HANKERTON

Hankerton 1840
Hankerton church is 5 km. north-east of
Malmesbury. (fn. 1) The long and narrow parish, 891
ha. (2,203 a.), runs east-west and contains
Hankerton village and the hamlets of Cloatley and
Bullock's Horn: in the Middle Ages Moredon may
have been another hamlet. (fn. 2) Hankerton manor was
part of Malmesbury abbey's Crudwell estate, the
church was dependent on Crudwell's, (fn. 3) and
Hankerton was probably late in becoming a parish.
To the west, Hankerton's north and south
boundaries were fixed early and appear to have
been little changed. The northern, with Eastcourt
and Murcott, both in Crudwell, may have been
on or near its present course in the early Middle
Ages when both Eastcourt's and Murcott's followed Braydon, otherwise Swill, brook: (fn. 4) part of
Hankerton's later boundary with Crudwell followed Braydon brook and its feeders and, for short
distances, roads. The southern, with Charlton,
was defined possibly c. 1100 (fn. 5) and was later marked
by a road. The western boundary of Braydon forest
in 1225 may have been the eastern boundary of
Hankerton, as it apparently was of Charlton and
Garsdon to the south and of Crudwell to the north.
It ran, possibly almost due north, from Swatnage
wood in Charlton to Braydon brook following the
stream which was called Locks brook in 1225 and
1809. Braydon forest was extended westwards and
took in Hankerton village in 1228, was reduced
to its 1225 boundaries in 1279, and was reduced
further in 1300. (fn. 6) The purlieus of the forest, apparently the land between the boundaries of 1279 and
1300, were open pastures and woods used in common by the lords and tenants of manors near the
forest, but particular parts were claimed for, and
perambulated by, each manor. (fn. 7) Until the 1540s
Hankerton and Cloatley were parts of a single
estate (fn. 8) and until c. 1580 parishioners of Hankerton perambulated part of the purlieus claimed for
both Hankerton and Cloatley. For most of their
length the northern and southern boundaries of
that part seem to have been similar to the later
boundaries of the parish, but towards the east end
they both turned southwards and met at Charlham
oak on Shire ditch. (fn. 9) About 1580 the lord of both
Hankerton and Charlton, to deprive Cloatley of
part of the purlieus, ordered the men of Charlton
to perambulate what had formerly been perambulated by the parishioners of Hankerton. To keep
it the men of Cloatley perambulated the same part
of the purlieus. Probably soon after the dispute
was heard in the Exchequer in 1595, (fn. 10) but possibly
after the forest and purlieus were inclosed in the
1630s, (fn. 11) both the north and south boundaries of
Hankerton were cut off at the Cricklade—Malmesbury road and the triangle to the south, formed
by that road, Shire ditch, and a line from Charlham oak to Stonehill wood in Charlton, became
Charlton land. (fn. 12) Only minor changes were later
made to Hankerton parish boundaries. Those with
Crudwell on Windmill Hill and with Charlton
along the Cricklade—Malmesbury road were
defined at inclosure in 1809, (fn. 13) and in 1882 a small
part of Charlton was transferred to Hankerton. (fn. 14)
West of Hankerton village are outcrops of limestone and clay of the Forest Marble and, immediately west of the village, of Cornbrash: the land,
over 100 m. in the west, slightly lower nearer the
village, is almost flat. East of the village are outcrops of Kellaways Clay and Oxford Clay and,
around Bullock's Horn, of Kellaways Sand: the
land, c. 110 m. in the east, 90 m. near the village,
is almost as flat as in the west. Virtually the whole
parish drains to the Thames. Tributaries of Braydon brook flowing from each end of the parish
meet in the middle north-east of the village, where
they are joined by Locks brook and there are extensive deposits of alluvium. (fn. 15) A stream flowing south
to Charlton may have risen in Hankerton parish
in the 16th century. (fn. 16) Hankerton's open fields were
west of the village, its common pastures were north
of the church and on clay south-east of the church.
Most of the clay to the east was open pasture until
the 1630s and little has ever been ploughed. (fn. 17) In
several places west of the village the limestone has
been quarried. (fn. 18) To the east John Aubrey thought,
apparently mistakenly, that the parish could yield
both fuller's earth and saltpetre. (fn. 19)
West of Hankerton village, where the open fields
were, there was no road in the parish until the
later 18th century (fn. 20) when the road from Cirencester (Glos.) to Malmesbury, turnpiked in 1778
and disturnpiked in 1874, (fn. 21) was made across it.
The lanes follow the parish boundaries. From the
north end of the village one led to Crudwell: the
lane leading from it towards Eastcourt was on its
present course in 1773. (fn. 22) From the south end of
the village the road called Down Lane in 1585, (fn. 23)
in the course of which is a semicircular detour,
leads to Tetbury (Glos.). It was crossed by the
Cirencester—Malmesbury road at a junction called
Five Lanes. The Tetbury road was turnpiked west
of Five Lanes in 1798, (fn. 24) east of Five Lanes to its
junction with a new road from Charlton in 1808. (fn. 25)
Both east and west parts were disturnpiked in
1876. On the grassland east of Hankerton village
the Cricklade—Malmesbury road, turnpiked in
1756 and disturnpiked in 1876, (fn. 26) crosses the parish, and the lanes were more numerous. Cloatley
Lane, called Locks Brook Road in 1809, led across
the former purlieus to Minety and there were offshoots to the south. The lanes were wide and in
1809 the offshoots were inclosed and allotted as
farmland. (fn. 27) The road to Bullock's Horn became
a footpath in the 20th century, (fn. 28) and in 1988 that
hamlet was approached by road only from the
south. Where it runs straight across the former
common pasture immediately east of the village
Cloatley Lane may have been remade at inclosure
in 1809.
