STAPLEFORD
Stapleford village is 11 km. north-west of
Salisbury. (fn. 1) The parish is crossed north—south
by the river Till, and consists of a rectangle on
each side of it; from the smaller, western rectangle a tapering tail of downland extends c. 2 km.
north-westwards. On the Till's east bank stand
Stapleford village, part of which may have been
called Church Street, and Uppington hamlet; on
the west bank stand the small villages called
Over Street and Serrington. In 1884, 33½ a.
south of Stapleford village, until then a detached
part of Berwick St. James parish, were transferred
to Stapleford parish, thereafter 2,118 a. (857
ha.). (fn. 2)
Most of the parish boundary ignores relief. To
the south-west it follows a side stream of the
river Wylye. At their confluence and for short
distances east and south of it the Till and the
main course of the Wylye marked, until 1884,
the boundary between Stapleford and the detached part of Berwick St. James. Boundary
mounds define the north-western tail of the
parish. On the east and on the south at the east
end the roads which mark the boundary are
ancient. (fn. 3)
Chalk outcrops over the whole parish. Beside
the Wylye in the south-west and beside the Till
alluvium and valley gravel have been deposited.
On the eastern downs gravel has also been
deposited at the head of a tributary valley of the
Christchurch Avon, and a small area of claywith-flints is in the south-east corner of the
parish. (fn. 4) The highest land, 155 m., is at the end
of the tail. There are steep slopes on either side
of the Till, but to the east there is flat land at c.
140 m. on the watershed of the Till and the
Avon. The land is at c. 65 m. beside the Wylye.
The parish had extensive meadow land, much
of it watered from the 18th century. The open
fields were on the chalk nearer to the settlements
on either side of the Till, and the eastern and
western ends of the parish were pasture. (fn. 5)
The Devizes—Salisbury road along the eastern
boundary was turnpiked in 1761, disturnpiked
in 1870; (fn. 6) it remained a major road in the late
20th century. Until the 18th century traffic
between Southampton and Bristol via Salisbury
and Bath used the Devizes road northwards
from Salisbury; the Bath road branched from
the Devizes road, entered the parish c. 750 m.
south-east of the church, crossed the Till at
Serrington, ran north-westwards across the west
part of the parish, and followed the west boundary of the tail. It became less important from
1761, when other roads to Bath were turnpiked,
and on both sides of the Till in Stapleford parish
was no more than a rough track in 1992. A road
linking the villages of the Till valley and leading
south from Maddington and Shrewton to Wilton
crossed the Bath road south of the church, and
a road leading to Warminster through villages
on the north bank of the Wylye diverged from
the Bath road at Serrington. In 1761 the Wilton
and Warminster roads were turnpiked as part of
a main Salisbury—Bath road: that road, disturnpiked in 1870, (fn. 7) became more important in the
20th century and was designated a trunk road in
1946. (fn. 8) The Till valley road, on the east bank of
the river and called Uppington Lane north of
Stapleford village in 1886 and later, (fn. 9) continued
to carry local traffic in 1992. A parallel road west
of the Till, part of which was made after 1773,
has never been tarmacadamed north of Over
Street. Other roads that crossed the parish in
1773 (fn. 10) survived as tracks in 1992: the north part
of that parallel to and west of the Devizes road
was tarmacadamed; Berwick Lane, linking Berwick St. James and Steeple Langford, crosses
the north-western tail and is thought to have
been part of the ancient Harrow way running
from Kent to Somerset. (fn. 11)
Most evidence of prehistoric activity in the
parish has been found on downland in the
eastern part. A large saddle quern of the early
Iron Age was found in the north-east corner.
The South Kite is a quadrilateral earthwork
enclosing 22 a., possibly the site of a RomanoBritish settlement, and within it, north-west of
it, and in the parish's south-eastern corner, lie
barrows. To the west, in the tail, there may be
another Romano-British settlement site. A field
system covering 450 a. lies across the east part
of the boundary with South Newton, and another field system extends across the tail. (fn. 12)
Stapleford may have been more populous in
1377, when it had 89 poll-tax payers, than in
1801, when it had 233 inhabitants. The population had risen to 337 by 1831; it fell from 309 to
260 between 1851 and 1861, a decrease attributed to a reduction of road traffic following the
opening of the Salisbury—Warminster section of
the G.W.R. in 1856. Numbers continued to fall,
with some fluctuations, in the later 19th century
and the early 20th. They rose from 215 in 1931
to 267 in 1951 (fn. 13) but had fallen to 212 by 1961.
The parish had 252 inhabitants in 1981, 249 in
1991. (fn. 14)
Each of the settlements beside the Till stands
on a narrow strip of gravel, and the names of
three of them, Stapleford, Uppington (called
Uphampton in 1249 and the 17th century), and
Serrington (called Southampton in the early
14th century), suggest a Saxon origin: (fn. 15) the
names of Uppington and Serrington evidently
refer to their relationship to Stapleford. In the
18th century the largest settlements were Stapleford and Over Street, and each was stretched
out along a road. (fn. 16) Over Street was so called c.
1537. Then and until the 19th century Church
Street may have been a hamlet; (fn. 17) it was possibly
the group of buildings at the south end of the
continuous line of settlement called Stapleford
village in 1773 and later, and if so was evidently
losing its separate identity in the later 18th
century and early 19th. (fn. 18) Notwithstanding the
names Church Street and Over Street settlement
seems to have grown gradually along the gravel
strips; neither road is built up with houses on
both sides and there is no evidence of early
planning.

Stapleford 1840
Stapleford.
In the late 18th century Stapleford village extended along the Maddington road
from a little north of the church to the Bath road.
