MORETON VALENCE
MORETON VALENCE lies 6 miles south-west of
Gloucester, on the left-hand bank of the Severn.
The river has been a significant element in the history of the parish, which is rural and, although two
main roads cross it, for the most part secluded. The
parish covered an area of c. 1,450 a. and was extremely elongated in shape, extending more than 5
miles from the Severn to the Cotswold escarpment
but never being over a mile across. In the middle it
was divided into two by the part of Putloe hamlet
that was in Standish: to the north-west lay 666 a.
including the hamlet of Epney, and to the south-east lay 775 a., including the areas called Little
Moreton, Pidgemore, Horsemarling, and Moreton
Hill. (fn. 1) In 1884 all of Standish lying north-west of the
main road at Putloe was transferred to Moreton
Valence and all of Moreton Valence south-east of
the road was transferred to Standish. That change,
together with minor boundary adjustments, reduced
the area of the parish to 991 a. The minor adjustments were the transfer of an unpopulated part of
Moreton Valence to Whitminster in 1884 and the
transfer to Moreton Valence of two unpopulated
parts of Standish in 1882, of three small parts of
Saul by the river, including one at Epney with three
houses, in 1884, and of an unpopulated part of
Randwick in 1886. (fn. 2) The account that follows relates
to the area of the parish before 1884, except that the
parts of Epney in Saul and Standish are included, and
that Putloe, which was partly in Moreton Valence, is
reserved for treatment as part of Standish. (fn. 3)
The River Severn forms the short north-west
boundary. The long north-east boundary with
Standish is an artificial one, following field boundaries. Parts of the long south-west boundary are
marked by a watercourse and by Moreton Lane,
the middle section of which no longer survives. (fn. 4)
The Severn makes the riverside land liable to
flooding, (fn. 5) and in 1625 the owner of some land at
Epney was obliged to maintain the 'sea wall'. (fn. 6)
In places the sea-wall is 8 ft. higher than the land
inshore. A fishing weir at Epney belonging to the
manor existed in 1216, (fn. 7) and apparently c. 1151; (fn. 8)
in 1246 it needed strengthening, (fn. 9) and the sheriff
was ordered to repair it. (fn. 10) In 1324 the fishery was
recorded as no more than a pool in the Severn; (fn. 11)
tithes of the fishery were mentioned in 1341, (fn. 12)
and in 1372 the weir at Epney was in a bad state. (fn. 13)
Nothing further has been found about the weir
until 1630, when the lord of the manor, Sir Henry
Jerningham, sold the weir house at Epney. (fn. 14) A
pool or fishing place, and free fishing in the Severn
where it passed Moreton Valence, were sold with the
manor in 1640. (fn. 15) The fishery was to be leased from
the lord of the manor in 1720. (fn. 16) At the Anchor Inn,
Epney, elvers are collected for sending to distant
places, and another elver-station was opened at
Baldwins in 1967. (fn. 17)
The parish lies mainly on the Lower Lias. The
north-west part is flat, lying below the 50 ft.
contour. To the south-east the land rises gently at
first until in the extreme eastern tip it rises sharply
to 750 ft. (fn. 18) Although the land has been used mainly
for pasture there were once open fields, and a
gradual process of inclosure was completed in
1823. Orchards in the parish have been extensive. (fn. 19)
A vineyard, apparently in Moreton, was recorded c.