In 1377 Hankerton had 61 poll-tax payers and
Cloatley 33; Moredon, probably a hamlet in the
parish, had 20. Those figures show the parish to
have been one of the more populous of the
hundred. (fn. 29) In 1676 there were 190 adults in the
parish. (fn. 30) The population was 286 in 1801. It had
risen to 413 by 1831 when 325 lived in Hankerton
tithing and 88 in Cloatley, and reached a peak of
417 in 1841 when Hankerton had 340 inhabitants
and Cloatley 77. The decrease to 371 in the period
1841–51, when Hankerton's population declined
by 62, was attributed to lack of housing and to
several families leaving the parish. From 393 in
1861 the population of the parish had fallen to
252 by 1901, between 1901 and 1951 it fell to 217, (fn. 31)
and in 1961 reached a low point of 178. In the
period 1971–81, when new houses were built, it
rose from 194 to 289. (fn. 32)
Hankerton village is almost certainly the oldest
settlement in the parish. Its farmsteads and cottages were loosely grouped in lanes around the
church. To the west the lane linking Hankerton
and Charlton, called Windmill Hill Road in 1809, (fn. 33)
forms a village street. North of the church Cuff's
Lane ran between the street and Cloatley Lane.
The east end of Cuff's Lane was stopped at inclosure in 1809 and the west end has largely gone
out of use. In the 19th century Chapel Lane was
formed between its middle and Cloatley Lane. (fn. 34)
The pre-inclosure pattern of settlement could be
clearly seen in 1988. In all parts of the village the
older buildings were set back behind what until
1809 were the wide verges of lanes used for pasture
in common: they are all of apparently local stone.
Beside the village street to the north Brook Farm
is a later 18th-century farmhouse with extensive
farm buildings, south of it is an 18th-century cottage, and east of it are a small farmhouse much
enlarged in the 1980s and a small 18th-century
farmhouse. Further south Yew Tree Farm is an
early 18th-century farmhouse near which is an
early 18th-century cottage. Beside the west part
of Cuff's Lane is a farmhouse of the 17th century
or earlier, and beside the centre part a 19th-century
cottage. North and south of Cloatley Lane are
small 18th-century houses, and beside Chapel
Lane, near what was the west edge of a common
pasture until 1809, two cottages standing in 1809
survive. The north end of the village is possibly
the site of Moredon. There Rookery Farm is a
late 18th-century farmhouse, west of it Hankerton
Priory is the old vicarage house, (fn. 35) and west of that
are two cottages, apparently one of the 17th century and one of the 18th. From the mid 19th century to the mid 20th, while the population was
declining, there was little new building in the village, and some buildings which were standing in
1840 (fn. 36) were demolished. A school was built in
Church Lane and a nonconformist chapel with a
small cottage in Chapel Lane. (fn. 37) Some pre–1809
house sites were re-used in the 20th century, but
the former verges between the older houses and
the roads were the sites of much 20th-century
housing. Those at the junction of the village street
and Cloatley Lane were used for six council houses
in 1948 (fn. 38) and four old people's bungalows in
1962, (fn. 39) and several other houses and bungalows
were built beside Cloatley Lane in the later 20th
century. Follyfield, an estate of c. 35 houses, was
built east of the village street in the early 1970s, (fn. 40)
in 1988 five houses were being built on the site
of Church Farm, and several other later 20th
century houses were in the village. West of the
village Bishoper Farm was built c. 1725, (fn. 41) and
Hankerton Field Farm, where the farmhouse was
rebuilt in the earlier 20th century, was probably
built shortly before 1808. (fn. 42) A pair of estate cottages
beside the Cirencester—Malmesbury road was built
in the early 20th century.
The cottages and small farmsteads of which
Cloatley hamlet may have consisted from the 13th
century to the mid 16th (fn. 43) may have been beside
Cloatley Lane east of its junction with Cuff's Lane,
where a hamlet, consisting of only three cottages
or houses south of the wide verge, was called Cloatley in 1773. (fn. 44) After the verges were allotted in
1809 (fn. 45) a house was built on the north side of the
road. (fn. 46) In 1988 that house, with a commercial
garage, a later 20th-century bungalow, and one
of the cottages on the south side survived. Cloatley
Manor was built on low land east of Hankerton
church in the Middle Ages. (fn. 47) After the purlieus
were inclosed three new farmsteads were built
beside Cloatley Lane east of the hamlet: the farmhouses of Dolman's Farm and Laurel Farm are
clearly 17th-century; that of Cloatley End Farm
has a late 18th-century front. At the east end of
Cloatley Lane a few cottages include one of the
early 19th century. At the eastern edge of Hankerton's common, a short distance west of Cloatley
hamlet, three cottages stood in 1809. (fn. 48) One, possibly 18th-century, became the nucleus of Common
End Farm, a house with later 20th-century extensions and farm buildings. Near the east end of
the parish a cottage on inclosures called Woburn
had been taken down by 1569. (fn. 49) A house and farm
buildings there in 1840 were probably erected in
the early 19th century: (fn. 50) none survives. In the
early 19th century buildings were also on the site
of Purlieus Farm beside the Cricklade—Malmesbury road and divided by the boundary with Charlton: (fn. 51) none of that date survives. An electricity substation was built on the boundary with Charlton
in 1970. (fn. 52)
Bullock's Horn was named as a settlement site in
the early 18th century, (fn. 53) and several cottages, most
built in a wide lane leading east from Hankerton's
common, stood there in 1773. (fn. 54) Six cottages and
a house were there in 1840. (fn. 55) All four houses there
in 1988, much altered, may survive from 1840.
Manors and other Estates.
