AGRICULTURE.
The earliest references to
open-field land in Warminster are in deeds of the
13th century, when North (fn. 37) and West (fn. 38) Fields
are mentioned. East and South Fields are so-named
in 1334 (fn. 39) and 1349 (fn. 40) respectively. All these names
were still in use in the 17th century, (fn. 41) but the more
detailed surveys of that period commonly defined
arable land by the furlong in which it lay rather
than the field. Furlongs were often themselves
referred to as fields; thus in 1682 arable lay in Sand
Field, Gillidge Bridge Field, Hill Field, Copripp
Field, and Wetridge Field, beside the four fields
mentioned in the Middle Ages. Wetridge Field was
probably the same as the Wetridges in Mancombe
Field which appears in the same survey. (fn. 42) But
although it is difficult to be certain about the exact
division and nomenclature of the town fields continuously between the 13th and the 18th centuries,
the regular references to arable land at such known
places as Chedlanger, Fernicombe, Mancombe,
and Morley, which all occur in the 14th century or
before, (fn. 43) show that much of what was still open
arable in the 18th century had been so in the 13th. (fn. 44)
It is also possible tentatively to identify three of
the medieval fields with those which still existed
in the 18th century. The West Field, in which land
at Chedlanger lay in 1284, (fn. 45) is no doubt the Chedlanger Field which before inclosure stretched
south and east of Norridge Woods from near
Bugley across the Bath road to the Westbury road
below Arn Hill. (fn. 46) In 1349 the North Field included
land below Cop Heap, at Mancombe and at
Oxenpit. (fn. 47) Mancombe and Oxendean both lay in
Warminster Field in 1780 and Cop Heap adjoining
it; it then included all the arable land on the downs
between the Upton Scudamore boundary and the
Westbury and Imber roads as far eastward as the
edge of the sheep down above Mancombe and
Oxendean. If West and North Fields do indeed
correspond with Chedlanger and Warminster
Fields, then the medieval East Field must be the
Morley Field of the inclosure award, which extended south of the Imber road between Cop Heap
and Battlesbury. Land 'over Morligh' lay in the
South Field in 1349, (fn. 48) however, so that the position
is not very clear. No open arable land to the south
of Warminster remained at the time of inclosure.
Some lay at Sambourne in the early 14th century, (fn. 49)
and at Ryehill, between East Street and the Were,
as late as 1687; (fn. 50) both may well have formed part
of the medieval South Field.
Of the outlying hamlets of Warminster, Boreham had its own fields and its agriculture is dealt
with separately below. (fn. 51) About Bugley the position
is rather less certain. Arable land lay in Bugley
Field in 1320, (fn. 52) and is occasionally referred to in
or near Bugley until the 17th century. In 1652, for
instance, arable land lay 'near Haygrove on the
Lyes', and in 1671 in Princecroft, south of the road
to Warminster. (fn. 53) But the district was one of early
inclosure, and only three or four pieces of land
there still lay open at the inclosure. Arable land
which belonged to holdings at Bugley lay regularly,
from the 16th century at least, in Chedlanger
Field and Cley Field. (fn. 54) The former was shared by
the tenants of Warminster and Corsley, and the
latter, although it was one of the fields of Corsley,
included much land which belonged to holdings
in Warminster. (fn. 55)
In 1086 there were 80 a. of meadow in Warminster. (fn. 56) Some of this must have lain at Pit Mead,
a large meadow which lies along the Wylye between
Norton Bavant and Sutton Veny, but was partly in
Warminster until the 19th century. (fn. 57) The lord of
Warminster had meadow there in the early 13th
century. (fn. 58) Possibly at that time, and certainly by
the 15th century, he shared it not only with some
of his freehold tenants of Warminster, (fn. 59) but also
with the lords of Bishopstrow and Norton Bavant. (fn. 60)
The other principal common meadow of Warminster was Woodman Mead, which extended from
near Bugley to Warminster church along the
stream north of the road, and is first mentioned in
1323. (fn. 61) In it the copyholders of the capital manor
and the lords and tenants of the manors of Furnax,
Warminster Scudamore, and Portway had their
meadow. (fn. 62) Smaller meadows which were common
lay at Bristol Mead and Laurence Mead. Bristol
Mead lay on the stream between the Bath and
Westbury roads, north of Gas House Farm;
meadow land lay there in 1328, (fn. 63) and is occasionally referred to from that time, mainly attached to
holdings of the capital manor. (fn. 64) It survived partly
open until the inclosure. Laurence Mead, south of
St. Laurence's chapel, was apparently common in
1618, when an illegal inclosure was made there (fn. 65) ,
but inclosed before the parliamentary award.
