MANORS
The manor of CHIGWELL, later known as CHIGWELL HALL alias CHIGWELL-AND-WEST HATCH, was held in 1066 by
Earl Harold. After the Conquest it was
given to Ralph de Limesi, whose chief seat was at
Wolverley in Solihull (Warws.). (fn. 53) The tenancy in
chief of the manor descended in the Limesi family and
their heirs the Dodyngsells. John de Dodyngsells held
it in 1350. (fn. 54)
Alan de Limesi, son of Ralph, granted the tenancy in
demesne of the manor to Richard de Lucy, the Justiciar
of Henry II, to hold for 1 knight's fee. (fn. 55) The grant was
confirmed before 1163 by Gerard de Limesi, Alan's
son. (fn. 56) De Lucy's interest in the manor subsequently
passed through his daughter Maud, wife of Walter
Fitz Robert of Woodham Walter to the Fitzwalter
family. (fn. 57) Walter, Lord Fitzwalter (d. 1406) held
1 knight's fee in Chigwell. (fn. 58)
After acquiring the tenancy of the manor Richard de
Lucy enfeoffed Ralph Brito, who held of Richard for
1 knight's fee. (fn. 59) Some time after this Richard appears
to have enfeoffed William de Goldingham so that he
became the overlord of Brito, holding of Richard for
1 knight's fee. (fn. 60) In 1169-70 William de Goldingham
enfeoffed Robert son of Ralph Brito with the manor, to
hold for 1 knight's fee. (fn. 61)
During the reign of Richard I Robert Brito suffered
imprisonment and forfeiture for his adherence to Prince
John. (fn. 62) In the 20 years that followed there were several
disputes concerning the ownership of Chigwell. Before
his imprisonment Robert Brito had leased the manor for
ten years to Andrew Blund of London. The lease still
had six years to run when the manor was seized by the
king. (fn. 63) While the king had possession a suit was brought
by Geoffrey Mauduit, claiming the manor. (fn. 64) Mauduit
apparently succeeded in getting possession of it for a
time but he was later ejected through the legal action
of William son of Robert Brito and William's mother
Philippa. (fn. 65) In 1214 Andrew Blund sued William Brito
for the unexpired portion of the ten-year lease, and the
court awarded him 50 marks in compensation. (fn. 66) In
1226 Gilbert Mauduit, presumably Geoffrey Mauduit's heir, quitclaimed a knight's fee in Chigwell to
William Brito. (fn. 67) About 1235 Alan son of John de
Goldingham quitclaimed all his rights in Ohigwell to
William son of William Brito. (fn. 68) In or about 1254
William Brito's daughter was patron of the rectory and
probably held the manor also. (fn. 69) Soon after this, however, the Goldinghams appear to have acquired the
tenancy in demesne. In 1258 William de Goldingham
made a conveyance of property in Chigwell (fn. 70) and in
1298 John de Goldingham was lord. (fn. 71) John died before 1316, leaving a son and heir John. (fn. 72)
John son of John de Goldingham was knighted and
was still living in 1349. (fn. 73) He died about 1362 and was
succeeded by his son Sir Alexander de Goldingham. (fn. 74)
In 1381 Sir Alexander had licence to impark his garden
and 50 acres of land adjoining his manor of Chigwell. (fn. 75)
He died in 1408 leaving his estates to his wife Isabel for
life with remainder to his son Sir Walter Goldingham. (fn. 76)
Sir Walter was dead by 1435 when his widow had become the wife of Matthew Hay. (fn. 77) Sir Walter's daughter Eleanor married John Mannock of Stoke by Nayland
(Suff.) who inherited the manor in right of his wife
after the expiration of a life interest held by Matthew
and Elizabeth Hay. (fn. 78) Mannock died in 1471 (fn. 79) and
was succeeded by his son John who died in 1476, leaving Chigwell to George Mannock his elder son. (fn. 80)
In 1531 George Mannock leased the manor to John
Kempe for 15 years, (fn. 81) but four years later sold it to the
king. (fn. 82) In 1537 a 21-year lease was granted to William
Rolte, serjeant-at-arms, (fn. 83) and this was upheld when
Kempe claimed in respect of the earlier lease. (fn. 84) Rolte
died in 1541, leaving the residue of his lease to George
Stoner (fn. 85) who apparently transferred it soon after to
his son John. (fn. 86) In 1550 Edward VI sold the manor to
Sir Thomas Wroth, who died in 1573. (fn. 87) Sir Robert
Wroth, son of Sir Thomas, married, before 1578,
Susan daughter of John Stoner. (fn. 88) Chigwell descended
in the Wroth family in the same way as the manor of
Loughton (q.v.) until the death in 1642 of John
Wroth. (fn. 89) John's estates were then apparently divided
between the two sons of his brother Henry: John
Wroth, who took Loughton (and Luxborough, see
below), and Sir Henry Wroth, who took Chigwell. (fn. 90)
Sir Henry Wroth sold Chigwell in 1669 to Sir William Hicks of Ruckholts in Leyton, 1st Bt. (fn. 91) The
manor descended with the baronetcy to Sir Henry
(commonly called Harry) Hicks who took possession
after the death of his mother in 1723. (fn. 92) Sir Henry,
while retaining the manorial rights, sold the demesne
lands of the manor and built himself a house near
Woodford Bridge, formerly called the Bowling Green
but now the Manor House. (fn. 93) He died in 1755. (fn. 94) His
elder son, who became the 4th baronet, was blind and
Sir Henry left his estates to his second son Michael
Hicks, who died unmarried in 1764. (fn. 95) Michael left
the estates in trust for the benefit of his blind brother
Sir Robert and his sisters Ann Burton and Martha
Petty, with successive remainders to Howe Hicks of
Witcombe (Glos.), a relative, and Howe's second son
Michael. (fn. 96)
Sir Robert Hicks died unmarried in 1768 but the
trust continued until 1799 when Michael Burton, son
of Ann, sold his interest in Chigwell to Michael, son of
