OVERTON
Overton (fn. 1) was made up of two separate triangles
of land and contained approximately 7,000 a.
(2,834 ha.). (fn. 2) The main triangle stood 6 km. west
of Marlborough. (fn. 3) It comprised the chapelry of
Fyfield and the tithings of East Overton, which
contained the parish church, Lockeridge, Shaw, and
West Overton. A detached portion of West Overton
tithing, Overton Heath, lay in the south-east corner
of the triangle. The triangle measured 8 km. from
its apex north of New Totterdown in Fyfield to its
southern boundary south of Wansdyke and was
crossed from east to west by the river Kennet and
the London—Bath road. The settlement in West and
East Overton, called West Overton village from the
later 18th century, (fn. 4) and that in Lockeridge are all
immediately south of the river. Further east the
village of Fyfield lies mainly north of the river with
some settlement to its east on the north side of the
London—Bath road. The base of the triangle a little
south of Wansdyke measured some 5 km. The
southern and eastern sides of the triangle followed no
physical feature. The eastern boundary between
Fyfield and Clatford, in Preshute, was revised by
the inclosure commissioners in 1819. (fn. 5) To the west
an ancient ridge way, which follows the western
summits of the Marlborough Downs, separated the
triangle from Winterbourne Monkton, Avebury, and
East Kennett.

Overton in the Early 19th Century
The second triangle, 6 km. south-west of West
Overton church, comprised the chapelry of Alton
Priors and was separated from the first by that part
of Shaw which was in Alton Barnes. It was separated
on the south-west from Alton Barnes by an ancient
track which ran southwards from Walker's hill to
the two Altons and south of them by the stream,
from which those settlements derived their name,
flowing south from Broad Well spring to join the
Christchurch Avon. The chapelry contained Alton
Priors tithing, West Stowell tithing, which formed
a spur-like projection east of Alton Priors, and a
small detached rectangle, the Black Horse, 1.5 km.
east of West Stowell and geographically in Wilcot.
Alton Priors village was ranged along the southwest boundary with Alton Barnes while the hamlet
of West Stowell clustered in the north-east corner
of the spur. Alton Priors took its suffix from its
ownership by the priory of St. Swithun, Winchester.
For a short time in the later 16th century, when the
Crown held the manor there, the village was called
Queen's Alton. (fn. 6) It is 11 km. south-west from
Marlborough. From its northern boundary south of
Furze hill in East Kennett the chapelry measured
a little over 3 km. to its southern boundary north of
Woodborough hill in Woodborough, and about the
same distance from west to east on a line with the
lane linking Alton Priors village with the hamlet of
West Stowell.
Shaw township originally constituted a diamondshaped wedge between Overton and Alton Barnes.
Shaw village, which straddled the Wansdyke 3 km.
south of West Overton village, was apparently
deserted in the earlier 15th century. (fn. 7) It may have
been then that the township was divided into two
triangles, of which the northern was attached to
Overton as a tithing and the southern to Alton
Barnes. It is likely, however, that the boundary
between them was not finally fixed until Shaw down,
common to both Shaws, was inclosed in 1674. (fn. 8)
Since the church was in that part allotted to Alton
Barnes, most aspects of Shaw's history have been
treated elsewhere. (fn. 9)
It is probable that Overton Heath and Clatford
Park, which both lay on the western fringe of
Savernake forest, were originally part of an estate
at Rainscombe, in North Newnton, given in 934 to
the abbey of Wilton. (fn. 10) In the earlier 18th century,
and probably much earlier, the portion then called
the land at Savernake park, and later Overton Heath,
was considered part of West Overton manor and
township, also a former Wilton property. (fn. 11) Since it
had once lain within the forest the land remained
tithe-free and was therefore deemed an extraparochial place in the 19th century. (fn. 12) The crescent
shaped area north of Overton Heath, also tithe-free,
was called Clatford Park from the 16th century and
remained unattached to any parish. It was bounded
on the north by the Wansdyke. Its southern
boundary may have been established when the land
was imparked. Both Overton Heath and Clatford
Park were deemed civil parishes in the later 19th
century. (fn. 13)
In the earlier 19th century the tithings of West
Overton, East Overton, and Lockeridge, in one of
which Shaw tithing was probably then included,
were a poor-law parish of 1,719 ha. (4,248 a.) called
West Overton. (fn. 14) The chapelries of Alton Priors and
Fyfield then each relieved their own poor. (fn. 15) That
apparently led the Census enumerators of 1841 to
class Fyfield, with its medieval chapel, incorrectly
as an ancient parish. (fn. 16) All three became civil
parishes in the later 19th century and as such are
dealt with separately below.
In 1885 the detached fragment of Alton Priors
called the Black Horse, reckoned to contain some
75 a. (30 ha.), was transferred to Wilcot, and Shaw
in Alton Barnes to Alton Priors. (fn. 17) The area of Alton
Priors was thereafter 1,909 a. (773 ha.). (fn. 18) The two
small civil parishes of Clatford Park, 310 a. (125 ha.),
and Overton Heath, 124 a. (50 ha.), were merged in
1895 and called the civil parish of Clatford Park. (fn. 19)
That in the following year became part of the civil
parish of Fyfield, increasing Fyfield's area from
1,121 a. (454 ha.) to 629 ha. (1,555 a.) (fn. 20) In 1934
Alton Priors and Alton Barnes were merged to form
the civil parish of Alton. (fn. 21)
West Overton.
The civil parish comprises two
exposed chalk masses transected by the alluvium and
associated gravel terraces of the Kennet valley. The
two areas in most respects mirror one another. (fn. 22)
Around the northern apex, which stands at about
254 m., and at the south end, slightly lower-lying
around the 213 m. contour, the Upper Chalk is
overlain by clay-with-flints. The south-eastern
deposits support extensive woodland called Pumphrey wood and West Woods. (fn. 23) On Overton down
the Upper Chalk, particularly around Down and
Pickledean barns, is strewn with hard siliceous
sandstones called sarsen stones, or, from their
resemblance at a distance to a flock of sheep, grey
wethers. Similar scatters occur west of Lockeridge
House on the chalk beyond the south bank of the
Kennet and in Lockeridge dene. (fn. 24) Those in Pickledean and Lockeridge dene have been under the
protection of the National Trust since the early 20th
century. (fn. 25) From Overton down the land slopes
gently downwards to the south for 4 km. across the
Upper and Middle Chalk of the dip slope of the
Marlborough Downs. That area was the site of
the open fields and was still mostly arable in 1977.
Similarly in the south part of the parish the land
inclines from 223 m. on Boreham down northwards
for over 3 km. across the chalk, in 1977 largely
arable, to the valley cut out by the Kennet below
152 m. South of the river the alluvium bears a cover
of rich pasture land, once the site of extensive water-meadows. Beyond it to the south gravel deposits provide the terrace 1 km. wide on which the village of
West Overton grew up. Both north and south of the
river the chalk strata have been breached by headstreams, their beds long since dry, which gouged out
valleys, or deans, at right angles to the Kennet. The
courses of those valleys at Pickledean, Lockeridge
dene, and Hursley bottom are mostly characterized
by gravel deposits. It was in Lockeridge dene that the
hamlet of Lockeridge, which lies nearly 2 km. east
of West Overton but at about the same height, grew
up on an exposed tongue of Middle Chalk.
West Overton tithing, which lies on the periphery
of an area of considerable prehistoric settlement, has
been the scene of human activity from Neolithic
times. (fn. 26) Numerous barrows of various types, some
of which have associated inhumations and cremations, as well as artefacts of the Neolithic Period and
the Bronze Age, have been found. (fn. 27) A group of seven
bowl-barrows on Overton hill and another four near
North Farm have given rise locally to the names
Sevenbarrow hill and Four Hill fields. (fn. 28) An ancient
ditch extends across Overton down from Avebury. (fn. 29) The chalk uplands north and west of North
Farm seem to have been particularly favoured as
a settlement site from the Iron Age. North-west of
the farm-house an Iron-Age enclosure of some 2 ha.
is surrounded by a bank and ditch. (fn. 30) There are
Romano-British settlement sites north of the Bell
inn, in the coomb near Down barn, and further
north on Overton down. Both the Down barn and
Overton down areas contain numerous hut sites
which possibly represent the villages of coloni attached to larger estates. The Overton down settlement, which is of the later 3rd or earlier 4th century,
is associated with an earlier field system to the
south-west. (fn. 31) Also on Overton down are the remains
of some funerary monuments of Roman date which
have occasionally been mistaken for bowl-barrows.
Their mounds, which may originally have been
drum-shaped with ditches and fences around,
contained cremations and, so far as is known, are
unique in the British Isles. (fn. 32) A field system, possibly
of Romano-British date, extends into West Overton
from Avebury and Winterbourne Monkton. (fn. 33) A
contemporary field system extends over 8 ha. west
of Boreham wood and another of early-Iron-Age
date over 44 ha. on Boreham down. (fn. 34) The Wansdyke
crosses West Overton south of Shaw House and
continues eastwards through West Woods. (fn. 35)
Although the settlements in the civil parish of West
Overton were in different hundreds for administrative purposes, several medieval taxation assessments
show that together they represented a fairly
prosperous unit. (fn. 36) There were 37 poll-tax payers in
West Overton, 41 in Lockeridge, and 63 in East
Overton tithings in 1377. (fn. 37) In the later 16th century
and the earlier 17th East Overton and West Overton,
which for taxation purposes may then have included
Lockeridge, contained several inhabitants prosperous
enough to be assessed at large sums. (fn. 38) In 1801 there
were 172 people living in East Overton, (fn. 39) the same
number in West Overton, and 194 in Lockeridge.
The total number living in the three townships had
increased to 563 in 1811 and to 734 by 1821. The
emigration of a Lockeridge farmer and some of his
men to Australia in 1830 may have accounted for
the slight decrease in population to 718 by 1831. (fn. 40)
Numbers had increased to 791 by 1841 but thereafter in general showed a decline. The decrease in
the population of East and West Overton townships
noted in 1871 had apparently occurred because
houses there had been demolished, while Lockeridge's population had increased slightly because
new houses had been built. (fn. 41) Thereafter numbers
declined until in 1931 there were 454 people living
in the civil parish. In 1971 there were 478 people
living in West Overton. (fn. 42)
Most roads and lanes which served West Overton
in the later 18th century were either still in use or
could be traced as tracks in 1977. (fn. 43) Of the numerous
ancient thoroughfares which cross the downs north
of the Kennet one, later than the field system which
it crosses, led from the eastern entrance of Avebury
eastwards across Overton down, where it branched
out into numerous tracks, to Marlborough. It
probably continued in use until fairly recent times. (fn. 44)
An ancient ridge way runs along the western parish
boundary. (fn. 45) The course of the Roman road from
Mildenhall to Bath may be traced a short distance
north of the London-Bath road west of North
Farm. (fn. 46) The London—Bath road itself was turnpiked in 1743. (fn. 47) Much of its traffic had, however,
been diverted to the motorway 12 km. to the north
by 1977. Within West Overton village only two
changes of any significance have taken place in the
network of lanes. The first was the building c. 1819
of New Road on the north side of a tract of open
arable, probably at the time of parliamentary
inclosure. (fn. 48) The second was the incorporation into
the churchyard, probably c. 1877, of the eastern end
of the lane running south of the Old Manor. (fn. 49) The
lane north of the Kennet linking Lockeridge with
Fyfield was a footpath in 1977. (fn. 50) Another lane, no
trace of which remained in 1977, led north-westwards from it in the later 18th century to join
the lane running northwards past Lockeridge House
to the London-Bath road. (fn. 51)
Where it flows in wide meanders eastwards
through West Overton the Kennet is no more than
a sluggish stream except after heavy rain. Since
water is extracted from near-by chalk strata to supply
Swindon and Marlborough its bed is often dry in
the low-water season from June to December. (fn. 52) By
the later 18th century the river had been bridged
east of the mill in West Overton tithing and in East
Overton tithing south of the George inn. There may
also have been a footbridge carrying a lane across
the river mid-way between those bridges on the
tithing boundary between East and West Overton. (fn. 53)
The George bridge, which took its name from the
near-by inn, was rebuilt, and the road it carried
widened, c. 1929. (fn. 54) South of Lockeridge House
the river appears to have been crossed by a ford
in the later 18th century. (fn. 55) A bridge seems to have
been built by 1816. (fn. 56)
Although the London—Bath road crossed the
parish, the nearness of Marlborough discouraged
the establishment of inns in West Overton. The
George, first mentioned in 1736, stood on the south
side of the main road west of the lane leading into
the eastern end of Overton village. (fn. 57) No mention of
it after 1827 has been found. (fn. 58) The New Inn, first
mentioned in 1819, changed its name c. 1823 to
the Bell. (fn. 59) That inn, which was enlarged at various
dates in the 19th century, stands further west on
the south side of the main road at its junction with
the lane leading to West Overton Farm. By 1906
Lockeridge had two inns. The Masons' Arms, once
apparently called the New Found Out, stood near
the green at the south-west end of the hamlet's
main street. It closed c. 1956. (fn. 60) That later called the
Who'd 'a Thought It stands further north on the
west side of the road. (fn. 61)
In the earlier 20th century there were two bands
in West Overton, the Overton Mission Band based
at the Primitive Methodist chapel in West Overton,
and the Lockeridge Prize Band. They were amalgamated c. 1934 to form the Kennet Vale Silver
Band which still flourished in 1977. (fn. 62)
The village of West Overton lies entirely south of
the Kennet and is approached by two lanes running
south from the London—Bath road. West Overton
Farm stands at the village's western entrance whence
the main street runs almost imperceptibly uphill
towards the church, which stands on a knoll with
the Old Manor and the former Vicarage (now called
Overton House) to the west. Most of the older
houses are on the wide gravel terrace close to the
street and to another road, parallel to the street,
which runs along the southern side of the valley
floor. South Farm, the most substantial of them,
has a long south range with sarsen walls which is
probably of the 17th century. That range was
partly rebuilt in brick c. 1800 and a north wing
added at its eastern end to provide a new symmetrical
entrance front. New windows were inserted in that
front in the later 19th century. Houses which lay on
the north bank of the Kennet east of the lane leading
from the New Inn (later the Bell) in the later 18th
century and the earlier 19th had disappeared by the
later 19th century. (fn. 63) Earthworks south of the church
suggest that settlement may once have spread
further up the hill in that area. Sarsen, used both as
squared ashlar and rubble, red brick, and timberframing, all occur as walling materials. The use of
timber-framing, of 17th- or early-18th-century date,
seems to have been replaced in the later 18th century
and the 19th by that of brick and sarsen. (fn. 64) In 1977,
however, the village was mostly one of small closes
of council houses of the 1950s and of more recent
private developments. Southfield, beyond South
Farm, was being developed by G. B. Thorner
(Homes) Ltd. in 1977.
