STIVICHALL
The ancient parish of Stivichall (or Styvechale,
as it is now sometimes spelt) lay about 1½ mile south
of the city of Coventry. It comprised 818 acres in
1891. (fn. 72) After 1842 the parish was in Warwick Union
and Rural District. In 1928, 193 acres were transferred to Coventry County Borough, and a further
545 acres in 1932. The parish was then extinguished,
and the remaining 80 acres became part of Baginton
civil parish in Warwick Rural District. (fn. 73)
The north-east boundary of the parish was formed
by the fence of Cheylesmore Park; (fn. 74) the eastern by
the stream from Park Mill to the River Sherbourne,
and by the Sherbourne itself as far as its confluence
with the River Sowe; and the southern by the Sowe.
On the south-west the boundary followed a stream,
once called the Mardon Sich, (fn. 75) which runs from
Stivichall Common to the Sowe. The house and
small estate called Stivichall Grange west of the
Mardon Sich is in Stoneleigh. To the north-west,
the tithe agreement of 1595 made the road to
Warwick (probably the modern Kenilworth Road)
the parish boundary, but by the 19th century an
irregularly-shaped piece west of the road was included in the parish as part of Stivichall Common. (fn. 76)
Stivichall Common and Park are on a ridge of
high ground between the valleys of the rivers
Sherbourne and Sowe. To the north, Warwick
Road climbs from Greyfriars Green in Coventry to
the old Stivichall boundary, and, as Kenilworth Road,
runs south-west across Stivichall Common before
falling to Canley in Stoneleigh parish. On the
southern end of the ridge, Stivichall Hall and the
church formerly overlooked the village fields and the
River Sowe. The modern Leamington Road branches
from Warwick Road where it entered the parish
and runs south past the church, crossing the
Coventry by-pass (completed 1940) (fn. 77) by a roundabout near the city boundary which here coincides
with the former parish boundary. The railway from
Coventry to Leamington (built 1842) (fn. 78) runs roughly
parallel with Kenilworth Road. The stone bridge by
which the railway crosses Stivichall Croft bears the
coat of arms of the Gregory family. The centre of the
former parish is occupied by modern suburban
housing, the building of which began about 1930
and was still going on in 1964; to the north is the
War Memorial Park and Stivichall Common; only in
the extreme east, where the former mill stood beside
the River Sherbourne, (fn. 79) and in the extreme south
along the River Sowe, have any fields or meadows
survived.
It has been suggested that the village of Lowick,
in George Eliot's novel Middlemarch, was modelled
partly on Stivichall (and partly on the neighbouring
village of Baginton) as it was in the second quarter
of the 19th century. (fn. 80)
MANORS AND ESTATES.
Stivichall was first
mentioned among the chapelries 'restored' to
Coventry Priory by Ranulf de Gernon, Earl of
Chester, in the early 12th century. (fn. 81) Shortly after
Ranulf's death in 1153, his son, Hugh de Kevelioc,
granted the estate there to Walter Durdent, Bishop
of Coventry (or Chester, as he was then styled), for
the soul of his father, who had died excommunicate. (fn. 82)
The bishop was lord of this manor until the mid
16th century. His holdings in Stivichall and
Tachbrook were in 1428 assessed at half a knight's
fee. (fn. 83)
An examination of the descent of Stivichall is
very difficult, particularly for the 16th century.
