ECONOMIC HISTORY.
In 1086 there were
8 ploughlands and as many teams, a square
league of pasture, and 8 a. of meadow. There
were 6 hides in demesne with 2 ploughteams and
six servi. There were 10 cattle, 10 swine, 48
sheep, and a riding horse. Twenty villani and 10
bordars worked the rest of the land with 6
ploughteams. (fn. 54) In 1303 Montacute priory's demesne in Creech comprised 304 a. of arable and
51 a. of meadow with some pasture. There were
also 26 free holdings on about 11 virgates of land,
31 customary and ferling tenants with another
11 virgates, 9 villeins each having a house and 6
a., and 10 cottars. (fn. 55) Creech was prosperous: in
1327 it paid almost as much tax as Taunton, (fn. 56)
and in 1334 it was one of the most highly taxed
places in the county. (fn. 57) By 1526 it was still
wealthy and the manor bailiff had the second
highest tax assessment. (fn. 58) In 1535 the capital
messuage and woodland were let to farm and the
rental distinguished between tenements, later
called 'place lands', (fn. 59) and overland. (fn. 60) In 1535-8
the rental of Creech was over £70, higher than
any other of Montacute priory's estates and
accounting for about 15 per cent of the priory's
income. (fn. 61) During the later 16th century Creech
manor was divided and sold. Many holdings
remained divided and some were part free and
part lease or copyhold until the late 18th or early
19th century when successive lords of the manor
sold their estates. (fn. 62)
The moorlands on both sides of the Tone were
regularly flooded in winter and provided rich
grass in summer. (fn. 63) The tenants of Ham in the
14th century had common rights for draught
animals on Westhay moor in North Curry. (fn. 64)
Creech moor was said to measure c. 45 a. in 1638
and Ham moor c. 49 a. (fn. 65) Dairying and cheesemaking were important: in 1679 one man had 30
cheeses and another had 72, in 1687 a third had
46, and in 1688 a herd of 8 cows produced 2 cwt.
of raw milk cheese and 2 cwt. of household
cheese. Oxen were rarely listed before the 18th
century but horses were plentiful and were
presumably the preferred plough beast. Pigs
were kept on the byproducts of cheesemaking.
Edward Cely the younger had 90 sheep at
Charlton in 1677. One man had 46 geese in 1687
and in 1690 a flock worth 8s. was recorded. Most
farmers combined stock rearing with arable husbandry. Bearded barley was recorded in 1645,
dredge in 1648, and clover from the 1670s. Apple
orchards were common and both apples and
cider feature in most inventories. One husbandman in 1681 worked for his landlord ploughing
and sowing at 17s. an acre. Many farmers in the
17th century enjoyed considerable prosperity,
reflected in their books, furnishings, linen, and
plate. One of the wealthier farmers died in 1647
possessed of a quantity of silverware, jewelry,
and fine clothing. John Crosse of Langaller,
probably the wealthiest man in the parish when
he died in 1679 with goods worth over £1,400,
possessed silver plate, a clock, and books. (fn. 66)
In 1733 the arable in the parish was estimated
at 1,361 a. (fn. 67) In 1781 grass covered 1,045 a.,
arable 1,016 a., turnips and clover 115 a., and
gardens and orchards 205 a. A crop survey of
1784 gave the following acreages: meadow
585½, wheat 365½, barley 174½, fallow 140½,
orchard 104, peas 80½, beans 40½, vetches 33½,
oats 14, clover 3½, and flax 2. (fn. 68) In 1787 one man
grew 47 stone of flax in the parish. (fn. 69) At the end
of the 18th century the vicar collected tithe from
potatoes and flax and in 1787 he received 87 bags
of apples in tithe. In 1800 he recorded over 47
a. of potatoes. (fn. 70) At Little Creech, a farm of c. 25
a., pasture and meadow predominated but crops
of potatoes, wheat, barley, and vetch were
grown, livestock comprised horses, plough oxen,
heifers, steers, ewes, pigs, poultry, and 4 cows
which produced an average of 336 gallons of milk
a year between 1801 and 1806. (fn. 71) In 1813 artificial, Dutch, and rye grasses were grown in the
parish, 30 a. of flax in 1816, and 25½ a. of flax
on Sheepham moor in 1817 when 67½ a. of
potatoes were tithed in the parish. (fn. 72) There were
74 a. of water meadow on the Court Barton
estate in 1825, over a third of the acreage. (fn. 73)
The moors by the Tone, Creech and Langaller
Heathfields, and other small areas of common
and waste totalling 200 a. were inclosed under
an award of 1814. (fn. 74) By the 1820s the newly
inclosed moors were growing crops of wheat and
beans, and wheat was grown on Creech Heathfield. (fn. 75) The tithe award of 1839 recorded 1,137
a. of arable out of 2,152 a. (fn. 76)
Landholding was fragmented by the division
of the manor in the 16th century (fn. 77) and there were
few compact farms apart from the old freeholds
at Walford and Charlton and the Court Barton
estate. In 1839 only 26 holdings were over 25 a.
