GREAT WISHFORD
Great Wishford village is 8.5 km. north-west
of Salisbury. (fn. 1) The parish measures 680 ha.
(1,679 a.).
The parish's boundary with Little Langford
follows a dry valley and had been fixed by the
10th or nth century. (fn. 2) On the north and east
the boundary follows the river Wylye and may
also have been fixed early: the boundary is
marked by the main course of the river in some
places, by side-streams in others. To the south,
where the woodland of Grovely forest lay between Great Wishford and Barford St. Martin,
the boundary may have been defined equally
early, but, if so, was later changed. In 1604 the
jurors of a forest court gave the prehistoric
Grim's ditch as the boundary of the two parishes: that boundary left seven coppices of the
forest in Great Wishford, (fn. 3) but in 1609 the rector
claimed tithes from only the easternmost, Bonham's copse, later called Heath wood. (fn. 4) In 1839
Heath wood, bounded to the south by Grim's
ditch, was in the parish, but the other six
coppices were not: by then the rest of the
southern boundary of the parish had been moved
north from Grim's ditch to what was until c.
1800 the north edge of the woodland. (fn. 5)
Chalk outcrops over the whole parish, and the
relief is sharp. The downs reach 170 m. on
Ebsbury Hill and 155 m. on Hadden Hill and
are crossed by deep valleys, now dry, cut by
tributaries of the Wylye. Heath wood is on
clay-with-fiints at c. 150 m., and there is also a
small area of clay-with-flints on the west side of
the village. Near the Wylye, at c. 60 m., there is
alluvium, and gravel has been deposited along
the Wylye and in the tributary valleys. (fn. 6) There
were open fields on the lower slopes of the chalk
and, mostly further from the river, the steeper
slopes and higher downland provided pasture.
There is extensive meadow land beside the river,
especially in the north part of the parish. Apart
from Heath wood, there was until c. 1800 little
woodland in the parish as defined in 1839. (fn. 7)
The Roman road from Winchester and Old
Salisbury to the Mendips is thought to have
crossed the south-east end of the parish, running
west from the Wylye and north of Heath wood. (fn. 8)
Also to the south-east the Grovely ridge way was
apparently on the same course as Grim's ditch
along the south boundary of Heath wood in
1589: (fn. 9) a track remained there in the late 20th
century. Unusually for a Wiltshire parish no
road in Great Wishford was turnpiked. The
principal road through it is that, apparently of
Saxon origin, (fn. 10) between Wilton and Warminster
linking the villages on the right bank of the
Wylye. From it a road led across Stoford bridge (fn. 11)
to the road on the left bank, which became a
trunk road in the 20th century. In 1773 and 1993
minor roads led south-west from Great Wishford village. (fn. 12) The Salisbury—Warminster
section of the G.W.R., opened in 1856, runs
beside the principal road. A station built in the
village in 1856 or soon after was closed in 1955. (fn. 13)
Earthworks covering c. 100 a. on Ebsbury Hill
provide evidence of Iron-Age and Romano-British
settlement, and coin hoards probably deposited in
the 5th century A.D. have been found. A RomanoBritish field system extends over part of the site,
and other prehistoric field systems have been
identified west of Ebsbury Hill and on Hadden
Hill. Grim's ditch may be of slightly later date
than the Roman road to the Mendips. (fn. 14)
The parish had 138 poll-tax payers in 1377.
The population was 346 in 1801, 291 in 1811,
372 in 1821: the reason for such large changes is
obscure. From 1821 to 1871, when there were
381 inhabitants, numbers were roughly constant. Thereafter they fell, reaching a low point
of 234 in 1951. (fn. 15) From the 1950s new housing
was accompanied by a sharp increase: 328 people
lived in the parish in 1971, 360 in 1991. (fn. 16)
Great Wishford village is close to the Wylye.
The church stands at the centre of an arc of
gravel, and the village grew west and south along
the arc to form two streets, West Street and
South Street. (fn. 17) Great Wishford manor house
stood 200 m. north-west of the church: part was
evidently demolished in 1785, the rest in the mid
19th century (fn. 18) when a new farmhouse was built
among farm buildings near its site. Near the
church at the junction of West Street and South
Street stand the old rectory house, a mid 17th-century almshouse, and an early 18th-century
school. (fn. 19) In West Street the principal surviving
house is Wishford House, on the north side. It
consists of a main 18th-century range, on which
a new south front of brick was built in the early
19th century; a north extension was built in the
early 19th century apparently to replace a
kitchen wing, a north service wing of flint and
brick was built in the late 19th century, and the
interior of the main range was much altered in
the mid 20th century. In South Street, on the
east side, Shatfords is a farmhouse of chequered
flint and limestone and of 17th-century origin.
South of it on the same side Wishford Farmhouse may also be of 17th-century origin. It was
altered in the mid 18th century, probably for Sir
Edward Knatchbull, Bt. (d. 1789), the tenant in
1773: (fn. 20) a new west front of brick was built, and
a high-quality oak staircase was inserted. West
Street and South Street are each built up on both
sides, and in each several cottages and small
houses of 17th- or 18th-century origin survive:
some are timber-framed, some are of flint and
stone, and some are of brick with stone dressings. Both streets were in a conservation area
designated in 1974. (fn. 21)

Great Wishford 1839
A little east of the village a mill stood on the
Wylye at Stoford bridge. (fn. 22) A little south of the
village one of two houses standing close to a
branch of the Wylye in 1773 was later called Cobbs
Mill: (fn. 23) between 1773 and 1802 a third house was
added to form a group. By 1773 both West Street
and South Street had been built up between the
church and the Wilton—Warminster road, and
there were then several buildings beside the road
near the junction with West Street. Several more
had been erected there by 1802, (fn. 24) and, also beside
the road, two more between the south end of South
Street and Cobbs Mill by 1839. (fn. 25) An alehouse at
Great Wishford was recorded in 1618. (fn. 26) On the
west side of the Warminster road at its junction
with West Street an inn called the Tap was open
in 1822 and 1839. (fn. 27) By 1848 it had been renamed
the Royal Oak, (fn. 28) under which name it remained
open in 1993.