This is due partly to the legal manoeuvres of the
Gregory family in giving themselves a secure
title, and to their more dubious activities which
included the forging or suppressing of evidence and
the addition of misleading glosses not only to 16thcentury but also to medieval records. (fn. 84)
The earliest recorded tenant of the bishop in
Stivichall was Stephen de Nerbone at the beginning
of the 13th century; (fn. 85) the bishop, however, seems
from the first to have kept some of the tenements in
hand. Stephen's daughter, Margery de Nerbone,
married Robert de Stivichall, (fn. 86) described in 1220-1
as 'formerly lord of Stivichall', (fn. 87) but otherwise an
obscure figure. Ralph son of Robert granted some
land in Stivichall in 1220-1, (fn. 88) and was presumably
the same as the Ralph de Stivichall, son of Margery
de Nerbone, (fn. 89) who held land in several places around
Coventry in the 13th century. Robert son of Robert
was also mentioned at this time. (fn. 90) Margery was
described as lady of the manor in 1221-2. (fn. 91) Ralph's
son was Joylin de Stivichall, and their successor in
1299 was John de Stivichall. (fn. 92)
The energetic Geoffrey de Langley, who built up
estates in Pinley, Shortley, Wyken, and elsewhere in
the first half of the 13th century, was also active in
Stivichall. In 1221-2, in settlement of an apparently
genuine dispute, he received a house, two virgates,
the mill, and other property from Margery de
Nerbone. (fn. 93) Geoffrey also made at least six other
purchases of land in Stivichall, and his successors
William, Walter, and John continued the process. (fn. 94)
Some of the land was said to be held of the Nerbone
estate, some from other tenants. At his death in 1280
Walter de Langley held four virgates in Stivichall
of the heirs of Margery de Nerbone. (fn. 95)
By 1299 Alice de Langley was said to hold half
the village directly of the bishop. John de Stivichall
held the Overhallstede or manor-house and what
was called a hide of land. The bishop still had in
hand nine tenements with three virgates. (fn. 96) When
described in the middle of the 14th century, the
'hide' of the Overhallstede was about 61 acres. (fn. 97) By
the mid 14th century the Langley holding was said
to consist of eight virgates. (fn. 98) It descended with
Pinley and Wyken to 1452, (fn. 99) when in the final
division of the estates, Stivichall came to Elizabeth,
the eldest of the three Frevill sisters, and her
husband Thomas Ferrers. (fn. 1) The estate then descended in the Ferrers family until 1573 when it was
merged with other holdings by the marriage of Jane,
sister of John Ferrers, with Arthur Gregory. (fn. 2)
Elizabeth Swillington, the founder of a trust for the
repair of local roads, (fn. 3) held what was called a mansion
house and lands from this estate in 1544. (fn. 4)
The smaller estate of three virgates in 1299 was
retained by the bishops of Coventry and Lichfield
until 1547, when it is said to have been sold to
Thomas Fisher (or Hawkins). (fn. 5) Some rents in
Stivichall were granted by the bishop and Thomas
Fisher to Richard Fisher in 1557-8, (fn. 6) but it was
Thomas Fisher who was said to have sold the estate
in 1563 to Thomas and Arthur Gregory. (fn. 7)
Most of the individual tenements of 1299 can be
traced through rentals to the 16th century. (fn. 8) It is not
clear, however, what happened to the Overhallstede
holding after the disappearance of the Stivichall
family, though it presumably remained part of the
bishop's possessions and seems also to have passed
to Thomas Fisher. The rent was sold to the Gregorys
with the other holdings in 1563, (fn. 9) but Fisher
apparently retained possession, and still held land
in Stivichall from the bishop in 1578. (fn. 10) The holding
descended to his son Edward and his grandson
John, (fn. 11) who sold it before 1619 to Sir Clement
Fisher (not a relative). In 1619 it was called the Hall
House or Manor House, and was held of the Gregory
estate. It had then been recently granted to Sir
Clement Throckmorton, (fn. 12) but this was merely a
legal arrangement, for Throckmorton appeared as
joint owner of land in Stivichall with Sir Robert
Fisher in 1630. (fn. 13) In 1725 Captain Fisher owned
about 52 acres of which the tenant was Richard
Griswell. (fn. 14) There was no reference then to the hall
or manor-house; it may have fallen into disrepair
and its site been lost in the inclosure of 1740. (fn. 15) On
the other hand it may be represented by the oldest
part of the present Bremond College at the junction
of Leamington Road and Stivichall Croft. This
house has many Victorian and later extensions, but
the core may date from the late 17th century. In the
19th and early 20th centuries it was known as the
Manor House; it became a girls' boarding school
about 1935. (fn. 16)
The Gregory family seems finally to have acquired
ownership of all the land in the parish after the
inclosure, and its members were the sole owners
throughout the 19th century. The last Gregory in the
direct line, Major F. H. Gregory, died childless in
1909. The estate passed to his cousin, the Hon.
Alexander Hood, who assumed the name of Gregory.