Before the
Conquest Hankerton, which was not mentioned
in Domesday Book, is likely to have been part of
Malmesbury abbey's Crudwell estate and, lying
between the abbey and Crudwell, may, like Crudwell, have been an early endowment. (fn. 56) It is also
likely that the 10 cassati at Hankerton given by
King Edward to the abbey in an exchange in 901 (fn. 57)
were the lands of Cloatley. The abbey held
Hankerton and Cloatley until the Dissolution,
each as part of its Crudwell estate. (fn. 58)
In 1552 the Crown granted HANKERTON
manor, without Cloatley, to John Dudley, duke
of Northumberland, in an exchange, (fn. 59) and in 1553
Northumberland sold it to Sir James Stumpe (fn. 60) (d.
1563), the owner of Charlton manor. Hankerton
manor descended with Charlton to Stumpe's
daughter Elizabeth (d. 1585) and her husband Sir
Henry Knyvett (d. 1598), to the Knyvetts'
daughter Catherine, wife of Thomas Howard, earl
of Suffolk, and in the Howard family and with
the earldoms of Suffolk and Berkshire to Michael
Howard, earl of Suffolk and of Berkshire from
1941. (fn. 61) In 1840 Thomas, earl of Suffolk and of
Berkshire, owned 1,125 a. in the parish. (fn. 62) About
1959 Lord Suffolk sold the eastern part of the
manor, Church farm, Common End farm, part
of Old Park farm based in Charlton, and Purlieus
farm: in 1988 he owned c. 800 a. in the parish. (fn. 63)
In 1542 the Crown granted CLOATLEY manor
to William Sharington (fn. 64) who in 1543 sold it to John
Warneford (fn. 65) (d. 1558). The manor passed to Warneford's son John (fn. 66) (d. 1620) and to that John's
son Thomas (fn. 67) (d. 1639) who settled it in 1627 on
the marriage of his son Edmund (fn. 68) (d. 1649). (fn. 69)
After Edmund's death the manor was held by his
relict Margaret (will proved 1693) and at her death
passed to his son Sir Edmund Warneford (d.
1700), who devised it to his son Edmund. In 1706
Edmund Warneford sold the manor to Giles
Earle (fn. 70) (d. 1758), lord of the neighbouring manor
of Eastcourt. It passed with Eastcourt to Giles's
son William (d. 1774), and to William's son Giles
who divided Cloatley manor c. 1806. (fn. 71) The manor
house, Manor farm, and woodland, a total of 177
a. in 1840, (fn. 72) were bought by Joseph Pitt and
remained part of the Eastcourt estate until 1919.
They belonged successively to Pitt, J. R. Mullings
(d. 1859), Joseph Mullings (d. 1860), A. R. Mullings (from 1877 A. R. Randolph, d. 1885), and
J. R. Randolph. (fn. 73) In 1919 Randolph sold them to
the tenant A. T. Hislop (d. 1968), who devised
them to his brother and sister. In 1986 his sister
Dorothy Hislop and the executors of his brother
A. C. Hislop (fn. 74) (d. 1986) sold the house and 146
a. to Mr. M. Thornbury, who owned that estate
in 1988. (fn. 75) Cloatley Manor consists of an eas-west
hall range with, as east and west wings, the two
stone cross wings of a substantial medieval house.
The west, at the upper end of the hall, has a roof
of arch-braced collars with elaborate wind braces
below the purlins and may originally have been
of one storey. The east, a two-storeyed service
wing at the lower end of the hall, has a plainer
roof with braced collars. Both wings are probably
of 14th-century origin. Between them the long hall
range, entered through a two-storeyed south
porch, was rebuilt in the late 16th century. Both
ground- and first-floor rooms retain some original
plaster decoration, and at the north-west corner
a wooden newel stair, possibly older than the present hall, gives access to the upper floor of the west
wing. The roof of the hall range was renewed in
the late 18th or early 19th century. After 1986
the house, which had become dilapidated, was
extensively restored. The farm buildings near it
include a 17th-century dovecot, a stable of 1706,
and a barn of 1707. East and west of the house
parts of a moat survive.
The other farms sold by Earle c. 1806 were
Woburn, Dolman's, Laurel, and Cloatley End.
Woburn farm, 203 a. in 1840, was bought by
Christopher Cole; it became the main part of Elms
farm based in Minety, and it has remained part
of that farm. Jonathan Cole owned it in 1854 (fn. 76)
and 1873, (fn. 77) and in 1897 John Cole's trustees owned
it. (fn. 78) In 1910 it belonged to Henry Hathaway, (fn. 79) in
1926 to Percy Manners. (fn. 80) In 1947 Elms farm, 160
a., was bought by M. H. Crocker and his wife,
and Mrs. Crocker owned it in 1989. In 1968 Purlieus farm, c. 145 a., was bought by the Crockers'
son Mr. P. H. Crocker, the owner in 1989. (fn. 81) After
c. 1806 Dolman's, Laurel, and Cloatley End
farms, a total of c. 310 a., usually descended separately, (fn. 82) but in the early 20th century Murray Shirriff owned all three. (fn. 83)
An estate called MOREDON seems to have
originated in a grant of ¼ knight's fee, possibly
demesne land, by Malmesbury abbey to William
of Crudwell c. 1150. (fn. 84) William of Hankerton
apparently held it in 1242–3, (fn. 85) as did John of
Hankerton in the later 13th century. (fn. 86) It was possibly the estate conveyed by John Brown to Roger
Joliffe or Beaumond in 1365 (fn. 87) and settled by Joliffe
or Beaumond in 1367, (fn. 88) and possibly that held by
Richard Urdley and his wife Margaret in 1388 and
1394. (fn. 89) The estate later seems to have been
divided. An estate called Urdley's passed from
Thomas Warneford (d. 1539), a freeholder in
Hankerton in 1510, to his son John (d. 1558), (fn. 90)
and with Cloatley manor to Sir Edmund Warneford who sold it in 1693 to Thomas, earl of Berkshire (d. 1706). (fn. 91) It belonged to Lord Berkshire's
daughter Lady Frances Winchcombe in 1706 (fn. 92) and
later to George White. (fn. 93) A second portion was
apparently sold by Richard Urdley's descendant
Alison or Alice Parfet and her husband Thomas
Hasard to John Hibberd in 1440, (fn. 94) and it descended in the Hibberd family. William Hibberd,
who held it in 1539, (fn. 95) died holding it in 1560 (fn. 96)
and was succeeded by his son John (fl. 1605), who
held Moredon in 1590. John's son Edmund (fn. 97) held
it in 1606, (fn. 98) but its later descent is uncertain. It
may have been the estate, held by John Cooper
in 1616, (fn. 99) which on the death of Richard Cooper
c. 1627 passed to John Machell (fl. 1644). (fn. 100) George
Machell may have held it at his death c. 1684 when
it passed to Richard Stacey. (fn. 101) George White held
both Moredon and Urdley's in the earlier 18th
century. His land descended to his son John (d.
