STEEPLE ASHTON
The village of Steeple Ashton lies about 3 miles
east of Trowbridge. (fn. 1) Its name is derived from the
church tower. (fn. 2) The parish formerly included the
tithings of West Ashton, Great Hinton, Semington,
and Littleton. The first two of these, and Semington and Littleton together, were assessed for poor
rates separately from Steeple Ashton tithing, (fn. 3) and
so became civil parishes in the late 19th century.
In 1883 small detached parts of Great Hinton and
Semington were transferred to Hilperton. (fn. 4) In 1894
the whole parish of Whaddon was transferred to
Semington civil parish. (fn. 5) In 1897 part of Steeple
Ashton civil parish, containing a number of houses
and a factory which were part of the built-up area
of Trowbridge, was transferred to Trowbridge
U.D.C. (fn. 6) The detaching of West Ashton, Great
Hinton, and Semington has left the modern civil
parish of Steeple Ashton with a long projection
extending westward to the Trowbridge boundary,
dividing Semington and Hinton to the north from
West Ashton to the south.

Figure 10:
Steeple Ashton parish 1818
This map is based on the inclosure award map.
Geologically the dominating feature of the ancient parish is the Corallian series, which outcrops
here from the clays of the vale of North Wiltshire
to form a low plateau with a distinct scarp to the
north. This scarp runs north of Great Hinton
village, round Hag Hill and south-westward, east
of the Semington-Yarnbrook road, to Rood Ashton
park and the parish boundary south of West Ashton
village. Projections such as Hag Hill and Stourton
Hill, show characteristic rounded outlines. (fn. 7) South
and east of the scarp most of the land is over 250 ft.
rising to 265 ft. south of Steeple Ashton and 314 ft.
south of West Ashton. The soil of this plateau is
lighter than that of the vale, and somewhat more
suitable to arable farming. (fn. 8) The lower ground in
the north-west of the parish is drained by the Biss,
which forms its boundary for some distance, and
two streams both emptying into the Biss above
Trowbridge; one, Paxcroft Brook, rises near
Semington and the other near Steeple Ashton. This
area is mainly below 150 ft. and contains a large
amount of woodland. Woods called Kayred and
Slowgrove lay here in 1370, (fn. 9) and in 1617 woods,
still called by these early names, covered much the
same area as those now called Green Lane and Biss
Woods. Carter's and Flower's Woods also existed
then. (fn. 10) Considerable parts of Biss Wood and
Flower's Wood have recently (1960) been felled. The
north-east of the parish is also in the Oxford Clay
region in the valley of the Semington Brook, which
forms the parish boundary to the north. Semington
village itself, however, stands at the eastern end
of a low ridge of Cornbrash which extends westward
to Trowbridge and again gives a somewhat lighter
soil than the clay of the vale.
Three of the principal ancient settlements,
Steeple Ashton, Great Hinton, and West Ashton,
stand on the higher ground in the south. The main
road from Trowbridge to Devizes crosses the north
of the parish, and that from Melksham to Westbury
runs through Semington and so south-west,
crossing the end of West Ashton village. Both these
roads were turnpiked in the 1750's. (fn. 11) Great Hinton,
Steeple Ashton, and West Ashton all lie on minor
roads which connect the main roads with the Westbury-Lavington road at Bratton and Edington.
The road from Tinhead to Steeple Ashton and
thence by Stony Gutter and Green Lane to Trowbridge was turnpiked in 1752. (fn. 12) It formed part of
the old route over the downs from Salisbury to
Bath, which fell out of use in the later 18th century. (fn. 13)
In 1768 the road from Horseshoes through Hinton
and Cold Harbour was added to the Trowbridge
Trust, (fn. 14) and those from Stony Gutter to Hilperton,
and Trowbridge to the top of West Ashton Hill
were added in 1854. (fn. 15) The last part of the old main
road to Trowbridge was still not made up in 1961,
and the quickest way into the town was through
Hilperton.
In the Middle Ages Steeple Ashton was the
centre of the great Romsey Abbey estates in the
district. The courts of the abbey's hundred of
Whorwellsdown were held there, (fn. 16) and in 1266 a
weekly market and yearly fair were granted to the
abbess. (fn. 17) In the taxation of 1334 Steeple Ashton
paid more than Trowbridge or Westbury, and in
1377 its 260 poll-tax payers placed it 18th in the
whole county. (fn. 18) In the 16th century Leland described it as 'a praty little market towne', and wrote
'it standithe muche by clothiars'. (fn. 19) But Steeple
Ashton suffered severely by fire at some time, and
Aubrey attributed the decline of the market to
this. (fn. 20) The fire he referred to may have been in
1503, when at least six houses in the village were
destroyed. (fn. 21) By 1524 it had fallen well behind the
neighbouring towns, (fn. 22) and by the end of the 16th
century the prosperity of the cloth industry was
at an end. (fn. 23) From that time Steeple Ashton retained only a certain pre-eminence among surrounding villages, bestowed perhaps by the holding of
petty sessions and by being often the home of a
medical man or a lawyer. (fn. 24) In 1801 the population
of the tithing was 618; it increased to 848 by 1831,
and then declined intermittently to 603 in 1931. In
1951 it was 1,231, (fn. 25) but this number included many
Poles temporarily living in a hostel in disused buildings belonging to the airfield at Keevil. The hostel
was closed in 1956.
The village still retains something of the aspect
of a small town. The principal street, called High
Street, opens out into a green on which stand the
market cross and a small lock-up or blindhouse,
built in 1773. (fn. 26) Most of the houses here stand directly by the road, without gardens. To the east of
High Street are other streets called Church Street,
the Strand, Dark Lane, and Silver Street. Several
have stretches of cobbled pavement. The church
stands at the north-east corner of the village, adjoining the manor house. The buildings of Steeple
Ashton display a pleasing variety of building macerial. Most of the older buildings are timber-framed
with later brick infilling, some colour-washed, and
some with bricks set in herringbone. Stone could
be fetched from Bradford for more pretentious
buildings such as the late-medieval vicarage (fn. 27) or
the manor house, (fn. 28) while brick, often with stone
dressings, was in general use from the early 18th
century.
The village contains several houses with cruck
trusses. The north wing of the Sanctuary in Dark
Lane was formerly a cruck-framed building, probably of the 15th century or earlier. It was apparently
of three bays, but only one complete cruck truss
remains, with an arch-braced collar-beam. Part of a
second truss can also be seen. A jettied cross-wing
of two stories was added to the house c. 1500. Just
south of the Sanctuary is a small cottage with a
cruck truss visible at one end, while a similar one
with an internal truss remaining stands at the
corner of High Street and Silver Street. On the
west side of the southern part of the High Street
are four timber-framed houses which appear to date
from c. 1500. They were evidently built for people
of means, and in their original form were remarkably uniform in size and design. The northernmost,
now called Ashton House, was the home of the
Stileman family from about that time until the mid-19th century. (fn. 29) It consisted originally of a hall block
of three bays parallel to the road and a cross-wing
of the same height at its south end projecting eastward. The hall has arch-braced collar-beam trusses
with chamfered braces, the chamfers being continued on wall posts down to the windowsills of
the ground floor. There are remains of an original
wooden window with late medieval tracery at the
heads of the lights. The two-storied cross-wing,
also with an open roof, has at least three original
bays, and evidently contained a 'great chamber'
or solar on the upper floor. Alterations were made
probably in the mid-16th century; they included
the insertion of a large stone chimney and fireplace
in the north bay of the hall, and the building of a
two-storied addition in the angle between the hall
and the cross wing, so that the whole frontage was
brought forward to the street. Rooms in this part
have heavily moulded beams, and one has the remains of contemporary wall decoration. In 1724 a
stone ashlar facade of five bays was added to the
house. It had sash windows on two floors; above is
a row of 5 blank openings to represent attic windows. On the ground floor the sash windows have
been replaced by recent stone-mullioned and
transomed windows. In the 1920's the house was
carefully restored under the direction of Sir Harold
Brakspear. All the original features in the interior
were exposed, and if decayed were reproduced, and
a new wing was built at the back. (fn. 30)
Further south in High Street no. 48 was originally a similar house, also probably of c. 1500. It is
built on a stone base with small stepped buttresses;
the cross-wing has a jettied overhang at first floor
level, supported by hollow chamfered brackets
continued down as small buttressed shafts. Although
the longer wing has been considerably altered and
re-roofed at some time, it may well have been an
open hall comparable to that at Ashton House. The
house contains heavily moulded beams; these can
also be seen in the adjoining Black Barn Farmhouse,
which may once have been a similar house of which
parts have been demolished. To the south again no.
54 has a jettied cross-wing faced with stucco; it
retains carved barge boards, and its hall wing may
possibly be enclosed in the adjoining house. Nos.
56, 58, and 60 form an L-shaped block of which the
south end is a very similar cross-wing, having barge
boards with carved quatrefoil ornament. The main
block, timber-framed with brick filling and two
small gables, may be an early 17th-century reconstruction of a single-storied hall. Similar buildings
exist in other parts of the village. The south wing
of Church Farm had a jettied overhang until at
least the mid-19th century; it has since been built
under and the whole house stuccoed. (fn. 31) Inside are
the heavily moulded beams typical of the other
houses, and the main block may include the former
hall. The Firs, too, may once have been a similar
house, now much restored. The presence of so
many houses in the village with the same characteristics suggests considerable building activity at a
single period, and this may well have been after the
fire of 1503. It may also be significant that most of
the houses stand detached and spaced well apart.
The village contains a number of other timber-framed houses, including the 'Rose and Crown',
Peartree Cottage, nos. 20, 22, and 24 High Street
and nos. 1 and 3 Church Lane. Some of these are
probably of later date than those described above,
but almost all have the curved braces in the upper
panels typical of framing in Steeple Ashton. A
particularly fine example is the house facing the
green in High Street, used as a shop and the village
post office. It is traditionally said to have been a
market or merchants' hall, (fn. 32) but nothing is known
of its history. It stands on a stone base with buttresses; the timber-framing above has later brick infilling in herringbone pattern, and the roof is of
stone tiles. If it ever consisted of a single open hall
it must have been converted into a house by the
late 16th century. There are many features of this
period including a small front gable, a newel-staircase, panelling, and doors.
The 'Long's Arms' is a stone building of the 17th
century with mullioned and transomed windows.
The front has been entirely renewed to include an
extension forward on the ground floor. Just north
of Ashton House is a small stone house of three bays,
no. 32 High Street, which is probably contemporary with the refronting of the larger house in 1724.
There are several brick houses with stone-mullioned
windows and stone quoins. They include Tyler's
Farm in High Street, Moorfields Farm in Church
Lane, and the Lodge facing the green south of the
'Rose and Crown'. At the south end of the High
Street are three pairs of cottages built for workers
on the Long estate, dated 1877, 1879, and 1901.
The estate office and yard were opposite. A small
council-house scheme at St. Mary's at the north
end of the village dates from the 1930's. Beyond it
Newleaze is a much larger estate built after the
Second World War.
North of the village groups of cottages at Ashton
Hill, Ashton Common, and Snarlton, which all
existed by 1773, (fn. 33) must have begun by encroachment on the great common which covered the north-west of the parish until 1818. (fn. 34) Brook Farm and
Green Lane Farm were not built until it was inclosed. South of the village only Ashton Mill and
Dairyhouse Farms date from before inclosure. (fn. 35)
West Ashton village lies about 1½ mile south-west
of Steeple Ashton, where the minor road from
Trowbridge to Bratton climbs on to the Corallian
plateau. Most of the older houses of the village are
scattered along this road; on the Westbury-Melksham road which crosses it is a group of five pairs
of houses, Doreen Cottages, built c. 1850 for workers
on the Rood Ashton estate. Another pair, Woodside Cottages, is further down the hill towards
Yarnbrook, and two more pairs are in the village
street. Another group lies on the far side of Rood
Ashton park at Heath Hill. The history of the park
is mentioned below. (fn. 36) West Ashton Manor Farm
at the south end of the village is an early-18th-century brick house with stone-mullioned windows.