After the First World War he sold 121 acres in the
north of the parish to Coventry corporation as the
site of the War Memorial Park; this was opened in
1921. His son, Major C. H. Gregory-Hood, succeeded him in 1927, and shortly after sold the rest
of the estate to the corporation. Major Gregory-Hood subsequently bought, and lived at, Loxley
Hall, but remained the patron of the Stivichall
living. (fn. 17)
The Gregory family built Stivichall Hall to the
south-east of the church between 1750 and 1760,
probably on a newly-inclosed site. Its main approach
was by a drive which ran from lodge gates on the
Leamington road, passed the east end of the church,
and entered a forecourt on the north-east side of the
house. (fn. 18) Here the entrance front, with its central
portico, was flanked by single-story outbuildings.
The main house was a rectangular three-storied
structure of stone ashlar, its principal fronts having
seven bays, two of which represented a later addition.
On the south-west or garden front the original
central bay contained a pedimented doorway with
Venetian and semi-circular windows above, the
whole being surmounted by a pediment. (fn. 19) The hall
was demolished by stages after the sale of the estate,
and it finally disappeared soon after the Second
World War. An ice-house in the garden and a stablecourt to the south-east survived for a few more
years. (fn. 20) In 1964, although the site was still vacant,
no buildings were left and the former gardens were
derelict and overgrown.
Roger and Cecily de Montalt included in their
grant to Coventry Priory of 1250 the service of
Vitalis de Foleshill for a tenement in Stivichall. (fn. 21)
This holding, though small, seems to have had
pretensions to manorial status throughout its history.
The priory was uncertain about the nature of its
tenure, and at one point at least seems to have
recognized the bishop as the chief lord of the fee. (fn. 22)
The holding was described as a chief messuage with
land worth 8s. in 1410-11. (fn. 23) Another house was
acquired in 1364. (fn. 24) Three other holdings mentioned
in the priory's rental were appurtenances of Stivichall
chapel. (fn. 25) William Babthorpe held two houses and
other land of the priory in 1444. (fn. 26) Some at least of
the priory's lands in Stivichall were granted in 1544
to John Wade and Thomas Gregory. (fn. 27) The descent
of the holding which Thomas Essex was said to have
bought from the bishop in 1547 and sold to Thomas
and Arthur Gregory in 1563 was traced in the deed
of 1563 from Vitalis de Foleshill to William
Babthorpe. (fn. 28)
Tenements in the parish were also held by the
owners of the Caludon estate, (fn. 29) by the Queen's
College, Oxford, with its Keresley estate, (fn. 30) and by
Christ's College, Cambridge. (fn. 31) Property in Stivichall
formerly belonging to a chantry in Sutton Coldfield
church, which had been founded by one Thomas
Broadmeadow at an unknown date, was included in
a grant to Thomas Fisher and Thomas Dabridgecourt in 1549. It then consisted of three crofts and a
yardland held by Thomas Gregory. (fn. 32)
GENERAL HISTORY.
