MILBORNE PORT
The parish of Milborne Port lies on the southern edge of Horethorne hundred, its southern
boundary forming the boundary between
Somerset and Dorset. (fn. 79) Its main settlement is
the compact former borough of Milborne Port,
in the south of the parish, with the more
dispersed Kingsbury Regis in a valley running
northwards. Further north still is the hamlet
of Milborne Wick. The mansion called Ven
represents a secondary settlement established
south-east of the borough by the 13th century. (fn. 80) In the mid 11th century Milborne was
a large rural estate with urban and industrial
characteristics, (fn. 81) and its church was a minster
whose parochia included Holwell and Pulham, several miles south in Dorset, (fn. 82) as well
as Charlton Horethorne to the north (fn. 83) and
Goathill to the south-west. In the later 11th
century Milborne gave its name to the hundred
in which it lay, (fn. 84) indicating administrative
importance, an importance which may have
been in gradual decline after the division of
the diocese of Sherborne in 909 and which
may also have hastened the dismemberment
of the parochia. (fn. 85) Coins were minted at Milborne between 997 and 1035. (fn. 86) The name
Kingsbury emerged in the later 13th century,
perhaps partly to emphasise its royal ownership
as well as to recognise the independence of the
borough.
The parish name evidently derives from the
stream which flows south through Milborne
Wick and Kingsbury Regis. (fn. 87) The additional
name Port occurs in 1249. (fn. 88) The parish measures
some 5.8 km. from the northern boundary with
Charlton Horethorne to Hanover (Hyneure c.
1215-30, Hyndover c. 1544) (fn. 89) Hill in the south
and at its widest measures just over 3 km. from
east to west. In 1839 it was said to comprise
3,266 a. (fn. 90) In 1885 an unrecorded area of unpopulated land was transferred from Henstridge. (fn. 91) In
1981 the total area was 1,368 ha. (3,380 a.). (fn. 92)
Several fields were transferred in 1982 to Corton
Denham and in 1991 the parish measured 1,335
ha. (fn. 93)
The stream which flows southwards from
Charlton Horethorne through the centre of the
parish, named variously Gascoigne, Ivel, or
Yeo, (fn. 94) forms a narrow band of alluvium which
broadens in the extreme south. To the west of
the stream the land rises in places steeply to just
over 152 m. (actually 512 ft.) on Poyntington
Hill over Inferior Oolite, (fn. 95) providing a large tract
of open ground in the north-west of the parish
known as Milborne and Horethorne downs, and
Sheep Sleight. (fn. 96) Further south Combe, Vartenham (Farkenham in 1569, Pertnam in 1633), (fn. 97)
Crackmore (Crackmacke in the 1570s), (fn. 98) and
Highmore's hills form a steep scarp which are a
natural defence from the west. To the east of the
stream the ground slopes gradually upwards
over oolite, Fuller's Earth, and Fuller's Earth
rock to reach just over 122 m. (400 ft.) below
Toomer Hill. Fuller's Earth and Fuller's Earth
rock form the rising ground of Hanover Hill on
the southern boundary. (fn. 99)

Milborne Port in 1839
The principal route through the parish runs
east-west and was both the main street of the
village and part of the chief road from London
to the West Country until the 18th century. (fn. 1)
That part within the parish was turnpiked by
the Sherborne trust in 1753 but a more southerly
route was taken from 1823 between the Henstridge boundary and the village and in 1827-9
the steep gradient west of the village at Crackmore Hill was improved. It was disturnpiked in
1877. (fn. 2) The diversion east of the village was
presumably the reason for the closure of a road
south of Ven which would have avoided Milborne Port village and given a more direct route
to Sherborne (Dors.). The most important road
north from the village, leading to Charlton
Horethorne, was maintained by the Wincanton
trust between 1756 and 1798. A second road
north from the main street served Kingsbury
and led to Milborne Wick and a third led to the
high pastures in the north-west and north. The
only direct route south from the main street led
to Goathill (Dors. formerly Som.). It was turnpiked in 1755-6 by the Sherborne trust. (fn. 3)
The east-west character of communications
was continued in 1860 when the Salisbury and
Yeovil railway was completed and a station was
built two miles north of the town. The track had
been doubled by 1870 and continued in 1994 to
be part of the London-Exeter route. The station
was reduced to the status of a halt in 1950 and
was closed in 1964. (fn. 4)
The high ground of Milborne Down and
Poyntington Hill has yielded evidence of Neolithic and Roman activity and Roman burials
were discovered immediately south of the
churchyard on the southern edge of Milborne
Port village. (fn. 5) An earth bank across a spur east of
Milborne Wick and known in the 19th century
as the Barrow (fn. 6) was thought in the 17th century
to have been the site of a fortified manor house
or castle of Kingsbury Regis, (fn. 7) but more recently
has been interpreted either as an Iron-Age
promontory fort or an unfinished Saxon burh. (fn. 8)
The parish church stands on the highest point
of a spur formed where the south-flowing stream
from Kingsbury turns eastwards. A roughly
rectangular area is defined by High Street on the
north, South Street on the east, Brook Street on
the south, and Bathwell Lane on the west, and
probably marks the minster enclosure. The same
area seems to have formed part of the medieval
borough, which also extended north into the
present North Street. (fn. 9) Puddlebrook or Puttebrooke, so named by 1496 until the earlier 19th
century, (fn. 10) may have been the name for the
present Brook and South streets. Church and
Blind lanes were both named in 1477. (fn. 11) Bathwell
probably derived from the spring known as
Baggewell in 1477 and Bavewell in 1735. (fn. 12) At
the north-east corner of the presumed minster
enclosure a triangular market place was formed
at the junction of North and South streets with
the east end of High Street. Much of that area
had been encroached upon during the 18th
century, (fn. 13) by housing and by the market house.
The cross, whose base seems to date from the
13th century, was removed to the site of the
former bandstand at the end of Bathwell Lane
in 1959.
North of the east-west axis the settlement pattern
is less regular but comprised North Street, formerly
known as Pig Street, (fn. 14) and the road to Charlton
Horethorne. Further west beyond Kingsbury the
names Gainsborough and Gunville derive respectively from land in the west field called Garnesberye
c. 1544 and a house called Gunvil in 1769. (fn. 15) Rosemary Lane in the same area was so named in 1794. (fn. 16)
Apart from the church there are only two
buildings earlier than the mid 17th century in
the centre of the village. The masonry structure
of the so-called guildhall, with its 12th-century
doorway, may suggest that in some form it was
always a public building. The 16th-century timber-framed and jettied no. 160 North Street may
be indicative of what was the more usual early
domestic building material. No. 61 South Street
includes fragments of 15th-century stonework.