Opposite Manor Farm is a 17th-century house of
stone rubble. A small estate of council houses has
been built in East Town Lane, and several bungalows in the village street, since the Second World
War. East Town is a hamlet on the way to Steeple
Ashton. It was known as Gulden Ashton in the
Middle Ages. (fn. 37)
Two small groups of houses lay on the lower
ground to the north of West Ashton before the
inclosure of the parish in 1818. One was at the
north end of Biss Wood, upstream from Blackball
Bridge. Houses stood there in 1617, (fn. 38) and in
1811 the hamlet was called Blackball. (fn. 39) It still
existed in 1841, (fn. 40) but was probably removed
very soon afterwards in the reconstruction of Rood
Ashton park. (fn. 41) It seems likely that this was the
place called Lovemead or Lowmead, which is
regularly mentioned in medieval records as lying
within the manor of Steeple Ashton but near
Trowbridge. (fn. 42) In 1341 there were 9 houses there, (fn. 43)
and later in the century its inhabitants appeared at
the manor court separately from West Ashton. (fn. 44)
Another group of houses called Biss stood in the
18th century between the River Biss and the Trowbridge road at the north end of Carter's Wood. (fn. 45)
This too was probably replaced by Biss Farm on
the other side of the road in the 1840's. (fn. 46) The
population of West Ashton was 344 in 1801, and
rose to 374 in 1831; since then it has declined
intermittently, and was 243 in 1951. (fn. 47) In 1731 a
mineral well was discovered at West Ashton, and
two years later an attempt was made to attract visitors by advertising in the London Evening Post. It
was claimed that over 100 people had been cured
of such afflictions as leprosy, sore eyes, and the
king's evil, and that lodgings were available in the
village and in Trowbridge. The well never became
established as a place of resort, and its site is uncertain. (fn. 48) Thomas King, who was born at West
Ashton c. 1694, gave his name to King's Coffee
House in Covent Garden, a well-known resort in
the 18th century. (fn. 49)
Great Hinton lies about a mile north of Steeple
Ashton on a road which goes on to join the main
road from Trowbridge to Devizes north of the
village. It is built along two roads which divide at
its south end and re-unite at the north end. Fore
Street Farm is a timber-framed building with brick
in-filling, probably of the early 17th century.
Church Farm is a somewhat later building of stone
rubble with a stone-tiled roof, and there are several
18th-century houses of brick with stone dressings.
The New Inn is an early-19th-century building of
brick, which has been licensed since at least 1842. (fn. 50)
South-west of the village small groups of houses at
Cold Harbour and Bleet both existed in 1773, (fn. 51)
and were no doubt in origin groups of cottages
built on the verges of the common. The population
of Great Hinton tithing, later civil parish, rose from
174 in 1801 to 234 in 1831, and then gradually
declined to 143 in 1951. (fn. 52)
Semington stands at the northern edge of the
ancient parish in the valley of the Semington Brook,
a tributary of the Avon. Many of its houses are
built along the main road from Melksham to
Westbury, which is crossed by the Trowbridge-Devizes road just south of the village. The 'Somerset Arms' is an early-18th-century building of
brick with stone quoins, which is possibly to be
identified with the 'Bell' which existed in 1710. (fn. 53)
Near it is a two-storied house of stone rubble with
stone-tiled roof and mullioned windows, dated
1698. A group of three large late-18th or early-19th-century stone houses stands at the foot of the
hill up to the main cross-roads. Semington House
is of three stories with rusticated ground floor; it
was probably built by a member of the Bruges
family. (fn. 54) Opposite is Highfield, also of three stories
and with a pedimented doorway. Both houses were
apparently built by 1811. (fn. 55) The Old Parsonage is a
two-storied house of rather later date. The church
and the adjoining school lie along Church Lane to
the east. Here also are the oldest houses in the
village. Nos. 26–27 were evidently once a single
house on a ½-H plan, probably of the 16th century;
the whole is of timber-framed construction, although the framing is only exposed on the wings,
and inside are carved and moulded beams and
other features. Church Farm is apparently of the
same period. It is partly timber-framed, but the
exterior has largely been built up in stone. Manor
Farm is mentioned below. (fn. 56) Also in Church Lane
are several council houses built between the
World Wars. Another group built after the Second
World War is on the other side of the main road in
Pound Close.
West of the village St. George's Hospital, the
former workhouse of the Trowbridge and Melksham Union, was built in 1836–9 to the design of
H. E. Kendall. (fn. 57) South of the main cross-roads a
group of houses on the edge of the common
existed at Little Marsh in 1773. (fn. 58) One or two of the
cottages which still stand there are probably
survivors from that time, and typical of the better
type of common cottage; they are of brick, of two
stories with thatched roofs. Further south again Hag
Hill Farm was not built until after the inclosure of
the parish. Paxcroft on the Hilperton boundary is,
however, an ancient settlement. Houses stood there
in 1254, (fn. 59) and in the 18th and 19th centuries there
were two or three farms and some other houses
there. (fn. 60) The only survivor is the present Lower
Paxcroft Farm, formerly a detached part of Whaddon and now in Hilperton. (fn. 61) Upper Paxcroft Farm,
which is just inside the Semington boundary, was
built in the 19th century some distance from the
old hamlet.
Littleton lies about ½ mile east of Semington
on the road to Devizes. It consists only of three
farms and Littleton Wood Mill. Littleton Wood
Farm is a stone building with stone-tiled roof, probably of the 17th century. Some timber-framing is
visible at the back, and there is a moulded plaster
ceiling in one of the rooms. In 1801 the combined
population of Semington and Littleton tithings
was 265. By 1831 it had risen to 398, and ten years
later, after the building of the workhouse, to 570.
During the later 19th century it fluctuated between
420 and 500, and was 449 in 1931. By 1951 it had
risen to 546. (fn. 62)
In 1839 William Carrier, the Trowbridge Chartist leader, addressed a small meeting in Steeple
Ashton. The next day Thomas Miles, tenant of the
Manor Farm, dismissed some of his men for
attending. Later he took one back; the others
assembled again and threatened to pull down this
man's cottage, and Carrier returned and urged
them to buy muskets. Later a fire occurred on
Miles's property for which the Chartists were
blamed. (fn. 63)
MANORS.
Ashton belonged to King Edgar, who
in 964 set forth its bounds and declared that he
should enjoy it for life and at his death give it to
whom he wished. (fn. 64) The estate then included the
whole of the ancient parish and also the modern
parishes of North Bradley and Southwick. (fn. 65) There
is no record of Edgar's disposal of the estate, but
he must have given or left it to Romsey Abbey
(Hants), which he refounded in 967. (fn. 66) The nuns
held it in 1086, (fn. 67) and it remained the property of
the abbey until 1539, when it passed in the same
way as Edington Romsey to Sir Thomas Seymour,
and on his forfeiture in 1549 to the Crown. (fn. 68) A year
later the manor and demesnes were granted to
William Paulet, Earl of Wiltshire; (fn. 69) this grant was
apparently surrendered, for another of the same
year included only the house and demesnes. (fn. 70) Later
in the century the Paulets, Marquesses of Winchester from 1551, unsuccessfully claimed certain
manorial rights, especially those relating to the
woods and commons in Steeple Ashton and North
Bradley. (fn. 71) The capital manor, however, remained
in the hands of the Crown. In 1562 it was mortgaged to the City of London, and in 1579 the mortgage was assigned to trustees for Walter Long. (fn. 72) In
1610 the manor was assigned for the maintenance
of Prince Henry, (fn. 73) and in 1617 it was granted to
Prince Charles. (fn. 74) It was sold to Edward Ditchfield
and others in 1629, (fn. 75) and they sold it to Walter
Long of Whaddon (d. 1672), who held the manor
by 1632. (fn. 76) Steeple Ashton descended in the Long
family in the same way as Whaddon (fn. 77) until the
present century. Parts of the family estates in
Semington and Great Hinton were sold in 1911,
and most of the remainder in Steeple Ashton in
1930. (fn. 78)
The manor house and farm of Steeple Ashton,
granted away separately in 1551, descended to
William Paulet, Marquess of Winchester (d. 1629),
who in 1601 sold them to John Greenhill, (fn. 79) the
tenant under him for a number of years before. (fn. 80)
Greenhill died in 1618; (fn. 81) in 1624 his son Henry
sold the farm to John Bennett. (fn. 82) It descended to
his great grandson Thomas Bennett, who died
without surviving issue c. 1730 and left it to his
sister Mary, wife of Robert Smith of Combe Hay
(Som.). (fn. 83) At the death of Robert's son John in 1775,
an Act was obtained to sell his estates to pay his
debts. (fn. 84) They were paid without the Steeple
Ashton property being sold, but in 1799 John
Smith sold the house and farm to Richard Long
of Rood Ashton (fn. 85) . The house was still in 1963 occupied by his descendant, the third Viscount Long of
Wraxall. The manor house, which is dated 1647,
is a three-storied building, fronted with ashlar but
with the back parts mainly of brick, and roofed
with stone tiles. The symmetrical front has three
gables, crowned with finials, and a small gabled
porch. There are two-light mullioned windows
with moulded architraves, pulvinated friezes, and
cornices. Nearby is a group of contemporary farm
buildings of stone rubble, with ashlar quoins and
stone-tiled roofs; one, probably formerly a dovecot,
has a small open turret of wood. Near the house is
an elaborate granary, of brick with ashlar quoins,
which stands on circular columns about seven feet
high. It is probably of the early-18th century, as is
the low brick wall, with rusticated stone gatepiers
and enriched ball finials, which bounds the forecourt of the house. Beyond the older farm buildings
is a large 19th-century stone barn with a small
brick chimney stack, probably for a steam engine
to work farm machinery.
Subinfeudation had begun on the Abbess of
Romsey's manor in 1086, when tenants named
Edward and William held three hides and one hide
respectively, and some unnamed Englishmen four
hides. (fn. 86) Several considerable estates, some called
manors, were held freely of the abbey in the Middle
Ages. In 1248 Walter de Dunstanville, lord of
Castle Combe, obtained permission to hold the
park which his father Walter had made by inclosing his wood of Little Ashton. (fn. 87) This estate
was later subinfeudated again, and was reckoned
part of the barony of Castle Combe until the 16th
century. (fn. 88) In the Romsey Abbey records, however,
the intermediate lordship was forgotten, and the
actual tenants were spoken of as holding from the
abbess. The first of these known to us was probably
Thomas of Hurdecote, who perhaps held in the
early 13th century. (fn. 89) By 1255, and still in 1277,
William Bluet held lands in 'Hurdecotes Ashton',
reckoned at two carucates. (fn. 90) It was no doubt the
same two carucates which John Biset died possessed
of in 1307, (fn. 91) which were then delivered to his
widow Katharine. (fn. 92) Their only son John died
without issue in 1334 leaving as heir his sister
Margaret, wife of Robert Martin. (fn. 93) In 1339 John
de Croucheston complained that Martin and others
had wrongfully imprisoned him and seized his
goods at Chapel Ashton, (fn. 94) and in the following
year Martin and his wife released the property to
Croucheston. (fn. 95) It was then first called the manor
of CHAPEL ASHTON, but more usually in later
times, of ROOD ASHTON.
