HOLFORD
Holford, named after a crossing point on the
stream in the deeply cut valley at the mouth of
Holford Combe, lies on the north-eastern slopes of
the Quantocks. (fn. 1) The ancient parish, to which the
present article relates, (fn. 2) was shaped roughly like a W,
its eastern arm detached from the remainder. The
western arm, including Holford village, was a narrow
band rarely more than 0.5 km. wide but some 3.5
km. from north to south along the course of Holford
water. In the centre of the W, linked with the western
arm by a narrow strip of woodland, a roughly triangular area included Newhall farm and part of the
hamlet of Currill. The narrow eastern part of the
parish, known as Batchwell, ran north-east from the
Quantock scarp just south of Dowsborough for some
3.5 km., passing the southern edge of Dodington to
the outskirts of Nether Stowey. The woodland and
commons on the hills were bounded by watercourses
and footpaths, with individual holdings in the 18th
century divided by fences, heaps of stones, and landmarks named Lord's Bench, Nog Head, Wilmot's
Pool, and Poor Oak well. (fn. 3) The whole parish was
thought to measure 796 a. in 1881. (fn. 4) In 1884 Holford
lost the central area called Newhall to Dodington,
and in 1886 Batchwell was also added to Dodington. (fn. 5)
Moorhouse and Woodlands, about 450 a. including
45 people in 9 houses, and Alfoxton, some 360 a. but
only 1 house, were transferred to Holford from Kilton
and Stringston respectively in 1886. (fn. 6) In 1901 the
civil parish covered 1,083 a. (fn. 7) In 1933 the civil parish
of Dodington was amalgamated with that of Holford
to form the civil parish of Holford, measuring 1,316
ha. (3,253 a.) in 1971. (fn. 8)
The two main arms of the parish ran down over the
Hangman Grits of the higher slopes of the Quantocks
to the gravels and marls of the coastal shelf. (fn. 9) The
western arm formed the eastern side of Holford
Combe, and fell from c. 213 m. at its highest point
to 122 m. at the broadening mouth of the combe.
The eastern arm began near the 290 m. contour and
ran, at first steeply across common and woodland,
and then more gently, reaching 56 m. at Stogursey
brook east of Perry Mill.
Holford village lies at the extreme western edge of
the parish at the mouth of Holford Combe, at a point
where the road west from Nether Stowey divided,
one branch running as the Great Road or Old Stowey
Lane westwards over the Quantocks to Staple in
West Quantoxhead, the other skirting the northern
end of the Quantock ridge. St. John's cross, probably marking the junction of the Great Road with
the lane from Holford Combe, still stood in 1716. (fn. 10)
The subsidiary settlement at Currill or Corewell,
partly in Stringston parish, existed by the early 14th
century. (fn. 11) Holford village expanded up Holford
Combe from the early 19th century. In the 1930s
there was residential development in the northern
tip of the parish; in the 1950s Holford village expanded north-eastwards into the area that had been
added from Kilton.
The eastern side of the triangular road pattern in
Holford village was probably created when the lower
route from Nether Stowey to Minehead was adopted
by the Minehead turnpike trust in 1765, (fn. 12) in preference to the Great Road. Small alterations to the
lanes in the east of the parish improved access to
woodland at Five Lords' wood in 1788, (fn. 13) and involved
the abandonment of part of an old road to Over
Stowey. (fn. 14)
Small pieces of land at Currill c. 1300 may indicate
the remains of open fields there, (fn. 15) but the shape of
closes established in the east by the early 16th century do not suggest common arable. (fn. 16) In the latter
area lay a medieval park, part of the Durborough
estate and traceable by the field name Trivet's and
Tripod's park. (fn. 17) One side of the park lay along the
boundary with Dodington; another part of the
boundary bank was 'taken down' in the mid 18th
century. (fn. 18)
There was an alehouse by 1609 which was closed
in 1613. (fn. 19) A cottage later called Burnell's or Holford
inn was a public house by 1657, and survived as such
until 1755 or later. (fn. 20) Another inn, the Fox and
Goose, was established by 1716, and may have survived until after 1754. (fn. 21) In 1980 it was two private
houses, of which one was known as Glenside. An inn
in the village on the Minehead road was established
by 1851. (fn. 22) By 1859 it was known as the Plough, (fn. 23) and
remained in 1980.