The common pasture of the manor lay in Warminster Common or Heath to the west of the town,
extending in a long strip to the Somerset border;
in the common fields and meadows after harvest or
while they lay fallow; and in the common downs
beyond the arable land in the east of the parish.
It is fairly clear that a two-field course was practised until the 17th century. In 1218 a half-virgate
of land had for its arable 7 a. in the field between
Warminster and Bishopstrow and 7 a. in the field
between Upton and Warminster. (fn. 66) West and North
Fields, then, apparently lay fallow when East and
South Fields were sown; this probably explains
the conventional division of 39½ a. arable into
North and South Fields in 1349, when, as noted
above, the South Field included land which might
have been expected to be in the East Field. (fn. 67) In
1238 a tenant was to receive half his leasehold
estate sown with winter corn 'at champarty', (fn. 68)
and in 1327 half the demesne arable was sown each
year, when it was worth three times as much as
that which lay fallow and common. (fn. 69) Of the meadows Woodman Mead was subject to this course,
and lay in with Chedlanger Field when it was
fallow every other year in the late 15th and early
16th centuries. (fn. 70) The course of Pit Mead is not
known. The two-field rotation persisted until at
least the early 17th century. In 1603 a freehold
yardland had common after harvest either in Mancombe Bottom or Cop Heap Field, (fn. 71) so that the
North and East Fields were still sown in alternate
years, and in 1616 land at Topps (near Sambourne),
which should have lain common every other year,
was being sown every year contrary to the custom. (fn. 72)
Chedlanger Field was in a two-year course with
Cley Field in Corsley in the early 18th century. (fn. 73)
Linked with the field course were the regulations
which governed the stocking of the commons and
the fallows. Warminster Common provided pasture
for a common herd of horses and other beasts in
1574, but its use for sheep was confined to 'lying-in
weather', which meant only in time of snow. Pigs
also ran there. (fn. 74) In the early 17th century it was
said that every inhabitant could have one horse and
one cow there, and those who held land could have
them there without stint. All could cut fern and
furze as much as they wished, (fn. 75) paying a hen at
Christmas and five eggs at Easter. (fn. 76) The common
milking place of the town lay at the north end of the
hamlet at the Common. (fn. 77) More important was the
feeding for sheep and oxen provided by the common fields and downs. The course of the lord's and
freeholders' feeding was apparently as follows. (fn. 78) In
the winter, which was reckoned from 29 September
to the Sunday after 23 April, the sheep were kept
on the downs, those of the lord of Warminster (or
later his farmer) on his own down and those of the
freeholders on their down. During this time oxen
were kept in the field which had last been cut and
was to lie fallow. On 2 February Woodman Mead,
and presumably the other common meadows, were
hained from the fields for the grass to grow. At
the end of winter, or the Sunday after 23 April all
the downs were hained, and the sheep moved down
into the fallow field to follow the oxen. The lord
of Warminster's down was broken at Whitsun for
his and the freeholders' oxen. The freeholders'
down remained hained until 23 June, when all the
oxen were moved into it and the farmer's down was
kept for lambs. Finally on 1 August the lambs
followed the oxen into the freeholders' down, and
the oxen were moved into the meadows which were
then broken after haymaking. Whether the stock of
the copyholders followed this course is not clear.
