HAM
The parish, (fn. 1) in a secluded position away from
main thoroughfares, is on the eastern boundary of
Wiltshire. (fn. 2) Until that part of Shalbourne which
abuts on the west was transferred from Berkshire to
Wiltshire in 1894, Ham, with its southern neighbour
Buttermere, formed a peninsular jutting eastwards
into Berkshire. (fn. 3) Hungerford (Berks.), the nearest
town, is 6 km. north-east. Ham comprises 669 ha.
(1,652 a.). (fn. 4) The northern half of the parish is
rectangular. The village stands in its north-west
corner centred upon a small green. A few dwellings
lie along the north side of Spray Road which leads
eastwards from the village. South of Ham a few
houses stand on either side of the secondary road to
Fosbury, in Tidcombe and Fosbury. The southern
portion of Ham consists of a tail of land projecting
south-westwards from the rectangle. The parish is
3 km. broad on a line north of the village to the area
in the north-east corner called Spray. There a
scatter of houses and cottages stands along the south
side of Spray Road. From north to south over Ham
hill the parish is also 3 km. long.
A belt of Upper Greensand extends from the
northern boundary of Ham southwards for c. 1.5
km. (fn. 5) The broad terrace so formed lies around the
152 m. contour line and is locally called the vale of
Ham. (fn. 6) In 1976, as in former times, it was covered by
woodland in the north-east corner at Spray. (fn. 7) Beyond
the vale successive strata of Lower, Middle, and
Upper Chalk outcrop on the broad open scarp of
the downs, the site of the former open fields and
still mostly under arable cultivation in 1976. The
chalk pit cut in the escarpment on the east side of
the road to Fosbury may have been in use in the
later 19th century. (fn. 8) On the crest of the downs, on
Ham hill, a height of 256 m. is reached. The figure
of a horse was cut out there by Charles Wright,
owner of the Ham Spray estate from 1869 to 1879,
but afterwards became overgrown. (fn. 9) There is a
deposit of clay-with-flints in the south-east corner
of the parish. South of Ham hill the Upper Chalk
dips gently away across the tail of the parish, once
occupied by old inclosures, to about 183 m. on the
southern boundary.
Although the greensand vale was apparently not
settled until Saxon times, (fn. 10) the uplands of Ham
provide evidence of prehistoric and Roman activity.
An ancient ridge way crosses the summit of the
downs and forms that part of the parish boundary
which runs from Ham hill eastwards to Inkpen
(Berks.). Two primary cremations were found in
a bowl-barrow near the eastern parish boundary
north of that track. Another bowl-barrow on Ham
hill may once have had a ditch. (fn. 11) The remains of a
ditch running north-eastwards from Collingbourne
Kingston are visible inside the south-western
boundary. (fn. 12) Another ditch runs for a short distance
on a north-south course on the west side of the road
south of Ham hill. (fn. 13) Roman foundations were found
near Inwood copse on the north-eastern parish
boundary. (fn. 14) The East Wansdyke may have formed
part of Ham's north-eastern boundary. (fn. 15)
In 1377 119 people were assessed for the poll
tax. (fn. 16) The smallness of the population of Ham in
the Middle Ages and later is indicated by the
insignificant amounts the parish contributed to
various taxations, and by the fact that it was sometimes combined for assessment with other small
areas. In 1524 it was assessed with Henley, in
Buttermere, part of Kinwardstone hundred, and in
1545 with Haxton in Fittleton. (fn. 17) The population,
when first officially enumerated in 1801, was 188. (fn. 18)
Numbers rose to 195 in 1811 but dropped to 171 in
1821. Thereafter a steady increase took the population to 255 in 1871. There were only 199 people in
the parish in 1881, but 241 in 1891. The population
declined gradually to 160 in 1921. It rose to 179 in
1931 but afterwards declined once more. (fn. 19) In 1971
149 people lived in the parish. (fn. 20)
Most lanes which ran through Ham in the later
18th century and in the earlier 19th century, if not
still in use as roads, could be traced as footpaths or
tracks in 1976. (fn. 21) The secondary road which runs
from the Hungerford-Andover road at Shalbourne
eastwards through the village towards Inkpen on
a course parallel to the ridge way may also be of
considerable age. Its course east of Ham at Spray,
called Spray Road in 1877, lay between greensand
embankments, and it was overhung by numerous
mature trees including many beeches. Such steep
wooded banks also enclose the lane which winds
south from Ham village. That part of the lane south
of Ham hill was called Ashley drove in 1877. The
courses of Field and Pills lanes, so named in 1877,
which led respectively west to Shalbourne and east
to Ham Spray House, could still be seen south of the
village as tracks in 1976. (fn. 22)
Ham's site, enfolded in the downs and approached
from east and south by sunken lanes often overhung
by trees, emphasizes its seclusion and rural character.
