GANSTEAD
The hamlet of Ganstead is less than 1 km. north
of Hull, to which it is virtually joined by ribbon
development, and c. 2 km. south-east of Swine
village. The name, possibly meaning 'Gagni's
place or landing-place', is an Anglo-Scandinavian hybrid. (fn. 57) Of 809 a. (327 ha.), (fn. 58) Ganstead
civil parish was added to all of Wyton, almost
all of Bilton, and a little of Preston civil parishes
to form a new civil parish of Bilton in 1935. (fn. 59)
Ganstead's poll-tax payers in 1377 may have
been recorded under Bilton. (fn. 60) In 1672 Ganstead
had 11 houses assessed for hearth tax and one
was discharged. (fn. 61) From 58 in 1801, the population fluctuated upwards to stand at 101 in 1911
and 105 in 1931. (fn. 62)
GANSTEAD hamlet in the mid 19th century
comprised little more than six houses served by
a lane which became part of the main HullBridlington road. (fn. 63) Many bungalows were
strung along the main road and provided with
sewerage by the district council in the mid 20th
century, (fn. 64) and much of the road was replaced by
a straighter diversion in 1986. (fn. 65) The few buildings dating from before the present century
include a single-storeyed cottage with a lobby
entrance, of the early 18th century, and Ganstead Grange with its two lodges. (fn. 66) There was a
beerhouse at Ganstead in the 1750s, (fn. 67) and allotment gardens may have been provided in the
1890s. (fn. 68) The course of Ganstead Park Golf Club
was laid out on part of Old Hall farm and a
clubhouse built in 1975, and in the late 1980s
the course was enlarged to 18 holes and c. 36 ha.
(90 a.). (fn. 69)
MANOR AND OTHER ESTATES.
In 1066
Fran and Halfdan held GANSTEAD manor;
the 4-carucate estate had passed to Drew de
Bevrère by 1086, when his undertenant Albert
held it, (fn. 70) and it was later part of the Aumale fee,
which passed to the Crown, as heir to the counts
of Aumale, and thereafter to its grantees. (fn. 71)
Ganstead was held of the counts of Aumale
and their successors by the Suttons. Richard of
Sutton's tenancy was recorded in the mid 12th
century, and in 1196 Alan de Scruteville released
2½ carucates there to Richard's nephew, Amand
of Sutton. (fn. 72) Amand was succeeded by his son
Saer (fl. 1208) (fn. 73) and he probably by his son Saer
(d. perhaps in 1270) and certainly by the last
Saer's son Saer (d. by 1290), who was mesne
lord of all 4 carucates. (fn. 74) Ganstead descended to
Saer's son, John Sutton, Lord Sutton (d. by
1338), of whom it was held as 1/20 knight's fee, (fn. 75)
and from him, with Sutton on Hull, to the
family's heirs. (fn. 76)
The Suttons' tenants at Ganstead were the
Twyers. The estate which William de la Twyer
bought there in the mid 13th century (fn. 77) was presumably the manor, which Peter de la Twyer
(d. by 1304) held; it then included 2¼ carucates
of demesne land. Peter was succeeded by his son
William, (fn. 78) who was named as joint lord of neighbouring Wyton in 1316, presumably for Ganstead. (fn. 79) William (d. by 1334) left a son William, (fn. 80)
but in 1347 the tenant was evidently Robert de
la Twyer, who was then granted free warren
at Ganstead. (fn. 81) William Twyer of Ganstead,
esquire, recorded in 1432, presumably had the
manor. (fn. 82) From Peter Twyer (d. by 1500) (fn. 83) it
descended to Joan, daughter of a Peter or Robert
Twyer, and her husband, William St. Quintin
(d. 1529). The St. Quintins' son or grandson
John (fn. 84) (d. 1572) left the manor house and its
closes to his son-in-law Matthew St. Quintin
