LOCAL GOVERNMENT.
In 1252 it was said
that Robert de Pontlarge and all his free and customary tenants used to go to the Whitstone hundred
court twice a year, that Robert and his free tenants
used to be on juries and assizes, but that those suits
had been withdrawn by William de Valence. (fn. 92) In
1276 it was said that the suit at the hundred twice a
year by all the free tenants and by 4 men and the
reeve of Moreton had been withdrawn since 1252, (fn. 93)
suggesting that a compromise about suit at the
hundred had been reached in the interval. In 1287
William de Valence claimed view of frankpledge in
Moreton and quittance of the shire and hundred;
asked whether he claimed gallows in Moreton,
William said that he had all judgements. (fn. 94) In 1276
he had claimed wreck. (fn. 95)
The court leet was recorded in 1613, (fn. 96) and the
liberties that were conveyed with the manor in
1640 included view of frankpledge and the right to
payments called Moorsilver and the common fine,
collected by the tithingman of Moreton Valence. (fn. 97)
The right to hold a court leet and view of frankpledge was part of the estate that Abraham Chamberlain sold to Sir Ralph Dutton in 1681. (fn. 98) The only
court rolls found are drafts for 1730 and 1742; the
court then appointed a tithingman, a constable, and
a hayward, but little other business seems to have
been done. (fn. 99)
Incomplete series of accounts of the overseers of
the poor begin in 1651, of the churchwardens in
1719, and of the surveyors in 1737. (fn. 1) By 1653 the
parish owned a building called the church house, (fn. 2)
apparently built on the waste of the manor. (fn. 3) It may
have been once used, or intended to be used, as a
poorhouse (fn. 4) but c. 1775 it was let for a rent of 50s,
used for the benefit of the poor. (fn. 5) The church house
is likely to have been the house on the south-east
edge of the churchyard, which was formerly two
cottages. It is a rectangular building of two stories,
timber-framed under rough-cast; one gable-end is of
stone and the other has a large stone chimney with
a moulded cap.
In the mid 17th century methods of relieving the
poor included paying for rent, medical attention, and
house-repairs. In 1653 the overseers bought a
loom, (fn. 6) and in 1709 a broadweaver raised money
temporarily by mortgaging his loom to the churchwardens and overseers. (fn. 7) In the 1660s and 1670s
each of the two overseers accounted separately and
was responsible for one division of the parish, from
which, apparently, he collected the rate. (fn. 8) In the mid
18th century there were separate rate assessments
for the upper and lower divisions, each with its own
overseer. Items of expenditure included doctors'
fees, rent, clothes, apprenticing, and a subscription
to the Gloucester Infirmary. Total expenditure fell
from £105 in 1756 (fn. 9) to c. £70 a year in the late 18th
century, but was nearly £200 in the first decade of
the 19th. (fn. 10) In 1823 the parish farmed its poor for
£106 a year, but the arrangement seems to have
come to an end in 1826. In that year 2 overseers
were appointed for each division of the parish, and
from 1827 to 1836 there were three for each. (fn. 11)
Upkeep of the roads of the parish was apparently
divided between three surveyors, for in the 18th
century there was a surveyor for the middle division. (fn. 12) A waywarden continued to be appointed by
the vestry until 1886 or later. (fn. 13)
The parish became part of the Wheatenhurst
Poor Law Union in 1835, (fn. 14) and of the Wheatenhurst
highway district in 1863. (fn. 15) With the rest of the
Wheatenhurst Rural District it was transferred to
the Gloucester Rural District in 1935. (fn. 16)