John de Croucheston died c. 1374; (fn. 96) another
John who died c. 1390 had during his lifetime
settled it on his bastard son Richard. Richard, who
was perhaps already dead, left a son Edmund and a
daughter Eleanor who possessed it successively but
left no issue. The next heir was Joan, daughter of
John de Croucheston. (fn. 97) In 1390 John Milbourn
held it as dower of his wife Margaret, presumably
widow of John or Richard de Croucheston, (fn. 98) but
on his outlawry for murder it was taken into the
king's hands. On this, Joan de Croucheston, who
had married Nicholas Temmes, claimed it, (fn. 99) and
in 1402 John Milbourn and Margaret released their
right. (fn. 1) Joan married Robert Salmon as her second
husband, (fn. 2) and in 1433 the manor was settled on the
issue of the marriage with remainder to her sons
by Temmes. (fn. 3) She evidently had no sons by Salmon,
for the manor descended in the Temmes family to
Robert Temmes, who in 1548 sold Rood Ashton
to William Button of Alton Priors. (fn. 4) William's son,
another William, died holding it in 1591. (fn. 5) In the
disputes which followed his death it was allotted
to his younger son William, (fn. 6) who sold it in 1597
to Edward Long of Monkton in Broughton Gifford. (fn. 7)
Edward's great-grandson, Henry Long, died without issue in 1672, and left Rood Ashton to his
nephew Richard, son of his sister Elizabeth by
Richard Long of Collingbourne Kingston. (fn. 8) From
him it descended in the male line to Walter Hume
Long, created Viscount Long of Wraxall in 1921. (fn. 9)
After his death in 1924, the estate was broken up
by sale. (fn. 10) The mansion house and park were sold
to Mrs. Walter Shaw in 1930; after being used by
the fighting services in the Second World War, the
house was sold in 1950. It has since been stripped of
its fittings and the park turned over to agriculture. (fn. 11)
Rood Ashton house in 1963 was only a roofless
shell. The mansion house of the Long family
stood on the site in 1773, but nothing is known of
the building at that time. In 1808 Jeffry Wyatt
(later Sir Jeffry Wyatville) designed the older part
of the present building, (fn. 12) and in 1836 his house was
altered and extended under the direction of Thomas Hopper. (fn. 13) Wyatt's house was of stone ashlar
in the 'Tudor' style, with embattled parapets,
square-headed stone-mullioned windows, and
octagonal pinnacles at the corners. The principal
two-storied block was of three bays at the front
and sides, the central bay at the front being
carried one story higher. The main doorway at the
centre of the south-west front had a four-centred
arch; its embattled surround was repeated on the
large ground floor windows. Behind was a lower
block with a single-storied orangery on the south-east. The rest of the house Hopper either rebuilt
or completely altered. He adopted Wyatt's window and parapet details, but in the grouping of its
various parts his design is much more picturesque
and romantic than that of the earlier building. The
principal feature is a large porte-cochère tower near
the centre of the new entrance front, facing north-west. Its elaborate windows, tall angle turrets, and
enriched frieze are in contrast to the rest of this
elevation, which relies for its effect on variations of
frontage and roof line. The south-east elevation is
again more highly decorated, having carved stone
work, a low tower, a two-storied bay, and clustered
chimneys. Inside the house remains of elaborate
plasterwork can be seen. Some panelling and other
material brought from Whaddon House were used
in 1836, after being rescued from the fire there the
previous year. (fn. 14)
In 1773 the house was surrounded by formal
gardens, while to the north-west three small lakes
lay in the hollow between the house and the main
road. Beyond them a lane parallel to the road
joined West Ashton village to Mudmead Lane and
so to Steeple Ashton. (fn. 15) By 1811 this lane had been
diverted so that it only ran from the site of the
later Castle Lodge to Mudmead Lane. (fn. 16) The park
was remodelled in the 1840's. The three lakes were
replaced by the larger lake called Stourton Water
north of the house, and to make this possible the
old lane was closed altogether. Beyond the lake
Stourton Farm was demolished, and the small inclosures which covered Stourton Hill were levelled;
the top was planted with trees to form a background
to the water. The old main entrance to the house
had been a drive from the main road, with a lodge
half way between the cross-roads and the site of
Castle Lodge. This was replaced by a drive further
east, which extended across the main road and so
through the woods to Trowbridge; it was lined
with Scotch firs, the whole being laid out by Sir
John Nasmyth. Lodges built at the Trowbridge end
and on the Westbury to Melksham road still survive; the latter is called Castle Lodge, consisting of a
large square and a small round tower. Another
drive to the cross roads at West Ashton probably
dates from the building of the church in 1847. The
lodge at that entrance was designed by T. H.
Wyatt. (fn. 17) Rood Ashton Home Farm was probably
built about the same time. The previous home farm
was apparently north of the road between East
Town and West Ashton at the point where it is
joined by the lane from Dunge. (fn. 18)
What was later called the manor of WEST
ASHTON consisted in 1340 of two properties.
Thomas Langford held of the abbess a house and
2 carucates which later passed to William Don. (fn. 19)
They were settled on Don and Katharine his wife
in 1388, (fn. 20) but a few years later Don's brother John
complained of the breach of an agreement that he
should have the reversion of the estate, for William
and Katharine had sold it to William Stourton. (fn. 21)
Stourton was summoned to do fealty for the lands
in 1411. (fn. 22) The other part of the later manor was
held in 1340 by John Oysel, and consisted of a
house and 2 virgates. (fn. 23) They passed to John Westbury the elder, who held lands in West Ashton in
1412. (fn. 24) In 1449 William Westbury, grandson of
John, died holding them. (fn. 25) Soon after this the
property must have passed to John, Lord Stourton,
son of the William Stourton who had bought the
Don property. John died in 1462 holding lands in
West Ashton; (fn. 26) his grandson John, Lord Stourton,
held at his death lands there which were said to
include the properties formerly of Don and of
Westbury. (fn. 27) These descended with the title to
William, Lord Stourton (d. 1548), who in 1544
conveyed them, then referred to as a manor for
the first time, to Thomas Long of Trowbridge,
clothier. (fn. 28) He died without surviving issue in 1554,
leaving most of his property to Edward, third son
of his younger brother Henry. Edward subsequently bought the manor of Rood Ashton, (fn. 29) and from
that time the descent of the two manors was the
same. The capital house of West Ashton was probably Stourton Farm, which stood on Stourton Hill
until the alterations to Rood Ashton park in the
1840's.
In the early 12th century Hawise, Abbess of
Romsey, enfeoffed a knight named Herlewin with
a hide of land in Ashton, Edington, and Bradley,
and also land which a certain Alric had formerly
held at a rent of 10s. (fn. 30) Alric was probably one of the
abbey's English tenants in 1086. (fn. 31) About 1170
Abbess Juliana confirmed these and other lands to
Richard, son of Michael, son of Herlewin; they included ½ hide in Semington held freely, ½ hide there
held by 10s. a year, ½ hide in Ashton freely, 1½ virgate in Edington freely, and land at Feltham there
by a rent of sheep and honey. (fn. 32) In the mid-13th
century at least some of these lands were held by
Peter FitzMichael of Semington, and then by his
widow Alice; (fn. 33) they granted away some estates in
Edington, reserving rents which in 1293 were payable to William of Semington. (fn. 34) It seems likely that
the Semington lands of this family passed, probably
by the marriage of an heiress, to the Tinhead
family. John of Tinhead held a yardland in Semington in 1281, (fn. 35) but in 1329 a larger estate there, described as a carucate of land, was settled on another
John of Tinhead and his wife Margaret. They had
a daughter Maud, (fn. 36) who may have married as her
first husband a Percy of Great Chalfield. (fn. 37) In 1340
she was the wife of Robert Selyman, who held the
carucate by the old rent of 10s. (fn. 38) They had a son
Robert who was dead by 1374; in that year John
Gore, who had married Robert's widow Emma,
claimed to hold the lands for her life. (fn. 39) What
happened to them after her death is not clear, but
in the middle of the 15th century lands formerly
occupied by Robert Selyman and later by Emmot
Percy were held by Robert Long. (fn. 40) This Robert
Long, the first known member of the family who
possessed Wraxall, (fn. 41) held at that time another
estate in Semington, which had belonged to John
of Lilleshulle in 1340, (fn. 42) and afterwards to John
Gore. (fn. 43) These two properties, first called the manor
of SEMINGTON in 1522, (fn. 44) descended in the Long
family as did Wraxall to Sir Robert Long, who
succeeded his father Sir Henry in 1556. (fn. 45) In the
following year he renewed a lease of the manor to
Thomas Long, farmer of Semington, who already
held it for life. (fn. 46) At an unknown date, before 1591, (fn. 47)
the freehold was sold to the Brouncker family,
lords of the manor of Melksham. In 1598 Henry
Brouncker sold the manor house of Semington and
a considerable amount of land there to John Lowe
of Orcheston St. Mary. (fn. 48) At Lowe's death in 1632
this property was described as the mansion house
and farm of Semington; he had since bought two
other properties there which had belonged to
Thomas Long and Robert Flower. (fn. 49) The whole
estate, usually still referred to as the manor of
Semington, descended to Lawrence Lowe, on whom
it was settled when he married Lucy, daughter of
Thomas Pile of Baverstock, in 1679. He apparently
left no issue, for in 1689 his widow joined with
Thomas Chaffin, Edward Lowe, and Robert Hyde
in releasing his estates to Thomas Freke and
Thomas Pile. Freke died without issue in 1698,
leaving his estates to Pile and to Elizabeth, wife of
Thomas Freke of Hannington, for their lives, with
remainder to George Pitt of Stratfield Saye (Hants),
who had married Lucy, Lawrence Lowe's widow.
The life interests terminated in 1714, (fn. 50) and the
manor descended from George Pitt to his grandson
George, Baron Rivers (d. 1803), who held it in 1780.
By 1800 it had been sold to the Duke of Somerset. (fn. 51)
In 1838 the Somerset estate consisted chiefly of
Manor Farm, Church Farm, and Littleton Wood
Mill Farm, in all about 350 a. (fn. 52) It has remained
the property of the dukes of Somerset until the
present century. (fn. 53)
Manor Farm, which may have been the capital
house of the manor, is probably basically of the
16th century. It has been considerably altered, but
has one 16th-century window on the south side.
LESSER ESTATES.
In 1086 William Scudet, one
of the king's cooks, held a hide of land in Steeple
Ashton of the Abbess of Romsey. (fn. 54) It seems likely
that his descendants took their surname from his
occupation. Edwin cocus lived c. 1130, and Crispin
cocus late in the 12th century. (fn. 55) The name also
appears as le Keu. In the late 13th century Richard
le Keu granted to his brother William lands in
West Ashton which had formerly belonged to
Richard their father and subsequently to Roger,
their brother. (fn. 56) It was perhaps the same estate which
in 1285 Richard le Keu and Sybil his wife conveyed
in reversion after their deaths to Margaret, daughter
of Roger le Porter of Shaftesbury. It was then described as 2 virgates in 'Rodeschawe'. Margaret's
heir was her brother Roger, (fn. 57) who in 1306 conveyed
1½ virgate in West Ashton to Robert of Wilmington, clerk. (fn. 58)
Robert of Wilmington acquired several other
estates in the district. One of them lay at 'Hurdecote's Ashton', and had previously been held by
the Sauser family. In the early 13th century Thomas
of Hurdecote granted a half-virgate of his fee of
Ashton to Henry le Sauser. (fn. 59) Henry was apparently
the father of another Henry, who granted the halfvirgate to his brother Roger, and on another
occasion, gave him land at 'Middle Ashton', which
had also been held of the Abbess of Romsey by
Henry the father. (fn. 60) This or another Roger le Sauser
was a free-tenant of John Biset, successor of Thomas
of Hurdecote in the manor of Rood Ashton, in
1307. (fn. 61) Two years later he conveyed 2½ virgates in
'Gyldene Ashton' and 'Hurdecote's Ashton' to
Robert of Wilmington. (fn. 62) Robert acquired by 1314
1½ virgates in West Ashton and 'La Stone' which
had once been held by the Bythewood family. (fn. 63) At
an unknown date he also obtained a small property
in West Ashton from Walter of Wyke. (fn. 64)
Robert of Wilmington, who was Rector of Donhead St. Andrew from 1304 to 1321, (fn. 65) seems to have
had some connexion with Bradford, and settled his
property on two of the children of a certain Beatrice
Sulleve of that place. They were no doubt his own
children, for one of them, called John of Wilmington, obtained a dispensation on account of his
illegitimacy and became a priest. (fn. 66) Most, if not all,
of the lands passed to John's sister Agnes, who
married William of Whitecliff in Brixton
Deverill. (fn. 67) In 1340 William was said to hold
two properties, each of two virgates in West
Ashton. (fn. 68) He was dead by 1358, leaving two or
more daughters and coheirs. In 1386 one of these,
Margaret, conveyed her share of the lands in West
Ashton to William Lyveden and his wife Agnes, who
was probably a daughter of one of Margaret's
sisters. (fn. 69) Another coheir, Lettice, married Thomas
Ward, and in 1390 granted a life estate in her share
of lands in West Ashton to her son John. (fn. 70) In some
unexplained way this share of the Ward family
evidently passed to the Lyveden family. In 1445
John Lyveden conveyed his lands in West Ashton
and 'Rodshaw' to feoffees. (fn. 71) In 1476 he settled
lands there on his daughter and heir Margaret
when she married Nicholas, second son of Sir
Nicholas St. Lo. (fn. 72) John Lyveden died c. 1502, and
Nicholas St. Lo succeeded him. (fn. 73) His estate was
only for life, however, for Margaret was long since
dead, (fn. 74) presumably without issue, and on his death
the estate reverted to John Westley, who had
succeeded to John Lyveden's estates in Whitecliff
and elsewhere. He held the West Ashton property
in 1511, (fn. 75) and it descended to his grandson, Leonard
Westley, who died in 1562. At his death the West
Ashton property was held by Anne Tichebourn,
widow, for her life but the reason for this is not
clear. (fn. 76) Leonard's son Thomas held a house and
160 a. of land in West Ashton at his death in 1621. (fn. 77)
By 1642 Samuel Martyn held lands in East Town
and West Ashton which he had bought of another
Thomas Westley. (fn. 78)
Although the names of 'Sauser's', 'Gyldene' and
'Hurdecote's Ashton', 'Rodshaw', and 'La Stone'
are all lost, there can be little doubt that the estate
which Robert of Wilmington built up in the early
14th century represents the present East Town
Farm. This is indeed indicated by the use of the
form Sauser's Ashton alias East Town in 1614. (fn. 79)
The Martyn family held the property well into the
18th century. (fn. 80) By 1780 it had passed, probably by
sale to Gaisford Gibbs, and it descended in the
same way as Heywood House to the Ludlow
family. (fn. 81) About 1844 it was conveyed to the Longs
of Rood Ashton in exchange for Fulling Bridge
Farm in Heywood. (fn. 82) The house at East Town is
a 17th-century building of stone rubble.