and grandson Gabriel and the rest of the estate
to his daughters Margery Monkton, Jane or Joan
Dolman, and Margaret Noddall. (fn. 85) The manor
was partitioned in 1583. (fn. 86) Margery's share descended to her son William Monkton, (fn. 87) who sold
it in lots in the 1590s. (fn. 88) The Dolmans' estate
descended to William Dolman, who sold it in
1599 or 1600 to his brother-in-law Robert Constable (d. 1637). (fn. 89)
In 1606 Gabriel St. Quintin sold his share of
the manor, possibly by then increased to a
moiety, to Thomas Beverley, who conveyed it
to his son John in 1607. (fn. 90) John sold the estate,
as Ganstead manor, to Edward Richardson and
others in 1624. (fn. 91) Richardson died in 1631, and
his son William (fn. 92) sold the manor to Henry
Barnard in 1652. (fn. 93) Henry was succeeded by Sir
Edward Barnard (d. 1688) (fn. 94) and he in turn by
his son Edward (d. by 1718) and Edward's heirs,
who held undivided shares. Besides the manor,
the estate then comprised a 70-a. farm. Edward
Barnard's daughter Margaret married Lovelace
Gilby, (fn. 95) and by the mid 18th century Ganstead
manor was divided between the heirs of their
daughter Margaret. The manor was reunited by
purchases made in 1752, 1763, and 1764 by
Jonathan Midgley (d. 1778). (fn. 96) His widow Mary
sold the manor to Jonathan's sister Margaret
Gilby in 1778. Mrs. Gilby (d. 1790) devised it
for life to her sister Mary Midgley (d. c. 1810),
with remainder to Jonathan's daughters Anna
and Mary. (fn. 97) Anna died in 1795, (fn. 98) and Mary, who
married William Beverley, evidently inherited
her share. (fn. 99) In 1826 the Beverleys' son R. M.
Beverley sold the manor and the farm to James
Walker, (fn. 1) who in 1829, just before his death,
settled them on his son James. (fn. 2) In 1847 James
Walker sold the estate to J. F. Butter (d. 1866),
and in 1867 Sarah Dooby bought it, then of
117 a., from Butter's trustees. (fn. 3) W. J. Atkinson
bought the manor and farm in 1877, (fn. 4) and his
trustees held the estate until 1965, when the
125-a. Manor farm was sold to Foxton Farmers
Ltd., the owner in 1995. (fn. 5)
The manor house stood on the west side of
the Hull-Bridlington road until its demolition
before 1752. A farmhouse had by then been built
near the southern boundary on land inclosed in
1602; (fn. 6) it was called White House in 1889 and
later Manor Farm. (fn. 7) Possible earlier chief houses
are discussed below.
The Monktons' share of the manor may have
included Turmer Hall, which stands near the
southern township boundary: in 1595 one of
their sales was made to Robert Taylor of
Turmer Hall, perhaps the tenant. (fn. 8) Turmer Hall
evidently belonged to Richard Atkinson in
1609, (fn. 9) was sold with land in Bilton by Gervase
Bosville to Robert Gunby in 1682, (fn. 10) and later
passed to William Burton (fn. 11) (d. 1752) and then
in turn to his sons William (d. 1764) and Robert
(d. 1802). (fn. 12) Henry Burton and others, evidently
Robert Burton's devisees, sold Turmer Hall and
another farmhouse with 387 a. in Ganstead and
30 a. in Coniston to William Todd, a Hull merchant, in 1832. (fn. 13) Todd (d. by 1838) left a life
estate to his son W. G. Todd, with remainder
to the latter's daughter Helen, (fn. 14) who as Helen
Pechell had succeeded by 1889. In 1914 Mrs.
Pechell sold the 159-a. Ganstead farm to J. R.
Woods, who bought Turmer Hall and 263 a.
from the Pechells in 1923. (fn. 15) Woods died in 1930
and his widow Eliza probably by 1949, when the
trustees sold Turmer Hall with 193 a. to J. A.
