LOCAL GOVERNMENT
About 1274 Baldwin Wake claimed gallows, view of frankpledge,
and amercements for breach of the assizes of
bread and of ale. Robert de Quency had withdrawn Wakes Colne from the sheriff's tourn. (fn. 54)
Edward I granted Baldwin Wake free warren in
1280. (fn. 55) The manorial gallows, renewed in 1534,
stood in the Bures road near Wakes Colne
green. (fn. 56)
From 1397 or earlier courts were usually held
in March and at Michaelmas, and a leet on the
Monday after Pentecost. (fn. 57) They heard pleas of
debt and of assault, and dealt with breaches of
the assize of ale and with unscoured ditches and
ruined houses. They also heard pleas of land,
notably dower, and recorded conveyances of
copyholds and leases of demesne lands. In 1406
and succeeding years three villeins were presented for leaving the manor without permission. Two aletasters were elected from 1400
and two constables from 1411. (fn. 58) Between 1515
and 1529, while the manor was in his hands,
Henry VIII appointed bailiffs or seneschals. (fn. 59)
By the mid 17th century the main business of
the courts was the conveyance of copyholds, but
some nuisances were presented; two constables
and two drivers of the common were elected at
the annual court leet in Pentecost week. (fn. 60) The
leets had ceased by 1727, but annual courts
baron continued until 1848 or later. Apart from
presentments for encroachments and nuisances,
the business was increasingly formal; copyholds
were usually surrendered out of court. (fn. 61)
Henry III granted free warren to Walter of
Crepping. (fn. 62) By 1327 the lords of Crepping
manor were holding three-weekly courts baron,
and annual courts leet in Pentecost week.
Tenants were amerced for damaging the lord's
crops, pasture, hedges, or wood, for stealing
corn, for encroaching on roads, and for failing
to scour ditches; in 1361 one was summoned for
not performing labour services. Pleas of debt
and of trespass were heard, and conveyances of
customary land recorded. At the leets, breaches
of the assizes of bread and of ale were presented;
men were accused in 1327 and 1333 of shedding
blood, in 1328 of raising the hue and cry
unjustly. In 1402 a tenant paid chevage to live
outside the manor, and three others failed to do
so in 1412. In 1433 two nativae made fine to
marry outside the manor. Two tasters of ale
were recorded from 1338, the constable in 1343,
and a hayward in 1349. In 1347 the appointment
of rentcollectors and haywards for the manorwas regulated. (fn. 63)
In the earlier 16th century courts dealt with
cases of debt, trespass, and assault with bloodshed; unscoured ditches and unrepaired houses
were presented. Constables and aletasters wereelected at the leets, and boys over 12 were admitted to frankpledge. In 1508 tenants were forbidden to graze unringed pigs on the common, and
in 1550 to pasture animals on the highways without a herdsman. In 1559 the court ordered the
repair of the stocks and the metas, perhaps the
archery targets. (fn. 64) By 1708 there were only courts
baron whose business was confined to the conveyance of copyholds; they continued until 1796
or later. (fn. 65)
Between 1681 and 1741 the overseers paid
weekly allowances and supplied firewood and
other relief in kind to 6-9 paupers, and gave
occasional relief to others; some pauper children
were apprenticed. In 1724-5 a woman was taken
to hospital in London. Apart from the wheel and
two spindles bought for a widow in 1717,
nothing was done to set the poor on work. Rents
were paid for a few paupers; others were accommodated in the town house or workhouse at
Wakes Colne green, or in the parish or poor
house, occasionally also called the town house,
east of the church. One house, called the almshouse, was built or rebuilt in 1698; the town or
workhouse was extensively repaired, in white
brick, in 1749-50. The total amount spent averaged c. £60 a year, reaching a low point of £28
in 1688-9, and high points of £122 in 1715-16
and £123 in 1730-1. Expenditure was high
between 1715 and 1723, perhaps because of
widespread illness, and in 1721 the overseers
reduced spending on clothes and other relief in
kind. (fn. 66)
Expenditure on the poor was £168 in 1776,
averaged £180 between 1783 and 1785, and rose
in 1803 to £324, or 17s. 5d. per head of population, about average for the hundred. (fn. 67) Between
1813 and 1836 expenditure per head of population was among the highest in the hundred,
although total expenditure fell from £961 in
1813 to £638 in 1815 before rising again to £882
in 1819. It reached a high point of £1,070 or
48s. 5d. per head in 1831 and £1,015 in 1832
before falling sharply to £683 in 1834. (fn. 68)
In 1800-1 paupers still received weekly allowances, wood, clothing, and other contributions
in kind, (fn. 69) but by 1823 almost all out relief was
in cash. Men worked in the gravel pits or on the
roads; in 1824 and 1825 four girls were at a
nearby silk mill. From 1830 the overseers paid
the workhouse governor for keeping up to 26
paupers at 3s. a head, but other payments to the
poor continued as before. (fn. 70) The workhouse
was used until 1837, when it was sold and the
paupers transferred to the Union workhouse in
Stanway. (fn. 71)
The usual parish officers, 2 churchwardens, 2
overseers of the poor, 2 surveyors of the highways, and 2 constables, were elected annually
from the late 17th century or earlier. From 1734
to 1822 there was only one churchwarden.
Attendance at the Easter vestry in the earlier
19th century ranged from 2 to 9; the rector,
when present, took the chair. (fn. 72)