Robert Stileman was a leaseholder under the
Abbess of Romsey in 1478, (fn. 83) and he and his son
Anthony were bailiffs of the manor. (fn. 84) In 1500 the
abbess granted two houses, about 80 a. of land, and
various meadows and pastures to Anthony Stileman
in fee. (fn. 85) Parts of this property remained in the
family for almost 350 years. Anthony's son Richard
was dead by 1561; Richard's son Anthony had a
son John on whom the estate was settled in 1582.
John died in 1601 leaving a son Anthony, (fn. 86) who
was perhaps father of the John who died in 1649.
His son John died in 1691, and was succeeded by
another John. (fn. 87) By 1699 some of the family lands
had been sold, for John Stileman paid only part of
the original chief rent charged on the premises in
1500. (fn. 88) He died in 1713, his widow Christian surviving him until 1765. (fn. 89) From there the descent
is not clear, but some lands remained in the family
until the death of Dr. William Stillman in 1843.
His sons sold them to Walter Long and emigrated to
Australia. (fn. 90) The home of the family was the house
now called Ashton House, which is described
above. (fn. 91)
In 1524 John Loveday of Melksham bought a
virgate of land in West Ashton from Walter Ballard
of Hilperton. (fn. 92) Loveday sold it in 1545 to Henry
Brouncker. (fn. 93) Brouncker also bought lands in West
Ashton which had been customary holdings of
the manor, and had been granted in 1553 to Sir
William Sharington and Richard Roberts. (fn. 94) His
grandson Henry Brouncker sold them to Tristram
Flower, who died in 1604 holding 3 virgates in
West Ashton. (fn. 95) Later in the 17th century these
lands passed to the Beach family by the marriage of
Robert Beach and Grace Flower. Their son Thomas
died in 1729, and was succeeded in turn by his son
and grandson, both of the same name. (fn. 96) In 1763
the latter held a house and about 100 a. of land. (fn. 97)
After his death in 1774 the estate appears to have
been broken up; most of it probably passed to the
Longs. The house stood at the top of West Ashton
Hill. (fn. 98)
ECONOMIC HISTORY.
When the bounds of
the manor of Ashton were set forth by King Edgar
in 964, (fn. 99) the estate included the whole of the ancient parish of Steeple Ashton and also North
Bradley and Southwick. The furthest points to the
west were thus about 6 miles from the village of
Steeple Ashton, near the Somerset border north
of Rode, where Romsey Oak Farm still recalls the
connexion. In 1086 the manor was assessed at 40
hides, of which tenants of the abbess held eight. (fn. 1)
By 1340 the number of freeholders under the abbess
was 28, who paid rents totalling about £15. Their
properties lay chiefly in Southwick and West
Ashton, although some land nearer Steeple Ashton
itself had also been granted out. (fn. 2) By c. 1540 the
free rents had increased to almost £20, largely
owing to a rent of £4 6s. 8d. from the lands granted
to the Stileman family. (fn. 3) In 1553 the free rents from
holdings in Semington were included in the property
granted away to Sir William Sharington, (fn. 4) but in
1775 rents amounting to over £18 were still being
collected from free tenants. (fn. 5)
In 1086 40 villeins and 30 bordars held land for
20 ploughs. A rental and custumal of 1340 (fn. 6) lists
bond tenants of the abbess in all parts of the ancient
manor except North Bradley, which was by this
time reckoned a part of Edington manor. (fn. 7) Apart
from cottagers and holders of a few acres, there
were 71 bond tenants holding ½ virgate or more,
few holdings being of more than one virgate. They
held a total of 62½ virgates, of which 6½ lay in
Southwick, 13 in West Ashton, 17 in Hinton,
8 in Littleton, 4½ in Semington, and 13½ in Steeple
Ashton. In Steeple Ashton there were in addition
27 holders of ¼ virgates who were called acremen
and who served the offices of oxherd, shepherd, and
swineherd. The works demanded of the bond
tenants for the demesne embraced the whole range
of agricultural pursuits, and also carrying goods,
and driving sheep to Romsey.
The demesne land of the manor appears to have
been in Steeple Ashton only in 1340. The names
or number of the common fields at this time have
not survived, but furlong names such as Mudmead
Furlong, Loppinger, Cranhill, and Morefurlong
indicate that they probably lay north-west, south-west, and south-east of the village. Meadowland
lay at Ashton Northmead, north of the present
Dairyhouse Farm, and Daddlesmore, later Dodsmead, between the present Biss and Green Lane
Woods. (fn. 8) Pasture for oxen lay at Albury, north of
East Town, and Raydown, on the southern boundary of the parish.
The Biset property in West Ashton, which was
later to be called the manor of Rood Ashton, had
in 1307 a demesne of 80 a. arable, 3½ a. meadow,
and 4 a. several pasture. Four customary tenants
held ½ virgates and a number of others had smaller
holdings. (fn. 9) In contrast to the main manor, the works
of the ½-virgaters were completely commuted and
those of the cottagers amounted only to being
messengers for the lord four or five times a year
and carrying hay a half-day a year. Deeds of the
13th century mention North, East, South, and
Town fields in West Ashton. (fn. 10) Furlongs called
'Hameracrestyghele' (fn. 11) and 'la Smytheswell' indicate that Northfield lay near Stourton Hill, and 'la
Witelond' and 'Cranhulle' that East Field lay south
of East Town farm. (fn. 12) 'Upper Cranhulle' lay in
South Field, which may have been between West
Ashton and Dunge. It is possible that Town Field
was one of the Steeple Ashton fields.
It is not easy to trace the course of agricultural
change in Steeple Ashton in the later Middle Ages.
There are a few indications of the increasing importance of sheep. In the early 1370's numbers of
murrained sheep were presented at the manor
court, and in 1374 William Trowbridge had overstocked the commons with sheep from outside. (fn. 13)
By the end of the next century overstocking was constantly presented. In 1499 William Passion had 300
sheep at Hinton, and William Long of Trowbridge
1,000 at West Ashton where he had no common. (fn. 14)
By 1414 many of the works of the customary tenants
must have been commuted, for over £6 was
received for them. (fn. 15) The demesne, however, was
still in hand then. A mid-15th century rental (fn. 16)
shows that a number of customary tenants held an
acre or two of demesne arable or meadow, but it is
not certain when the demesne entirely ceased to be
farmed by the nuns; the first known lease of the
site of the manor was in 1537 to Robert Temmes
for 42 years. (fn. 17) Five tenants of Steeple Ashton were
presented in 1493 for inclosing lands in the East
Field, Moor Field and Standle Field with hedges
and ditches. (fn. 18)
By the mid-16th century (fn. 19) a few of the principal
inhabitants were each holding several small tenements on leases for long terms of years. Apart from
these, a large number of small copyholders, mostly
of a virgate or under, in all parts of the manor held
their lands for lives by rents only. Some holdings
had a few acres added to them, sometimes demesne
land, but there is little evidence of any extensive
consolidation of holdings, nor of much inclosure in
any part of the manor except Southwick. A large
proportion of the land was open-field arable; this
was particularly preponderant in Steeple Ashton
and Hinton, where little meadow or pasture and
few inclosed grounds existed. Arable in Steeple
Ashton lay in East Field, North Field, Standle
Field, Loppinger Field, Windmill Field, and Moor
Field. Of these, East Field and Moor Field lay east
of the village near Spiers Piece Farm, Windmill
Field probably near Mudmead Lane, (fn. 20) and Loppinger Field near the farm of that name. Standle
Field probably lay west or south west of the village.
The fields of Hinton were Middle Field, Crowcheyate Field, and Windmill Field. The latter lay
west of the village north of Coldharbour. (fn. 21) At
Semington there were Down Field, west of the
village, Middle Field, and South Field between the
Hilperton road and Hag Hill. At Littleton arable lay
in Holbrook Field, Jacketts Field, East Field, and
Down Field, and at West Ashton in Culverford
Field, Cranhill Field, and Sandfield. Culverford
Field lay near Stourton Hill and Cranhill Field
south of East Town, corresponding to the North
and East Fields of the 13th century.
The demesnes of Steeple Ashton were held in
hand by Lord Seymour when he owned the manor.
They consisted of the house, a close of 6 a., 66 a.
of meadow at Ashton More, Northmead, and Dodsmead, 181½ a. of arable land in the common fields,
and various rights of pasture. (fn. 22) After the demesnes
were alienated to the Marquess of Winchester in
1551, the common rights of the customary tenants
in the meadows and the common pastures were the
subject of protracted disputes. Eight tenants called
'neatholders' had winter pasture for oxen or sheep
in Northmead, which contained 40 a., and all the
tenants who held land there had winter common
in the 60 a. of Dodsmead. The common pastures lay
at Albury, Raydown, and Laydown, and contained
in all over 200 a. (fn. 23) The rights of pasture which the
various tenants and the farmer enjoyed in them for
oxen and other beasts at various times of the year
were governed by complex customs. Disputes were
about such points as whether the owner of the
demesnes had unlimited common, whether he could
put cattle in instead of horses, and whether he could
inclose any of the commons. In 1604 all the customary tenants prosecuted John Greenhill, the new
owner of the farm, in the Exchequer, and alleged
that their customs were necessary to their tillage,
and that if Greenhill succeeded in putting them out
of their commons, his farm would be £100 a year
more valuable. When he was taxed with inclosing
12 a. out of Dodsmead, Greenhill retorted that the
customary tenants had recently much improved
their holdings by inclosures out of the common
fields, and so wintered many more cattle than
formerly. Another witness on his behalf estimated
that 60 a. of meadow and 500 a. of arable had been
inclosed in the past 50 years. (fn. 24)
Other disputes also occurred about the woods of
the manor and the timber standing in the commons.
These were evidently very valuable adjuncts of the
manor. In 1604 it was estimated that the woods in
West Ashton, Yarnbrook, and Broker's Wood in
Southwick covered 450 a., and that there were
almost 8,000 trees besides standing in the wastes. (fn. 25)
The Marquess of Winchester claimed in 1574 that
the woods belonged to the demesnes, (fn. 26) and ten
years later claimed the strays found in the woods
and commons. (fn. 27) These claims failed, for in 1583 the
woods were let for 21 years to Edward Langford of
Trowbridge and Richard Spencer of Steeple Ashton. They assigned the lease to the Brounckers of
Erlestoke in 1585. (fn. 28) In 1596 it was assigned to
Edmund Dowse and subsequently renewed to him. (fn. 29)
By 1610 it had passed to Roger Martyn. Many trees
had been felled and others spoilt by continuous
lopping, but it was estimated that with careful
restocking the woods would be worth £300 a year
to the Crown. (fn. 30) They were, however, sold with the
manor, and in 1636 Walter Long, the new lord,
prosecuted Henry Martyn and Edward Martyn
for waste in Broker's Wood. (fn. 31)
The process of consolidation of holdings and
inclosure of the common fields, which had begun
in the later 16th century, continued in the 17th.
Leases refer continually to newly inclosed grounds
and to several acres of arable lying together in the
Steeple Ashton fields, although a considerable
amount still lay dispersed. (fn. 32) Semington, too; was
fairly extensively inclosed by the end of the 16th
century. (fn. 33) The capital manor was by this time confined, except for woods and commons, to the
tithings of Hinton and Steeple Ashton, the outlying copyhold lands having been granted separately by the Crown. (fn. 34) The process of consolidation
of holdings into large farms was apparently slow,
and there was no rack leasing in the 17th century.