In the mid 19th century new farm buildings,
south of Wishford Farmhouse, and a terrace of
four estate cottages of banded brick and flint north
of it, were erected in South Street, and Wishford
station was built beside the Wilton—Warminster
road. There was evidently little new domestic
building in the late 19th century. In the 20th the
principal road came to be called Station Road
between its junctions with West Street and South
Street, Langford Road to the north-west. About
1900 a pair of brick villas and in 1929 four council
houses were built at the south end of South Street. (fn. 29)
The southern end of the village was further developed 1949–54 when Grovely Cottages, 22 council
houses and bungalows, (fn. 30) and c. 1987 when
Kingsmead, an estate of 12 private houses, were
built. At the north end in Langford Road 4 estate
cottages were built in 1953 (fn. 31) and Bonhams Close,
6 flats and 11 bungalows, in 1969. (fn. 32) In Station
Road the stationmaster's house survives: a later
19th-century goods shed was demolished after
1980. (fn. 33) In the later 20th century c. 10 private
houses were built beside the road. In 1993 there
were few buildings within the triangle formed by
Station Road and the houses in West Street and
South Street: one there, among farm buildings
west of South Street, was a weatherboarded granary of the 18th century.
Outside the village beside the Warminster road
a thatched cottage was built between 1773 and
1802 (fn. 34) and a barn between 1817 and 1839. (fn. 35) In
the north-west corner of the parish Hungerford
Lodge Farm was built near the site of the barn
from the mid or later 19th century; a pair of
cottages was added in the early 20th. (fn. 36) Dairy
Cottages and farm buildings were erected 1 km.
south of the church between 1839 and 1886; (fn. 37)
the farmstead was enlarged in the 20th century.
A sewage works was built in the parish's south-east corner between 1958 and 1969. (fn. 38)
Great Wishford was within the bounds of
Grovely forest. (fn. 39) In the mid 13th century it was
represented at forest inquests, (fn. 40) the jurors at the
forest court of 1604 were drawn from Great
Wishford and Barford St. Martin, (fn. 41) and inhabitants of Great Wishford owed suit at a similar
court in 1618. (fn. 42) A small estate in Great Wishford
was attached to the office of keeper of the north
bailiwick of the forest, (fn. 43) and it included housebote, haybote, and firebote from the underwood
of Grovely. (fn. 44) Men of Great Wishford had rights
to pasture in the forest by the mid 13th century
and rights to wood by the 16th century. In 1597
the lord of the manor was entitled to certain
loads of wood each year, and his tenants had the
right to fetch boughs from Grovely on Saturdays
and holidays from 1 May to Whitsun, to fell a
load of wood annually, and at all times to take
dead wood and wood from Grim's ditch. (fn. 45) In
1604 it was customary for the men of the manor
to claim their rights by going in procession to
Salisbury cathedral on the Tuesday after Whitsun and there reciting the words 'Grovely!
Grovely! And all Grovely!'. After 1660 the date
of the procession was changed to 29 May. The
right to take boughs in May was compounded
for in 1681, and pasture rights were extinguished
in 1809, but the ceremonial claim continued to
be made. In the early 19th century the procession was replaced by a deputation of two women
who placed boughs from Grovely forest on the
cathedral altar. By 1885 the ceremonial claim in
Salisbury cathedral had been replaced by a
yearly procession in Great Wishford village. (fn. 46)
From c. 1890 processions and other events were
organized by the Oak Apple club, and from 1951
a claim to rights in Grovely forest was again
made in Salisbury cathedral. (fn. 47)
In 1728 a fire engine made by Richard Newsham was bought for the parish. (fn. 48) It remained in
use until the 1920s or later, and from 1972 was
preserved in the church. (fn. 49)
The price of bread at various dates between
1800 and 1984 is recorded on stones inserted in
the north-east wall of the churchyard.
Manor and other estates.
In 1066
Avitius and in 1086 William Corniole, one of the
king's servants, held what became GREAT
WISHFORD manor. (fn. 50) Henry I gave the estate
to Patrick de Chaworth, who before 1127 subinfeudated the manor to his son-in-law Henry
Daubeney. (fn. 51) From Patrick the overlordship descended with Berwick St. James manor, until the
14th century in the Chaworth family: Patrick de
Chaworth was overlord of 1½ knight's fee in
1242–3, (fn. 52) and Maud de Chaworth, wife of Henry
of Lancaster, earl of Leicester from 1324 and of
Lancaster from 1326, was overlord at her death
c. 1322. (fn. 53) The overlordship thereafter descended
with the earldom and dukedom of Lancaster. (fn. 54)
Henry Daubeney was succeeded by his son
Robert, who gave Great Wishford manor to his
brother Niel (fl. 1166). (fn. 55) The manor passed to
Niel's son William and before 1207 to William's
son Henry, who held it in 1242–3. Ralph de St.