Foxton (d. 1954). In 1964 Foxton's widow Edith
and the other executors vested the farm in B. P.
Foxton, who still had it in 1995. (fn. 16)
The east range of the present Turmer Hall
probably dates from the 17th century but the
building was enlarged and remodelled with
additional, parallel ranges and Tudor-style
"çades by W. G. Todd in 1840. (fn. 17)
By the 17th century much of the manorial
estate belonged to John Herron, and his
daughter Elizabeth Robinson had houses called
Hall Garth and Twyers house and c. 300 a. at
Ganstead in 1699. (fn. 18) Part of her estate passed to
Stephen Oates (d. 1743), who devised Hall
Garth and over 170 a. to his great-nephew
Robert Bee. Marmaduke Brown bought Bee's
estate in 1750, (fn. 19) and it evidently descended c.
1785 to Marmaduke Brown the younger and c.
1795 to Thomas Brown, who bought c. 45 a.
more in 1803. From Thomas (d. by 1831), the
estate passed to another Thomas Brown (fn. 20) (d.
1841) and then to that Thomas's sisters Mary
and Elizabeth, who married respectively Haddon Trigg and C. S. Parker, both Hull merchants. (fn. 21) The 220-a. estate was sold in lots in
1875. Charles Wells, a Hull shipowner and coal
merchant, bought Old Hall and 150 a. (fn. 22) In 1909
the mortgagees sold the farm to T. H. Perry (d.
1940), a Hull dairy farmer, who was succeeded
by Annie E. Newlove and Emmie Butler as joint
tenants. In 1948 Mrs. Newlove sold her interest
to Mrs. Butler, from whom Longdales Development Co. Ltd. bought the farm in 1971. (fn. 23) Some
of the land was later used for a golf course and
all still belonged the company in 1994. (fn. 24)
Ganstead manor house, named as Ganstead
Hall in 1573, (fn. 25) presumably stood where Ganstead Old Hall did until its demolition in the
late 1980s; an earlier chief house may have stood
nearby on a formerly-moated site, part of which
survived on the west side of the new road in
1995. (fn. 26) Ganstead Hall evidently lost its association with the manor after that estate's fragmentation in the late 16th century. (fn. 27) Ganstead Old
Hall, known as Hall Garth in the 18th century, (fn. 28)
was used as a farmhouse by the mid 19th century. It was apparently the Parkers who c. 1847
built near Old Hall a large cottage ornée called
Ganstead Grange and laid out an ornamental
park to the south. Two lodges had been added
by 1889. (fn. 29) That house and 27 a. were bought by
Septimus Marsdin, a Hull shipowner, in 1875
and by W. H. Richardson, a Hull glass merchant, in 1878. In 1995 the owner was Mr. K.
North, a Hull timber merchant. (fn. 30)
By 1711 Elizabeth Robinson had sold the rest
of her estate, comprising Twyers house and 128
a., to William Hydes, a Hull merchant. Hydes's
daughter Mary and her husband Richard Burton
conveyed it to William Burton in 1746, and it
presumably later descended with the Turmer
Hall estate. (fn. 31)
A bovate at Ganstead, given to Meaux abbey
by Richard of Sutton c. 1150, was later returned
to his heir Amand of Sutton. (fn. 32) St. Sepulchre's
hospital, Hedon, had land at Ganstead by
1208, (fn. 33) and in 1535 its estate there and at
Coniston was valued at £2 a year. (fn. 34) The hospital
passed to the Constables, who had a house at
Coniston and a bovate at Ganstead in 1609. (fn. 35)
Before their suppression, the Knights Hospitaller also had an estate at Ganstead; the
Crown granted it to the restored order in 1558, (fn. 36)
and it may later have passed to Philip Herbert
(d. 1639). (fn. 37) Swine priory's estate at the Dissolution included land at Ganstead, (fn. 38) some of
which was bought by the Constables. (fn. 39) Ann
Watson's charity of Sutton on Hull had 42 a.