Although Stivichall was
not mentioned in Domesday Book and some aspects
of its early history are obscure, it had in the 13th
century the appearance of an ancient and wellestablished community. In fact, in the almost
complete utilization of the land within the parish
boundaries from the 13th century onwards, Stivichall
is unique among the villages around Coventry,
where it was normal for wastes and woods to survive
to the 18th century. The Earl of Chester gave to the
bishop about 1160, not a piece of new land, but the
income from an estate with a manor-house, occupied
by a Stivichall family, villein and free tenants, and a
demesne, (fn. 33) and the bishop did not disturb this
ancient pattern. Though so close to Coventry, this
small community retained its identity, as, for
instance, Radford and Harnall to the north did not.
Comparison of its institutions with those of
Coundon, which was described in 1086, (fn. 34) suggests
that Stivichall, though perhaps included in the
Coventry entry, was also in existence at that time,
and was probably one of the earliest settlements in
the district.
The medieval village was built along the road
(now Leamington Road) which runs south from
Coventry to Finham Bridge and thence to Warwick
on the west, and to Stoneleigh and Leamington on
the east. A medieval reference suggests that the road
to Baginton from which Leamington Road branches
then ran directly south from the chapel. (fn. 35) This road
seems later to have been cut, probably after the
inclosure of the parish in 1740, and forced to take a
loop to the west by Stivichall Croft and Baginton
Road. Its old course apparently became a drive to the
church and to the newly-built Stivichall Hall to the
south-east of it. The medieval village seems to have
been destroyed in the process and the church left
isolated except for the new manor-house. The few
village houses which survived were further west in
Stivichall Croft, forming the hamlet later preserved
by Coventry corporation. (fn. 36) The Leamington road
was reconstructed on approximately its original
course in the 20th century.
The highway to Warwick (probably Leamington
Road) was first mentioned about 1250, (fn. 37) and a road
towards Kenilworth in 1313. (fn. 38) The Warwick road
ran south through the village and the arable fields.
The Kenilworth road left it at the Queen's Cross on
the parish boundary and followed the narrow belt of
common along the north and west of the parish.
Other ancient roads were Whor or Hor Lane from
Horwell to the common, Cocklane, or Corkslane,
now Coat of Arms Bridge Road, and Grange Lane in
the south. (fn. 39) Green Lane, leading to the common
from the south, was mentioned in the 16th century. (fn. 40)
Leaf Lane became Howes Lane in the 19th century, (fn. 41)
running past Howes Lane Farm which was demolished in 1963. The Leamington and Kenilworth
roads were turnpiked in 1775, the former only to the
southern boundary of the parish. (fn. 42) A notable tree
called Wightwick's Elm was cut down in 1783 and
an avenue of oaks was planted along the Kenilworth
road in the late 18th century. (fn. 43)
Several fords were mentioned in the 13th and 14th
centuries. Dillotsford seems to have crossed the
River Sherbourne towards Whitley, (fn. 44) and Moldeford or Mongesford the River Sowe towards
Baginton. Baginton Bridge in Stivichall was in
existence in 1460, (fn. 45) and was presumably the bridge
below Baginton Mill mentioned in 1581. (fn. 46) The
Warwick road forded the Mardon Sich, or Martins
Gutter as it was called in the 18th century, in the
south of the parish. (fn. 47) From the mid 16th century
Stivichall benefited from Elizabeth Swillington's
bequest for the repair of local roads, (fn. 48) and about the
same time there was apparently an attempt made to
create a charitable trust for the repair of a bridge
in the parish. (fn. 49)
In addition to the Overhallstede and the glebe
house, there were several other substantial houses
in the village from the 13th to the 16th century,
particularly on the freehold tenements of the bishop's
estate. There seems to have been a suburban
element in the medieval population of Stivichall;
Vitalis de Foleshill, prominent in the 13th century, (fn. 50)
William de Leicester, in the 14th century, (fn. 51) Ralph
Swillington and his widow Elizabeth in the early 16th
century, (fn. 52) were examples of residents, without
family or manorial connexions in Stivichall, who
found it a convenient place in which to live. Another
such was Humphrey Hale, who was active in local
affairs in 1655. (fn. 53) The acquisition of the estate in the
16th century by the Gregory family from Coventry,
however, restricted such developments. The family's
assertion of manorial rights and later creation of a
model estate in Stivichall (fn. 54) left no place for influential outsiders. From the 17th to the 20th
century, Stivichall, in striking contrast to Stoke,
was preserved from the encroachments of the city. (fn. 55)
Stivichall was always an agrarian community.