The centre of the village clusters round a triangular
green formed from a small greensand outcrop
formerly surmounted by trees. North of the green
stands Ham Cross and to the north-west Dove's,
formerly the Laurels, houses respectively of 17th and 18th-century date. Huddling close to the roadside to the west and south-east of it are several large
cottages with thatched roofs: they are mostly
timber-framed with brick infilling and of 17th- and
18th-century date. The Crown and Anchor inn, so
named in the 19th century and apparently of that
date, is said to have been formed from two cottages.
Another inn, the Cross Keys, stood inside the
northern parish boundary beside the lane leading
from the green to Shalbourne in the 19th century. (fn. 23)
Its site was marked in 1976 by a modern house. At
the green's south-west corner, south of the school,
a formerly semicircular lane, Church Road, branches
south-westwards down a slight incline. (fn. 24) At its
western end the church stands on a rise in the
ground, and beyond it the Manor is screened by
a well established yew hedge. The lane formerly
rejoined the Ham-Fosbury road west of the drive
to East Court but ceased at the Manor in 1976. (fn. 25)
Scattered settlement south of the village on either
side of the Ham-Fosbury road includes a few
cottages of similar type and date to those at the
green, and some dwellings of 20th-century construction. Beyond them Manor Farm, originally a
cottage of 17th-century date and converted to a
farm-house in the 19th century, stands on the west
side of the road. The few council houses south of
Manor Farm date from the mid 20th century. On the
opposite side of the road Copyhold Farm formerly
lay east of a short drive. New Buildings, the only
dwelling in the tail of the parish and of later-19th-century date, stands in a high and exposed position
on open downland. The house was occupied as two
cottages in 1976, as it was in the earlier 20th
century. (fn. 26)
East of the green, beyond the two former rectoryhouses, a few more substantial houses, concealed
behind high embankments, and beyond them to the
east some council houses, were built on the north
side of Spray Road in the earlier 20th century.
Further east, on the south side of the road, Acorn
and Breach Cottages are of similar date. Ham Spray
House stands south-east of them at the end of a long
drive from Spray Road. Wan's Dyke End, which
stands east of Ham Spray House in Captain's copse,
is approached from Spray Road by a double drive.
It is a large house built in 18th-century style by
G. E. Huth in the 1920s. (fn. 27)
Manors and other Estates.
In 931
Athelstan granted his thegn Wulfgar 9 cassati at
Ham. (fn. 28) Soon after Wulfgar devised the estate to his
wife Aeffe for life with remainder to the Old Minster,
Winchester. (fn. 29) By 1086 its profits had been assigned
by the bishop to support the monks there. (fn. 30) The
estate was confirmed to the convent by the bishop
in 1284. (fn. 31) In 1300 the prior and convent were
granted free warren in their demesne lands at Ham. (fn. 32)
They retained the manor of HAM, the profits of
which were assigned to the conventual chamberlain
from at least the early 14th century, until the
Dissolution. (fn. 33)
In 1541 the Crown granted the manor to the new
cathedral chapter of Winchester, which remained
owner until the 19th century. (fn. 34) The chapter
forfeited the estate in 1649 when the parliamentary
trustees granted the farm-house and demesne of
c. 304 a. to Henry and Thomas Hunt of Ham, and
the remainder of the land and the manorial rights
to Hugh Whistler of Faccombe (Hants) and
another, (fn. 35) but it was restored. Until 1828 the estate
contained some land in Buttermere. At that date
the Buttermere land was exchanged with the owner
of East Court farm, whose land it abutted, for land
in Ham. (fn. 36) In 1839 the manorial estate comprised
a leasehold demesne farm of 384 a., a copyhold of
51 a. (later called Copyhold farm), and a holding of
482 a. formed from numerous small copyholds in
the east part of the parish. (fn. 37) The larger copyhold
farm was enfranchised in favour of the tenant in
1847. (fn. 38) Its later descent is described below.