North Farm, the only substantial house in West
Overton to stand north of the London-Bath road,
was begun in 1801. (fn. 65) Of red brick, it has a square
main block with a three-bay south front and a service wing to the rear. To the north-east a large
farmyard with central stockyard is surrounded on
three sides by farm buildings of various dates from
the early 19th century. (fn. 66) The modern buildings on
the east have replaced an aisled barn which had
a thatched roof. Two outlying stockyards on the
downs beyond North Farm, Pickledean barn, and
beyond it to the north-west, Down barn, were
called respectively Old and New barns in 1773. (fn. 67)
They were reconstructed in the 19th century and
have enclosing walls of squared sarsen stone.
The hamlet of Lockeridge lies along the bottom
of a small valley running south-westwards from the
Kennet towards Boreham down. At least three of
the houses have outer walls of timber-framing,
perhaps of the 17th century, which was by 1977
much replaced by brick. Dene (formerly Glebe)
Farm, which stands on the west side of the street
south of its junction with the lane running from
Manton, in Preshute, to West Overton, has a long
later-17th-century range of coursed sarsen blocks
with mullioned and transomed windows and a
thatched roof. A secondary wing was added on the
west in the earlier 19th century. Most of the other
older houses appear to be of later-18th- or earlier19th-century origin. Lockeridge Dene House was
converted from cottages in the earlier 20th century. (fn. 68)
At Lockeridge, as at West Overton, red brick or sarsen
rubble are the usual walling materials and many of
the roofs are still thatched. Where the street turns
south-west into Lockeridge dene there is a small
green around which in the later 18th century were
several cottages. The green formerly extended over the
sarsen field bought in 1907 by the National Trust. (fn. 69)
Much of the later-19th-century building was at
the north end of the hamlet where there are estate
cottages, a school, and the Who'd 'a Thought It inn.
All were built, probably at the expense of the Meux
family, in the style associated with C. E. Ponting,
an architect and agent for the Meux estates. (fn. 70)
Lockeridge House is separated from the rest of the
hamlet by the flood-plain of the Kennet. A few
houses are scattered along the road from Lockeridge
to West Overton. The most notable are Lockeridge
Cottage of c. 1800, the former home of C. E. Ponting,
and the later-19th-century building formerly used as
the Meux estate office. (fn. 71) There are some modern
private houses along the lane leading east from the
green.
That part of the former village of Shaw which
lies within West Overton consists of a hollow way
with embanked areas, presumably the sites of houses,
on each side. The village street ran north-westwards
towards the Wansdyke and close to their junction
was the original site of the house and buildings of
Shaw manor.
Fyfield.
The civil parish has similar geological
features to those of West Overton. (fn. 72) North and
south of the Rennet's alluvial plain and gravel
terraces are extensive chalk masses overlain at their
extremities by clay-with-flints. (fn. 73) Near New Totterdown on Fyfield down the clay-with-flints lies at
c. 259 m. and is thickly littered with sarsen stones. In
1644 the area was 'a place so full of a grey pebble stone
of great bigness as is not usually seen', where 'they
lie so thick as you may go upon them all the way'. (fn. 74)
The site formed part of the Nature Conservancy
area on Fyfield down in 1977. Between Fyfield down
and Fyfield hill the uplands are broken by a dry
valley, part of Clatford bottom, which lies below
168 m. South of Fyfield hill the village of Fyfield
lies on the gravel terrace at c. 137 m. in the Kennet
valley, clustering in a wide meander of the river on
its north bank. As in West Overton the riverside
settlement was sandwiched between the arable of
the chalk uplands north and south of the Kennet.
In the south part of the parish Clatford Park Farm,
lying at c. 200 m., and the road by which it is approached from Clatford, are on the gravel deposits
of another dry valley cut through the Upper Chalk
by a head-stream of the Kennet. On either side of
that road deposits of clay-with-flints coat the Upper
Chalk and lie between 213 m. and 229 m. Those
west of Clatford Park Farm are thickly wooded.
Two bowl-barrows at Totterdown and a bellbarrow on Fyfield down attest activity in Fyfield
in early prehistoric times. (fn. 75) As in West Overton
the downs north of the Kennet were the site of
settlement of a more permanent nature in early-Iron-Age and Romano-British times. A field system
of 121 ha. on Fyfield down, which extends westwards
into West Overton and eastwards into Preshute, has
yielded material of both periods. Some of its field
boundaries are marked with sarsen stones and
within it are ditches and ponds which may be
contemporary. (fn. 76) The remains of a Roman pavement
were found south of Fyfield village in the early 19th
century. (fn. 77) Within Wroughton mead on Fyfield down
there was a farmstead from at least the later 12th
century until c. 1300. It consisted of three small
inclosures within a larger inclosure and its buildings
included a long-house which could accommodate
both men and beasts. (fn. 78)
In 1334 Fyfield, then called Little Fyfield, was
assessed for taxation with East Overton. (fn. 79) The
chapelry had 22 poll-tax payers in 1377. (fn. 80) At least
eight of its inhabitants were able to contribute to
the benevolence of 1545. (fn. 81) Until 1831 the population
was possibly enumerated with that of East Overton
or Lockeridge. Numbers were first returned separately in 1841, when 150 people lived in Fyfield. (fn. 82)
There were 200 people in 1861, and thereafter
the population fell gradually until 1891 when there
were 152 inhabitants. Because of the transference
in 1896 to Fyfield of the civil parish of Clatford
or Clatford Park, which included the former extraparochial place at Overton Heath, numbers had
risen to 178 by 1901. (fn. 83) The population had declined
to 143 by 1931 and stood at 134 in 1971. (fn. 84)
The population of Clatford Park rose from 15 in
1841 to 25 in 1881. Just before it was merged in
Fyfield, Clatford Park in 1891 had thirteen inhabitants. In 1841 25 people lived at Overton Heath.
Numbers there fluctuated little over the next 40
years but rose from 24 in 1881 to 34 in 1891. (fn. 85)
The track from Avebury which enters Fyfield
from West Overton and crosses the field system on
Fyfield down is of ancient origin. (fn. 86) The London-Bath road, turnpiked in 1743, crosses Fyfield as well
as West Overton. It is carried a short distance north
of the Kennet's flood-plain on a ridge of Middle
Chalk. (fn. 87) The courses of most lanes which ran through
Fyfield in the later 18th century and the earlier 19th,
if not still in use, could in 1977 be traced as footpaths. Such a footpath, part of which formed the
village's main street in 1773, leaves the lane running
from the London—Bath road towards the Kennet
and leads southwards to Lockeridge House. There
was no trace in 1977, however, of the small lanes
which once led northwards from that lane. The lane
which runs south-east from the London—Bath road
towards the Kennet, over which it has been carried
by a bridge since the later 18th century, formerly
split south of the river into two lanes. (fn. 88)
The church and Fyfield House stand south of the
London-Bath road on slightly higher ground at
what was originally the northern end of the village.
Until the later 19th century settlement lay close to
the river along the lane which ran southwards from
the London-Bath road. (fn. 89) That site was subject to
frequent flooding and, after numerous cottages
there were burned down c. 1860, was abandoned in
favour of one higher up the valley along the main
road, where there was already settlement including
the Fighting Cocks inn, first mentioned in 1811. (fn. 90)
Many cottages, particularly those on the south side,
the inn, and the Congregational chapel were
demolished when the road was widened in the later
1930s. (fn. 91) In the earlier 20th century council houses
were built near the western boundary of the civil
parish immediately south of the London-Bath road
on a site, part of which was once glebe land, called
Priestacre. (fn. 92) Most of the inhabitants of Fyfield
lived there in 1977. A few private houses have been
built south of the village near the bridge over the
Kennet at various dates since the First World War.
Beyond them sewage disposal works to serve the
area upstream were opened in 1973. (fn. 93)
Overton Heath and Clatford Park, which are on
the eastern fringe of extensive woodland, contained
little settlement in 1773 as in 1977. Clatford Park
contained only a farm-house at both dates. (fn. 94) Apart
from Park Farm, which stands beside the lane to
Clatford, Overton Heath contains on its eastern
boundary a former Wesleyan Methodist chapel and
one or two houses. Other houses were built on the
west side of the road to Wilcot between 1802 and
1862 but had disappeared by 1889. (fn. 95) Further south
on that side of the road Yew Tree Cottage stands on
the site of the house, burned down some time in the
19th century, in 1773 called the Dog House and
in 1788 the Old Dog. (fn. 96)
Alton Priors.
The former chapelry lies almost
entirely on the elongated chalk bluff which bounds
the Vale of Pewsey to the north. (fn. 97) The northern tip
stands on the Upper Chalk between the 244 m.
and 259 m. contours. About 500 m. south of it, a
little north of New Town, the Upper is succeeded
by the Middle Chalk which is divided into twin
summits, Walker's hill (fn. 98) to the west and Knap hill
to the east. Both hills stand at 260 m. and, with the
uplands to the north, have always provided pasture.
The open Lower Chalk terrace, mainly under
arable cultivation in 1977 as formerly, lies south of
them between the 137 m. and 168 m. contours and
extends for some 2 km. to the chapelry's former
southern boundary. The village of Alton Priors lies
in the south-west corner of the former chapelry at
c. 136 m. on a narrow strip of Upper Greensand
facing its westerly neighbour, Alton Barnes, across
withy fringed streams. The hamlet of West Stowell
also stands on Upper Greensand at about the same
height. The detached rectangle of land to the east
once called the Black Horse lies at c. 137 m.
Numerous barrows of various types, with
associated primary cremations and later intrusive
burials, show the uplands north of Alton Priors to
have been settled from the Neolithic Period (fn. 99) when
a causewayed camp which belonged to the Windmill
Hill culture was constructed on Knap hill. (fn. 100) The
site was refortified with a plateau enclosure in the
early Iron Age and apparently remained in use in
Roman times. (fn. 101) Another two enclosures lie west and
north-west of New Town. (fn. 102) Of the four ditches in
Alton Priors, that extending south-west from Knap
hill is called locally the Devil's trackway. (fn. 103) Traces of
a building of Romano-British date have been found
in a field called Stanchester at West Stowell. (fn. 104)
Walker's hill, below which an ancient ridge way
runs on a north-south course, was of strategic
importance in Pagan-Saxon times. It was probably
to prevent incursions from the north along such a
route early in that period that the Wansdyke, which
crosses the northernmost tip of the former chapelry,
was constructed, leaving a pass for the ridge way at
Red Shore. (fn. 105) The Neolithic long barrow on Walker's
hill, called Adam's Grave, may be identified with
Wodnesbeorg, or Woden's Barrow, the site of battles
in 592 and 715. (fn. 106)
In 1334 Alton Priors and 'Stowell', which possibly
included not only West Stowell tithing but also
East Stowell in Wilcot, was, apart from Westwood
and Wroughton, the most highly rated unit in
Elstub hundred as then constituted. (fn. 107) It seems
likely that inhabitants of both West Stowell and
Alton Priors were numbered among the 114 polltax payers accounted for at 'Stowell' in Swanborough
hundred in 1377. (fn. 108) Various taxation assessments of
the later 16th century and earlier 17th century show
Alton Priors and West Stowell to have contained
several inhabitants of sufficient substance to be
assessed. (fn. 109) In 1801 178 people lived in Alton Priors
and West Stowell. (fn. 110) Numbers had declined to 161
by 1911 but thereafter increased, and in 1841, of the
chapelry's 251 inhabitants, 194 lived at Alton and
57 at Stowell. The population was 253 in 1851 but
had declined to 207 by 1861. There was an increase
to 221 in 1871 but the population again declined and
stood at 178 in 1891. By 1901 numbers had increased to 217 but thereafter declined. In 1931, the
last date at which figures are available, 172 people
lived at Alton Priors and West Stowell.