The many water-mills nearby, on the rivers
Sherbourne, Sowe, and Avon, (fn. 56) did not lead to the
growth of a local community of tradesmen or
craftsmen; there is no evidence, for instance, of local
weavers supplying Baginton fulling mill. Stivichall
did not share in the developments associated with
the coal mines, the ribbon weaving, and the suburban
housing of the area north and east of Coventry
(though the slump in 1851-61 had some effect on its
population), (fn. 57) and it was too close to Coventry to
need inns and shops to provide for travellers on the
Warwick road. The fishing frequently mentioned
seems never to have been on a commercial scale.
The occupational names used in the 14th century
are not a reliable indication of the trades actually
practised in Stivichall, (fn. 58) and some tradesmen, such
as Peter Ripon, bottlemaker, were merely men from
Coventry who had acquired land in the village as an
investment. (fn. 59) There was certainly a small group of
building workers - two carpenters and a glazier -
in 1378-9. (fn. 60) There seems to have been an inn in
Stivichall in 1725 (fn. 61) and 1792; (fn. 62) the Stivichall Arms
was mentioned in 1875. (fn. 63) Since its inclusion in the
city Stivichall has been almost entirely a residential
district.
Of the 800 acres of the parish, over 600 acres were
arable land until the late 17th century. The arable
field, sometimes called Stivichall Field, lay around
the village and to the south-east, with the small area
of common to the north-west. In the 16th and 17th
centuries there was a systematic three-course rotation in the three fields, Park Field in the north,
Church Field around the village, and Nether or Mill
field in the south and east. (fn. 64) There are, however,
no medieval references to rotation, and it is not
possible to find a significant pattern of fields in the
detailed descriptions of medieval holdings. Several
other field or furlong names such as Oldfield, Hallfield, Merdenfield, and the White; appear frequently. (fn. 65) There were the usual selions, headlands, butts,
and furlongs in the fields, some of the furlongs being
divided by balks. (fn. 66) The meadows seem to have been
divided into separable plots. In the 14th century
there was intercommoning between Stoneleigh and
Stivichall on both sides of the Mardon Sich, extending into Stivichall as far as the church and the
Baginton road, (fn. 67) an area which cannot be equated
with one of the later three fields.
The holdings were described as virgates (later
yardlands), half virgates, and quarter virgates or
quartrons. Witnesses at the tithe inquiry of 1725
differed in their estimates of the number of yardlands in the village; the most reliable estimate seems
to have been 21 yardlands. (fn. 68) When compared with
the 600 acres inclosed about 1740, (fn. 69) this indicates a
standard yardland of 30 acres; but this varied in
practice. One yardland and a half, for example, was
variously estimated as 52 or 53, 50 to 60, and 60
acres. (fn. 70) Again, it is not possible to find such a
systematic arrangement in the medieval references,
or to find the equivalent in acres or virgates of the
'hide' which was then mentioned. (fn. 71) The term
'virgate' was used not only for a holding made up of
plots scattered in the fields, but also for an area of
land, Park Field, for instance, being described as
6¼ yardlands. (fn. 72)
The inquiry of 1725 illustrated some of the general
difficulties of open-field farming. As has been
noticed, the permanent common or heath in Stivichall was comparatively small. By about 1680 this
and the stubble field were proving insufficient, and
the tenants said that they could not keep enough
cattle for the manuring and 'managing' of their
holdings, though it is not clear why the situation
had not been apparent before. Most of the tenants
also had grass leys in the arable fields (where horses
might be tethered), and there were some old closes.
