NORTH TIDWORTH
North Tidworth village (fn. 1) is 13.5 km. WNW.
of Andover (Hants) on the eastern edge of
Salisbury Plain. (fn. 2) It seems that a large estate
called Tidworth had been fragmented by 1066
when seven estates were so called: three were in
Wiltshire and became North Tidworth parish,
four were in Hampshire and became the adjoining South Tidworth parish. (fn. 3) After 1897 both
parishes were greatly affected by the army,
which built a garrison town across their boundary. (fn. 4) North Tidworth parish, 1,253 ha. (3,096
a.), is rectangular and lies east and west across
the valley of the river Bourne. Few prominent
features mark its boundaries, which mostly run
over downland, but part of the northern is
marked by an ancient ditch and crosses the
summit of Windmill Hill. The parish was in
Chute forest until 1300. (fn. 5)

North Tidworth c. 1840
The whole parish is on chalk, overlain by
clay-with-flints and clay of the Reading Beds on
Sidbury Hill and by a small area of clay-withflints east of the village. The Bourne, which for
a century or more has usually been dry, has
deposited gravel and, to the north, a small
amount of alluvium in its north—south valley
across the middle of the parish, and there is also
gravel in three east-west dry valleys to the west.
The relief is sharper in the west where Sidbury
Hill at 224 m. is the highest point in the parish
and Clarendon Hill reaches 178 m. To the east
Windmill Hill, over 183 m., and Pickpit Hill,
173 m., are on the watershed of the Bourne and
the river Anton, and south-east of them on
Perham down and Lamb down the relief is
gentler. The lowest land is at c. 100 m. in the
south-east corner of the parish. (fn. 6) Like many
other Wiltshire villages North Tidworth had
meadow land beside the river, arable on the
lower slopes of the downs nearest the village,
and extensive pastures for sheep on the higher
and further downs. In the 19th century woodland for coverts was planted on the downs, and
in the 20th agriculture was greatly reduced after
the army acquired the land for training, barracks, workshops, and housing. (fn. 7)
In the 17th century the main Oxford—Salisbury
road via Hungerford (Berks.) ran southwards
over Windmill Hill and passed through North
Tidworth village, where it turned sharply
south. (fn. 8) By the late 18th century a new course
had been adopted for the road: it left the old
Oxford road north of the parish, crossed the
western part of the parish between Sidbury Hill
and Clarendon Hill, and bypassed the village. (fn. 9)
It was turnpiked between the northern parish
boundary and Hungerford in 1772, (fn. 10) and was
disturnpiked in 1866. From 1835, however, the
north-south road through the village, then the
last part of a Swindon—Salisbury road via
Marlborough and the villages of the Bourne
valley to be turnpiked, was again a main road. (fn. 11)
North of the church a new straight section was
made. (fn. 12) The road was disturnpiked in 1876, (fn. 13)
and in 1990 remained an important north—south
route. The road to Salisbury between Sidbury
Hill and Clarendon Hill presumably decreased
in importance from 1835 and it was among
several roads in the west part of the parish closed
by the army c. 1900. (fn. 14) In the east part of the
parish a road to Ludgershall is apparently on its
original course, (fn. 15) but the old Hungerford road,
from which it branched, went out of use in the
mid 20th century. (fn. 16) The army built a new road
between North Tidworth, where it is called
Meerut Road, and Bulford in 1909–10, (fn. 17) and
military activity has increased the importance of
a road leading from Andover to South Tidworth
across Perham down and of Somme Road between Brimstone bottom and Perham down.
A railway for the army was built from the
Midland & South Western Junction Railway in
Ludgershall to a terminus in South Tidworth
and opened in 1901. The public used it from
1902 (fn. 18) until it was closed in 1955. (fn. 19)
Prehistoric artefacts have been found in the
parish and there are bowl barrows on Sidbury
Hill and Pickpit Hill. A prehistoric field system
extends into North Tidworth from the west. It
was later crossed by parts of the seven ditches
which converge on the Iron-Age hill fort covering 17 a. on Sidbury Hill; the ditches may be
associated with cattle ranching. A smaller field
system is further east. Romano-British remains
have been found near Sidbury Hill and on
Perham down, and a Pagan-Saxon burial on
Perham down. (fn. 20)
North Tidworth was seriously affected by the
plague of 1349, (fn. 21) and there is no evidence that
any inhabitant paid poll tax in 1377. (fn. 22) There
were 140 inhabitants in 1527. (fn. 23) The population
rose from 240 in 1801 to 417 in 1841, but had
fallen to 241 by 1891 and was 259 in 1901.
Thereafter barracks and new housing, mainly for
the army, were built and the population was
greatly increased, although numbers varied with
the amount of military activity. The population
was 1,541 in 1911, 1,253 in 1921, 2,771 in 1931,
4,916 in 1951, (fn. 24) and 2,824 in 1961. After more
housing was built the population was 7,280 in
1971, 5,813 in 1991 when it was still mainly
soldiers and their families. (fn. 25)
North Tidworth was a small village on the
gravel beside the Bourne, strung out along the
old Oxford—Salisbury road which, with its sharp
southward bend, closely followed the river.