Howe Hicks. (fn. 97) This Michael had changed his name
in 1790 to Hicks-Beach. (fn. 98) In 1800 a private Act of
Parliament was passed to enable him to sell Chigwell
and other property, which were still subject to the
limitations imposed by the settlement under the will of
Michael Hicks in 1764. (fn. 99) The purchaser was James
Hatch of Bromley (Mdx.), a wealthy malt-distiller. He
paid over £30,000 for the manor of Chigwell (including
West Hatch) and the estate of 1,430 acres. (fn. 1)
Hatch died in 1806, leaving three daughters, Caroline wife of John Rutherforth Abdy, Jemima later wife
of Christopher James Mills, and Louisa later wife of
William Rufus Rous. The eldest daughter and her
husband, who changed his name to Hatch-Abdy, acted
as joint lords of Chigwell until her death without
issue in 1838. The lordship then passed to Caroline's
nephew James Mills, who died in 1884, also without
issue. (fn. 2) Mills was succeeded by William John Rous,
son of the above Louisa. Since Rous's death in 1914
the manor has been invested in trustees, chief among
whom was the Earl of Stradbroke. (fn. 3) In 1839 James
Mills's estate in Chigwell comprised about 900 acres. (fn. 4)
This included Luxborough and Buckhurst (for both of
which see below).
The original manor house of Chigwell Hall was beside the Roding where the R.A.F. Station now stands. (fn. 5)
The moat which had surrounded the house survived
until 1937, when it was filled in by the contractors
building the R.A.F. Station. (fn. 6) The site had been deserted by the middle of the 17th century and a new
manor house built near the church and the site of the
modern Bramstons. (fn. 7) This house had evidently been
rebuilt by about 1870. (fn. 8) The house now known as
Chigwell Hall is a little to the south of the previous
house, on the opposite side of Roding Lane. (fn. 9) The
Manor House near Woodford Bridge has been greatly
altered. It has fine wrought iron gates dating from the
18th century. It is now a convent.
In 1359 William de Melcesborn appointed attornies
to give seisin of his manor of WEST HATCH to
Nicholas Ploket. (fn. 10) In 1389 William Tasburgh clerk
and John Bekke granted to Sir Alexander de Goldingham lands and tenements in the vills of Chigwell and
Barking called 'le Westhach and Bookhurst', once belonging to Nicholas Ploket and previously to William
de Melcesborn. (fn. 11) West Hatch subsequently passed
along with the main manor of Chigwell Hall. (fn. 12) The
two manors were usually described in the 17th century
and later as the manor of Chigwell-and-West-Hatch.
The present house of Great West Hatch dates from
about 1800. It is of stock brick with two stories. It is
now used as a hospital (see Public Services).
The manor of APPLETONS, now known as Old
Farm, was in Green Lane. It probably took its name
from the family of Thomas Apilton, who with his wife
Anne was party to a fine of 1402 relating to 180 acres
of land and 20 acres of meadow in Chigwell. (fn. 13) Later
in the 15th century Philip Malpas held Appletons: it
passed on his death to his daughter Elizabeth wife of Sir
Thomas Cooke. (fn. 14) She died about 1484 having settled
it upon her son John Cooke in reversion. (fn. 15) John died in
1486 holding it as a tenant of John [George ?] Mannock,
lord of Chigwell Hall; his brother Sir Philip Cooke was
his heir. (fn. 16) Appletons was later in the hands of William
Cooke, probably the brother of Sir Philip. (fn. 17) In 1520
William sold the manor to Sir John Brygges and John
Senewe of London. (fn. 18) Senewe died in 1537 leaving
Appletons to the children of his sister Elizabeth, who
had married John Hill. (fn. 19) About 1540 Tristram Cooke,
son of Thomas, son of the above William Cooke, sought
possession of the manor. (fn. 20) He appears to have had some
success, for in 1564 the children of John Hill took proceedings against his representatives for unlawful entry. (fn. 21)
The plaintiffs seem to have won their case: the Woolston
court roll of 1567 recorded a declaration that Thomas
Colshill, Thomas Fuller, and others who were shown
to be the descendants of John Hill, jointly held the
freehold of various lands, part of their ruined tenement
called Appletons. (fn. 22) Colshill sold his share to Thomas
Fuller who died about 1575 leaving the house of Appletons, in which he lived, to his nephew Henry Fuller of
North Weald Bassett, probably a relative of the Henry
Fuller who owned Stocktons (see below) about this
time. (fn. 23) Thomas Fuller had presumably bought the
other shares in the property, in addition to that of
Colshill.
Henry Fuller died in 1602. (fn. 24) Appletons passed successively to his son (d. 1623) and his grandson, both
named Henry. (fn. 25) Henry Fuller of Appletons appears in
a presentment of 1668. (fn. 26) Thomas Buckford held
Appletons from 1671 until his death in 1688. (fn. 27) In
1692 another Thomas Buckford sold it to Francis
More. (fn. 28) More's granddaughter Winifred Pitfield
(d. 1753) married Solomon Ashley, who died in 1778
holding Appletons. (fn. 29) He left it to Humphrey Stuart,
presumably in trust for his son Solomon Ashley who
was named as the owner in 1783. (fn. 30) In 1802 Stuart
sold it to John Blades, on whose death in 1830 it passed
to his daughter Elizabeth, wife of John Blackburn. (fn. 31)
A Joshua Blackburn was given as the owner in 1839:
the farm then comprised 63 acres. (fn. 32) Appletons was still
owned by the Blackburns in 1873. (fn. 33) The present farmhouse is a red-brick building that appears to date from
the late 19th century.