In 1699 106 copy and leaseholders in Steeple Ashton and Hinton produced a regular income which
amounted to under £36 a year, (fn. 35) although large
fines were no doubt paid at entry. In 1775 the copyhold and leasehold rents were just over £50, and
two holdings let on rack leases produced £105 a
year. (fn. 36) Some compact and fairly large inclosed farms
not part of the manorial lands appear in the 17th
and 18th centuries. In 1674 Dairyhouse Farm consisted of 60 a. of inclosed meadow and pasture and
15 a. of open-field arable, but the latter was disposed of by 1723, leaving a compact holding around
the farmhouse. (fn. 37) Ashton Mill Farm consisted of
about 45 a. of inclosed land in 1700. (fn. 38) Pasture land
which had been inclosed at Crosswelldown by
1620 (fn. 39) formed the nucleus of the farm of that name
which in the 18th century was owned by the Ballard
family. (fn. 40) At Littleton Nicholas Flower owned in
1632 a farm which contained 68 a. of inclosed land
and only 7 a. in the open fields. (fn. 41) Paxcroft Farm, the
property of the Duke of Kingston, was leased at a
rent of £80 a year in 1731. (fn. 42) Of the 100 acres of the
Beach property in West Ashton in 1763, all but 7
were inclosed. (fn. 43) Part of Hag Hill was inclosed by
1762. (fn. 44) Littleton Wood Farm consisted of over
60 acres, all inclosed, in 1788. (fn. 45)
Steeple Ashton was inclosed under an Act of
Parliament passed in 1813. (fn. 46) The results of over
two centuries of piecemeal inclosure, of which
indications have been given above, are evident from
the award maps. No common fields remained at
Littleton, and at Semington only two small areas of
open-field arable near the Hilperton road, and some
common meadow near the Brook were left. Hinton
too was almost fully inclosed, only a few acres of
arable south of the village and Hinton Mead to the
north remaining. In Steeple Ashton, however, considerable areas of the open fields remained uninclosed. Three of these then existed: High Field
lay between Mudmead Lane and Sandpits Lane,
Middle Field south of the village on both sides of
Acreshort Lane, and Moor Field east of the Edington road. The common pastures of the Steeple
Ashton tenants were also inclosed at this time, at
Albury, Raydown, and Laydown, (fn. 47) and the remaining common meadow at Dodmsead. Finally
Steeple Ashton, Hinton, and Littleton Wood Commons were inclosed. Steeple Ashton and Hinton
Commons covered most of the low ground in the
tithings of West Ashton, Steeple Ashton, and Hinton, extending from Kettle Lane on the Heywood
boundary in a crescent shape to Stranger's Corner
near Hinton. Only a little of this large expanse had
been affected by earlier inclosure. Some meadow
had been inclosed along the Biss and Paxcroft
Brook, and encroachments extended from the higher
ground to the lower at Armouracre and Snarlton.
A number of inclosures had also been made on the
southern slope of Hag Hill. Littleton Wood Common lay in the bend of the Semington Brook in
the north-east corner of the parish. The southern
part of Steeple Ashton Common was mainly woodland, estimated at over 500 acres in 1807. (fn. 48)
After inclosure farming in the parish began to
assume its modern aspect. New farms were built
in the inclosed lands at Spiers Piece, Newgrounds,
Raydon, Brook, and Green Lane, and old farms
were let on short leases at improved rents. By 1844
eight farms on the Long estate in the parish let for
over £100 a year, the highest being Steeple Ashton
Manor Farm at £670. (fn. 49) But some of the Long farms
were still held on leases for lives at this time. The
estate in 1841 comprised over 3,500 acres, somewhat
more than half of the ancient parish. The next largest estates were the Ludlow's 650 acres in West
Ashton, (fn. 50) the Duke of Somerset's 340 in Semington, and G. T. Chamberlaine's 150 in Littleton
and Hinton. At this time arable totalled just over
30 per cent. of the total area of the parish, and
pasture and meadow over 55 per cent. The former
was most preponderant, as would be expected, on
the higher ground, varying from about 42 per cent.
in Steeple Ashton to only 16 per cent. at Semington. (fn. 51) By 1870 rents had risen considerably. Eight
of the Long farms let for over £400 a year each, East
Town making £910 a year and Spier's Piece £800.
Their 13 largest farms in the parish produced over
£5,400 a year. (fn. 52)
When Leland visited Steeple Ashton c. 1540 he
remarked that 'it standithe muche by clothiars' and
named two, Robert Long and Walter Lucas, who
had assisted in the building of the parish church. (fn. 53)
These two men flourished c. 1500, but no evidence
has been found of any cloth industry at Steeple
Ashton much before that time. Beside these two,
the names of a few clothiers of the early and mid-16th century are known. William Alcombe (d. c.
1513), (fn. 54) had been an associate of James Terumber,
the rich Trowbridge clothier. (fn. 55) John Reynold held
land in Steeple Ashton c. 1540, (fn. 56) and three members
of the White family, George, Robert, and William,
were fined for defective white cloths in 1561. (fn. 57) That
Long and Lucas were prosperous men is shown by
their works at the church and by Lucas's will, (fn. 58) and
in 1545 Robert White, although not quite in the
first rank of local clothiers, paid more tax than
anyone else in the tithing. (fn. 59) But the period of prosperity was short, and apparently centred on a few
men, who left no successors in a village which, with
its lack of water power, offered no attractions to
clothiers. Even before 1514 Walter Lucas had had
to entice his son back from Bradford with a promise
of his household goods. (fn. 60) Walter and Thomas,
sons of Robert Long, moved to Trowbridge. (fn. 61) By
1576 only two men known to have been clothiers
paid tax in Steeple Ashton, George White, who had
apparently bought land, and William White, and
neither was particularly prosperous. (fn. 62) Although
spinning and weaving for the Trowbridge and
Westbury clothiers no doubt continued there until
the introduction of power machinery, the brief era
of the clothiers of Steeple Ashton was practically
over by 1600. After that date only two have been
met with, Peter Crook (fl. c. 1633) and William
Tipper (d. before 1700). (fn. 63)
The cloth industry's first known appearance at
Littleton is also associated with Robert Long of
Steeple Ashton, who in 1494 leased a fulling mill
there of the Abbess of Romsey. The lease subsequently came into the possession of Anthony
Passion, no doubt a member of a family that had
held the mill before Long. (fn. 64) Although he held the
mill, and leased or owned a good deal of land in
Steeple Ashton and Littleton, (fn. 65) he too seems to
have found it more convenient to carry on his
business from Trowbridge, (fn. 66) where in 1545 he
paid £7 in tax, a sum exceeded by only nine payers
in the whole county. (fn. 67) In the 17th century the mill
was occupied by successive clothiers of the Somner
family of Littleton as a fulling mill. (fn. 68) Another
clothier of Littleton in the early 17th century was
Nicholas Flower, (fn. 69) who at his death in 1632 owned
a considerable landed estate in Littleton and Melksham. (fn. 70) No evidence about the use of Littleton Mill
for the cloth trade in the 18th century has been met
with, although there is every probability that it was
used as a fulling mill by clothiers from Trowbridge
or Melksham. By about 1800 it was occupied by
Francis Naish, a Trowbridge clothier. Soon afterwards, because he had introduced gig mills and
shearing frames into it, the mill was destroyed by
the Trowbridge shearmen. (fn. 71) There is no subsequent
record of the cloth trade in Littleton.
Occasional references to clothiers at Semington
have been found. William Witcom was fined for
defective white cloth in 1562. (fn. 72) Daniel Somner
(d. c. 1604) was a clothier of Semington, (fn. 73) and so
was Henry Coulthurst (fl. c. 1710). (fn. 74) Here, too,
spinning and weaving must have been carried on as
a domestic occupation until the 19th century.
Although no reference to the cloth trade in Great
Hinton has been found, there is in the village a
small factory building, dated 1815, adjoining the
New Inn. It is of brick, of five bays and three stories
with a mansard roof, and has the segmental-headed
windows with stone mullions typical of mills in the
neighbouring towns. It is named as a factory in
1841, (fn. 75) when it was owned and occupied by Stephen
Sims, and the tradition that it was used for the
making of cloth survives in the village.
Two limekilns once existed in Steeple Ashton.
One lay near Mudmead Lane, (fn. 76) and the other south
of the village east of the Edington road, where the
quarries are still visible. (fn. 77)
MARKET AND FAIR.
In 1266 Henry III granted
to the nuns of Romsey a weekly market on Wednesday in their manor of Ashton, and a yearly fair there
on 7, 8, and 9 September. (fn. 78) Two years later Richard
de la Rokele complained that his market at Market
Lavington, also held on Wednesday, had gone down
£40 in value because of the abbess's market at Church
Ashton. The abbess blandly replied that she had
no vill of that name, (fn. 79) and the charter was confirmed
by several kings, the last known confirmation being
in 1537. (fn. 80) In 1410 two shops, several stalls and the
tolls were held by William Whatden. (fn. 81) In the mid-15th century the tolls and stallage of the market
were still farmed out; there was no certain return,
but in the year to which the record referred, it was
worth 8d. (fn. 82) A detailed rental of a century later (fn. 83)
does not mention a market or fair. Aubrey attributed the decline of the market to a fire in the town,
and said that the market at Lavington had prospered owing to the decay of Ashton. (fn. 84) Two attempts
were made to revive the market in the 18th century.
In 1756 it was announced that it was 'to be continued for ever for all sorts of corn, grain, cattle, meat,
fowls and all sorts of provisions'. In 1766 the promoters reminded the public of the penalties against
forestalling and ingrossing corn, and also assured
it that the roads to Steeple Ashton were repaired,
but all in vain. (fn. 85) The fair was still being held
in 1625, when its suspension for that year was
ordered to prevent the spread of plague. (fn. 86) In 1770 it
was held on 2 September for the sale of cheese, (fn. 87)
and in 1831, when it was said to be inconsiderable,
it was held on 18 September. (fn. 88)
The market 'cross' stands on the village green.
It consists of a stepped base surmounted by a short
circular column, which is crowned by a square stone
block with a sundial on each face and a ball finial
with wrought iron cross over. The date 1679 is
carved on it and an inscription states that it was set
up in 1071. The structure as it stands is probably of
the late 17th century. (fn. 89)
MILLS.
There were three mills within the manor
of Steeple Ashton in 1086. (fn. 90) In 1340 there were
also three, (fn. 91) at Bradley, Littleton, and 'La Lese'. (fn. 92)
The mill at Littleton was a copyhold of the manor.
It was held in 1340 by Thomas Shepherd and
called Stikeberd's Mill from a former tenant. (fn. 93) A
hundred years later the mill was held by Christine
Passion. (fn. 94) In 1494 the abbess let the mill to Robert
Long for 95 years, but he later assigned his lease
to Anthony Passion. Anthony Passion settled it on
his wife Edith, who married George Drinkwater
as her second husband, and a succession of disputes
followed between Drinkwater and William Passion,
Anthony's son. After William's death the dispute
was carried on by John Wychewell and Simon
Sloper, successively husbands of his widow
Marion. (fn. 95) Meanwhile the freehold of the mill, and
of certain lands near it, had been granted away by
the Crown in 1551 to Sir Thomas Wrothe. (fn. 96) By
1604 it belonged to Thomas Somner who at his
death, in 1631, left the mills called Passion's Mills
and various lands in Littleton to his brother
Edward. (fn. 97) The mill was described as a fulling and
grist mill in the 16th century, (fn. 98) and Thomas Somner
as a clothier c. 1608. (fn. 99) In 1652 the mill, described
as 2 fulling mills and a grist mill under one roof, and
some 44 a. of land, were settled on Edward's son
Thomas when he married Agnes Blagden. Thomas
died c. 1668; in 1678 his son Thomas married Anne,
daughter of Christopher Bennett of Steeple Ashton.
At his death without issue in 1699 he left the mill
and land to Thomas Somner Hippesley, son of his
sister Joan by Robert Hippesley of Wanborough.