The remainder of the chapter's Ham estate
became vested in the Ecclesiastical Commissioners
in 1861. Six years later they regranted to the chapter
as a permanent endowment 612 a., west of the HamFosbury road, which included Ham Manor and its
grounds, and Manor and Copyhold farms. (fn. 39) In 1914
the estate was sold by the Commissioners to S. W.
Farmer (d. 1926), who already owned Dove's and
East Court farms. (fn. 40) By 1928 S. R. Brown had
acquired Farmer's Ham estate of 1,350 a. and in
that year he offered it for sale in the following
lots: Ham Manor and its grounds of 44 a., Manor
farm (324 a.), Dove's (also called the Laurels) farm
(267 a.), East Court (also called Canning's) farm
(236 a.), and New Buildings farm (241 a.). (fn. 41) East
Court farm was then bought by G. E. Huth, and in
1930 New Buildings farm was the property of A. D.
and Catherine M. Hart. (fn. 42) Dove's farm was owned
by F. Hill in 1939. (fn. 43) S. R. Brown apparently retained Ham Manor and Manor farm and was still
lord in 1959. (fn. 44) In 1976 house and farm were in
separate ownership.
By the later 16th century the Hunt family had
established themselves as demesne farmers at Ham.
John Hunt(d. 1590) devised his lease of the demesne
to his wife Christian. On her death shortly afterwards the lease seems to have passed to one of the
Hunts of Ashampstead (Berks.). (fn. 45) The Hunts
remained lessees into the 18th century. (fn. 46) In 1780
John Hunt Watts (d. 1813) was farmer. (fn. 47) Another
John Hunt Watts was lessee until his death in 1829
when Manor farm passed to his brother Francis
R. Watts (d. 1867). (fn. 48) Henry D. Woodman was lessee
in the later 19th century. (fn. 49)
Ham Manor originally comprised a timberframed east-west range built in the 16th century, of
the same length as the present south front. That
house was enlarged in the later 17th century by the
conversion of either end to a cross-wing. The south
front has a central clock turret of uncertain date
housing a 17th-century mechanism. Additions,
mostly of brick, were made to the north in the 18th
and 19th centuries. (fn. 50) The inside of the house was
rearranged, and a new staircase introduced, c. 1800.
Much 17th-century panelling was then reset in the
entrance hall and on the first floor. An early-18th-century pigeon-house stands south-east of the
house. North-west of the house are the remnants of
a garden enclosed by formally arranged box and
yew hedges of considerable age. A rectangular
ornamental mound, possibly of 17th-century origin,
stands in the west part of the garden.
In 1086 an estate of 2 hides, previously granted
by a bishop of Winchester, was held of the bishop
by William Scudet. (fn. 51) It is probably to be identified
with that known from the 17th century as the manor
of HAM or EAST COURT. (fn. 52) The overlordship
of what was apparently that estate was held by
William Marshal, earl of Pembroke (d. 1219), and
descended like the manor of Hampstead Marshall
(Berks.). (fn. 53) It is last mentioned in 1362 when it was
held by Isabel, daughter of Edward III. (fn. 54)
What was probably William Scudet's land was
held by John of Ham in 1249. In that year John
granted 2 hides in Ham to Adam of Portland and
his wife Isabel. Adam and Isabel in return conveyed
a life interest in the capital messuage and half the
estate to him for 10s. yearly. (fn. 55) In 1287 William of
Ham held what seems to be the same property,
which then included land at Spray and at Moordown in Buttermere. In that year he granted a life
estate therein to Isabel of Ham. (fn. 56) Walter of Ham
apparently held the estate in the early 14th century
and before 1317 granted it to Richard Polhampton
and his wife Margaret. (fn. 57) After Richard's death in
1317 the lands passed to his widow. (fn. 58) In 1320
Margaret seems to have reconveyed the entire
estate to Walter of Ham. Walter retained about a
third, but regranted two-thirds and the reversion of
two small estates of 16 a. and 40 a. to Margaret (d.