c. 1774) and to John's son John, (fn. 102) who in 1793
and 1809 exchanged lands with John, earl of Suffolk and of Berkshire. (fn. 103) John White's estate,
ROOKERY farm, 102 a., was held in 1840 by,
presumably another, John White, (fn. 104) and in 1868,
when land was exchanged with Charles, earl of
Suffolk and of Berkshire, by J. M. White. (fn. 105) In
1874 White (fl. 1883) sold the reversion to G. W.
White (d. 1892). (fn. 106) In 1910 J. White owned the
land, (fn. 107) in 1921 G. W. White sold most of it to
Joseph Chivers, (fn. 108) and in 1951 Chivers sold it to
Harold Sheppard whose relict, Mrs. A. Webb,
owned it in 1988. (fn. 109)
A small estate in Hankerton was acquired by
Bradenstoke priory before and in 1232. (fn. 110) Before
the Dissolution some of the land was apparently
granted freely to St. Bartholomew's hospital,
Gloucester. At the Dissolution the priory's land
passed to the Crown. (fn. 111) In 1541 it was granted to
Sir Thomas Seymour (fn. 112) (cr. Baron Seymour 1547,
d. 1549), who was attainted, (fn. 113) and in 1550 to Sir
Walter Mildmay. (fn. 114) It was bought soon afterwards
by John Warneford (fn. 115) who added it to Cloatley
manor. The hospital kept its land, 36 a. in 1840, (fn. 116)
until between 1910 and 1926. (fn. 117)
Malmesbury abbey took the corn tithes from
the parish from 1222 until the Dissolution (fn. 118) and
they were granted by the Crown with Hankerton
manor in 1552. (fn. 119) They descended with the manor
and belonged to Thomas, earl of Suffolk and of
Berkshire, in 1840, when those arising from his
own land were deemed merged and those from
other lands were valued at £15 and commuted. (fn. 120)
Economic History.
Hankerton and Cloatley were each a part of Crudwell manor in the
Middle Ages, but their lands were distinguished; (fn. 121)
in a survey of them after the Dissolution the distinction was clarified. (fn. 122) To the west Hankerton's
lands included common pastures and large open
fields; east of them on the clay Cloatley's, presumably colonized later, apparently included little land
used in common. (fn. 123) East of Locks brook and a line
from its source to Swatnage wood in Charlton both
Hankerton and Cloatley had rights to feed animals
in common in the open woodlands and pastures
of Braydon forest and its purlieus until the 1630s. (fn. 124)
Hankerton.
In the mid 12th century Malmesbury abbey may have alienated some of its demesne
in Hankerton (fn. 125) and in the later Middle Ages it
clearly had little there. In the early 16th century
the demesne farm was called Hall Court. Other
holdings were also small. In the later 13th century
and the early 16th c. 30 yardlands were shared
among 20–25 customary tenants and a few freeholders. (fn. 126) Isolated references to cultivation at Hankerton in the Middle Ages (fn. 127) suggest that by the
mid 16th century the arrangement of open fields,
inclosed land, and common pastures and meadows
had long been little changed. The arable was in
three fields, West, Middle, and Home, all west
of the village, and the common pastures east and
south of the village were called the Moors. Meadow
land called lot mead was in the open fields, presumably most beside the tributary of Braydon brook
crossing the parish from the west, and there were
other common meadows, presumably beside that
tributary and another stream north and north-east
of the village. A meadow called New mead northeast of the church was used in common. (fn. 128)
Apparently in the 1570s, soon after Charlton
Park was built and part of West field in Charlton
was inclosed, (fn. 129) the neighbouring West field in
Hankerton was partly or wholly inclosed: (fn. 130) c. 90
a. were inclosed, another 63 a. may have been,
closes of c. 5–10 a. were added to copyholds, and
some land was converted to pasture. (fn. 131) There was
no open West field in 1616. (fn. 132) Exchanges of plots
in and inclosures of three common meadows,
including New mead, were authorized in 1577, (fn. 133)
and most meadow land had been inclosed by
1606. (fn. 134) There had been two other inclosures by
the early 17th century: north of the village Moor
down or Moredon, c. 100 a., was inclosed and
divided into a few closes for the lord of the manor
and a freeholder; (fn. 135) south of the village Down Hill
was divided into the Down, 10 a., and smaller
closes for the copyholders. (fn. 136) There were also small
inclosures around the village. (fn. 137) In 1616 a total of
416 a. of arable was in Home field and Middle
field: the 35 furlongs had 802 strips. The fields
also contained 35 a. of lot mead in small pieces
which were cut simultaneously. The arable was
shared among 29, the meadow among 24. (fn. 138) The
Moors were then 60 a. and Windmill Hill was a
smaller common pasture. Inclosures at Hankerton
totalled c. 450 a. In the later 16th century and
early 17th Hall Court farm was c. 92 a. and a
freehold may have been c. 100 a. All the copyholds
were smaller: 3 were over 50 a., 4 were between
25 a. and 50 a., and 15 were under 25 a. The
Down was part of Bambury Hill farm based in
Charlton but all Hankerton's other land was presumably worked from the village. (fn. 139)
Hankerton's part of the purlieus of Braydon
forest was presumably inclosed with Charlton's
by the lord of the manor, Thomas, earl of Berkshire, in 1631, (fn. 140) and part of it was assigned to
Cloatley in 1633. (fn. 141) By an agreement of 1634 the
copyholders and freeholders of Hankerton were
allotted 120 a. of the purlieus at the east end of
the parish as a common and Lord Berkshire kept
the rest: Lord Berkshire undertook to build a small
house for the overseer of the common but there
is no evidence that he did so. The agreement also
sanctioned the inclosure of two meadows as
demesne and use of the fallow field for meadow
land, and excluded tenants of demesne land from
the Moors. (fn. 142) In 1635 the copyholders and freeholders were stinted at 1 horse, 2 cattle, and 4
sheep on the new common for each yardland
held. (fn. 143)
Small farms and common husbandry persisted
at Hankerton until the late 18th century. Husbandry was regulated in the manor court where
officers to oversee it were appointed. (fn. 144) A new third
arable field was marked out and in 1693 the fields
were Home, Mersell (later Quarry), and Murcott, (fn. 145) but piecemeal inclosure apparently continued. (fn. 146) About 1800 the open fields, west of the
village, may have been no more than c. 325 a.
