MANORS AND OTHER ESTATES
The
bishop of Lincoln's manor of HISTON covered
most of the 30-hide vill in 1086, when it comprised a demesne manor of 16¾ hides, held by
the bishop of Dorchester before the transfer of
the see to Lincoln in 1072, and 9¾ hides of
tenanted land. (fn. 99) The bishop's lordship of the
whole manor was recorded in 1279, (fn. 1) and in the
14th century he was said to hold 5 knights' fees
in Histon and elsewhere. (fn. 2) The demesne and the
tenanted land descended as two separate manors
until the early 17th century, when they were
united. Each also had a rectory estate attached
to it until the 17th century, when the impropriate
rectories were combined and held briefly with
the manors before being sold together.
Bishop Robert Bloet gave the demesne manor
to Eynsham abbey (Oxon.) when he moved the
monks back there from Stow (Lincs.) before
1100. (fn. 3) The grant was confirmed by Henry I in
1109 and by later kings, (fn. 4) and the abbey retained
the manor until its dissolution in 1539. (fn. 5) The
abbot was said in the mid 13th century to hold
2 knights' fees in Histon of the bishop of Lincoln
and in 1392 still held of him, but by 1428 the
abbot was regarded as holding the manor in
chief. (fn. 6)
The manor was called HISTON EYNSHAM
until c. 1630, (fn. 7) and from the 17th century
HISTON ETHELDRED or HISTON ST.
ETHELDRED, after its former parish church. (fn. 8) The Crown sold it in 1539 to the courtier Sir
Thomas Elyot (d. 1546), (fn. 9) whose widow Margaret
took the manor in 1547 to her second husband
James Dyer (kt. 1553, afterwards chief justice
of Common Pleas). (fn. 10) Elyot's heir, his nephew
Richard Puttenham, (fn. 11) apparently sold the reversion to Sir John Hinde (d. 1550) of Madingley,
whose son and heir Sir Francis Hinde (fn. 12) presumably took possession of Histon on Margaret
Dyer's death in 1560. (fn. 13) Histon Eynsham passed
with Madingley from Sir Francis (d. 1596) to
his son Sir William (d. 1606). Sir William had
settled his estates on his wife Elizabeth but his
brother and heir Edward obtained possession of
Histon from her in 1607. (fn. 14) Edward Hinde seems
to have sold the land in 1611 to Humphrey
Gardiner, who at his death in 1620 held the site
of the manor and 360 a. of arable, (fn. 15) and the
lordship in 1613 to William Norton, who was
said to hold it in 1621 and 1623. (fn. 16) Norton in
turn sold it in 1631 to Matthew Weld, (fn. 17) and
before 1635 it was united with the other manor
in Histon, held by William Bowyer, though
Bowyer did not hold courts for it in his own
name until 1638. (fn. 18)
The land was held for life by Humphrey
Gardiner's widow Elizabeth (d. 1642), with remainder to his infant grandson, also Humphrey
Gardiner. (fn. 19) That Humphrey's son Humphrey
by will proved 1681 settled his estates on his
daughter Cecily, who died shortly afterwards,
and on his widow of the same name. (fn. 20) The elder
Cecily in 1683 married John Penhallo (d. 1716),
who left a life interest in Histon to Margaret
Gwalter, afterwards wife of Thomas Matthews. (fn. 21)
Penhallo's brother and heir Benjamin was later
in possession and in 1738, after his death, his
niece Elizabeth and her husband John Peters
sold the land to Francis, earl of Godolphin. The
estate, 140 a. in 1684, (fn. 22) was thereby combined
with the united impropriate rectory, held by
Godolphin's daughter Mary. (fn. 23)
The manor styled HISTON DENNY and
later HISTON ST. ANDREW originated in 926¾
hides held in 1066 by nine sokemen of the bishop
of Dorchester. Picot, sheriff of Cambridge, took
the land and in 1086 also held 1 5/12; hides that had
belonged before the Conquest to the abbot of
Ely's tenant Wulfwine the mead-maker (medarius) and had been seized by Bishop Remigius
after 1067. (fn. 24) Successive bishops of Lincoln evidently prevented Picot's successors as barons of
Bourn from establishing any hereditary right to
the manor, despite claims in the 1220s. (fn. 25) The
bishop's overlordship was recorded in 1392. (fn. 26)
Two knights' fees in Histon were held of the
see in the late 12th century by Geoffrey du Boys,
who sold his interest to Bishop Hugh (1186-
1200) in order that the bishop might enfeoff his
own brother Peter of Avalon. Peter's possession
was confirmed by King John in 1200. (fn. 27) By 1223
the bishop's tenant in Histon was Henry de
Colville, (fn. 28) who held 2 knights' fees there c.