In the south part of the village a lane, a footpath
in 1992, formed a loop to the west. (fn. 19) The site of
a demesne farmstead is immediately north of the
church: a substantial house there was apparently
built in the mid 19th century. South of the
church and west of the road four 17th-century
farmhouses of chequered flint and limestone
survive: two of them, Parsonage House, which
was extended in the early 19th century, and
Seymour Cottage, which stands in the loop, are
mid 17th-century. On the east side of the road
and a little south of the church stand two early
18th-century cottages, one timber-framed and
rendered, one of brick, and the Malthouse, a
thatched 17th-century house of four bays, with
a former malthouse as a long single-storeyed
extension. (fn. 20) All those older buildings were included in a conservation area designated in
1988. (fn. 21)
Between 1773 and 1817 cottages built on the
waste on the east side of the road took settlement
north towards the lane which linked Stapleford
and Over Street over Bury bridge, (fn. 22) so called in
the late 19th century, (fn. 23) and by 1812 a back lane
east of the north part of the village had been
defined. (fn. 24) In the later 19th century some houses
and cottages were rebuilt, and a school beside
the western lane and a new vicarage house beside
the eastern were built. (fn. 25)
There was little new building in the earlier
20th century. At the north end of the village six
council houses were built in Riverside Terrace
in 1950, and the local authority also built four
houses and six bungalows in Hillside beside the
eastern lane in 1961. (fn. 26) Private building after c.
1960 included small groups of houses and bungalows north of Riverside Terrace, in the eastern
lane, in Church Pasture north of the church, and
at the south end of the village.
Over Street.
West of the Till a small castle
or a fortified house was apparently built in the
12th century or early 13th for a lord of Stapleford manor, held from the mid 12th century by
members of the Hussey family. (fn. 27) The mound
and ditch survive, but no masonry or other direct
evidence of a building has been found. Over
Street village is mainly on the west side of the
road south of the castle site, and has changed
little in extent since the late 18th century. (fn. 28) A
demesne farmstead stood immediately south of
the castle site. (fn. 29) The farmhouse, Manor Farm,
was built in the 17th century as a small house of
two storeys with attics, and, on the ground floor,
had one room on each side of the main chimney
stack: a large extension to the east was built c.
1860. Two cottages, of flint and limestone rubble, between Manor Farm and the castle mound
are also of 17th-century origin. Manor Cottage,
south of Manor Farm, and two cottages east of
the road are early 18th-century, and a house of
slightly later date stands at a right angle to the
road on the west side further south. In the later
19th century farm buildings west of the castle
mound were renewed and several cottages were
built or rebuilt beside the road. Brooklet Farm,
comprising a house west of the road and a
farmyard east of it, was built c. 1930, and several
private houses have been built west of the road
in the later 20th century.
Serrington.
In the later 18th century Serrington was a hamlet of some eight houses beside
the Warminster road; (fn. 30) its modern name was in
use in the early 19th. (fn. 31) Several of the houses
standing in 1773 survive. Bridge House, on the
north side of the road at the junction with the
road to Over Street, was built c. 1700; a northwest range was added in 1777. (fn. 32) On the south
side of the road the Pelican, a building of late
17th- or early 18th-century origin, was an inn in
1751 (fn. 33) and 1992. West of the Pelican, Southington is a three-bayed house built of chequered
flint and limestone c. 1700, and Pembroke Cottage is of similar date. A mill stood west of the
village until the mid or later 19th century. (fn. 34) By
1840 more houses had been built near Bridge
House. (fn. 35) Among them was the New Inn, which
was open in 1848 and demolished c. 1908. (fn. 36) In
the later 20th century four houses were built
north of Bridge House, two police houses and
two bungalows at the west end of the hamlet,
and a house and a commercial garage near the
Pelican. The bridge over the Till, called Southington bridge in 1705 (fn. 37) and Pelican bridge in
1899, (fn. 38) was rebuilt in 1937. (fn. 39)
Uppington.
Only three buildings stood at
Uppington in 1773, (fn. 40) although earlier there may
have been three small farmsteads there. (fn. 41) In
1992 a small farmhouse apparently of c. 1800
and a house of the earlier 20th century stood
there.
Other settlement.
There was no building on
the downs in 1817. (fn. 42) By 1840 Plantation Barn
north-east of Uppington and Field Barn northeast of the church had been built. (fn. 43) Between
1840 and 1879 Plantation Barn was demolished
and two new farmsteads, Druid's Head Farm
and York Yard, were built respectively 500 m.
south-east and 1.5 km. east of its site. The new
farmsteads were linked by a road which in the
later 20th century was called York Road. Druid's
Head Farm was enlarged c. 1900 and again in
the later 20th century; it incorporates a pair of
bungalows. York Yard was also enlarged c. 1900
and, perhaps then, was converted to a stable
yard; a house and two cottages west of it were
built in the mid 20th century. (fn. 44) In Woodford
parish near the north-east corner of Stapleford
parish a small settlement called Druid's Head
developed c. 1800 (fn. 45) and survived in 1992. In
Stapleford parish, a house called Druid's
Lodge (fn. 46) and a large stable block are part of the
settlement. In the south-east part of the parish
a farmstead called Chain Hill Farm was built
near the southern boundary between 1840 and
1879 and another, called Cowdown Farm, in the
south-east corner between 1879 and 1899. (fn. 47) Most
of Chain Hill Farm has been demolished; Cowdown Farm is the site of Camp Cottages, a group
of seven early 20th-century cottages. In the mid
20th century a few houses were built beside the
Warminster road in the south-west corner of the
parish, and a school beside the Maddington road
near Berwick St. James village. (fn. 48)
Manor and other estates.
In 1084
and 1086 Suain held 10½ hides which his father
had held in 1066 and which became STAPLEFORD manor. (fn. 49) Geoffrey Hussey held the
manor in 1166–7. (fn. 50) It passed to Henry Hussey
and, probably after 1189, to Henry's son
Geoffrey, to whom it was confirmed in 1198. (fn. 51)
With Figheldean manor it passed to Geoffrey's
son Geoffrey (d. c. 1218), who was succeeded by
another Henry Hussey. (fn. 52) By 1226 Henry (d.
1260 X 1263) had subinfeudated Stapleford
manor to his son Sir Hubert: (fn. 53) the overlordship
apparently passed to Henry's relict Maud (fl.