Amand held a third of the manor in 1242–3,
possibly as tenant by the courtesy, and of that
third stood as mesne lord between Henry and
Patrick de Chaworth. Henry (fl. 1258) was succeeded in or before 1268 by his son Walter (fn. 56) (d.
by 1273). Walter was succeeded by his brother
Henry (fn. 57) (d. c. 1278), whose heirs were his sister
Clarice Daubeney and grandnephew Maurice
Bonham. (fn. 58) From c. 1278 to 1576 the manor
descended in moieties.
Maurice Bonham (d. 1302) was succeeded in
turn by his sons William (d. by 1316) and Sir
John (fn. 59) (fl. 1348). (fn. 60) His moiety passed to Sir
John's son Robert, who in 1356 granted it to his
brother Nicholas (d. 1386). (fn. 61) Nicholas's relict
Edith (fl. 1387) may have held the moiety for
life (fn. 62) and in 1391 his son Thomas held it. (fn. 63) From
Thomas (d. 1420) it passed in turn to his sons
William and Thomas (d. 1473). Thomas, who
held the moiety in 1429, was succeeded by his
son Walter (fn. 64) (d. 1476). It passed to Walter's son
William (fn. 65) (fl. 1514), and in turn to William's sons
Walter (d. 1527) and Nicholas (fn. 66) (d. 1559), who
devised it for life to his relict Alice. In 1574 Alice
and her husband Anthony Styleman surrendered their interest to Nicholas's son Walter, (fn. 67)
who acquired the second moiety and in 1597 sold
the whole manor to Sir Richard Grobham. (fn. 68)
Grobham (d. 1629) settled the manor for life
on his wife Margaret (d. 1637), with reversion
to a kinsman George Grobham. George presumably died without issue, and the manor passed,
probably before 1650, to Sir Richard's nephew
John Howe (cr. baronet 1660). (fn. 69) In 1661 Sir
John (d. by 1672) settled it on his son (Sir)
Richard (fn. 70) (d. 1703), who was succeeded by his
son Sir Richard (d. 1730). The manor was held
for life by the younger Sir Richard's relict Mary
(d. 1735) (fn. 71) and passed to his second cousin John
Howe (fn. 72) (cr. Baron Chedworth 1741, d. 1742).
With the barony it passed to John's sons John
(d. 1762) and Henry (d. 1781) and their nephew
John Howe (d. 1804). (fn. 73) In 1808 the last Lord
Chedworth's executors sold the manor to
George Herbert, earl of Pembroke and of
Montgomery. (fn. 74) Thereafter it passed with the
Pembroke title, (fn. 75) and in 1993 Henry Herbert,
earl of Pembroke and of Montgomery, owned
most of the land in the parish. (fn. 76)
A chapel belonging to Walter Daubeney (d. by
1273) may have been at a manor house at Great
Wishford; (fn. 77) John Bonham was taxed at Great
Wishford in 1332; (fn. 78) and in 1408 and 1410
Thomas Bonham was licensed to hear mass there
in an oratory in his manor house, (fn. 79) where his
descendants evidently lived in the 16th century. (fn. 80) A manor house was lived in by Sir
Richard Grobham (d. 1629), and probably by
Sir Richard Howe (d. 1703) and Sir Richard
Howe (d. 1730). (fn. 81) In 1773 Lady Chedworth,
presumably Dorothy (d. 1777), relict of John,
Lord Chedworth (d. 1742), lived in it. (fn. 82) Nothing
is known of the architecture of the house; it was
said to have been demolished in 1785, (fn. 83) but part
of it remained a house until demolished between
1839 and 1886. (fn. 84)
The second moiety of Great Wishford manor
was held in 1281 by Clarice Daubeney's husband
Sir Edmund Spigurnel (d. by 1296) (fn. 85) and in 1298
by her son Adam de la Ford (fn. 86) (d. by 1326). It
passed to Adam's son Sir Adam (d. by 1349) and
was evidently held by Sir Adam's relict Elizabeth, wife of Sir Robert of London, until 1390
or later. (fn. 87) Sir Adam's heir may have been Robert
Brent, probably his nephew, and in 1402 the
moiety was held by John Brent (d. c. 1413),
probably Robert's grandson. (fn. 88) John was succeeded in turn by his son Sir Robert (d. 1421)
and daughter Joan, whose husband John Trethek held the moiety in 1428. (fn. 89) With Ford manor
in Bawdrip (Som.) it presumably passed to
Robert Brent (d. 1508); from Robert's son John (fn. 90)
(d. 1524) it passed in the direct line to William (fn. 91)
(d. 1536) and Richard. (fn. 92) In 1564 Richard (d.
1570) settled the moiety for his life on his
daughter Anne and her husband Thomas Paulet
and thereafter on his wife Dorothy for life with
reversion to Anne and Thomas. (fn. 93) It was reunited
with the other moiety in 1576 when Anne and
Thomas Paulet sold it to Walter Bonham. (fn. 94)
At her death in 1281 Edith, daughter of John
Humphrey, held in Great Wishford an estate of
2 yardlands, later QUINTIN'S: 1½ yardland
was held by serjeanty of keeping the north
bailiwick of Grovely forest. The estate passed to
Edith's son Henry Quintin (d. 1284) and from
him in the direct line to William (d. by 1290),
William (fn. 95) (d. by 1341), William (fn. 96) (d. 1351), and
Richard (fl. 1373). (fn. 97) Thomas Stabber held it at
his death c. 1416 and it passed in moieties to his
daughters Elizabeth (d. c. 1419) and Joan, wife
of John Wilton (alias John at the end). Elizabeth's moiety was inherited by Joan (d. 1421),
whose heirs were Thomas's sisters Edith (d.