The manor of BARRINGTONS (or LITTLE
CHIGWELL) took its name from the family of Barrington which held the tenancy in demesne from the
12th to the 16th century. It is probably identical with
the estate of 2 hides and 15 acres which Robert Gernon
was said to hold in Chigwell in 1086. (fn. 34) The overlordship appears to have descended like that of Battles in
Stapleford Abbots (q.v.) until the death in 1267 of
Richard de Montfichet. In 1274 ½ knight's fee in Chigwell and elsewhere was assigned to Philippa, wife of
Roger de Lancaster and granddaughter of Margaret de
Bolbec, sister of Richard de Montfichet. (fn. 35) On his death
in 1360 John de Vere, Earl of Oxford, held ½ knight's
fee in Chigwell. (fn. 36) It had probably come to him by reversionary grant in the same way as Stansted Mountfichet. (fn. 37)
The manor continued to be held of the earls of
Oxford. In 1537 it was held of the then earl as of the
honor of Hedingham Castle. (fn. 38)
The de Veres appear to have had an earlier interest
in the manor than that which came to them in the 14th
century. Early in the 12th century an Aubrey de Vere,
one of the ancestors of the earls of Oxford, enfeoffed
Eustace de Barrington with land in Chigwell which
afterwards descended in the Barrington family. (fn. 39) It
seems probable that before enfeoffing Barrington
Aubrey de Vere had been tenant in demesne holding
of Robert Gernon.
The family name of Barrington was derived from
Barrington (Cambs.). Eustace de Barrington held land
there in 1130. (fn. 40) He also held land in Hatfield Broad
Oak which was later known as Barrington Hall, and he
was a forester of Hatfield Forest, serving under Robert
Gernon. (fn. 41) His son Humphrey de Barrington received
confirmation by Aubrey de Vere of the grant previously
made to Eustace. (fn. 42) Humphrey was succeeded by his
son, another Humphrey, who was a minor at his father's
death, which took place early in the reign of Henry II. (fn. 43) The younger Humphrey lived until the early 13th century; he was under-sheriff of Essex and Hertfordshire
in 1197. (fn. 44) He was succeeded by his son Sir Nicholas de
Barrington who held the manor in 1249. (fn. 45) Sir Nicholas
was succeeded by his grandson, Nicholas, who was lord
in 1274 and died about 1330. (fn. 46) The manor then
passed to the younger Nicholas's son Nicholas Barrington III, who settled it in 1344 on his eldest son John. (fn. 47)
John died about 1368 and his son and successor John
about 1426. (fn. 48) Several deeds relating to Chigwell between 1319 and 1384 suggest that the Barringtons were
at least occasionally resident in Chigwell during that
period. (fn. 49) Certain copyhold lands within the manor of
Woolston were held by this family and the descent of
these as shown in the court rolls was probably the same
as that of the manor of Barringtons. (fn. 50)
Thomas son of the last named John Barrington died
in 1472 leaving his manor of Chigwell to his wife Anne
for life with reversion to his son Edmund. (fn. 51) Anne is
said to have died on the day after her husband. (fn. 52) In
1479 Margaret, formerly the wife of a Thomas Barrington, was declared to have previously held the manor
jointly with her husband. (fn. 53) On her death in that year
Barringtons passed to her husband's brother Humphrey
Barrington. Humphrey and his brother were probably
sons of the Thomas Barrington who had died in 1472. (fn. 54)
Humphrey Barrington died before 1487 and was succeeded by his son Nicholas, who died in 1505. (fn. 55)
Nicholas's son and heir Nicholas died in 1515. (fn. 56) John
Barrington, son of the younger Nicholas, died in 1537. (fn. 57)
He was succeeded by his son Thomas Barrington, who
sold the manor of Barringtons in 1563 to Thomas
Wiseman of Great Waltham, (fn. 58) thus breaking a connexion which had lasted for as long as 450 years. (fn. 59)
Thomas Wiseman died in the year that he bought
the manor and was succeeded by his third son Stephen,
who died childless in 1567. (fn. 60) Stephen's heir was John
Wiseman, son of his brother William. (fn. 61) In 1573 William Tyffin of Wakes Colne did homage for Barringtons,
presumably on account of his marriage to Mary, widow
of Stephen Wiseman, who had a life interest. (fn. 62) During
his lifetime Stephen had demised the manor with certain
lands in Chigwell to John Morley and one Goldringe
who were to pay rent to him and after his death to his
widow; this rent was in arrear and was the cause of
legal proceedings. (fn. 63) John Wiseman died in 1615,
leaving Barringtons to his eldest son Thomas, who conveyed it in 1617 to John Hawkins. (fn. 64)
In 1626 Hawkins and his wife Sarah sold the manor
to William Rolfe. (fn. 65) Rolfe sold it in 1629 to Henry
Jackson, who in 1630 and 1634 claimed forest rights in