At the same time Park Field was said to be so worn
out with ploughing and overrun with weeds that it
was not worth cultivating. Accordingly about 1690
it was agreed that Park Field should be put down
to grass as a common pasture, while the grass leys
in the two other fields were ploughed up; a period of
fallow was apparently no longer included in their
crop rotation. The stint of cattle was also reduced.
Park Field was grassed and ploughed up several
times before being left as permanent pasture about
1718. Arthur Gregory also took advantage of the
change to consolidate the lands of his tenants into
larger units, and though the arable fields were still
formally open, tenants began putting temporary
fences around their plots.
The results of the change were impressive. By
1725 the two remaining arable fields were said to be
more productive than the original three, and the
value of a yardland had risen from £7 8s. to £10 12s.
a year. Several houses and farm buildings had been
rebuilt. The stock were carefully managed. The
cattle were put into Park Field on May Day,
remained there until the harvest, then were put on
the stubble; they later returned to Park Field
until Martinmas, when they were taken into the
farmyards. Cattle were replaced in Park Field
by sheep, which stayed there until March, and then
went on to the common for the summer. Village
haywards and shepherds managed the beasts, and
there were communal arrangements for milking and
shearing. (fn. 73) The pound, at the south-east corner of
the common on the lane from the village, was
mentioned in 1663, and still existed in the 19th
century. (fn. 74)
This apparently satisfactory compromise between
communal farming and inclosure was not, however,
to survive for long. About 1740 600 acres of the open
fields were inclosed, (fn. 75) Park Field presumably being
dealt with in the same way as the two arable fields.
Park Field was used as a sheepfold, though not in
common, in the early 20th century. (fn. 76) The peasant
farmers disappeared. In 1801 only 79 acres of the
parish were sown with crops - wheat, barley, oats,
turnips, and potatoes - a figure which included the
gardens of the poor. (fn. 77) In 1831 there were three
occupiers employing agricultural labourers, and
there were three farmers in 1850. (fn. 78)
Until the inclosure the village had been remarkably stable. There were at least eleven tenants in
Stivichall in 1299, (fn. 79) and nine taxpayers in 1327. (fn. 80)
In 1378-9 there were 15 married couples and 20
other persons. (fn. 81) A rough estimate can be made
of the total number of tenants on the four estates
in the village in the early 15th century. There
were nine or ten tenants holding of the bishop
throughout the period. (fn. 82) On the Ferrers estate in
1418-19 there were ten or eleven village tenants, a
smallholder, and four free tenants of mills. (fn. 83) On
Coventry Priory's estate there were four or five
tenants in 1410-11. (fn. 84) There was probably only a
single tenant on the Overhallstede holding. (fn. 85)
The tenant population on the Ferrers estate, and
probably the total population, fell slowly in the first
half of the 15th century and more rapidly in the
second, (fn. 86) and this was accompanied by the engrossment of village holdings into larger units. The court
rolls of the Ferrers estate give some additional
evidence, of land being taken up without entry fines,
and houses in disrepair. (fn. 87) In the first half of the 16th
century this trend was first checked and then
reversed. The value of rents on the Ferrers estate
also indicates stability in the early 15th century
followed by rising rents later. The total annual
value rose progressively from over £10 in 1418-19
to £14 in 1543-4. (fn. 88) The larger units created by
engrossment were not permanent, and easily
reverted to yardland and quartron units. The comparative prosperity of the 16th century was shown
in 1524, when there were seventeen taxpayers in
Stivichall, (fn. 89) more than in any of the other neighbouring villages except Foleshill.
By 1587 more of the land in the village had been
acquired by the Gregorys; there were then some 24
tenants (excluding millers) on their estate. (fn. 90) The
Compton Census of 1676 records 43 adults. (fn. 91) There
were still 23 houses in Stivichall in 1730, (fn. 92) though
only ten tenants were concerned in the open-field
arrangements of that time. (fn. 93) In spite of the changes
in the 15th century, the village just before inclosure
was much the size it had been in the late 14th century.
