward (d. 1656). Edward's heir
was his son, Sir Walter (d. 1682), who already held
the manor of Northcombe (see above). (fn. 109)
Thereafter the manors of Northcombe and
Wedhampton, which by 1695 included farms known
as 'Dwellis' and 'Franklin's', followed the descent
of the manor of Eastcott until 1918. The former
manor of Northcombe had lost its separate identity
by that date and as early as 1815 the name was
applied to the entire Drax estate in Urchfont. (fn. 110)
In 1918 Manor farm, Wedhampton (known as Old
Manor alias Uncle's farm in 1969) was sold to a
Mrs. Strong of Bath, Franklin's farm to John
Smith of Potterne, and Uphill farm to the tenant,
Mr. T. Stone. (fn. 111) Later all three were bought by the
Heytesbury Hospital trustees, and c. 1969 were sold
to Mr. M. G. Ellis, Mr. W. G. Potter, and Mr.
R. H. Alexander respectively. (fn. 112)
Old Manor Farm, Wedhampton, is a timberframed house of the early 17th century, with two
ground-floor rooms, one of which contains a fireplace. It was enlarged by the addition of a wing to
the east later in the 17th century.
The Eyre family was established at Wedhampton
as customary tenants of the abbess of St. Mary,
Winchester, as early as the 14th century, and by the
early 16th century had acquired a freehold estate
there. (fn. 113) In 1554 John Eyre died seised of a tenement
in Wedhampton and was succeeded by his son
John, who, on the occasion of his second
marriage to Elizabeth Dauntsey in 1579, settled his
Wedhampton estate, including East Crook Mill, on
her as a life estate. (fn. 114) John Eyre died in 1581 and
was succeeded by his son William, to whom his
stepmother Elizabeth subsequently released her life
estate. (fn. 115) In 1624 Sir William Eyre settled the
estate on Henry, the younger son of his second
marriage to Elizabeth Jackman (d. 1622). (fn. 116) Sir
William died in 1629 and was succeeded by Henry
(d. before 1649). (fn. 117) Henry's heir was his son
William upon whose death in 1660 the lands
passed to William's son Henry, who held a farm
comprising four yardlands at Wedhampton in the
early 18th century. (fn. 118) In 1722 Henry Eyre sold the
estate, reckoned at 115 a. in 1732, to William
Tichborne and his brother Michael. (fn. 119) William died
at an unknown date and was succeeded by his son
Michael, who died in the early 1790s. (fn. 120) Michael was
succeeded by his daughter Teresa Tichborne, who
in 1797 conveyed the estate to Thomas Noyes Lewis
(d. c. 1807), who devised it to his nephew, also
called Thomas Noyes Lewis (d. 1861). (fn. 121) In the
early 1860s Thomas (II) Noyes Lewis's executors
sold the property to George Mannings the younger. (fn. 122)
Thereafter little is known of the estate until 1889
when the trustees of Alexander Meek (d. 1888)
owned it. They sold the farm to Heytesbury
Hospital, who already had a considerable amount of
land in the parish (see above), in 1912. (fn. 123) The land
lay in the south-east of the parish immediately
north of Redhorn Hill. Its farm-house, which
formerly stood north of Wedhampton Cottage, was
burnt down in the 19th century and never rebuilt. (fn. 124)
The farm apparently later became merged with the
other Heytesbury lands in Wedhampton.
The house known as Wedhampton Manor stands
behind a walled terrace garden close to the road,
from which it is approached by stone steps. The
oldest part of the house is the timber-framed northeast range of two storeys with attics: it dates from
c. 1650 but has been much altered at various times.
In the last years of the 17th century, at the time
of his second marriage, Henry Eyre extended and
refronted the house on the west by the addition of
three principal rooms and a central staircase block
projecting to the east. Much of the panelling in the
new wing is of early-17th-century date, however,
and may have come from an earlier house. The date
1701 and the initials of Henry Eyre and his second
wife Susanna, which appear on a rainwater head on
the west wing, may mark the date of its completion. (fn. 125)
Soon after he acquired the property in 1722,
William Tichborne made many alterations, mostly
to the interior, notably the insertion of a new
principal doorway, some panelling, and perhaps
some of the plasterwork. Early in the 19th century
the angle between the staircase and the south rooms
was filled in by a small block in a style to match the
early-18th-century work. Later in the 19th century
new fire-places were put into most of the principal
rooms. By 1842 the house was detached from
the estate and was owned by John Townsend
Compton. (fn. 126)
In 1546 Nicholas Hame died seised of lands in
Eastcott, and the bulk of his estate there passed to
his son Robert, although small grants of land were
made to his son William and daughter Joan. (fn. 127)
Robert Hame died seised of his portion in 1558 and
his coheirs were his daughters Joan, Jane, and
Agnes, all minors. (fn. 128)
A third was delivered to Joan and her husband
Roger Willis in 1562. (fn. 129) Joan was dead by 1580 when
the lands were delivered to her son Nicholas. (fn. 130) He
died without issue before 1602 whereupon his lands
passed to his sister Anne, wife of John Whitbread. (fn. 131)
Jane Hame received her third in 1567. (fn. 132) In 1603
she and her husband John Bennet conveyed their
share to Michael Tidcombe the elder (d. 1639), who
in 1623 settled the land on a younger son Michael. (fn. 133)
About 1631 the younger Michael conveyed his land
at Eastcott, reckoned at some 50 a., to Edward
North, who in 1649 resold it to William Shergall. (fn. 134)
In 1660 Shergall sold the estate to William Talman
the elder (d. 1663), father of William Talman the
architect. (fn. 135) On the elder William's death, the land
passed to his son Christopher Talman. (fn. 136) In 1683 he
sold it to William Pynsent, who a few years later
acquired other lands in the area (see above). (fn. 137)
The remaining third was delivered in 1573 to
Agnes, later the wife of William Springe. (fn. 138) She died
in 1622 and was succeeded by her grandson William
Springe. (fn. 139)
In 1546 John Sainsbury (d. 1559) held an estate
of some 70 a. in Eastcott in chief. He was succeeded
there by his grandson John (II), son of Richard
Sainsbury. (fn. 140) The estate was delivered to John (II)
when he came of age in 1578, and at his death in
1634 he was succeeded by his son John (III), who
died at an unknown date. (fn. 141) In 1696 William
Sainsbury (d. 1705), possibly the son or grandson of
John (III), had an estate in Eastcott and Urchfont,
but thereafter its descent is obscure. (fn. 142) Robert
Sainsbury held 34 a. in Eastcott and Urchfont in
1732. (fn. 143)
In 1732 Francis Wroughton held 175 a. around
Eastcott, including land in Eastcott Urchfont field
and the old inclosures. (fn. 144) Francis (d. 1733) was
succeeded by his brother William (d. 1750), from
whom the land passed to William's son Seymour
(d. 1789). (fn. 145) Its later descent has not been traced. It
would appear, however, that the estate was broken
up soon afterwards. In 1973 Maggot's mead, the
site of the house described below, was owned by the
Giddings family of Crookwood Farm. (fn. 146)
By 1732 the estate included Castle House. (fn. 147)
Seymour Wroughton is thought to have either
rebuilt or extensively remodelled it c. 1758. (fn. 148)
The house stood north of Folly wood, c. 1 mile
north-west of the settlement at Eastcott, directly
below the steep-sided outcrop of greensand known
in the 18th century as Maggot Castle. It was
approached from the lane between Workforth
common and Crookwood Farm by a drive cut
through the greensand. The formal gardens north
of the house were arranged round three ornamental
fishponds, and a gazebo stood some distance southeast on Maggot Castle. In 1789 the mansion, then
probably known as Folly House, was a substantial
building with garrets, cellars, and extensive outhousing. Its dining- and drawing-rooms were well
furnished and the library stocked with works on
various topics including literature, philosophy, and
gardening. There were at least six bedchambers.
