HARDWICKE
HARDWICKE lies 4 miles south-west of Gloucester,
close to the River Severn but at no point touched by
it. Primarily agricultural, the parish was for long
dominated by the resident owners of two estates,
Hardwicke Court and Field Court. In the 20th
century the proximity of Gloucester introduced
suburban development in the north-eastern part of
the parish, and the city's lines of communication
have had a marked influence, the Gloucester and
Berkeley Canal dividing the parish in two, and the
Gloucester-Bristol road running across the eastern
part. The R.A.F. establishment in neighbouring
Quedgeley has two subsidiary stores in Hardwicke.
Until 1882 Hardwicke comprised 2,378 a. (fn. 1) The
main body of the parish was compact in shape but
irregular in outline, and several detached parts of
the parish lay within the boundaries of Elmore
parish, to the north. Part of the north and part of
the south boundary followed small streams, but
the eastern boundary and that of the whole of the
western half of the parish followed field-boundaries. (fn. 2)
The detached parts belonged to Hardwicke because,
it seems, they constituted Farley manor, which was
connected tenurially with Rudge manor in Hardwicke,
and because the tithes of Farley were in the same
ownership as those of the rest of Hardwicke. (fn. 3)
In 1882 a small detached part of Elmore lying within
the boundaries of Hardwicke was transferred to
Hardwicke; in 1884 Farleys End, comprising 219 a.
and containing 66 people living in 14 houses, was
transferred from Hardwicke to Elmore parish,
within whose boundaries it lay; in 1885 Hardwicke
lost 10 small detached parts to Elmore and gained a
small detached part from Haresfield. By the changes
the area of Hardwicke was reduced to 2,150 a. (fn. 4)
In 1935 Hardwicke lost to Quedgeley a further 130 a.
with a population of 47, (fn. 5) being the area around Field
Court. (fn. 6) The account here printed, however, relates
to the area comprised in the parish up to 1882.
The land of the parish is mostly flat and lies
below 100 ft., but in the north-west it rises to two
small hills, Hockley (or Acklow) Hill at 195 ft. and
Monk's Hill at 135 ft. (fn. 7) The soil is a cold clay,
overlying the Lower Lias, (fn. 8) and difficulties of
drainage have meant that a large part of the parish
has been used for pasture rather than arable. There
were, however, open fields in Hardwicke, which
were inclosed piecemeal over a fairly long period. (fn. 9)
Orchards have been extensive, (fn. 10) and in the 18th
century Hardwicke's stout cider was noted along
with its excellent cheese. (fn. 11) Woodland, especially in
the north-west part of the parish where some pieces
survived in 1967, appears to have been extensive in
the 12th and 13th centuries. (fn. 12) In 1782 elms from the
Hardwicke Court estate were sold for £335. (fn. 13) The
park belonging to Hardwicke Court, which extends
across the southern boundary of the parish into
Haresfield, was in existence by the late 12th
century. (fn. 14)
Settlement in the parish is scattered, with several
loose clusters of houses and a high proportion of
isolated farmsteads. The grouping of the houses
appears to correspond in part with the division of the
parish into separate estates, and the correspondence
is reflected as late as 1839 in the existence of five
so-called tithings of which four were named after
the then or recent principal owners. (fn. 15) Thus Hardwicke village seems to have belonged primarily to
Hardwicke (or Park Court) manor, the scattered
farmsteads in the north-west part of the parish to
Rudge manor, Farleys End hamlet to Farley
manor, and the houses in the north-east of the parish
to Field Court manor. (fn. 16) The houses at Hardwicke
Green and near the south-east boundary may have
belonged to various estates.
Hardwicke village lies near the centre of the parish,
where the church stands beside a crossroads, and is
likely to have been the earliest settlement in the
parish. The name combines words meaning 'herd'
and 'farm', (fn. 17) and the inference is that Hardwicke was
originally an outlying farmstead of another settlement. It was presumably an offshoot from either
Standish or Haresfield: it was linked ecclesiastically
with Standish, (fn. 18) and Hardwicke manor, with which
Hardwicke village is presumed to have been associated, was a sub-manor of Haresfield or Standish. (fn. 19)
The village was formed mainly by a loose street of
houses running north-east from the crossroads. In
addition to Church House Farm, which is timberframed, two-storied, on an L-shaped plan, there are
several square-framed cottages of one story with
attics under thatched roofs; most of the older
houses, in the village as in the parish generally, are
covered with rough-cast. Near the north-east end of
the street is Old Hall, called Old Farm in 1792, (fn. 20)
apparently the oldest surviving house in the village.