Hippesley died without issue in 1731, leaving as
heir Richard Goddard of Swindon, who only survived him a year. Leaving no issue, Goddard was
succeeded by his brother Pleydell, who also died
childless in 1742. (fn. 1) He is the last member of the
family known to have held the mill; by 1780 it
belonged to Ambrose Awdry of Seend, a member
of a family closely related to the Goddards. (fn. 2) In 1790
it was thoroughly repaired at a cost of over £300;
it was then called by its modern name of Littleton
Wood Mill. (fn. 3) Shortly afterwards it passed to
Thomas Naish, a Trowbridge clothier, whose introduction of shearing frames led to its destruction by
a group of shearmen from Trowbridge in 1803. (fn. 4) By
1820 it had passed to the Kennet and Avon Canal
Company, and was held on lease by Mrs. Freelove
Noad. (fn. 5) Since then the mill has been occupied by
successive members of the Noad family. Trading
as J. and J. Noad, the firm uses this mill and others
at Seend Head for the production of flour and
compound feeds for farm stock. In 1961 water power
was still used to drive the milling machinery by
means of a turbine. (fn. 6)
In the mid-15th century John Tynny held a
watermill and ⅓ virgate of land, which had
formerly been held by Roger Tynny, as a copyhold
of the manor of Steeple Ashton. (fn. 7) A century later
the mill then called Tynny's Mill was held by Robert
Hancock and Walter his brother. (fn. 8) The mill was
variously called Hancock's Mill, Tynny's Mill, or
Tinhead Mill in the early 17th century; it lay at the
northern end of Ashton Normead and Tinhead
Normead, in the position of the modern Ashton
Mill Farm. (fn. 9) The freehold of the mill must have
been granted by the Crown to the Brouncker
family. In 1597 Martha Brouncker, widow, and
Henry Brouncker conveyed it to Roger Blagden the
younger, (fn. 10) and in 1606 he conveyed it to Edward
Bromwich. In 1629 Bromwich's widow Margaret,
who had remarried, claimed the reversion of the
mill after the death of William Hancock. (fn. 11) By 1688
the freehold had passed to John Torksey, clerk,
who then conveyed it to William Gilbert, (fn. 12) of
Maddington. In 1700 Gilbert sold the mill and
about 45 a. of land near it to John Axford of Erlestoke. At his death in 1704 Axford left it to his son,
another John, who in 1762 sold the property to
Gifford Warriner of Conock in Chirton. It descended in that family until it was sold to the Longs
of Rood Ashton in 1834. (fn. 13) The building was
demolished to make way for the airfield. (fn. 14)
There was a windmill in Steeple Ashton in
1371. (fn. 15) In the mid-16th century a cottage occupied
its site, which was probably east of Mudmead
Lane, (fn. 16) at the place called Windmill Furlong in
1841. (fn. 17) Another windmill no doubt existed in
Hinton, giving a name to Windmill Fields west of
the village, (fn. 18) but no mention of it has been
found.
CHURCHES.
A church at Steeple Ashton is first
mentioned in 1252, in terms which imply that there
had long been one in the village. (fn. 19) Semington has
been a chapelry of Steeple Ashton since the Middle
Ages; there was a chaplain there in 1370, (fn. 20) and the
15th-century chapel retains an inscribed stone
which is probably of the 13th century. Another
ancient chapel, which gave its name to Rood,
formerly Chapel Ashton, existed in the parish, but
nothing is known of any institutional relationship
to the parish church. (fn. 21) West Ashton was made a
separate ecclesiastical district in 1847. (fn. 22)
The rectory of Steeple Ashton had been appropriated by the Abbess of Romsey before 1252, by
virtue of a papal grant. (fn. 23) The advowson had no
doubt belonged to the nuns since before the Conquest. The first recorded presentation of a vicar was
in 1338, and successive abbesses presented until the
Dissolution with only two exceptions, when Sir
Walter Hungerford in 1490, and Robert Foster in
1538, presented with their permission. (fn. 24) The
advowson was alienated to Sir Thomas Seymour in
the same way as the manor. (fn. 25) After his forfeiture
it was retained by the Crown until the early 17th
century. James I presented George Webb in 1605,
but in 1609 Webb, dedicating a sermon to Sir
James Ley, spoke of him as being 'lately seized with
the patronage to which . . ., though unworthy, I
owe myself and my service'. (fn. 26) In spite of this, Sir
James did not hold the advowson at his death in
1629 (fn. 27) and Charles I presented at the next vacancy
in 1636. (fn. 28) Charles II presented in 1661, (fn. 29) but by
1663 the advowson had passed to Sir Samuel Jones,
who presented in that year. (fn. 30) By 1676 it had passed
to John Martyn, who presented then and in 1684
and 1688. (fn. 31) By 1697 it had been bought by Drue
Drury of Riddlesworth Hall (Norf.), who at his
death in the following year left the advowson and
rectory to Magdalene College, Cambridge, to found
a travelling fellowship for a 'gentleman's son of
Norfolk'. The Martyn family evidently reserved
the next presentation, for the vacancy which
occurred in 1747 was filled by Samuel Martyn of
Chippenham. (fn. 32) The advowson is still owned by
Magdalene College.
In 1291 the church of Ashton was valued at
£40, of which £13 6s. 8d. was the value of the vicarage. (fn. 33) In 1535 the gross value of the vicarage alone
was £30 4s., but various payments, including
£6 10s. for a chaplain at Semington, reduced its
net value to £10 12s. 6d. (fn. 34) By 1698 it was estimated
that the vicarage was worth £150 a year and the
rectorial tithes £100 a year. (fn. 35) In 1831 the average net
income of the vicar was £852 a year, of which he
paid £100 to the curate of Semington. (fn. 36)
Before 1252 all the great tithes had apparently
been taken by Romsey Abbey, but then the great
tithes of 'Gulde Ashton', Ashton Dunstanville,
and West Ashton were awarded to the vicar. (fn. 37) It
was probably the custom to lease out the rectorial
tithes, at least of the outlying parts of the manor.
In 1410 Thomas Flower of Littleton took a lease
of the great tithes of Semington for ten years at an
annual rent of 16 marks. (fn. 38) In 1538 the rectory and
tithes of Steeple Ashton were leased to Peter
Westbrook for 70 years at £13 6s. 8d. a year. (fn. 39) This
lease may have been resumed, since c. 1550 Henry
Long held the parsonage for £20 a year. (fn. 40) In 1561
the Crown leased the rectory to Nicholas Morgan
for 21 years at the same rent, (fn. 41) and the lease to him
was renewed for three lives in 1582. (fn. 42) It was settled
on Morgan's widow, Christian, who had remarried
Anthony Garnons, in 1589. (fn. 43) In 1588 a lease in
reversion for 21 years was granted to Edward
Bunyan. (fn. 44) In 1606 the rectory was granted by the
Crown in fee to Sir John Ramsey. (fn. 45) After this its
descent is not certain. The rectory and advowson
were included in settlements of the Longs of Rood
Ashton several times between 1615 and 1641, (fn. 46) but
they never exercised the advowson, and neither was
mentioned among the possessions of Gifford Long
in 1635. (fn. 47) What probably happened was that the
rectorial tithes became divided among several
owners during this period, and that the Longs
owned a part. In 1643 Edward Long and Thomas
Long conveyed tithes in Semington and Steeple
Ashton to George Keate, and in 1647 Keate
conveyed them to Anthony and John Martyn. (fn. 48)
In 1663 the tithes of Semington were settled
on Anthony Martyn the younger. (fn. 49) Other tithes,
in Semington and West Ashton, were in 1667
conveyed by George Lowe to Thomas Bythesea. (fn. 50)
It is probable, however, that a large part
of the rectorial tithes came to be concentrated
in the Martyn family of Great Hinton, and that
they sold the Steeple Ashton part of them
with the advowson to Drue Drury (see above).
They retained the great tithes of Hinton, however,
which passed with Anne, daughter and sole heir of
John Martyn of Hinton, on her marriage to Richard
Long (d. 1760). (fn. 51) The great tithes of Semington
may have passed to the Longs in the same way. But
it is only when they were commuted in 1841 that
the distribution of the great tithes becomes clear.
They were then mainly divided into three roughly
equal parts. Magdalene College owned those of
about 2,130 a., all in Steeple Ashton; Walter Long
all the great tithes of Hinton and Semington and
35 a. in Steeple Ashton, about 1,920 a. in all; and
the vicar almost all the great tithes of West Ashton
and 283 a. in Steeple Ashton, (fn. 52) about 2,270 a. in all.
The Magdalene tithes were commuted for £363 10s.
and the Long tithes for £310; the vicar's were included with his small tithes (see below). (fn. 53) The
great and small tithes of about 60 a. lying near
Trowbridge were owned by the Rector of Trowbridge, and had been since at least the 17th century.
It is probable that the customary payment of 4s.
yearly paid by the rector to the Vicar of Steeple
Ashton was a composition for these tithes. (fn. 54) This
payment was imposed on the rectors of Trowbridge
in 1252. (fn. 55)
In 1252 the whole of the glebe, with a house,
which had formerly belonged to the rector, was
assigned to the vicar, while the former vicar's glebe
was all assigned to the abbess except for two
acres. (fn. 56) In 1340 rectorial glebe, amounting to
7 houses and about 70 a., was held by seven bond
tenants, (fn. 57) and it was still held by tenants in the
mid-15th century (fn. 58) and c. 1540. (fn. 59) Its subsequent
history or occupation is not known. In 1841 the
glebe of Magdalene College amounted to only
about 4 acres. (fn. 60)
In 1252 the vicar was allotted all the small tithes
of the whole parish as well as the great tithes
described above, (fn. 61) and continued to own them,
except those belonging to the Rector of Trowbridge,
until the 19th century. In 1841 the whole of the
vicar's tithes were commuted for £920. (fn. 62) In 1604 the
vicar's glebe consisted of an orchard and two
gardens, a close containing 1½ a. and 2 a. in the
common-field at Oathill, but in 1671 and 1704 only
1 a. in Oathill was mentioned. (fn. 63) In 1841 the vicar
had about 16 a. of glebe. (fn. 64)
In 1252 it was ordered that the vicar should have
two chaplains continually with him, to serve the
church at his own expense. (fn. 65) In 1514 Walter Lucas
left money to the three priests serving in the church
of Ashton. (fn. 66) Probably one of these served the chapel
at Semington where there was a chaplain by at
least 1370. (fn. 67) In 1470 a dispute arose between the
Vicar of Steeple Ashton and the inhabitants of
Semington and Littleton about the cost of services
there, and the bishop ordered that the vicar should,
himself or by a suitable chaplain, celebrate mass
and vespers every Sunday and feast day. For this
the inhabitants were to pay 20s. a year over and
above other dues, and to find all needful things
except bread and wine. (fn. 68) Semington had its own
churchwardens and managed its own affairs, probably at least from the date of this award, and
certainly by the mid-16th century, and only paid
the annual dues to the Vicar of Steeple Ashton. (fn. 69)
The provision of a separate curate for Semington
only ceased between the two World Wars. (fn. 70) John
Carpenter, vicar 1428–9, a much beneficed clerk
who later became Bishop of Worcester, is unlikely
to have resided. (fn. 71) During the period covered by
the early churchwardens' account book, 1543–1668,
most vicars seem to have been resident. (fn. 72) George
Webb, vicar 1605–36, held a cure at Bath from 1621,
but was frequently at vestries in Steeple Ashton
after that date. He was made Bishop of Limerick in
1634, and was the author of a number of sermons
and theological works, the best known being The
Practice of Quietness. (fn. 73) Henry Carpenter was vicar
throughout the Interregnum, but his successor,
Gabriel Sanger, was ejected in 1662, and became a
presbyterian. (fn. 74) After 1698, when the advowson
was obtained by Magdalene College, vicars had
to be unmarried, (fn. 75) but the rule was relaxed after
1870, A. O. Hartley (1870–89) being the first married
vicar. (fn. 76) In 1783 the vicar resided in Surrey because
of ill-health. His curate lived in the village, but not
in the vicarage itself. He performed Sunday
services at Steeple Ashton morning and afternoon,
and at Semington at 1.30 p.m., and also held extra
services on saints' and red letter days and during
Lent. From 30 to 50 people received the Sacrament
four times a year. (fn. 77) Of Samuel Hey, vicar 1787–
1828, it was said that 'the peculiarity of his dress
and the simplicity of his manners had gained for
him the title of The Hermit', and that he was 'a
father to his parish'. (fn. 78)
The church of ST. MARY THE VIRGIN consists of a clerestoried nave, chancel, north and
south aisles, square western tower, and north and
south porches. Both aisles are extended to form
chapels at either end, the western ones being the
full width of the tower and the eastern ones corresponding to the first two bays of the chancel. (fn. 79) The
dedication is first recorded in 1281. (fn. 80) The tower is
thought to be of the early 15th century; it is of four
stages, embattled, and decorated with crocketed
pinnacles and gargoyles, and has a row of five
niches on the second stage of the west front. It was
formerly surmounted by a stone spire built c. 1480–
1500 (see below), (fn. 81) which, when it was measured in
1606, was found to be 32 yards higher than the tower,
making together the remarkable height of about
186ft. An inscription in the church records how
the spire was struck by lightning in July 1670,
and, just as repairs were being completed, struck
again the following October. Two men working on
it were killed, and the body of the church severely
damaged, so that no attempt to rebuild the spire
was made. The parts of the aisles which flank the
tower are also of the early 15th century, although
their exteriors were remodelled when the rest of
the church was rebuilt.