The survival of relatively few 18th-century
houses in the High Street and around the market
place seems to confirm the evidence of maps (fn. 17)
that the village settlement was sparse and High
Street typical, 'tolerably wide but irregularly
built'. (fn. 18) By 1822 (fn. 19) the built-up area had expanded northwards and there was infilling,
largely in the form of small cottages. Terraces
in South and East streets, Sansome's Hill, and
Lower and Upper Gunville were put up by one
or other of the two political factions in the
borough, (fn. 20) in tandem with the creation of the
settlement of small thatched houses in Newtown, then an isolated site north-west of the
town and Waterloo Crescent on the border with
Charlton Horethorne. (fn. 21) At about the same time
the two inns near the market place were rebuilt
or enlarged. The older buildings in Kingsbury
and Wick, away from the village centre, date
from the 17th and 18th centuries.
The growth of industry from the later 18th
century encouraged one landowner to offer a
dwelling house with large malthouse and
newly-built barn as 'really fit' for the residence
of a genteel family or a 'complete situation' for
a manufacturer. The same owner built a dwelling named the Cupola on a leasehold site. (fn. 22)
Nineteenth-century workers' housing included Russell Place (1867) and Baunton's
Orchard, both in Kingsbury. (fn. 23) Larger private
houses, several built by glove manufacturers,
include the Knapp (c. 1865), Norton or
Northton House, later Sunnyside (c. 1870),
Limerick House, and the Yews, later Bazzleways (all c. 1885). Cross House was enlarged
and refronted at about the same time. (fn. 24) Bowling Green House, on the south side of the road
towards Sherborne and designed by Sir Guy
Dawber was begun for the de Montmorency
family in 1914 and completed in 1925. It
includes plasterwork by G. P. Bankart. (fn. 25) Expansion of building to the north and east of
the village continued into the later 20th century and there has also been infilling south of
the church over the site of the former Canon
Court farmyards and orchards.
There were three open arable fields to the
north, east, and west of Milborne Port, sometimes described as the fields of Kingsbury and
Wick. (fn. 26) The north and west fields were so
named in the earlier 13th century. (fn. 27) Common
fields of Ven, referred to in 1678, (fn. 28) were probably uninclosed parts of the east field. (fn. 29)
Common pasture was largely on the high
ground in the north and north-west. (fn. 30) There
were still small areas of common meadow near
Ven in the 1670s. (fn. 31)
In 1260 John de Burgh received a grant of free
warren in his estates in the parish, (fn. 32) and a similar
grant was made in 1307 to Henry de Lacy, earl
of Lincoln, at Kingsbury. (fn. 33) A field called Conygar was named in 1263, (fn. 34) and by 1839 the name
was probably corrupted to Binegar, the name of
two fields to the west of Wick. (fn. 35) A warren, also
named at Wick in the 18th century, had been
converted by 1839 to an orchard. (fn. 36) New Park, to
the west of Milborne village, was so named in
the 1540s. (fn. 37)
There was woodland west of Milborne Wick
before the 16th century, (fn. 38) at Henwood, on the
eastern boundary, before the late 17th century, (fn. 39)
and at Hanover in the south by 1568. (fn. 40)
A double fives court known as the Ball Court,
on the south side of High Street, was built by
Sir William Coles Medlycott (d. 1882) in 1847. (fn. 41)
An inn called the George stood in Church
Lane in 1550. (fn. 42) There was another in the centre
of the village in 1568, and the Star was mentioned in 1574. (fn. 43) A tippler was in business in
1630 and an alehouse was suppressed in 1666 for
having unlawful games and pastimes. (fn. 44) In the
1680s there were 24 beds and stabling for 32
horses in houses which included the Rose and
Crown, the George, the Red Lion, and the
White Lion. (fn. 45) The former Dolphin, the White
Lion, and the Five Bells were mentioned in the
early 18th century. (fn. 46) Later in the century there
were between five and seven licensed victuallers, (fn. 47) one of whom by 1746 kept the Tippler or
Tippling Philosopher. (fn. 48) The Angel, there by
1759, closed in 1796 and the White Lion in
1797. (fn. 49) The Queen's Head, so named by 1792,
may be the successor to the Rose and Crown (fn. 50)
and was in business in 1994. The Tippling
Philosopher was renamed the King's Head c.
1820 (fn. 51) and was also in business in 1994. There
were also five beerhouses in the parish in 1840,
including the Three Horseshoes. (fn. 52) A temperance
hotel stood in High Street in 1861 and 1866 and
the Gainsborough Arms had opened by 1866. (fn. 53)
By 1872 there were two unnamed beerhouses, (fn. 54)
both of which survived until after 1910; one was
replaced by a beerhouse in Station Road until
the 1930s. (fn. 55) By 1993 the three inns had been
joined by the Old Vicarage Hotel and Restaurant.