Its contents were auctioned on Seymour
Wroughton's death and the house afterwards
became ruinous. The foundations were visible in
the later 19th century in the meadow, then wooded,
called Maggot's mead. (fn. 149) The legends and hauntings
with which the area was by then associated doubtless
originated in the reputed eccentricity of Wroughton
himself, the house's desolate condition, and its
isolated situation. (fn. 150) All that marked the position of
Folly House in 1973 were the sites of the drive,
fishponds, and gazebo.
In 1291 a portion valued at £12 was payable from
Urchfont church to Master Ralph of York who,
later evidence shows, held the prebend of Urchfont
in the nuns' church at Winchester. (fn. 151) How part of
the church's revenues came to be taken to endow
a prebend at Nunnaminster is not known but by
the late 13th century such an endowment clearly
existed and from 1291 a number of prebendaries
presented by the abbess can be traced. (fn. 152) By 1309 the
endowment of the prebend was made up of twothirds of the tithes from the abbess's demesne lands
in Urchfont, with certain exceptions, and from 20
virgates of tenant land there. A house with garden
in Urchfont was also attached to the prebend at that
date. (fn. 153) The prebend was valued at 24 marks in 1341
and consisted entirely of great tithes valued at about
£15 and small tithes at about £1 13s. (fn. 154) In 1535
the prebend was valued at £14. (fn. 155) The prebend
passed in 1536 with Urchfont rectory and the
advowson of the vicarage to Edward Seymour, in
1547 to the Crown, and subsequently to St. George's,
Windsor. (fn. 156) Thereafter no more prebendaries were
presented, except in 1593 when the king presented
the vicar of Urchfont. (fn. 157) The prebendal endowment,
however, continued to form a distinct part of the
church's revenues. In 1624 6 a., perhaps the remains
of the site of the medieval house, and known as
Strawlinches field piece and Parsonage close,
belonged to the prebend. (fn. 158) The prebendal tithes
apparently comprised all the great and most of the
small tithes from Wedhampton tithing in the 17th,
18th, and earlier 19th centuries. (fn. 159) In 1799 and 1824
the prebend was reckoned to be worth £883. (fn. 160)
£340 was allotted to St. George's, Windsor, in 1842
in place of prebendal tithes. (fn. 161)
The estate was leased in 1539 to William
Noyes (d. 1557) at £14 yearly, a constant rental in
the 16th and earlier 17th centuries. (fn. 162) William's
son Robert (d. c. 1614), grandson William Noyes
(d. 1618), and great-grandson William Noyes
(d. before 1645) were also lessees. (fn. 163) The last's
mother Dame Anne Eyre (d. 1654) was lessee in 1649
and his brother-in-law Edward Howard in 1666. (fn. 164)
By 1675 Sir Walter Ernle (d. 1682), had acquired a
lease and was followed by his son Walter (d. 1721),
and grandson Sir Walter (d. 1732). Margaret, Sir
Walter's widow, was lessee in 1734. Gifford Warriner
(d. 1787) had a lease in 1742. He was probably
followed by his son Gifford (d. 1820), elder grandson
Gifford (declared a lunatic in 1821 and d. 1880), and
younger grandson Ernle (d. 1850), lessee in 1842. (fn. 165)
As explained below, Nunnaminster formally
appropriated Urchfont church in 1382. (fn. 166) The house
retained the appropriate rectory until 1536, when
it was acquired, with the prebend and advowson of
the vicarage, by Edward Seymour. Rectory, prebend,
and advowson were sold to the Crown in 1547 and
immediately afterwards passed to St. George's,
Windsor. (fn. 167) Little is known of the rectory's endowments until 1649. The overall value of the rectory
was then £180 5s., of which the rectorial tithes were
worth £160 yearly. (fn. 168) In the later 17th century the
rectorial estate comprised some 20 a. in an open field
called 'Dunfurlonge'. (fn. 169) In 1784 the estate included
Lower, Middle, Hither, and Little Glebe, which lay
north of Glebe Lane (known in 1969 as Crookwood
Lane), in the north-west of the parish. (fn. 170) The same
estate was reckoned at 34 a. in 1831 and was worth
£55 yearly. The rectorial tithes were then worth
£959. (fn. 171) In 1842 St. George's, Windsor, as appropriators, received a rent-charge of £1,088 to replace
their rectorial tithes, which included the small
tithes from 25 a. in Wedhampton called Filk mead.
The rectorial estate passed to the Ecclesiastical
Commissioners in 1867 and the land, estimated at
35 a., was offered for sale by them in 1892. (fn. 172) It was
sold off in small lots at various dates during the
next thirty years. The two largest parcels of 16 a.
and 12 a. were sold to A. J. Hues and T. Stone
respectively in 1921. (fn. 173)
The rectory was farmed at £15 in the 15th,
16th, and earlier 17th centuries. (fn. 174) Robert Wilkins
(d. 1499), the demesne farmer, farmed it in 1478. (fn. 175)
In 1612 William Noyes was lessee. (fn. 176) Thereafter
the rectory was leased like the prebend until at least
1666, when Edward Howard was lessee. He assigned
his lease to his brother-in-law John Richards in
1677. (fn. 177) Sir William Pynsent (d. 1719) was lessee in
1681, and his son and namesake in the earlier 18th
century. (fn. 178) John, Henry, and Elizabeth Compton
were lessees in 1842. (fn. 179)
Economic History.