respect of the manor. (fn. 66) In 1639 Jackson sold Barringtons to Thomas Wilmer, whose father had already purchased Rolls, the mansion house of the manor. (fn. 67) The
first surviving court roll of the manor (1653) gives as
lords Edmund Denny and Thomas Wilmer. (fn. 68) Wilmer
was a major in the royalist army; he had probably sold
half the manor to Denny to pay the fine for his delinquency. (fn. 69) In 1655 he sold the remaining half to Robert
Abdy of Albyns (in Stapleford Abbots, q.v.) and John
Chapman of London. (fn. 70) Abdy and Chapman were
apparently trustees for Robert Abbott of London, who
made his will in 1657, leaving a moiety of Barringtons
to his wife for life and in 1658 added a codicil leaving
all his manors to his executors in trust to provide portions for his children. (fn. 71) The executors were Abbott's
wife Bethia and John Chapman her brother. In 1668
Abdy and Chapman conveyed this half of the manor to
Sir Eliab Harvey and John Prestwood. (fn. 72) Eliab died in
1699, leaving all his manors in Essex to his son William. (fn. 73)
Edmund Denny, who had acquired the other half of
Barringtons from Thomas Wilmer, died in 1656, leaving
it to his wife Anne for life with reversion to his cousin
William Gardner. (fn. 74) In 1657 Anne married Francis
Comyn of London, vintner, and in the same year
Gardner surrendered to Comyn all his rights in the halfmanor. (fn. 75) The court roll for 1659 names as lords Abdy,
Chapman, Thomas King, John Jekyll, Edward Cotton,
and John Berrisford. (fn. 76) The last four were presumably
trustees to the settlement made on the marriage of Anne
and Francis Comyn. Anne died in 1694 and Francis in
1697. (fn. 77) Their half of the manor passed to their son
Francis Comyn who sold it in 1700 to William Harvey,
who thus became owner of the whole manor. (fn. 78)
William Harvey died in 1731 and was succeeded by
his son, also named William, who died in 1742. (fn. 79) The
younger William was succeeded by his son, a third
William Harvey, who died in 1763. (fn. 80) The manor then
passed to William Harvey (IV), son of the last owner,
who died unmarried in 1779, leaving Barringtons to his
brother Eliab, later Admiral Sir Eliab Harvey. (fn. 81) The
admiral died in 1830 without surviving male issue. He
left the bulk of his estate, including Barringtons, to his
eldest daughter Louisa, wife of William Lloyd of Aston
Hall (Salop). In 1839 the estate in Chigwell consisted
of about 420 acres. (fn. 82) Lloyd and his wife acted as joint
lords of the manor until his death in 1843, after which
Louisa was sole lady until her death in 1866. (fn. 83) Her son
Richard T. Lloyd succeeded to the manor and died in
1898. Barringtons then passed to Richard's eldest son
Lt.-Gen. Sir Francis Lloyd, who died without issue in
1926. The manor then passed to the Revd. Rossendale
Lloyd, brother of Sir Francis. (fn. 84) Soon after this the
manorial rights were sold to Philip Savill, from whom
they passed to his son Mr. Lawrence L. Savill of
Comenden Manor (Kent) who is their present owner. (fn. 85)
The freehold of the Barringtons estate, however, remained in the Revd. Rossendale Lloyd who died in
1940 and was succeeded by his son Mr. Andrew F.
Lloyd. (fn. 86)
Rolls House, the capital mansion of the Barringtons
estate in modern times, is now (1953) in process of
demolition, much of the older part having already disappeared. It was a two-story building with attics,
partly timber-framed and partly of brick. The former
kitchen block was built about 1600 and late in the 17th
century the north-east and north-west wings were built
or rebuilt, making the house L-shaped. Early in the
18th century a long addition was made on the south-east
side of the north-east wing and there were later additions
on the south and south-west. (fn. 87)
The manor of BUCKHURST alias MUNKENHILL alias MONKHAMS probably formed part of
Barringtons (see above) until 1135, when William de
Montfichet granted to the abbey of Stratford Langthorne his wood of Buckhurst. (fn. 88) The grant was later
confirmed by Henry II. (fn. 89) The abbey's estate was
increased by other grants: in 1217 Matthew de St.
Tronius and Rose his wife quitclaimed to the abbey a
third part of 55 acres in Chigwell which was her dower
from her former husband Geoffrey Levenoth, and in
1230 William Fitz Edric granted to the Abbot of
Stratford ¾ carucate and 8½ acres in Chigwell. (fn. 90) In
1240 the Abbot of Stratford came to an agreement
with the Abbot of Waltham, a neighbouring landowner, concerning the agistment of cattle. (fn. 91) In 1253
Henry III granted the Abbot of Stratford free warren
in his demesne in Chigwell and Woodford. (fn. 92) The
boundary of the parish at Buckhurst Hill was for long
ill defined and the manor of Buckhurst seems to have
extended into Woodford.