The population in 1801 was 125. (fn. 24) By 1821 it had
almost doubled, but thereafter it gradually decreased,
falling to 145 by 1871. An increase to 169 by 1891
was in part due to boundary changes. By 1911 the
total had fallen to 88, but within the next twenty
years it had almost doubled to 171. Subsequent
figures for the parish alone are not available. (fn. 25)
MANOR AND OTHER ESTATES.
Two Domesday estates lay in the ancient parish of Holford. The
larger, assessed at 1 hide, was held by Hugh of
William de Mohun in succession to Alwold, (fn. 26) and
can be traced as a fee held of the honor of Dunster
until 1777. (fn. 27) By 1166 the fee was probably one of
those held by William de Curci (fn. 28) (d. 1171), and descended as a mesne lordship with the barony of
Stogursey, passing in 1224 to Joan, wife of Hugh de
Neville of Essex (d. 1234). John de Neville (d. 1246) (fn. 29)
was called to warrant the terre tenant against Reynold
de Mohun in 1235, (fn. 30) and in 1358–9 another John de
Neville claimed the mesne lordship, (fn. 31) which has not
been traced later.
It is not known when the estate was subinfeudated,
but since the church was surrounded by its lands,
Robert son of Alfred, who gave the church to Stogursey Priory in 1175, is likely to have been the terre
tenant. (fn. 32) By 1279 the estate was held by Matthew de
Furneaux, (fn. 33) and it descended with the manor of
Kilve (fn. 34) through the Furneaux family to Elizabeth
Blount, whose daughter Alice succeeded in 1399 to
the estate called HOLFORD manor. (fn. 35) Like Kilve it
was held by the Rogers family from 1419 and passed
to the Cunditts in 1664. (fn. 36) John Cunditt (d. 1771)
seems to have sold his lands in Holford to John St.
Albyn by 1746, and they were absorbed into the
Alfoxton estate. (fn. 37)
In 1500 John St. Albyn of Chilton Trivet was
holding land called the manors of ALFOXTON
AND LYMBER, which included property in
Holford. (fn. 38) Later in the 16th century the estate was
known as Lymbards, (fn. 39) and by 1718 as the manor of
Alfoxton with Lymberds and Holford. (fn. 40) The land
in Holford thus seems to have descended in the St.
Albyn family with the manor of Alfoxton in Stringston.
An estate called NEWHALL, held in 1066 by
Merlesuain and in 1086 by Robert son of Roscelin of
Ralph Pagnell, lay in the centre of the ancient
parish. (fn. 41) The subsequent ownership is not certain,
but it was probably attached to that estate in North
Newton in North Petherton which descended from
Robert de Odburville with the forestership of North
Petherton. The occupant was charged with the service of attending at North Petherton park at fawning
time, a service still discharged as a cash rent in the
1730s. (fn. 42) The tenant in 1642 was probably Thomas
Clutsome. (fn. 43) By 1720 the estate belonged to the Dodington family and was a holding of 24 a.; (fn. 44) in 1840
Newhall farm was just over 90 a. in extent. (fn. 45) The
buildings remaining in 1980 date from the 19th century, but stand on the site of an earlier house.
Part of the same section of the parish, known as
CURRILL, was held by the Verneys in the 14th and
earlier 15th centuries, (fn. 46) and George Dodington
bought a house and land there in 1606. (fn. 47) From
another George Dodington, owner in 1720, the
estate descended with the manor of Dodington,
passing to the Aclands in 1835. (fn. 48)
ECONOMIC HISTORY.