and only 8 over 50 a. The largest farms were
Charlton House farm (124 a.), Court Barton (146
a.), and Charlton farm (149 a.). (fn. 78) There was,
however, some consolidation during the 19th
century. The Coombe family of Charlton were
farmers and graziers and bought several estates. (fn. 79) In 1813 they had over 168 a. in Creech (fn. 80)
and George Coombe's estates in the parish and
elsewhere were worth about £15,000 of which
£1,200 was in livestock. (fn. 81) By 1839 the Coombe
holdings covered nearly 200 a. and in 1851
George Coombe (d. c. 1857) farmed 250 a. in
Charlton, having bought part of Charlton farm
in 1846. (fn. 82) In 1881 his son George was farming
401 a. and employing 16 labourers. (fn. 83) George
Coombe (d. 1929) held the largest farms in the
parish at Charlton and Court Barton. (fn. 84) During
the late 19th century the size of the other farms
increased: 6 were over 100 a. by 1851, (fn. 85) and 8
by 1871 of which 2 were over 200 a., but the
number of labourers declined. (fn. 86) Court Barton
employed fewer hands in 1881 than 10 years
earlier although the acreage had increased and
on at least one other farm employment had
halved. (fn. 87)
Drainage was poor and divided ownership
inhibited improvement. On Charlton farm before 1834 several large fields were flooded every
winter and one year in seven summer floods
destroyed half the produce. (fn. 88) Improvements in
the late 19th century alleviated sheep rot,
though reducing the number of snipe. (fn. 89) An
agricultural society for Creech and neighbouring parishes was set up in the 1880s to encourage skilled labour; ploughing and shearing
matches were held at Court Barton and Walford, and an annual dinner was given. (fn. 90) By 1905
more land was under grass and only 769 a. were
arable, (fn. 91) a figure which had declined still further to 182 ha. (c. 450 a.) in 1982. (fn. 92) Nurseries
and market gardens were established, mainly
at Creech Heathfield, in the later 19th century. (fn. 93) During the 20th century orchards were
established at Charlton, growing apples, pears,
plums, damsons, and soft fruit. (fn. 94) In 1982 two
specialist fruit farms covered c. 25 ha. (62 a.).
The main crops were wheat and winter and
spring barley. There was no further consolidation of farms, most of which specialized in
dairying and stock rearing. There were 758
cattle, 445 sheep, 345 poultry, and 34 pigs. (fn. 95)
Mills and fishery
A mill at Creech in 1086 (fn. 96)
presumably descended with the manor. By the
mid 16th century there were two distinct mills,
Creech mills and North End mill. Creech mills,
also called Philberds or Filberts mills, on the
Tone near Creech Bridge, (fn. 97) were probably a pair
of mills under one roof. William Knapman sold
a half share in two mills to Lawrence Radford
in 1578; (fn. 98) in 1585 Henry Shattock and Nicholas
Harris sold to Lawrence what was described as
three water mills but was probably the other half
share. (fn. 99) Lawrence's son Arthur sold the mill
with the manor to Robert Cuffe in 1598. (fn. 1) Creech
mill descended with the Court Barton estate
until 1816. (fn. 2) By 1831 the mill building had
doubled in size and a long extension, probably
the cottages surviving in 1984, had been built
along the river bank. (fn. 3) In 1861 and 1866 the
miller was also a seed and manure merchant (fn. 4) and
by 1872 milling had ceased. (fn. 5) The river was
divided by an island; the northern branch serving as a mill pond was called the Creech river.
The other branch, with a lock and towpath, was
a navigable waterway called the Ham river. (fn. 6) By
1984 flood prevention schemes had closed the
northern branch, leaving the mill without water.
The early 19th-century mill house and the mill
have been converted to residential use.
North End mill, probably the Creech customary mill, seems to be the mill of which William
Knapman sold half to the elder Robert Cuffe in
1558 (fn. 7) and Henry Shattock sold half to Robert
Seager, possibly in trust for Robert Cuffe, in
1584; at his death in 1593 Cuffe owned the
customary mill. (fn. 8) North End mill descended with
the Court Barton estate until 1710 or later but
by 1731 was again part of Creech manor. (fn. 9) The
miller bought one third of the mill from the lord
in 1788 (fn. 10) and the remainder before 1800. (fn. 11) The
mill was still in use, converted to steam, in 1906
but probably closed soon afterwards. (fn. 12) In the
1920s it was used as a carpenter's shop and for
making cider. (fn. 13) The mill, on the stream at North
End, has been partly demolished and the pond
filled in. The main building has been converted
into flats.