The Milborne Port Benefit Society was
founded in 1753. It met in the guildhall and held
its feast on Whit Tuesday. (fn. 56) A Union Club was
founded in 1777 and met at the Angel. (fn. 57) The
first was re-founded in 1823 as the Old Friendly
Society and both Old and New clubs were
supported by the marquess of Anglesey between
1818 and 1828. (fn. 58) A Female Friendly Society
founded in 1831 met at the Ensor factory. In
1843 it was succeeded by the Milborne Port
Female Perpetual Friendly Society which met
in the market house. A year later the Milborne
Port Friendly Society had its rules enrolled, and
in 1849 and 1853 the rules of the Perpetual
Benefit Society were registered. (fn. 59) In 1912 the
Constitutional Club was built for Conservatives,
by 1914 there was one for Liberals, and by 1927
a Labour Club had opened. (fn. 60)
In 1798 the population of the parish was 928, (fn. 61)
and in 1801 it was 953. It rose to 2,072 in 1831,
but then fluctuated at a slightly lower level until
after 1891, when it fell from 1,951 to 1,546 in
three decades. There followed a slight recovery,
a fall in the 1950s, and from 1961 a rapid rise,
to 2,480 in 1981, and to 2,590 in 1991. (fn. 62)
Lt. Gen. John Middleton had his headquarters in the village in the summer of 1644. (fn. 63) In
1655, 38 people from the parish were reported
to be suspected royalists. (fn. 64) Two men joined the
duke of Monmouth in 1685. (fn. 65) In 1708 there was
a riot in the village. (fn. 66) In the early 19th century
the marquess of Anglesey contributed generously to bread and cheese feasts held on New
Year's Day in connexion with the borough
audit. (fn. 67) About 1860 mummers performed in the
parish at Christmas and Panshard Night was
celebrated on the eve of Shrove Tuesday. (fn. 68)
About 1268 itinerant justices sat at Milborne (fn. 69)
and between 1357 and 1401 several government
enquiries were held there. (fn. 70)
BOROUGH
In 1086 there were 56 burgesses
on the king's estate, 5 on the estate of Garmund,
and 6 in Milborne associated with the estate of
Shaftesbury abbey at Abbas Combe. (fn. 71) A holding
of 2 masurae in Milborne was attached to
Goathill. (fn. 72) Milborne also contributed to the
third penny of the shire and to the firma, possibly
in association with the royal estate at Bedminster. (fn. 73)
The town paid tallage in 1187, 1205-7, and
1214 and was described as a villa or villata. (fn. 74) By
1212 the men of Milborne held a market and the
pleas of the town at farm from the Crown, (fn. 75) and
in 1213-14 the burgesses and freemen of the
town were made quit of all tolls, namely sac, soc,
toll, team, passage, pontage, stallage, and picage
in fairs and markets at home and abroad (fn. 76) by
what was later described as a charter of King
John. (fn. 77) In 1225 the borough appeared by a
separate jury at the assizes (fn. 78) and throughout the
13th century was assessed for tallage as part of
the royal demesne. (fn. 79) It was still considered royal
demesne in 1276 (fn. 80) but presumably ceased to be
so when payment of the fee farm was transferred
to the lords of Kingsbury Regis manor in the
earlier 14th century. (fn. 81)
In 1332 the town bailiff occupied a former
Templar property in the town, (fn. 82) presumably in
the name of a corporate body, and a royal charter
of 1397 granting a weekly market and annual fair
was addressed to the bailiff and burgesses. (fn. 83) By
1382, however, two bailiffs were among lessees
of borough land; (fn. 84) and in 1432 two borough
bailiffs had control of a common seal. (fn. 85) By the
1380s two stewards of the guild merchant seem
to have been administering borough property.
That was known by the later 16th century as
commonalty lands and the stewards as commonalty stewards. (fn. 86) That property, which included a
common bakehouse by 1477, a common brewhouse, a mill, a tolsey, and two shops by 1482,
and a guildhall by 1535, (fn. 87) was increased by the
acquisition of land in the parish formerly belonging to Sherborne abbey and to the parish
brotherhood. (fn. 88) In 1596 a chamberlain seems to
have assisted the stewards. (fn. 89)
In the later 17th century the commonalty
stewards continued to administer the estate, then
known as the guild market. (fn. 90) By the 1740s the
lands were vested in nine trustees or assistants,
two of whom were chosen as stewards each year
to keep the common seal and to pay rents to the
second poor. (fn. 91) The land and investments continue to be administered as an endowed charity. (fn. 92)
A common seal was mentioned in 1432. (fn. 93) The
seal in use in 1826 is 1" in diameter and bears a
shield with a lion passant gardant with the letter
R in base surrounded by an inscription, gothic,
Sigllum de milborne port. (fn. 94)

Seal of Milborne-Port.
From 1177 an annual sum of £8 was paid to
the Crown, presumably from the borough. (fn. 95)
That sum was still being paid to the Exchequer
in 1204. (fn. 96) The same sum was received by the
lords of Kingsbury Regis manor in the earlier
14th century, (fn. 97) was paid to Lady Margaret
Beaufort until her death in 1509, (fn. 98) and in 1528
was granted to Henry FitzRoy, duke of Richmond (d. 1536). (fn. 99) It was later held by Edward
Seymour, earl of Hertford (d. 1621). (fn. 1)
The fee farm, as it came to be called, was
paid to Queen Henrietta Maria (d. 1669), by
1671 seems to have passed to Henry Bennet,
earl of Arlington (d. 1685), by 1678 to Queen
Catherine of Braganza, (fn. 2) and by 1698 to the
earls of Shaftesbury, (fn. 3) who still retained their
interest in 1796. (fn. 4) In 1818 part of the fee farm
was paid to the Crown and part to the earl of
Radnor. (fn. 5)
MANORS
In 1066 MILBORNE manor was
royal demesne. (fn. 6) By 1156 it was held at farm by
Reynold de Dunstanville (cr. earl of Cornwall
1141, d. 1175). (fn. 7) After his death the sheriff
answered for his farm until 1184, (fn. 8) but from 1185
until 1202 Guy de Val or Laval paid a smaller
sum, and from 1203 until 1224 or later the holder
was Robert de Vipont. (fn. 9) In 1228 the estate was
temporarily granted to Hubert de Burgh, earl of
Kent (d. 1243), (fn. 10) but was not returned to the
heirs of Guy de Val and passed to Hubert's son
John (d. 1275). In 1260 it was described as
MILBORNE AND KINGSBURY manor (fn. 11)
and in 1271 as KINGSBURY manor. (fn. 12)
From 1273 John de Burgh held the manor for
life with reversion to the Crown, (fn. 13) and in 1276,
after John's death, Kingsbury with Horethorne
hundred passed to Queen Eleanor of Castile (d.
1290), wife of Edward I. (fn. 14) Between 1292 and
1317 the manor, with the hundred and borough,
were administered by a succession of custodians
including Henry de Lacy, earl of Lincoln,
Robert FitzPayn, and William Montagu. (fn. 15) In
1317 William Montagu had a grant of the same
for life, quit of fee farm. (fn. 16) He died in 1319 and
in 1321 the manor was granted in fee to the
king's brother Edmund of Woodstock on his
creation as earl of Kent. (fn. 17) In 1330 William, son
of William Montagu, was given the estate for life
after Edmund's execution, (fn. 18) but in the following
year the grant was limited to custody during the
minority of the heir. (fn. 19) Montagu died in 1344 (fn. 20)
and the estate evidently remained in direct
Crown custody until 1351 when Edmund's heir
John, earl of Kent, came of age. (fn. 21) John died in
1352 and the dower of his widow Elizabeth of
Juliers included Kingsbury manor and the fee
farm of the borough. She held both until her
death in 1411. (fn. 22) Elizabeth's heir to what by 1431
was known as KINGSBURY REGIS manor
was Margaret Holand, widow of John Beaufort,
earl of Somerset (d. 1410) and subsequently wife
of Thomas of Lancaster, duke of Clarence (d.