They are not known to have had their own down, and
in 1603 it was said that their sheep could go in with
the freeholders' sheep on 21 December. (fn. 79) Perhaps
before that day they had to keep their sheep in
part of the field destined for spring sowing. In
addition to the general course, at least one freeholder
had winter common for a stint of sheep on limited
parts of the fallow fields. This was Roger Mawdley,
who in 1603 had in alternate years pasture for
100 sheep from 11 November to the middle of
March in Mancombe Bottom or Cop Heap Field,
whichever lay in wheat stubble. (fn. 80) The common
rights over 60 a. of arable land near the Sands
Cross and Morley, which belonged to the lords of
Furnax in the 16th and 17th centuries, (fn. 81) and William Chandler's winter field in Chedlanger, which
in 1698 had bounds long fixed by custom, (fn. 82) were
probably similar. An early instance of this practice
is perhaps the winter pasture in the fields below
'Orebury' in the mid-13th century. (fn. 83) The practice
may have arisen from obligations on certain tenant
flocks to fold on the demesne arable in the winter,
for such obligations existed in the 14th century. (fn. 84)
In addition to the commons which followed this
course, the lord of Warminster and some freeholders
had their own several pastures. That of the lord was
a coppice called the Frith, which lay near the Common; (fn. 85) it provided pasture for his oxen in 1292–3, (fn. 86)
and was evidently part of the demesne as long as it
was farmed. (fn. 87) The 'more' of the lord of Smallbrook,
in which pasture for one beast was sold in 1327, (fn. 88)
was also probably a several pasture, and perhaps
the same as the Waspail's Marsh of 1585. (fn. 89) To the
manor of Furnax belonged a coppice near Norridge
Woods, first mentioned in 1483. (fn. 90)
Apart from this tentative reconstruction of the
course of the fields and commons, little is known
of the agriculture practised in Warminster in the
Middle Ages except on the demesne of the capital
manor. In 1300 the demesne was said to consist
of 240 a. of arable and 30 a. of meadow, (fn. 91) but in
1327 the arable was reckoned at 400 a., of which
half was sown yearly. (fn. 92) The most extensive work
on this land was done by 8 virgaters, who in 1348–9
worked 5 days a week from Lammas to Michaelmas,
and 3 days a week for the remainder of the year.
In addition they ploughed 2½ a. and weeded 8 a.
each year. (fn. 93) In 1364–5 31 half-virgaters did a day's
ploughing at the spring sowing, a day's weeding in
summer and a day's reaping at harvest, and 17
cottagers did the last two of these, but not the first.
Since only 5 half-virgaters and 6 cottagers were
mentioned as belonging to the capital manor in
1300 and 1327, it is possible that many of these
were small freeholders. Some of the larger free-holds
also owed works, mainly of carrying crops from the
fields and ploughing, in the mid-14th century. The
crops threshed from the demesne are known for
three years in the 14th century. In each wheat and
barley were the largest crops; wheat was rather
larger than barley in 1348–9 and 1385–6, but in
1390–1 barley was the larger. In 1410 78 a. of the
demesne were sown with barley and 42 a. with
wheat. (fn. 94) The only other considerable crop in the
14th century was oats; the quantity threshed was
⅓ to ½ that of the wheat crop. In 1410 52 a. of
oats were sown on the downs. (fn. 95) Crops grown in
small quantities were bere, or inferior barley, in
1322 (fn. 96) and 1348–9; rye in 1348–9; dredge-corn in
all the recorded years; and peas and beans in 1410. (fn. 97)
The only other crop known to have been grown
in Warminster in the Middle Ages is flax. In 1315
a tenant of Cheyney's manor was obliged to dig
sufficient land to take a bushel of flax seed, and
afterwards to treat and prepare the crop 'as far as the
water'. (fn. 98)
In 1296 the stock on the demesne of the capital
manor consisted principally of 32 plough-oxen,
16 cattle, 48 pigs, and 250 sheep and lambs. (fn. 99) In
1327 the demesne was said to have common of
pasture for 300 sheep, (fn. 1) and it is clear that sheep
were kept in considerable numbers as long as it was
farmed. In 1379–80, for instance, 350 sheep and
90 lambs were sheared, and in 1390–1 the whole
flock amounted to over 700. The larger freeholders
too kept considerable numbers of sheep. In the
later 14th century the stints allowed to 10 chief
freeholders amounted to 1,956 sheep, and in
1379–80 they paid for the agistment of 1,080 lambs
on the lord's down. The fold of at least one free
tenant's flock was reserved for the lord's land
during the winter. (fn. 2)
To complete the account of medieval agriculture
it only remains to consider how the lands, which
were under the system here described, were divided
between the various holders. Much of this is deduced from surveys of the 16th and 17th centuries,
but the conclusions seem to be borne out by what
earlier evidence is available. The most noteworthy
feature of land-holding in Warminster was the
preponderance of freeholders over copyholders.