South-east of the village Home common was c.
70 a., north of the village Lower common was
c. 35 a. and Windmill Hill common was c. 5 a.,
and further east the 120 a. allotted in 1634 were
still a common pasture. Over 500 a. of Hankerton
land were in closes of which the average size was
no more than c. 5 a. (fn. 147) About 1725 Bishoper farm,
169 a., was created with land in Brokenborough
and Charlton and 79 a. in closes at the west end
of Hankerton. (fn. 148) In the late 18th century it was
c. 529 a., including 124 a. in Hankerton, and by
then another holding had grown to over 400 a.,
but there remained a number of small farms. (fn. 149)
As part of the improvement of his whole Wiltshire estate John, earl of Suffolk and of Berkshire,
initiated many changes in Hankerton between c.
1790 and c. 1810. Hankerton Field farm was
created and, following an exchange of lands
between Lord Suffolk and John White in 1793,
the three open fields were inclosed by bringing
nearly all of each into separate farms. In 1808
Hankerton Field farm, 373 a., included the whole
of both Murcott and Quarry fields. (fn. 150) The common
pastures were inclosed in 1809 under an Act of
1808. A small allotment was made for every dwelling in the parish but most of the Hankerton commons, including that allotted in 1634, was allotted
to Lord Suffolk and leased as farmland. (fn. 151) Brook
farm, including most of Home field, was the largest
of only a few farms based in the village; Bishoper
farm, 355 a. in 1809, then had c. 165 a. in Hankerton. (fn. 152) A further exchange between Lord Suffolk
and John White in 1809 left Rookery a compact
farm of 102 a. north of the village. (fn. 153) Intending to
improve drainage, roads, and buildings on the
farms and to promote tillage by providing threshing machines, Lord Suffolk invited farmers from
Northumberland and Scotland and found new tenants for about half his Hankerton land in 1809. (fn. 154)
Cloatley.
An assart in the purlieus may have
been added to Cloatley's lands in the mid 12th
century, (fn. 155) but those lands were never extensive.
In the later 13th century Malmesbury abbey had
13 tenants at Cloatley, some of whom apparently
held very little. One or more held a Monday land.
In 1540 the lands of only 2 of c. 10 tenants were
referred to as yardlands, and the holdings were
clearly very small. (fn. 156) Although there may earlier
have been open field there is no evidence of it after
1540, but pasture and woodland adjoining the purlieus were claimed for Cloatley in the later 16th
century and were presumably used in common. (fn. 157)
Four closes called Woburn, assarted in the purlieus, were part of Cloatley manor in the mid 16th
century when they were mostly meadow land. (fn. 158)
After dispute, 120 a. of the purlieus near the
east end of the parish were allotted to Cloatley
to replace feeding rights in Braydon forest and
the purlieus in 1633. They were divided equally
between the lord of the manor and the tenantry:
the tenants' 60 a. were for use in common. (fn. 159) Much
of Cloatley's land may have been in the lord's hand
from the mid 16th century, (fn. 160) and later the largest
farm was worked from the manor house. (fn. 161) From
the 17th century two farmsteads, later called Dolman's and Laurel, stood east of the hamlet, as
did a third, Cloatley End, from 1773 or earlier. (fn. 162)
Manor farm and the three farms worked from those
buildings were the only ones based in Cloatley
tithing in the early 19th century. (fn. 163) Each was apparently compact and, from when they were sold c.
1806, (fn. 164) without rights of common pasture. Those
rights were apparently sold c. 1806 with the land
called Woburn. Under the Act of 1808 the owner
of Woburn farm, which was worked with Elms
farm based in Minety, was allotted 123 a. in 1809. (fn. 165)
In 1840 there were 1,585 a. of grassland and
514 a. of arable in the parish. The part with the
most arable remained that between the Cirencester—Malmesbury road and Hankerton village.