1421). (fn. 23) Margaret's heir at her death in 1439 was
her son John Beaufort, duke of Somerset. He
died in 1444 leaving an infant daughter Margaret, later wife of Edmund Tudor, earl of
Richmond. As Lady Margaret, countess of Richmond and Derby and mother of Henry VII, she
died in 1509. Her heir was her grandson Henry
VIII. (fn. 24)
The manor remained with the Crown until
1528 when, with the hundred and borough, it
was settled on Henry FitzRoy, duke of Richmond. (fn. 25) He died in 1536 and thereafter until
1547 or later the manor and borough were again
in Crown hands. The manor subsequently
passed to Charles Brandon, duke of Suffolk (d.
1551), and to his daughter Frances, wife successively of Henry Grey, duke of Suffolk (d. 1553),
and Adrian Stokes. Adrian held it by the curtesy
from the death of Frances in 1559 until his own
death in 1585. (fn. 26) Through Catherine (d. 1568),
wife of Edward Seymour, earl of Hertford (d.
1621), the only daughter of Frances to have
issue, the manor passed to the Seymour family. (fn. 27)
From Edward Seymour it descended to his
grandson William Seymour (cr. duke of Somerset and d. 1660). William was succeeded by his
grandson, also William, who died unmarried in
1671. The heirs to the duke's estates were his
three aunts, Frances, Mary, and Jane, and his
sister Elizabeth. Charles Boyle, Baron Clifford
of Lanesborough, and Conyers Darcy, Lord
Darcy, husbands of Jane and Frances respectively, held courts for Kingsbury Regis manor
in 1683-5 (fn. 28) and Boyle, Charles Finch, earl of
Winchilsea and son of Mary Seymour, and
Robert Bruce, son of Elizabeth Seymour, agreed
to sell the manor in 1694 to Sir Thomas Travell,
already owner of Milborne Wick. (fn. 29)
Travell died in 1724 leaving a life interest in
one third of the manor to his widow for her
jointure. In 1727 she married John Gordon, earl
of Sunderland (d. 1733), and died in 1732. (fn. 30) A
grant of that third in reversion made to William
Sclater passed to Sclater's nephew and namesake
on the earl's death. (fn. 31) The remaining two thirds
had been settled in 1712 in trust on Anna Maria
Wyatt and Grace Sclater, Grace's share only for
her life with reversion to William Sclater and
Anna Maria Wyatt. (fn. 32) In 1740 part of the manor
passed to Michael Harvey (d. 1748), whose
mortgaged estates were surrendered to Peter
Walter the elder (d. 1746). (fn. 33) In 1753 Walter's
grandsons, Peter and Edward Walter, acquired
half the manor from the Sclater and Wyatt
families. (fn. 34) Peter Walter the younger died in 1753
leaving the estate to his brother Edward with
remainder to Henry Bayly, for whom the elder
Peter Walter had acted as agent. (fn. 35) Edward Walter died in 1780 and in consequence Bayly, who
had taken the additional name of Paget and had
succeeded as Baron Paget in 1770, took the
additional names of Peter Walter. In 1784 he
was created earl of Uxbridge. (fn. 36)
Henry William, the second earl, succeeded his
father in 1812 and in 1815 was created marquess
of Anglesey. In 1835, when control of the borough no longer had political interest, the
marquess sold his estate to Sir William Coles
Medlycott (d. 1882) (fn. 37) and it descended with the
Ven estate.
A hamlet called Fenn was mentioned in
1245. (fn. 38) In 1320 land there was held for 1/16 fee of
William Montagu by Nicholas Dibbe. (fn. 39) It may
have formed part of the estate of the Carents of
Toomer by 1412 (fn. 40) and, as Fen Wick, and Fen
or Ven Court or VEN manor, it was owned by
Sir William Carent (d. 1574) in 1537. (fn. 41) It passed
to Sir William's second son Leonard (d. c. 1605)
who in 1578 settled it on his wife Mary for
jointure, with remainder successively to his sons
William and Henry. William died in 1593 leaving a son Maurice, then a minor. (fn. 42) Maurice
succeeded his grandfather and was still alive in
1628. (fn. 43) He was followed by his sons William (d.
1665) and James (d. 1675). (fn. 44) Edmund Carent,
heir to James, sold the manor to (Sir) Edward
Carteret in 1679. (fn. 45)
Sir Edward Carteret died c. 1683 (fn. 46) and was
succeeded by his son Sir Charles, who first
mortgaged the manor to Thomas Medlycott the
younger and in 1698 sold it to Thomas's brother
James (d. 1731). (fn. 47) Ownership thereafter descended in the Medlycott family from James to
his son Thomas (d. 1763) and to Thomas's
nephew, Thomas Hutchings, who on succession
assumed the name and arms of Medlycott.
Thomas died in 1795 and was followed by his
son William Coles (cr. Bt. 1808, d. 1835). Sir
William Coles Medlycott (d. 1882), son of the
last, was in turn succeeded by each of his four
sons, William Coles Paget Medlycott (d. 1887),
Edward Bradford Medlycott (d. 1902), Mervyn
Bradford Medlycott (d. 1908), and the Revd.
Hubert James Medlycott (d. 1920). Much of the
land was sold between 1918 and 1925, (fn. 48) but the
house and grounds were let until 1957 when Sir
James Medlycott, son of Sir Hubert Mervyn and
grandson of the Revd. Sir Hubert, sold them. (fn. 49)
The capital messuage known as Ven Farm had
been built by 1689. (fn. 50) It seems to have been a
rectangular building, its east front facing a yard
or terrace. A long central rear wing joined an
irregular structure, probably a dairy, and close
by was a large barn. The immediate grounds
included a garden with a wide avenue of trees
running north-east to the road, a hop garden,
and two orchards, one in 1689 newly planted. (fn. 51)
Parts of the house, adapted to form a gatehouse
and other offices and with the addition of an
octagonal kitchen and a tall brick chimney, stood
until c. 1835-6. (fn. 52)
Ven House, a few yards to the west of the
farmhouse, was largely complete by 1731 (fn. 53) and
was built under the superintendence of
Nathaniel Ireson. (fn. 54) It is of red brick with stone
dressings and has a high basement, two full
storeys, and an attic storey topped with a balustrade. The north and south fronts are of seven
bays, divided 2-3-2 by Corinthian pilasters, and
the principal entrance, which is from the north,
was approached by steps, whilst in the south
there is a high-level terrace. A stream is conduited below the terrace, which extends beyond
the end of the south front and was terminated
by small pavilions. (fn. 55) A plan of 1739, which may
not have been fulfilled, shows the four-bayed
west front with a central doorway approached
by a pair of flights of curved steps. Stables and
outbuildings were ranged round a court against
the east side, in the centre of which was an
octagonal building, probably the kitchen which
survived with the previous farmhouse until
1835-6. (fn. 56)
The three bays at the centre of the house were
occupied by a square double-height entrance
hall on the north and a staircase hall on the
south. To each side there were smaller rooms
including, in the centre of the east side, the
secondary staircase. Surviving fittings in the
style of the 1730s include much panelling in oak
and, in the hall, two stone fireplace. Later in
the 18th century the ceiling of the entrance hall
was fitted with a large central painting of Time
and Beauty in a simple plaster surround, replacing the original made in the 1740s by Brown of
Stalbridge (Dors.). (fn. 57)
In 1835 Decimus Burton produced designs (fn. 58)
for the remodelling of the house. The main
staircase was removed and the secondary staircase rebuilt. The three rooms along the south
front were redecorated, the pavilions on the
terrace were removed, and an L-shaped conservatory was built to the west and south of the
corner of the west front. Pavilions in the form
of triumphal arches and linked to the house by
quadrant walls were constructed either side of
the north front and an enclosed porch was built
out in front of the north doorway. On the east
the service court was rebuilt behind the new
pavilion.