In 1300 there were 35 freeholders of the capital
manor, of whom 17 held land reckoned at 7 carucates and 10½ virgates; (fn. 3) this is exclusive of the
manors of Furnax and Smallbrook, which were not
held of the capital manor. (fn. 4) Against this there were
only 8 bond tenants who held a full virgate and a
few smaller tenants; there is, moreover, little doubt
that most, if not all, these virgaters held their land
in Boreham, being the predecessors of the group
of large copyholders there which belonged to the
manor until the 18th century. (fn. 5) Thus in 1300 Warminster manor was already apparently what it
certainly was later: a manor in which the demesne
outstripped in size the total of the copyholds, which
were generally small. (fn. 6) Demesnes were also important on other holdings of which details are known.
Thus in the late 16th century Warminster Scudamore comprised a demesne of some 60 a. and
about 100 a. divided between 21 copy- and lease-holders. (fn. 7) Somewhat earlier Furnax demesne was
80 a. and 19 tenants held about 190 a. (fn. 8) In the early
17th century Cheyneys manor had a demesne of
200 a. and about 50 a. divided between 13 tenants. (fn. 9)
Smaller free-holds consisted of single units farmed
or let by their owners, such as Roger Mawdley's
virgate or Cutting's Farm. (fn. 10) Thus as far back as
information is available, Warminster never had
the hierarchy of copyholders of various degrees
typical of some manors. The multiplicity of free-holds and the smallness of copyholds made the
farm consisting of a freehold, or the demesne of a
freehold, the typical unit; an important factor in
considering the effect of the changes in agriculture
which began in the later Middle Ages.
The process by which the works of the customary
tenants were commuted and the demesnes leased
out can again only be traced on the capital manor. (fn. 11)
In 1348–9 the 8 full-virgaters on it were obliged to
perform 1,396 days work and actually performed
1,086. By 1379–80, however, two of them had had
their whole obligation commuted; of the 1,050
owed by the remainder, 727 were still performed.
The proportion was much the same in 1390–1, but
in 1401–2 only three virgaters still owed 497 works,
of which they performed 290. In that year little
arable farming was done on the demesne, and most
of the works were haymaking; a flock of 163 sheep
was kept. The first known lease of the whole
demesne was made for eight years in 1410 when the
land sown amounted to 185 a. (fn. 12) Leasing evidently
continued until 1437–8, when 102 a. of land sown
with corn and 5 oxen were bought from the farmer,
evidently for a partial resumption of farming. In
1441–4 a small part of the arable was used and the
remainder let in small parcels, but a large flock of
sheep was kept. This partial revival was over by
1462–3, when the demesnes were already let at
farm again. Of the other manors of Warminster, the
demesnes of Cheyneys were let at farm by 1421, (fn. 13)
and those of Furnax as early as 1352; (fn. 14) information
for the others is lacking.