North of the bend an offshoot of the village lay
along the part of the Collingbourne Ducis road
which from 1835 has been a back lane. (fn. 26) A bridge
over the river was called Church bridge in
1701. (fn. 27) At the south end of the village the church
is west of the main road; the rectory house was
immediately south-east of the church, a farmstead, demolished in the mid 19th century,
immediately west of it. Two other large farmsteads were in the village in the 19th century.
Zouche Farm, of which the farmhouse survives
as Zouch Manor, was on higher ground north-west of the church and away from the main road;
a manor house stood on the site in the 18th
century. Manor Farm, on the north side of the
road east of the bend, (fn. 28) was rebuilt in the early
20th century and was ruinous in 1990. Few of
the cottages in the village before 1900 survive:
two stand near the church, several estate cottages, including a trio of brick and flint bearing
a plausible date stone for 1890, stand at the old
bend of the main road, an 18th-century cottage
stands in the back lane, and a 19th-century flint
and brick house stands at the junction of the back
lane and the new section of road which replaced
it in 1835. The village was often flooded in the
early 19th century. (fn. 29)
There was a church house in 1566, (fn. 30) new
cottages were licensed in 1591, (fn. 31) and almshouses
were built in the late 17th century. (fn. 32) A friendly
society in the parish in 1805 had an average of
83 members 1813–15. (fn. 33) There was an alehouse
in 1587, (fn. 34) the Old Bull was open in the 1820s (fn. 35)
but had been replaced by the Ram by 1848, and
the Ram was rebuilt c. 1935. (fn. 36) The house of John
Mompesson in the village attained national notoriety in the early 1660s for allegedly being
haunted by a poltergeist. (fn. 37)
On downland called the Pennings, north-west
of the village, there was a barn in 1773, and by
1820 Tidworth Cottage had been built amid
woodland on roughly the same site. (fn. 38) Neither
building was standing c. 1839. (fn. 39) Tidworth Down
Farm was built on the downs between Brimstone
bottom and Windmill Hill c. 1800: (fn. 40) it incorporates a red-brick house, extended in the later 19th
century, and was called Sweetapple Farm in
1990. A new farmstead at the Pennings, incorporating barns and two cottages, was built in the
mid 19th century. (fn. 41)
North Tidworth was transformed after 1897,
the year in which nearly all the parish, together
with nearly all of South Tidworth parish, was
bought by the War Department for military
training. (fn. 42) Much land was built on for the
garrison attached to the headquarters of the
Southern Military Command based at Tidworth
House in South Tidworth; most of the barracks
were in South Tidworth, most of the houses, for
both soldiers and civilians, in North Tidworth.
Tented camps were on Windmill Hill and Perham down and at the Pennings in 1899. (fn. 43) In the
village Lucknow and Mooltan barracks were
built south-west of the church and completed in
1905; they had been extended westwards by
1926. (fn. 44) Zouch Manor and Manor Farm were
used as officers' quarters. (fn. 45) Also in the village,
east of the church, a Royal Army Ordnance
depot was erected, probably during the First
World War. (fn. 46) On Perham down a hutted camp (fn. 47)
had been built by 1915, new buildings were
erected north and south of the Andover road in
the 1920s, and brick barracks were built 1933–6.
Perham Down barracks were rebuilt 1972–4 and
renamed Swinton barracks. South of the Ludgershall road in Brimstone bottom Fowler
barracks were built on the west side, and
Busigny barracks on the east side, of Somme
Road in 1938. (fn. 48) In the village, east of the Ordnance depot, Mathew barracks were built c.
1939, (fn. 49) and north-east of the village, adjoining
Fowler barracks, Busigny barracks, and Ludgershall, extensive military workshops were built
in 1939 (fn. 50) Mathew barracks and Fowler barracks
were demolished in the 1960s and Busigny barracks c. 1976, (fn. 51) but Lucknow, Mooltan, and
Swinton barracks remained in use in 1990.
An isolation hospital was built in Brimstone
bottom in 1900 (fn. 52) and a military cemetery was
opened north of the village in 1904. (fn. 53) As the
garrison grew other buildings were erected for
sport and recreation: they included a British
Legion club and a cinema before 1923 (fn. 54) Later,
when there was much new housing, a police
station, schools, shops, and health and community centres were built.