Much of the service court of 1835-6 was
demolished in the course of extensive restoration
of the house in the mid 1990s and there is a
single-storey kitchen block against the east side
of the house.
Plans by Richard Grange, (fn. 59) who was working
at Ven until 1736 or later, (fn. 60) show the formal
gardens which surrounded the house. Walls
running out from the ends of the north elevation,
the main entrance, enclosed a forecourt with an
oval drive and gates in the centre of the north
side. Beyond that was an axial drive, flanked by
lawns, beds, and avenues, leading to gates in a
railed, semi-circular bay next to the road. In
front of the terrace on the south there was
another walled garden whose outlines survive
with parterres and long flanking ramps leading
to a raised walk across the south side. The plan
of 1739 shows to the east, beyond the stable
court, a walled kitchen garden which survives.
To the west, and extending from the road to
the limit of the south garden, was an elaborate
layout of walks, serpentine paths, statuary,
pavilions, and water features including a canal,
basins, and a cascade. (fn. 61) The formal gardens on
the west may never have been created, (fn. 62) but
by 1839 the stream to the south-west, which
had perhaps been the formal 'Long Canal', ran
over a weir and curved through ornamental
woodland. The outline of the south garden
remained and a few clumps of trees had been
planted beyond the diverted London road
which had, since 1823, inexplicably cut
through Grange's formal entrance. (fn. 63) By 1887,
however, a double avenue had been planted on
the northern axis, a single one continued the
boundaries of the southern garden, and two
others created vistas to the east where ornamental planting had been extended alongside
the stream and where an island had been
enlarged and planted. The park thus created
extended for over a mile from the summit of
East Hill north-east of the house to a field
boundary to the south-west. (fn. 64) The park was
later extended further south-west where another axial avenue was planted, reaching
almost to the Goathill road. (fn. 65) Something of the
formality of the garden was restored in the mid
1990s and a summerhouse, said to be constructed with material from the demolished
main house at Bowood (Wilts.), was built in
the former kitchen garden.
In 1314 Alice de Horsted occupied a manor
house at WICK, part of an estate in the parish
which she had held in 1311. (fn. 66) The manor lands
passed to Henry le Gulden in 1320, by 1332
to Roger de Gulden and Elizabeth his wife, (fn. 67)
and from Roger to his son, also Roger, and
later perhaps to William Gulden. (fn. 68) William
may have been followed before 1396 by William Lewenthorp, possibly through his wife
Isabel, later wife of John Kendale. She died in
1406 when her estate was called WICK manor
and was held of Kingsbury manor. (fn. 69)
John Kendale, son of Isabel, was the heir in
1406, but the manor seems to have reverted to
the Gulden family since in 1465 it was held by
Elizabeth Cricklade, formerly wife of Thomas
Gulden. On her death in that year it passed to
her daughter Avice, Thomas's heir and wife
first of William Cowdrey and second of Morgan Kidwelly. (fn. 70) By 1466 the estate was known
as GULDENSWYKE manor. (fn. 71)
Avice Kidwelly died in 1496 and her second
husband in 1505 when her heir was a grandson,
Morgan Cowdrey. (fn. 72) In 1547 the estate seems to
have passed to Edward Seymour, duke of Somerset (d. 1552), (fn. 73) and perhaps formed part of the
land which George Brooke bequeathed in 1610
to Robert Cecil, earl of Salisbury, (fn. 74) and which
seems to have passed like Temple Combe to (Sir)
John Daccombe. (fn. 75) In 1612 Daccombe sold what
was described as the capital messuage or farm
place at Wick to Christopher Wickham and in
1620 Wickham bought another farm, called
Wick farm, in Kingsbury, from George Dyer. (fn. 76)
In 1632 the combined estate was settled on
Thomas Field, and in 1692 Field's son or grandson, also Thomas Field, sold it to (Sir) Thomas
Travell (fn. 77) and it descended like Travell's manor
of Kingsbury. (fn. 78)
Another estate at Wick was held at her death
in 1503 by Alice Clayton, widow of Giles Kendale, as of Toomer manor in Henstridge. Alice's
heirs were her daughter Margaret, wife of Henry
Wadham, and her grandson Thomas Roo. (fn. 79)
Ownership seems to have passed successively to
Thomas (d. 1526-7) and Robert Brightridge (d.