Urchfont contained land
for twenty ploughs in 1086. There were seven
ploughs on the six demesne hides and nine elsewhere on the estate. Meadow was reckoned at 64 a.
and there was pasture a league long and half a
league broad. (fn. 180)
There were 65 customary tenants on the manor in
1086, of whom 17 worked on the demesne lands. (fn. 181)
There were 19 free tenants in 1260 and 34 unspecified tenants in 1480. (fn. 182) In the later 14th
century a number of tenants were presented for the
dilapidated condition of their tenements. Others
fled from the manor, and in 1385 the tithings of
Eastcott, Urchfont, and Wedhampton refused to
nominate a suitable man to brew beer for
Nunnaminster, apparently an ancient duty. (fn. 183) By the
15th and 16th centuries labour services had been
commuted for a yearly total payment of £2 10s. 8d. (fn. 184)
Little is known of the type or size of tenant holdings,
although in the later Middle Ages the manor
contained certain customary holdings, each known
as an acremansland. (fn. 185) The manor, when surveyed
in 1540, comprised 9 freeholders, whose estates are
not described, and 64 customary tenants who held
a total of 1,362 a. Of the customary tenants, 47 held
722 a. in Urchfont and Eastcott; 8 had yardlands,
another a yardland and a half, 2 half-yardlands, 10
cotsetlands, and 11 acremanlands. A total of 640 a.
at Wedhampton was held by 17 customary tenants,
of whom 4 had yardlands, 11 two yardlands each,
and another a holding made up of 3 yardlands. (fn. 186)
In 1615 there were 10 free and 51 customary
tenants and in 1634 18 free and 73 customary
tenants. (fn. 187) Wedhampton contained 2 freeholds and
23 copyhold estates in 1732. Urchfont tithing then
had 21 freeholds and 107 copyholds. (fn. 188) In 1784
Urchfont manor contained 97 leaseholds, mostly
held for lives and totalling 2,426 a., as well as 73
copyholds totalling 900 a. There were then 12
leasehold estates totalling 400 a. at Wedhampton. (fn. 189)
The demesne was farmed in 1205 by Thomas
Griffin and in the later 15th century by William
Harvest and his son William the younger (d. 1502). (fn. 190)
During the 16th century farmers were generally
members of the Noyes family: a William Noyes is
mentioned in 1510 and he was evidently succeeded
by his son William (d. 1557), and grandson
Robert (d. c. 1614). (fn. 191) In 1540 the demesne farm
contained 524 a., of which 24 a. of pasture in Over
and Nether Breche were worth 3s. 4d. the acre, 7 a.
of meadow in 'Longhe', 'Harmersshe', 'Mowre mede',
and 'Whytt Croft' 5s. the acre, while 440 a. of
arable in the open fields were worth 1s. 8d. the acre. (fn. 192)
In the 17th century Urchfont farm, which represented the earlier demesne lands, contained some
1,288 a. (fn. 193) By 1784 the demesne had been divided
into Home and Green farms, both of which contained considerable areas of downland and lay
south and east of Urchfont village. (fn. 194)
In 1086 the value of the manor had increased
from £15 T.R.E. to £30. (fn. 195) The receipts of the manor
were £102 in 1464 and £190 in 1500. (fn. 196) Its economy
was based on sheep and corn. In 1260 the demesne
flock totalled 1,185 sheep, in 1461 1,268, and in
1464 1,261 sheep, then tended by two shepherds. (fn. 197)
In 1461 about 12 cwt. of lambs' wool and about
14 cwt. of torn wool were sold that year and in
1462 45 wool-fells, six bare fells, and three 'little'
fells were sold, while 950 fleeces weighing 21 cwt.
were sent to Nunnaminster. (fn. 198) In 1464 872 sheep
were sent to the convent. (fn. 199) Secondary to the demesne
flock and to a large extent dependent upon it were
the tenant flocks. Evidence suggests that some of
these were fairly numerous, since in 1384 two
tenants pastured 160 sheep above the number
allowed on the abbess's demesne pasture at
'Holcombe'. (fn. 200) Presentments of this kind occur
frequently in the court rolls of the manor throughout
the 14th century. (fn. 201) The sheep pastures belonging
to Urchfont manor in 1464 were 'le Whythecroft',
'le mour', 'Gaveldoune', and 'Otbreche', of which
'Gaveldoune' and 'Otbreche' were leased to the
abbess's tenants at Wedhampton at that date and in
1488. (fn. 202) Large demesne flocks and smaller tenant
flocks were still maintained on these pastures in
the 17th century. At that date Holcombe down
was estimated at 100 a., while 'Rowdowne' and
'Gavelsdowne' contained some 200 a. each. (fn. 203)
The crops produced on the manor varied little in
the Middle Ages. In 1260 144 qr. of corn, 180 qr.
of oats, and 80 qr. of barley were produced. (fn. 204) Some
170 qr. of corn were harvested in 1462, of which
49 qr. were sent to St. Mary's, Winchester. Of 226
qr. of barley produced in the same year, a certain
amount was allotted in liveries. (fn. 205) Barley yields were
apparently still substantial in the earlier 19th
century. (fn. 206)
In 1540 the open fields within the manor contained
an overall acreage of c. 970 a. Wedhampton field
contained 442 a., Yardland field 150 a., and
Eastcott field 100 a., all apportioned amongst
tenants holding yardlands, while the largest of the
open fields, Cotset or Cotsetland field, had 278 a.