1433), wife of John Stone, and Agnes (d. 1433),
wife of John Dykeman. Dykeman apparently
held both moieties until 1445. John Cooper and
his wife Maud, granddaughter and heir of Agnes
and evidently Edith's eventual heir, (fn. 98) in 1466
conveyed what was probably the whole estate to
Maurice Berkeley. (fn. 99) By 1597, when the lord of
Great Wishford was forester of the northern part
of Grovely forest, the whole had evidently been
absorbed by the manor. (fn. 100)
Bolle held 3 yardlands in Great Wishford in
1066: Robert held them of Waleran the huntsman in 1086. (fn. 101) The overlordship apparently
descended like Steeple Langford manor and was
held by John of Monmouth in 1242–3 and by
Oliver de Ingham, Lord Ingham, in 1343 or
1344. In 1242–3 the estate, 1/10 knight's fee, was
held of Monmouth by John de Camp and of
John by Warin of Wishford. By 1344 it had been
added to Great Wishford manor. (fn. 102)
Arnulf Bisset gave to Margery or Margaret
Bisset 8 yardlands in Great Wishford which by
1243 she had given to the hospital and priory of
Maiden Bradley. (fn. 103) The estate passed to the
Crown at the Dissolution. In 1544 it was granted
to Edward Seymour, earl of Hertford, (fn. 104) and sold
by him to Nicholas Bonham: (fn. 105) thereafter it
passed with Bonham's moiety of Great Wishford
manor.
Tithes from the demesne of Great Wishford
manor were c. 1191 an endowment of South
Newton prebend in the conventual church of
Wilton abbey; (fn. 106) they were confirmed to the
abbey in 1208. (fn. 107) By 1291 they had been replaced
by a pension paid by the rector of Great Wishford, of 13s. 4d. in 1291, (fn. 108) 6s. 8d. at the
Dissolution. (fn. 109)
The tithes of the first cut of part of Asserton
mead, 12 a. in Great Wishford, belonged to
Asserton chapel in Berwick St. James parish. (fn. 110)
The endowment of the chapel passed to the
Crown c. 1547, from 1615 belonged, like Great
Wishford manor, to Sir Richard Grobham, (fn. 111)
descended with the manor, and was devised by
Sir Richard Howe (d. 1730) to Great Wishford
school. (fn. 112) In 1840 the tithes were valued at 30s.
and commuted. (fn. 113)
Economic history.
In 1086 Great Wishford had land for 2½ ploughteams. Although not
expressly mentioned there may have been demesne with 1 team or more on it; 3 villani and
2 bordars had 1 team, and there were 2 other
bordars. There were 12 a. of meadow. (fn. 114)
In 1273 the demesne of Great Wishford manor
was said to comprise 500 a. of arable, 33 a. of
meadow, and pasture for 32 beasts and 400
sheep: what may have been a roughly equal
amount of land was held by 18 customary tenants. (fn. 115) Between c. 1278 and 1576, while the
manor descended in moieties, the demesne may
have been worked in two parts. In 1326 one of
the moieties was said to include in demesne 100
a. of arable and 8 a. of meadow; on the moiety
were 2 free tenants, 4 customary tenants who
held 32 a. and had to wash and shear sheep and
to mow, and 6 cottagers. (fn. 116) In 1545 on the other
moiety 145 a. of arable with pasture rights for
274 sheep was in 5 copyholds and 1 leasehold. (fn. 117)
The other holdings in Great Wishford in the
Middle Ages were evidently small. In 1284 that
held for keeping part of Grovely forest and
comprising 54 a. of arable, 2½ a. of meadow,
and presumably pasture rights, may have been
the largest: (fn. 118) in 1341 houses on it were in
disrepair and of its 60 a. of arable 15 a. had
evidently gone out of cultivation. (fn. 119) The 8 yardlands given to Maiden Bradley priory by 1243
were held by 13 tenants, (fn. 120) in 1544 apparently by
8 tenants. (fn. 121) From the later 16th century, when
the moieties of the manor were reunited, (fn. 122) most
of the demesne was in a single farm, later called
Manor. In 1606 the farm was apparently in hand
except for fishing rights in the Wylye, small areas
of meadow, and a warren: from 1659 it was
leased. (fn. 123)
Common husbandry prevailed at Great Wishford until 1809. In 1326, when three different
values were set on arable, there may have been
three open fields, as there were later. (fn. 124) Some or
all of the downland was used in common, (fn. 125) and
from 1252 or earlier men of Great Wishford had
a right of pasture in Grovely forest. (fn. 126) Quintin's
estate had pasture there for all animals except
sheep and goats, (fn. 127) and c. 1356 the lord of a moiety
of Great Wishford manor claimed common
there both for his demesne and his tenants. (fn. 128) In
1603 all men of Great Wishford had common of
pasture throughout the forest for all beasts except 'cattle of two teeth', perhaps cattle over a
year old, and, during the fence month, goats and
pigs over a year old. (fn. 129)
In 1802 Great Wishford had c. 852 a. of arable,
nearly all in open fields. The three fields were
of roughly equal size, and each holding with land
in them had about the same amount in each.
South field was c. 279 a., Middle field c. 282 a.,
West field c. 265 a. Between the fields and the
Wylye there were c. 98 a. of meadows, of which
c. 61 a. were in five common meadows. Between
the fields and Grovely forest were 543 a. of
downland: East End down, north of Heath
wood, and, about twice as large, West End down,
south-west of Ebsbury Hill, 278 a. in all, were
tenantry downs; Farm down, 265 a., was south-west of the village between the tenantry downs.