In the 20th century the main north—south road
through the village has been renamed Pennings
Road, and its old southward bend and the road
leading east from it have together been called
Ludgershall Road. The many houses built in the
20th century are in roughly equal numbers east
and west of Pennings Road. The first to be built
by the army were those north-west of the church
in Nepaul Road dated 1922 and those south-east
of the church on the north side of Ordnance
Road standing in 1923. (fn. 55) The earliest council
houses are apparently 18 in Ludgershall Road
built c. 1930 and 8 on the west side of Pennings
Road. (fn. 56) Many more houses were built north-west
of Nepaul Road, an area called the Zouch estate,
especially in the 1960s; in the angle between the
Zouch estate and Pennings Road the Gason Hill
council estate was built, mainly in the early
1950s (fn. 57) East of Pennings Road much new housing, blocks of flats and small houses, was built
for the army in the mid and later 1960s to designs
by the Austin Smith, Salmon, and Lord Partnership: c. 90 houses on the Mathew estate, on
the site of the Mathew barracks, were sold by
the Ministry of Defence to Kennet district council in 1990. (fn. 58) South of Ludgershall Road and
adjoining that housing an estate of council
houses, including bungalows for old people, was
built in the later 1960s. (fn. 59) East of the village,
labourers employed on the construction of the
garrison soon after 1900 were accommodated in
a hutted encampment in Brimstone bottom
called Tin Town. It included a hospital, mission
hall, school, recreation rooms, and baths. (fn. 60) There
are houses of the 1920s or 1930s in Lambdown
Terrace off the Andover road, (fn. 61) and a large estate
of houses was built by the army south of the road
on Perham down from the late 1920s. North of
the road smaller estates were built in 1968 and
1977. (fn. 62)
From the 11th century, when Croc the huntsman held estates at North Tidworth and South
Tidworth, North Tidworth may have been a
centre for sport. (fn. 63) Game, particularly hares and
partridges, were abundant in the 17th century, (fn. 64)
and in the 19th North Tidworth was part of a
large sporting estate. In 1895 coursing meetings
were held there. (fn. 65) Cricket was played on Perham
down in the 18th century, and from c. 1787 to
c. 1797 players from Hambledon (Surr.) and the
rest of England met there. (fn. 66) Between c. 1926 and
c. 1984 there was a polo ground on Perham
down; it was a general sports ground in 1987. (fn. 67)
In 1935 Salisbury Plain Race club had a course
and stands on Windmill Hill. (fn. 68)
Manors and other estates.
A 4-hide estate that became MOELS or Moyles
manor was held in 1066 by Alward and in 1086
by Edward of Salisbury. (fn. 69) It descended in the
direct line to Walter of Salisbury (d. 1147),
Patrick, earl of Salisbury (d. 1168), and William,
earl of Salisbury (d. 1196), (fn. 70) and to William's
daughter Ela (d. 1261), wife of William Longespee, earl of Salisbury (d. 1226). From Ela, who
took the veil in 1238, the overlordship descended
like the overlordship of Shrewton; (fn. 71) it was last
mentioned in 1428, when Thomas Montagu, earl
of Salisbury, held it. (fn. 72)
Either William, earl of Salisbury (d. 1196), or,
more likely, William, earl of Salisbury (d. 1226),
granted the manor to William de Moels. (fn. 73) Philip
de Moels held it in 1242–3, (fn. 74) and before 1250
granted it to William of Widworthy. Hugh of
Widworthy held it in 1263–4, (fn. 75) but later it
belonged to Richard of Coombe (d. c. 1293) and
his son Richard. (fn. 76) Moels manor was settled in
1313 by the younger Richard on himself and his
wife Anstice and passed to his nephew Richard
of Coombe (d. c. 1329) and to that Richard's son
Sir Richard (d. 1361). (fn. 77) Walter of Coombe held
the manor in 1379, his son or nephew Robert of
Coombe (d. by 1416) held it in 1409 and c. 1411,
and Robert's son John, M.P. for Ludgershall
1436–7, held it in 1428. John was succeeded by
his sons Richard (d. by 1460) and John in turn. (fn. 78)
The younger John's heir, his daughter Joan, wife
of Ralph Bannister (d. 1492), was succeeded by
her daughter Joan (fl. 1534), wife of Thomas
Dauntsey and later of William Walwyn. On the
younger Joan's death the manor passed to Edmund Walwyn, who sold it in 1538 to William
Dauntsey (fn. 79) (d. 1543). It passed to William's
brother Ambrose (d. 1555) and to Ambrose's son
John (d. 1559), who was succeeded in turn by
his sons Ambrose (d. 1562) and Sir John. (fn. 80) In
1627 Sir John Dauntsey sold the manor to James
Ley, earl of Marlborough (fn. 81) (d. 1629), the owner
of an adjacent estate in South Tidworth. (fn. 82) The
earl's relict Jane and her husband William Ashburnham sold Moels manor in 1650 to Thomas
Smith. (fn. 83) It descended in the direct line to John
Smith (d. 1690), John Smith (d. 1723), speaker
of the House of Commons and Chancellor of the
Exchequer, (fn. 84) and William Smith (d. 1773). William devised it to his nephew Thomas Assheton
(d. 1774), who assumed the name Smith.
Thomas's son Thomas Assheton Smith (fn. 85) (d.