at Ganstead until 1952, when Hull corporation
bought the estate. (fn. 40)
The rectorial tithes and dues of Ganstead
were bought by Joseph Micklethwaite in 1681. (fn. 41)
He sold those of Turmer Hall in 1682, and they
were evidently later merged in that estate. (fn. 42)
Micklethwaite's title to the rest of the tithes
descended with Swine manor to Cropley
Cooper, earl of Shaftesbury, who in 1848 was
awarded a rent charge of £15 9s. for the few
unmerged tithes there. (fn. 43)
ECONOMIC HISTORY.
COMMON LANDS AND LNCLOSURE. In 1602 the seven proprietors
of Ganstead inclosed all or most of the commonable lands. The tillage and some grassland then
lay in East, West, and South fields, which had
evidently already been reduced by the making
of closes. Other areas dealt with were the common meadows, called South and West ings, and
the stinted Town's pasture, all occupying the
low land in the west of the township. Adjoining
West ings was Lord's pasture, which by 1607
lay in three closes. (fn. 44) Some stinted pasture may
have remained in an area called Cogham. (fn. 45)
Much of Ganstead was evidently under grass by
the late 17th century, (fn. 46) and ridge and furrow,
presumably of East field, remained in the
grounds of Ganstead Grange in 1994. (fn. 47)
MEDIEVAL HOLDINGS. In 1086 three
ploughs were at work on the four ploughlands
at Ganstead, one on the lord's holding and two
operated by 7 villeins and 4 bordars. The holdings presumably also included shares in the 20 a.
of meadow land then recorded for Ganstead. (fn. 48)
MODERN AGRICULTURE. There were 3-5
farmers at Ganstead in the 19th century and
earlier 20th; the one or two larger farms included
Turmer Hall, of 700 a. in 1851. (fn. 49) Market
gardening and dairying have been pursued at
Ganstead. (fn. 50)
MILLS. A ruinous windmill recorded at Ganstead in 1334 (fn. 51) had evidently been rebuilt by the
early 17th century. (fn. 52) It probably stood in the
north-east of the township in New Mill close,
which was recorded in 1602, together with the
more southerly Mill close. (fn. 53) The modern post
mill occupying the north-eastern site ceased to
grind in or soon after 1905 and was demolished
in 1909. (fn. 54)
LOCAL GOVERNMENT.
A call roll and a
brief note of proceedings in Ganstead manor
court, both of 1811, survive; the court had leet
jurisdiction and appointed the constable and a
pinder. (fn. 55)
At Ganstead 2 people were relieved permanently and 3 occasionally in 1802-2013;3, and 10/12
were on permanent and 5-6 on occasional relief
between 1812 and 1815. (fn. 56) Ganstead joined
Skirlaugh poor-law union in 1837, (fn. 57) and the
township, later civil parish, remained in Skirlaugh rural district until 1935. As part of Bilton
civil parish, it was then included in the new
Holderness rural district and at reorganization
in 1974 was taken into the Holderness district
of Humberside. (fn. 58) In 1996 Bilton parish became
part of a new East Riding unitary area. (fn. 59)
CHURCH.
St. George's chapel, Ganstead, had
been built by 1226, possibly to house the Sutton
family's chantry, which in that year and again
in 1236 Swine priory agreed to supply with a
chaplain, clerk, and all other necessities for daily
services there. (fn. 60) No later evidence of services in
Ganstead chapel has been found, but the ruined
building was mentioned as late as 1764. (fn. 61)
ROMAN CATHOLICISM.
In the 1660s the
half dozen papists at Ganstead included members of the Constable family. (fn. 62)
EDUCATION.
Children from Ganstead attended Bilton and Swine schools in 1871. (fn. 63)