In 1801 there were said to be 107 people, but by
1811 the population had fallen to 56, (fn. 94) a decline
unparalleled in the Coventry district in the 19th
century. The population rose to 96 in 1821 and
remained at about 100 from 1821 to 1851; it fell
with the decline of ribbon weaving, to between 65
and 75 until 1891, and then rose to stay at only 80-85
until 1921. (fn. 95)
As has been seen, Stivichall Hall, built by the
Gregorys in the 1750s, may have had no connexion
with the medieval hall, but have been on a newlyinclosed site. The new house, the planting of the
mile-long avenue of three rows of oaks, and the
complete rebuilding of the church, (fn. 96) suggest that
the family was determined to leave an indelible mark
on the whole village. Although it was the nearest
of the surrounding parishes to the centre of
Coventry, Stivichall was kept free from suburban
housing in the 18th and 19th centuries. While
Radford, Foleshill, Stoke, and later other parishes
became featureless urban communities, Stivichall
remained an archetypal rural estate; by the early 20th
century it was in fact regarded rather as a museum
exhibit. This quality may have suggested its
particular suitability as the site of the city's war
memorial, but the War Memorial Park was in conception and appearance an urban incursion into the
parish. The only part of Stivichall which still (1964)
retains any village character is the hamlet in Stivichall Croft, near the Coat of Arms Bridge. In 1932 this
area, with a strip of tree-planted green and a field
to the south of it, was given to the corporation for
permanent preservation by Major C. H. Gregory-Hood (fn. 97) when the rest of the estate was sold. A
disused smithy and three cottages stand near the
road; the oldest, west of the bridge, is an early-17thcentury timber-framed building of two bays. There
was formerly a second timber-framed cottage to the
east of the bridge. (fn. 98) Smithy Cottage is brick-built
and probably of late-17th-century origin; it was
damaged by bombing during the Second World
War and later restored. An obelisk on the green
commemorates Major Gregory-Hood's gift.
Elsewhere the break-up of the estate after 1927,
the demolition of Stivichall Hall, and the extension
of the city boundary (fn. 99) were followed by suburban
house building, which, 37 years later, had covered
most of the parish. In many cases, both before and
after the Second World War, the corporation sold
blocks of land to private developers, so that there is
far more variation in the cost of houses and sizes of
gardens than on the northern and eastern outskirts
of the city. By 1964 parts of Stivichall might be
called superior residential suburbs, but in general
its character as a distinct community had disappeared.
LOCAL GOVERNMENT.
The southern boundaries of the chapelry of Stivichall as described
in the 15th century appear, from field names and
prominent features, to have been substantially the
same in the 13th and 14th centuries. (fn. 1) To the north-east, however, it is possible that Cheylesmore Park
was once considered to be part of Stivichall, and that
it was separated after the grant of the rest of the vill
to the bishop. (fn. 2) Uncertainty about the boundary
between Stivichall and Whitley around the south of
the park remained. (fn. 3) The dispute about the
boundaries to the north-west, in Asthill and Horwell,
in the 16th century, is mentioned elsewhere. (fn. 4)
Another indication that Stivichall had stretched
further north at some period, is that the strip of
common west of Warwick Road, now Top Green
and the site of the Grammar School, was inclosed in
1883 as Stivichall Common, though it had been
considered to be in St. Michael's parish after the
16th-century dispute, and was distinct from the rest
of Stivichall Common to the south. (fn. 5)
The bishop is said to have been granted sole
jurisdiction over his Stivichall estate in the 12th
century, and its exclusion from the jurisdiction of
the manor of Cheylesmore seems to have been
confirmed in 1451 when only half Stivichall was
said to be included in the county of the city of
Coventry and that in only one version of the charter