Holford and Newhall
between them included 4 ploughlands in 1086; Holford had 3 a. of meadow, 60 a. of pasture, and 4 a. of
woodland, and Newhall included ½ league of woodland. Holford demesne was three times the size of
the tenant holdings, but all but one of the 8 tenants
on the two estates were bordars. The Holford estate
had doubled in value since 1066. (fn. 49)
By 1327 Thomas Trivet held the largest estate in
the parish, probably the land in the eastern area
which was part of Durborough manor. (fn. 50) Simon
Furneaux held lands worth only 40s. in 1359. (fn. 51) The
Sydenham family had some land in the parish by
1500, (fn. 52) and the Lytes and the Verneys had small
holdings at Currill and elsewhere. (fn. 53) By the late 16th
century the Dodingtons had begun to acquire land
in the parish, (fn. 54) and by the early 18th century owned
Durborough manor and Newhall. (fn. 55)
Corn and peas were listed as tithable crops in the
early 17th century. In the 1630s Durborough Hill
was divided between sheep and tillage, (fn. 56) and in the
1640s land formerly under grass in the west part of
the parish was ploughed and sown in rotation with
oats, peas, barley, peas, and fallow, with a single
application of lime. (fn. 57) Common rights on the higher
ground seem to have been only gradually extinguished. By 1639 the Dodingtons held a fifth share
in the former common, presumably the origin of the
name Five Lords' wood. (fn. 58) Currill or Holford common remained for stocking cattle until after 1792, (fn. 59)
but by 1840 it was occupied by Sir Peregrine Acland. (fn. 60)
The marquess of Buckingham acquired some common turbary rights in intermixed holdings, but
areas remaining uninclosed by 1819 had been reclaimed by Holford people. (fn. 61) There were still 64 a.
of common in 1840, (fn. 62) and some survived in 1980 in
the hands of the National Trust. (fn. 63)
Much of the former common was converted to
woodland: Holford Edge, in Holford Combe, was
coppiced by c. 1727, and in 1734 other parts of the
same land were let for felling. (fn. 64) By 1764 Danesborough wood was planted, together with Custom or
Newspring wood. (fn. 65) By 1840 the Aclands owned
146 a. of woodland out of a total of 178 a. (fn. 66)
By 1840 the three largest farms were known as
Zesters, Newhall, and Winsors, (fn. 67) the first two created
out of smaller units by the early 18th century and
held from the 1760s onwards on short leases under
the Dodingtons and the Grenvilles. (fn. 68) From 1835 the
Aclands owned most of the parish, the farms equally
divided between arable and grass. (fn. 69) By 1851 a farm
of 210 a. had been created by uniting Newhall and
Zesters. (fn. 70) By 1980 the land was largely under grass,
and had been absorbed into holdings based outside
the ancient parish. (fn. 71)
Cloth was made at Holford as elsewhere in the
district. Weavers are found in 1584, (fn. 72) and 1684, (fn. 73) a
tucker in 1606, (fn. 74) dyers c. 1590 and 1681, (fn. 75) and
clothiers in 1680, 1688, 1698, and 1709. (fn. 76) Lewis
Pollard (d. 1688), a clothier, left goods valued at over
£328, including not only cloth and racking and
finishing equipment but also raw materials and dye
stuffs suggesting organized production. (fn. 77) There was
a linen house in Holford by 1721, (fn. 78) a dye house by
1756, (fn. 79) and two fulling mills in 1664. (fn. 80)
The Dodington copper workings included an ore
floor at Newhall and an adit there which was opened
after 1787. (fn. 81) The manor court at Dodington in 1817
heard complaints about ore dressing at Newhall and
about the unrailed state of shafts. (fn. 82) An extensive tannery was established in Holford Combe by 1840. (fn. 83)
By 1856 it possessed a wide range of buildings including a bark mill, tan pits, saw pit, glue house,
counting house, and carpenter's shop. (fn. 84) The tannery
continued to operate until the beginning of the 20th
century, and by 1906 the owner was also a road
contractor. (fn. 85) By 1910 the dwelling house, across the
stream in Kilve, had been converted into a private
hotel, known in 1980 as the Combe House Hotel. (fn. 86)
The site includes converted industrial buildings and
a large iron water-wheel.
From the late 1890s apartments and boarding
houses in the village, (fn. 87) and later the Combe House
Hotel, catered for holiday makers, and a garage was
established by 1931. (fn. 88)
Mills.
There was a mill at Holford in 1086. (fn. 89) Its
site is not known, but the mill was part of the main
holding and was thus presumably driven by Holford
water. The continuous existence of the mill cannot
be traced, but by 1718 a grist mill, known as Over
Mill to distinguish it from Higher Mill in Kilve, (fn. 90) lay
at the northern tip of the parish. It was still there in
1840 but had been demolished by 1886. (fn. 91)
By 1664 there were three fulling mills on the
Rogers estate of Kilve and Holford, of which two
were in Holford and one in Stringston. (fn. 92) One of the
Holford mills had been built by c. 1590. (fn. 93) The other,
described as lately built in 1664, was called Broadwood Mill, and a dye house stood near it. (fn. 94) It
remained in use until 1832 or later. (fn. 95)
LOCAL GOVERNMENT.