Manor farm, 595 a., included commonable and
several land. Its downland, Farm down, was
several, and by 1802 c. 9 a. of it had been
burnbaked and 61 a. planted with trees. The
farm included 29 a. of several meadows and
rights in the common meadows, and it had 247
a. in the open fields, mostly in parcels much
larger than those of the other holdings. There
were 28 other holdings of Great Wishford manor
with land in the open fields: some were small
and some tenants had more than one. They
included c. 555 a. of arable with feeding for 1,027
sheep on the downs and for cattle in the common
meadows: the largest holding, later called Wishford farm, was of c. 190 a. with grazing for 344
sheep. In 1806 Manor farm no longer included
the 61 a. of new woodland, and c. 17 a. more of
Farm down had been ploughed. (fn. 130)
Common husbandry was ended in 1809 by an
agreement which also extinguished pasture
rights in Grovely forest. Lands already several
were among those allotted; Farm down was
taken from Manor farm which, worked from the
buildings near the manor house, was thenceforth
restricted to a compact area in the west part of
the parish. The other farms were worked from
South Street and West Street and the lands
allotted to them were intermingled in the centre
and east parts of the parish. (fn. 131) The parish contained 862 a. of arable and 649 a. of grassland in
1839, when there were four principal farms.
Manor farm was 497 a.; Wishford farm, worked
from Wishford Farmhouse and with most of its
land in the south-east part of the parish, was 429
a.; a farm of 187 a. was worked from Wishford
House, and one of 108 a. was worked from South
Street. (fn. 132) About 1863 Manor farm included 289
a. of arable, 159 a. of downland, and 13 a. of
water meadow, Wishford farm 250 a. of arable,
177 a. of downland, 20 a. of lowland pasture,
and 9 a. of water meadow. (fn. 133) An additional
farmstead for each of those farms was built
outside the village between 1839 and 1886. (fn. 134) By
1910 the smaller farms had been absorbed:
Wishford farm was c. 800 a. in 1896, Manor farm
569 a. in 1910. (fn. 135) Sheep-and-corn husbandry
predominated until c. 1920; thereafter more
dairy cattle were kept. (fn. 136) In the 1930s there was
much less arable than there had been in the
1830s, and Wishford farm was nearly all pasture. (fn. 137) More land on Wishford farm was
ploughed during the Second World War, but it
remained principally a beef and dairy farm. In
1993 it included 450 a. of arable on which cereals
were grown and 435 a. of pasture: there was a
dairy herd of 150, beef cattle were kept, and 75
a. were set aside. (fn. 138) Manor farm, 570 a., then
included c. 460 a. on which cereals were grown
and 100 a. of permanent grassland: a flock of 450
breeding ewes was kept, and the farm had 180
a. of additional sheep pasture in South Newton
parish. (fn. 139)
Like others in the Wylye valley (fn. 140) meadows at
Great Wishford may have been watered from
the 17th century. Three common meadows,
King's mead, Broad mead, and Little mead, a
total of c. 30 a. north-west of the village, were
being watered in 1782, when two parishioners
were appointed at the manor court to oversee
the watering. (fn. 141) The inclosure agreement of 1809
provided for King's mead, thereafter used in
severalty, to be watered between 1 November
and 5 April each year. (fn. 142) From 1812 until 1842
or later two overseers and a common drowner
were appointed at the manor court. (fn. 143) There were
50 a. or more of water meadows in the parish c.
1863 (fn. 144) but by 1877 watering of some had probably ceased. Drowners were recorded in the
1930s, when the Wilton Fly Fishing club held
dinners for them, but not thereafter. (fn. 145)
Great Wishford had no woodland in 1086, (fn. 146)
and later the men of the parish had rights to take
wood from Grovely forest. (fn. 147) One of the coppices
of the forest, Heath wood, 59 a., is in the parish, (fn. 148)
and new woodland was planted on 61 a. of Farm
down (Hadden Hill) evidently not long before
1802. There was little other woodland in the
parish in 1802 (fn. 149) or the later 20th century. (fn. 150)
There was a mill in 1086 on what became
Great Wishford manor. (fn. 151) A mill at Great Wishford in 1273 was, as part of the manor, held in
moieties from c. 1278 and was in poor repair in
1326. (fn. 152) It may have stood beside Stoford bridge,
where a mill standing in 1773 (fn. 153) had been demolished by 1802. (fn. 154) There was a mill in 1243 on
Maiden Bradley priory's estate. (fn. 155) It may have
stood south of the village on the site of Cobbs
Mill, so called in the earlier 19th century. (fn. 156)
Cobbs Mill is unlikely to have been used for
grinding in 1773 (fn. 157) and there is no evidence that
it was later.
A weaver lived in the parish in 1699, as did a
clothier in 1729 and 1741: the weaver was associated with the Wilton cloth industry, and the
clothier may have been. (fn. 158) There was a malthouse
in the village in the early 19th century, (fn. 159) and a
foundry near the church in 1839. (fn. 160) From the
1850s, presumably after the opening of Great
Wishford station, until the 1930s, coal merchants traded in the parish. (fn. 161)
In 1298 rights to hold an annual fair on 31
August and 1 September and a weekly market
on Mondays were granted to Adam de la Ford,
the lord of a moiety of the manor: (fn. 162) the holding
of neither fair nor market is recorded.
Local government.