To the west Bishoper farm was 407 a., including
170 a. in Hankerton, and Hankerton Field farm
was 274 a. Based in the village Brook farm was
219 a. and Church farm 85 a. From Rookery Farm
172 a. in the parish were worked. To the east
Manor was a pasture farm of 160 a. leased to the
tenant of Bishoper farm; Dolman's farm, 137 a.,
included buildings at Bullock's Horn; Laurel farm
was 89 a.; and Cloatley End farm was 79 a. Much
land in the east and south was worked mainly from
outside the parish: Elms farm included the old
Cloatley common and land and buildings at
Woburn, 239 a.; Woodward farm, based in
Minety, included 29 a.; Summerhouse farm,
based in Charlton, included 59 a. of the former
Hankerton common in the purlieus; and two other
farms based in Charlton, Old Park and Bambury
Hill, included respectively 82 a. and 67 a. of Hankerton land. (fn. 166)
Between 1840 and 1939 arable farming in the
parish declined further. There may have been less
than 400 a. of arable in 1887 and no more than
200 a. in the 1930s. Cows, other cattle, sheep,
and pigs were all kept. (fn. 167) Bishoper, Hankerton
Field, and Brook remained the largest farms based
in the parish. In 1926 Bishoper was 422 a. of which
171 a. were in Hankerton, Hankerton Field farm
was 304 a., and Brook 272 a. Other farms then
based in the parish included Manor, 156 a., Rookery, 122 a. and other land in Crudwell, Dolman's,
136 a., Laurel, 90 a., and Cloatley End, 81 a. By
1926 Church farm had shrunk and Common End
farm, 49 a. in 1926, had grown; Purlieus farm,
121 a., had been established on the old Hankerton
purlieus; and Woburn, 63 a., had become a separate farm. (fn. 168)
After 1939 arable and stock farming both greatly
increased. In 1977 there were 710 a. of arable and
901 cattle on farms based in the parish. (fn. 169) In 1988
c. 300 a., all arable, were in hand as part of Lord
Suffolk's Charlton Park estate. Of the tenanted
farms Bishoper, 458 a., was arable and dairy,
Brook, 272 a., was arable. (fn. 170) Rookery, 120 a., was
a mainly dairy farm. (fn. 171) East of Hankerton village
much grassland was not intensively farmed.
Further east the c. 300 a. of Elms farm and Purlieus farm were used with Home farm, Minety,
and land in Charlton for dairy farming. A large
dairy was built on Purlieus farm in 1969. (fn. 172)
Although Hankerton parish included much land
which was within Braydon forest and its purlieus
it was not well wooded. In 1840 several small
woods totalled 23 a., (fn. 173) and there was little more
woodland in 1988.
A windmill stood on or near Windmill Hill in
the later 13th century (fn. 174) and later 17th. (fn. 175) Its site,
which may have been in Hankerton or Crudwell,
is not known.
Few non-agricultural trades have flourished in
Hankerton. References to a weaver in 1568, (fn. 176) a
clothyard in 1700, (fn. 177) and a wool comber in 1710 (fn. 178)
are evidence of a local cloth industry. Bricks were
made near Cloatley hamlet in the early 19th
century. (fn. 179)
Local Government.
In the Middle Ages
Malmesbury abbey's tenants in both Hankerton
and Cloatley attended the abbey's courts held at
Crudwell. To judge from the fact that they rendered cert money separately Hankerton and Cloatley were then separate tithings, (fn. 180) as they were
later. (fn. 181) After the Dissolution the right to hold
views of frankpledge and manor courts for Hankerton and Cloatley was granted separately with the
respective manors. (fn. 182) For Hankerton, where copyhold tenure and open fields long survived, records
exist in abundance; for Cloatley no court record
survives.
From the mid 16th century to the mid 17th view
of frankpledge with a court of the manor for
Hankerton was usually held twice a year: (fn. 183) it may
have been annual 1570–6. Leet jurisdiction was
exercised throughout the period. In the early part
the view proceeded on presentments of the tithingman, affirmed and supplemented by those of
a jury, from the 1580s solely on the jurors' presentments. Bakers, tapsters, and butchers were presented; brawlers and players of prohibited games
were punished; felony by tenants, including murder in 1571 (fn. 184) and 1629, (fn. 185) was reported; in 1580
three were presented for not having bows and
arrows for archery as required by a statute of 1542
which was invoked; (fn. 186) the lack of a rook net,
required by statute, was presented in 1570 and
1573, and in 1574 a new rook net was displayed
in court; (fn. 187) and an oath of allegiance was occasionally administered. (fn. 188) In 1583 a suspected thief and
in 1586 a thief were punished in the stocks, (fn. 189) and
in 1626 three men were forbidden to keep greyhounds. (fn. 190) By the 1620s, when a woman was
required to find a male deputy, (fn. 191) the office of tithingman apparently rotated among the tenants.
Under the jurisdiction of the manor court the
homage presented normal business such as the
deaths of tenants and dilapidated buildings, and
increasingly the courts made orders to regulate the
use of the open fields and common pastures and
penalized misuse. Overstocking and inadequately
maintained gates, boundaries, and watercourses
were most frequently presented. A reeve, a hayward who was paid a salary by the tenants, (fn. 192) an
agrarian watchman ('agrophilax'), and overseers
of the fields were appointed. (fn. 193) Unlicensed undertenants were prohibited and in the 1640s orders
made to prevent tenants introducing to the parish
any thought likely to need relief. (fn. 194) The courts also
heard pleas between tenants, settling some by
agreement, some by arbitration, and some by
wager of law. (fn. 195)
From the later 17th century to the early 19th
the principal business of the courts was to make
rules for husbandry. (fn. 196) From the 1670s the court,
usually called view of frankpledge with court
baron, was annual, and from then its records survive mainly in the form of a warrant from the steward ordering the tithingman or the constable to
convene the court, a list of those who ought to
attend handed in by the tithingman, and the bill
of presentments drawn up by the foreman of the
jury. A single body acted as homage and jury and
little was done under leet jurisdiction. Old orders
governing the use of the open fields and common
pastures were repeated or varied and new ones
made, officers were appointed to supervise such
use, orders to repair boundaries, gates, and watercourses continued to be made, and sometimes a
common fund was raised to repair boundaries. (fn. 197)
In the later 18th century most presentments were
of rules to be observed rather than particular transgressions or nuisances, but they were not stereotyped. In 1799, for example, orders restricted the
amount of furze to be cut, turf dug, and geese,
cattle, and sheep kept on the commons. (fn. 198) After
inclosure in 1809 (fn. 199) fewer orders were made but
matters such as nuisances and encroachments on
the waste, the feeding of unmarked cattle in the
lanes, and the need to repair the common pound
continued to be presented. (fn. 200) For much of the
period courts baron were also held to witness surrenders of and admittances to copyholds.