1235. (fn. 29) From Colville part at least of the manor
was held by undertenants: in 1242 Robert son
of Henry Bourn sold ½ knight's fee held of Henry
de Colville to Hugh of St. Vedast and his wife
Cecily, possibly a daughter of Colville, while
Hugh and Cecily at the same time exchanged
the other 1 ½ fees with Colville for land in Oxfordshire, (fn. 30) and in 1250 Robert Bourn released the
entire 2 knights' fees to Colville. (fn. 31) The division
into two parts remained in 1279, when Henry's
son Philip de Colville, (fn. 32) in possession by 1273, (fn. 33)
had 1½fees and his tenant Brian of Lincoln
160 a. (fn. 34) Brian's surname suggests that he may
have been the successor of Hugh of St. Vedast, a
tenant of the bishop of Lincoln in Lincolnshire. (fn. 35)
From the late 13th century the Colville manors
in Histon and Impington descended together,
gradually becoming regarded as a single manor. (fn. 36) From Philip the manor descended to his son
Henry, then to Henry's son Philip, who held it
in 1302-3 and died c. 1311. (fn. 37) His widow Maud
married Sir Robert Baynard, lord in 1316, (fn. 38) and
died after 1346. (fn. 39) She was presumably succeeded
by her first husband's heir, his brother Henry
de Colville (d. c. 1360), since Anne, probably
Henry's daughter, and her husband Dedric of
Somerton sold Histon in 1362 to Sir Robert
Thorpe (d. 1372). (fn. 40) Histon passed with Thorpe's
manor of Lolworth to his nephew William
Thorpe, who settled it on feoffees in 1383. (fn. 41) The
feoffees sold Histon in 1392 to Denny abbey, (fn. 42)
which retained the manor until the Dissolution. (fn. 43)
Histon St. Andrew was sold by the Crown in
1539 to Edward Elrington (fn. 44) and in 1541 by
Elrington to William Bowyer. (fn. 45) William died,
knighted and holding office as mayor of London,
in 1544, leaving the manor of Histon and Impington to his illegitimate son John Bowyer or
Turner. John was granted leave to hold the
manor in 1547, notwithstanding irregularities in
his father's will. (fn. 46) Sir William's executor, Henry
Searle, nevertheless retained possession until
1557 and had leases of both the manor and the
rectory until 1560. (fn. 47) John Bowyer died in 1571, (fn. 48)
and his son Francis in 1598; (fn. 49) Francis's son
William and his feoffees held courts until 1651. (fn. 50)
William Bowyer had bought the manor of
Histon St. Etheldred, without any demesne land,
by 1635, from which time the two descended
together. William's son Hutton Bowyer held
courts from 1651 and sold both to Richard Bigg
in 1655. (fn. 51) Successive sales took place in 1657 to
Hezekiah Haynes, (fn. 52) in 1659 to Richard Pigott,
and in 1664 to Thomas Archer. (fn. 53) The last
(d. 1704) (fn. 54) settled the manors in 1698 on his son,
also Thomas, on whose death in 1728 (fn. 55) his
widow Rebecca released her interest to their son
Hoste Archer. (fn. 56) Hoste died childless in 1740 and
left Histon to Guy Sindrey (d. 1761), who
devised it successively to his widow Grace (d.