It is a timber-framed building built on a long
rectangular plan, of one story with an inserted
attic floor. It has been divided into two cottages and
much restored, but three surviving cruck-frame
trusses suggest that it was once a hall-house of four
bays or more; the one truss that remains exposed
below the collar is near the middle of the range and
has chamfered edges and chamfered arch-braces to
its cambered collar, suggesting that it may have been
an intermediate truss dividing the bays of a 14th-century hall. So substantial a house presumably
belonged to one of the chief estates in the parish;
it may have belonged to the Delamares, but its
possession by Sir Thomas Crawley-Boevey in
1808 (fn. 21) suggests rather a connexion with the Field
Court estate. (fn. 22) On the road leading south-west Church
Farm stands close to the crossroads; the house was
recorded in 1775, (fn. 23) and the surviving building, of
rendered brick, appears to be of about that date but
to occupy an old site. In 1699 there were 5 houses
scattered along Pound Lane, leading south-east from
the crossroads, (fn. 24) but by 1967 they had all been
replaced and the oldest houses were two 18th-century
cottages.
Hardwicke Green ½ mile ENE. of the church,
may have been a subsidiary settlement of Hardwicke
village, established on the manorial waste. In 1699
there were c. 5 houses there, (fn. 25) grouped around three
sides of a rectangular green, with a minor road,
Green Lane, forming the fourth and northern side, (fn. 26)
and Sticky Lane linking the southern end with the
main road. A farm-house and three pairs of cottages
that were there in 1967 were apparently built in the
18th and 19th centuries, and are of various materials.
The green remained uninclosed in 1967, and c.
1840 a few farmers had been turning out sheep on it. (fn. 27)
Outlying houses in the eastern part of the parish,
in addition to Hardwicke Court and Field Court
which, as mentioned below, were both in existence
by the late 12th century, (fn. 28) include Laynes Farm,
Southfield Farm, and Road Farm, all marked on a
map of 1699, (fn. 29) Summerhouse Farm, recorded in
1824, (fn. 30) and Ellis's Farm. Laynes Farm is mainly
a tall 19th-century brick building, but at the north
end is a range of one story with an attic that was
once one wing of an L-shaped house; the walls are
partly timber-framed, partly brick, and at the east
end are some large ashlar blocks. Southfield Farm
appears to contain no fabric earlier than the 18th
century. Road Farm is a square-framed, thatched
house of one and two stories on an L-shaped plan;
the short northern cross-wing, which has quadrant
bracing on the gable-end, is a low building that may
represent a former hall; the southern range is built
on a stone plinth and has a central ashlar chimney
with a moulded cap. (fn. 31) Summerhouse Farm,
rebuilt in brick in the 18th century, incorporates
fragments of a timber-framed building and has a
partly timber-framed barn. In Sticky Lane,
opposite the 19th-century Ellis's Farm, a pair of
brick cottages has a timber-framed gable-end with
a large chimney.
Other houses were built, from the 18th century
or earlier, along the main Gloucester-Bristol road,
notably at the former north boundary of the parish
along the edge of Quedgeley Green. The houses
there that were within Hardwicke parish until 1935
include the Lawn, built in the early 19th century.
Scattered small houses of the 19th and 20th centuries
line the road southwards to Four Mile Elm, where
the Hardwicke Elm stood by the roadside (fn. 32) until
felled in the early 19th century, (fn. 33) and where the
smithy was. (fn. 34) By the road junction 300 yds. south,
where the 'Cross Keys' was built before 1831, (fn. 35) a
terrace of 8 cottages was built in the late 19th
century, (fn. 36) but was replaced in the 1930s by a row
of a dozen houses, mostly detached.