Stratford Abbey retained Buckhurst until the Dissolution. (fn. 93) In 1521 John Saunders had a 41-year
lease from William Etherway, then abbot, of a tenement called 'Buckhurst alias Monkyn'. (fn. 94) By 1527 the
lease had passed to Ralph Johnson of Woodford. (fn. 95) In
1547 the king granted a tenement called Buckhurst
and a grove called Monk Grove, formerly belonging to
Stratford Abbey, to John Lyon alderman of London
and Alice his wife, to hold by 1/40 knight's fee. (fn. 96) Sir
John Lyon died in 1564 seised of this property. (fn. 97) He
was succeeded by Richard Lyon, son of his brother
Henry, who died in 1579. (fn. 98) Richard's son Henry
Lyon died in 1590. (fn. 99) In 1611 Henry's son George
Lyon leased the manor to the sitting tenant Joan
Newman for 21 years. (fn. 1) In 1616 John Lyon sold the
property to Thomas Hill of London, (fn. 2) and Hill sold it
in 1649 to William and George Nutt who were
brothers. (fn. 3)
George Nutt was dead by 1656 when his son George
sold his interest in Monkhams to his uncle William
Nutt. (fn. 4) In 1669 William Nutt settled it on his son on
the marriage of the latter. (fn. 5) The younger William died
in 1721, leaving the manor to his son William who sold
it in 1725 to William Cleland of Woodford. (fn. 6) Cleland
sold Monkhams in 1735 to Sir Joseph Eyles, Kt., who
was already owner of the neighbouring estate of Luxborough (see below). (fn. 7) Eyles died in 1740 and his
widow and executors sold the manor in 1746 to Robert
Knight, 1st Baron Luxborough, whose father had
bought Luxborough from them three years earlier. (fn. 8)
Lord Luxborough sold both properties in 1750 to
James Crokatt. (fn. 9) Crokatt sold them in 1767 to Baker
J. Littlehales, who conveyed them a few days later to
Sir Edward Walpole, K.B. (fn. 10) Walpole sold them in
1775 to Samuel Peach. (fn. 11) In 1781 Peach went bankrupt and Buckhurst and Luxborough were bought
from his creditors by Sir Edward Hughes, whose
widow Ruth sold them in 1799 to James Hatch, lord
of Chigwell Hall. (fn. 12) Thereafter they passed along with
Chigwell Hall. In 1839 the farm of Monkhams
included 178 acres and was let by James Mills to
William Death. (fn. 13) The farm survived until 1936, when
it was broken up for building. The house, which was
then demolished, stood at the south-west corner of
Lords Bushes. (fn. 14) Its site is now Farm Way and Farm
Close.
The manor of GRANGE, which gave its name to
Grange Hill, was originally part of Chigwell Hall (see
above). In 1258 William de Goldingham and Aline
his wife confirmed to Robert, Abbot of Tilty, gifts to
the abbey of 3 messuages and 234½ acres of land in
Chigwell. (fn. 15) The original donors were Herbert the
chaplain, John Fitz Gilbert, Margery de Chigwell,
and John the Miller and Agnes his Wife, all of whom
were evidently tenants of Chigwell Hall. The land so
granted became a grange of Tilty Abbey and remained
in the possession of the abbey until the Dissolution. (fn. 16)
In 1536 William Baker of Epping, carpenter, rendered
his first account to the king as lessee of Chigwell Grange.
He held the manor on a 31-year lease from Michaelmas
1532, at an annual rent of £3 10s. (fn. 17) In 1538 the
manor was bought from the Crown by Thomas
Addington of London, skinner, for £60. (fn. 18) Addington
died in 1543 and was succeeded by his son Thomas. (fn. 19)
The younger Thomas conveyed the manor to James
Altham of London, clothworker, at a date not exactly
known, and in 1555 Altham granted it to Anthony
Browne of South Weald. (fn. 20) In 1555 the manor was
said to consist of 4 messuages, 60 acres of land, 200
acres of meadow, 40 acres of pasture, and 10 acres of
wood: it would thus appear to have been reduced by
about 100 acres since the 13th century. Later in 1555
Browne sold 14½ acres of land in Chigwell, of which
11½ acres were part of the manor of Grange, to John
Stonarde and others. This small holding later became
the endowment of a road charity founded by Joan
Sympson. (fn. 21)
In 1558 Browne endowed his newly founded grammar school at Brentwood with this manor and other
property, confirming the grants by his will of 1565. (fn. 22) The grammar school remained owners of this estate
until about 1900, since when various sales have taken
place, mostly for building. In 1839 the property consisted of some 140 acres. (fn. 23) Grange farm-house was
about 300 yds. east of the junction between Hainault
Road and Manor Road. (fn. 24)
The manor of KING'S PLACE alias LANGFORDS alias POTELLS, at Buckhurst Hill, probably originated in the purchase by Edward III (through
his son John of Gaunt) in 1360 of a messuage and 92
acres of land from Matthew de Torkeseye. (fn. 25) In 1372
Alexander de Goldingham, lord of Chigwell Hall,
released to the king all his rights in this property 'now
commonly called the Neweloggelands in Chigwell'. (fn. 26)
From this release it is clear that Matthew de Torkeseye
had held the estate as a tenant of the manor of Chigwell
Hall. In 1378 Alan de Buxhull was granted custody
of the king's new lodge in Waltham Forest, free of rent
on condition that he kept the houses in repair. (fn. 27) In
1476 Edward IV enlarged the estate by the purchase
of a neighbouring estate from Robert Langford and
others. (fn. 28) Soon after this Edward IV granted the custody
of the whole property for life to Sir John Risley and in
1485 Henry VII confirmed the grant. (fn. 29) Risley appears to have later received a grant of the estate in tail
male, but he died without a male heir and in 1513
King's Place was granted in tail male to William
Compton. (fn. 30) Compton was later knighted and died in
1528, leaving a son and heir Peter, who died in 1539. (fn. 31) Peter's son Henry was created Baron Compton in 1572
and died in 1589. (fn. 32) William, 2nd Baron Compton,