1151. (fn. 20) In 1255 the Crown granted palings for
enclosing the park at Moreton belonging to William
de Valence, (fn. 21) who later claimed free warren there. (fn. 22)
The park was broken into in 1287 and 1295, and
deer were taken. (fn. 23) It was described as a park without
wild beasts in 1324, (fn. 24) the latest date at which mention
of it has been found. Its location may be indicated
by the name of Park field, which was near the
centre of the south-east part of the parish. (fn. 25)
Settlement is scattered, and the two most compact
groups of houses, at Putloe (fn. 26) and Epney, appear to be
of relatively late origin. The earliest settlement was
presumably the small group of houses near the
centre of the parish, including the church, the site
of the moated manor-house, (fn. 27) Church Farm, Barracks Farm, and two small houses. That was the site
of the settlement characterized in the 11th century
by the name Moreton, a farmstead set in marshland,
to which the suffix Valence had been added by
1276, (fn. 28) after the then lord of the manor. (fn. 29) Church
Farm is an L-shaped house of one story with attics
under a steeply pitched roof. It is of brick, with a
tiled roof, but was formerly timber-framed and
thatched. (fn. 30) The range projecting eastward is wider
and higher at the eaves and ridge than the northsouth range, to which it was an addition. Barracks
Farm is a small 18th- or 19th-century brick
house. South-east of the church, Woodfield House
was built c. 1830 and the new glebe house in the
1880s; (fn. 31) both are of brick. Moor Farm, ¾ mile
north-west of the church, stands at the end of a
long avenue of oak trees, planted c. 1806 when the
house was rebuilt or enlarged for Daniel and Mary
Willey. (fn. 32) Their house was a substantial building of
brick, and it was given the name Moor End House;
c. 1916, however, it was destroyed by fire and only a
small part was rebuilt. (fn. 33)
In the south-east part of the parish are two very
loose groups of farm-houses, Horsemarling and
Little Moreton. The name Horsemarling, recorded
in 1326, (fn. 34) appears to have been used of an area of
½ square mile or more, including Welch's Farm, (fn. 35)
Horsemarling Farm, Stagholt Farm, and Crowcomepill. Horsemarling Farm may have been the
house belonging to Thomas Banbury in the early
14th century; (fn. 36) in the late 17th century it belonged
to the Bower family, (fn. 37) and was described in 1672
as being in two halves separately occupied, the new,
lower half on the west and the older, upper half
on the east. (fn. 38) The house is of ashlar with a Cotswold
stone roof, and has two stories with gabled attics.
The older, eastern part was built in the early 17th
century; it has continuous dripmoulds, and the
roof-trusses in the attics are numbered. The western
part is built in a similar but slightly simpler style.
In 1967 Horsemarling Farm was again in two
occupations. Stagholt Farm, a small house built
or rebuilt in the late 18th century or early 19th,
may be a successor of the house in Horsemarling
called Hannowes in the 17th century; (fn. 39) Robert
Hannowe was churchwarden of Moreton Valence in
1498. (fn. 40) The house near Stroud Green that was
mentioned in the 17th and 18th centuries (fn. 41) may
have been at Crowcomepill, where in 1967 there
were only two pairs of 19th-century cottages, or it
may have been ¼ mile further north towards Stroud
Green, where there appears to be the site of a demolished house.
Little Moreton, (fn. 42) a name that has dropped out of
use, comprised Manor Farm, Green Farm, and
Moreton Green. At Moreton Green were a cottage
and two other buildings in 1818, (fn. 43) but only one
small cottage remained in 1951 (fn. 44) and it had gone
by 1967. Close to Manor Farm on the south-west
was the house of the rectory estate, recorded in
1652 and demolished by 1841. (fn. 45) Manor Farm was
built in the 18th century, a two-story building of
brick with stone quoins and a Welsh slate roof.
Immediately south of it are earthworks which may
mark the site of another farm-house. Green farm,
west of Manor Farm, was burnt down and rebuilt
c. 1935. (fn. 46) Between Little Moreton and Horsemarling
is Pidgemore Farm. The name Pidgemore occurred
in 1287. (fn. 47) In 1617 Pidgemore, held as a freehold of
the manor by Thomas Cowles (d. 1631), included
two houses; (fn. 48) another Thomas Cowles owned it in
1680. (fn. 49) In the 18th century there seem to have been
at least two houses, owned by Samuel Pridey and
his successor William Pridey and by Nathaniel
Hewlett; (fn. 50) Edward Hewlett had Pidgemore Farm
in 1818 and 1823, (fn. 51) and John Pridey sold his estate
there to the lord of the manor in 1828. (fn. 52) By 1841
there was only one farm-house, owned and occupied
by John Hooper. (fn. 53) The house was built in the early
19th century, as a large two-story brick farm-house.
In the extreme south-east tip of the parish are
Moreton Hill Farm (fn. 54) and Standish House. Standish
House is said to have been built by Lord Sherborne
as a hunting-lodge in 1830, (fn. 55) but there was a building
there in 1818, apparently either a farm building or a
house under construction. (fn. 56) In 1824 a house on the
site was called the Cottage. (fn. 57) Standish House is a
stuccoed building of two stories enlarged in 1865, (fn. 58)
in a commanding position, and it was occupied c.