Another inscription in the church, copied from
an earlier one, records that it was built between
1480 and 1500, the north aisle at the cost of Robert
Long, the south aisle at the cost of Walter Lucas,
and the rest of the church and steeple at the cost
of the parishioners. This refers to a complete
rebuilding of the nave and the two aisles east of the
tower arch. The part played by Long and Lucas in
building the aisles is also attested by Leland. (fn. 82) Long
in his will of 1501 ordered that the works begun on
the north side of the church should be completed
at his expense. (fn. 83) Before his death he had agreed
with Thomas Lovell of Trowbridge, freemason, to
do the work for £80, but at Lovell's death £49 was
still owing. (fn. 84) Long's widow's second husband,
William Morgan, ordered in his will in 1508 that
the works begun by Long should be completed. (fn. 85)
The work done during these years is in an elaborate Perpendicular style with good proportions and
unusually vigorous moulding and carving both
internally and externally. The nave is of four bays,
and has a lofty clerestory with large four-light
transomed windows, and a five-light blocked
window in the east gable above the chancel arch.
The nave arcades are supported on composite piers
with moulded capitals and high moulded bases. It
was apparently intended to build a stone vault over
the nave: stone springers rise from the capitals of
the piers, and preparations were made outside to
build flying buttresses, two pairs of which were completed, one at each end. The present roof, however, is
of oak with plaster panels in a pattern of lierne vaulting; its four pendants and four bosses are elaborately carved. It may originally have been contemporary with the nave, but it is probable that it had
either to be extensively repaired or rebuilt in 1670.
The aisles and eastern chapels are vaulted in stone
with elaborate bosses; the vaulting springs from
canopied niches supported by vigorously carved
figure corbels. Each bay has a four-light window. The
bay to the west of the south porch was evidently
damaged by the fall of the spire, and the rebuilt
vaulting carries the initials of the churchwardens
for 1670. A carving of the Assumption in the
eastern chapel of the north aisle shows that it was
the Lady Chapel. The south porch has a room above
and a stone vaulted ceiling at the lower stage; the
north porch is of one story only. The external parapets are embattled and decorated with crocketed
pinnacles rising from the buttresses. Those on the
aisles and south porch have octagonal panelled shafts;
smaller pinnacles spring from the first offset of the
buttresses. There is a fine display of grotesque
gargoyles.
The chancel of the earlier church remained untouched in the late 15th century apart from the
opening of the arches into the aisle chapels. It had
a two-light window to the south and a steeply
pitched roof which only just cleared the chapel
arches. It was pulled down in 1853 and a higher
and slightly longer chancel built to a design by
Henry Clutton (fn. 86) in a style similar to the remainder
of the church, the expense being borne by Magdalene College. (fn. 87)
The church retains considerable fragments of
medieval glass. The tradition remains in the village
that the glass was broken after the battle of Roundway in 1643, when Sir William Waller stabled his
horses in the church, but it seems more likely that
it was two years later, when Waller's army is known
to have been in the district. In 1648 a heavy church
rate was levied to repair the glass of the church. (fn. 88)
There are many monuments, but none earlier than
the 17th century. A small monument to Deborah
Marks (d. 1730/1) in the north aisle has been made
on the back of a copper plate for a Protestant
engraving. This shows a Frenchman, a Pope, and
the Devil outweighed in the balance by a Bible, with
Queen Anne and others looking on. Only part
of the design remains. (fn. 89)
The font, which stands in the chapel south of the
tower at the west end of the south aisle, formerly
called the Beach chapel, was given by Richard
Crawley, vicar 1828–69, in memory of his mother. (fn. 90)
It replaced a hexagonal font with quatrefoil panels. (fn. 91)
A new pulpit was provided in 1605, (fn. 92) and remained
in the church until the 19th century, (fn. 93) when it was
replaced by one in memory of Richard Crawley.
In 1514 Walter Lucas left money to buy organs for
the church. (fn. 94) In 1589 the parish had 181 organ
pipes in hand, although apparently dismantled, but
in 1620 old pipes and fragments of the organs were
sold. (fn. 95) In the early 19th century an orchestra played
in a gallery at the west end of the church, but in 1835
a barrel organ was placed there. This organ was
moved to the former Lady Chapel when the gallery
was removed in 1868. (fn. 96) In 1877 it was replaced by
the present organ, by Bryceson Bros. and Ellis,
which was given by Charlotte Long. In 1883 a fund
was set up to maintain the organ and to pay an
organist. (fn. 97)
In 1543 the church had 5 great bells, a small bell,
and a clock. (fn. 98) Three bells were recast by John
Wallis of Salisbury in 1607, and he recast the tenor
in 1616. (fn. 99) In 1666 Henry Long agreed to set up a
sixth bell, for which he was given £18 and the
sanctus bell. (fn. 1) Four bells were recast in the 18th
century, another in 1889, and the only survivor of
1607, with one of 1772, were recast again in
1915. Another sanctus bell was provided in 1809. (fn. 2)
Finally in 1959 the whole peal was recast. (fn. 3)
In 1495 Walter Lucas left a missal, a pair of
vestments, and a chalice to the altar of St. John
the Baptist in Steeple Ashton church. (fn. 4) In 1501
Robert Long left a chalice, a mass book of paper
in print, and 2 chasubles. (fn. 5) In 1543 the church
owned a chalice, 5 pairs of vestments, and 3
copes. (fn. 6) In 1553 the Commissioners left the chalice
and took 4 oz. of silver. (fn. 7) In 1581 18s. was
paid 'to exchange the chalice into a communion
cup', (fn. 8) and this remodelled chalice still survives.
By 1625 the parish owned a pewter flagon, and two
more flagons were bought in 1636. (fn. 9) Amy Long left
a second chalice to the church in 1649, (fn. 10) and this,
hall-marked 1650, also still survives. Besides the
two chalices, the plate now (1960) consists of a
paten and alms dish of 1699, given by Henry Long,
another paten of 1704, and a flagon of 1736. (fn. 11)
The parish registers begin in 1538 and are complete. (fn. 12) A volume of churchwardens' accounts covers
the period 1543–1668, with some years missing. (fn. 13)
The vicarage stands somewhat away from the
church. It appears to have been a stone-built hall
house, probably of the 15th century, consisting of a
one storied hall with a cross wing at its west end.
The screens passage across the west end of the
hall was entered by a moulded stone doorway with
a two centred arch and a projecting porch, which
still survive. The hall block retains much of its
original roof of four bays, with three surviving
arch-braced collar-beam trusses and some curved
wind-braces. The division of the hall into two
stories and the insertion of a staircase do not
appear to have taken place until c. 1700, perhaps
after the living had been acquired by Magdalene
College. The west wing was also remodelled then.
There is no indication of a corresponding wing to
the east. A large extension was built there c. 1840,
faced with ashlar masonry, the stone cut in pieces the
size of bricks. Ellis Wright, vicar 1538–69, left 5 volumes of Chrysostom's works, printed at Basle in 1530,
to his successors. (fn. 14) Samuel Hey, vicar 1787–1828,
left 1,139 books and some articles of furniture for
the use of future vicars. (fn. 15) Most of the volumes were
destroyed for salvage during the Second World
War, but the works of Chrysostom and about 250
volumes of Hey's books survive. (fn. 16)
A church house is first mentioned c. 1550 when
it was a copyhold estate of the manor (fn. 17) and expenditure for its repair occurs frequently in the early
churchwardens' accounts. It was usually held from
the church by two or three tenants on lease, and
may have incorporated in it the shop for which
the church received rent. (fn. 18) In 1662 Matthew
Hancock gave his estate in it to the poor of the
parish, (fn. 19) but by 1699 it had fallen down. (fn. 20)
The chapel of ST. GEORGE at Semington consists of nave, chancel, north porch, and south
vestry. The dedication is first mentioned in 1470. (fn. 21)
The nave and porch are of the 15th century, and the
chancel of the first part of the 16th. It was perhaps
in the 18th century that a thin square tower was
built apparently resting on the roof of the chancel
where it joins the nave. (fn. 22) This was removed in
1860, when the east and west walls were rebuilt, a
small bell-turret built at the west gable, and the
interior completely renewed. The new east and
west windows are in the 14th century style. All the
roofs were renewed, and a new font provided. The
octagonal vestry was added in 1877. (fn. 23) Built into the
porch is a stone with an incised inscription in old
French offering pardon to whomever should pray
for Philippa de Salcest (Sauser). Its date is probably the 13th century. There are several monuments
including one in coloured marbles to the Blagden
family by Ford of Bath. (fn. 24) The chapel had two bells
in 1553; the present one, in a turret at the west
end, was recast about 1850 from a pre-Reformation
one, (fn. 25) which was traditionally said to have come
from the chapel at Bulkington. (fn. 26) The plate consists
of a chalice and paten of 1579, another paten of
1697, and a cruet-shaped flagon. (fn. 27) The registers
of the chapelry begin in 1586. The organ is by
Sweetland of Bath.
In 1597 Arthur Swayne and another conveyed a
house and 8 a. of land in Semington to Edward
Long and other feoffees, the profit to be used to
maintain and repair the chapel, and to relieve the
poor of the chapelry. It is not clear that Swayne
was the donor and it seems more likely that the
chapelry raised money and bought the land from
him. The house was known as the church house.
In 1704 a chamber in it was reserved for the use of
the curate. (fn. 28) In 1833, described as an old thatched
dwelling, it was let to the overseers. In 1859 it was
given to be the site of the school. Part of the land
was sold to the Kennet and Avon Canal Company
c. 1800 and the proceeds invested. The profits of
the lands were devoted by successive feoffees to
the maintenance of the chapel, and did away with
the necessity for a church rate. After 1779 surpluses arose, which were used for various charitable
purposes, such as apprenticing children and assisting
emigrants. In 1861 some stock was sold to pay for
the restoration of the chapel. In 1891 the vicar of
Steeple Ashton and the chapelwardens of Semington were made trustees. In 1901 the property
consisted of about 8 a. and £167 stock, producing
an income of about £29. (fn. 29) The income was about the
same in 1932. (fn. 30) In 1910 Frances E. Arden left £150
to the curate and churchwardens of Semington
to keep her grave, and that of her parents, in repair,
and to keep the churchyard grass tidy. (fn. 31)
There was a chapel at West Ashton by 1307, when
the name Chapel Ashton for an estate there first
occurs. In the later Middle Ages the more common
form became the modern Rood Ashton, showing
that it was noted for its rood. (fn. 32) This is supported
by the only known reference to it, apart from its
occurrence in the place name, when in 1533 Joan
Try left to the chapel of Rood Ashton and to the
rood there a pax of silver and two ells of cloth for
the altar. (fn. 33) The chapel is traditionally said to have
stood behind Rood Ashton house, (fn. 34) and the site was
still called Church Hill in 1841. (fn. 35) Some remnants of
a raised and levelled plot of ground, which was
the probable site, can still be traced, although
grown over with trees.
The church of ST. JOHN THE EVANGELIST,
West Ashton, was built in 1846, chiefly at the cost
of Walter Long. (fn. 36) It was designed by Wyatt and
Brandon, (fn. 37) and consists of nave, chancel, and
northern tower with small spire. It contains a
number of 19th-century monuments, particularly
of the Long family, for whom a vault was made in
1882. (fn. 38) The one bell is of the same date as the church,
as is the chalice; the paten is an 18th-century piece
presented later. (fn. 39) The original registers are still
in use. (fn. 40)
In 1846 Walter Long gave a rent-charge of £100
payable out of lands in West Ashton to provide a
stipend for the minister there. At the same time
about £200 stock was bought with subscriptions
to provide for the maintenance of the church and
churchyard. (fn. 41) The Vicar of Steeple Ashton also
set apart £100 from tithes to augment the stipend. (fn. 42)
The advowson of the church belonged to the Long
family until their estate was broken up in 1930,
when it was bought by Canford School (Dors.). (fn. 43)
About 1944 it passed to the Martyrs Memorial
Trust, which still held it in 1962. (fn. 44) Since 1962 the
church has been held in plurality with that at
Heywood. (fn. 45)
NONCONFORMITY.
No return was made for
Steeple Ashton to Bishop Compton's 'Census' in
1676; in Semington there were 207 conformists
and 2 dissenters. (fn. 46) In 1704 the house and barn of
James Smith were licensed as a meeting-house for
Quakers, but the group does not seem to have
survived. (fn. 47) A house at East Town was licensed for
Independents in 1767, and between 1815 and 1817
houses at West Ashton, Steeple Ashton, and Hinton
were all licensed for Independents by B. Kent,
minister of the Tabernacle at Trowbridge; that at
Steeple Ashton was described as a chapel. (fn. 48) No
Independent meeting in the parish was mentioned
in 1829. (fn. 49)
Baptist meetings were licensed in 1825 at West
Ashton and Steeple Ashton, and another licence for
Steeple Ashton was granted in 1828. (fn. 50) No Baptist
congregation was mentioned either in 1829 or
1851, (fn. 51) but in 1864 a dwelling house facing the
green was taken over as a station of the Baptist
chapel at Bratton. (fn. 52) A Sunday school was started
in 1874. (fn. 53) The chapel finally closed c. 1940, and its
sale was authorised in 1947. (fn. 54) The building has
since been reconverted into a dwelling house.