1771), John Alderson (d. 1782), (fn. 57) and Thomas
Sumpter, Hoste Archer's nephew and a member
of a farming family long established in Histon. (fn. 58)
In 1784 Thomas Sumpter owned over 400 a.
in Histon and Impington. (fn. 59) Contrary to his will,
proved 1806, (fn. 60) his executors conveyed the 25-a.
park and 108 a. of land in the parish as well as
the manor house to his eldest son Richard (d.
1817). (fn. 61) Richard Sumpter later sold a large part
of the land. (fn. 62) The much reduced manorial estate
passed to Richard's brother William (d. 1847), (fn. 63) William's son William Richard (d. 1870), and
the latter's widow Catherine, on whose death in
1877 her husband's nephew, the Revd. W. S.
Beevor, sold the estate to William Peed, (fn. 64) a
Cambridge solicitor. After Peed's scandalous
bankruptcy and disappearance in 1897 the manorial rights were sold to J. F. Eaden, (fn. 65) and they
were held until 1935 or later by partners in the
Cambridge legal firm of Eaden, Spearing, and
Raynes, and by members of their families. (fn. 66)
Histon Manor and the park were bought in
1897 by F. Crisp, (fn. 67) and the house passed by sale
successively to W. A. H. Harding (1899-1927), (fn. 68) W. H. D. Rouse (1927-50) and his devisee
Christ's College, Cambridge, (fn. 69) Pye Ltd., Chivers and Sons Ltd., and, from 1953, Professor
J. K. S. St. Joseph. (fn. 70)
The moated site 200 m. south-west of St.
Andrew's church is presumably the location of
the medieval manor house of Histon St. Andrew.
The ditch encloses a rectangle 85 by 42 m. (fn. 71) The
site was probably abandoned in the late medieval
or early modern period in favour of a new house
on the site of the present Histon Manor, between
the moat and the church. There was a manor
house standing in 1560. (fn. 72)
One bay of an early 17th-century timberframed hall range aligned north-south survives
in the centre of the north side of Histon Manor.
The northern part of the range, which projected
north of the present house in the early 19th
century, (fn. 73) had been demolished by 1886. (fn. 74) A tall
doorway at the south-east corner of the surviving
bay may have been the entrance to a stair or
to a screens passage. The 17th-century house
appears to have had a southern cross wing: part
of its cellars survive, with walls partly of ashlar,
and a large chimney stack to the west may
indicate the position of the original kitchen.
In the 18th century the T-or H-shaped house
was altered to make it face south by rebuilding
the southern cross wing as a Palladian entrance
front of three storeys and five bays, having a
three-bay centre with pilasters and pediment. (fn. 75)
The addition of a room in the western angle
between the south and hall ranges made an
irregular plan with part of the original hall
projecting north and probably by then used as
the service wing. The south front was remodelled
in the late 19th century, when the attic floor was
removed and a porch added. Two or more phases
of extensions on the east side accommodated
new service rooms. A large billiard room was
added to the north-west in the late 19th century,
and early in the 20th a small single-storey addition was built between it and the south range.
The grounds of Histon Manor include the
moated site, landscaped in the 18th century. An
eastern arm added to the moat before 1801 had
been filled in by 1901. (fn. 76) East of the house a brick
and thatch snake house survives from the private
zoo kept by W. A. H. Harding. (fn. 77) In the late 19th
century and the early 20th the park extended
south across Park Lane and included an ornamental lake called the Ballast Hole further along
Park Lane by the railway, (fn. 78) presumably created
by gravel digging.
The impropriate rectory of Histon St. Etheldreda descended with Histon Eynsham manor
from 1268 until the early 17th century. (fn. 79) Either
Edward Hinde or William Norton, who bought
the manor from him in 1613, evidently sold the
rectory estate to William Bowyer, who was in
possession of it some years before acquiring the
manor in the 1630s. It was thus united with the
impropriate rectory of Histon St. Andrew, held
by the Bowyer family since 1541 with Histon St.