1263) (fn. 54) and presumably reverted to Sir Hubert,
successors of whom held in chief. (fn. 55) The heirs of
Sir Hubert (d. before 1277) were his daughters
Margaret, who married Henry Sturmy (d. 1305),
Maud (d. c. 1285, unmarried), and Isabel, who
married John of Thorney: (fn. 56) the manor descended in moieties, presumably from c. 1285.
Before her death c. 1320 Margaret Sturmy may
have granted her moiety to her son John Sturmy,
who by 1325 had granted it to Hugh le Despenser, earl of Winchester (fn. 57) (executed 1326). (fn. 58) John
recovered the moiety and by 1327 had granted
it to John Mautravers (from 1330 Lord Mautravers). (fn. 59) By 1330, however, the moiety had
been successfully claimed by John Sturmy's
brother Henry (fn. 60) (d. c. 1338), whose son Henry (fn. 61)
(d. 1381) was in 1359 granted free warren in his
demesne lands at Stapleford. The moiety passed
to Henry's nephew Sir William Sturmy (fn. 62) (d.
1427), whose heirs were his daughter Agnes,
wife of John Holcombe, and grandson (Sir) John
Seymour. (fn. 63) It was allotted to Seymour (fn. 64) (d.
1464), who in 1447 settled it on his son John (d.
1463) and that John's wife Elizabeth, (fn. 65) later wife
of Richard Whiteley. On Elizabeth's death in
1472 the moiety passed to her son John Seymour (fn. 66) (d. 1491), who was succeeded in turn by
his son (Sir) John (fn. 67) (d. 1536) and Sir John's son
Sir Edward (cr. Viscount Beauchamp 1536, earl
of Hertford 1537, duke of Somerset 1547). Like
the Earldom manor in Amesbury it was forfeited
on Somerset's death and attainder in 1552, and
was restored in the same year to his son Edward
(cr. earl of Hertford 1559, d. 1621), a minor until
1558. (fn. 68) It was held for life by Hertford's relict
Frances (d. 1639), wife of Ludovic Stuart, duke
of Richmond, and passed to the earl's grandson
William Seymour, earl of Hertford (cr. marquess of Hertford 1641, duke of Somerset 1660,
d. 1660). (fn. 69) William devised the moiety to trustees, (fn. 70) but its descent 1660–1743 is obscure.
William's successors as duke were his grandson
William Seymour (d. 1671), that William's uncle
John Seymour (d. 1675), John's cousin Francis
Seymour (d. 1678), and Francis's brother Charles (d. 1748), (fn. 71) but in 1743 the moiety belonged
to William Seymour of East Knoyle (fn. 72) (d. 1747).
It passed to William's brother Francis (d. 1761),
in turn to Francis's son Henry (d. 1805) and
grandson Henry Seymour (d. 1849), in turn to
the younger Henry's sons Henry (d. 1877) and
Alfred (d. 1888), and to Alfred's daughter Jane
(d. 1943), (fn. 73) who held c. 890 a. in Stapleford
parish in 1923. (fn. 74) The lands were bought after
Jane's death by J. V. Rank and have since been
part of the Druid's Lodge estate. (fn. 75)
The second moiety of Stapleford manor was
conveyed by Isabel and John of Thorney to John
Giffard, Lord Giffard, probably in 1316. (fn. 76) From
then until 1560–1 the moiety descended almost
like Sherrington manor. (fn. 77) In 1322 Giffard was
executed and the moiety was granted to Hugh
le Despenser, earl of Winchester (executed
1326); (fn. 78) unlike Sherrington it was granted as
dower in 1327 to Giffard's relict Aveline (d. 1327). (fn. 79)
Like Sherrington the moiety was conveyed in 1330
by John Callaway to John Mautravers (from
1330 Lord Mautravers, d. 1364); (fn. 80) between 1337
and 1347, while Mautravers was in exile, it
was held by Maurice Berkeley. (fn. 81) It was restored to Mautravers in 1351, (fn. 82) passed to his
relict Agnes (d. 1375) and granddaughter
Eleanor, Baroness Mautravers (d. 1405), (fn. 83) and
descended to Eleanor's grandson John d'Arundel, earl of Arundel (d. 1421). (fn. 84) Two further life
interests were granted, between 1375 and 1379
to Thomas Adderbury (d. 1415), (fn. 85) and in 1416
to Joan Beauchamp (d. 1435), relict of William
Beauchamp, Lord Bergavenny. Lord Arundel's
grandson Humphrey FitzAlan, earl of Arundel
(d. 1438), held the moiety from 1435, and Humphrey's uncle William, earl of Arundel (d. 1487),
from 1438. (fn. 86) Like Sherrington it passed in the
direct line, and in 1561 Henry, earl of Arundel,
conveyed it by exchange to the Crown. (fn. 87) In 1580
the moiety was granted to John Castillion (fn. 88) (d.
1597), whose son Sir Francis sold it in 1611 to
George Tattershall (fn. 89) (fl. 1624). (fn. 90) In 1642 it belonged to Tattershall's son George, (fn. 91) who
conveyed it in 1667 to John Woolfe, perhaps a
trustee. (fn. 92) Woolfe conveyed it in 1673 to Bernard
Howard, (fn. 93) and Howard in 1693 to Sir Richard
Grobham Howe, Bt. (fn. 94) (d. 1703). From then until
1808 the moiety descended with Great Wishford
manor and was held by Sir Richard Howe, Bt.
(d. 1730), John Howe, Lord Chedworth (d.
1742), John, Lord Chedworth (d. 1762), Henry,
Lord Chedworth (d. 1781), and John, Lord
Chedworth (d. 1804). (fn. 95) In 1808 that last Chedworth's executors sold it to Alexander Baring (fn. 96)
(cr. Baron Ashburton 1835, d. 1848), (fn. 97) who in
1840 owned c. 1,030 a. in Stapleford. (fn. 98) The land
passed with the barony to Alexander's sons
William (d. 1864) and Francis (d. 1868), to
Francis's son Alexander (d. 1889), and to Alexander's son Francis, (fn. 99) who sold it to E. T. Hooley
probably in 1896. In 1898, following Hooley's
bankruptcy, (fn. 100) the land was bought by Sir Christopher Furness, who in 1909 offered it for sale
through the Cavendish Land Company. Manor
farm, 407 a. west of the Till, was bought by Frank
Moore: (fn. 101) in 1992 it belonged to his grandsons Mr.