The ridge way which forms the western boundary
of West Overton continues on a southerly route
inside the western boundary of Alton Priors.
Entering Alton Priors at Red Shore through the gap
in the Wansdyke it formed part of the road linking
the Altons with Woodborough which was turnpiked
in 1840. (fn. 111) The track formerly called Workway drove,
which marked part of the boundary between Alton
Priors and West Stowell tithings, (fn. 112) once provided
a more direct link between the hamlet of West
Stowell and that road at Knap hill. (fn. 113) Those sections
of the ridge way which were not turnpiked could,
like the courses of most other later-18th-century
and 19th-century roads in Alton and Stowell, be
traced as footpaths in 1977. (fn. 114) The Kennet & Avon
canal, constructed across the south-west angle of
the chapelry in 1807, was opened in 1810. (fn. 115)
The Manor stands on the north side of the lane
leading to West Stowell, but apart from some more
modern housing east of that house, settlement in
Alton Priors in 1977, as in the later 18th century,
was mainly south of the lane. The mid-19thcentury house which stands opposite the Manor is
surrounded by an earlier walled garden and probably
replaced an earlier house. In 1977, however, most
of the houses clustered, as they did in 1773, close
together along a lane running southwards from the
Manor towards the church. (fn. 116) At least one incorporates some 17th-century work but the remaining
older houses appear to have been rebuilt in the
earlier 19th century. Some houses of more recent
construction flank the lane's southern end. The
village may formerly have extended west of the lane
into the field north of the church where there are
still earthworks. (fn. 117) There was apparently little
settlement there by 1773 when the church and the
original manor-house, in 1977 much reduced in
size and called the Priory, stood, as in 1977, isolated
beside the streams separating the two Altons.
Settlement in West Stowell lies, as in 1773, in the
easterly spur of the tithing and is confined to the
eastern branch of a triangular lane which runs north
of the lane from Alton Priors to Wilcot. (fn. 118) Apart
from a few farm buildings, the hamlet included in
1977 West Stowell House on the east side of the lane
and a chapel opposite on the west.
Manors and other Estates.
In 939
Athelstan granted a nun, Wulfswyth, 15 mansae at
Overton. (fn. 119) That estate is to be identified with the
15 hides at Overton, later called the manor of
OVERTON or, from the later 16th century, EAST
OVERTON, which both in 1066 and in 1086
belonged to the bishop of Winchester. (fn. 120) By 1086
the estate had been assigned by the bishop for the
support of the monks of the Old Minster. (fn. 121) The
prior and convent of St. Swithun's received a grant
of free warren within their demesne lands at East
Overton in 1300, and held the estate until the
Dissolution, when it passed to the Crown. (fn. 122)
In 1541 Winchester chapter received a royal grant
of the manor, which it reconveyed to the Crown in
1547. (fn. 123) In the same year the Crown granted East
Overton to Sir William Herbert (created earl of
Pembroke in 1551) and it descended with that
title to Philip, earl of Pembroke and Montgomery
(d. 1683), who sold it in 1682 to William Clarke
(d. 1688). (fn. 124) Clarke devised the manor in trust for his
son John, who in 1720 sold it to a director of the
South Sea Co., Francis Hawes. Hawes's property,
including East Overton, was confiscated by parliamentary trustees when the South Sea Bubble burst
shortly after and was sold by them in 1726 to the
trustees of John Churchill, duke of Marlborough
(d. 1722). From the duke's eldest daughter Henrietta
Godolphin, countess of Godolphin and suo jure
duchess of Marlborough, the manor passed to her
nephew Charles Spencer, duke of Marlborough (d.
1758), and thereafter descended with the title to
John Spencer-Churchill, duke of Marlborough (d.
1883), who sold it in 1866 to R. C. Long(d. 1869). (fn. 125)
In 1870 under Long's will his brothers F. S. and
W. Long sold it to the trustees of Sir Henry Meux,
Bt. (d. 1883). By that date the much augmented
estate included South Overton and North Overton
farms, representing East Overton manor, and
Fyfield, Lockeridge, Glebe, and Clatford Park
farms. There was also West Woods, 718 a. Sir
Henry was succeeded by his son Sir Henry Bruce
Meux, Bt. (d. 1900), whose widow sold most of the
estate in 1906 to Alexander Taylor of Manton
House in Preshute. (fn. 126) Taylor afterwards sold the
estate to the Olympia Agricultural Co. Ltd., whose
chairman was Joseph Watson (created Baron
Manton and d. 1922). (fn. 127) The company's farm
manager, Frank Swanton, bought North, South,
and Fyfield farms in 1925. After Swanton's death
in 1971 his sons R. G. F. and R. Swanton farmed
in partnership as F. Swanton & Sons. In 1977
Mr. R. G. F. Swanton farmed Fyfield and South
farms, 880 a., and Mr. R. Swanton North farm,
700 a. (fn. 128)
Some land on Overton and Fyfield downs, 800 a.,
was retained by the Olympia Agricultural Co. Ltd.,
however, and in 1977 was owned by Mr. J. V.
Bloomfield as part of his estate at Manton. (fn. 129) West
Woods, 1,008 a., sold by the Olympia Agricultural
Co. Ltd. in 1928, was acquired in 1931 by the
Forestry Commission, owner in 1977. (fn. 130)
Before the rearrangement of East Overton manor
into North and South farms, it is probable that the
estate was farmed from the Old Manor. That house
stands west of the church. Its west range is a small
house of the earlier 17th century which has walls
partly of sarsen rubble, with ovolo-moulded
windows, and partly timber-framed. A later wing,
which may have been a parish reading room, was
incorporated on the east and remodelled in the later
19th century. The whole house was remodelled in
the later 20th century when one room in the west
range was filled with panelling brought from a
house in Stafford. (fn. 131) Sir Maurice Dorman was owner
in 1977.
In 972 King Edgar granted Alflaed 10 mansae,
then said to be at 'Kennett' but clearly identifiable
with the later manor of OVERTON or WEST
OVERTON. (fn. 132) In 1066 the estate belonged to
Wilton Abbey and at the Dissolution passed to the
Crown. (fn. 133)
The manor was granted in tail male to Sir William
Herbert (created earl of Pembroke 1551, d. 1570)
and his wife Anne in 1544. (fn. 134) The estate, which
included a detached part at Overton Heath abutting
the south-east corner of the ancient parish, thereafter descended with the Pembroke title. (fn. 135) In 1917
Reginald, earl of Pembroke and Montgomery, sold
West Overton farm, 665 a., to J. H. E. Poole, 257 a.
including Pickrudge and Pumphrey woods to F.
Spearman, and Park farm, 116 a. at Overton Heath,
to F. W. Harvey. (fn. 136) The woodland, 180 a., bought
by Spearman was sold in 1940 by the administrator
of the estate of G. Spearman to the Forestry Commission, owner in 1977. (fn. 137) West Overton farm, 705 a.,
was owned in 1977 by Mereacre Ltd. (fn. 138)
The site of the manor's original farm-house is
unknown but may have been opposite West Overton
Farm. (fn. 139) West Overton Farm, called Overton House
in the later 19th century and the earlier 20th, (fn. 140) is
a square red-brick house of c. 1825 with a contemporary walled garden to the north and large
farmyard to the south.
The 2 hides at Lockeridge held in 1066 by Elmar
had passed to Durand of Gloucester by 1086. (fn. 141)
Durand's estate descended to his grand-nephew
Miles of Gloucester (created earl of Hereford in
1141, d. 1143). (fn. 142) Between 1141 and 1143 Miles
granted the lands, the later manor of LOCKERIDGE, to the Templars. (fn. 143) In 1567 and 1719
Lockeridge was considered to be a free tenancy of
East Overton manor. (fn. 144)
After the suppression of the order of Templars in
1308, the estate passed, with other Temple property,
to the Knights Hospitallers. (fn. 145) Thenceforth the
estate was administered from the preceptory at
Sandford (Oxon.) until the Dissolution, when it
passed to the Crown. (fn. 146)
In 1543 Richard Andrews was granted the manor
by the Crown and immediately conveyed it to
Christopher Dismore (d. 1564) and his wife Joan or
Jane. (fn. 147) After her husband's death Jane, who married
secondly Edward Passion, held Lockeridge for life. (fn. 148)
In 1577 John Dismore, on whom his cousin
Christopher had settled the reversion of the manor,
sold the reversion to Henry, earl of Pembroke, who
was in actual possession of Lockeridge at his death
in 1601. (fn. 149)
The manor passed like that of East Overton to
Philip, earl of Pembroke and Montgomery (d. 1683),
who sold it in 1680 to Edmund Naish. (fn. 150) Naish sold
it in 1683 to Thomas Cholwell (will proved 1694),
who devised Lockeridge to Richard Kent. (fn. 151) In 1717,
after Kent's death, his trustees conveyed the manor
to his daughter Hester (d. 1739) and her husband
John Chetwynd. (fn. 152) John Chetwynd, who became
2nd Viscount Chetwynd in 1736, sold it in 1756 to
Charles, duke of Marlborough (d. 1758). (fn. 153) The
manor afterwards descended again like that of East
Overton.
In 1086 Durand of Gloucester held freely of the
church of Winchester 2 hides, all but 1 virgate,
which in 1066 had apparently been held of the
church by lease. (fn. 154) The land passed like Lockeridge
manor to Miles, earl of Hereford, and descended to
Miles's eldest daughter and coheir, Margaret, wife
of Humphrey de Bohun, as part of the honor of
Hereford. The estate continued to pass with the
honor and in 1243 was still deemed to be held of the
bishop of Winchester. (fn. 155) After the death in 1373 of
Humphrey de Bohun, earl of Hereford and Essex,
it was allotted in 1384 to his younger daughter and
coheir Mary, wife of Henry, earl of Derby (later
Henry IV). (fn. 156) The estate is last mentioned as part
of the honor of Hereford in 1402. (fn. 157)
Richard Quintin held the lands, then reckoned
at 1 knight's fee, of Humphrey de Bohun, earl of
Hereford and Essex, in 1243. (fn. 158) A Richard Quintin
still held that fee in 1275. (fn. 159) What is probably the
same estate was held in 1316 by John of Berwick. (fn. 160)
In 1327 John of Berwick, perhaps the same, settled
lands at Lockeridge, Shaw, East Kennett, and West
Kennett, in Avebury, on himself for life with
reversion to John of Fosbury and his wife Alice. (fn. 161)
In the later 14th century the lands were held by
Peter of Fosbury's heir. (fn. 162) William Sparshot held
them in 1412. (fn. 163)
The estate apparently passed like an estate at
Woodborough to Richard Benger (d. 1529), whose
heir was his sister Anne, wife of Thomas Smith. (fn. 164)
Anne and her husband were still seised of it in
1551. (fn. 165) In 1559, however, Anne, then a widow,
settled an estate which included land at Lockeridge
on herself for life, with reversion to Ralph Henslowe
(d. 1578) and his wife Clare. (fn. 166) Ralph's son Thomas
sold the estate in 1594 to Thomas Smith. (fn. 167) The
Smith family held the land until the earlier 18th
century, when Richard Smith of West Kennett sold
the Lockeridge estate in moieties. (fn. 168)
A portion was sold in 1713 to William Andrews
who in 1726 settled it on the marriage of his son
William and Elizabeth Franklin. William and
Elizabeth sold it in 1768 to George, duke of
Marlborough. (fn. 169)
The other portion, which seems to have comprised no more than a few acres, was sold in 1723 by
Richard Smith and his son Thomas to George
Brown. In 1757 George conveyed it to his son
George, who sold it in 1763 to George, duke of
Marlborough. (fn. 170) Both moieties thereafter passed like
the manor of East Overton.
In the earlier 12th century 2 hides at Lockeridge,
the provenance of which is unknown, were held by
Walter de Beauchamp (d. 1131). The estate passed
to Walter's son William (d. 1170), who between
1155 and 1169 granted it to the Templars. (fn. 171) It was
presumably merged with their manor of Lockeridge,
as was another hide there granted by Robert of
Ewias in the earlier 12th century. (fn. 172)
The Macy family held a small estate at Lockeridge
in the earlier 13th century. (fn. 173) In 1281 William Macy
granted 60 a. of land there to the priory of St.