1331) for life with remainder to her son Richard. (fn. 59)
The estate so acquired by Margaret was held in
1362 by Geoffrey Polhampton and his wife Christine. (fn. 60) Although its descent is thereafter obscure,
it evidently remained in the Polhampton family
until the later 17th century. John Polhampton (will
proved 1619) devised his farm at Ham to his son
John. (fn. 61) In 1668 another John Polhampton, perhaps
the younger John's son, his wife Anne, and William
and Adam Polhampton, conveyed the property to
Ferdinand Gunter. (fn. 62) He may perhaps have been an
assignee of Thomas Gunter, to whom the estate was
mortgaged in 1666, and who seems to have been in
possession by 1672. (fn. 63) Through Thomas's eldest
daughter, Margaret, who married Thomas Brotherton, the estate passed to the Brotherton family. (fn. 64)
William Browne Brotherton was owner from at least
1780 to the early 1820s. (fn. 65) In 1822 Thomas W. B.
Brotherton was owner. (fn. 66) East Court Manor farm,
or East Court farm, as it was called from the 19th
century, was in the possession of Thomas Cowderoy
in 1825 and he retained it until at least 1831. (fn. 67) In
1828 he added more land in Buttermere, formerly
held by copy of Ham manor, to the farm by exchange. (fn. 68) The Revd. John Bushnell was owner of
the farm, 279 a., in 1839. (fn. 69) By 1843 John Canning
had acquired it. (fn. 70) It was as the property of H. D.
Woodman, however, that it was sold to S. W.
Farmer in 1908. (fn. 71) After 1914 it became part of the
Ham manor estate. (fn. 72)
East Court, as the farm-house from which the
estate was worked until the earlier 20th century was
called in 1976, stands at the south-eastern corner
of Ham village. (fn. 73) It comprises two 17th-century
ranges which form an L-shaped plan. The earlier
eastern wing is timber-framed. The later wing,
which extends the south front, was apparently
refronted in the 18th century. The entire house was
considerably altered in the 19th century and was
extended and refitted c. 1965.
The estate known variously as Ham Spray farm,
Spray farm, or the Spray (fn. 74) originated in a copyhold
farm built up in the north-east of the parish in the
early 19th century, (fn. 75) and in 1847, when it comprised
482 a., enfranchised by Winchester chapter for its
tenant William Woodman (d. 1862). Woodman was
apparently succeeded there by H. D. Woodman (d.
1915). (fn. 76) Charles Wright bought the property in 1869.
Ten years later his Ham Spray estate was offered
for sale and apparently repurchased by H. D.
Woodman. (fn. 77) In the earlier 20th century Ham Spray
House, from which the estate was worked in the
19th century, and the farm were in separate ownership. (fn. 78) In 1976 the farm was owned by Mr. Gerald
Boord.
Ham Spray House was bought in 1924 by Ralph
Partridge (d. 1960) and the critic and biographer
Lytton Strachey (d. 1932). (fn. 79) The original house of
c. 1830 was a two-storeyed villa with a principal
five-bay south front facing the downs. (fn. 80) It was
considerably enlarged to the north and east in the
later 19th century. During Lytton Strachey's
occupation much of the interior was redecorated by
his friends, particularly Dora Carrington, the
painter (Mrs. Ralph Partridge, d. 1932), and Boris
Anrep, the mosaicist. Nothing of their work
remained in 1976. Guy Elwes, who bought the house
in 1961, added a westerly bay to the north-west
drawing-room and replanned and redecorated the
interior.
The farm called Dove's in the 19th century
occupied some 77 a. in the north-west corner of the
parish and may have originated in the estate held
by John Clarke in the later 13th century or the
early 14th. (fn. 81) Another John Clarke was a freeholder
in 1525, and Richard Clarke held what was presumably the same land in 1578. (fn. 82) It is possibly to be
identified with the estate held by Daniel Dove in
1672. (fn. 83) F. R. Watts (d. 1867) was owner in the
earlier 19th century and worked the estate from
Dove's Farmhouse, in 1976 called Ham Cross. (fn. 84)
The farm was afterwards acquired by H. D. Woodman who sold in 1908 to S. W. Farmer. (fn. 85) After 1914
it became part of the Ham manor estate. (fn. 86)
Ham Cross, which stands north of the green, is
probably of 17th-century origin. The house is
partly timber-framed and originally comprised a
main east-west range of three or four rooms with
a short rear wing. An upstairs room retains 17th-century panelling. There are also several dividing
walls of heavy framed oak panelling. During the
18th century the walls of the west end of the main
range were rebuilt in flint with brick dressings. The
east end of that range was completely rebuilt in the
earlier 20th century, possibly after a fire.
Economic History.