Roger Moore and Mr. Geoffrey Moore. (fn. 102)
Druid's Head farm, 478 a. east of the Till, may
have been bought by F. B. Beauchamp in 1909. (fn. 103)
In 1910 it belonged to A. P. Cunliffe as part of
the DRUID'S LODGE estate. (fn. 104) The estate, the
principal buildings of which stood on the boundary between Stapleford and Woodford, included
land in Berwick St. James and Winterbourne
Stoke parishes. (fn. 105) Cunliffe sold it in 1934 to J. V.
Rank, after whose death in 1952 it was bought
by the Fenston Trust. In 1989 the trust sold it
to Mr. R. A. Hurst, the owner in 1992 when the
estate included c. 1,400 a. in Stapleford. (fn. 106)
Druid's Lodge, a plain red-brick house of two
storeys with attics, was built in the north-east
corner of the parish c. 1895. (fn. 107)
In 1406 John Bonham (d. 1411) and his son
John held land in Uppington. (fn. 108) BONHAM'S
was held in 1435 by the elder John's nephew
Thomas Bonham (fn. 109) (d. 1473) and passed with an
estate in Berwick St. James to Walter Bonham,
who held it in 1559. (fn. 110) It was perhaps the estate
held in 1780 by Sir James Harris (cr. Baron
Malmesbury 1788, earl of Malmesbury 1800), (fn. 111)
which comprised 193 a. in 1812. (fn. 112) Harris sold
that estate c. 1815 to Alexander Baring, who
added it to his moiety of Stapleford manor. (fn. 113)
Three estates held by religious houses were
combined after the Dissolution, probably as
SAPH'S. St. Denis's priory, Southampton,
held land valued at 12s. in 1291, (fn. 114) 12 a. at the
Dissolution; (fn. 115) Bath abbey held 1 yardland, probably given by Sir Hubert Hussey (d. before
1277); (fn. 116) in 1314 Andrew of Aldbourne was
licensed to grant 4 yardlands to Keynsham
abbey (Som.), (fn. 117) which held 86 a. at the Dissolution. The Crown granted the combined estate
twice in 1557, first to Anselm Lane, (fn. 118) possibly a
trustee, and secondly to William Northcote and
his son John. (fn. 119) It was probably that held in 1631
by John Saph, (fn. 120) which passed in the direct line
from John to John (d. 1683), John (d. 1699),
Charles (d. 1726), and Charles (d. 1736). (fn. 121) By
1753 Saph's had apparently passed to another
John Saph, (fn. 122) who was succeeded c. 1782 by his
son John. The son sold the estate, 125 a. in 1812,
to Alexander Baring c. 1822. (fn. 123)
Lands in Stapleford granted by Henry Hussey
and his son Geoffrey were confirmed to Stanley
abbey in 1189; (fn. 124) at the Dissolution the abbey
received 8s. rent from land in the parish. (fn. 125) In
1291 Hyde abbey, Winchester, had lands in
Stapleford valued at 10s., (fn. 126) at the Dissolution 2
a. (fn. 127) St. Thomas's church, Salisbury, was entitled
to 13s. 4d. a year from Stapleford in the earlier
16th century; the rent was given by Easton
priory, probably in the 16th century, for an obit,
and was a charge on the Rectory estate; (fn. 128) it was
apparently not paid after the Dissolution. In
1535 Salisbury cathedral received pensions of 1s.
and 3s. 4d. respectively from the Rectory estate
and Stapleford vicarage: (fn. 129) no later reference to
the pensions has been found. From 1712 to 1981
Great Wishford church owned a rent charge of
£10 from Stapleford. (fn. 130)
In 1446 Stapleford church was appropriated
by Easton priory, (fn. 131) which held it until the
Dissolution. In 1536 the RECTORY estate,
consisting of tithes and land, was granted to Sir
Edward Seymour, Viscount Beauchamp (later
duke of Somerset), (fn. 132) who in 1547 gave it to the
king in an exchange. Also in 1547 the king gave
it to St. George's chapel, Windsor. (fn. 133) In 1840 the
rectorial tithes were valued at £420 and commuted: St. George's chapel then held 122 a. in
Stapleford. (fn. 134) The land passed to the Ecclesiastical Commissioners and was sold in 1871 to
Thomas Powell. (fn. 135) Between then and 1910 it
passed, presumably by purchase, to Alfred or
Jane Seymour and was added to their moiety of
Stapleford manor. (fn. 136)
Economic history.
In 1086 Stapleford
had land for 10 ploughteams. On the demesne
were 2 teams with 1 servus; 17 villani and 10
bordars shared 8 teams. There were 40 a. of
meadow, and pasture ½ league square. (fn. 137)
When Stapleford manor was divided in the late
13th century (fn. 138) demesne and customary land was
allotted to each moiety. In the 1320s John
Giffard's moiety included 214 a. of arable, 20 a.