Margaret, Marlborough. (fn. 174) The priory's estate at
Lockeridge was augmented c. 1294 by 40 a., held of
the honor of Hereford, which Philip Francis granted
to it. (fn. 175) The priory held the manor of LOCKERIDGE or, as it was later called, UPPER
LOCKERIDGE until the Dissolution. (fn. 176)
In 1539 the manor was granted to Anne of Cleves
as jointure. (fn. 177) Edward Seymour, earl of Hertford
(created duke of Somerset in 1547, executed in
1552), received a grant of it in 1542. (fn. 178) In 1550,
however, Thomas Goddard (d. 1550) was in possession. (fn. 179) In 1582 his son Thomas sold the manor to
Richard Wroth. (fn. 180) In 1588, however, Richard
Browne was seised of it. After his death Bariscourt
farm, as the estate was then also called, was held for
life by his widow Katharine Muffett. (fn. 181) The land descended in the Browne family to Richard Browne, who,
with his wife Jane, sold it in 1688 to Sir Thomas
Fowle (will proved 1693). (fn. 182) Under Sir Thomas's
will the estate passed to his nephew Thomas Fowle,
and on the nephew's death to another nephew, Robert
Fowle (d. 1705), who devised it to his kinsman the
Revd. John Fowle (d. 1710). (fn. 183) By 1737 Peter Delme
(d. 1770) had acquired the estate, and he sold it in
1759 to George, duke of Marlborough. (fn. 184) The manor
thereafter descended with that of East Overton.
Immediately after he had bought the estate, the
duke of Marlborough leased Lockeridge House and
some adjoining meadows to Peter Delme. (fn. 185) The
house was thereafter always let as a gentleman's
residence until offered for sale as part of the Meux
estate at Overton in 1906. (fn. 186) It was occupied in the
late 19th century and the earlier 20th by H. R.
Giffard, who later bought the freehold. (fn. 187)
Lockeridge House was built c. 1700 and has a
double pile plan with principal fronts to the north
and south of five bays. Two small additions were
made on the west in the early 18th century and
another on the south in the early 19th century, when
new windows and a porch were added to the east
front. Most of the 18th-century rooms retain
original panelling and fittings. To the north-west
there is a small stable court and to the north part
of an entrance court with early-18th-century gatepiers and walls. Other 18th-century walls remain
around the gardens to the south.
An estate comprising 2 hides and 1½ virgate at
Shaw was held in 1066 by Cudulf. By 1086 it had
passed to Robert son of Gerald and was held of him
by a tenant Hugh. (fn. 188) It is to be identified with the
later manor of SHAW. (fn. 189) It passed like the manor
of Fittleton to Hubert de Burgh, earl of Kent (d.
1243). (fn. 190)
In 1243 Simon le Dun held the estate of the earl
of Kent, and Henry le Dun held it of Simon. (fn. 191)
Henry le Dun the younger was in possession in the
later 13th century. (fn. 192) In 1316, however, John of
Hartington held Shaw. (fn. 193) In 1327 Walter of Harrington held it and was still lord in 1333. (fn. 194) In 1386
Robert Devenish, who had apparently acquired the
lands from John Wylye and Robert of Etchilhampton, granted the estate to Joan, widow of Robert
Blake of Quemerford, and her son John. (fn. 195) John
Blake was in possession in 1395. (fn. 196) Robert Blake held
Shaw in 1428. (fn. 197) The manor descended in the Blake
family to Thomas Blake, who in 1575 sold Shaw
farm to William Button (d. 1591) of Alton Priors. (fn. 198)
William Button was succeeded at Shaw by his
son Ambrose, who in 1595–6 sold the farm to his
younger brother William (d. 1599). (fn. 199) William's son,
Sir William Button, Bt. (d. 1655), in 1648 settled it
on himself for life, with remainder to his second son
Sir Robert Button (d. 1678). (fn. 200) It thereafter passed
like the manor of Lyneham to John Walker (d.
1758), whose son John sold it to George, duke of
Marlborough, in 1770. (fn. 201) The duke sold it c. 1801
to John Stratton, still owner c. 1815. (fn. 202) In the early
1840s, however, William Brough owned Shaw farm,
481 a. (fn. 203) The farm afterwards changed hands
frequently. (fn. 204) It was bought in 1921 by Frank
Stratton (d. 1941), whose grandson Mr. C. A.
Cutforth was owner in 1977. (fn. 205)
The manor-house at Shaw mentioned in 1648
and 1660 stood at the junction of the street of the
former village of Shaw with the Wansdyke. It may
have survived into the 19th century and the last of
its out-buildings, a barn, was demolished c. 1970. (fn. 206)
Soon after 1800 that house was replaced by a new
one some 400 m. west. (fn. 207) The red-brick house, (fn. 208)
which is approached from the south-west by a short
avenue of beeches, has a principal south front of
three bays and stands amid walled gardens. The
stable block of 1909 east of the house was built by
Spencer Compton, the then owner. (fn. 209)
The part of Boreham wood claimed by Thomas of
Kennett when the wood was put out of Savernake
forest in 1225 may possibly be identified with the
estate at Shaw held by the same Thomas or a namesake in 1243. (fn. 210) The estate was then apparently held
of the bishop of Winchester. (fn. 211) A Thomas of Kennett
still had land at Shaw in 1265. (fn. 212) What may be the
same estate was settled by John of Berwick on
Gilbert of Stubbington and his wife Margery and on
Margery's heirs in 1299. (fn. 213)
The estate's later descent is unknown. It may
possibly be represented either by land at Shaw sold
in 1511 by John Ernie to John Button and his wife
Edith, (fn. 214) or by another estate there, which included
land at East Kennett, owned by the Weston family
in the 16th century and sold in 1586–7 by Richard
Weston and his wife Margaret to William Button. (fn. 215)
Both were merged with the manor of Shaw.
The priory of St. Swithun, Winchester, appropriated Overton church and its chapels in 1291. (fn. 216)
The rectory estate, which consisted of tithes alone,
passed with East Overton manor until 1553. (fn. 217) In
that year William, earl of Pembroke, conveyed the
tithes from Alton Priors chapelry to the Crown. (fn. 218)
The Pembrokes later recovered that portion, however, and the reunited rectory descended with East
Overton manor to Philip, earl of Pembroke and
Montgomery (d. 1683). (fn. 219)
In 1680 the earl sold the tithes of Alton Priors
chapelry with Alton Priors manor to Samuel
Brewster and Nicholas Fownes in moieties. After
the moieties were reunited in 1714 the great tithes
of Alton tithing were deemed to be merged. (fn. 220) In
1812 those of West Stowell tithing were sold by the
lord of Alton manor to William Hitchcock, owner
of West Stowell farm. (fn. 221) In 1848 rent-charges of
£250 and £100 respectively were allotted to the
owners of the Alton Priors and West Stowell estates.
Since the tithes were already considered to be
merged, however, the sums so allotted were not
apportioned. (fn. 222)
In 1682 Philip, earl of Pembroke and Montgomery, while retaining the demesne tithes of West
Overton manor, sold some of the great tithes arising
from the tenantry lands there, with all the impropriated tithes arising from East Overton, Fyfield, and
Lockeridge, to William Clarke with East Overton
manor. Those tithes, thereafter deemed to be the
impropriated rectory of Overton, descended like
East Overton manor. (fn. 223) In 1802 the tithes from
the tenantry lands of West Overton manor were
re-allotted between the duke of Marlborough
as impropriator and the earl of Pembroke and
Montgomery as lord of the manor. (fn. 224) The duke of
Marlborough was allotted 512 a. in the open fields
of East Overton, Fyfield, and Lockeridge to replace
his impropriated tithes there in 1821. (fn. 225)
By 1840 the owner of Shaw farm had in some way
acquired the great tithes of his estate. They were
thereafter considered to be merged. (fn. 226)
In 1066 the bishop of Winchester held an estate
of 5 hides at Fyfield. At an unknown date it was
assigned to the sacrist of the cathedral church and
in 1066 was held of the bishop by a monk, Alsi. In
1086, however, Edward held it of the bishop. (fn. 227) In
1243 the prior of St. Swithun's claimed the manor
of FYFIELD, which was finally confirmed to him
by the bishop in 1284. (fn. 228) The prior and convent
received a grant of free warren in their demesne
there in 1300. (fn. 229) Thereafter the estate, like East
Overton manor, was held by St. Swithun's until the
Dissolution, when it passed to the Crown. (fn. 230)
In 1547 the Crown granted the manor, with East
Overton, to Sir William Herbert, later earl of
Pembroke, and it thereafter passed with the title to
Philip, earl of Pembroke and Montgomery (d.
1683). (fn. 231) Thomas Fowle had acquired it by 1697
and it afterwards descended in the Fowle family to
the Revd. F. C. Fowle (d. 1840). (fn. 232) It was presumably
he who offered the estate for sale in 1812. (fn. 233) It was
bought by John Goodman, in possession by 1815. (fn. 234)
The manor was later bought by R. C. Long,
described as lord in 1867, (fn. 235) and thereafter descended
again like East Overton manor. (fn. 236)
The east front of Fyfield House, from which the
estate was farmed until c. 1975, (fn. 237) was probably added
c. 1820 to an earlier house which was demolished
and rebuilt in the later 19th century to provide
secondary rooms and a service wing. West of the
house are barns and extensive stabling of 19thcentury date, of which the larger part to the west
was built in 1872. (fn. 238)
It is possible that the small estate called CLATFORD PARK in the later 16th century may have
originated in land at Rainscombe granted in 934 by
Athelstan to Wilton Abbey. (fn. 239) The land may have
passed after the Dissolution with other Wilton
estates in the area to Sir William Herbert.
Before 1597, however, the ground called Clatford
Park, then apparently lately inclosed, belonged to
Sir Thomas Wroughton (d. 1597), who had bought
it from Robert and Thomas Wroth. (fn. 240) Shortly before
his death Sir Thomas sold it to Sir Robert Wroth
(d. 1606), who devised the park to his younger sons
John, Henry, and Thomas. (fn. 241) In 1618 John and
Henry Wroth confirmed the park to Richard
Goddard, who may have acquired it some years
earlier. (fn. 242) It may have been that Richard Goddard
who disparked the land c. 1631. (fn. 243) By 1717 Clatford
Park seems to have been acquired by John Chetwynd, later Viscount Chetwynd, owner of Lockeridge manor. (fn. 244) It was sold with Lockeridge in 1756
to the duke of Marlborough. Clatford Park thereafter
descended like East Overton manor until 1906 when,
reckoned at 182 a. and called Clatford Park Home
farm, it was offered for sale as part of the Meux
estate. (fn. 245) It was acquired at some date by the
Forestry Commission, who sold the farm to E. N.
and N. S. Baker in 1956. (fn. 246) Clatford Park Farm,
a brick house of c. 1800 which may have replaced
an earlier one, (fn. 247) and the surrounding land were
owned in 1977 by Mr. C. Morgan-Smith.
Between 871 and 899 Ceolwen, widow of Osmod,
granted the reversion of 15 hides at Alton, which
she had inherited from her husband, to the church
of Winchester for its refectory. (fn. 248) By the nth century
Winchester's Alton estate also included the later
manor of Patney. (fn. 249) In 1086 the estate, reckoned at
20 hides, was among those which had been allotted
by the bishop for the support of the monks of the
Old Minster. (fn. 250)
Between 1047 and 1052 Bishop Stigand and the
monks of Winchester leased 2 hides and 1 virgate at
Alton to Wulfric for two lives. (fn. 251) The estate was
afterwards held by Wulfward Belgisone, and between
1078 and 1085 the bishop, at William I's instigation,
granted the same land to William Scudet for life. (fn. 252)
It was restored to the convent in 1108. (fn. 253)
In 1284 the estate, by then separate from Patney,
was finally confirmed to St. Swithun's by the
bishop. (fn. 254) It comprised the land of the tithings of
Alton and West Stowell. The convent received a
grant of free warren within the demesne of the
manor of AL TON PRIORS, or AL TON PRIORS
AND STOWELL, as it was later known, in 1300. (fn. 255)
St. Swithun's held the estate until the Dissolution,
when it passed to the Crown. (fn. 256)
In 1541 Alton was granted to Winchester chapter,
who returned it to the Crown in 1547. (fn. 257) In that year
Sir William Herbert, later earl of Pembroke,
received a royal grant of it, but he returned it to the
Crown in 1553. (fn. 258) The manor was later restored to
the Herbert family, earls of Pembroke, however, and
in 1630 William, earl of Pembroke, died seised of
Alton and Stowell. (fn. 259) The manor descended with
the title to Philip, earl of Pembroke and Montgomery
(d. 1683), who in 1680 sold it in moieties while
retaining the manorial rights. (fn. 260)
In 1681 Nicholas Fownes sold the moiety which
he had bought to John Smith the elder (d. 1691) of
Alton Priors. Samuel Brewster, who bought the
other moiety, settled it on his son Samuel in 1692.