Although Great
Wishford was held before 1127 with rights including sac and soc, toll and team, and
infangthief, (fn. 163) Roger de Hales, sheriff of Wiltshire 1226–7, distrained men of Great Wishford
to do suit at Branch hundred court: they were
summoned as two tithings, said to correspond
to a fee of Daubeney and, inexplicably, to a fee
of Fancourt. In 1268, however, it was confirmed
that Great Wishford manor was held free of suit
of shire and hundred and with a gallows and an
ordeal pit, and then and thereafter Great Wishford was apparently a single tithing. (fn. 164)
A court may have been held for Adam de la
Ford (d. by 1326) as lord of a moiety of the
manor, (fn. 165) but none held for his successors is
recorded. View of frankpledge passed with the
Bonhams' moiety: there are records of a view
and a manor court held, usually together and
probably twice yearly, in 1391, 1404, and 1454.
Cert money was paid and a tithingman presented
defaulters from the court, strays, infringements
of grazing rights, and affrays. Tenurial business
was transacted, and orders were made to repair
a bridge, probably one over the Wylye, and for
fishing the river. In 1454 a jury found on the
presentments. (fn. 166) A court of survey was held in
1545. A view or law day and a manor court are
recorded for 1560 and for most of the years
1579–87; some of the records consist only of lists
of presentments. The view and the manor court
were usually held on the same day as each other
and twice a year. In 1579 the tithingman presented at the view, the homage at the manor
court. Matters presented at the view included
breaches of the assize of ale, the taking of stray
animals, the dilapidation of bridges, the butts,
and the pound, and, in 1582 and 1586, the
playing of unlawful games of bowls. In 1586 the
tithingman was presented for allowing a traveller
suspected of felony to escape. Business before
the manor court included defaulters from the
court, vacant tenements, and breaches of grazing
customs; orders were made to maintain ditches
and headlands, in 1584 to destroy rabbit burrows, and to regulate the gathering of wool from
fields. (fn. 167)
A court leet and a manor court were held
together, usually in October, from 1782 to 1842,
annually until the mid 1830s, less frequently
thereafter. In 1782 the homage and jury presented customs of the manor, that the stocks
needed repair, and the death of a copyholder; a
tithingman, a hayward, two sheeptellers, and the
overseers of the water meadows were appointed.
The business of the court was similar until c.
1830; in 1801 it was recorded that swans on the
manor had been destroyed, apparently unlawfully. From the 1830s most non-tenurial
business concerned watercourses and water
meadows. Between 1782 and 1887 a court for
the transaction only of tenurial business was held
occasionally. (fn. 168)
The parish (fn. 169) spent £81 on poor relief in 1775–6
and an average of £87 a year in the three years
to 1785; £209 was spent in 1802–3, when the
poor rate was about the average for the hundred,
19 adults and 34 children were regularly relieved, and no occasional relief was given. (fn. 170) In
1806 the parish held houses in the village on
lease to accommodate some of the poor. (fn. 171) Spending was at a peak of £830 in 1813, when 237 of
a population of c. 300 received relief, 51 regularly, 186 occasionally. (fn. 172) It fell to £313 in 1816,
but rose to £712 in 1817. It was usually between
£250 and £350 in the 1820s (fn. 173) and averaged £242
between 1833 and 1835. Great Wishford became
part of Wilton poor-law union in 1836, (fn. 174) and of
Salisbury district in 1974. (fn. 175)
Church.
The church may have been standing
in the 12th century or earlier. (fn. 176) It was first
recorded in 1207, when it was served by a
rector. (fn. 177) In 1952 the area served by Grovely
Wood chapel was added to the ecclesiastical
parish, (fn. 178) and in 1992 Great Wishford rectory
became part of the benefice of Lower Wylye and
Till Valley. (fn. 179)
In 1207 the advowson of the rectory was
disputed between the abbess of Wilton and
Henry Daubeney, lord of Great Wishford
manor. (fn. 180) The abbess surrendered her claim in
1208, (fn. 181) and the advowson presumably passed
with the manor to Henry Daubeney (d. c. 1278).
A right of presentation at alternate turns descended with each moiety of the manor from c.
1278 to 1576. Thereafter the advowson passed
with the manor, (fn. 182) and from 1992 Lord Pembroke
shared the patronage of the new benefice. (fn. 183) Six
presentations other than by owners of the manor
or a moiety of it are recorded. Hugh le Despenser, Lord le Despenser (cr. earl of Winchester
1322), keeper of the estate of William Bonham,
a minor, presented between 1302 and 1305; (fn. 184) the
bishop collated by lapse in 1391; trustees of John
Brent, probably the half-brother of Joan Brent
(fl. 1421), presented in 1430; in 1637 trustees of
John Bower, a former rector, presented his son
Robert by grant of a turn; Dorothy, relict of
John, Lord Chedworth (d. 1742), presented in
1770 and 1774. (fn. 185)
The rectory was valued at £5 in 1291, a little
below the average for Wylye deanery; (fn. 186) at £17
10s. 6d. in 1535 and c. £342 in 1830 it was about
the average. (fn. 187) Between 1609 and 1705 the rector's income included rent from 2 a. in South
Newton parish: no later reference to the rent has
been found. (fn. 188) The rector was entitled to all tithes
from the parish, from 1291 or earlier including
those from the demesne of Great Wishford
manor, but excluding those from part of Asserton mead: (fn. 189) they were valued at £437 in 1838
and commuted in 1840. (fn. 190) In 1609 the glebe
comprised 20 a. of arable, 1½ a. of meadow, and
feeding for 5 cattle, an unlimited number of pigs,
and, in autumn, 4 horses; (fn. 191) some of the grazing
may then as later have been in Grovely forest. (fn. 192)
After inclosure the glebe measured 18 a.; (fn. 193) c. 2
a. were sold in 1961, (fn. 194) and c. 13 a. remained glebe
in 1993. (fn. 195) There was a house on the glebe in
1513. (fn. 196) In the early 17th century a new house
was built of stone; its north-south range survives
in the present house. In the early 18th century
the house was extended to the south and east
and mullioned windows were used in the new
walls. A north-east wing was built, probably
later in the century and possibly as a replacement. Between c. 1825 and c. 1850 the inside of
the house was altered. The west front was
refaced in brick probably in the same period,
and c. 1850 bay windows were added to the
north-east wing. In 1976 the house was sold and
a new rectory house built north of the church. (fn. 197)
In 1386 St. Mary was invoked at the altar in
the north part of the church; the lights of St.