In 1066 the capital
manor was assessed for geld on 10½ hides and ½
virgate and was worth £6. In 1086 there was land
enough for 7 ploughs. The 5½ demesne hides, to
which 1 serf was attached, maintained 3 of those
ploughs and were worth £9. Elsewhere on the estate
there were 9 villeins and 10 coscez with 3 ploughs.
There were 8 a. of meadow, pasture 3 furlongs long
and 1 furlong broad, and woodland 6 furlongs long
and 3 furlongs broad. The 2 hides William Scudet
held of the capital manor, the later East Court
farm, were worth £3 in 1086. (fn. 87) Of that estate, and
of the other small freehold farm, Dove's, which
emerged by the early 14th century, (fn. 88) little is known
until the 19th century.
The manor was worth £16 in 1210, of which £4
represented the assessed rents. (fn. 89) It was taxed at
£13 14s. 8d. in 1291. (fn. 90) At least from the 14th century
to the 17th the manorial revenues included a payment of £3 yearly from the lord of Buttermere. (fn. 91)
In the early 14th century, and until the Dissolution,
the profits of Ham manor belonged to the conventual
chamberlain of St. Swithun's. (fn. 92) In the earlier 15th
century he received £19 yearly from Ham, and £23
in the later 15th century and the earlier 16th. (fn. 93)
With the chamberlain's Hampshire manors of
Chilbolton and West Meon the manor formed part
of an economic unit in which interchange of workers,
stock, and produce was usual. Chilbolton tenants
were apparently required to work in the woods at
Ham, while certain Ham tenants were bound to
drive stock to Chilbolton. Wool and cheeses were
apparently sent direct to St. Swithun's. (fn. 94) The usual
sheep-and-corn husbandry prevailed. (fn. 95) In addition
Ham's abundant woodland yielded a considerable
nut harvest. (fn. 96)
From at least the 16th century to the earlier 17th
the manorial demesne, which lay mostly south of
the manor-house and west of the Ham-Fosbury
road, was let for 21-year terms at £7 6s. 8d. yearly.
Edmund Polhampton was farmer in 1502 and
Thomas Faller from at least 1545 to 1572. (fn. 97) The
Hunts and their successors the Wattses were
farmers from the later 16th century to the mid 19th. (fn. 98)
In 1649 the farm comprised 302 a., of which 13 a.
were inclosed meadow, 52 a. pasture, and 212 a.
arable worth 3s. an acre. (fn. 99) In 1779, of the farm's
overall area of 400 a., 120 a. were open field arable,
101 a. inclosed arable under the hill, and 54 a.
inclosed arable on the hill. (fn. 100) At parliamentary
inclosure in 1828 the demesne farmer was allotted
384 a. for his land, both in the open fields and old
inclosures. (fn. 101)
In the early 14th century there were 7 virgaters,
12½-virgaters, 9 tenants with 10 cottage holdings,
and 7 tenants who held messuages. Several tenants
also held small plots of 'forripelond'. The virgaters
each held 30 a. for which they owed rents of 5s.
yearly and corn-rents. Besides the usual agricultural
duties they gathered nuts and apples. The ½virgaters each held 15 a. and owed half the virgaters'
duties. They each had to provide two men to reap at
autumn boon-work, and from them were chosen the
woodward and hayward. The cottagers held 10 a.
each for 2s. yearly. Their duties included threshing
and reaping and their wives were bound to wash
the sheep. From them were drawn the ploughman,
shepherd, and swineherd. Those who held messuages mostly held 5 a. each for 1s. yearly and the
duties of driving animals to Chilbolton and of
hoeing and reaping. (fn. 102) In 1649 there were 25 copyholders within the manor: 1 held 2 yardlands,
2 held 1½ yardland, and 8 held 1 yardland. Four
holdings were apparently at Henley, in Buttermere,
adjoining the south-east side of the parish. The
total copyhold land of the manor was estimated to
be 474 a., of which 14 a. were meadow and the rest,
of which 5 a. were inclosed, arable. Of the 93 a.
then said to be at Henley 79 a. were inclosed. (fn. 103)
About 1687 24 copyholders held 541 a. within Ham
manor. Only one copyhold, of c. 30 a., was then
expressly described as at Henley. (fn. 104) That land was
exchanged at inclosure in 1828 for land in Ham
belonging to East Court farm. (fn. 105) The accumulation
of copyhold estates in the hands of a few tenants
seems to have taken place during the 18th century.