In 1708 the younger Samuel mortgaged the moiety
to George Noble, whose interest therein was
declared absolute in the same year. Noble sold it in
1714 to the elder John Smith's son John (d. 1726),
and thus the moieties were reunited. (fn. 261) The manorial
rights apparently passed like Patney manor to Sir
William Pynsent (d. 1719), who conveyed them in
1717 to John Smith. (fn. 262)
John Smith was succeeded in 1726 by his son
John. (fn. 263) That John died in 1742 having devised the
manor to his daughters Dilarevere, Priscilla, and
Elizabeth in turn. Dilarevere, wife of Michael Smith,
died without issue in 1769, and her sister Priscilla,
wife of Michael Ewen, also died childless. Their
sister Elizabeth, wife of James Burrough, succeeded,
and in 1778 she sold Alton Priors to her son Michael
(d. 1831). (fn. 264)
In 1812 Michael Burrough sold Alton Priors to
Thomas Caldecott (d. 1833). Caldecott was succeeded by his nephew, the Revd. J. T. Parker, who
sold the manor in 1849 to J. G. Simpkins. In the
following year Simpkins sold it to Head Pottinger
Best (d. 1887). Best settled it on his daughter
Rosamond, wife of W. L. Stucley, who predeceased
her father in 1877. Her husband, created a baronet,
held the manor for his lifetime. On his death in 1911
it reverted to Rosamond's half-brother, Marmaduke
Head Best (d. 1912), whose widow and another sold
the Alton estate, 1,100 a., in 1912 to New College,
Oxford, owner in 1977. (fn. 265)
The Button family were lessees of the demesne,
and probably resident at Alton, from the later
15th century. John Button (d. 1491), his son John
(d. 1524), grandson William (d. 1547), and greatgrandson William (d. 1591), were all tenants. (fn. 266)
Thereafter the lease passed like Lyneham manor to
Sir William Button (d. 1655). (fn. 267) In 1651 John Smith
became lessee. (fn. 268) It may have been the same John
Smith (d. 1691), who acquired the freehold of a moiety of the estate in 1681. (fn. 269)
The Priory, as it was called in 1977, probably
represents a wing of the manor-house of c. 1700
built of brick with stone dressings. (fn. 270) It incorporates
some timber-framed walling and the reset head of
a fire-place of the later 16th century. The house was
reduced in size c. 1810 and the surviving part divided
into cottages, which were reunited and restored
c. 1970. (fn. 271) South-east of the house fragments of the
18th- and 19th-century walls of a formal garden
remain.
Soon after 1810 a new manor-house was built on
the north side of the lane from West Stowell to
Alton Barnes. Although Alton Priors Manor incorporates some features of a house of c. 1815, it is
the product of an extensive reconstruction in the mid
19th century. There are extensions to the north.
In 1680 Philip, earl of Pembroke and Montgomery, sold seven copyholds totalling 4 yardlands
at Alton Priors to Daniel Hodges (d. 1689). (fn. 272)
The land passed in the Hodges family from
Daniel to his son Edward (d. 1738), and grandsons
George (d.s.p. 1739) and Edward Hodges (d. 1769).
The daughters of Edward the grandson, Hannah,
wife of James Beezely, and Anne, wife of Nicholas
Symmonds, succeeded as tenants in common. In
1771 Nicholas Symmonds bought Hannah's moiety
and in 1783 sold the reunited estate to Michael
Burrough. The estate thus merged with Alton
Priors manor.
In 1680 the earl also sold 3 yardlands at Alton
Priors to John Stiffe. In 1691 John's widow and
devisee, Mary, conveyed the land to their daughter
Mary and her husband Ebenezer Cawdron. The
Cawdrons sold it in 1698 to William Stretch of
Alton Priors. The land passed in the Stretch family
to another William who sold it in 1783 to Michael
Burrough, lord of Alton Priors. (fn. 273)
It seems possible that the land at West Stowell
which formed part of Alton Priors manor was also
sold c. 1680. In 1780 the West Stowell estate was
owned by John Hitchcock and it passed in the
Hitchcock family until at least the earlier 19th
century. (fn. 274) Elizabeth Clark was owner in 1848. (fn. 275)
F. A. Cave was owner in 1912. (fn. 276) Sir Eric Phipps
acquired the estate c. 1930. His widow sold the
farm and West Stowell House separately in the early
1950s to the Hosier Estate Co. and Pewsey rural
district council respectively. The Hosier Estate Co.
sold the farm to Sir Philip Dunn, Bt., in the late 1960s.
Sir Philip's daughter, the Hon. Mrs. Jacob
Rothschild, was owner in 1977. (fn. 277)
West Stowell House, a square red-brick house of
the earlier 19th century with fronts of three bays,
was much remodelled and enlarged to the designs
of Guy Aylmer for Sir Eric Phipps c. 1930. (fn. 278) After
it was acquired by the local authority it was used by
Pewsey hospital as a school until 1971. (fn. 279) In 1977 the
house and its out-buildings were being remodelled
as eight separate dwellings.
Economic History.
During the Middle Ages
Overton contained, besides the Winchester manors
of East Overton, Fyfield, and Alton Priors,
economically independent estates at Lockeridge,
West Overton, and Shaw. East Overton and Alton
Priors, while part of the inter-manorial structure of
the estates of St. Swithun's Priory in Wiltshire and
Hampshire, remained separate economic units.
Fyfield manor, however, seems to have been administered as part of East Overton manor for
economic purposes by the later 13 th century,
although with separate open fields. What is known
of the economy of the most substantial of the
Lockeridge estates, which was held by the Templars,
and of the economies of West Overton, a Wilton
property, and Shaw, is mentioned below.
In 1066 East Overton was assessed for geld at 15
hides. In 1086 the estate contained land enough for
7 ploughs. The 8½ demesne hides supported 2
ploughs and those held in villeinage 5 ploughs. The
demesne's value had increased from £6 in 1066 to
£8. There were 15 a. of meadow and the pasture
was 8 furlongs in length and 4 furlongs broad. (fn. 280)
In 1066 the bishop of Winchester's Fyfield estate
was assessed for geld at 5 hides. In 1086 there was
land enough for 3 ploughs. There were 2 ploughs
and 1 serf on the 3 demesne hides. Elsewhere on the
estate there were 3 villeins and 9 bordars with 2
ploughs. There were 3 a. of meadow, 30 a. of pasture,
and woodland 3 furlongs long by 1 broad. In 1066
and 1086 the value of the estate was £5. (fn. 281)
In 1210 East Overton and Fyfield, still economically independent, were valued at £16 and £8
respectively. (fn. 282) In 1309 the manors were interdependent and their joint income was £116. (fn. 283) During
the 16th century the two estates were valued at £52
yearly, a sum which included the worth of the
rectorial tithes of both. (fn. 284)
By the later 13th century it is possible that Fyfield's demesne was worked with that of East
Overton, which was then in hand. (fn. 285) The demesne of
East Overton, leased to farmers from at least the
16th century, certainly included a considerable
acreage at Fyfield in 1567. (fn. 286) Some 291 a. at Fyfield
were still included in the East Overton demesne,
755 a., in 1728, although the owners of the two
manors were then different. (fn. 287)
Of the tenancies within the combined manors of
East Overton and Fyfield in the later 13th century
only one, of ½ virgate held by a cottar, may be
located with certainty and it was at Fyfield. Eleven
holdings of 1 virgate, reckoned at 20 a. each, were
then held for the usual agricultural services and
small money rents. The virgater who acted as woodward was excused certain of the usual duties but
was instead bound to carry the lot and crop of the
manorial timber to the lord's court. There were also
thirteen holdings of ½ virgate. Their tenants owed
services similar to those of the virgaters and half
their money rent. The ½-virgater, or cottar, who
acted as shepherd paid no rent. The chief task of the
cottar at Fyfield, whose holding was probably at
Wroughton's mead, was to look after two of the
lord's plough-teams at the ox-yard there. (fn. 288)
In 1567 the demesne farmer leased an additional
3 yardlands. At that date both East Overton and
Fyfield contained several small copyhold farms. At
East Overton there were 4 holdings of 2 yardlands,
4 of 1½ yardland, 1 of 1 yardland, and 2 of ½ yardland. At Fyfield there were 1 of 2 yardlands, 5 of
1½ yardland, and 2 of 1 yardland. (fn. 289) By 1724 the
number of East Overton leaseholders had increased
to ten, and the largest leasehold farm contained
100 a. Of the nine copyhold farms at East Overton
the largest contained 113 a. (fn. 290)
In 1210 the demesne flock at East Overton
numbered 300, and at Fyfield 100 sheep. (fn. 291) The chalk
uplands continued to support large numbers of
sheep throughout the Middle Ages. In 1299 the
combined manor of East Overton and Fyfield supported a flock of 717 ewes, 400 hoggasters, and 322
lambs. (fn. 292) They were folded in three sheepcots, one
south of the Kennet at Audley's Cottages in Fyfield
and two north of the river at Hackpen and at 'Raddon' or Wroughton's mead in Fyfield. (fn. 293) There was
much interchange of stock, particularly of lambs and
hoggasters, between the Overton flock and those of
some of the Hampshire manors of St. Swithun's
Priory such as Barton, Hurstbourne Priors, and
Mapledurham, in Buriton. (fn. 294) In 1567 at both East
Overton and Fyfield sheep were stinted at 100 to
the yardland. (fn. 295)
The open fields of East Overton and those of
Fyfield occupied the wide chalk terraces north and
south of the Kennet. In 1567 East Overton's fields
were named as South, East, and North fields, and
Fyfield's as North, South, and Rylands fields. (fn. 296) In
the Overton fields at least, subdivision had taken
place by the early 18th century, and in 1728 there
were North, Yonder, South, Vicar's, Coneys, Long,
Bittam, Hatch Yatt, White Barrow, and Pound
fields. (fn. 297)
In 1567 there was a common meadow in East
Overton called Broad mead and another in Fyfield
called Berry mead. At the same date the common
pastures of East Overton, called Prior's Ball, Full
Ridge, and Hursley, were estimated at 100 a. and
used by the manorial tenants all the year. The
tenantry sheep downs were on Broad, 34 a., and
Little, 8 a., downs. Fyfield then contained a sheep
down of 130 a. called North down. 'Atleys' or
Audley's down, 80 a., at Fyfield, south of the village,
was common to the tenants there during spring,
summer, and autumn, but after 11 November the
farmer of East Overton was entitled to it. (fn. 298) In 1728
East Overton manor contained Hackpen and
'Roddon' downs, 276 a., Hursley down, 26 a., and
a tenantry down of 101 a. (fn. 299)
In 1719 some lands in the open fields and common
meadows of East Overton and Fyfield were inclosed,
and in some cases exchanged, by agreement between
the lord of East Overton, his tenants there, the
freeholders and leaseholders of Lockeridge tithing,
the lord of Fyfield manor, and others. (fn. 300) At parliamentary inclosure in 1821 the lord of East Overton
was allotted some 800 a. in East Overton tithing and
some 500 a. in Fyfield chapelry for the manor of
East Overton. Within Fyfield manor, administered
separately from East Overton from at least 1697 and
perhaps much reduced in size by that date, the lord
was allotted 218 a. At the same date arrangements
were made to pay the owner of the mill in the
neighbouring tithing of West Overton £27 yearly
for turning water out of the mill dam to irrigate the
water-meadows of East Overton, partitioned into
7 'stems' on either side of the Kennet, from
December to the beginning of April and again from
the beginning of May until the end of June. (fn. 301)
Much reorganization of the farms in East Overton
and Fyfield took place before parliamentary inclosure. In 1812 Fyfield manor comprised three
farms, two, of 338 a. and 27 a., containing land on
either side of the Bath road, and one of 112 a.
representing the remnant of the former demesne. (fn. 302)
The division of the manorial estate at East Overton
into North and South farms on either side of the
London-Bath road probably occurred c. 1800. (fn. 303) In
1856 North farm at East Overton and Fyfield farm
were worked together but by 1906 North, 958 a.,
and South, 451 a., farms at Overton and Fyfield
farm, 573 a., had been let to three different tenants. (fn. 304)
In the later 19th century and the early 20th both
Overton and Fyfield downs were exploited, as part
of the Meux estates in north Wiltshire, for sporting
purposes. Both areas provided training courses for
such notable racehorse trainers as Alexander Taylor
and his son Alexander. (fn. 305) A large rabbit warren of
some 536 a., established on Fyfield down by 1880,
was managed as a game warren until c. 1910, when
Alexander Taylor the younger killed c. 14,000
rabbits to make the downland gallops safer. (fn. 306)
In 1066 Wilton Abbey's West Overton estate was
assessed for geld at 10 hides. In 1086 7 hides and
½ virgate were in demesne. There was land enough
for 4 ploughs. On the demesne there were 2 ploughs
and 2 serfs. Elsewhere on the estate were the
remaining 2 ploughs and 3 villeins and 8 bordars.