of arable held by the tenants of cotsetlands and
acremanlands. Wedhampton field had been divided
into east, middle, north, and west fields by the 16th
century and by the earlier 17th century a similar
subdivision had been made in the other fields. (fn. 207)
In 1784 the fields stretched southwards from the
hamlets across the Upper Greensand and Lower
Chalk to the scarp of Salisbury Plain. (fn. 208) The area
was still devoted to large open arable fields in
1969. Most of the pasture land in the north of the
parish was probably inclosed in the later 17th
century: by 1695 two small farms known as
'Franklin's' and 'Dwellis' had emerged within the
manor of 'Northcombe', then held by the Ernle
(later Ernle-Erle-Drax) family. (fn. 209) A similar process
had taken place elsewhere in the parish: in 1784,
just before inclosure, besides Home and Green
farms, which together represented the former manorial demesne (see above), there were four substantial leasehold estates within Urchfont manor:
one was Crookwood farm and another, then called
Harris's farm, is identifiable with the later Little
Crookwood farm. (fn. 210) Other farms formed before
parliamentary inclosure in 1793 can be identified
with Dairy and Lydeway (later called Manor) farms,
all part of the manorial estate, and Marsh farm,
then owner-occupied. (fn. 211) Thus only 1,622 a. remained
commonable in the later 18th century. When the
open fields, then named as Wedhampton, Yardland,
Corset, Eastcott, and Eastcott Urchfont fields, were
inclosed in 1793 662 a. were allotted to the lord
of the manor, William Salmon, and his tenants. (fn. 212)
As a result, a number of small farms were formed,
of which three were in Urchfont tithing and two,
identifiable with the later Eastcroft and Snook's
farms, at Eastcott. (fn. 213) Various other freeholders
received allotments of land, including Teresa
Tichborne, who received 105 a. for her estate at
Wedhampton. Land known as Upper Green,
Yardland cliff, and Filk mead (26 a.) remained
commonable. (fn. 214) Filk mead, which lay north-east
of Wedhampton on the Urchfont-Chirton boundary,
was still common to certain landowners in 1912
from August to April each year. (fn. 215)
In 1842 the manorial estate at Urchfont, then
owned by the Watson-Taylor family, comprised
some 248 a. in hand and fifteen farms leased out.
Eleven, including Home (822 a.), Green (609 a.),
Little Crookwood (75 a.), Crookwood (200 a.),
Dairy (69 a.), and Lydeway (later Manor) (82 a.)
farms, were in Urchfont. Two, later known as
Manor and Manning's farms, were in Wedhampton,
while another two, later Eastcroft and Snook's
farms, lay at Eastcott: all contained over 100 a. (fn. 216)
Over 2,000 a., including most of the downland within the manor, were sold in the later 19th century. (fn. 217)
Eastcott was included in the Domesday assessment for Urchfont. As an economically separate
estate, it supported twelve free tenants in 1352. (fn. 218)
Its receipts totalled £22 in 1539 and the manor was
estimated to be worth £19 in 1545. (fn. 219) An open field
known as Eastcott field was mentioned in the later
15th century. (fn. 220) The economy of the manor, like
that of Urchfont, was based on sheep and corn, and
in 1539 there was a flock of 400 wethers on the
farm: at that date the manor was stated to have been
required previously to send 10 qr. each of wheat,
barley, and oats yearly to the rector and convent
of Edington. (fn. 221) In 1566 the farm contained 438 a.,
including 200 a. of arable, 200 a. of rough, and 20 a.
of ordinary pasture, 12 a. of meadow, and 6 a. of
woodland, presumably that known as 'Maggotswode'
in 1539. (fn. 222) The acreage of woodland had perhaps
been miscalculated at that date since in 1610 it
was estimated at 20 a. and comprised Westham,
Marshfield, Marshcliff, Eastcott common, and
Maggots woods. (fn. 223) By 1610 the entire farm was
reckoned at 540 a. and in the 18th and 19th centuries
at some 600 a. (fn. 224) Under the inclosure award of 1793
Richard Erle-Drax-Grosvenor, the owner, was
allotted 187 a. in place of his lands in Eastcott and
Eastcott Urchfont open fields. (fn. 225) In 1842 the land
was farmed from Eastcott Hill farm-house which
then stood on the downland south-west of Eastcott
hamlet. The farm then contained a large sheep
pasture of some 250 a. known as Blackheath Down. (fn. 226)
The farm was divided into Eastcott and Manor
farms in the later 19th century. (fn. 227) In the late 19th and
early 20th centuries over 600 a. in Eastcott tithing
were sold to the War Department. (fn. 228)
In the later 19th century some villagers leased
small allotments, most of which lay on the Upper
Greensand between Urchfont bottom and Foxley
Corner on either side of the Market Lavington road.
There vegetables, notably potatoes, carrots, and
peas, were grown for the Bristol and South Wales
markets. Allotment gardening had declined by the
earlier 20th century and by 1903 the land was
consolidated in the hands of a few tenants. By 1969
most of the allotments around the village formed
Hales farm, while the remainder had been merged
with Uphill and Franklin's farms and with Old
Manor (alias Uncle's) farm at Wedhampton. (fn. 229)
Well over 1,000 a., which consisted of most of the
downland formerly attached to the Urchfont and
Eastcott estates, was bought by the War Department
in the late 19th and early 20th centuries and
subsequently its value as agricultural land has
diminished, although much was leased to local
farmers at nominal rents in 1969. (fn. 230) Land on the
crest of the downs was then under arable cultivation.
In 1969 Urchfont contained the following substantial farms: Manor, Rookery, Uphill, Hales,
Cuckoo, Newside, Green, Lydeway, Marsh,
Crookwood, Crookwood Mill, Bridge, and Church
farms, and Manor and Old Manor farms (at
Wedhampton). The Eastcott farms (then in
Easterton), were known as Manor, Eastcott,
Eastcroft, and Snook's farms. The land to the south
of a line formed by Eastcott, Urchfont, and
Wedhampton villages consisted in 1969 of large
unfenced arable fields. Most of the clay lands in
the north of the parish were then under pasture
and mostly devoted to dairy farming although a
little stock rearing was done.
The north of the parish was well wooded in the
Middle Ages. In 1086 woodland measured a league
in length by half a league in breadth. (fn. 231) In 1461, the
woods, which lay on the clays north of Urchfont
and Wedhampton villages, were known as 'Westrudyng', 'Rudelfate', 'Okfrygh', 'Crowkwode',
'Hawkescombe', 'Whytecroft', and 'Inlond', and
were tended by a woodward. (fn. 232) Crookwood contained 6 a. of 'okes and scruggis . . . very thyn
sett' in 1536 and was commonable to the abbess's
tenants there. (fn. 233) Another copse called 'Foxeleyse',
contained 12 a. of thinly-set trees. (fn. 234) The woodward's account that year totalled some £34. (fn. 235)
During the next hundred years much replanting
was done. The acreage of Oakfrith coppice at some
date in the 17th century was 16 a., while Crookwood
had apparently become broken up into a number of
coppices: these included Burnodokes coppice (18 a.),
Stert coppice (11 a.), Ruddlebat coppice (20 a.), and
Wickham Cliff coppice (8 a.). Foxley coppice then
totalled 8 a. The woodland on the entire manor
amounted to over 100 a. at that time. (fn. 236) Thereafter
the woodland rapidly declined and Aubrey,
writing in the later 17th century, said that
Crookwood, once full of well grown oaks, was then
destroyed. (fn. 237) Oakfrith coppice was replanted after
the First World War but cut down during the
Second. (fn. 238) Many well established trees still stood
in the hedgerows in the north-west of the parish, in
Peppercombe, Ruddlebats hanging, Breach hanging,
and in Urchfont bottom in 1969.