of meadow, and pasture for 400 sheep: the
arable, assessed at three different values, is likely
to have been in three open fields. Seven customary tenants of the moiety held 1 yardland each,
and one held ½ yardland; there were 10 cottagers. (fn. 139) The demesne was leased to members of
the Harris family in the mid 15th century and
the late 16th. (fn. 140) The demesne of the other moiety
was leased in two portions in 1432 and in three
in 1453, when one was described as in the west
and one was of pasture only. In 1432 the moiety
had 16 customary tenants, of whom 13 shared
17 yardlands and 3 were cottagers. (fn. 141) With the
right to feed 212 sheep in 1341 the rector's 2
yardlands were probably more generously
stinted than other holdings; the rector also had
3 a. of meadow. (fn. 142)
There were farmsteads in all four or five
settlements in the parish, throughout which
there was sheep-and-com husbandry in common. Holdings of the Seymours' moiety were
based in each of the settlements, holdings of the
Howes' moiety in Stapleford or Church Street,
Over Street, and Serrington, but apparently not
Uppington; the Howes, however, may have had
Bonham's, based at Uppington. The lands of the
two moieties remained intermingled until inclosure in 1812. (fn. 143) In the early 16th century the
Seymours' moiety and the Rectory estate, about
half the parish, included c. 535 a. of arable, c. 20
a. of meadow, and pasture rights for 1,076 sheep
and 121 cattle and horses. The arable was in
seven fields: the names of five, Church Street,
Stapleford, Over Street, Uppington, and Serrington, presumably indicate where they lay; two
larger fields, Marnham and Berry, are likely to
have been east of the Till. Over Street down was
in the parish's tail, Cow down was in the southeast corner, and Marnham down and Berry
down were probably east of the fields bearing
those names. (fn. 144)
About 1537 the demesne in the Seymours'
moiety, 182 a. with rights to feed 420 sheep and
24 beasts, was held by lease with the lands of the
Rectory estate, 45 a.; the demesne apparently
became Church farm, which had its principal
buildings immediately north of the church. Also
c. 1537 that moiety had 7 other holdings based
in Stapleford village and Church Street, 4 in
Over Street, 2 in Uppington, and 1 in Serrington. (fn. 145) The demesne of the Howes' moiety
became Manor farm, based in Over Street with
principal buildings near the site of the castle; in
the early 19th century the moiety had 11 other
holdings of over 10 a., 5 based in Stapleford
village, including Church Street, 2 in Over
Street, and 4 in Serrington. (fn. 146) The main part of
the Saphs' estate, assessed at 3 yardlands, was
based at Uppington. (fn. 147) Nearly all the arable of
each holding was almost certainly in the field or
fields adjacent to the settlement in which the
holding was based; (fn. 148) sheep of holdings based in
Stapleford, Church Street, and Uppington were
apparently fed on downs east of the Till, those
of Over Street and Serrington on downs west of
the Till, although there were some exceptions. (fn. 149)
Rights to use West mead, beside the Wylye, East
mead, beside the Till, and Cow down were,
however, included in holdings based in all four
or five settlements. (fn. 150)
Uppington field, in the north-east part of the
parish, was apparently subdivided after c. 1537;
in 1743 there were North, Middle, and South
fields at Uppington. (fn. 151) An agreement of 1735 to
water meadows adjacent to each other in Stapleford and Berwick St. James may have related to
Uppington meadows. (fn. 152) In the later 18th century
Uppington down was grazed for six months of
every year by the demesne flock of the Howes'
moiety of the manor: (fn. 153) part of it had been
burnbaked by 1812. (fn. 154) In the south-east part of
the parish, Cow down was 254 a. in 1808,
Church Street down was 106 a.; an additional
250 a. of downland, which could support 1,000
sheep, were grazed only by the demesne flock of
each moiety and by the flock on the Rectory
estate. In the south-west part Serrington had a
sheep down of 30 a. in 1808; (fn. 155) in the later 18th
century part of it, or other land, beside the
Steeple Langford boundary, was apparently
used for cattle. (fn. 156) West mead, c. 70 a., was being
watered in the early 19th century (fn. 157) and almost
certainly much earlier. In the north-west Over
Street down was 121 a. in 1808. Between Stapleford village and Over Street, East mead and
other meadows totalled c. 25 a. (fn. 158)
Manor farm was apparently in hand in the
1690s, when a flock of 300 of Sir Richard
Grobham Howe's sheep was moved between
pastures in Stapleford and Great Wishford
parishes. (fn. 159) In 1808 the farm included 133 a. of
arable, 8 a. of water meadow, and pasture rights
for 400 sheep. Other holdings in the Howes'
moiety, seven held by lease, three by copy, and
one at rack rent, then included 308 a. of arable
and rights of pasture for 748 sheep, and nine
more holdings were of less than 5 a. each. (fn. 160) In
the late 18th century the Seymours' moiety
apparently included Church farm and 12
smaller holdings, (fn. 161) and in 1715 the Rectory
estate included 35 a. of arable, 7½ a. of meadow
and inclosed pasture, and grazing for 200
sheep. (fn. 162) Although many of the holdings based
in each of the four or five settlements remained
small c. 1800, it is likely that by subletting they
had by then been absorbed into substantial
farms.