1828) was succeeded by his son Thomas Assheton Smith (d. 1858), a noted sportsman, (fn. 86) who
in 1844 owned nearly all the parish. As part of
the Tidworth estate, which also included nearly
all of South Tidworth parish, he devised it to
his relict Matilda (d. 1859). She devised the
estate to her nephew F. S. Stanley who sold it
in 1877 to Sir John Kelk, Bt. (fn. 87) (d. 1886). Kelk's
son Sir John sold it in 1897 to the War Department. (fn. 88) The Ministry of Defence owned most of
the parish in 1990. (fn. 89)
The 5-hide estate that came to be called
HUSSEY manor after its 13th-century lords
was held in 1066 by Eddulf and in 1086 by Odo,
bishop of Bayeux. (fn. 90) It was among the bishop's
estates which may have been held by John the
marshal (d. 1165) and passed to William Marshal, earl of Pembroke (d. 1219), who held it by
serjeanty of marshalcy. The overlordship passed
with the marshalcy to William's son William,
earl of Pembroke (d. 1231), whose relict Eleanor
(d. 1275) and her husband Simon de Montfort,
earl of Leicester, held it in 1248. (fn. 91) The overlord
in 1290 was the marshal, Roger le Bigod, earl of
Norfolk (d. s.p. 1306), (fn. 92) and the marshal was
overlord in the 14th century. (fn. 93)
In 1086 another Odo held the estate of Odo,
bishop of Bayeux. (fn. 94) It was held in 1218 by Henry
Hussey (fn. 95) (d. by 1235) and descended in the
direct line to Sir Matthew (d. 1253) and Sir
Henry (d. 1290), (fn. 96) who was granted free warren
in his demesnes in 1271. (fn. 97) The manor was
assigned to Sir Henry's relict Agnes (fl. 1326),
and she and her husband Peter de Breuse held
it in 1307. (fn. 98) It passed to her son Henry Hussey,
Lord Hussey (d. 1332), who was succeeded by
his son Henry, (fn. 99) Lord Hussey (d. 1349). That
Lord Hussey settled it on his son Richard (fn. 100) (d.
s.p. 1361), from whom it passed to his brother
Sir Henry (d. 1383). (fn. 101) By 1401 it had apparently
been acquired by John Chitterne, a clerk. (fn. 102) In
1239 Maud, granddaughter of Henry Hussey (d.
by 1235), successfully claimed 1 carucate against
her uncle Sir Matthew Hussey, (fn. 103) and she and
her husband William Paynel held the estate in
1269. (fn. 104) Their land in North Tidworth may also
have been acquired by John Chitterne in the
early 15th century as their manor of Littleton
Pannell in West Lavington was. (fn. 105) In 1409 and
1412 feoffees held what was probably the whole
Hussey manor, (fn. 106) which evidently passed, like
Upton Knoyle manor in East Knoyle and Great
Bathampton manor in Steeple Langford, to John
Chitterne's sister Agnes, wife of William Milbourne. Hussey manor was held by Agnes's son
Richard Milbourne (fn. 107) (d. 1451) and passed in the
direct line to Simon (fn. 108) (d. 1464), Sir Thomas (fn. 109)
(d. 1492), Henry (fn. 110) (d. 1519), and Richard Milbourne, (fn. 111) who was succeeded by his cousin
William Fauconer (fn. 112) (d. 1558). Fauconer's son
William (fn. 113) (d. c. 1610) was a recusant and two
thirds of his estate were held by the Crown in
1592–3 and 1600. The manor passed to his niece
Jane (d. 1615), wife of Francis Eyton, and
afterwards to his daughter Anne, wife of Benet
Winchcomb. (fn. 114) Anne Winchcomb sold it in 1624
to Sir James Ley, Bt. (fn. 115) (cr. earl of Marlborough
1626), (fn. 116) and from 1627 it descended with Moels
manor.
Three hides, from which ZOUCHE manor
may have originated, were held by three thegns
in 1066. In 1086 Croc held 2 hides and 3
yardlands and Edward of Salisbury held 1 yardland. Croc's 2 hides were held of him by a
knight. (fn. 117) Some or all of those lands may have
been held by Hugh de Lacy (d. 1186) (fn. 118) and were
possibly the estate in North Tidworth held by
the king 1187–91. (fn. 119) Later John Bisset (d. 1241)
was overlord of Zouche manor. It was held of
him by Roger la Zouche who was succeeded by
his son Sir Alan (d. 1270). The Zouches subinfeudated the manor in portions: their successors
Roger la Zouche (d. 1285), Alan la Zouche, Lord
Zouche (d. 1314), and that Alan's daughters
Ellen, wife of Sir Nicholas Seymour, and Maud,
wife of Sir Robert de Holand, were mesne
lords. (fn. 120)
Between 1199 and 1227 Roger la Zouche gave
½ yardland to Maiden Bradley priory. (fn. 121) Sir Alan
la Zouche gave the priory rent from a carucate
of the manor, (fn. 122) and in 1273 the lessee Sir
Nicholas Vaux surrendered the land to the priory, (fn. 123) which held it until the Dissolution. (fn. 124) It
was granted in 1536 to Sir Edward Seymour,
Viscount Beauchamp (cr. earl of Hertford 1537,
duke of Somerset 1547), (fn. 125) was presumably forfeited on his execution and attainder in 1552, and
was granted in 1559 to John Cutt and Richard
Roberts. (fn. 126) What was probably the same land was
sold in 1567 by John Stockman and his wife
Dorothy to John Knight, (fn. 127) who sold it in 1579 to
John Thornborough. (fn. 128) In 1592 Thornborough
sold it to John Pitman, (fn. 129) who owned Zouche
manor in 1600. (fn. 130) William Pitman, more likely the
elder, owned it in 1621 and, apparently before
1649, sold it to John Bulkeley. In 1662 Bulkeley
sold it to Thomas Pierce (fn. 131) (d. 1691), president of
Magdalen College, Oxford, and later dean of
Salisbury. The manor descended to Thomas's son
Robert (d. 1707), rector of North Tidworth, and
to Robert's son Thomas, (fn. 132) who sold it in 1724 to
Smart Poore (fn. 133) (d. 1747). (fn. 134) Poore's son Edward (d.