From the 16th century, then, the agriculture of
Warminster was based largely on a number of
considerable farms. The farm of the capital manor,
consisting of over 400 a., was let as a whole from
the 15th century until the late 17th century, (fn. 15) but
after the long tenure of the Sloper family, from
1598 until c. 1670, it was divided into two parts
of roughly equal size, and remained so until the
inclosure. (fn. 16) Cheyneys Farm was of c. 200 a. in the
early 17th century, (fn. 17) and continued to be let as a
whole until the 18th century. (fn. 18) In the 16th century
Warminster Scudamore had, in addition to a
demesne farm of about 65 a., another farm of 83 a., (fn. 19)
which had been added to it in 1537 and 1538 by
Walter, Lord Hungerford's purchase from Peter
Morgan. (fn. 20) The demesne farm of Furnax consisted
of some 85 a. let as a whole until the inclosure. (fn. 21)
The demesnes of Portway were let as a whole by
1509, (fn. 22) but after the whole of the manor was the
property of the Middlecott family, (fn. 23) they may have
been kept in hand as a home farm. This was certainly so at the time of the inclosure, when Edward
Middlecott held a farm of several hundred acres. (fn. 24)
The demesne farm of Smallbrook, which amounted
to over 160 a. in 1723, was kept in hand by its
owners, the Bennett family, in the 17th and 18th
centuries. (fn. 25) Among other farms which may be
mentioned are the estate belonging to the Prebend
of Warminster; (fn. 26) the holding of Heytesbury Hospital, leased as a whole from the 16th to the 18th
centuries; (fn. 27) and the slightly larger farm in Bugley,
formerly of Maiden Bradley, which was let as a
whole until the inclosure. (fn. 28)
Compared with these the typical copyhold in
Warminster was small, often a house and an acre
or two in the fields. Thus in the late 17th century
the estate of Lord Weymouth, which by then included the former Hungerford property, only had
6 copyholds of over 20 a. (apart from the Boreham
ones mentioned below) out of a total of over
90. (fn. 29) Some engrossment of these small estates was
inevitable. In the mid-16th century John Stanlake
held the manor of Furnax at farm, (fn. 30) and took
advantage of his position to amass 16 copyholds,
amounting in all to over 70 a. (fn. 31) In addition Stanlake held land of the manor of Warminster Scudamore, (fn. 32) and of the Prior of Longleat. (fn. 33)
The changes in agriculture on these holdings
from the 16th century onwards by inclosure and
consolidation of open field land can only be intermittently traced. Closes near Warminster town
are mentioned in the 13th century, (fn. 34) but were probably no more than crofts attached to houses. The
earliest reference to the inclosure of land which had
once formed part of the common fields is in a deed,
probably of the mid-14th century, of a croft in
Sambourne and 1 a. of arable land lying outside
it in Nicholas Nobount's inclosure. (fn. 35) Closes are
occasionally referred to from that time onwards.
Some, like the pasture called Pathcroft, with parcels of arable adjoining, of 1465 (fn. 36) were probably
the result of the inclosure of low-lying arable land
near Warminster and Bugley for conversion to
meadow or pasture. (fn. 37) Sixteenth-century surveys
show that most closes lay there. Thus in 1582
Warminster Scudamore manor included closes at
Fernhill and Ryehill, both near Smallbrook, and
at Sambourne, (fn. 38) and about the same time five
closes near the church belonged to Furnax manor. (fn. 39)
In Bugley the farm formerly of Maiden Bradley had
8 closes amounting in all to some 20 a. (fn. 40) Inclosures
of land further from the town were made by
encroachment on the waste. 'Tercecroft', now
Tascroft, south-west of Bugley, where pasture was
let in 1322, (fn. 41) may be an early example of this.
In 1585 50 a. of coppice newly inclosed lying on
both sides of Redford Water were let for the first
time; in 1606 the land was described as pasture, (fn. 42)
and probably formed the nucleus of Stalls Farm,
north of Longleat.
Inclosure of both kinds probably continued
spasmodically until the award of 1783. Thus in
1618 two tenants of Cheyneys manor had inclosed
land in Woodman Mead and Laurence Mead. (fn. 43)
Parts of Bristol Mead were inclosed by 1609, (fn. 44)
and in 1638 a close at the east end of Warminster
had recently had 2 a. of arable which had been let
down to pasture added to it. (fn. 45) The inclosure of the
arable land called the Sands, between Woodcock
and the Boreham road, which already contained
some inclosed land by 1577, (fn. 46) may have been
completed in the early 18th century, for some
inclosure had recently taken place there in 1723.
Inclosure had at the same time been taking place
at Battlesbury. (fn. 47) An inclosure at Brickhill was made
by 1768. (fn. 48) In Pit Mead, Lord Weymouth's holding
of 30 a. had been made several by 1711. (fn. 49) The
sheep sleights on the downs were not inclosed but
by the 16th century had been divided so that they
were several to their owners during the winter,
when each flock kept to its own down. Thus 100 a.
at High Hook (now Mancombe Down) were
claimed as parcel of the farm of Smallbrook in
1607; it had formerly been a rabbit warren but this
had been destroyed 50 or 60 years before to protect
the tenants' corn. (fn. 50)
On some holdings consolidation of the strips
of open-field arable land was well advanced
by the 16th century. Thus in 1577 83½ a.