By deed of 1554 Thomas Walton, the lessee of
Crudwell rectory estate, gave a church house in
Hankerton to relieve poverty and repair highways.
In 1671 it was being leased for £2 a year, (fn. 201) but
its later history is obscure.
The parish spent £67 on poor relief in 1775–6,
an average of £119 in the years 1782–5, and £232
in 1802–3 when 27 adults and 36 children were
relieved permanently and 17 occasionally. Spending was below average for a parish of its size in
1814–15, when £105 was spent and 18 adults were
permanently relieved, (fn. 202) and remained so until the
mid 1820s. Over £300 was spent in 1824–5 and
between 1828–9 and 1833–4, and over £400 in
1829–30: those sums were above average for such
a parish. (fn. 203) Hankerton joined Malmesbury poorlaw union in 1835 (fn. 204) and became part of North Wiltshire district in 1974. (fn. 205)
Church.
Hankerton church was built as a
chapel of Crudwell church in or before the early
12th century. By 1222 a vicarage of Hankerton
had been ordained. (fn. 206) The vicar had cure of souls
but the church remained dependent on Crudwell (fn. 207)
until 1445 when a graveyard at Hankerton was
licensed. (fn. 208) In 1954 the vicarage was united with
the vicarage of Charlton with Brokenborough; in
1987 it instead became part of a new benefice with
Ashley, Long Newnton (both now Glos.), Crudwell, and Oaksey. (fn. 209)
Until the Reformation all known presentations
of vicars of Hankerton were by rectors of Crudwell: (fn. 210) the rector's right was tested and confirmed
in 1379 (fn. 211) and 1410. (fn. 212) Thomas Walton, while lessee
of the Crudwell rectory estate, presented in 1552,
and in 1600 Robert Beale presented a vicar under
the lease to Walton. (fn. 213) In the later 16th century
the lord of Hankerton manor, who owned the corn
tithes, (fn. 214) claimed the advowson, and in 1590 the
right to present at two of every three turns, (fn. 215) but
did not present. An incumbent was appointed in
1647, (fn. 216) in 1662 the rector of Crudwell was called
vicar of Hankerton, (fn. 217) and c. 1663 the new rector
of Crudwell apparently appointed a vicar. (fn. 218) In
1699 the rector of Crudwell presented himself as
vicar, (fn. 219) in 1717 the same rector presented his son, (fn. 220)
in 1723 the rector of Crudwell was presented as
vicar by his mother, (fn. 221) and in 1763, after that vicar's
death, the bishop collated by lapse to Hankerton
the man who became rector of Crudwell the same
year. (fn. 222) The next rector presented himself as vicar
of Hankerton in 1785, (fn. 223) as did his own successor
in 1839. (fn. 224) That rector presented a vicar of Hankerton in 1855 and 1864. (fn. 225) In 1898, with the bishop's
consent, Georgina, the wife of H. K. Adkin, later
Knight-Adkin, rector of Crudwell, bought the
advowson, and in 1903 presented Adkin to be
vicar; in 1910 she again presented. In 1920 she
transferred the advowson to the bishop of Bristol,
who shared with the Crown the patronage of the
united benefice of 1954–87, and with others the
patronage after 1987. In 1961 the archbishop of
Canterbury presented by lapse. (fn. 226)
The vicarage, worth £8 10s. in 1535, (fn. 227) £45 in
1650, (fn. 228) and £269 c. 1830, was of average wealth
for the deanery. (fn. 229) In the later 12th century and
earlier 13th the rector of Crudwell may have been
entitled to all the tithes of Hankerton. When the
corn tithes were appropriated by Malmesbury
abbey in 1222 the remaining tithes may already
have been an endowment of the vicarage, (fn. 230) as they
were later. (fn. 231) By 1582 the tithe from meadow land
in the open fields, apart from demesne meadow,
had been replaced by a meadow of 1½ a. (fn. 232) The
vicar's tithes were valued at £280 in 1840 and commuted. (fn. 233) The rector of Crudwell had 1 yardland
of glebe in Hankerton. (fn. 234) From 1410 or earlier the
vicar had a house, (fn. 235) and in the 17th century a house
and 5 a. (fn. 236) The rector's yardland was transferred
to the vicar, presumably in the 18th century, and
there were 17 a. of glebe in 1840. (fn. 237) The vicarage
house, later called Hankerton Priory, and 6 a. were
sold in 1903. (fn. 238) The house has small north and east
ranges, each with moulded beams and apparently
of the earlier 16th century: c. 1830 a taller block
was built in the angle of the two ranges, and in
1903 the house was extended westwards and northwards to designs by H. S. de Bertodano. (fn. 239) A new
vicarage house was built in 1905–6, also to designs
by de Bertodano: (fn. 240) that house was sold in 1954. (fn. 241)
In the Middle Ages c. 4 a. for an obit and 1
a. for a light in the church were given. (fn. 242) In 1662
there was no surplice, Book of Homilies, or copy
of Jewell's Apology in the church. The minister,
who used the Elizabethan prayer book before the
Restoration, was not licensed to preach: he was
probably John Hopkins, vicar from c. 1663. (fn. 243) In
the 18th century, when the rector of Crudwell was
usually vicar of Hankerton, curates were often
employed, and from 1782 to 1785, when he was
instituted as vicar, the rector, James Wiggett, was
himself curate. (fn. 244) In 1783 he held a Sunday service
every week, celebrated communion four times a
year, and catechized. (fn. 245) From 1785 to 1855 and