Most of the parish lay
in Whitley hundred, (fn. 96) but Newhall was in Williton.
Holford tithing extended beyond the parish boundary
to include Perry Mill in Dodington. (fn. 97)
No record has been found of a separate manor
court for any of the estates in the ancient parish.
Tenants of Holford manor in the 17th century owed
suit to Kilve manor court, sometimes called the court
baron of Kilve and Holford. (fn. 98) The Dodingtons' tenants were required to do suit at Dodington manor
court, (fn. 99) or in 1625 at Stogursey. (fn. 100)
One churchwarden administered parish affairs by
the 1760s, (fn. 101) and there was a single overseer by the
early 19th century. There is one reference to a meeting of inhabitants in 1824, and one to a vestry in
1828. (fn. 102) A parish house is recorded in 1699. (fn. 103) A poorhouse still existed in 1840 although the parish had
been part of the Williton poor-law union since 1836. (fn. 104)
The house was in 1980 part of the house known as
Brackenside in Holford Combe. The parish became
part of the Williton rural district in 1894, and of
West Somerset district in 1974. (fn. 105)
CHURCH.
In 1175 the church of Holford was given
by Robert son of Alfred to Stogursey Priory. (fn. 106) Successive priors, or the Crown when the priory was in
royal hands, held the patronage of the rectory (fn. 107) until
the priory's estates passed to Eton College in 1440. (fn. 108)
The living remained in the hands of the warden and
fellows of Eton until 1913 when Dodington was
united with Holford and the college shared the
presentation with Lord St. Audries. (fn. 109) The college
ceded its patronage on the creation of the benefice of
Quantoxhead in 1978. (fn. 110)
The net income of the living was £5 1s. 4d. in
1535. (fn. 111) Its reputed value was £50 c. 1668, (fn. 112) and no
more than £70 in 1715. (fn. 113) The benefice was augmented in 1723 by a grant of £200 from Dr. Henry
Godolphin, dean of St. Paul's and formerly provost
of Eton, met by an equal grant from Queen Anne's
Bounty. (fn. 114) It was said to be worth £200 in 1815 (fn. 115) and
£225 in 1851. (fn. 116) The living was subject to a small
pension paid to Stogursey Priory by 1392 and later
to Eton College. (fn. 117)
The tithes were worth £3 6s. 5d. in 1535. (fn. 118) By 1633
they were payable on crops and some stock, and
included corn and wool tithes from Durborough
Hill and 'hand tithes' (perhaps personal tithes) from
'servants and others' coming from parishes where
such were due. Tithes of other stock, of mills, and of
meadows had been commuted for moduses. The
rector also claimed Easter offerings of 2d. from every
communicant (1d. from natives at first communion)
and 4d. for weddings, churchings, and certificates. (fn. 119)
All remaining tithes were commuted in 1840 for a
rent charge of £148. (fn. 120)
Glebe was worth 22s. in 1535. (fn. 121) By the early 17th
century it amounted to c. 28 a. (fn. 122) In 1742 nearly 40 a.
were bought in Stogursey with augmentation money.
Just over 26 a. in Holford and nearly 33 a. in Stogursey
were sold in 1893, (fn. 123) and in 1948 there were only 3 a.
in Holford. (fn. 124) The rectory house in 1633 had a fourroomed plan with four chambers above. (fn. 125) It was
almost entirely rebuilt c. 1815, (fn. 126) and was sold in
1978.