In 1828 the most substantial of the six copyholders,
who held 748 a. mostly in the east part of the parish,
was John Hunt Watts, the demesne farmer, who
had acquired fourteen copyhold estates totalling
681 a. (fn. 106) In 1839 the copyhold farm later known as
Ham Spray was reckoned at 482 a. and tenanted by
F. R. Watts. (fn. 107)
In the 16th century pasture was situated at Spray. (fn. 108)
Then, and in the 17th century, tenants of the manor
who held land at Henley had pasture rights on
Ashley common, which probably lay at the extreme
south end of the parish. (fn. 109) A common at Ham was
inclosed in the mid 17th century. (fn. 110) The open fields
of the parish extended from the southern outskirts
of the village to the scarp of the downs. They were
called East, West, Up, Little, and Pills fields in the
later 17th century and in the earlier 19th Great,
Little, and Pidget fields, and the Down. (fn. 111) By 1828
some 975 a. in the parish, which represented all the
land in Ham except open field arable, had already
been inclosed. When the open fields, 639 a., were
inclosed, however, that land was re-allotted. Besides
the allotments already mentioned, Thomas Cowderoy received 320 a. for East Court farm and F. R.
Watts 77 a. for Dove's farm. (fn. 112)
Ham, abundantly wooded in the 11th century, in
the 13 th century was considered to lie within
Savernake forest. (fn. 113) In the early 14th century
tenants at Henley held Henley wood at will of the
lord of Ham. (fn. 114) There were 22 a. of coppices on the
demesne in 1649. The 423 trees, mostly oaks, were
worth 10s. 6d. each, and the 800 saplings 2s. each.
The total value of the demesne timber was then
£209. The tenants were allowed timber from
Ashley common to repair their houses. (fn. 115) Ham
coppices, 19 a., which comprised Thorney Down
and Gibbs coppices and a coppice on the hill, and
represented most of the demesne woods, were
leased separately in 1779 and in the earlier 19th
century. (fn. 116) In 1839 Ham contained 113 a. of woodland. The demesne farm's woodland, 60 a., lay in
the south-west part of the parish and in the north-east part at Spray. The largest coppices were Spray
Way, 24 a., Grubbed Mead, 9 a., and Inlands, 7 a.
The Ham Spray estate then contained 34 a. including
South Close coppice, 18 a., and Pidget and Gibbs
coppices. (fn. 117) The area around Spray still bore a fairly
thick cover of deciduous trees in 1976.
By 1867 H. D. Woodman had leased 499 a. of
the manorial estate from the Ecclesiastical Commissioners and he worked it from Manor Farm. (fn. 118)
He seems to have secured a lease of Ham manor and
the 113 a. surrounding it some time afterwards. (fn. 119)
S. W. Farmer (d. 1926), of the firm of Frank
Stratton & Co., became tenant of much of Woodman's Ham Spray land and in 1909 farmed some
700 a. in the north and east parts of the parish as
both owner and tenant. (fn. 120) It was probably he who
varied the arable farming prevalent in the parish by
the introduction of dairy herds. (fn. 121)
In 1976 mixed farming prevailed at Ham. There
were then four farms in the parish: Manor, Dove's,
Ham Spray, and East Court. Of those, Ham Spray
and East Court were worked together by Mr.
Gerald Boord in conjunction with land elsewhere
in Wiltshire and Berkshire.
Local Government.
Records of courts of
Ham manor survive from the 14th century to the
19th century. (fn. 122) Ham apparently owed suit at
Kinwardstone hundred court until the 14th century
at least. (fn. 123) During that time the business of the Ham
courts was entirely manorial. In the 15th century,
however, the prior of St. Swithun's, who by then
seems to have detached Ham from Kinwardstone
and to have included it in his own hundred of
Elstub, over which he claimed extensive franchisal
jurisdiction, (fn. 124) held view of frankpledge within Ham
manor. The Ham courts, generally held once or
twice yearly, were thenceforth called successively
views of frankpledge, views of frankpledge and
courts, and views of frankpledge, courts leet, and
courts. At them a tithingman made presentments
and another tithingman was elected for the following
year. The manorial aspect of the court's affairs was
mostly limited to copyhold business and the
regulation of agricultural matters.
Accounts of the overseers of the poor run from
1683 to 1797. Sums disbursed during that time rose
from about £5 in 1683, to £45 in 1751, to £106 in the
year ending 1794. (fn. 125) Ham was included in the
Hungerford (Berks.) poor-law union in 1835. (fn. 126)
Until 1883, when they were sold, there were two
parish cottages in Ham. (fn. 127)
Church.