1530-1) and was later disputed between the
Pitman, Pincherton, and Carent families. (fn. 80) In
1613 Roger Saunders, clerk, bought from Edmund Hungerford a holding which included
land in Wick, Kingsbury, and Milborne Port, (fn. 81)
and at his death in 1623 he was holding what
was described as a capital messuage or farm in
Wick, held of Kingsbury Regis manor. His heir
was his son, also Roger and a minor. (fn. 82) In 1689
Saunders sold his estates to (Sir) Thomas Travell (fn. 83) and the land descended with Kingsbury
manor. (fn. 84)
Rainbald of Cirencester held a hide of land
with the church in 1086 (fn. 85) and the estate passed
from him to the Crown and formed part of the
endowment of Cirencester abbey by Henry I. (fn. 86)
The abbey appropriated the church in 1203, (fn. 87)
and in 1437 the estate was known as CANONCOURT manor. (fn. 88) In 1539 the abbey was
dissolved and the manor and advowson passed
to the Crown. (fn. 89) In 1543 Winchester college
acquired the estate from the Crown by exchange (fn. 90) and retained it until 1824 when it was
exchanged with the marquess of Anglesey. (fn. 91) In
1836 the farm and tithes were sold to Sir William
Coles Medlycott and were absorbed into the Ven
estate. (fn. 92)
The former Canon Court Farm, a double-pile
building of stone in a Tudor style, was built
probably in the late 18th century, possibly in
1799. It was reduced in size in the mid or later
19th century. (fn. 93)
The Milborne family, who took their name
from the parish, seem to have acquired their
holding in the borough from the Gulden family
of Wick. (fn. 94) William Milborne (d. c. 1535) (fn. 95) seems
to have been followed by George (d. 1559), and
then in the male line by Giles (d. c. 1575), Giles's
son George (fl. 1601), and his grandson John (d.
c. 1664). (fn. 96) John's eldest son William, elected to
parliament in 1660 for Milborne borough, died
c. 1662 (fn. 97) and was eventually succeeded by his
brother George. George's son William, who
mortgaged what was called MILBORNE manor
to Thomas Strangways in the 1690s, (fn. 98) sold it to
James Medlycott in 1714. (fn. 99)
In 1545 the estate included George Milborne's own house, described as a capital
messuage, and three tenant holdings producing
21s. rent. (fn. 1) The house was in 1563 one of those
in which the office of borough bailiff was vested. (fn. 2)
In 1714 it was said to lie near the church and
the land measured more than 60 a. (fn. 3)
In 1554 the Crown leased land in Kingsbury
Regis which had formerly belonged to the dissolved chapel of Upper Lambourn (Berks.), part
of the estate of Westminster abbey. (fn. 4) The land
remained with the Crown until after 1573, (fn. 5) but
in 1576 it seems to have passed to the dean and
chapter of Westminster. (fn. 6) By 1619 it had been
sold. It passed in that year to Henry Gray and
his wife Elizabeth. (fn. 7)
The Templars had two messuages in the
borough which by 1332 were occupied by the
borough bailiff. (fn. 8) Shaftesbury abbey owned tenements and Sherborne abbey a rent in the parish
which passed to lay hands after the Dissolution. (fn. 9)
ECONOMIC HISTORY
Agriculture. Before 1086 the royal estate called Milborne had
never paid geld. It was assessed in that year at
50 ploughlands; the adjoining holdings of Garmund and Rainbald were each assessed at a hide.
The royal demesne estate was small, worked by
5 servi with 4 ploughteams; the small holdings
were both entirely in demesne, Garmund's
worked by 2 bordars and 2 servi. There were 70
villani and 18 bordars on the main estate with
65 ploughteams. Meadow measured 181 a., pasture 4 furlongs by 2 furlongs, moorland 1 league,
and woodland 2 leagues by 9 furlongs. The royal
demesne farm was stocked with 153 sheep and
2 riding horses, Garmund's with 20 swine, 1
cow, and 1 riding horse. (fn. 10) A market, associated
with a borough and 7 mills, suggest together a
thriving economy.
By the early 13th century the rectory estate
had been leased by the convent of Cirencester,
the appropriators, and some tenants had been
obliged to promise not to pay their labourers
with sheaves until tithes had been paid. (fn. 11) The
church estate was valued at £20 in 1254, (fn. 12) and
in 1263 a detailed agreement over intercommoning was made between the abbot of Cirencester
and the tenant of Kingsbury Regis manor concerning arable and meadow, but principally
pasture for the benefit of plough oxen, sheep,
cattle, and pigs. The land involved comprised
the abbot's arable at Hanover on the southern
boundary of the parish and grazing on downland
named after oxen (Oxdown) and sheep (Ewedown) in the north. Boon ploughings called
grassherth were then mentioned. (fn. 13) In 1291 the
rectory was assessed at £16 13s. 4d. (fn. 14) In 1436
the abbey estate was said to comprise over 360
a., (fn. 15) and in 1445 was valued at £18. (fn. 16) In 1535
the tithe income of the vicarage suggests a
balance of cultivation in the parish as a whole
slightly in favour of arable; (fn. 17) ten years earlier
there had been some destruction of hedges and
inclosures on the Carent family's estate. (fn. 18) In the
1540s the former Cirencester estate measured
518 a. and comprised two holdings of 60 a. and
40 a., the later farms at Swatchford and Wick,
and the rest let to a single tenant for £18 a year
and lying principally in the south of the parish.
Most of the land was in small strips, but Hanover was a single unit of 100 a. of arable. (fn. 19) The
rectorial farm at Wick included pasture for 6
beasts on Kingsmoor and for 60 sheep on the
commons. (fn. 20)
In the early 17th century the arable crops in
the parish were corn and hemp. (fn. 21) In the later
17th century some arable on the west side of the
parish had already been inclosed, but two farms,
Ven and Ryall's tenement, included together 35
a. in the common fields, arable closes amounting
to c. 20 a., and 80 a. of arable and sheep grazing
(sheep sleight) in the north of the parish. In
comparison there was 104 a. of inclosed meadow
on those two farms and pasture and a small
amount of common meadow. Perhaps more
significant were 15 beast leazes and 150 sheep
leazes on Horethorne Down and 47 sheep leazes
in the common fields. (fn. 22) There were similar holdings in Kingsbury manor. One farm comprised
nearly 50 a. of inclosed arable and meadow, 95 a.
of arable dispersed in three common fields, common pasture in the fields and wastes of Milborne
Wick and Kingsbury for 8 score sheep, and 9 beast
leazes and common pasture for 6 score sheep on
Horethorne Down. (fn. 23) From 1629 the main Winchester college holding was let to Sir Nathaniel
Napper for 20 years at a rent of £12 os. 8d., 8 qr.
of wheat, and 13 qr. 3 bu. and 1 peck of malt, (fn. 24)
perhaps indicating a preponderance of barley over
wheat and the development of malting in the
parish.