The building c. 1908 of a dozen detached houses
¾ mile NNE. of Hardwicke church marked a new
stage in the settlement of the north-east corner of
the parish. (fn. 37) By 1921 the two ends of a new road,
Elmgrove Road, had been made on a line from just
north of those houses to the Gloucester-Bristol
road; (fn. 38) the middle section of the road, however,
remained only a footpath in 1967 because two hunting men bought the land there in order to keep
open the habitual fox-run from Quedgeley Gorse to
Hardwicke Gorse. (fn. 39) The area was gradually developed: the 170 new houses built in Hardwicke in the
period 1901-61 (fn. 40) were largely in or near Elmgrove
Road, especially at its eastern end. North of Field
Court an estate of 30 council houses built after the
Second World War is on land that was once partly in
Hardwicke parish. Some new houses were built at
the east end of Green Lane, where a large house
called the Cottage had been built in the earlier 19th
century, and along the canal banks c. 25 small
wooden cabins were built. In 1967 the inhabitants
of the north-east corner of the parish greatly
outnumbered the rest.
The western half of the parish, separated from
the eastern half since the early 19th century by
the Gloucester and Berkeley Canal, has remained
relatively unaltered. A high proportion of the houses
are single farmsteads on or near sites of some antiquity. In the area of Hardwicke Farm there are
also half a dozen small 19th- and 20th-century
houses. Hardwicke Farm itself is described below. (fn. 41)
Velthouse Farm, recorded in 1649, (fn. 42) incorporates a
two-story building, timber-framed and rough-cast,
and jettied at each end, with a central chimney of
ashlar with a moulded cap. A similar massive
chimney at Clarke's Farm may also have been
centrally placed, for the part of the house west of it
was rebuilt c. 1880 and east of it is a short structure
of two stories, partly timber-framed; one roof-truss
has smoke-blackened timbers, apparently re-used.
The house was extended eastward in the late 17th
century. One of the barns contains a single cruckframe truss. Madam's End Farm, mentioned in
1675, (fn. 43) is timber-framed and rough-cast, of one
story with attics under a thatched roof. The earliest
part is of two bays of which one, in which the rooftimbers include wind-braces and are smokeblackened, appears to have been an open hall; an
upper floor was later inserted and lit by a gable.
At various dates the house was lengthened at each
end and given two back wings. Grove End House,
built of red brick in the later 19th century, is near
but not on the site of a house which bore the same
name in 1699. (fn. 44)
In 1852 T. B. Ll. Baker, one of the founders of
the reformatory school system, opened the Hardwicke Reformatory for Boys in a building south-east
of Grove End House. The number of boys rose from
17 in 1854 to 79 in 1881 and, after the building had
been enlarged, to 108 in 1911. The boys worked
mostly on the land. The reformatory was closed in
1922, on the grounds that its buildings were oldfashioned; the buildings became a farm-house. (fn. 45)
Farleys End, called the vill of Farley in the 13th
century, (fn. 46) is a loosely knit hamlet detached from the
rest of the parish and forming in effect the western
part of the straggling village of Elmore, with which
it was administratively joined in 1884. In 1839
Farleys End contained 3 farm-houses, 5 cottages, and
2 other houses, (fn. 47) and in 1884 there were 14 houses
in all. (fn. 48) Farleys End Farm is described below. (fn. 49)
Pleasure Farm, partly of Lias stone, was enlarged in
brick in the 19th century. Church Farm was built of
brick in the early 19th century. The Dower House,
formerly called the Sands, is a square, two-story
house built in the mid 19th century of brick with
stone dressings. The smaller houses, mostly built
in the 19th century, include five mid-20th-century
houses.