The bishop of Winchester confirmed
the right of St. Swithun's Priory to present rectors
to Ham church in 1172. (fn. 128) The priory, however,
ceded its right to the bishop in 1284. (fn. 129) Thereafter
the bishops of Winchester presented until the 19th
century, except in 1319 when the king presented
because the see was vacant, and in 1393 when, for
an unknown reason, Robert Kymberle presented. (fn. 130)
In 1869 the advowson was transferred to the bishop
of Oxford, who presented rectors until 1933 when
the rectory was united with that of Buttermere. (fn. 131)
The bishop was then entitled to present alternately
to the united benefice of Ham with Buttermere with
Windsor chapter, patron of Buttermere. (fn. 132) The
bishop of Oxford's turn was transferred to the bishop
of Salisbury in 1953. (fn. 133) In 1956 Shalbourne vicarage
was added to create the united benefice of Shalbourne and Ham. The bishop was to have the first
turn of presentation and Windsor chapter, as patron
of both Buttermere and Shalbourne, the second and
third turns. (fn. 134)
The rectory was assessed for taxation at £6 13s.
4d. in 1291. (fn. 135) It was valued at £13 in 1535. (fn. 136) The
living was let, generally for £20 yearly, in the later
16th century. (fn. 137) It was worth £70 yearly in 1650. (fn. 138)
From 1829 to 1831 the yearly average net value was
£457. (fn. 139)
The tithes of Ham apparently formed the sole
rectorial endowment until the later 14th century.
In 1363, however, Geoffrey Polhampton, owner of
the estate later called East Court manor, and his
wife Christine endowed the rector with 20 a. and
some meadow land at Ham. Although expressly
granted to support a chaplain to say mass daily in
the church, (fn. 140) the land was afterwards regarded as
glebe. It is to be identified as the glebe estate of a
little over 20 a., which lay scattered in East, West,
Up, Little, and Pills fields, described in the later
17th century. (fn. 141) By 1705 the rector no longer had
land in Little field but had acquired 5 a. in the 'new'
inclosure. (fn. 142) When the open fields were inclosed in
1828 the rector received an allotment of 20 a. north
and south of the then Rectory. (fn. 143) In 1839 he was
allotted a rent-charge of £435 to replace his tithes. (fn. 144)
In 1341 the rector had a house and garden. (fn. 145) The
rectory-house mentioned in the later 17th century
may have been that which in 1828 stood east of the
village on the north side of Spray Road. (fn. 146) The central
range and eastern cross-wing survive from the 17th-century house and originally had timber-framed walls
which by the earlier 19th century had either been
rebuilt in brick or encased with brick and mathematical tiling. In 1864 Charles S. Burder, rector from
1864 to c. 1900, replaced the west end of the house by
a tall brick cross-wing built to designs by Waring &
Blake of London. (fn. 147) The central range was later extended northwards by a block similar in design to
that of the west end. That Rectory was apparently sold
as a private dwelling, in 1976 called the Old Rectory,
and replaced by a modern house east of it some time
after 1933. (fn. 148) That, in 1976 called Field House, was
in turn sold after 1956 when Ham with Buttermere
was united with Shalbourne, where the incumbents
of the united benefice have since lived. (fn. 149)
Many rectors, at least from the 16th century,
probably did not live at Ham. Erasmus Webb,
rector 1582–1614, held other preferments including
a canonry of Windsor, and employed a curate at
Ham. (fn. 150) His successor Nicholas Darell (d. 1629),
rector 1614–18, was also a canon of Winchester. (fn. 151)
Robert Newlin, president of Corpus Christi College,
Oxford, was rector from 1643 until his death in
1688. (fn. 152) From 1660 he was also sinecure rector of
Wroughton. (fn. 153) Ham rectory was sequestered in 1646
and Henry Newlin, reported a zealous preacher,
intruded. (fn. 154) Richard Willowes and John Wilmer may
also have served Ham before Robert Newlin's
restoration in 1660. (fn. 155) At least during the second
part of Newlin's incumbency curates performed his
duties at Ham. (fn. 156) Curates, who apparently often
lived outside the parish, assisted the rectors in the
later 18th century and the earlier 19th century. (fn. 157)
From 1829 to 1831 the assistant curate received £60
yearly. (fn. 158) In 1783 an assistant curate held morning
and afternoon services at Ham each Sunday and
celebrated Holy Communion four times yearly. The
previous Easter about ten people had communicated. (fn. 159) On Census Sunday in 1851 129 people
attended morning and 137 afternoon service. (fn. 160)
Services were still held twice on Sundays in 1864. (fn. 161)
The church of ALL SAINTS is built of rubble
and brick with ashlar dressings, and comprises
chancel with south vestry, nave with west gallery
and north porch, and a west tower. (fn. 162) Both nave and
chancel appear to be of 13th-century construction,
and are lit by single lancet windows and a two-light
east window. That window was given a new head
in the 19th century. The tower was added in the
14th century. (fn. 163) Windows of nave and chancel were
reported broken in 1553. (fn. 164) The tower was reroofed
and perhaps heightened c. 1611. (fn. 165) The extensive
restoration which began c. 1733 and continued
intermittently throughout the 18th century obscured
many of the church's earlier features. The south
chancel wall and most of that of the nave were
rebuilt in 1733. (fn. 166) Other 18th-century alterations and
additions probably included the removal of the
chancel arch, and the renewal of the chancel's roof
and of the tower's casing. (fn. 167) A west gallery lit by
dormer windows to north and south was inserted.