In 1655 the lord of the manor allowed James
Claston, 'coal-finder', to dig on the manor, but the
enterprise proved a failure partly because tenants
refused to allow digging on their land, and partly,
according to Aubrey, because the woodland in the
parish at that date provided sufficient fuel. (fn. 239) At a
later date bricks were produced on the clay in the
parish: a brickworks formerly stood near the Bell
inn at Lydeway but had been closed by the later
19th century. Traces of a former brickworks could
also be seen in 1969 in a field, known as Brick Plot,
directly north of Chapel Lane. (fn. 240) Clock-makers
flourished in the neighbourhood in the 18th
century: among them was Thomas Keyte of
Eastcott, who in 1710 produced a 30-hour clock. (fn. 241)
In the 19th century there were two forges in
Urchfont and other trades included those of saddler,
cooper, and tailor. In 1969 there were two builders
and a thatcher, but, apart from a few people
employed on the farms, most people then worked
outside the parish, some travelling as far as Bristol
each day. (fn. 242)
Mills. In 1086 there were three mills on the
manor which together paid £1 1s. 3d. (fn. 243) They may
be identified with the mills at Peppercombe,
Crookwood Farm, and Crookwood Mill Farm, which
served the parish in the early 20th century. The
pond at Peppercombe Mill was fed by a stream
which rose in Urchfont bottom, while the two
Crookwood mills lay on the Eastcott side of the
parish and were fed by the south-westwards-flowing
stream which forms the north-western parish
boundary. (fn. 244) Both Peppercombe Mill and that at
Crookwood Mill Farm drew their water-supply
from higher up the streams on which they stood,
the water being channelled in a leat along the valleyside until sufficient power to drive their overshot
wheels was obtained. (fn. 245)
In 1768 Peppercombe Mill, described as newlybuilt, was part of the former Pynsent lands, which
by then had become merged with the manorial
estate at Urchfont. (fn. 246) In 1842 it was leased to
Robert Giddings. (fn. 247) It remained in use until the
early 20th century and in 1969 its site, although
partly hidden in dense undergrowth, could still be
seen in the wooded, marshy coomb north of the
church. (fn. 248)
A mill at Eastcott was held of Nunnaminster in
the later 14th century by Henry Denys. (fn. 249) He died
in 1387 and his widow Grace succeeded him at
'Crouke'. William Bele held the mill in 1396. (fn. 250) It was
perhaps that mill, later part of Crookwood farm,
which was held in 1502 by William Harvest, who
devised his copyhold to his wife Joan. (fn. 251) The mill
remained in the Harvest family until 1582, when the
lord of the manor regranted it to William Ashurst. (fn. 252)
John Cook leased the mill in 1784, and Thomas
Weeks in 1842. (fn. 253) It remained in use until the
earlier 20th century. (fn. 254)
In 1498 and 1517 Crookwood Mill was held by
John Eyre and described as at Eastcott. (fn. 255) Another
John died seised of the freehold in 1554. (fn. 256) Known
in the 16th and 17th centuries as East Crook Mill,
it descended with the Eyre estate at Wedhampton
until 1653 when William Eyre and his wife Sarah
conveyed it, together with some land, to Robert
Amor. (fn. 257) Crookwood Mill, as it became known in
the early 18th century, remained in the Amor
family and in 1729 was held by Anne Amor the
elder, Richard Amor, and his wife Elizabeth. (fn. 258)
It afterwards passed to Chafin Grove (d. 1771)
who married Anne Amor, perhaps a daughter of
Richard and Elizabeth. Anne succeeded her husband there. (fn. 259) John Cook, lessee of the other
Crookwood mill (see above), was doubtless tenant
at that time, since it was known as Cook's Mill in
1773. (fn. 260) On Anne Grove's death in 1794 the mill and
a small estate attached to it passed to her grandson
Chafin Grove (d. 1851), who sold to Richard
Giddings in 1802. (fn. 261) Richard Giddings (d. c. 1821)
devised it to his son James (d. c. 1843), who devised
it upon trust for sale. (fn. 262) Stephen Giddings was owner
in 1867. (fn. 263) Mr. and Mrs. Herrod-Taylor owned
Crookwood Mill farm in 1972 and maintained a
pedigree dairy herd there.
Crookwood Mill Farm was described as newlybuilt in 1677. (fn. 264) The water-mill itself had fallen into
decay by 1802 (fn. 265) but a new one was built in the
earlier 19th century. That building, which ceased
to be used in the earlier 20th century, still stood in
1972. (fn. 266)
Local Government.
The jurisdiction of the
abbey of St. Mary, Winchester, and of the house's
successors after the Dissolution, extended over the
entire ancient parish. (fn. 267) Records of courts are extant
for 1260, 1355–99, 1498, 1500, 1517, 1526–30,
1546–8, 1587–9, 1615–38 (entries for 1628–30 and
1633 are wanting), 1725–43, 1743–71, and 1789–99. (fn. 268)
In the 14th century the courts, which met two or
three times a year, dealt with the usual manorial
business. Presentments were then made by tithings,
although that distinction was no longer observed
by the later 16th century. (fn. 269) Sessions of medieval
courts were probably held in the court-house,
mentioned in 1461. (fn. 270) In 1443 Nunnaminster was
granted view of frankpledge, assize of bread and ale,
and quittance from suit at the hundred court. The
grant, although repeated in 1468, apparently proved
ineffective, and a further one was made in 1476. (fn. 271)
The business of both manorial and leet courts was
thereafter conducted on the same day and presentments recorded together until the 18th century
when leet and manorial business were sometimes
entered separately, as in 1725, 1730, and 1738. (fn. 272)
Frequency of courts varied greatly during the 17th
and 18th centuries but generally at least one court a
year was held.