Nicholas, St. John, and Holy Cross in the church
may have been on separate altars. (fn. 198) In 1305
Richard of Langtoft, the rector, was licensed to
leave the parish for a year's study, and a curate
was appointed. (fn. 199) Richard Burleigh, rector 1468–
93, Alexander Hody, rector 1493–1518, and
Thomas Hulse, rector 1518–31, were all pluralists. (fn. 200) In 1553 the church had no copy of
Erasmus's Paraphrases or covering for the communion table: (fn. 201) in 1556 the rector, William
Hardy, was said to have been guilty of simony. (fn. 202)
Robert Bower, rector from 1637 and a canon of
Salisbury, was ejected in 1645 or 1646; he was
charged with keeping fasts appointed by the
king, using prayers against parliament, and using
the Book of Common Prayer. He was restored
to the rectory in 1660. (fn. 203) In 1648 and 1650 the
living was served by Robert Parker, a signatory
of the Concurrent Testimony and a regular
preacher. (fn. 204) James Birch, rector 1773–1823, also
served Burcombe chapel in 1783. At Great
Wishford he then held two services every Sunday and services on Christmas Day, Good
Friday, the Monday and Tuesday after Easter,
and the Monday after Whit Sunday. Communion was celebrated at Christmas, Easter,
Whitsun, and Michaelmas: there were c. 20
communicants. (fn. 205) In 1851 on Census Sunday 66
people attended morning service, 149 afternoon
service: numbers were said to be lower than
usual because of an outbreak of measles. (fn. 206) In
1864 three services were held each Sunday; there
were also services at the great festivals, on Ash
Wednesday, on Fridays in Lent and Advent, and
every evening in Holy Week. In the Wiltshire
part of Salisbury diocese Great Wishford was
one of only five parishes in which communion
was celebrated weekly: there were 40–50 communicants at the great festivals, 20–30 at other
times. The rector, T. B. Buchanan, regretted
that the liturgy was too inflexible to make possible brief daily services which agricultural
workers might have time to attend. (fn. 207) Between
1926 and 1973 the rectors also served Little
Langford. From 1926 they presumably served
Grovely Wood chapel, (fn. 208) which had been built in
Grovely forest in 1867, (fn. 209) was in Barford St.
Martin civil parish from 1934, (fn. 210) and was demolished probably in the 1940s. (fn. 211) From 1973 until
1992 Great Wishford was served by a priest-incharge, and from 1992 the benefice of Lower
Wylye and Till Valley was served by a rector
resident in Great Wishford. (fn. 212)
In 1681 Philip, earl of Pembroke and of
Montgomery, gave £6 a year to Great Wishford
church in return for the surrender by the parish
of rights to take wood from Grovely forest.
Payments were irregular until 1712 when
Thomas, earl of Pembroke and of Montgomery,
compounded with Sir Richard Howe, lord of
Great Wishford manor. Howe charged his estate
in Stapleford with a payment to the church of
£10 a year, (fn. 213) which was made until 1981. (fn. 214) From
1714 and probably earlier the right to cut hay
from the Monday before Ascension day to 12
August from 6 a. in Great Wishford was auctioned each year and the money paid for it given
to the church. From the late 18th century the
grass was called the Midsummer Tithe. The
auction raised c. £3 yearly in the early 18th
century, c. £11 in the early 19th and early 20th. (fn. 215)
Grass from part of the meadow was not auctioned after 1945: that from the remainder raised
£85 in 1993. (fn. 216) Agnes Kennedy (d. 1941) gave by
will to the church three cottages: (fn. 217) they were sold
in 1945 and the income from the proceeds, £176
in 1993, has since been used for the church's
upkeep. (fn. 218)
The church of ST. GILES, so called in 1386 (fn. 219)
and possibly in 1298, (fn. 220) is built of irregularly
chequered chalk ashlar and flint and has a chancel with north vestry, an aisled and clerestoried
nave with south porch, and a west tower. The
narrowness of the nave, which was rebuilt in the
19th century, suggests that its predecessor may
have been of the 12th century or earlier. The
chancel was probably rebuilt in the 13th century,
when a stepped-lancet east window was inserted.