The south nave wall was again repaired, and two
windows in 12th-century style inserted, in 1849. (fn. 168)
At the same time the vestry was added and the north
porch renewed. The 17th-century pulpit was lowered
in 1871. (fn. 169) Other fittings include a 17th-century altar
table and 18th-century altar rails. The church was
restored in 1896–7 and again in 1970. (fn. 170)
John Hunt (d. 1590) and his wife are depicted on
a monumental brass. (fn. 171) Richard Gillingham, rector
1688–1719, (fn. 172) is commemorated by a cartouche
ornamented with a shield of arms and heads of
putti. The churchyard, the north side of which is
shaded by yews of considerable age, contains,
amongst others, 18th- and 19th-century monuments
to members of the Hunt and Watts families.
In 1828 the churchwardens and overseers were
allotted c. ½ a. to the north-east of East Court when
the open fields were inclosed. The £1 rent from
Church Plot was used for church repairs. In 1905
it was paid to the church's expenses fund. (fn. 173) The
charity was deemed lost in 1976. (fn. 174)
In 1553 the king's commissioners took 2 oz. of
plate but left a chalice of 9 oz. That was probably
replaced by the cup and paten-cover hall-marked
1576 which the parish retained in 1976. There were
then also a paten of 1719 and a flagon hall-marked
and inscribed 1868. (fn. 175)
In 1976 as in 1553 there was a ring of four bells:
(i) founded in 1712 by William and Robert Cor;
(ii), (iii), and (iv) founded in 1663 by William
Purdue. The bell-frames were renewed in 1663. (fn. 176)
No registration of baptisms, burials, and marriages
earlier than 1720 was extant in 1783. Baptisms and
burials are recorded from 1720. Marriage registrations, which begin in 1722, appear to be lacking
from 1744 to 1755. (fn. 177)
Nonconformity.
No evidence of dissent in
the parish has been found.
Education.
In 1808 children were taught at
a 'petty' school in the parish. (fn. 178) A private school may
have existed at Ham ten years later. (fn. 179) Twenty
children, paid for by their parents, were taught at
a daily school in 1833. (fn. 180) In 1858 30–40 children
were taught by a mistress in a small schoolroom. (fn. 181)
That school was chiefly supported by the rector. (fn. 182)
On return day in 1871 24 boys and 37 girls, including
a few from Buttermere, attended the school, which
was by then connected with the National Society. (fn. 183)
New school buildings, which incorporated a teacher's
house, were provided in 1874 on the south-west side
of the green. (fn. 184) In 1906 an average of 53 children had
attended over the past year. (fn. 185) An average of just over
40 pupils attended until 1914 and thereafter numbers
declined gradually to 25 in 1938. (fn. 186) Some 40 children
from Ham and its neighbourhood were taught there
in 1976 by two teachers. (fn. 187)

Ham Spray House
Charities for the Poor.
John Hunt (d.
1719) (fn. 188) bequeathed £20 in trust, the interest to be
distributed yearly among the poor of Ham. Doles in
money or kind were apparently paid by the Hunt
family in the 18th century but no payment seems to
have been made after c. 1820. The charity was
deemed lost in 1834. (fn. 189)