The main Gloucester-Bristol road through the
parish is a route of great antiquity, and was presumably the reason for such events as the holding of
a visitation at Hardwicke in 1300 (fn. 50) and the dating of
letters there in 1328 by the Bishop of Bath and
Wells. (fn. 51) Those events, however, suggest that the
main road then lay further north-west and actually
went through the village, an idea that is consistent
with the alignment of Hardwicke village street and a
footpath north of it in relation to that of the Roman
road leaving Gloucester and continuing beyond
Moreton Valence, and with the finding near Southfield Farm of a gold stater of the Dobunni. (fn. 52) A new
road from Hardwicke to Little Haresfield was built
in the mid 13th century (fn. 53) and may have helped to
divert the Gloucester-Bristol road. The main road
followed its modern route by 1675 (fn. 54) and was said in
the early 19th century never to have been any different; (fn. 55) it seems to have followed the modern line as
early as 1378, when the repair of Wolgar's Bridge
was at issue. (fn. 56) Wolgar's Bridge, built of stone by
1675, (fn. 57) was the same as Wokers or Oakey Bridge (fn. 58)
carrying the main road across the south boundary of
the parish. The road, with a toll-gate at Four Mile
Elm, (fn. 59) was a turnpike from 1726 to 1877, (fn. 60) as was
the road to Little Haresfield. (fn. 61) Minor roads mentioned at an early date include the king's highway in
the early 13th century, (fn. 62) apparently the Quedgeley-
Longney road, Kingston way between 1263 and
1284, leading to Farleys End, (fn. 63) and a road called
Port Street in the neighbourhood of Elmore. (fn. 64)
Green Street, presumably the same as Green Lane,
and Beaurepair Lane in the south of the parish (fn. 65)
were recorded in 1598, and Fisher's Bridge, on the
Quedgeley-Longney road at the north boundary of
the parish, in 1600. (fn. 66)
The Gloucester and Berkeley Canal, begun in
1794, reached southwards as far as Hardwicke by
1797, (fn. 67) but as late as 1810 it had been carried no
further than Southfield Farm. (fn. 68) It was opened to
traffic in 1827. (fn. 69) Two swing bridges, each with a
Doric lodge, cross the canal to link the two halves of
the parish. Near the north boundary of the parish a
jetty on the canal and oil storage tanks were built in
1960 as a distribution point for Shell-Mex & B.P.
Ltd. (fn. 70)
The population appears to have been moderately
stable from the mid 16th century until the early 18th.
In 1542 a muster included 52 names for Hardwicke (fn. 71)
and there were 169 communicants in 1551. (fn. 72) The
figure of 100 communicants in 1603 (fn. 73) is shown to be
too low by the 67 adult males listed in 1608, (fn. 74) the 60
families recorded in 1650, (fn. 75) and the 49 houses
assessed for hearth tax in 1672. (fn. 76) In 1676 there were
said to be 171 communicants. (fn. 77) From 280 people
living in 70 houses c. 1710 (fn. 78) the population may have
fallen, for it was returned as 200 in 1735 (fn. 79) and
c. 250 in the 1770s, (fn. 80) but if so it increased again
rapidly, to 341 in 1801 and 423 in 1811. It rose
steadily to 645 in 1881, though there were fewer
families then than in 1871. The fall to 538 in 1901
was accentuated by the reduction in the size of the
parish, and after a further rise a fall in the twenties
resulted mainly from the closing of the reformatory.
From 575 in 1931 the population grew, despite a
further reduction in area, to 797 in 1951 and 861 in
1961. (fn. 81)
Geoffrey the taverner in the late 13th century may
have kept his tavern in Farleys End. (fn. 82) Edward the
taverner witnessed a Hardwicke deed in 1326. (fn. 83) In
1664 Edward Stratford was indicted for keeping an
unlicensed alehouse. (fn. 84) The Pilot Inn by Sellars
Bridge over the canal was open by 1856; and two
other beerhouses were recorded in 1863; (fn. 85) in 1883
the 'Morning Star' on the main road, the 'Cross
Keys', and the Pilot Inn were recorded, (fn. 86) and all
three remained open in 1967. A friendly society
meeting at Hardwicke in 1836 may have been the
same as the female friendly society that met in its
own room there in 1838. (fn. 87)
At least four of the abbots of Gloucester are likely
to have come from Hardwicke: Thomas Carbonel,
Walter of St. John, John of the Field, and William
Farley. (fn. 88) Several of the manorial lords have achieved
distinction in public life. (fn. 89)