At least three medieval rectors were involved in
abortive exchanges. (fn. 127) John Dickinson, rector 1530–
44, acted for Thomas Cromwell during a visitation
of Athelney Abbey in 1538. (fn. 128) Thomas Withers, the
first known graduate rector of Holford when
appointed in 1544, probably came from a Stogursey
family. (fn. 129) Richard Bodley, rector by 1558 until his
death in 1586, was reported in 1576 for not preaching
the regular quarterly sermons and for not reading the
services distinctly. (fn. 130) Henry Cox, rector from 1586,
lived a little distance from the parish, but in 1593
was reported to have preached monthly. (fn. 131) His successor John Gibson (d. 1609) was suspected of being
a drunkard. (fn. 132) John Slater, rector 1610–11, had been
at Eton and a fellow of King's College, Cambridge. (fn. 133)
Michael Pollard, rector 1663–7, combined the living
with Dodington. (fn. 134)
The rectors in the later 18th century were absentees
who left the parish to curates. (fn. 135) William Chilcott,
rector 1776–88, combined the living with Stogursey. (fn. 136)
At the beginning of Chilcott's tenure of Holford
there were 28 communicants. (fn. 137) George Buxton, rector 1788–1832, lived at Dorney (Bucks.). In 1815 the
curate was John Audain of Nether Stowey, who also
served Dodington. (fn. 138) From 1816 John Hole was resident curate until Buxton's death, and during his time
one service was held every Sunday morning. (fn. 139) John
Barnwell, rector 1832–66, was already vicar of
Stogursey and by 1848 was rector also of Sutton
Valence (Kent). (fn. 140) By 1840 Sunday services were held
alternately morning and afternoon; (fn. 141) in 1851 the
average attendance was 100 in the morning and 150
in the afternoon including at each service 30 Sundayschool pupils. (fn. 142) Henry Prentice, rector 1867–87 and
a former curate of an Eton living, introduced two
services with sermons each Sunday and monthly
celebrations. (fn. 143)
The church of ST. MARY THE VIRGIN,
dedicated to St. John by 1175 (fn. 144) and to St. Mary by
1791, (fn. 145) is a small building comprising chancel with
south vestry, nave, and west tower with north porch.
The lower parts of the tower suggest a 12th-century
origin, and there was refenestration in the early 16th
century. (fn. 146) Before probable rebuilding at least of the
chancel and north side of the nave between 1842 and
1844 the porch gave entrance to the western end of
the nave, and the window on the north side of the
chancel was further west. A west gallery was added
during rebuilding, but was later demolished. (fn. 147) The
vestry was added in 1888. (fn. 148) The nave contains some
17th-century pew ends. In the churchyard is a late
medieval cross shaft with mutilated figures.
The registers date from 1558, but marriages were
not entered between 1653 and 1660. (fn. 149) Of the six bells,
two were cast in the early 16th century, one by Roger
Semson of Ash Priors, the other by Thomas Jefferies
of Bristol. (fn. 150) The plate was bought in 1844, partly
from the proceeds of sale of the old silver. (fn. 151)
NONCONFORMITY.
None known.
EDUCATION.
An unlicensed schoolmaster was
reported in 1603. (fn. 152) A schoolroom stood west of the
church by 1840 (fn. 153) and the school, supported by the
rector and by voluntary contributions, continued
until 1875 when it was replaced by one at Dyche in
Stringston. (fn. 154) In 1847 it appears to have been a
Sunday school only, with 38 children. (fn. 155)
CHARITIES FOR THE POOR.
Three small
charities were established in the 17th century: John
Hembrow (d. 1631) gave £5, half the interest for the
poor at Easter; Agnes Winsor (d. 1637) gave £5 for
poor householders at Christmas; and Alexander
Standfast of Kilve gave to the second poor of Holford
a rent charge of 6s. 8d. to be given at Easter. (fn. 156) By the
1760s Winsor's and the whole capital of Hembrow's
were held by the churchwarden and the whole income was paid to the poor in cash. No rent was
received from Standfast's from 1802. (fn. 157) Bread costing
£2 was given to the poor of Holford at Christmas
1813. (fn. 158) The Hembrow and Winsor charities produced 6s. between them by 1869, but details of
Standfast's were not then known. (fn. 159) By 1955 the total
income of the two former was c. 4s., and there were
problems over the payment of Standfast's rent
charge. The Standfast charity was probably lost soon
afterwards. (fn. 160)
In 1891 Mrs. Jane St. Albyn gave £300, the
interest to be given to the poor at Christmas at the
discretion of the rector and churchwardens. (fn. 161) Unspecified benefactions were said to produce between
£8 and £9, distributed in coal, in the early 1970s, (fn. 162)
perhaps an accumulation of all the parish charities.
No distributions were made after 1978. (fn. 163)