The south aisle and the lower stages of the tower
were built in the 14th century. Possibly in the
15th or 16th century the upper stages of the
tower were built, and the porch was probably
built in the 16th. In the 17th the chancel was
largely rebuilt to accommodate a monument to
Sir Richard Grobham (d. 1629). In the early
18th the north wall of the nave was raised and
given a clerestory of oval windows, the south
wall of the aisle was raised, the arcade was
removed, and the roof of the aisle was merged
with that of the nave. (fn. 221) In 1863–4 the chancel
arch, the nave with north and south aisles and a
clerestory of rectangular windows, and the porch
were rebuilt in a 14th-century style to designs
by T. H. Wyatt; the chancel was reroofed, the
upper part of the tower rebuilt with elaborate
crenellation and pinnacles, and the vestry
added. (fn. 222) The vestry was rebuilt in 1955. (fn. 223) Stone
figures of the 14th century, representing a man
and a woman, each in an arched recess in the
north aisle, probably commemorate members of
the Bonham family, as does a 15th-century
brass. (fn. 224)
John Bonham (d. 1411) gave to the church a
crucifix, a paxbred, and a cup, all of silver. (fn. 225) In
1553 a chalice weighing 10 oz. was left in the
parish and 2 oz. of plate were confiscated. The
chalice was replaced by a tazza-shaped cup of
silver gilt, hallmarked for 1576 and probably of
secular origin. A flagon of 1637, a chalice with
paten cover of 1679, a paten of 1711, and an
almsdish converted in 1864 from a flagon, all of
silver gilt, were, with the cup, held by the church
in 1993. (fn. 226)
Two bells hung in the church in 1553. The
ring was increased to five, presumably in 1751
when five new bells were cast by James Burrough of Devizes. The fourth was recast by
Mears & Stainbank in 1887. (fn. 227) Those five bells
and a sixth, bought from Queenhill (Worcs.) in
1978, hung in the church in 1993. (fn. 228)
Registers of baptisms, marriages, and burials
survive from 1558: those of baptisms and burials
are largely complete, that of marriages lacks the
years 1747–54. (fn. 229)
Nonconformity.
In 1662 four parishioners, presumably dissenters, were regularly
absent from divine service: one had not had his
child baptized. (fn. 230) There was no dissenter in the
parish in 1676 or 1783. (fn. 231) In 1797 a house was
certified for nonconformist meetings. One was
certified for Independent meetings in 1817 (fn. 232) and
converted to a chapel in 1839. An evening service
held there on Census Sunday in 1851 had a
congregation of 22. (fn. 233) The chapel is said to have
stood in West Street. (fn. 234) A house was certified in
1832 for Primitive Methodist meetings, (fn. 235) and in
1864 c. 12 Wesleyans and Independents met in
a small room. (fn. 236)
Education.
The foundation stone of a
school, of red brick with stone dressings and
standing in 1993, was laid in 1722. Sir Richard
Howe (d. 1730) by will endowed the school with
tithes from Asserton mead and from Asserton,
all valued at £30 c. 1730. A master and a mistress
were to receive £10 each for teaching subjects
including the church catechism to 20 boys and
20 girls respectively. The school's remaining
income was for fuel and repairs. The income was
£63 55. annually between 1810 and c. 1830, £51
in 1903, (fn. 237) and the interest on c. £1,000 in 1993. (fn. 238)
The school had two rooms and accommodation
for a teacher in 1846. (fn. 239) Another classroom was
built in 1896, (fn. 240) and the school was further
extended in 1962. (fn. 241) In the 1830s there were
difficulties in filling the school until children
under five and more girls than boys were admitted. (fn. 242) There were 21 boys and 22 girls in 1846: (fn. 243)
the total had risen to 70 by 1859. (fn. 244) Average
attendance was 62 in 1906, (fn. 245) 60 in 1911–12, and
50 in 1935–6; (fn. 246) in 1993 there were 51 pupils,
principally from Great Wishford and South
Newton parishes. (fn. 247)
In 1833 a boarding school in Great Wishford
was attended by seven girls. (fn. 248)
Charities for the poor.
Sir Richard
Grobham (d. 1629) gave by will lands in South
Newton to endow an almshouse in Great Wishford. The almshouse, a range of banded flint and
stone, was built probably in the mid 17th century
and survived in 1993. It was built as four cottages,
each for a single parishioner, and the services of a
nurse or housekeeper were to be provided. Rents
from the lands were £60–£80 from the mid 18th
century to the early 20th. (fn. 249) The lands were sold in
1948; (fn. 250) the income from the proceeds was between
£250 and £500 in the 1960s. (fn. 251) Men and women
were nominated to places in the almshouse until
c. 1790: in most cases in the 1790s and in the 19th
century the nominee was a married man whose
wife shared his accommodation. In 1904 two
couples and a single man occupied three of the
cottages: the fourth was leased and from the rent
another parishioner was given money. Each
almsman received c. 30s. monthly in the mid 19th
century. A housekeeper was appointed 1870–85
but probably not at other times. By a Scheme of
1898 the almshouse was managed with Oland's,
Williams's, and Smokem's charities. (fn. 252) It was converted to two dwellings in 1969–70, and thereafter
occupants paid rent according to their means. The
income from endowments and rent, £1,396 in
1991, was used to maintain the building. (fn. 253)
David Oland (d. 1737) by will gave the income
from £200 to apprentice boys from Great Wishford school and, on their apprenticeship, to give
each £5 for tools. He also gave the income from
£50 to buy bread and meat on Christmas Eve
for 10 poor families not receiving poor relief. No
payment was made until 1762; thereafter the
income, c. £10 yearly in total, was used as Oland
directed. The Revd. F. de V. Williams (d. 1863)
by will gave £70, and Mary Smokem by will
proved 1888 gave £100, to augment the doles
provided by Oland. In 1888 and 1903 bread and
beef were given to 30 families. (fn. 254) Apprenticeship
premiums and grants for tools were occasionally
paid until the 1930s or later, (fn. 255) but in the 1980s
and in 1992 the charities' whole income of c. £10
was distributed in cash at Christmas. (fn. 256)
The poor of Great Wishford were entitled to
a third share of a charity set up by the Revd. E.
B. Hill (d. 1925) and governed by a Scheme of
1926. In the 1960s the income of the charity was
c. £1 10s. yearly and occasional grants were made
to the needy. (fn. 257)