Besides general matters the manorial courts,
both before and after the Dissolution, frequently
dealt with the felling of trees without licence, an
offence usually presented by the homage of the
manor. In 1358, 1365, and 1387, however, the
woodward's presentments were listed separately,
and in 1387 the number of trees delivered to the
abbey's tenants at Urchfont was recorded. (fn. 273)
Medieval presentments generally concluded with
those made by the carrion men. (fn. 274) Brewers who had
broken the assize of ale were presented at the
court leet in 1500 and 1517. (fn. 275) From the later 16th
century onwards the court leet also dealt with such
matters as illegal under-tenancies, while in 1622 and
1738 the need for stocks was noted. (fn. 276)
In 1439 the three tithings of Urchfont, Eastcott,
and Wedhampton had two tithingmen each. (fn. 277)
After Nunnaminster acquired view of frankpledge
(see above) tithingmen were elected at the courts
leet. By the later 16th century Urchfont tithing,
probably for local convenience only, was divided
into three smaller tithings, Eastcott Urchfont,
Yardland, and Cosset tithings: during the 17th and
18th centuries those tithings, as well as Eastcott, had
a tithingman each, but during the 18th century at
least, Wedhampton was served by two. (fn. 278)
In 1592 the justices of the peace ordered that the
church-house should be used as a house of correction. (fn. 279) That use may have lapsed by 1651 when the
three-weekly courts of the hundred were held
there. (fn. 280) The justices again ordered the establishment of such a house in 1660. (fn. 281) A poor-rate,
amounting to about £52, was levied in 1724. (fn. 282) In the
later 18th century outdoor relief was introduced into
Wiltshire and c. 1832 some £400 was paid out by the
parish in weekly doles of 3s. each to about 50 ablebodied unemployed men for at least 45 weeks
yearly. (fn. 283) No overseers' accounts are known to
survive. Urchfont became part of Devizes poor-law
union in 1835. (fn. 284)
Churches.
St. Mary's Abbey, Winchester
(Nunnaminster) presented rectors to the church
of Urchfont from at least the early 13th century
until 1382. (fn. 285) In the earlier 13th century, probably
c. 1232, the rector, John Griffin, endowed a vicarage
within the church and appointed a chaplain,
Richard de Stokes, to it. Griffin's endowment was
confirmed by the bishop of Salisbury in 1232. (fn. 286)
The rectors continued to appoint vicars until the
later 14th century. (fn. 287) Although by the 13th century
part of the church's revenues had been taken
to endow a prebend in Nunnaminster (see above),
the church of Urchfont was not completely appropriated by St. Mary's until 1382. (fn. 288) Thereafter no
more rectors were presented and the abbesses of
Nunnaminster presented vicars to the church. (fn. 289)
The appropriation was confirmed in 1391. (fn. 290) Three
years before the dissolution of the abbey the
rectory and advowson of the vicarage were granted
to Edward Seymour (later duke of Somerset and
executed 1552), who in 1547 sold them to the king. (fn. 291)
The king immediately conveyed them to the dean
and canons of Windsor for the endowment of
masses to be said at the tomb of Henry VIII. (fn. 292)
They were subsequently claimed unsuccessfully by
Somerset's heir, the earl of Hertford (d. 1621), and
were confirmed to the dean and canons in 1598. (fn. 293)
The dean and canons remained rectors and patrons
of the vicarage in 1969. (fn. 294) The chapel of Stert was
annexed to the church by the earlier 13th century
and remained a chapel of Urchfont in 1969. (fn. 295)
By the 14th century there was a free chapel at
Eastcott, described below, which survived until the
Reformation. Eastcott tithing was detached from
Urchfont parish in 1874 and included in the newlyformed ecclesiastical parish of Easterton. (fn. 296)
In 1291 the church of Urchfont was valued at
20 marks, only slightly more than the portion which
formed the endowment of the prebend (see above). (fn. 297)
It was worth £22 2s. 4d., about £5 more than the
prebend, in 1341, a value which included great
tithes worth about £14, all the small tithes other than
those allotted to the prebend, and some land. (fn. 298)
At some date in the earlier 13th century, probably
c. 1232, the rector of Urchfont, as mentioned above,
endowed a vicarage with certain dues and tithes from
Urchfont church, and with Stert chapel. (fn. 299) In 1386
the endowment was found to be insufficient and was
augmented by the bishop of Salisbury with most of
the small tithes of Urchfont and certain of the
great ones. (fn. 300) By 1478 the vicarial tithes included a
portion of the great tithes from the rectorial glebe
as well as from 9 a. of the abbess's demesne land in
Urchfont. (fn. 301) In the later 17th century the vicar
received great and small tithes from Urchfont
tithing worth £40 a year and all the small tithes
from Wedhampton. (fn. 302) He also had all tithes from
Stert except those from its demesne farm. (fn. 303) The
vicarial tithes were commuted in 1842 for a rentcharge of £303. (fn. 304)
By 1478 a close called the rector's, presumably
part of the rectorial estate, had been allotted to the
vicar. (fn. 305) In the later 17th century and in 1842 it
comprised 1½ a., 1 a. of which lay in Stert. (fn. 306) The
western range of the Old Vicarage, which contains
a timber-framed house of 17th-century date with
three rooms in a line, is to be identified with the
vicar's house mentioned in 1649 and 1677. (fn. 307) It
proved inadequate by 1783, when the incumbent
lived at Potterne, where he had 'a much more
comfortable residence'. (fn. 308) The house was enlarged
c. 1810 by a range of three rooms on the east and
extended on the south in the later 19th century.