Some exchanges of tenant holdings were approved in the Kingsbury manor court in 1685, (fn. 25)
but more radical rearrangement became possible
elsewhere in the parish as James Medlycott
bought land between 1698 and 1726. (fn. 26) At his
death in 1731 Medlycott owned Ven, Wick, and
Spurles farms and other properties worth over
£568 and further lands in reversion worth over
£330. (fn. 27) Kingsbury manor in the 1740s comprised four substantial holdings, two of over 200
a. and two of over 70 a., much of the arable still
dispersed. One tenant was bailiff of the manor
and farmed nearly 300 a. (fn. 28) The Winchester
college estate in 1756 comprised Canon Court
farm with nearly 387 a. of land and 20 beast and
200 sheep leazes, and two smaller holdings of 78
a. and 46 a., each with 6 beast and 60 sheep
leazes. (fn. 29) Edward Walter of Stalbridge (Dors.)
took the tenancy at that date and was succeeded
by the Pagets, who continued as tenants until
they acquired the freehold in 1824. (fn. 30) In the
1780s the earl of Uxbridge's total estate in the
parish amounted to just over 1,100 a., most of it
held either on lease or at will. (fn. 31) Thomas Hutchings Medlycott owned 893 a. including two large
farms, both of over 250 a., tenanted at will. (fn. 32)
Most of the arable was inclosed and turnips were
grown, but farmers were ignorant of the value
of marl; grassland supported c. 2,500 sheep. (fn. 33) In
1801 the principal crops were wheat (346 a.) and
barley (326 a.), followed by rape or turnips (207
a.), and oats (174 a.) and with much smaller
quantities of beans, peas, and potatoes. (fn. 34)
Under an Act of 1812, amended so that
borough rights might be transferred to prevent
the loss of the franchise, 1,267 a. of common
grassland was allotted in 1817. (fn. 35) After the marquess of Anglesey sold his estate in 1835 the
Medlycotts had most of the land in the parish. (fn. 36)
In 1839 the parish was almost equally divided
between arable and grassland, with 97 a. of
woodland. There were two farms of 400 a. or
over, both at Wick, North Street farm measured
314 a., and there were four more of over 200 a.,
including two at Kingsbury and the former
rectory farm of Canon Court. Rectorial tithes
were commuted for £585, vicarial for £210. (fn. 37) By
1851 one of the farms at Wick had increased to
500 a. and employed 16 labourers and two others
measured 340 a. or over. Six farms between them
employed 85 men and boys. (fn. 38) Permanent grass
(2,122 a.) covered more than two thirds of the
parish by 1905, arable land totalled 855 a., and
there was 198 a. of woodland. (fn. 39) Flax was grown
extensively until after the First World War. (fn. 40) In
the 1920s two of the Medlycott holdings were
advertised for sale as dairy, corn, and sheep
farms. (fn. 41) Eight of the 20 holdings recorded in
1988 were dairy farms, one specialised in sheep
rearing, and two concentrated on cereals. Seven
ranged in size between 100 ha. and 200 ha., and
five more between 30 ha. and 100 ha. Grassland
covered just over 809 ha. and 457 ha. was under
arable crops, principally wheat (226 ha.) and
barley (206 ha.) with a little oats (23 ha.). Sheep
(1,684) slightly outnumbered cattle (1,607). (fn. 42)
Trade and industry
A mercer was mentioned in the borough in 1242-3, (fn. 43) a dyer
represented it in parliament in 1298 and 1306-
7, (fn. 44) a tucker, 2 dyers, and 2 tailors were resident
in 1327, (fn. 45) a draper in 1424, (fn. 46) and 2 weavers in
the early 16th century. (fn. 47) Two shops and a tolsey
belonged to the burgesses in 1482. (fn. 48) There is
some evidence for decline by the later 16th
century when the burgesses feared the loss of
their liberties (fn. 49) and the whole parish ranked
behind both Henstridge and Charlton Horethorne for the payment of subsidies in 1641. (fn. 50)
The restoration of the parliamentary franchise
in 1628 provided the impetus for increased
economic activity in the later 17th century and
by the 1680s brewers, tanners, bakers, and
leather dressers formed distinct craft groups
within the borough. (fn. 51) Thirteen hosiers or stocking makers were active between 1688 and 1818,
of whom Angel and Thomas Hide and Edward
Hallett were the most prominent, (fn. 52) and 16 men
variously described as linmen, linen weavers, or
linsey weavers were in business in the parish
between 1671 and 1818, notably the manufacturer William Feaver. (fn. 53) Between 1695 and 1733
there was also a worsted comber. (fn. 54) Manufacturers of dowlais, ticks, and white bays were said c.
1785 to have employed most of the poor in the
neighbourhood, (fn. 55) and dowlais, linsey, and stockings were with shoes the chief manufactures in
1822. (fn. 56) The principal markets were in London,
Bristol, Bath, Salisbury, and Exeter. (fn. 57) By the
1830s the textile trade, then involving both
sailcloth and collars, had been 'in some degree'
superseded by gloving. (fn. 58) In 1851 a sailcloth
maker, 4 dowlais or linen weavers, 2 flax dressers, a collar maker, and a woolstapler were still
occupied. (fn. 59) Flax continued to be processed until
1866 (fn. 60) and in the same year a woolstapler was
still in business. A rick cloth maker was active
by 1861 and until 1875 or later and paper boxes
were made in the village by 1861 until after the
turn of the century. (fn. 61)
Between 1671 and 1782 there were 21 tanners,
fellmongers, and curriers in business. (fn. 62) Gloving
on a large scale was introduced in 1810 and ten
years later the Ensor family began production.
A second factory opened in 1816, a third in
1823, (fn. 63) and evidently a fourth in 1827. (fn. 64) There
were 150 people engaged in gloving in the parish
in 1831, (fn. 65) and in 1834 25,000 dozen pairs were
produced in two factories; new premises were
opened in 1837. (fn. 66) There were three factories in
1851, by far the largest that of Thomas Ensor in
North Street which processed the work of over
2,000 employees from the parish and beyond.
John Pitman at his factory in High Street employed 34 men and boys, and Silas Dyke in
Church Street 21 men and boys. In the parish
as a whole 511 people were engaged in some
aspect of the gloving industry and a further 25
were employed in leather processing. (fn. 67) In 1871
Ensors, who had moved to West Hill, employed
2,519 people, Dykes, then in North Street,
1,198, and Pitman's successor, Minchinton,
468. (fn. 68) In 1891 there were 564 people living in
the parish employed in some way in gloving. (fn. 69)
After the closure of Minchinton's another factory opened in the later 1890s and continued
until shortly before 1910. (fn. 70)
In 1914 the Ensor business, owned by Southcombes of Tintinhull since 1900, employed 201
people in their premises and 470 female outworkers. In 1930 365 employees contributed to
the wedding present of Hector Southcombe. In
1914 weekly output was between 800 and 1,000
dozen pairs of leather gloves. The Dyke factory
produced 480 different styles in the 1930s but
for several years before closure in 1984 concentrated on sporting gloves. The Ensor company
ceased trading in 1965 but the factory continued
under new management until c. 1970. (fn. 71) A small
tannery remained in business in the village in
1994.