There were 5 a. of meadow, 20 a. of pasture, and
20 a. of woodland. The whole estate was worth £5
in 1086. (fn. 307)
Nothing is known of the estate's economy later
in the Middle Ages. In 1535 the manor was worth
£21, of which £9 represented the rents of free
and customary tenants and £12 the farm of the
demesne. (fn. 308)
The demesne in 1567 contained 168 a. of arable
and 7 a. of meadow and supported a large flock. (fn. 309)
The Kingman family were farmers in the earlier
17th century and the Cooke family for most of the
18th century. (fn. 310) Edward Pumphrey became tenant
in 1784 and his family held West Overton farm,
reckoned at 232 a. in 1794, well into the 19th century. (fn. 311)
In 1567 the estate contained, besides 3 freeholders
and 1 cottager, 11 customary tenants who paid
yearly rents totalling £7: 2 copyholders held 2
yardlands each, 4 held 1½ yardland, 3 held 1 yardland, and 2 held ½ yardland. (fn. 312) There was the same
number of customary holdings in 1631. (fn. 313) In 1706
there were 24 manorial tenants, of whom the most
substantial held no more than 30 a. Three of their
holdings included land at Overton Heath. (fn. 314) About
1794, of the seventeen tenants holding some 560 a.,
most held about 30 a. each, but a few worked farms
of 50–100 a. (fn. 315)
West Overton's arable fields, on the chalk soils
north and south of the settlement, were named in
1631 as North, West or Little, and South fields. (fn. 316)
Some subdivision had apparently taken place by
c. 1794 when the arable lands north of the London-Bath road were named as Upper, Middle, and Lower
fields and those to the south as Ditch Hedge,
Double Hedge, and Windmill fields. (fn. 317) In 1631
common meadow lay in South and Little meads
and in Northside and Southside meadows. (fn. 318) There
were two downs, a cow down of 100 a. and Aliens
down, 40 a., within the manor in 1567. The farmer
and the tenants then had herbage and pasture rights
in a common of 30 a. called Common woods.
Another common, of 40 a., called the Heath or
Abbess Wood and abutting the south-east corner of
the parish, was shared with the tenants of North
Newnton and its tithing Hilcott, which were also
owned by the Pembrokes. (fn. 319) The manorial pasture
was reckoned at 177 a. c. 1794 and called Cow and
Tenantry downs, Mill ham, and Church ditch. (fn. 320)
In 1802 551 a. in the open fields and common
meadows and pastures of West Overton were
inclosed at the expense of the earl of Pembroke and
Montgomery. The demesne farmer, whose land had
been augmented by several copyholds by that date,
was allotted 131 a., and the earl's other tenants a
total of 385 a. (fn. 321) Immediately afterwards rents within
the estate rose from £655 to £916, making available
the capital necessary for improvement. (fn. 322) By 1818 the
West Overton estate contained two consolidated
farms, the former demesne, then called West
Overton farm, 330 a., and another, probably to be
identified with the later Park farm at Overton Heath,
which was reckoned at 200 a., of which 10 a. were
water-meadows by the Kennet. (fn. 323)
In 1066 the estate later called Lockeridge manor
paid geld for 2 hides and was worth £2. In 1086
1 hide was held in demesne. The estate then supported 1 plough and contained 1 villein, 2 bordars,
and 1 serf. There were 1 a. of meadow, 12 a. of
pasture, and 6 a. of woodland. The value of the
estate had fallen to 30s. by 1086. (fn. 324)
That estate, acquired by the Templars between
1141 and 1143, was augmented in the later 12th
century by another 3 hides at Lockeridge. (fn. 325) The
lands were thenceforth administered from Rockley,
in Ogbourne St. Andrew. (fn. 326) By 1185, however, only
that land given by William de Beauchamp seems to
have been held by tenants: 2 were cottagers, and of
the remaining 9, 2 held 10 a. each for 6s. yearly,
and 7 held 5 a. each for 3s. yearly. Besides boonwork, all owed certain renders in kind which had
apparently been introduced by the Templars. An
assart and 4 a. were then held in common. (fn. 327) In 1338
receipts from the estate totalled £20, a sum which
included £7 representing rents, works, and customary payments. Outgoings amounted to £7, making
a profit of £13 to be sent to the preceptory at
Sandford (Oxon.), from which the estate was then
administered. (fn. 328)
By 1768 the duke of Marlborough had acquired
the manors of Lockeridge and Upper Lockeridge.
He also owned the land, deemed part of the Overton
estate of the monks of Winchester, held in 1086 by
Durand of Gloucester. (fn. 329) That estate, reckoned at
2 hides all but ½ virgate, was worth £1 in 1066 and
1086. (fn. 330) When the open fields and common pastures
of Lockeridge were inclosed in 1821 the duke of
Marlborough as lord was allotted 300 a. there. (fn. 331)
By the mid 19th century most of the land in
Lockeridge tithing north of the Kennet had been
included in North farm at Overton. What remained
of Lockeridge farm, 177 a., was south of the river.
It then included the allotment at Lockeridge made
in 1821 to replace vicarial tithes and glebe, which
was leased from the vicar. (fn. 332) The composite farm
so formed was worked in the later 19th century by
members of the Rebbeck family. (fn. 333) By 1906, however,
the former glebe, by then like Lockeridge the freehold property of Lady Meux, was worked separately
and known as Glebe farm. (fn. 334)
In 1066 Shaw paid geld for 2 hides and 1½ virgate
and was worth 20s. In 1086 the estate contained land
enough for 1 plough and supported 1 villein and
2 serfs. There were 30 a. of pasture and woodland
1 league long by 1 furlong broad. In 1086 its value
had increased to £2. (fn. 335)
By the 14th century it is likely that the lands of
the part of Shaw in Overton had been consolidated
as one farm. (fn. 336) It contained a very small arable
acreage and was probably exploited as a sheeprearing hill farm. (fn. 337) Under the ownership of the
Button family Shaw was worked in conjunction
with their West Tockenham estate in Lyneham. In
the 1670s the Shaw flock numbered some 600 sheep.
Much of the stock was transferred each summer to
West Tockenham for fattening on the lusher
pastures there. (fn. 338)
The owner of Shaw farm was accustomed to
pasture over 1,000 sheep on Shaw down, where in
the mid 17th century he inter-commoned with the
tenant of Alton Barnes. (fn. 339) When Shaw down was
inclosed in 1674 and apportioned between the
owners of Shaw in Overton and Alton Barnes, Sir
Robert Button as lord of Shaw in Overton was
allotted certain woods and 150 a. south of Wansdyke. (fn. 340) That apportionment was repeated in 1680. (fn. 341)
When Skilling heath, another near-by common
shared with neighbouring estates, was inclosed in
1693, the owner of Shaw farm received some 5 a. (fn. 342)
By 1834 the farm's arable acreage had greatly
increased, possibly through the clearance of woodland, and, of its 425 a., 112 a. represented arable land
in Boreham and Rowdown fields and 66 a. arable
land in South field. (fn. 343) From 1907 to 1918 the farm
was worked by Arthur Stratton in conjunction with
the farm at Alton Priors, and it was at Shaw that
Stratton established a pioneer school for Land
Women. (fn. 344)
In 1066 a composite estate based on Alton Priors
paid geld for 20 hides, 5 of which represented the
later manor of Patney. Of those 20 hides, then worth
£24, 6 hides and 1 virgate were in demesne in 1086.
There were then 4 ploughs and 8 serfs on the
demesne, and elsewhere on the estate 8 ploughs and
27 villeins and 15 coscez. There were 100 a. of
meadow, pasture 6 furlongs long by 4 broad, and
woodland 7 furlongs long by 2 broad. The estate of
3 hides held as an under-tenancy in 1086, which
comprised land at both Alton Priors and Patney,
then contained land enough for 2 ploughs and was
valued separately at £5. (fn. 345)
In 1210 Alton Priors manor, by then separate
from Patney, was worth £32, of which £8 represented
assessed rents. (fn. 346) The estate's profits were possibly
allotted at an early date to the almoner of St.
Swithun's, Winchester. (fn. 347) By 1334, however, the
profits seem to have been paid directly to the prior's
treasury at Winchester. (fn. 348) In the earlier and mid 16th
century the estate was worth £34, a value which
included the appropriated tithes of Alton Priors
chapelry. (fn. 349)
Alton Priors demesne, except 15 a. in West
Stowell and 8 a. in Alton Priors, probably remained
in hand and was administered by a bailiff appointed
by St. Swithun's Priory until the 15th century. The
demesne had been divided into Great and Little
farms by 1774, but in 1827 was again in single
occupation and called Alton farm. (fn. 350)
In the later 13th century assessed rents from the
manor totalled £8. The largest customary holding
was then that of ½ hide in West Stowell tithing held
for 8s. rent and labour services including autumn
boon-work. Also in that tithing were fifteen holdings
of 1 virgate for which half the rent and services of
the ½ hide were owed. Each virgater was additionally
entitled to 1 a. of demesne land. In Alton Priors
tithing there were eight holdings of 1 virgate, the
tenants of which owed the same yearly rent as the
West Stowell tenants and the usual agricultural
duties, and three of ½ virgate held for half the rent
and services of the virgaters. Another twelve
holdings of ½ virgate were held by cottars for rents
of 3s. yearly and an obligation to perform the
humbler agricultural tasks and certain weekly work.
One of the cottars acted as ploughman and the
cottars' wives milked the ewes or carried wool.
Some 8 a. of demesne were let to them for 2s.
yearly. (fn. 351) In 1595 of the seven Alton Priors copyholders, who paid a yearly rent of £6, the three
most substantial held 4½, 3, and 2½ yardlands
respectively. In West Stowell of the four copyholders, who paid £3 yearly, two held 3 yardlands
each and two held 2 yardlands each. (fn. 352)
Like East Overton, Alton Priors played its part
in the inter-manorial economy of the estates of St.
Swithun's Priory. In 1210 there were 32 oxen and
250 sheep within the estate. (fn. 353) Of the 464 ewes
maintained there in 1261, 100 were sent to Overton,
and of the 380 lambs raised there, 121 were sent to
the same estate after shearing. In the same year 193
qr. of wheat were accounted for, as well as varying
quantities of barley, oats, and dredge which were sent
to Enford and Overton. (fn. 354) In 1299 138 cheeses had
been produced over the past year. (fn. 355) Similar numbers
of sheep and quantities of wheat, oats, and barley
continued to be maintained and produced within
the manor in the 14th century. (fn. 356) During the 14th
and 15th centuries stock continued to be sent from
Alton to other priory manors in Wiltshire and
Hampshire and to be received from them in turn. (fn. 357)
There appear to have been two open fields on the
manor in the 13th century. (fn. 358) They were later named
as North and South fields. (fn. 359) In the later 16th
century, however, those fields appear to have been
exclusive to Alton Priors while West Stowell had
its own East and West fields. (fn. 360) It is likely that the
subdivision, the later emergence of West Stowell as
a separate farm, and the acquisition by the lord of
Alton Priors of two small freeholds within the manor
in 1783, made formal inclosure unnecessary. (fn. 361)
Since the manor was almost entirely on chalk soils,
it relied for meadow land and hay on another priory
manor, Patney, with which it had been associated
in the early Middle Ages. Hay was brought to
Alton from Patney in the 14th century, and in the
mid 16th century certain meadows in Patney were
usually leased with Alton Priors manor. (fn. 362)
Manor farm at Alton Priors was tenanted in the
later 19th century by Arthur Stratton (d. 1918),
who established there a business for contracting
agricultural machinery, the largest in Wiltshire for
cultivating, threshing, hauling, and cutting. Shortly
before the First World War the firm's work force at
times of greatest demand was 24 men and during
the same time the cultivating tackle let out increased
from three to five sets. (fn. 363)
It is likely that in the 12th and 13th centuries the
entire parish lay within Savernake forest. (fn. 364) Woodland seems to have been most plentiful within the
tithings of West Overton, Shaw, and Lockeridge. (fn. 365)
Boreham wood in Shaw, although put out of the
forest in 1225, became part of it again a year or so
later. It was still part of the forest in 1842, but was
afterwards acquired by an owner of Shaw farm. (fn. 366)
In 1543 Lockeridge manor contained 29 a. of woodland. (fn. 367) Tawsmead copse was part of Alton Priors
manor in 1552 and in 1977. (fn. 368) The woodland of East
Overton in 1567 comprised Little wood, 16 a.