It was sold as a private dwelling c. 1970 and replaced
by a new Vicarage to the north. (fn. 309)
A portion payable from Urchfont church to the
prior of Malvern (Worcs.) in 1291 was by 1341 a
charge upon the great tithes of Stert. (fn. 310) In 1349
Robert of Etchilhampton and John Malwain
(d. before 1376) endowed a chantry in the church by
conveying three virgates in Eastcott to support a
chaplain to pray daily for their own souls, their
parents', and John le Froend's soul. (fn. 311) No more is
known of the chantry, which was probably situated
in the south transept, although it may later have been
represented by the altar of St. Nicholas, mentioned
in 1502. (fn. 312) There were at least five lights in the
church in 1502, one of which, it was reported in
1574, was apparently maintained by the income from
2 a. of land in Urchfont. (fn. 313)
In 1301 the archdeacon of Salisbury was ordered
to sequestrate the fruits of the church because the
rector was absent and would not repair the chancel. (fn. 314)
So it was in 1302. (fn. 315) In 1305, 1306, and 1308 the
rector was granted leave of absence but not until
1310, when he was given leave to study in Oxford,
was he required to appoint a deputy. (fn. 316) He evidently
continued to be non-resident and the only presentation of a vicar by him found occurred in 1317. (fn. 317)
Another rector presented vicars in 1349 and 1361. (fn. 318)
Among the vicars, the royalist scholar and author
David Stokes, vicar 1644–5, presumably did not
live in the parish as he held other important
preferments. (fn. 319) Richard Wall, vicar for an unspecified
time during the Interregnum, signed the presbyterian manifesto in 1648. (fn. 320) He was probably
ejected at the Restoration and in 1662 the royalist
scholar Thomas Anne (d. 1671) became vicar. (fn. 321) In
1783 the vicar, who lived in Potterne, employed a
curate because of illness. (fn. 322) By 1835 £86 had been
allotted as an annual stipend for a curate, and in
1864 the vicar employed a curate of St. James's,
Devizes, to help him. (fn. 323) In 1783 services with sermons
were held in the morning and afternoon alternately
with those at Stert chapel. Services were also held
on major feast days and Holy Communion, attended
by an average of 100 communicants, was celebrated
at Christmas, Easter, Whitsun, and the Sunday
after Michaelmas at either church or chapel. (fn. 324)
The average attendance during 1850–1 was 400 at
morning and 350 at afternoon services. (fn. 325) In 1864
services were held alternately in the morning and
afternoon with those at Stert. There was an average
of 65 communicants at festivals and 50 at other
times. (fn. 326) What was probably an isolated example
in an area where unorthodox opinions later became
more widespread occurred in 1532 when John
Bent, tailor, of Urchfont, was burnt at the marketplace in Devizes for denying the doctrine of
transubstantiation. (fn. 327)
The church of ST. MICHAEL AND ALL
ANGELS is of local sandstone with limestone
dressings and has a chancel, aisled and clerestoreyed
nave with transepts and south porch, and a west
tower. (fn. 328) The earliest surviving part is the chancel arch
of c. 1200. The piers of the nave arcade may be of
similar date and the dimensions of the nave suggest
that it may have been laid out at that time. The
church also retains an early-13th-century font.
There was a south aisle by the early 14th century.
In 1302 the archdeacon ordered the rector to renew
the chancel. (fn. 329) That injunction seems to have
occasioned the extensive rebuilding and enlargement of the entire church which took place in the
earlier 14th century. It involved the construction of
a new chancel with pronounced staged buttresses
on the exterior and a vaulted ceiling internally, a
north transept and aisle, and a south transept, which
may have been built as a chantry probably c. 1349
(see above). The south aisle was rebuilt and so too
were both north and south nave arcades, re-using, as
suggested above, earlier piers. The west tower and
embattled parapet of the south aisle were added in
the 15th century. The chancel roof was repaired in
1478 when four cartloads of freestone were brought
from Hazelbury quarry for the purpose. (fn. 330) The
south porch was added and the window to its west
renewed early in the 16th century. Thereafter minor
alterations and repairs only were made to the
fabric. A window in the north aisle was altered in
the earlier 17th century, and the aisle's roof, dated
1631, renewed. Repairs were made to the roof of the
south transept in 1787, to that of the south aisle in
1791, and to that of the nave in the 19th century.
A gallery, built 1724, was taken down c. 1864. (fn. 331) The
east window was replaced some time in the 19th
century, and later, in 1899–1900, the church was
restored by C. E. Ponting. (fn. 332) Three monuments are
noteworthy: Thomas Ernle (d. 1725), Robert
Tothill (d. 1753) and his wife by Peter Scheemakers,
and James Long (d. 1768). Long, who gave the land
for the road which runs below Etchilhampton Hill
to Lydeway, is commemorated by a monument of
coloured marbles with an obelisk by Mauge of
Bath. (fn. 333)
In 1553 the church was allowed to keep a chalice
of 14 oz. by the king's commissioners. The plate in
1969 comprised two silver chalices, one of 1560 and
another, hall-marked 1827, given by the Revd.
George Hendrick and his wife in 1830; a paten,
hall-marked 1726, given by Mary Pierce in 1728;
a flagon, hall-marked 1764, given by James Long
in 1765; and an alms-dish, given by Harriet Read
Halliday in 1845. (fn. 334) The church also had a pewter
alms-dish of 1837.
Urchfont church had four bells in 1553. One of
them, possibly of 14th-century date, has survived as
the treble of the present (1969) peal of eight bells.
The age of the tenor, inscribed '1610', suggests a
fairly early ring of eight bells, although all except the
treble have been renewed. Besides the treble and
tenor, three of the remaining bells are of 17thcentury date, two of 18th-, and one of 19th-century
date. (fn. 335) The peal was rehung in 1933. (fn. 336)
Registrations of baptisms, marriages, and burials
all run from 1538; those for baptisms and burials are
complete, while those for marriages are lacking only
for the year 1560. (fn. 337)
A free chapel had been established at Eastcott by
the 14th century, probably by a lord of the manor.
By 1309 both manor and advowson were held by
Hugh of Eastcott and later in the 14th century
both passed to the convent of Edington. The chapel,
which apparently had no cure attached, was served by
clerks whose sole means of support was a small
estate. The building apparently fell into disuse after
the property was confiscated by the Crown in 1548.
The advowson is first mentioned in 1309 when
Hugh of Eastcott, lord of the manor, conveyed a life
interest in it to Thomas of Aston, who made the
first recorded presentation in 1319. (fn. 338) He presented
until 1348 when he resigned his interest shortly
before Hugh (II) of Eastcott, grandson of Hugh
mentioned above, conveyed the advowson in 1351 to
William Overton (d. 1352). (fn. 339) Thereafter the advowson passed with the manor of Eastcott to Edington,
probably in 1363, and the convent presented chaplains until the chapel was dissolved in 1548. (fn. 340)
The property was granted to John Berwick and
Robert Freke in 1549. (fn. 341) Shortly afterwards it was
acquired by William Noyes (d. 1557) who
devised it to his son John, later M.P. for Calne. (fn. 342)
By 1642 the property had apparently passed to
another John, presumably son of the elder John. (fn. 343)
The lands were held in 1680 by Israel Noyes
(d. 1708) of Calne and his wife Margery (d. 1716),
probably the son and daughter-in-law of John the
younger. (fn. 344) Thereafter nothing is known of the estate.
Nothing is known of the value or endowments of
the chapel during the Middle Ages. In 1535 the
chapel was worth £2 yearly, a sum which represented
the profits arising from the small estate which had
presumably formed the original endowment of the
chapel. (fn. 345) The land, leased out to Nicholas Hame
(d. 1546) and his son Robert (d. 1558) in 1536,
comprised 38 a., including a close called 'Harmers',
which contained 6 a. of pasture, 5 paddocks of
pasture amounting to 3 a., and 29 a. of arable in the
open fields at Urchfont, where there was also right
of pasture for 60 sheep. (fn. 346) The chaplains never appear
to have claimed any tithe and evidently relied
solely upon the profits of the estate for their support.