In 1783 a few Methodists were meeting in a
labourer's house in Steeple Ashton; according to
the curate their number had decreased by 'some
hundreds' in the past few years. (fn. 55) Houses were
licensed for Methodist meetings at Steeple Ashton
and Semington in 1797, and one at West Ashton in
1798 may also have been for them. (fn. 56) In 1829 the
Steeple Ashton Methodists were meeting in a farm
house; there were 8 members and about 50 people
attended. (fn. 57) In 1851 one room of a dwelling-house
was used exclusively for worship. It afforded 120
sittings, and average congregations were about
100. (fn. 58) It was probably this group which built the
Primitive Methodist Chapel at the north end of
the village three years later. The plain brick building, dated 1854, can seat 130 worshippers, (fn. 59) and
was in 1963 still in use.
In 1829 the Methodists at Semington had 27
members and an average congregation of 80. (fn. 60) The
present chapel at Semington was built in 1884. (fn. 61)
The Wesleyans had 9 members at West Ashton in
1829, (fn. 62) but no congregation survived in 1851. (fn. 63)
In 1814 and 1822 houses at Hinton were licensed. (fn. 64) They may have been for Methodists, for
in 1829 a congregation with 5 members was meeting in the village. (fn. 65) By 1851 two congregations met
in the village. The Wesleyan Methodists had a
room used exclusively for worship, which could
accommodate 100; the average congregation was
about 20. Primitive Methodists met in an unoccupied cottage, with a congregation of similar size. (fn. 66)
Both congregations subsequently built small chapels, the Wesleyans c. 1864, and the Primitive
Methodists c. 1859. (fn. 67) In 1961 one remained in use.
In 1851 a congregation of Latter Day Saints met
in a room of a house in Steeple Ashton, an average
of about 50 attending the services. (fn. 68) The tradition
of these meetings still remains in the village. Part
of Nitt's Lane is nick-named God's Corner because
they used to meet there in a house now called Old
Chesils. (fn. 69)
PARISH GOVERNMENT.
The earliest recorded
meeting of the manor court of Steeple Ashton was
in 1262. (fn. 70) In 1370 it met four times a year, and
presentments were made by the homages of West
Ashton, Southwick, Lovemead, Semington, Littleton, Hinton, and Steeple Ashton. (fn. 71) By the end of
the 15th century it met only twice a year and Lovemead sent no homage. (fn. 72) The Abbess of Romsey's
court for the hundred also commonly met in the
village. (fn. 73)
There were two churchwardens for Steeple
Ashton in 1543, (fn. 74) and this number has no doubt
been general ever since. In 1570 the tithings of
Steeple Ashton, Hinton, and West Ashton each
had two collectors for the poor and two waymen. (fn. 75)
Apart from a volume of churchwardens' accounts
covering the period 1543–1668, (fn. 76) few parish
records remain.
SCHOOLS.
George Webb, vicar 1605–36, is said
to have kept a school in Steeple Ashton. (fn. 77) In 1779
John Hicks left £5 a year toward paying a schoolmaster to teach poor children nominated by the
vicar. (fn. 78) This was paid to a 'very ingenious and
diligent man' who already kept a private school in
the village. He taught reading, writing, arithmetic,
and mathematics, which he had acquired 'merely
by his own industry and application'. (fn. 79) In 1808
there were day schools for 76 children in the
parish. (fn. 80) In 1815 John Togwell bequeathed an
annuity of £50 to educate 30 boys and 20 girls of
Steeple Ashton and West Ashton, but he died
leaving insufficient estate to meet the charge.
Finally only £17 a year was received from 1824
onwards. (fn. 81) In 1819 the wife of the parish clerk
with 'proper assistants' taught 40 children, 4 of whom
were paid for by Hicks's charity and 16 paid for
and partly clothed by the vicar. It was then thought
that the poor had not sufficient means of education, (fn. 82)
but in 1833 it was difficult to persuade the parents
of children paid for by Hicks's bequest to keep
them at school even for the year which was the
normal period for receiving the charity. At that
time a man and his wife taught the children under
both charities, and took day scholars and boarders
as well. (fn. 83)
In 1835 78 boys and 34 girls attended, of whom
22 were paid for by the charities and 7 by the vicar.
There were also two small schools in the village
where another 39 children were paid for by their
parents. (fn. 84) They were probably the 'two dames'
schools of a humble kind' which still taught about
30 younger children in 1859. By then the village
school was accommodated in the present building,
which had been built about twenty years previously.
On the upper story 30 or 40 girls were taught by a
certificated mistress; they were 'remarkably neat
and cleanly' and 'very fairly instructed'. Below
40 boys under an uncertificated master were in less
satisfactory accommodation. (fn. 85) The school had been
affiliated to the National Society since at least
1846. (fn. 86) In 1899 the building and adjoining teacher's
house were conveyed by Walter Long to the vicar
and churchwardens. In 1903 about £16 10s. a year
was being paid to the school from Hicks's and
Togwell's charities. (fn. 87) Since 1941 senior children
have gone to school in Trowbridge; the junior
mixed and infants' school was given Aided status
after the Act of 1947.
In 1699 Thomas Somner of Wellow (Som.)
left £2 a year charged on lands at Littleton to provide for schooling of two poor boys from Semington. (fn. 88) By 1819 the number had increased to four
boys, but it is not clear whether they were taught
in the village. (fn. 89) By 1835, however, there were two
schools in Semington, where 24 boys and 18 girls
were taught, 8 of them at the cost of the vicar and
curate. (fn. 90) One of these was no doubt that attended
in 1833 by the charity children, again reduced to
two in number. (fn. 91) In 1859 30 children were taught
in a cottage room by an uncertificated mistress who
had, however, received some training, and it was
intended to build a new school in the coming
Spring. Another 30 children attended two dames'
schools. (fn. 92)
The village school built in 1859 near the chapel,
on land given by the chapel trustees, was affiliated
to the National Society by the terms of the gift. (fn. 93)
In 1900 average attendance was 58. (fn. 94) The senior
children were taken away in 1941. Controlled status
was granted to the school in 1949.
In 1819 there was a school in Steeple Ashton
parish where about 16 poor girls were taught and
partly clothed at the cost of the vicar, and a few
others at the expense of Mrs. Long of Rood
Ashton. (fn. 95) This school, no doubt, lay in West
Ashton. It still existed in 1835, when 9 boys and
16 girls attended, and at another, begun in 1833,
6 girls were paid for by their parents. (fn. 96) In 1846 a
new school was built on ground given by Walter
Long, and affiliated to the National Society. (fn. 97)
Within five years this school, under the guidance of
the Revd. F. H. Wilkinson, had attained a remarkable position, and was held up by the government
inspector as a model village school. In 1851 203
children attended the school, coming from the
village and two or three miles around and from
seven different parishes. Almost a quarter of these
were over 12 years old, and they included 'a considerable number of females nearly grown up to
womanhood, but sadly behind-hand in information'. Nineteen children lived in lodgings in the
parish so that they could attend. 'Nothing unusual'
was taught in the school and the inspector attributed its success to the intelligent manner in which
the children were taught and to the personal influence of the vicar. 'It is a family', he wrote, 'and
apparently a very happy one, with the clergyman
at its head. . . . his house is open to the children
after school hours and his heart always'. He also
noted the 'really remarkable' progress of the
younger children, and their 'tone of cheerful obedience', which made children educated there in
great request to be employed as servants. (fn. 98)
By 1859 success had overburdened the school so
much that the pupils from outside the parish had
been withdrawn to a new school instituted by
Wilkinson in Trowbridge. (fn. 99) About 40 children
remained at West Ashton, taught by an uncertificated mistress. (fn. 1) By 1899 average attendance was
58 children. (fn. 2) Senior children were withdrawn from
the school in 1941.
In 1835 there was a day school at Hinton, begun
in 1827, where 30 children were educated at the
cost of their parents. It still existed in 1841, but
nothing more is known of it. (fn. 3)
CHARITIES. (fn. 4)
In 1643 Samuel Martyn left 2 a.
of land to provide two coats and two gowns yearly
for four poor people from West Ashton and Steeple
Ashton. In the 19th century the rent was spent on
coats and gowns, which were distributed in rotation
to a list of beneficiaries. (fn. 5) In 1952 the income was
£7, which was distributed in vouchers. (fn. 6)
In 1633 Peter Crook gave £2 a year charged on
land at Tilshead to the poor of Steeple Ashton. In
1833 it had been the custom for many years to lay
it out in shirts given annually to the second poor of
the tithing. (fn. 7) By 1903 the rent charge was being
spent with the income of Poor's Stock (see
below).
By his will proved in 1720 John Brown left 4 a.
of land in Steeple Ashton to trustees, who were
to apply the profits for four poor honest Anglican
men, living within 3 furlongs of Steeple Ashton
Cross, over 45, and who had bred up families
without aid from the parish. He also left £200 to
acquire lands for the same purpose, which was used
to buy 8 a. of land at Bowerhill in Melksham. In
1833 the four beneficiaries, who were appointed
by the vicar, occupied the land in Steeple Ashton
themselves, while a rent of £17 from the land at
Bowerhill was divided between them. In 1903 the
charity was still administered in the same way. (fn. 8) The
lands were later let. In 1955 about £300 arising
from the sale of timber on the Bowerhill estate was
invested for the charity. (fn. 9) In 1952 the rent received
was £27, of which about £24 was divided between
the four beneficiaries. (fn. 10)
Several small sums given to the poor of Steeple
Ashton in the 16th century and later were consolidated, and in 1729 £25 was paid to the overseers,
the parish paying 25s. a year as interest. This sum,
known as Poor's Stock, was spent on garments for
the second poor until 1820, when it lapsed, but a
payment of £1 a year was revived in 1833. This was
disallowed by auditors in 1845, and a public subscription set on foot, from which £34 Consols was
bought. Since that time it has produced 17s. a year,
which has been spent with the income from
Crook's charity in providing calico, and later vouchers for cloth. (fn. 11)
In 1671 Henry Long left £20 for the benefit of
the poor of West Ashton, which was used in 1725
to buy 1 a. of meadow in Dodsmead. At inclosure
the charity was allotted 3½ a. of land near West
Ashton Hill, which in 1833 was being used as rentfree allotments by second poor. It was exchanged
for another piece in 1845. In 1903 it was still being
used in the same way. (fn. 12)
In 1737 Elizabeth Martyn left a close of 3 a.,
part of East Town Farm, to provide linen cloth for
poor women of East Town and West Ashton. The
field was, however, still regarded as part of the
farm, subject to a yearly charge of 40 ells of dowlas.
This was supplied by the owner to the parish
officers, who had it made into shirts for the second
poor, the recipients being chosen by the owner.
The charity was applied in this way until 1884, when
the charge was redeemed for £150 Consols. (fn. 13) Since
then the yearly income of £3 15s. has been laid out
in linen which is distributed at Christmas. (fn. 14)
A sum of £42, given by an unknown donor,
belonged to the parish officers of Hinton in 1786.
It was afterwards used to buy a cottage at Coldharbour; when this was sold in 1812, £60 was invested in Consols. A further sum was invested in
1817, making a stock of £135. The income, just
over £4 a year in 1833, was distributed among the
second poor of the tithing. (fn. 15) In 1951 it was over
£3, which was distributed among 7 old people. (fn. 16)
In 1852 George Tayler left £3,000 to found
charities in Edington and three other parishes, of
which Steeple Ashton was one. The provisions
there for the distribution of bread, the preaching of
a children's sermon, and the provision of buns for
the Sunday School, were the same as those for
Poulshot. (fn. 17) In 1906, when the whole charity was
reorganized, the Steeple Ashton charity was made
separate and allotted £469 stock. (fn. 18) In 1952 the income of over £12 was still being spent on the objects
prescribed by the founder. (fn. 19)
By his will proved in 1857 Thomas Milsom left
£100 for the benefit of Semington Sunday School
and to supply coal to poor people there. (fn. 20) By his
will proved in 1922 William Bruges of Semington
left £100 for supplying coal to the poor of the
village at Christmas. (fn. 21) A yearly sum of £1, whose
donor is unknown, is charged on land called the
Crofts at Semington. It is paid to the Vicar of
Steeple Ashton for a sermon preached at Semington on Good Friday. (fn. 22)