planted with oaks, and Wools grove, 40 a., then both
fairly recently established. At the same date Fyfield
contained Fyfield wood, 40 a., and Audley's coppice,
8 a. The woods of West Overton, which included
Wykeham Hasset, 4 a., Allen's coppice, 27 a., and
Chichangles coppice (later Pumphrey wood), 25 a.,
were then considered dissafforested lands of Savernake. (fn. 369) After the Lockeridge estates and East
Overton manor were acquired by the dukes of
Marlborough in the 18th century, their woodland,
augmented in the later 19th century by a considerable acreage in Fyfield, was husbanded for
sporting as well as economic purposes. (fn. 370) In 1906
West Woods, as the woodland of the enlarged estate
was then called, comprised 718 a. of oak, fir, and
larch. (fn. 371) The woods suffered depredation by timber
merchants before their acquisition in 1931 by the
Forestry Commission, which thenceforth worked
them from Savernake Forest. The land in East
Overton, Lockeridge, and Fyfield was replanted
mainly with beech in the 1930s and that in West
Overton similarly replanted in the 1950s. (fn. 372)
The huge boulders, or sarsen stones, which
littered the Kennet valley and Overton and Fyfield
downs were used as building material locally from
earliest times until the 20th century. (fn. 373) Their
systematic exploitation began in the 19th century
when improving farmers began to clear them from
the arable fields. In the mid 19th century the Free
and Cartwright families established themselves as
stone-masons in the parish. Both firms, which
employed local labour, also functioned as coal
merchants, transporting sarsen stones to Honey
Street wharf in Woodborough and carting coal back
to Overton. Sarsen was used chiefly for tram-sets
and kerbing, but was replaced by concrete in the
earlier 20th century. Shortly before the industry
finished in 1939, four waggon-loads of sarsen blocks
were used to repair Windsor Castle. The main areas
worked were on the downs north of the river. Some
protection was offered to the Pickledean and Lockeridge dene areas in 1907 when 12 a. in Pickledean
and 8 a. in Lockeridge dene were bought by the
National Trust. (fn. 374) The sarsens on Fyfield down are
within the 610 a. there declared a Nature Conservancy area in 1956. (fn. 375)
In 1977 North farm, 700 a., although a distinct
unit from South and Fyfield farms, 880 a., was
worked in conjunction with them by the partnership
of F. Swanton & Sons. Fyfield and South farms,
then under grass, supported dairy cows and young
female stock, while North farm was given over to
cereal production and the rearing of beef and pigs. (fn. 376)
Some 200 a. on Fyfield down were then used as
gallops for the training of horses, mostly for flat
racing, by Mr. J. V. Bloomfield of Manton House
in Preshute. (fn. 377) West Overton farm, 705 a., was then
mainly under arable cultivation with 228 a. under
winter wheat and 118 a. spring barley. It was farmed
in conjunction with land in Beechingstoke and
Patney. (fn. 378) Within Alton Priors farm, 1,000 a. including
Tawsmead farm, there were 600 a. of arable under
a rotation of corn, kale, and grass, 100 a. of permanent pasture on which a dairy herd was maintained, and 300 a. of downland grazing for beef
cattle. (fn. 379) West Stowell farm then contained 344 a.
devoted to mixed farming. (fn. 380) Shaw farm in 1977 had,
besides its pasture lands on which a dairy herd of
no cows was maintained, 460 a. of arable mostly
devoted to barley and wheat. (fn. 381)
Mills.
In 1086 a mill attached to the abbess
of Wilton's estate at Overton paid 10s. yearly. (fn. 382)
Richard Cuffe (d. 1504) held a water-mill and some
land freely within West Overton manor and paid
a yearly rent of £1 2s. to Wilton Abbey. His heir
was his daughter Maud, wife of John True. (fn. 383) A John
True held the same mill and land in 1567. (fn. 384) By 1631
the mill estate was held by Robert Smith. (fn. 385) Before
1730 William Smith of Salisbury sold to Stowell
Smith of Overton (will proved 1731) a farm at
Overton to which a water-mill and a windmill were
attached. (fn. 386) The estate eventually passed to Stowell
Smith's nephew Thomas Smith (will proved 1763),
who devised it to his kinswoman Hannah Martyn.
She, who died c. 1804, devised the lands on trust for
her granddaughter Thermuthis Ashe. (fn. 387) Thermuthis
and her trustees sold them in 1806 to Richard
Matthews of East Kennett. (fn. 388) Edward Pumphrey
was owner of West Overton water-mill in 1821. (fn. 389)
The water-mill seems to have fallen into disuse
by the mid 19th century. It stood beside the Kennet
north of West Overton Farm. Most of the associated leats had been filled in but some stonework remained in 1977. The site of the windmill,
which stood in Windmill field about 1.5 km. southwest of Overton village, (fn. 390) was not recognizable in
1977.
Lockeridge manor contained a windmill in 1564. (fn. 391)
No more is heard of it.
There were two mills worth 12s. 6d. within
Winchester's Alton estate in 1086, presumably one
at Alton Priors and one at Patney. (fn. 392) Alton Priors
mill stood on the stream dividing the two Altons and
was apparently demolished c. 1650. (fn. 393)
Local Government.
The prior of St.
Swithun's, Winchester, withdrew his manors of
East Overton and Fyfield from Selkley hundred and
included them in his own hundred of Elstub in the
earlier 13th century. Alton Priors had been withdrawn from Swanborough hundred and included in
Elstub by 1281. (fn. 394) It was at Alton that the prior held
the courts for the Kennet valley portion of Elstub
hundred, which comprised the tithings of Alton,
West Stowell, East Overton, and Fyfield and the
near-by manor of Patney. At the courts, held twice
yearly, the prior exercised franchisal and manorial
jurisdiction from at least 1281. (fn. 395) His franchisal
rights included infangthief and outfangthief, return
of writs, view of frankpledge, which he claimed to
hold, in Alton at least, by grant of Henry III, and
pleas of vee de naam. (fn. 396) He accordingly claimed right
of gallows within East Overton manor in 1234 and
1275 and within Alton in 1275. (fn. 397) In 1255 he claimed
to hear pleas of vee de naam at Alton, and in 1281 to
hold assizes of bread and of ale there by virtue of
the grant of the view. (fn. 398)
The tithings of Lockeridge, West Overton, and
Shaw owed suit at the courts of Selkley hundred. (fn. 399)
No medieval manorial record for those manors is
known to survive.
Records of courts for West Overton, East Overton,
Alton Priors and West Stowell, and Lockeridge, all
Pembroke properties c. 1600, show the courts to have
been held locally, sometimes on the same day, once
or twice yearly. All, except the West Overton courts,
in which no franchisal jurisdiction seems to have
been exercised, were usually called views of frankpledge and courts. The business of the views was
transacted and recorded separately from that of the
courts. The main business of the views was to appoint
tithingmen and of the courts to regulate agricultural
practice and to appoint haywards. Records of courts
for East Overton and Fyfield, at which each tithingman and homage presented separately, survive for
1559, 1566–7, 1632–5, 1666–7, 1670, and 1676. (fn. 400)
West Overton court records are extant for 1559,
1566–7, 1632–5, 1667, 1670, 1675–6, 1678, 1688,
and 1724–1822, (fn. 401) and those of the Lockeridge views
and courts for 1632–3, 1666–7, and 1676–8. (fn. 402) The
Alton views and courts, at which the tithingmen
and homages of Alton and West Stowell presented
separately, are recorded for 1544–6, for 1564–5 and
1567 when the tenant William Button held them, and
for 1666–7, 1670, and 1676–8. (fn. 403)
The chapelries of Alton Priors and Fyfield both
relieved their own poor. (fn. 404) Alton and Stowell
became part of Pewsey poor-law union in 1835. (fn. 405) In
the same year Fyfield and the poor-law parish of
West Overton, which included East Overton, West
Overton, Shaw, and Lockeridge tithings, were
included in Marlborough union. (fn. 406)
A church book for Overton, 1810–77, records
church rates 1811–70, churchwardens' accounts
1810–77, and a few vestry minutes for the earlier
19th century. (fn. 407) A vestry minute book for Fyfield
chapelry, 1849–1922, records rates levied for chapel
repairs and the appointments of churchwardens,
overseers of the poor, and way-wardens. (fn. 408)
Churches.
In the 12th century there were
churches at East Overton, Fyfield, and Alton Priors.
Between 1142 and 1171 Henry, bishop of Winchester, and Jocelin, bishop of Salisbury, together
granted Alton church to the hospital of St. Cross
near Winchester. (fn. 409) A later-12th-century confirmation of the grant stipulated that suitable provision
be made for a vicar to serve it. (fn. 410) In the late 12th or
the 13 th century the hospital restored Alton to the
bishop of Winchester in return for a yearly pension
therefrom. That pension was reckoned at £2 in 1337
and in the 1540s, (fn. 411) but by the early 19th century,
and still in 1977, £3 4s. was paid yearly to the
hospital out of Alton Priors. (fn. 412) In 1291 another
pension, of £1 3s. 4d., was paid from Overton church
to the deacon in the abbey church at Wilton. (fn. 413) In
1284 St. Swithun's Priory gave up any right to the
advowson of Overton, to which Fyfield was then
already attached as a parochial chapel with rights of
baptism and burial, and to that of Alton in favour of
the bishop in return for his acknowledgement of its
lordship over manors including Fyfield and Alton. (fn. 414)
By 1290, when the advowson of Overton was
regranted by the bishop to the convent, Alton church
had also been annexed as a parochial chapel. (fn. 415) St.
Swithun's appropriated Overton church with its
dependent chapels in 1291. (fn. 416) Vicars were afterwards
appointed to serve the cure and a vicarage was
ordained probably by 1308. (fn. 417) The benefice was
called the vicarage of Overton until the earlier 18th
century but was afterwards referred to as that of
Overton with Fyfield and Alton Priors. (fn. 418) The priors
presented vicars until the Dissolution. (fn. 419)
A grant of tithes from his lands at Lockeridge by
Walter of Gloucester to the church of St. Owen at
Gloucester before 1129 may suggest the existence of
a proprietary church there. (fn. 420) The tithes passed to
the priory of Llanthony in Gloucester when Walter's
son Miles (d. 1143) conveyed St. Owen's church and
its possessions to the newly established house in
1137. (fn. 421) Miles's son Roger, earl of Hereford (d. 1155),
confirmed the grant of tithes to Llanthony. (fn. 422) Since
no more is known of any payment of tithes from
Lockeridge to Llanthony it is likely that they were
afterwards paid to the church of Overton.
In 1541 the Crown granted the advowson to the
newly formed Winchester chapter and it afterwards
descended like the manor of East Overton. (fn. 423) The
lords presented, except in 1545 when Richard
Paulet, to whom Winchester chapter had granted
a turn, presented and in 1623 and 1624 when John
Hayes and Robert Vaisey, to whom William, earl
of Pembroke, had granted consecutive turns, did
so respectively. (fn. 424) The chapelry of Alton Priors,
including West Stowell tithing, was detached from
the vicarage and united with the rectory of Alton
Barnes in 1913. West Stowell was detached from
Alton Barnes and annexed to the ecclesiastical
parish of Wilcot in 1928. (fn. 425) In 1929 the benefice of
East Kennett was united with the vicarage of
Overton with Fyfield and the patronage of Overton
transferred from the Olympia Agricultural Co. Ltd.
to the bishop of Salisbury, patron of East Kennett.
The united benefice was called Overton and Fyfield
with East Kennett. (fn. 426) In 1975 that benefice was
united with three others, Avebury with Winterbourne Monkton and Berwick Bassett, Broad
Hinton, and Winterbourne Bassett, to form the
benefice of Upper Kennet. A team ministry was
formed consisting of a rector at Avebury and two
vicars at Overton and Broad Hinton. The rector was
to be collated by the bishop of Salisbury and the
two vicars chosen by the bishop and rector together.
Rector and vicars were all to serve for terms of seven
years. (fn. 427)
In 1291 the church, including Fyfield chapelry,
was assessed for taxation at £13 6s. 8d. Alton Priors
was assessed separately at £6 13s. 4d. (fn. 428) The vicarage was worth £20 in 1535. (fn. 429) The vicar then received a pension of £1 18s. 9d. from the appropriated
rectory. (fn. 430) The owners of the rectory estate continued to pay it after the Dissolution and it is last
mentioned in 1725, when it was paid by the lord of
East Overton manor. (fn. 431) From 1829 to 1831 the
benefice had an average yearly net value of £319. (fn. 432)
The vicar, probably in the later 13th century or
the earlier 14th, was allotted all the small tithes
from Overton and its chapelries except those arising
from the lands of St. Swithun's Priory. The prior
of St. Margaret, Marlborough, was then expressly
allowed to take the small tithes from his manor of
Upper Lockeridge in return for a 3s. payment
yearly to the vicar. (fn. 433) That modus continued to be
paid in the later 18th century. (fn. 434) The lords of West
Overton manor also apparently took the small tithes
from their demesne. (fn. 435) By 1812 the small tithes of
Alton Priors had been commuted for £5 7s. 4d.
a year, and £5 6s. a year replaced those from West
Stowell. (fn. 436) When the open fields of the tithings of
East Overton, Fyfield, and Lockeridge were inclosed
in 1821 the vicar was allotted 200 a. in place of
tithes. (fn. 437) He received a rent-charge of £31 to replace
those arising from Shaw tithing in 1840. (fn. 438)
The vicarial glebe, presumably allotted at the
same time as the tithes, comprised some 64 a. of
which 46 a. were in the open fields of East Overton
and 18 a. in those of Fyfield. (fn. 439) The vicar received
40 a., mostly in East Overton tithing, to replace that
estate when the open fields were inclosed in 1821. (fn. 440)
With the 200 a. in place of tithes a glebe farm of
240 a. was formed. It was worked from the farmhouse called Dene Farm in 1977. The estate was
sold by the vicar to the trustees of Sir Henry Meux
in 1883. (fn. 441) The money raised was in the same year
used to buy estates at Beckenham (Kent) and
Battersea (Surr.). (fn. 442)
The vicarage-house at Overton, first mentioned
in 1588, stood west of the church. (fn. 443) The house was
rebuilt in the early 19th century, incorporating
older walling, and enlarged later in the century.
The incumbent of the united benefice of Overton
with Fyfield and East Kennett lived there after 1929.