from 1903 to 1909 the rector of Crudwell was again
vicar. (fn. 246) In 1910 communion was celebrated 64
times and matins were said daily; in 1938 communion was celebrated 31 times, 23 times in 1950. (fn. 247)
The church was served by priests-in-charge from
1945 to 1954. (fn. 248)
In 1706 Lady Frances Winchcombe gave a rent
charge from land in Hankerton to provide Bibles
and prayer books for poor children of Hankerton
and other parishes. Hankerton's share, £1 a year,
was given to the Sunday school in the 19th century (fn. 249) and spent on books in the early 20th. (fn. 250) From
1979 the charity was administered with the parish's eleemosynary charities. (fn. 251)
The church of HOLY CROSS, so called in
1763, (fn. 252) consists of a chancel, a nave with north
aisle and south porch, and a west tower. The tower
is of ashlar, the remainder of stone rubble with
ashlar dressings. On its outside wall the nave has
an early 12th-century animal-head stop on each
side of the south doorway, and the whole nave
is probably of that date. The aisle and porch were
built in the early 13th century, and the chancel
arch is early 14th-century. Apart from the triple
lancet at the east end of the aisle, all the windows
were renewed in the 15th century or early 16th,
and the tower bears a date stone for 1531. The
chancel was severely dilapidated in 1553 (fn. 253) and,
since in 1585 it was said to have been down 30
or more years, (fn. 254) was presumably demolished about
then. In the early 19th century the east end of
the nave was screened. (fn. 255) A new chancel was built
in 1904. (fn. 256) The shouldered south doorway, matching a blocked north doorway, has been given a
two-centred head, and building in the angle
formed by the tower and aisle removed. Inside
the church a wall tablet by Joseph Nollekens was
put up in 1775 to commemorate the Earle family,
and in the churchyard is the base of a stone cross.
The church had no plate in 1553. A cup with
a paten cover, dated 1577, was given later (fn. 257) and
belonged to the parish in 1988. (fn. 258) Of the four bells
in the church in 1553 three survive. The present
tenor is probably of the period 1300–50, the treble
was cast by Thomas Jefferies c. 1530–40 and (iii)
by Henry Jefferies c. 1540–50, and (ii) was cast
in 1613 by a Purdue, probably at Bristol by Roger
Purdue. (fn. 259) The registers begin in 1699 and, apart
from 1719–21, are complete. (fn. 260)
Nonconformity.
There was dissent in
Hankerton in the 1660s and 1670s: (fn. 261) in 1676 a
papist and eight protestant nonconformists lived
in the parish. (fn. 262) Independent meeting houses were
certified in 1775 and 1800, a Calvinistic Methodist
meeting house in 1809, and other meeting houses
for dissenters in 1831 and 1833. (fn. 263) The Rehoboth
chapel for Strict Baptists was built in 1837. (fn. 264) The
pastor in the mid 19th century, William Beard,
achieved prominence in the sect as the founder
of a Strict Baptist chapel in Birmingham in 1854. (fn. 265)
On Census Sunday in 1851 his two services at
Hankerton were attended by 100 and 120. (fn. 266) Services were held only occasionally c. 1968 (fn. 267) and the
chapel was closed in 1971. (fn. 268)
Education.
There was apparently no school
in the parish until 1827 when the wife and
daughter-in-law of Thomas, earl of Suffolk and
of Berkshire, began to pay for 25 children to be
taught. The school, attended by 35 in 1833, was
presumably in Hankerton tithing. Another school,
presumably in Cloatley tithing, may also have been
started c. 1827. In 1833 it was attended by 15,
of whom 6 were paid for by a daughter of Joseph
Pitt, the owner of Manor farm. (fn. 269) A National school
was built c. 1850–2 and was well run in 1858 when
40–50 were taught. (fn. 270) Average attendance was 42
in 1876, (fn. 271) 28 in 1902, (fn. 272) 35 in 1906–7, and 18 in
1921–2. The school was closed in 1922 and reopened in 1930. The numbers attending it were
again small, (fn. 273) however, and in 1966 it was again
closed. (fn. 274)
Charities for the Poor.
By will proved
1748 Mary Panting gave £10 to the second poor
of Hankerton parish. That sum was added to £42,
the donor of which is unknown, and invested as
the Poor's Money. In the late 18th century the
income was £1 15s. 6d. and sums of c. 2s. were
given away every few years. In the 20th distribution was quinquennial: in 1903 c. 2s. 6d. was given
to each of 19 married couples, 6 widows, 3
widowers, and 1 spinster. (fn. 275) In 1924 money was
given to 33 families. (fn. 276)
In 1848 Hannah Ludlow gave 5 a. in Hankerton
to provide payments each year to six male, married, agricultural labourers over 50 among the
second poor of the parish. In 1905 c. £11 was given
away. (fn. 277) In 1931 the payments were of £1 16s. 9d.
After the Second World War the beneficiaries were
reduced to five and the sixth share of the money
was paid to a repair fund. (fn. 278) Five parishioners
shared £13 in 1960, £60 in 1971. (fn. 279)
By Scheme of 1979 the Poor's Money, Hannah
Ludlow's, and Lady Frances Winchcombe's charities were administered jointly to relieve need
generally in Hankerton parish. Hannah Ludlow's
5 a. were then being leased for £200 a year and
the three charities had £496 stock. (fn. 280) In the late
1980s the income of c. £200 a year was used to
help old people. (fn. 281)