Common husbandry ceased in 1812, when the
whole parish was inclosed under an Act of
1810. Between 1810 and 1840 more downland
in the north-east corner of the parish and some
in the south-east corner was ploughed, and in
1840 the parish had c. 1,040 a. of arable, c. 640
a. of downland pasture, c. 70 a. of lowland
pasture, and c. 130 a. of meadow, mainly water
meadow. In 1840 Manor farm was 750 a.,
Church farm 580 a.: the lands of each were
scattered throughout the parish, and, in addition to its main farmstead, each had a barn and
yard on high ground east of the Till. In addition to Church farm, there were apparently
farms of 122 a., 38 a., and 34 a. based in
Stapleford village, and, in addition to Manor
farm, farms of 83 a. and 58 a. based in Over
Street: those of 122 a. and 58 a. may have been
worked together. Holdings of 52 a. and 26 a.,
each with a house at Serrington, may have been
small farms, and a holding of 22 a. may have
been worked from Uppington. (fn. 163)
New farmsteads were built on the downs in
the east part of the parish in the 19th century, (fn. 164)
and arable was converted to pasture; probably
less than half the parish was ploughed in the
1890s, about a quarter in the 1920s. All of the
parish west of the Till was grassland c. 1930:
most of the arable then lay immediately east of
Stapleford village. The increased areas of pasture were mainly for sheep. (fn. 165) In the later 19th
century and the early 20th there were four
principal farms. By 1898 Manor farm, then 475
a. including 51 a. in Steeple Langford, had been
limited to land west of the Till: it was still
predominantly arable, (fn. 166) but in 1929, when it was
371 a., was entirely pasture. (fn. 167) In 1992 it was a
specialist arable farm of 528 a., including land
in Winterbourne Stoke parish. (fn. 168) In 1898 Druid's
Head Farm was the base for a farm of 516 a. in
the north-east part of the parish. The farm was
half downland pasture, much of it recently converted from arable, and half arable. (fn. 169)
Presumably then, as in 1912, it was principally
a sheep farm. (fn. 170) In 1910 Church farm comprised
755 a., Parsonage farm 122 a. (fn. 171) By 1934 they had
been combined as Parsonage farm, 879 a., including 477 a. of arable, 234 a. of downland, and
42 a. of water meadow: the principal buildings
were then on the west side of the Maddington
road west of the church and at Field Barn. (fn. 172) In
the late 20th century Druid's Head Farm became the main farm buildings of the Druid's
Lodge estate, which included Druid's Head
farm, Parsonage farm, and lands in Winterbourne Stoke and Berwick St. James, a total of
c. 2,500 a. In 1992 the agricultural land of the
estate was in hand and worked mainly from
Druid's Head Farm and buildings in Berwick
St. James as a mixed farm, on which sheep and
cattle were kept and cereal and fodder crops were
grown. (fn. 173)
From 1855 until c. 1923 members of the
Williams family were nurserymen and
seedsmen. (fn. 174) In 1898 and the 1920s the nursery
was at Serrington south of the Warminster
road. (fn. 175)
A racing stable built for A. P. Cunliffe about
the same time as Druid's Lodge was opened in
1895. The gallops lay mainly outside the parish.
The stable was very successful until the First
World War, when it was requisitioned. It was
used again for some years in the 1920s by
Cunliffe and from 1934 by J. V. Rank, for whom
more stables were built. Training ceased c.
1954. (fn. 176)
In 1086 Stapleford had woodland 1 league long
and ½ league broad, (fn. 177) but later the parish was
sparsely wooded. In 1603 parishioners were
accustomed to take wood and ferns from
Grovely forest c. 3 km. to the south. They were
then said to do so without authority, (fn. 178) but in the
early 19th century apparently still claimed the
right. (fn. 179) In 1840 there were a few acres of withy
bed and, on the eastern downs, c. 10 a. of
plantation. (fn. 180) Further planting took place from
the later 19th century, and in the 1970s there
were c. 150 a. of woodland in the parish. (fn. 181)
In 1239 the lord of Stapleford manor was
granted a yearly fair on 7 September and the
three days following. (fn. 182) No fair is known to have
been held at Stapleford.
There were two mills at Stapleford in 1086. (fn. 183)
A moiety of a water mill was apparently assigned
as part of each moiety of Stapleford manor in
the late 13th century, (fn. 184) and the mill continued
in joint ownership until 1840 (fn. 185) or later. In 1773,
as presumably earlier, it stood west of Serrington
on the Wylye. (fn. 186) It was demolished between 1840
and 1886. (fn. 187)
Charles Rowden, a maker of clocks and
watches, lived in the parish between 1859 and
1875. (fn. 188)
Local government.
In 1198 Geoffrey
Hussey was granted freedom from shire and
hundred courts for Stapleford manor. (fn. 189)
The right to hold view of frankpledge for the
whole parish descended with the moiety of the
manor held by the Sturmy and Seymour families. (fn. 190) The records of courts held 1331–4 and in
1343 and 1364 survive. In the period 1331–4 and
in 1343 a court met between three and five times
each year. The court leet and the manor court
were usually held separately; the number of each
in a year varied, as did the dates at which they
were held. Pleas between tenants provided much
of the business. Presentments by the tithingman
at the court leet included defaulters from the
court, breaches of the assize of ale, many instances of the raising of the hue, and, in 1333,
the killing of six ewes and theft of their skins.
An aletaster was sometimes appointed at the
court leet. Matters before the manor court included infringement of grazing rights and of the
lord's rights to timber and certain hay crops,
besides tenurial business. The court held in 1364
was apparently a court of survey. (fn. 191) A court was
held 1453–4 (fn. 192) but no record of its business survives. The only business at the manor court
1559–60 was a few presentments by the homage
and the admission of tenants. (fn. 193) At a view of
frankpledge held in April 1651 a tithingman was
sworn, the jury presented a road in need of
repair, the homage presented the death of a
copyholder, and other tenurial business was
transacted. (fn. 194)
For the moiety of the manor held by the earls
of Arundel and members of the Howe family (fn. 195)
a court was mentioned for the years 1327–9,
1579, and 1712, (fn. 196) but little is known of its
business. An annual court baron was held between 1782 and 1800: the homage presented
defaulters from the court, regulations for the use
of common pastures and other customs of the
manor, encroachments by tenants of other manors, and the need to repair the stocks. In 1796
and 1797 the lessee of the Rectory estate was
presented for not keeping a boar or a bull for
parish use. Tenants were admitted to copyholds
and a hayward was appointed. (fn. 197)
The parish spent £106 on poor relief in 1776,
c. £135 in 1785. Expenditure had risen to £149
by 1803, when 10 adults and 23 children were
relieved regularly, 4 people occasionally. The
poor rate was then about the average for the
hundred, its level presumably reduced by the
£24 earned by the poor: Stapleford was one of
the few parishes in which there was no workhouse but some earnings by the poor were
recorded. (fn. 198) Expenditure on poor relief reached
a peak in 1813, when 24 adults received permanent and 9 occasional relief at a cost of £394. (fn. 199)
The amount raised by the poor rate varied
considerably between then and 1829: in 1816 it
was £129, in 1818 £397, in 1822 £269. (fn. 200) Average
annual expenditure 1833–5 was £253. Stapleford
became part of Wilton poor-law union in 1836, (fn. 201)
and of Salisbury district in 1974. (fn. 202)
Church.