1787) devised the manor successively to his
nephew Edward Poore (d. s.p. 1803) and Edward
Dyke, who assumed the name Poore in 1803.
Edward Dyke Poore sold the manor, 930 a., (fn. 135) to
Thomas Assheton Smith in 1832, and it became
part of Smith's Tidworth estate. (fn. 136)
A house on Zouche manor was built on Tidworth Hill of local stone for Edward, duke of
Somerset, 1547–9. (fn. 137) In 1773 Edward Poore had
a house, on rising ground north of the church, (fn. 138)
which c. 1800 was described as small and secluded. (fn. 139) It was replaced in the early 19th
century by Zouch Manor, (fn. 140) a square house with
a principal east front, rendered and of three bays
with a central door, and with a west service wing
of red brick.
Between 1220 and 1238 Roger la Zouche
subinfeudated part of the manor to his daughter
Laura and her husband Gilbert of Sandford.
Laura settled the land on Arabel, wife of Henry
of Pembridge, and on Arabel's son Fulk of
Pembridge (d. 1296), (fn. 141) who held it in 1282. (fn. 142)
Fulk's heirs held it in 1314, and in 1339 another
Fulk of Pembridge granted the reversion after
the death of the life tenant, Henry of Birmingham, to Robert of Pembridge. (fn. 143)
What may have been the same estate was held
in 1412 by Alice Sotwell, (fn. 144) and in 1579, when it
was called NORTH TIDWORTH manor, by
William Sotwell. (fn. 145) That manor descended to
William Sotwell (d. 1639), passed to his daughter Elizabeth, wife of Francis Trenchard and,
after 1646, of John Bulkeley, and apparently
reverted to his nephew John Sotwell, who sold
it to William Pitman and William's son William.
The Pitmans sold it in 1654 to John Bulkeley
and it was reunited with Zouche manor. (fn. 146)
In the later 13th century Sir Nicholas de Vaux
granted 1 yardland, the nucleus of an estate later
called TIDWORTH manor and perhaps formerly part of Zouche manor, to John Irish. (fn. 147)
The estate was later held by Simon Irish. (fn. 148) In
1423 Richard Etton and his wife Joan, whose
inheritance it was, settled it on themselves and
on William Ludlow (d. 1478) and his wife
Margaret. (fn. 149) From William's son John (d. 1487) (fn. 150)
the estate descended, apparently in the direct
line, to George Ludlow (d. 1580), Sir Edmund
Ludlow (d. 1624), Henry Ludlow (d. 1639), and
Edmund Ludlow, (fn. 151) who sold it to William
Maton (will proved 1687). It was presumably
merged with Maton's other estate in North
Tidworth. (fn. 152)
In the mid 12th century one Roland gave to
Bradenstoke priory a messuage and 5 a. in North
Tidworth which he had acquired from Benet of
Angreville, and in the early 13th Gerard of
Coombe gave the priory 5½ yardlands formerly
his brother Baldwin's. (fn. 153) The estate passed to the
Crown at the Dissolution (fn. 154) and was granted in
1540 to John Goddard. (fn. 155) It was possibly the later
MATON'S or Tidworth Down farm devised by
John Maton (d. 1590) to his son Leonard. (fn. 156)
Maton's apparently passed to Leonard's brother
Francis (will proved 1663), to Francis's son
William (fn. 157) (will proved 1687), and to William's
grandson John Maton (fn. 158) (d. 1737), who devised it
to his nephew Edmund Brickenden. (fn. 159) Brickenden's daughter and heir Ann (will proved 1788),
wife of John Hughes, devised the estate to her
cousin John Yaldwin, who sold it in 1793 to
Thomas Assheton Smith: it was added to the
Tidworth estate. (fn. 160)
Amesbury abbey may have received tithes
from lands in North Tidworth held by John the
marshal (d. 1165) and Hugh de Lacy (d. 1186),
and in 1179 such tithes were confirmed to
Amesbury priory. (fn. 161) The priory kept the tithes
until the Dissolution. (fn. 162) In 1541 they were granted
to Winchester cathedral, (fn. 163) the owner in 1843
when they were valued at £80 and commuted. (fn. 164)
Economic history.
In 1086 North Tidworth had land for 6½ ploughteams and 6½ were
there with 3 villani, 8 bordars, 5 servi, and 2
coscets: 6¾ hides were in demesne. The estates
had pastures measuring 12, 6, and 2 square
furlongs. (fn. 165)
In the Middle Ages the usual sheep-and-corn
husbandry of the Wiltshire chalklands apparently prevailed at North Tidworth. It is likely
that there were separate groups of open fields on
each side of the river, and later evidence suggests
that each of the main manors, Moels, Hussey,
and Zouche, had its own open fields, (fn. 166) but where
the lands of each lay is obscure. There were
bondmen on Zouche manor in the period 1199–
1227. (fn. 167)
On the minor part of Zouche manor in 1279
there were 4 yardlands of demesne and 9 yardlands held by customary tenants. In 1296 that
estate included 89 a. of arable, 1 a. of meadow,
and pasture worth £1 a year. The major part of
Hussey manor in 1290 included 210 a. of demesne arable and a several pasture worth 3s. a
year; there were eight customary tenants. (fn. 168) In
1332 it included 90 a. of arable and the pasture.