By 1969 the chapel buildings had entirely disappeared, although in the 19th century Chapel
field, which lay north of the Easterton-Urchfont
road, was thought to mark their site. (fn. 347) In 1546
furnishings, which were sold when the chapel was
confiscated, included a chalice weighing 8 oz., a
small bell, altar-hangings, vestments, two cruets of
tin, and a 'mass book'. (fn. 348)
Nonconformity.
Quakerism was firmly implanted in the area by the later 17th century and was
probably brought to Urchfont by Samuel Noyes, a
serge-maker from Devizes. Noyes was active in the
parish by 1658 when he spoke in the church there at
the conclusion of a service. He was subsequently
fined for the offence and on his refusal to pay was
imprisoned. (fn. 349) The Friends' influence continued and
by 1707 the Market Lavington meeting, led by
Isaac Selfe, had established a meeting at Urchfont. (fn. 350)
Thereafter Quakerism in the parish apparently
lapsed.
Independency was established in Urchfont by the
later 18th century and in 1775 a group of Independents registered a house there. (fn. 351) The meeting
was probably later affiliated to St. Mary's chapel,
Devizes (founded 1776), since the group, described
in 1783 by the vicar of Urchfont as 'Lady
Huntingdon's methodists', was then served by
the chapel's minister, Robert Sloper. (fn. 352) Another
building was registered by the group in 1797. (fn. 353)
Independents also registered a house at
Wedhampton in 1797 and certified another at
Eastcott in 1817 but these meetings seem to have
lapsed. (fn. 354) The Urchfont Independents certified a
newly-built chapel in 1817 and increased their
accommodation again in 1825 when a schoolroom
was certified. (fn. 355) The chapel, served by an occasional
preacher, James Staples, was apparently shared by
both Independents and Baptists in 1851, when there
was accommodation for 291 people. Over the
past year the congregation had averaged 12 at
morning, 60 at afternoon, and 130 at evening
services, while an average of 50 pupils in the morning and 30 in the afternoon were present. (fn. 356) The
chapel was attended by about twelve dissenting
families in 1864. (fn. 357) In 1886 it was used by Plymouth
Brethren. (fn. 358) A charity for the chapel's maintenance
was founded in 1896. It was served by lay preachers
from the Salem chapel at Devizes and following its
closure c. 1965, members afterwards attended the
Devizes chapel. (fn. 359) The Urchfont chapel, a square
red-brick building standing in Chapel Lane north of
Urchfont Green, was sold in 1969 and demolished
in 1971. The proceeds of the sale, with the capital
from the maintenance fund instituted in 1896 (see
above), were later invested and the profits used to
help maintain the Salem chapel, Devizes. (fn. 360)
Houses at Urchfont were certified for worship
in 1745 and 1822 and at Wedhampton in 1821,
but their denominations are unknown. (fn. 361) Wesleyan
Methodism, although occurring only sporadically
in the parish, seems none the less to have established
a lasting influence there. By 1757 23 Wesleyans, led
by David Saunders, the original of Hannah More's
Shepherd of Salisbury Plain, were meeting at
Eastcott, but the meeting apparently lapsed. (fn. 362)
Wesleyan Methodism was established at Wedhampton in the later 19th century and a redbrick chapel was built in the north of the hamlet in
1867. (fn. 363) It was used until about 1964 but in 1969
was being converted into a house. (fn. 364)
Education.
In 1808 five 'petty' schools in the
parish were attended by 22 boys and 36 girls. (fn. 365)
A day-school in Urchfont accommodating some 40
children was supported by subscribers in 1818. (fn. 366)
In 1833 the school was attended by 40 boys and
10 girls. (fn. 367) It may have been this school, thought to
be unsatisfactory, where 7 boys and 10 girls were
taught by an untrained mistress c. 1859. (fn. 368) The
school may have survived until 1871 when an
'adventure' school in Urchfont, attended by 15 boys
and 14 girls, was supported by the National
Society. (fn. 369) A 'dame' taught a few children reading
and writing in her cottage at Wedhampton c. 1859. (fn. 370)
In 1833 another day-school, supported by a yearly
subscription of £12 and by payments from parents,
was attended by 25 boys and 53 girls. (fn. 371) Eighty
boys there were taught by a master and a pupil
teacher, while 90 girls were taught by a mistress and
a pupil teacher c. 1859. Children from Eastcott
attended and both teaching and discipline were
good. (fn. 372) It later became affiliated to the National
Society. In 1871 43 boys and 71 girls attended on
inspection day. (fn. 373) In 1906 the school, which stood
east of the high street on land leased out by the
Watson-Taylor family, had an average attendance
of 159 pupils. (fn. 374) Over the next 30 years the average
attendance figures steadily declined, and an average
of 74 juniors and infants attended in 1938. (fn. 375) Some
63 pupils were taught by three teachers in 1969. (fn. 376)
Charities for the Poor.
Before 1786 a
person surnamed More gave £50 to be invested
for the benefit of the parish. (fn. 377) The capital was
reported to yield £1 10s. yearly. In 1834 no payments had apparently been made for at least 25 years
and some of the older parishioners maintained that
the capital had previously been used to set up a
spinning establishment to employ parish paupers.
In 1903 the charity was deemed lost.
Mrs. Sarah Parry, by will proved 1816, bequeathed £50 in trust to be invested, the interest
to be distributed yearly on old Christmas day
(5 January) in loaves to needy widows in the parish.
In 1834 Vincent Snook (d. 1876), one of Sarah
Parry's executors, stated that he had spent £2
interest each year on half-gallon loaves, which were
distributed to widows in Urchfont, Eastcott, and
Wedhampton. He subsequently undertook to invest the money under the terms of the will and
was said to have bought a field called 'Freeland'
which was then charged with the yearly £2 payment.
The land was afterwards sold to Thomas Snook but
in 1903 no bread had been distributed for at least
40 years.
By will proved 1879, Eliza Compton bequeathed
£1,000 in trust, the interest to be spent on fuel,
food, or clothing for the poor. In 1903 the income
was £25 yearly and each year the vicar and churchwardens met to choose recipients, who generally
included most workers in the parish. The charity
was distributed yearly at Christmas in coal and in
food vouchers whose value was determined by the
price of coal. There were about 170–80 beneficiaries
in 1903, each of whom received coal and at least one
voucher. In 1969 the charity, which amounted to
some £25, was still being distributed yearly at
Christmas when 50 pensioners each received
vouchers worth 10s. and redeemable at the village
grocer's and butcher's shops. (fn. 378)