1850-80 by the railway magnate Richard Potter,
whose daughter Beatrice Webb, Lady Passfield, spent
her childhood there. (fn. 59) The house was used as a
Red Cross hospital during the First World War; (fn. 60) in
1921 it was bought from Lord Sherborne for the
Gloucestershire Joint Committee for Tuberculosis, (fn. 61)
which opened its sanatorium there in 1922. (fn. 62)
In 1931 patients and staff numbered over 300. (fn. 63)
The buildings were extended in 1923-6, 1939,
and 1947, (fn. 64) but thereafter the hospital ceased to be
exclusively for tuberculosis, and became a general
chest, orthopaedic, and tuberculosis hospital. After
further building, it had 269 beds in 1967. (fn. 65)
The hamlet of Epney, beside the Severn in the
extreme north-west of the parish, was inhabited by
the late 13th century. (fn. 66) The name suggests that the
settlement was on an island (fn. 67) before the sea-wall
was built, and until the 19th century the hamlet was
very small. The earliest houses were presumably
on the piece of ground above the 25 ft. contour, in
the south-west part of the hamlet, and in that part
are a timber-framed and thatched cottage of the 17th
century and two farm-houses and the Anchor Inn, (fn. 68)
built or rebuilt in brick in the earlier 19th century.
In the north-east part of the hamlet, stretching
along the road towards Longney and protected
from high tides by the sea-wall, the houses are
mostly cottages of the early 19th century or small
villas-several of them are so named-of the late
19th century, but they include a single-story timberframed cottage, which was once apparently a pair,
and an 18th-century brick house. At Baldwins, ½
mile south-west of Epney, there were formerly
more houses within Moreton Valence parish than
the one 18th-century brick farm-house divided into
two cottages that was there in 1967; (fn. 69) the mill
belonging to Moreton Valence manor was there
until the late 17th century, (fn. 70) and the remains of two
groups of cottages were finally demolished in the mid
20th century. Including Baldwins, Epney contained
nearly half the houses in the parish in 1841. (fn. 71)
In no part of the parish has there been any
considerable amount of new building in the 20th
century.
Although the parish is crossed by two main roads,
the Gloucester-Bristol road and the Gloucester-Stonehouse road, which were turnpikes from 1726
to 1827, and by the Gloucester and Berkeley
Canal, (fn. 72) the main lines of local communications
formerly lay along the length of the parish. A lane
once ran from Putloe to Horsemarling, (fn. 73) but by
1967 it was no longer open. Part of it, the queen's
highway between Moreton Green and Putloe
Green, was presented as out of repair in 1599. (fn. 74)
The highway called the Moors, presented in 1600, (fn. 75)
apparently went close to the site of Moor Farm
and continued to Epney. Moreton Lane, an ancient
road marking the boundary between Moreton and
Whitminster, was stopped west of Pegthorne
Bridge, a former swing bridge across the Gloucester
and Berkeley Canal, in 1841; (fn. 76) the bridge is said to
have fallen down in 1916, (fn. 77) and in 1967 Moreton
Lane was overgrown beyond the avenue to Moor
Farm.
Fourteen inhabitants of the parish were assessed
for tax in 1327. (fn. 78) There were c. 150 communicants
in 1551, (fn. 79) the same number as in 1603. (fn. 80) There was
apparently a fall in population in the 17th century
for there were 50 families in 1650, (fn. 81) 28 houses
assessed for tax in 1672, (fn. 82) and c. 150 inhabitants in
30 houses c. 1710. (fn. 83) The population then remained
steady, (fn. 84) but from 169 c. 1775 (fn. 85) rose to 265 in 1801
and 312 in 1811. The growth is attributable mainly
to building in Epney. After a peak of 376 in 1871,
numbers fell more than could be accounted for by
the changes in boundary; the population of the civil
parish in 1961 was 208. (fn. 86)
There were two unlicensed alehouses in the parish
in 1660, two more in 1661, and one at Epney in
1665. (fn. 87) In 1838 there were said to be four beershops. (fn. 88)
Some of them are likely to have been at Putloe,
intended to serve travellers along the main road. (fn. 89)
The Anchor Inn at Epney was in existence in 1806, (fn. 90)
and a friendly society was meeting there in 1846. (fn. 91)