The tenants, who paid £5 yearly, may have been
more numerous than in 1290. They were all dead
in 1349 and their arable, 40 a., was held by the
lord. The demesne, 120 a. in 1349, was worked
in a three-field system. In 1361 the demesne
arable, 160 a., was worth only 1d. an acre, and
there were then 2 bond and 3 free tenants. A
demesne flock of 300 sheep could be kept on the
common pastures in 1349 and 1361. (fn. 169)
By the late 18th century both common husbandry and customary tenure had been
eliminated in North Tidworth, and nearly all the
land was in four several farms. Zouche, or Great
House, farm, 956 a., had 539 a. of arable of which
15 a. were sown with French grass, 33 a. of
meadow, and 383 a. of pasture including downland and 50 a. of former lanes; Moyles, 666 a.,
had 367 a. of pasture, 283 a. of arable, and 16 a.
of meadow; Manor, 718 a., had 449 a. of arable,
256 a. of pasture, and 9 a. of meadow, of which
c. 5 a. were watered; Maton's, 655 a., had 477 a.
of arable, 165 a. of pasture, and 9 a. of meadow,
mostly watered. Manor and Maton's included
newly ploughed downland, (fn. 170) but all four farms
were apparently worked from buildings in the
village. About 1800 new buildings were erected
outside the village for Maton's, thereafter Tidworth Down farm, and in the mid 19th century
buildings were erected at the Pennings for
Zouche farm. (fn. 171) On Zouche farm between 1790
and 1839 c. 200 a. were planted with trees,
mostly after 1832 when the farm was bought by
the sportsman Thomas Assheton Smith, and
more land was ploughed. Land on the other
farms in 1839 remained much as in 1790. (fn. 172)
Between c. 1839 and 1896 about half the arable
was laid to grass: (fn. 173) in 1896 grain was grown on
only half the arable, and temporary grasses were
sown on much of the former arable. Sheep
farming predominated until the late 19th century when dairying began to increase. Farming
ceased on about a third of the parish when the
War Department bought the land in 1897, and
more agricultural land was later taken for housing. In the earlier 20th century there were three
large farms: between 1900 and 1906 Manor and
Zouche, a total of 1,367 a., were worked together
and Tidworth Down, 636 a., separately; (fn. 174) between 1910 and 1939 Manor and Tidworth
Down were worked together as a dairy farm and
Zouche was worked separately. (fn. 175) After the Second
World War the agricultural land was worked from
Collingbourne Ducis and was used for mixed
farming. (fn. 176) In 1990 nearly all the parish was in use
for military training or had been built on. (fn. 177)
North Tidworth had no woodland in 1086, but
there was some on Hussey manor in the mid
13th century. (fn. 178) In 1790 Manor farm and Maton
farm each had 4 a. of woodland on its downs. (fn. 179)
Between 1790 and 1830 c. 50 a., mainly ash, elm,
beech, and fir, were planted on Zouche manor. (fn. 180)
Other woodland was also planted, probably in
the 1830s, and in 1839 there were 207 a. of
woods, mainly on Perham down, at the Pennings, and on Sidbury Hill. (fn. 181) About 1900 a total
of 175 a. of new woodland was planted, on the
south-east slope of Sidbury Hill and on Chalkpit
Hill, Clarendon Hill, and Windmill Hill. (fn. 182) All
those woodlands, c. 380 a., were standing in
1990.
There was a windmill on the major part of
Hussey manor in 1290, (fn. 183) one on Tidworth
manor in 1487, (fn. 184) and one on Maton's estate in
1590. (fn. 185) A windmill stood on Windmill Hill in
1773 (fn. 186) but not in the early 19th century. (fn. 187)
A brick kiln on the northern slopes of Sidbury
Hill in 1773 was probably in the parish. (fn. 188) Chalk
from the downs was quarried c. 1796 and carried
by way of Bristol to Birmingham and other
manufacturing centres. (fn. 189) In 1831 three quarters
of the men in North Tidworth were agricultural
labourers and the remaining quarter worked at
rural trades and handicrafts. (fn. 190) The increase in
population from c. 1900 encouraged some commercial enterprises, such as a creamery depot c.
1912, a photographic studio c. 1911, and a depot
for McEwan-Younger Ltd., brewers, c. 1939, (fn. 191)
but most business development was centred on
Ludgershall. (fn. 192) The Royal Army Ordnance depot
in Ordnance Road employed 150 civilians in
1928. A tank workshop was built in 1929; the
works were extended in 1938–9 and employed
90 civilians in 1952. (fn. 193) About 1980 c. 80 civilians
were employed and the works still maintained
armoured vehicles and provided support for the
Armoured Vehicle Storage depot at Ludgershall, (fn. 194) part of which was in North Tidworth
parish.
Local government.