negotiated with the queen in 1596 for the reversion of
the manor of King's Place (in default of the issue of the
1st baron), but nothing appears to have come of this. (fn. 33) Early in 1597 the queen granted the reversion to
Thomas Spencer and Robert Atkinson. (fn. 34) During the
16th century the estate was leased to at least two different tenants. In his will dated 1541 William Rolte,
tenant of Chigwell Hall, mentioned his lease of King's
Place. (fn. 35) In 1576 Richard Hayle left his lease of the
property to his wife Agnes. (fn. 36)
Although there was no failure of the heirs male of
the 1st Baron Compton King's Place seems to have
passed out of the hands of the 2nd baron soon after
1597. In 1612 Thomas Covell described himself in
his will as of King's Place. (fn. 37) His daughter Elizabeth
had married Roger Forster in 1610. (fn. 38) She died in or
before 1622, when Forster married Mary, eldest
daughter of John Penington. (fn. 39) In 1624 King's Place
was settled on Forster and Mary. (fn. 40) Forster died in
1633 and Mary married Michael Ernle, who died in
1645. (fn. 41) Mary finally married Sir Thomas Perient and
lived at King's Place until her death. (fn. 42)
The estate was, however, settled in 1657 on her
daughter Mary Ernle on the marriage of the latter
to Henry Goodricke of Grays Inn. (fn. 43) Mary and Henry
are said to have sold it a year later to William Livesaye, (fn. 44) whose son and namesake later sold it to Elizabeth
Colwall, widow, with successive remainders to her
sons John and Arnold: John Colwall died without
issue before 1680, when his mother settled King's
Place upon Arnold Colwall. (fn. 45) By 1705 the manor had
passed to Arnold's son, Daniel Colwall of the Friary,
Guildford (Surr.). (fn. 46) Arnold's widow Susanna married
Foot Onslow and appears to have had some interest in
King's Place in 1705 and 1708. (fn. 47)
In 1716 Thomas Gibson and John Jacob, trustees
under Daniel Colwall's will, sold the property to
Percival Chandler, who lived at the farm until about
1730. (fn. 48) He is said to have sold King's Place in 1741
to Oliver Marton, who died in 1744. (fn. 49) Marton was
succeeded by his son Edward, who died in 1758,
leaving the property to his brother the Revd. Oliver
Marton. (fn. 50) A year later Oliver sold King's Place to
Robert Jones of Babraham (Cambs.). (fn. 51) Jones died in
1774, leaving an only daughter Anne who married
General J. W. Adeane, who inherited all Jones's
property. (fn. 52) The general died in 1782 and was succeeded by his son Robert Jones Adeane. (fn. 53) On Robert's
death in 1810 King's Place passed to Henry J. Adeane,
who died in 1847. (fn. 54) In 1839 the property consisted
of 156 acres. (fn. 55) In 1853 the executors of H. J. Adeane
sold it to the National Freehold Land Society who
shortly after broke it up for building development. (fn. 56)
The name of this ancient manor is retained in King's
Place and King's Avenue, Buckhurst Hill.
The manor of LUXBOROUGH probably took its
name from the family of Loughteborough which lived
in Chigwell in the 14th century. William de Loughteborough was named in a Forest Roll in 1324 and in
1316 Henry Doule and Eve his wife quitclaimed to
William de Loughteborough a messuage and 132 acres
in Chigwell. (fn. 57) Robert de Loughteborough and
Margaret his wife were assessed to the subsidy of
1390. (fn. 58) In 1559 Francis Saunders and Margaret
Valentyne, widow, sold the manor of 'Loughbroughes'
to John Stoner, who built himself a house there. (fn. 59)
Stoner died in 1579, leaving the manor and the house
to his wife Anne with reversion to his only daughter
Susan, wife of Sir Robert Wroth, lord of Chigwell Hall
(see above). (fn. 60) In 1580 Anne conveyed her interest to
Robert and Susan, (fn. 61) and Luxborough passed along
with Chigwell Hall until 1642, when the estates of
John Wroth were divided. Luxborough then passed
to John, elder son of Henry Wroth and nephew of the
above John Wroth, by virtue of a settlement made in
1640 on the marriage of John the nephew with Anne
Gallard, widow. (fn. 62) Anne's will, dated 1675, was cited
in legal proceedings in 1676. (fn. 63) She left Luxborough
for life to her son by her first marriage, John Gallard,
with successive remainders to her son John Wroth for
life and her grandson John Wroth for ever. (fn. 64) Her
husband John Wroth had died in 1662. (fn. 65) John Wroth
her son died in 1708. (fn. 66) In 1716 her grandson John
Wroth sold Luxborough, then heavily mortgaged, to
Robert Knight, cashier of the South Sea Company. (fn. 67)
After the failure of the company in 1720 Knight's
estates, with those of the governors and directors, were
vested in trustees and in 1724 the manor of Luxborough was bought from these by Sir Joseph Eyles,
Kt. (fn. 68) Eyles died in 1740 and in 1743 his trustees contracted to sell the property to Knight, who had
returned from abroad on receiving a royal pardon for
his activities in the South Sea Company. (fn. 69) Knight
died in 1744, before the completion of the sale. Before
his death he had settled his estates on his son, Robert
Knight later created Baron Luxborough, and the
manor passed to the son on completion of the sale. (fn. 70) In 1746 Eyles's trustees also sold Buckhurst to Lord
Luxborough, and the two manors subsequently
descended together, becoming part of the Chigwell
Hall estate in 1799. (fn. 71)
The 16th-century manor house at Luxborough built
by John Stoner was rebuilt, probably in 1716-20, by
Robert Knight. (fn. 72) Prints of 1787 and 1788 show
respectively the south and east fronts of the house. (fn. 73) It was of two stories and appears to have been of brick
with stone or plaster dressings. To the north and east
were lower two-story ranges of stables and outbuildings.