which created it. (fn. 6) In the 13th century the bishop
certainly administered his manor, for some purposes,
with a group of estates, including Bishops Itchington,
which all contributed to the maintenance of two
serjeanties. (fn. 7) The bishop had a bailiff at Stivichall,
and held a twice-yearly 'great court' and a three-weekly manorial court, which were in the 13th
century making grants by court roll. (fn. 8) The bishop's
great court was mentioned, though it may not have
been functioning, in the 16th century. (fn. 9)
With the development of the Langley (later
Ferrers) estate, however, the bishops seem to have
taken a less active interest in Stivichall. By at least
1365 tenants of Stivichall were attending the Cheylesmore court. Two tithingmen were making presentments, apparently for the whole village. It was
suggested in the 19th century that the village was
divided into halves, the bishop's half outside and the
Langley estate within the Cheylesmore jurisdiction. (fn. 10) It was supposed that this division was
territorial as in Sowe, (fn. 11) the north being inside and
the south outside Coventry. It is possible that there
was some memory of the intercommoning with
Stoneleigh in the south-west of the parish. (fn. 12) The
notion seems to have been accepted in 1788, when
only part of Stivichall was included in an association
for the prosecution of felons formed for Meriden
and district. (fn. 13) However, even if the bishop's tenants
did not attend the Cheylesmore court (and there is
no conclusive evidence) their tenements could not
be territorially distinguished in the open fields. It
was said in 1842 that for many years, probably
centuries, the distinction between the part of
Stivichall in the county of the city of Coventry, and
the part in Warwickshire, had been lost, and for a
long time the whole parish had been considered to
be within Coventry. (fn. 14) Stivichall was certainly
considered to be in the county of the city by the late
15th century. (fn. 15) Presentments were made in the
Cheylesmore court to at least 1665; (fn. 16) a constable, a
hayward, and two tithingmen were elected there in
1663. (fn. 17) Other parochial matters were then already
being dealt with before the justices for the city and
county. (fn. 18) The constable and the overseer mentioned,
with the churchwarden, in 1704 (fn. 19) were probably
parochial officers, and no longer accountable to the
Cheylesmore court.
By at least 1423 courts were being held, normally
twice yearly, for the Ferrers estate, and land was
being granted in the court by custom of the manor. (fn. 20)
There was a collector for the Ferrers estate in the
early 15th century, and a bailiff in the late 15th
century. (fn. 21) The bailiff mentioned in 1569 was
presumably for the Gregory estates. (fn. 22)
CHARITIES FOR THE POOR.
NAUL'S CHARITY. Thomas Naul, by will dated
1703, left £5 to the poor of Stivichall from which the
interest was to be spent on bread. This money was
paid to Arthur Gregory of Stivichall who, in 1707,
entered into a bond for repayment with interest at
5 per cent. In 1833 his descendants had for many
years made a large distribution of bread and meat
which was considered to include Naul's Charity, (fn. 23)
but in 1875 the charity was said to have been lost. (fn. 24)
SWILLINGTON'S CHARITY. See pp. 409-10.
TURNER'S CHARITY. Mary Turner, widow, of
Bubbenhall, by her will dated 1607, left land in
Olton, in the parish of Solihull, charged with the
payment of £3 6s. 8d. a year to the incumbent of
Bubbenhall to be distributed in sums of 6s. 8d. to
the poor of each of ten Warwickshire parishes
including Stivichall. (fn. 25) According to the returns of
1786 this property was then vested in William Grant
whose estate was sold, about 1797, to the trustees
of the marriage settlement of Abraham Spooner
Lillingston, of Elmdon Hall. The payment of
£3 6s. 8d. had lapsed soon after 1786 and resumption
of it was resisted by Lillingston in 1833, but it was
apparently revived after his death the following
year. (fn. 26) In 1923, because of the difficulty of identifying, at that date, the original property, the charge
was redeemed by transfer of £133 6s. 8d. 2½ per
cent. stock. (fn. 27)