A court was held
for Hussey manor in the late 13th century and
the 14th, (fn. 195) and for part of Zouche manor in 1296,
the mid 16th century, and 1781. (fn. 196)
From £60 in 1776 and c. £86 a year 1783–5
sums spent on the poor increased greatly, and in
the earlier 19th century a twelfth of the inhabitants was relieved generously. In 1802–3 £208
was spent on regular out-relief for 17 people and
on occasional relief for 20, and in 1813–15 £338
was thus spent for 28 and 10 respectively. (fn. 197) In
1790 the parish had a cottage for housing paupers, and others could be admitted to Pierce's
almshouses. (fn. 198) Although the poor-rates raised
1816–34 were average for Amesbury hundred, it
is likely that in North Tidworth a smaller number of paupers was still generously relieved. (fn. 199)
The parish became part of Andover union in
1835. (fn. 200) was transferred to Pewsey union in
1879. (fn. 201) and became part of Kennet district in
1974. (fn. 202)
Church.
The church may have been standing
in the 12th century, (fn. 203) but the earliest reference
to it is of 1291. (fn. 204) In 1972 the rectory and parish
were united with those of South Tidworth;
North Tidworth church became the parish
church, and the new parish is in Salisbury
diocese. The united benefice, Tidworth, was
united with the rectory of Ludgershall and
Faberstown in 1986. (fn. 205)
The advowson apparently passed with the
overlordships of Moels manor and Shrewton as
part of the earldom of Salisbury, which was
forfeited to the king in 1326. From 1327 it may
have been held with the honor of Shrewton; the
king presented in 1348 and 1354 and Edward,
prince of Wales, in 1350 and 1351. Evidently
from 1361 and until the death in 1484 of Edward
Plantagenet, earl of Salisbury, the advowson
again passed with the earldom. The king presented in 1481, because the earl was a minor,
and at all vacancies after 1484. (fn. 206) The Crown
became patron of Tidworth rectory in 1972, and
in 1986 became entitled to present alternately
for Tidworth, Ludgershall, and Faberstown. (fn. 207)
The rectory was worth £8 in 1291, (fn. 208) £12 in
1535, (fn. 209) and £115 in 1650. (fn. 210) The living was
accounted good in 1707, (fn. 211) and the income of
£266 was above average for the benefices in
Amesbury deanery c. 1830. (fn. 212) The rector took all
tithes from the parish except those from 595 a.
In 1843 his tithes were valued at £327 and
commuted. (fn. 213) The glebe was 1 yardland in 1341, (fn. 214)
15 a. from the 17th century to the early 20th,
and was sold in portions 1901–22. (fn. 215) The rector
had a house in 1341. (fn. 216) In 1783 the glebe house
had two wainscotted rooms and five bedrooms. (fn. 217)
It was sold in 1962 and was later demolished. (fn. 218)
A new Rectory was built in St. George's Road. (fn. 219)
There was a chapel on Hussey manor in the
early 14th century. (fn. 220) In 1299 the rector, Simon
of Walcot, was licensed to study at Oxford for a
year provided that he resided on his return: his
leave was extended in 1300 on condition that he
employed a curate at North Tidworth and gave
alms and in 1301 on condition that he resided
from mid Lent to Easter. (fn. 221) Thomas Shifford,
who resigned the benefice in 1371, was also a
canon of Hereford. (fn. 222) In the years 1348–54 and
after 1481 some rectors were royal proteges.
Andrew Tracy, rector 1531–44, was a minister
of a royal chapel, (fn. 223) and John Panke, rector c.
1600, published anti-Catholic works. (fn. 224) John
Mompesson, rector 1617–37, seldom preached, (fn. 225)
and he employed a curate who was apparently
not ordained. (fn. 226) John Graile, rector 1646–54,
preached twice on Sundays in 1650, signed the
Concurrent Testimony, and defended himself in
print against charges of Arminianism. (fn. 227) Prescribed books were lacking in 1668 and 1674,
and in the 1660s the parish clerk could neither
read, write, nor sing. (fn. 228) Robert Pierce, rector
1680–1707, owned Zouche manor and was described by the bishop as 'a very ill man of a
turbulent spirit and loose behaviour that had
given him much trouble and uneasiness in the
county'. (fn. 229) From the later 17th century to the
earlier 19th many rectors were pluralists and
either were assisted by, or delegated the cure to,
curates. (fn. 230) Thomas Fountaine, 1780–8, who succeeded his father as rector, was vicar of Old
Windsor (Berks.) and a royal chaplain. (fn. 231) In 1783
the curate held two Sunday services and
preached at one of them. Weekday services were
held on Christmas day, fast days, and feast
days. (fn. 232) Francis Dyson, rector 1829–58, was also
rector of South Tidworth, a canon of Salisbury,
and a royal chaplain. (fn. 233) In 1832 and 1850–1 only
one service was held on Sundays at North
Tidworth, in the morning or evening by alternation with South Tidworth; an average of 250
attended morning services 1850–1. (fn. 234) In 1864 the
resident rector held two services every Sunday,
in winter and spring in the morning, when he
preached, and afternoon, and in summer and
autumn in the afternoon, when he preached, and
evening, when he lectured. The sacrament was
administered at the four great festivals, when c.