Oil mills were recorded on the North End
stream in the late 18th century, presumably
producing linseed oil from flax. (fn. 14)
The Tone fishery was recorded in 1086 (fn. 15) and
probably descended with the manor. Sir Thomas Wyatt let it to John Cuffe (d. 1557), (fn. 16) and
William Knapman sold it to Robert Cuffe in
1559. (fn. 17) Freeholders may have had fishing rights,
and Edward Cely the younger had a boat at
Charlton worth 30s. in 1677. (fn. 18) Fishing rights
were sold with the manor in 1767 (fn. 19) and were
retained until 1908 or later. (fn. 20)
Trade and industry
Goods brought up the
river Tone between the 17th and 19th centuries
were usually landed at Coal Harbour or at Ham
Mills in North Curry, formerly the upper tidal
limit. The Bobbett family imported coal through
Coal Harbour from the early 17th century. (fn. 21)
Tolls proposed by the Tone Conservators after
1698 brought objections from importers of coal,
culm, and salt to Devon, Dorset, and South
Somerset, who feared that prices would rise.
Coal Harbour then regularly served towns and
villages in a 20-mile radius; two Devon villages
imported 1,800 lb. of culm each year for limeburning, and dyers and maltsters at Bridport
(Dors.) used coal landed there. (fn. 22) Among the
traders there from 1714 was a salt merchant of
Bewdley (Worcs.). (fn. 23)
Over 40 boatmen petitioned unsuccessfully
against the imposition of tolls, (fn. 24) and in 1717 tolls
were paid at Coal Harbour on about 800 boatloads of coal and 200 tons of general cargo. The
amount of toll collected suggests a decline in
volume of trade during the 18th century, and
from the 1780s merchants were beginning to use
other sites along the river for landing coal and
timber. (fn. 25) Most business by the early 1830s had
been transferred to Ham Mills, (fn. 26) but still in 1878
the tenant at Coal Harbour was one of the two
principal toll payers on the river. (fn. 27)
The Bridgwater and Taunton canal, opened in
1827, took business from the river, and the canal
company obtained control of river trade in
1832. (fn. 28) By 1839 a coal wharf and timber yard
were established near the canal bridge in Creech
village. (fn. 29) The canal company was in turn bought
out by the railway company in 1866, but no
goods yard was built in the parish. (fn. 30)
In the later 17th century spinning, weaving,
and dyeing were all done in the parish: one man
in 1677 had a comb shop, over 166 lb. of yarn,
100 lb. of wool out in 'spinning houses', yarn
out with weavers, pieces of finished cloth, and
dyestuffs. (fn. 31) There is not much evidence of clothmaking in the 18th century. Silkweavers were
recorded between 1843 and 1871, (fn. 32) and a few
glovemakers in the later 19th century. (fn. 33) In the
late 17th century there were two families of
tanners, (fn. 34) and in 1695 a shop sold fruit, spice,
and silk tape. (fn. 35) In 1821 only 26 families out of
166 were not employed in agriculture. (fn. 36) By 1851
there were several shopkeepers and dealers. (fn. 37)
Small manufacturers in the late 19th century
included basketmakers, one of whom employed
two others, a matmaker, cabinet makers, and
pipemakers, and there was a gas fitter. (fn. 38) There
was a small brewery by the canal in 1831 (fn. 39) and
in 1851 there were several maltsters in the
parish. (fn. 40) A lemonade manufacturer was recorded
in 1866. (fn. 41) A brickyard at the eastern end of Bull
Street was open in 1851 making bricks and
drainage pipes, (fn. 42) and in the 1870s bricks and
tiles. (fn. 43) The yard had closed by 1904. (fn. 44)
A paper mill, opened west of Creech village in
1875, produced writing, cartridge, and fine
printing paper. (fn. 45) In 1881 it employed 140 men
and women as rag cutters, grass sorters, washers,
labourers, firemen and engine drivers, machine
boys, a blacksmith, and beaters. (fn. 46) New machinery was installed in 1948 to produce a wider
variety of papers (fn. 47) including by the later 20th
century 'bulky' papers for books and lighter
paper for stationery and advertising literature.
The mill, owned by the British Printing and
Communications Corporation and employing 62
people, closed in 1982. (fn. 48) The building was later
acquired by Taunton Deane borough council to
house small industries.
In 1269 Montacute priory was granted a Tuesday market at Creech and a three-day fair around
the feast of St. Matthew (21 Sept.). (fn. 49) The
priory's 14th-century copy of the charter gives
the date of the fair as St. Augustine's day (26
May). (fn. 50) There is no evidence that markets or
fairs were ever held.