Stapleford church, which belonged
to Salisbury cathedral in the earlier 12th century, (fn. 203) was served by a rector in 1220 (fn. 204) and until
the church was appropriated in 1446 by Easton
priory. A vicarage was evidently ordained in
1446. (fn. 205) In 1924 it was united with that of
Berwick St. James, (fn. 206) and in 1992 the united
benefice became part of Lower Wylye and Till
Valley benefice, served by a rector. (fn. 207)
In 1220 Gundreda de Warenne, relict of
Geoffrey Hussey (fl. 1198), acknowledged Salisbury cathedral's right to present a rector, (fn. 208) but
later the advowson was disputed by the Hussey
family and the dean and chapter. In 1236 Sir
Hubert Hussey challenged a recent presentation
by the dean and chapter, (fn. 209) and at the institution
in 1305 of a rector presented by Maud Hussey
an equal right of patronage was said to belong
to the cathedral. (fn. 210) The cathedral's claim was not
mentioned thereafter, and, like Stapleford
manor, the advowson of the rectory descended
in moieties to Sir Hubert's heirs, Margaret
Sturmy and Isabel of Thorney. (fn. 211) Between 1337
and 1443 the successors to Margaret's title presented eight or nine times, the successors to
Isabel's twice or thrice. In 1337 Henry Sturmy
(d. 1381) presented, in 1338 the king presented
as keeper of the estate of Henry Sturmy (d. c.
1338), between 1393 and 1423 Sir William
Sturmy presented four times, once by grant of
a turn, and in 1429 Agnes Sturmy and her
husband John Holcombe presented. In 1361
John, Lord Mautravers, and in 1400 Reynold
Cobham, Lord Cobham, husband of Eleanor,
Baroness Mautravers, presented: (fn. 212) no successor of Isabel presented after 1400. Feoffees of
Sir William Sturmy presented in 1434: one of
them, John Benger, presented in 1442 by grant
of a turn (fn. 213) and in 1443 granted the advowson
to Easton priory. (fn. 214) Vicars were presented by
the priors of Easton from 1446 to the Dissolution, except in 1473 when four confratres of
Easton presented, probably because there was
no prior, and in 1487, when Laurence Cox
presented by grant of a turn. (fn. 215) In 1536 the
advowson passed with the Rectory estate to Sir
Edward Seymour, Viscount Beauchamp, and in
1547 to St. George's chapel, Windsor. (fn. 216) John
Biggs, lessee of the Rectory estate, presented
in 1551, 1554, and 1571, but thereafter St.
George's chapel presented a vicar at every vacancy but one: (fn. 217) in 1854 the bishop presented by
lapse. (fn. 218) The chapel was patron of the united
benefice formed in 1924, (fn. 219) and from 1992 shared
the patronage of Lower Wylye and Till Valley
benefice. (fn. 220)
The rectory was valued at £8 in 1291, a little
below the average for a living in Wylye deanery. (fn. 221) The rector apparently received most, if not
all, tithes from the parish and had 2 yardlands
with pasture for 212 sheep. (fn. 222) In 1446 Easton
priory endowed the vicarage with £8 a year,
personal tithes, 3 a. and a house, and mortuaries
and oblations. (fn. 223) In 1535 the vicar's income, £9
7s. 2d., was well below the average for the
deanery; (fn. 224) despite augmentations by Queen
Anne's Bounty in 1816 and 1819, and of £15 a
year by St. George's chapel in 1818, (fn. 225) at c.
£106 it remained so in 1831. (fn. 226) A further augmentation of £400, of which Queen Anne's
Bounty gave £200, was made in 1856. (fn. 227) The
£8 a year was paid from the Rectory estate in
the mid and later 16th century: (fn. 228) the amount
had been increased to £12 by 1610 and to £34
by 1671. (fn. 229) The vicar was entitled to some small
tithes, (fn. 230) which in 1840 were valued at £30 and
commuted. His glebe never exceeded c. 3 a. (fn. 231)
In 1650 his house was of two storeys, each of
two rooms. (fn. 232) In 1705 it was said to be old and
thatched, (fn. 233) c. 1825 mean and inhabited by
paupers. (fn. 234) The old house, which stood immediately west of the church, (fn. 235) was replaced c.