30 received it, and on Ascension day and every
six weeks, when c. 24 received it. (fn. 235) In 1990 the
parish was served by a deacon who assisted the
rector and lived in the Rectory. (fn. 236)
The church of HOLY TRINITY, so called in
1763, (fn. 237) is of stone rubble with ashlar dressings
and extensive red-brick patching, and consists
of a chancel with north organ chamber, a nave
with south porch, and a west tower with north
vestry. It contains a 12th-century font, but the
oldest dateable part of its structure is a 14th-century niche which was reset when the church
was rebuilt in the 15th century. The tower had
been patched by 1805 (fn. 238) and was repaired again
in 1859. (fn. 239) In a restoration of the church in 1882,
to plans by J. L. Pearson, a gallery was removed,
the chancel and the nave were reroofed, the
porch was rebuilt, and the organ chamber was
built. The vestry was built in 1912. (fn. 240)
In 1553 the king took 4 oz. of plate and left a
chalice of 15 oz. for the parish. A chalice hallmarked for 1576 and a chalice and paten of 1838
belonged to the parish in 1891 and 1990. (fn. 241) There
were three bells in 1553. They were replaced by
three cast by John Wallis in 1619, to which were
added a treble cast by Clement Tosier in 1700
and a tenor cast by James Wells of Aldbourne
in 1809: (fn. 242) those five bells hung in the church in
1990. (fn. 243) The registers date from 1700; an older
one was burnt in the earlier 18th century. (fn. 244)
Nonconformity.
William Fauconer (d. c.
1610), a recusant who owned Hussey manor, (fn. 245)
is unlikely to have lived in North Tidworth.
There was no papist or dissenter in 1662 or
1676. (fn. 246) Primitive Methodists certified houses in
1816 and 1818 and Baptists from Ludgershall
did so in 1831. (fn. 247) Each group still had a few
adherents in the parish in 1864. (fn. 248)
Education.
Children were taught in several
small schools in the parish in 1783. (fn. 249) In 1818 a
total of 46, of whom 22 were from a neighbouring parish, presumably South Tidworth, was
taught in three schools, (fn. 250) but there was only one
school in 1833 when 12 were taught in it. (fn. 251) In
1846–7 there were two schools, one with 71
pupils and one with 9, (fn. 252) and in 1859 the 40 older
children attended a school opened in South
Tidworth in 1856 and 5–10 others were taught
in a cottage. (fn. 253) North Tidworth children attended
South Tidworth school until Clarendon junior
and infants' schools were opened east of the
church and of Pennings Road in, respectively,
1962 and 1964. (fn. 254) Zouch junior and infants' schools
were opened in 1969 west of the Gason Hill
estate and merged in 1985 as Zouch primary school. (fn. 255)
In 1990 there were on roll 228 children at Clarendon junior school, 184 at Clarendon infants' school,
and 309 at Zouch primary school. (fn. 256)
A mixed secondary school was opened on
Tidworth down in 1940 for children from
North Tidworth, South Tidworth, and Ludgershall, and became a secondary modern school in
1944. It was reserved for boys when a secondary modern school for girls was opened in
Ludgershall in 1965. In 1978 the Ludgershall
school became a primary school, and thereafter all
the older children attended Castledown comprehensive school housed in the buildings on
Tidworth down. (fn. 257) There were 450 children on
roll in 1990. (fn. 258)
A school at Tin Town for an average of 83
children was open from 1903 to 1906. (fn. 259) There
were classrooms at the barracks on Perham down
from 1926 and at Fowler barracks in Brimstone
bottom in 1965–6. There was also a school in
the parish for the children of Gurkha soldiers in
1965–6. (fn. 260) A private preparatory school was open
between 1934 and 1966. (fn. 261)
Charities for the poor.
Elizabeth
Willis (d. 1637) bequeathed the income from £5
for distribution to the poor each Good Friday.
The charity was lost before 1833. (fn. 262)
In 1656 John Bulkeley gave a rent charge of
£1 to the poor. (fn. 263) Firewood was given on St.
Andrew's day (30 November) in the early 19th
century, but the charity had been discontinued
by the late 1860s. It was revived and in 1905 the
£1 was distributed by the rector with other
money collected for the sick and poor. (fn. 264) In 1933
£4 was distributed among five people. (fn. 265) The £1
was given each year to the same old woman
1965–72. (fn. 266)
In 1689 Thomas Pierce (d. 1691) built four
almshouses on the west side of the main road
near the church. The almspeople, preferably
tenants of Zouche manor, were endowed with
£21 a year, 2s. a week each, and could also
work. Pierce also bequeathed the income from
£20 for repairs. The repair fund was lost
before 1833. The almshouses were a range of
two-roomed red-brick cottages. By a Scheme
of 1901 no new almsperson was to be appointed and each cottage, as it became vacant,
was to be sold. The proceeds and the £21
yearly were to be invested and weekly pensions
of 3s. to be paid to needy parishioners, preferably employees of the former Zouche manor
who received no poor relief. In 1905 only one
almsperson remained and three of the cottages
were let. From the rents and the £21 the
almsperson and two more old people received
weekly pensions of 4s. 6d. (fn. 267) The almshouses
were sold in 1913: in 1914 and in 1928 £52
was distributed in monthly pensions. (fn. 268) From
1966 to 1976 the yearly income of £35 7s. was
given in small pensions to 5–7 widows. (fn. 269)