Andrew manor. (fn. 80) The two impropriate rectories
thereafter remained together. William Bowyer
and his wife Dorothy conveyed them in 1626 to
William's uncle George Coke (later bishop of
Hereford, d. 1646). (fn. 81) Coke's son Thomas (fn. 82) sold
the estate in 1655 to Humphrey Gardiner, who
in turn sold it in 1658 to Sir Thomas Willys,
Bt., of Fen Ditton. (fn. 83) Sir Thomas settled the
rectory estate in 1681 on the marriage of a
younger son Robert. (fn. 84) Robert's widow Mary
held it for life in 1704 and their son John Willys (fn. 85)
(d. 1729) devised the rectory estate and c. 60 a.
of copyhold land to his cousin Sir William
Willys, Bt. (fn. 86) The estate passed with Fen Ditton
on Sir William's death without issue in 1732 to
his six sisters, from whom it was bought in 1733
by Henrietta Godolphin, duchess of Marlborough (d. 1733). (fn. 87) Under the duchess's will,
proved 1736, Histon rectory passed to her
daughter Lady Mary Godolphin, who married
Thomas Osborne, duke of Leeds. (fn. 88) Thomas in
1749 sold the estate, together with freehold
land acquired by Mary's father Francis, earl of
Godolphin, (fn. 89) to Thomas Panton, who settled it
in 1767 on the marriage of his son, also Thomas.
After the younger Thomas Panton's death in
1808 (fn. 90) it came to his niece Priscilla Barbara
Elizabeth Burrell, Lady Willoughby de Eresby,
and her husband Peter Burrell, Lord Gwydir, (fn. 91)
who sold the estate, comprising 605 a., in 1809. (fn. 92)
Over half the estate, the 368 a. comprising
Abbey farm, was bought by its tenant Uriah
Taylor, (fn. 93) who was succeeded in turn by his son
William and William's daughter Anne, wife of
F. W. Rowley (d. 1886). Their son S. H. Rowley
died in 1930 and was followed successively by
his son S. S. Rowley (d. 1963) and grandson J.
S. H. Rowley, the owner in 1986. (fn. 94) Abbey farm
covered 384 a. in 1986, (fn. 95) though the Taylor and
Rowley families had earlier owned other farms
in Histon as well. (fn. 96)
A house was built after 1611 on the site of
Histon St. Etheldred manor by the Gardiner
family as their main residence. (fn. 97) After c. 1738 it
was the farmhouse for the rectory estate. The
house occupied by the Gardiners in 1662 was
taxed on 11 hearths, and by 1664 new building
had added 6 more. (fn. 98) It stood immediately south
of the present Abbey Farm, and was a large
building with a front of four 17th-century
gables. (fn. 99) It was called the Parsonage in 1783, (fn. 1)
and was demolished in the early 1860s after a
period of disuse. Materials sold in 1860 included
timber-framing, brick, Ketton stone, roof tiles,
and sash windows, (fn. 2) while panelling was taken in
1864 to the Taylors' farm in Harston. Abbey
Farm was built in 1847 (fn. 3) in the Gothic style and
has the arms of the Taylor family over the front
door.
Two small estates in Histon recorded in
Domesday Book were already then attached to adjoining manors outside the vill. In 1066 the abbot
of Ely had a demesne manor of 1 ¾hides valued
in 1086 with his larger manor of Impington, (fn. 4)
which was afterwards often said to include land
in Histon. (fn. 5) One third of a hide belonging to
Robert, count of Mortain, was attached in 1086
to his manor of Girton and held by the undertenant of that manor, Morin. (fn. 6) It may have become
the farm at the north end of Girton village, just
within Histon parish, which was recorded from
1521 onwards. (fn. 7) In 1604, when it was called
Collyns after a Girton yeoman family, it was
bought by Sir William Hinde of Madingley, (fn. 8) whose successors as lords of Girton held it until
the 19th century. (fn. 9)
St. John's College, Cambridge, in 1516 acquired 14 a. in Histon, (fn. 10) for which 12 a. were
allotted at inclosure in 1806. (fn. 11) The land was sold
to the county council in 1920. (fn. 12)