belonging to the demesne farm of Furnax lay in
19 pieces, including pieces of 9 a. and 8 a. and four
of 6 a. (fn. 51) Mawdley's freehold virgate, on the other
hand, had 28 a. in 17 pieces in 1603, (fn. 52) and the
Warminster Scudamore demesne farm in 1687 had
its 65½ a. of field land in 56 pieces, of which 25 were
½ a. or less. At that time one moiety of Warminster
Farm had 144 a. in 19 pieces, of which 10 were 8 a.
or over, and the other moiety had 143 a. in 16 pieces,
one as large as 20 a. (fn. 53) At the time of inclosure many
small pieces of arable land remained in the fields,
and only the larger holdings had their land much
consolidated. Chedlanger Field and Woodman
Mead had been considerably affected by piecemeal
inclosure, and so had much land near Woodcock
and Heronslade. Warminster Field and Morley
Field remained largely open, and some of the inclosures that did exist in them were probably still
commonable, for they were ignored by the award. (fn. 54)
Little is known of the practice of agriculture in
Warminster between the 16th century and inclosure, although there is little doubt that it was
generally very similar to that of the chalk country
of south Wiltshire. (fn. 55) It is clear that all the arable
land did not follow the two-field course; the
'hockefelde' in which corn was grown in 1574
was probably a part of the fallow field put aside for
a second crop, but the significance of fields called
the Heath Common on which corn was also grown
at that time is not known. (fn. 56) After the parliamentary
inclosure of the common fields and downs, much
of the Longleat estate property was consolidated
into several large farms. Thus in the mid-19th
century Parsonage Farm consisted of 939 a. to
which 288 a. of Portway Farm were added in 1858,
when the rent was increased to £1,065. At the
same time Bugley Farm consisted of the old farm
of 168 a., another group of old copyholds of 75 a.,
and 60 a. belonging to the Luxfield Prebend. (fn. 57) On
these farms the conventional sheep and corn husbandry of south Wiltshire gave way as the century
progressed before the advance of dairy farming.
Thirteen cows imported from the Channel Islands
were sold in the market in 1855. (fn. 58) By 1905 there
were almost 4,000 a. of permanent pasture in the
parish compared with about 1,600 a. of arable
land. (fn. 59)
Market gardening had probably begun in Warminster by 1671, when the vicar complained that
he was deprived of the tithes of 'great parcels of
ground' occupied by gardeners. (fn. 60) In the 18th
century many gardeners occupied small holdings
which belonged to the Longleat estate. (fn. 61) Most of
them lay west of Warminster near the Common.
Arthur Young remarked on the extent of the
business in 1796, (fn. 62) and it continued during the
19th century. There was a public house called the
'Gardeners' Arms' at the Common, and in the
1850's Warminster onions were well known at
Bath. (fn. 63) In 1867 there were 18 market gardeners,
almost all at Warminster Common. (fn. 64) The firm of
T. H. Harraway and Son, nurserymen in Sambourne Road, was founded in 1876; in 1963 it
occupied some 20 a. of land for the production of
rose and fruit trees, hedging plants, and cut flowers,
and had a shop in the Market Place. (fn. 65)
The agriculture of the manor of Boreham was
separately organized from that of Warminster, and
it had its own common fields. These must have
been on the greensand levels between Boreham and
Battlesbury as far as the high downs. In the late
16th century the manor of Boreham consisted of a
demesne farm containing 20 a. of meadow, 11 a.
of several pasture, and 164 a. of field-land, and
four small copy- and leaseholds amounting in all
to about 50 a. more. (fn. 66) There was, however, a group
of considerable copyholders who held their lands
in Boreham directly of the lords of the capital
manor. (fn. 67) Little is known about the practice of
agriculture there, but it was no doubt the typical
sheep and corn farming of south Wiltshire. Little
inclosure had taken place before the general inclosure of the parish. (fn. 68) By that time the tithing
consisted of four farms: the manor farm, the
holding of the Slade family, which apparently
consisted of the old tenantry land of the manor,
and two farms made up of the former copyholds
of the capital manor. (fn. 69) In the early 19th century
the whole came into the possession of the Temple
family of Bishopstrow, and most of it was let as
Boreham Farm. (fn. 70)