The south or garden front had a central doorway with
a small classical porch. The entrance front on the east
side was more impressive. Between two projecting
wings was a recessed portico of five bays. Corinthian
columns the full height of the building supported an
entablature and pediment. Flanking this the parapet
was balustraded. The house was demolished about
1800 by James Hatch. (fn. 74)
The small manor of STOCKTONS alias SERJEANTS lay in Gravel Lane. John Stokton was
mentioned in the Woolston court rolls in 1462. (fn. 75) He
was later knighted and became Lord Mayor of London
in 1470. (fn. 76) He died about 1473, leaving his Chigwell
property to his younger son William, who died in
1483. (fn. 77) In 1543 Edward Brockett conveyed Stocktons
to John Potter. (fn. 78) Potter died about 1546, leaving all
his lands in Chigwell to his son Thomas, who jointly
with his wife Margaret conveyed Stocktons in 1567 to
John Watson and Elizabeth his wife. (fn. 79) In 1590 Henry
Fuller of North Weald Bassett left Serjeants to his son
Richard. (fn. 80) Henry Fuller of Serjeants was mentioned
several times in the Woolston court rolls between 1614
and 1621 (fn. 81) and the property seems to have remained in
the Fuller family until the end of the 17th century.
About 1700 John Fuller sold it to Edward Green who
died in 1707, leaving his 'farm in Gravel Lane' to his
son John. (fn. 82) John Green died soon after, leaving it to
his mother Ann Green. (fn. 83) In 1709 she left her freehold
estate called Serjeants to her son Charles Green. (fn. 84) By
1763 it had passed into the hands of the Harveys,
owners of the manor of Barringtons: in that year it was
let by Emma Harvey, as guardian of her son William
Harvey. (fn. 85) The lease described the property as fields,
barns, &c., containing 21 acres. After the 16th century
the farm was never termed a manor. In 1687 it was
even questioned whether it was a freehold. (fn. 86)
In 1066 the manor of WOOLSTON was held by
Earl Harold. It was then taken by King William and
in 1086 was held by him in demesne. (fn. 87) During the
12th century the manor was granted to the Sanford
family to hold in serjeanty by virtue of the office of
chamberlain to the queen. (fn. 88) A John de Sanford held
the manor in 1210-12 (fn. 89) and Cecily de Sanford in
1219. (fn. 90) Gilbert de Sanford held Woolston in 1236,
in which year he officiated at the coronation of Eleanor
of Provence. (fn. 91) He was still living in 1248, (fn. 92) but was
dead by April 1249 when the wardship of his daughter
and heir Alice de Sanford was bought by Fulk Basset,
Bishop of London. (fn. 93) In June 1249 the bishop sold
the wardship to Hugh de Vere, Earl of Oxford, who
married Alice to his son and heir Robert. (fn. 94) In 1259
John de Rivers, lord of Ongar hundred, granted to
Robert de Vere and Alice his wife a release of 4d. rent
at their view of frankpledge at Woolston. (fn. 95) In 1265
Robert's estates were forfeited for his part in the
Barons' War; the township of Woolston was then said
to be worth £6 6s. 8d. a year. (fn. 96) Robert recovered his
estates under the Dictum of Kenilworth, but before
this, in October 1265, all Alice's hereditary lands had
been restored to her. (fn. 97)
In 1284 Robert and Alice granted the reversion of
Woolston after their deaths to their daughter Joan and
her husband William de Warenne, son and heir of
John de Warenne, Earl of Surrey (d. 1304). (fn. 98) Robert
died in 1296; Woolston was then being held of him
and Alice by William le Plomer. (fn. 99) Alice died in 1312.
She had outlived both her daughter Joan and William
de Warenne and Woolston passed to John, Earl of
Surrey, son of Joan and William. (fn. 1) Before 1321 John
conveyed the manor to his sister Alice and her husband
Edmund Fitz Alan Earl of Arundel. (fn. 2) Woolston did
not escheat after the execution of Arundel in 1326 because it was his wife's inheritance. (fn. 3) Alice died between
1330 and 1338, and the manor passed to her son
Richard Fitz Alan, who had been restored to the earldom of Arundel in 1330. (fn. 4) In 1345 Woolston was
being held for life by Isabel Dispenser, the divorced
wife of Richard. (fn. 5) Richard died in 1376. (fn. 6) The manor
passed to his son Richard, Earl of Arundel, who was
executed in 1397. (fn. 7) The attainder of this earl was
reversed in 1400 and his titles and estates were restored
to his son Thomas, who in 1405 granted Woolston for
life to his servant John Wele. (fn. 8) Thomas died in 1415
and John Wele in 1420. (fn. 9) Shortly before he died Wele
was involved in a Chancery action against the king in
respect of Woolston. (fn. 10) In 1421 the manor was
divided between Thomas's three daughters, Elizabeth,
Duchess of Norfolk, Joan, Lady Bergavenny, and
Margaret, wife of Rowland Lenthal. (fn. 11)
In 1425, shortly before her death, the Duchess of
Norfolk granted her third part of Woolston to Norman
Babington and Margaret his wife. (fn. 12) Norman died
holding it in 1434 and Margaret held it at her death
in 1451. (fn. 13) It then passed to Norman's brother Sir
William Babington. (fn. 14) In the same year Sir William
settled the manor upon his sons William, Robert, and
Thomas Babington and the heirs of Robert. (fn. 15) Sir
William died in 1454, his son William in 1474 and
Thomas in 1471, (fn. 16) but it is not known how this third
of the manor passed between 1471 and 1485, when it
had come to William Scott (see below).