1860 by a red-brick one north-east of the
church; the new house, much enlarged in
1884, (fn. 236) was sold in 1991. (fn. 237)
In 1249 James, rector of Stapleford, was committed to gaol for wrongful disseisin. (fn. 238) John
Bath, rector 1400–2, was licensed in 1402 to hold
with Stapleford another living with cure of
souls. (fn. 239) Other 15th-century rectors were more
eminent and probably all absentees: John Perch,
1402–15, whose successor as rector claimed
against his executors for dilapidation of the
church and rectory house, was registrar of a
court of Canterbury; (fn. 240) Nicholas Upton, 1434–
42, an author of treatises on war and heraldry,
became precentor of Salisbury in 1446; (fn. 241) Adam
Moleyns, 1442–5, was dean of Salisbury 1441–5
and later bishop of Chichester. (fn. 242) The prior of
Easton, William Marshall, was himself vicar
1487–91. (fn. 243) In 1553 the churchwardens complained that the services were not held at the
proper times because the vicar also served Winterbourne Stoke; it was also said that, having
celebrated communion in that parish, he would
return to administer but not receive the sacrament in Stapleford. In the same year the
churchwardens reported that crosses had not
been removed from the chancel. (fn. 244) Some or all of
the quarterly sermons were omitted in 1585,
probably because the vicar was not qualified to
preach. (fn. 245) Humphrey Wall, vicar from 1622,
signed the Concurrent Testimony in 1648, and in
1650 preached twice each Sunday at Stapleford. (fn. 246) Few 18th-century incumbents resided in
the parish: (fn. 247) in 1783 the church was served with
Berwick St. James by a curate who held one
service at Stapleford each Sunday, alternately in
the morning and the afternoon. Communion was
celebrated at Christmas, Easter, and Whitsun:
there were c. 20 communicants. (fn. 248) John Matthews, vicar 1808–53, was also vicar of
Shrewton, where he lived. He was assisted in
1851 by a curate who lived at Little Langford:
on Census Sunday in that year 85 people attended morning service in Stapleford church
and 136 afternoon service. George Carpenter,
vicar 1854–64, was probably the first resident
incumbent for over a century. (fn. 249) In 1864 he held
a service with a sermon each Sunday morning
and Sunday evening. Services were also held on
Wednesdays in Lent, on Good Friday, and on
Ascension day. Communion was celebrated at
Christmas and Easter, on Whit and Trinity
Sundays, and on eight other Sundays: there were
c. 17 communicants at festivals, c. 13 at other
times. (fn. 250) From 1879 until the benefices were
united in 1924 Stapleford was held in plurality
with Berwick St. James: vicars usually lived at
Stapleford. (fn. 251)
From 1793, and probably long before, the rent
from c. 1 a. in Stapleford was used to maintain
the church. The rent was 2s. in 1793, £3 3s. in
1873. In 1898 the land was sold and the proceeds
invested. (fn. 252) The income of c. £8 a year from the
investment was spent on repairs in the early 20th
century, (fn. 253) but the charity had apparently been
lost by 1992. (fn. 254)

The south Arcade of the church
The church of ST. MARY was so called in
1446 and probably in 1239 or earlier. (fn. 255) It is
of chalk ashlar and flint and has a chancel
and a clerestoried nave with north chapel,
south chapel, north tower, south aisle, and twostoreyed south porch. (fn. 256) The oldest parts of the
church, the north and west walls of the nave, the
south arcade, and the west wall of the aisle, are
late 12th-century, but the nave is narrow and its
shape may be that of the nave of an earlier
church. The chancel, wider than the nave, was
rebuilt in the later 13th century, and the north
chapel was built about the same time. The tower
was built, after and west of the chapel, in the
late 13th century or early 14th, and in the mid
14th the south chapel was built and the south
wall of the aisle was rebuilt on its old foundations. New windows and a piscina with triple
sedilia were made in the chancel in the 14th
century. In the 15th the nave was raised to
accommodate the clerestory, and the porch was
built. The upper stage of the tower was rebuilt
in 1674. (fn. 257) The church was extensively restored
in 1861: some walls and most of the roofs were
rebuilt and windows were altered. (fn. 258)
In 1553 plate weighing 1½ oz. was confiscated
and a chalice of 6 oz. was left in the parish. Plate
belonging to the church in 1992 included a cup
and a paten of 1678 but not a plated flagon
bought in 1876. (fn. 259)
Three bells hung in the church in 1553. The
ring was increased to five, apparently by two
bells cast by John Wallis, one in 1611 and one
in 1615. Three bells cast by Nathaniel Boulter
in 1655 presumably replaced the old bells. The
bell of 1615 was replaced by one of 1887 cast by
Mears & Stainbank, who recast that of 1611 in
1907. (fn. 260) The bells of 1655, 1887, and 1907 hung
in the church in 1992. (fn. 261)
Registers of burials survive from 1633, of
baptisms and marriages from 1637; they are
incomplete for the 17th century and early 18th. (fn. 262)
Nonconformity.
In 1605 George Tattershall, then resident in Stapleford and from 1611
owner of a moiety of the manor, was indicted as
a recusant. (fn. 263) His father-in-law Christopher
Biggs, also of Stapleford, was convicted of recusancy in 1609 and c. 1629, (fn. 264) and his son
George forfeited a lease of the Rectory estate as
a papist and a royalist in 1645. (fn. 265) Biggs's wife
Alice was an excommunicate recusant at her
death c. 1619. It was said that her corpse was
buried secretly in Stapleford church by an unknown priest: the bishop later ordered its
removal. (fn. 266) John Saph (probably he who d. 1683)
owned an estate in the parish and was a papist
in 1657, (fn. 267) three papists who lived in the parish
in 1676 (fn. 268) may have been members of the Saph
family, and Charles Saph (d. 1726), successor of
John Saph as owner of the estate, was a Roman
Catholic. (fn. 269) In 1783 there was said to be no papist
in the parish. (fn. 270)
There were three protestant nonconformists in
Stapleford in 1676. (fn. 271) There was a Quaker meeting house in 1690 and 1703, (fn. 272) and Quakers lived
in the parish 1682–1715. (fn. 273) There was said to be
no protestant dissenter in 1783. (fn. 274) In 1816 several
Baptists lived in Stapleford and in 1820 a house
was certified for their meetings. A Methodist
chapel beside the western lane at the south end
of Stapleford village was built c. 1820 and certified
in 1824. On Census Sunday in 1851 Wesleyan
Methodists held a morning and an evening
service there, attended by 48 and 92 people
respectively. (fn. 275) No service was held in the chapel
after 1946 and it was demolished c. 1970. (fn. 276)
Education.
A school attached to the Methodist meeting house in 1824 was probably a
Sunday school. (fn. 277) In 1833 there was a school in
the parish for c. 10 infants but most children
attended Great Wishford school. (fn. 278) A National
school which had 20 pupils in 1847 (fn. 279) may have
been that in Over Street which had 30–40 pupils
in 1859. (fn. 280) It was presumably closed when a new
school incorporating a teacher's house was built
at the south end of Stapleford village in 1874. (fn. 281)
Average attendance at the new school fell from
31 in 1906 (fn. 282) to 9 in 1914, when some children
living in the parish attended Berwick St. James
and Great Wishford schools. In 1914 the county
council withdrew approval and funding from the
school but it continued privately for several
years and was re-adopted by the county in 1919
or 1920. In 1925, when there were 10 pupils, it
was closed. (fn. 283) It was used as a school for 24 boys
who were evacuated to neighbouring parishes in
1939 and 1940, (fn. 284) but was later a village hall.
In the north part of the parish Berwick St. James
school was built in 1936 and closed in 1992. (fn. 285)
Charity for the poor.
None known.