The Vicarage was sold in 1939 and was afterwards
called Overton (later West Overton) House. (fn. 444) A new
house for the united benefice was built on the southeastern outskirts of West Overton village. (fn. 445)
In the later 16th century there were also houses
belonging to the benefice at Fyfield and Alton Priors.
That at Alton is not mentioned again. The vicar
was ordered to rebuild that at Fyfield in 1686 but
no more is heard of it. (fn. 446)
At an unknown date 2 a. of land in Lockeridge
field were given to maintain a lamp in the church
at Fyfield. The land was let for 6s. yearly in 1548. (fn. 447)
The Crown granted the 2 a. to Thomas Gratwicke
and Anselm Lambe in 1557 and they immediately
reconveyed them to Christopher Dismore, lord of
Lockeridge manor. (fn. 448)
Among the more notable non-resident incumbents
of Overton were William Fauntleroy and John
Moore. Fauntleroy, vicar 1496–1511, and later vicar
of Enford, held many more lucrative preferments. (fn. 449)
Moore (d. 1805), vicar 1759–73, was tutor to the
younger sons of his patron, the duke of Marlborough.
While vicar, Moore was also rector of Liddington,
a prebendary of Durham, and dean of Canterbury.
He later became successively bishop of Bangor and
archbishop of Canterbury. (fn. 450)
It seems probable that chaplains served Alton
Priors and Fyfield churches in the Middle Ages.
One at Fyfield is mentioned in 1281. (fn. 451) Curates were
employed at each in the 1550s. (fn. 452) A reader served
Fyfield church in 1584 but it was unknown whether
he was licensed to do so. (fn. 453) A neighbouring incumbent served Alton Priors in 1585. In the same year the
vicar's son officiated at Fyfield but whether he had
episcopal licence to do so was unknown. (fn. 454) A
sequestered royalist, John Gregson, served Alton
Priors between 1650 and 1652 but by 1656 he had
been ousted by the puritan rector of Alton Barnes. (fn. 455)
The two Altons were once more briefly united from
1829 to 1833 when Augustus Hare, rector of Alton
Barnes, unofficially served the chapelry. (fn. 456) In 1851
the same assistant curate, who lived at Lockeridge,
served both Overton and Fyfield. (fn. 457) Curates seem
always to have assisted the vicars in the later 19th
and earlier 20th centuries. (fn. 458)
In 1851 it was reckoned that over the past year an
average congregation of 250 had attended morning
and 410 afternoon services at Overton. (fn. 459) At Fyfield
over the same period morning congregations had
averaged 150 and evening ones 250. (fn. 460) On Sundays
in 1864 morning and afternoon services with sermons
were held alternately at Overton and Fyfield. Weekday prayers were said, presumably at Overton,
during Lent and Eastertide. Holy Communion,
attended by an average of twelve communicants,
was celebrated at the great festivals and on the first
Sunday in each month. (fn. 461) Alton Priors church then
seems to have been served separately but no details
of its life have been found.
The parish church of ST. MICHAEL AND
ALL ANGELS is built of flint and sarsen with
ashlar dressings and has a chancel with north organ
chamber and south vestry, a nave with north aisle
and south porch, and a west tower. (fn. 462) It was built
in a mixture of gothic styles between 1877 and 1883
to designs by C. E. Ponting and replaced the
medieval church which had become dilapidated.
The earlier church had a chancel, nave with south
porch and west tower and, although the later building follows its plan except for the aisle and a
lengthened chancel, appears to have been generally
lower in height. (fn. 463) The chancel arch of the earlier
church, which is reset between the present aisle and
organ chamber, is of 14th-century date, and three
nave windows, much restored and reset in the south
wall, are of the 15th century. The small plain tower
appears to have been of later-medieval construction
but apparently bore the date 1697.
The church of ST. NICHOLAS, Fyfield, is
mostly built of ashlar and rubble and has a chancel,
nave with north aisle and south porch, and a west
tower. The nave was rebuilt during a restoration of
1849 by C. H. Gabriel but its predecessor may have
been of 12th-century origin. (fn. 464) The chancel, which
has lancets and a decorated corbel table, was built
in the earlier 13th century and the tower of ashlar
was added in the later 15 th when the nave was given
new windows, heightened, and reroofed. When the
nave was rebuilt that roof was reset but the windows
were replaced by lower ones in a simple 14thcentury style and the north aisle with a two-bay
arcade was added. The timber-framed south porch,
which was probably post-medieval, was also rebuilt
and the chancel reroofed and provided with a new
east wall with three lancets where there had
formerly been only one small window. The church
has a circular 12th-century font which is decorated
with interlacing arcading, but most other fittings are
of the 19th century.
The church of ALL SAINTS, Alton Priors, is
built of freestone, rubble, and red brick and has a
chancel, nave, and west tower. (fn. 465) The chancel arch
survives from the 12th-century church. The nave
was rebuilt and widened towards the south in the
14th century. The tower, which is similar in design
to that at Fyfield, was added in the later 15th
century or the earlier 16th, and at about that time
the chancel appears to have been reconstructed and
a rood-stair put into the north wall of the nave. In
1491 John Button bequeathed lead to roof part of
the church. (fn. 466) The nave roof was renewed in the
later 18th century and the chancel roof is probably of
similar date. The chancel walls were refaced in brick
in the earlier 19th century and the nave walls
restored later in that century. Further restoration
of the whole building was undertaken c. 1960 and
c. 1976. (fn. 467) On the north side of the chancel a tombchest surmounted by a monumental brass commemorates William Button (d. 1591). The church
was declared redundant in 1973 and in 1977 was in
the care of the Redundant Churches Fund. (fn. 468)
The king's commissioners took 8½ oz. of plate
from Overton church in 1553 but left a chalice.
Fyfield then apparently had no plate but 1 oz. was
taken for the king from Alton Priors. In 1977
Overton's plate comprised a silver chalice, paten,
and flagon in medieval style given at the church's
rebuilding in 1878. Fyfield in 1977 had a chalice and
paten hall-marked 1732, a cup given in 1733, and
an alms-dish hall-marked 1781 and given in 1833. (fn. 469)
Alton's plate then comprised a cup and paten hallmarked 1577 and 1638 respectively. (fn. 470)
Overton church had three bells in 1553. In 1977
there was a ring of six: (i), (ii), (iii) are by Gillett &
Co., Croydon, 1883; (iv), of the earlier 16th century,
is by H. Jefferies of Bristol; (v), 1683, by Roger (II)
Purdue and recast in 1883 by Gillett & Co.; (vi), 1606,
by John Wallis. (fn. 471) There were three bells at Fyfield
in 1553 and two in 1977: (i), c. 1540, is attributed
to Thomas Jefferies of Bristol; (ii) is dated 1629. (fn. 472)
Alton church retained its three bells in 1977: (i), (ii),
1709, are by William and Robert Cor; (iii), 1736, is
by William Cockey of Frome (Som.). (fn. 473)
Those baptisms, marriages, and burials performed
at Overton and Fyfield are recorded in the same
register from 1682 to 1731. Thereafter the two
churches kept separate registers, which are complete. (fn. 474) Alton Priors apparently kept a separate register: entries of baptisms and burials begin in 1664
and are complete. Marriage registrations, which start
in 1702, appear to be lacking from 1753 to 1758 but
are otherwise complete. (fn. 475)
Roman Catholicism.
A chapel of ease,
dedicated to the Holy Family, was established at
West Stowell by Lady (Frances) Phipps in 1934. (fn. 476)
It was served from Devizes but ceased to be used
regularly when a church was opened at Pewsey in
1964. In 1977 services were held infrequently at the
chapel, then still owned by Lady Phipps. (fn. 477)
Protestant Nonconformity.
A group
at Fyfield, including Richard Kingsman and his
family, was presented for not attending Fyfield
church in 1662 and 1674. (fn. 478) Some of those presented
may have been among the five nonconformists
recorded in Overton parish in 1676. (fn. 479)
Independents certified a house at Fyfield in 1797. (fn. 480)
No more is known of that meeting. Dissenters met
at Fyfield again in the later 19th century. Their
chapel was closed in 1895. (fn. 481) A Congregational chapel,
which apparently stood near the Fighting Cocks inn
at Fyfield, was demolished in the 1930s. (fn. 482)
Independency flourished in West Overton and
what was possibly one group certified houses there
in 1825, 1827, and 1849. (fn. 483) In 1851 the Overton
meeting was served by a lay preacher and over the
past year an average of 40 people had attended
afternoon services and 35 those held in the evening. (fn. 484)
Thomas James's house at Lockeridge was certified
by Independents in 1849. (fn. 485) The group still met in
1851 when it was estimated that over the past year
an average of 30 people had attended both afternoon
and evening services. (fn. 486)
Wesleyan Methodists certified two houses at
Lockeridge in 1817, another at Overton in 1819, and
one at Alton Priors in 1836. (fn. 487) The group at Alton
flourished, (fn. 488) and in the 20th century met in a small
chapel south-east of Alton Priors Manor until c.
1947. In 1977 the building was used as a garage. (fn. 489)
Wesleyans certified a new building at Overton
Heath in 1846. (fn. 490) In 1851 that chapel was served by
a minister from Marlborough. During the past year
an average of 110 people had attended afternoon,
and 40 evening, services there. (fn. 491) The chapel,
described as at 'Park', was still used in 1894 but had
closed by 1935. (fn. 492) The building was used as a store
in 1977.
Methodists, designated 'independent', certified a
house at Fyfield in 1821. (fn. 493) In 1851 what is clearly
the same group, then described as Primitive
Methodists, still flourished and over the past year
an average of 13 people had attended morning, and
51 afternoon, services in a cottage at Fyfield. (fn. 494) On
Census Sunday that year some 58 Primitive
Methodists attended afternoon service in a house
at Lockeridge. (fn. 495)
Primitive Methodists built a chapel at the western
end of Overton village in 1901. (fn. 496) When it closed in
1966 its members attended the chapel at Lockeridge
mentioned below. (fn. 497)
Two evangelists from the Christian Brethren
established at Regent Place, Swindon, started a
mission in a cottage in Lockeridge dene c. 1906. A
new chapel was later built in Lockeridge village.
The brethren, who were 'open', held regular Sunday
services there in 1977. (fn. 498)
Education.
In 1808 labourers' children were
taught in a school at Overton supported by the duke
of Marlborough. Other children, paid for by their
parents, attended two small day-schools elsewhere
in the parish. (fn. 499) Some 30 children were taught in
1818 at a day-school supported by subscriptions and
contributions from the parish rates. The master who
kept the school was paid £30 yearly. (fn. 500) The parish
contained four schools in 1833. One, begun in 1823
and supported partly by the incumbent and partly
by parental contributions, was attended by twenty
children. At the others, all begun after 1828, 26
children, paid for by their parents, were taught. (fn. 501)
Children from Alton Priors in 1833 attended a
school in Alton Barnes, and continued to do so
thereafter. (fn. 502) In 1858 30 infants were taught by an
old woman in a cottage kitchen at Overton. At a
'tidy and business-like' school in Fyfield between 60
and 70 children from Fyfield and Lockeridge were
taught in 1859 by a trained mistress. (fn. 503)
About 1872 a school, affiliated to the National
Society, was built at Lockeridge to the design of
C E. Ponting to serve West Overton, Fyfield, and
Lockeridge. (fn. 504) In 1906 that school had been attended
over the past year by an average of 117 pupils. (fn. 505)
Thereafter average attendance gradually declined
and was 66 in 1938. (fn. 506) In 1977 the school was attended
by 42 children, who nearly all came from West
Overton, Lockeridge, and Fyfield. (fn. 507)
Charities for the Poor.
In 1704 Robert
Fowler of Lockeridge gave £20, the interest to be
distributed yearly amongst the unrelieved poor of
the parish. Interest was usually allowed to accumulate in the earlier 19th century and £3 was distributed
triennially in small money doles. Income was 12s.
yearly in the 1860s. In 1902 accumulated interest
of £8 was apportioned in sums of £2 and £6 respectively between a coal and clothing club and a
fund for the sick and needy. The yearly income was
6s. or 7s. in 1905 and then deemed applicable only
to the civil parish of West Overton. (fn. 508) In the 1960s
the yearly income of under £1 was allowed to
accumulate and in 1969 there was a balance of £10. (fn. 509)
At an unknown date Mary Tasker of Fyfield gave
£20, the interest to be distributed yearly amongst
the unrelieved poor of Fyfield tithing. In the earlier
19th century interest was allowed to accumulate and
then distributed in small money doles. The yearly
interest of 12s. was distributed in fuel in the 1860s.
In 1895 accumulated interest totalling £4 was used
to buy coal for distribution at Christmas. In the
earlier 20th century the annual income of 6s. or 7s.
was similarly allowed to accumulate until there were
sufficient funds to provide coal for all the poor of
Fyfield. (fn. 510) In 1965 the charity had an income of
under £1. (fn. 511)
In the 1970s the funds of both charities were
allowed to accumulate and at Christmas 1976 doles
of 50p were distributed to twenty people in the
parishes of West Overton and Fyfield. (fn. 512)