In 1428 Joan Lady Bergavenny enfeoffed Robert
Darcy and others with her third part of Woolston. (fn. 17)
In 1457 the surviving feoffees settled the property on
Joan's grandson, Thomas Ormond, with successive
remainders to his brothers John Ormond and James,
Earl of Wiltshire. (fn. 18) In 1476 Thomas Ormond conveyed it to William Scott and Robert Hardyng. (fn. 19)
After the death of Margaret Lenthal her third part
of the manor was held by her husband until he died in
1450. It then passed to John de Mowbray, Duke of
Norfolk, grandson of the above Elizabeth, Duchess of
Norfolk, and to George Neville, later Lord Bergavenny,
great-grandson of Joan, Lady Bergavenny. (fn. 20) In the
division of Margaret Lenthal's inheritance between
Mowbray and Neville the third part of Woolston was
assigned to Mowbray. (fn. 21) In 1468 John de Mowbray,
Duke of Norfolk, conveyed the property to Thomas
Hoo and others. (fn. 22) This was the first of a complicated
series of conveyances between various parties, including
George Neville, by which this third of Woolston was
conveyed to William Scott and Robert Hardyng. (fn. 23)
By 1485 all three parts of the manor had been united
in the hands of William Scott, who had been acting as
lord three years earlier when he signed an agreement
between his bailiff and his tenants, detailing the services to be performed by the latter. (fn. 24) He died in 1491,
leaving Woolston to his fifth son George, who died
without issue in 1534. (fn. 25) George probably lived at
Woolston Hall. At his death the manor was said to
include 10 acres of arable, 24 acres of meadow, 80
acres of pasture, 8 acres of wood, and £9 rent. (fn. 26)
George Scott's heir was Walter Scott, lord of the
manor of Stapleford Tawney (q.v.), who was the
grandson of John Scott (d. 1527), eldest son of William
Scott (d. 1491). (fn. 27) Walter Scott died in 1550 and his
son Roger in 1585. (fn. 28) George, son of Roger Scott, died
in 1589. (fn. 29) Neither Walter nor Roger nor George
acted as lord of the manor, for by the will of George
son of William Scott a 99-year lease of Woolston had
been granted to William's sixth son Hugh. (fn. 30) Hugh
acted as lord of the manor until his death in 1540, and
so also did his son George. (fn. 31)
When George son of Roger Scott died in 1589 he
left Woolston in his will to his two daughters Elizabeth
and Mary. (fn. 32) This bequest was, however, invalid
owing to a settlement made under the will of William
Scott (d. 1491). By that settlement the manor passed
to George Scott, son of Hugh, who was already the
tenant of Woolston under the 99-year lease. This
George Scott was living at Woolston Hall when he
became its owner. (fn. 33) He died a few months later, in
December 1589. (fn. 34) He had made his will before
inheriting the freehold, leaving his lease of Woolston
to his grandson George son of William Scott. According to the settlement of 1491 the heir to the freehold
was William Scott, eldest son of the George Scott who
died in December 1589. William never acted as lord
of the manor. He died in 1597. (fn. 35) George, son of
William Scott, who had inherited the lease of the
manor, acted as lord from 1590 onwards. (fn. 36) He died
in 1648. (fn. 37) He never lived at Woolston Hall, which
was let to various tenants. (fn. 38) About 1640 he had
settled Woolston on his son and heir George Scott,
who inherited the manor in 1648 and died in 1683. (fn. 39)
The last named George Scott was succeeded by his
son William, who died in 1725. (fn. 40) William's elder son
George inherited the manor but died unmarried in
1727. (fn. 41) He was succeeded by his brother Thomas
who died in 1733. (fn. 42) Thomas's son, George Scott, was
a minor, and manor courts were held until 1741 in the
name of his guardian, Sir Robert Abdy, Bt. (fn. 43) George
died childless in 1780, leaving Woolston to his second
cousin Robert Bodle of Clare Market, London, a
picture-frame maker. (fn. 44)
Robert Bodle died in 1785, leaving Woolston in
trust for the benefit of his son Robert, who came of age
in 1791. (fn. 45) The younger Robert held Woolston until
his death in 1851. In 1839 his estate consisted of 350
acres in Chigwell parish. (fn. 46) He left two daughters, of
whom the elder, Mary Elizabeth, inherited the manor
but died unmarried in 1872. (fn. 47) The younger daughter,
Louisa, had married George Watlington as his second
wife, but died without issue before her sister. After
the death of Mary Elizabeth Woolston passed to John
Watlington Perry Watlington, son of Thomas Perry
by his wife Maria Jane, daughter of George Watlington
by his first wife. J. W. Perry Watlington died childless
in 1882, and his estates passed to his sister Louisa wife
of Robert Peel Ethelston. She died in 1892, leaving
Woolston to her second son Robert W. Ethelston. He
died in 1914 and the manor was subsequently vested
in trustees. (fn. 48) Shortly before 1939 Woolston Hall was
sold, possibly for the first time since the 12th century.
It is now a sports club belonging to the Co-operative
Wholesale Society. (fn. 49) The building is L-shaped in plan,
with the main front facing south-east. It is of two
stories with attics, partly timber-framed and plastered
and partly of brick. It was built about 1600, possibly
incorporating remains of an earlier house. The southwest front has an early 18th-century eaves cornice and
a Doric porch with paired outer columns. The house
was 'modernized and improved' early in the 19th
century, probably by Robert Bodle. (fn. 50) Over the mantel
shelf in the entrance hall is an oil painting, installed by
George Scott (d. 1780) depicting his arms impaling
those of his wife Jane (Gibson) and several trophies. (fn. 51)