In the 18th century the village was on a
waggon route to London (fn. 72) and in 1840 carriers
travelled three times a week to London and
Exeter and once a week to Dorchester and
Weymouth. (fn. 73) Coaches called at the King's Head
for Andover, Salisbury, Southampton, Exeter,
and Yeovil. (fn. 74) The arrival of the railway had little
immediate commercial effect and road carriers
were still in operation to Sherborne and Yeovil
in 1872, (fn. 75) but by 1875 the Somerset Trading Co.
had a depot at the railway station. (fn. 76)
The prosperity of retailing and other crafts
was directly allied to the strength of the gloving
trade. There were 22 retailers scattered around
the village in 1842 and 17 retailers and 25
craftsmen in 1861. (fn. 77) The number of retailers
remained stable until after the Second World
War, but by 1987 there were only 11 businesses. (fn. 78) A cooperative society was formed in the
village in 1873 and a branch of Stuckey's Bank
was being built in 1875. (fn. 79) By the 1880s an
auctioneer and solicitor were in business alongside a resident physician and a surgeon. Livery
stables, a polo ground at Spurles farm, and an
office for the Dorset Territorials were a reflection both of the nearness of the county boundary
and the continued contribution of the landed
interest before the First World War. (fn. 80)
Stone was quarried on Highmore's Hill,
WSW. of the town, and on Milborne Down, on
the NE. edge of the parish. (fn. 81) By 1839 fields
north-west and south of Milborne Wick were
named after limekilns. (fn. 82)
Markets and fairs
There was a market in
1086 (fn. 83) which by the early 13th century was
farmed by the townsmen. (fn. 84) It presumably
lapsed, but in 1397 the bailiff and burgesses were
granted one on Wednesdays. (fn. 85) The market had
again lapsed by the 18th century but attempts
were made to revive it c. 1720 when the market
house was built and in 1748 when a market for
grain, cattle, and wares was advertised. (fn. 86) There
was c. 1785 the memory of a fish market, (fn. 87) and
a general market was still held in the 1830s. (fn. 88)
The market house of c. 1720 comprised a
vaulted cellar, arcaded ground floor, and room
above. Anticipated business did not materialise
and by c. 1785 the arcades had been bricked up. (fn. 89)
The building was used in 1791 as a warehouse (fn. 90)
and later as a school, (fn. 91) and as a natural history
museum. (fn. 92) It was bought with the manor by the
Medlycotts in 1835 and in 1949 was sold to the
parish council, (fn. 93) by whom it was used in 1994
for a variety of community purposes.
In 1397 a fair was granted or confirmed for
the eve and feast of saints Simon and Jude (27-8
October). (fn. 94) It was held on 28 October c. 1700. (fn. 95)
By c. 1785, it was held on 26 October and was
'very large' for sheep and cattle. A second fair
was then held on 5 June. (fn. 96) Both fairs were still
held in the 1830s (fn. 97) and both in the 1840s attracted cattle dealers and pedlars but
entertainment had become more prominent. (fn. 98) In
1880 the October fair was moved to the 27th so
as not to clash with Sherborne fair. (fn. 99) In 1891 it
was described as for entertainment only (fn. 1) but
pupils did not apparently absent themselves
from school to attend it after 1898. (fn. 2) Both fairs
were said to have been held in 1906 but the
October fair only in 1910. In 1915 the date was
marked by the visit of a travelling picture show. (fn. 3)
Mills
In 1086 there were 7 mills, 6 on the
royal estate and 1 on Garmund's holding. (fn. 4) There
was a mill at Wick by 1212, another at
Kingsbury, and a third on the rectory estate by
1250, (fn. 5) all three probably successors to Domesday mills.
Wick mill, mentioned in 1320, (fn. 6) descended
with Wick manor and was held in the later 17th
century under Sir Thomas Travell by Elizabeth
Loaden. (fn. 7) In 1759 it was held by James Kenniston, and as Kenniston's mill it passed in 1794
from Thomas Noake to George Hutchings and
thence to the Medlycotts, owners by 1839. (fn. 8)
George Coombs occupied the mill from 1819 (fn. 9)
and his family remained there until 1866 or
later. (fn. 10) The mill ceased to grind in the late
1880s. (fn. 11)
A mill at Kingsbury probably descended with
the manor but was held in the later 17th century
by Sir Robert Napier. (fn. 12) Two mills were recorded
on the manor in the earlier 18th century, one at
Court Lane End (fn. 13) and one newly-built in 1715. (fn. 14)
One of those was held by the Shepherd family
by 1760 and until after 1839, (fn. 15) and from the
1840s until c. 1920 was worked by the Luffman
family. (fn. 16)
The mill on the rectory estate by 1250 (fn. 17)
remained associated with Canon Court farm and
in 1606 was known as Mearing's mill after the
tenant. (fn. 18) It was about to be rebuilt in 1824 (fn. 19) and
seems to have become a flax factory, which in
1839 employed 14 people and required a large
millpond. (fn. 20) Soon afterwards the factory failed;
it was demolished and the millpond drained. (fn. 21)
In 1482 there was a burgage called the old mill
which was still so named in the later 16th
century. (fn. 22) Before 1586 a horsemill was established in the borough. (fn. 23) Before 1701 there had
been a small fulling mill at Wick (fn. 24) and in 1742
John Dyer, a clothier, occupied a mill. (fn. 25)
LOCAL GOVERNMENT AND PUBLIC
SERVICES
Borough government. In 1212
the men of Milborne held pleas at farm from the
Crown, (fn. 26) and presumably continued to do so
after the transfer of the fee farm to private hands
in the earlier 14th century. (fn. 27) Extracts from proceedings of the borough court leet or lawday and
view of frankpledge survive for January 1682
and April 1683 and refer to a Michaelmas
lawday. (fn. 28) A separate presentment to the borough
court from the commonalty tenants survives for
February 1664. (fn. 29) An Easter lawday was described as 'of late years disused' c. 1731. (fn. 30)
Annual Michaelmas courts were held on the
Tuesday next after the first Monday in October,
and presentments survive for 1785, 1796-8,
1811, 1815-16, and 1822. (fn. 31) A steward to keep
the court was appointed by the capital and sub
bailiffs, (fn. 32) but when, as in 1774, a parliamentary
election divided the town, two sessions of the
leet court were held, each presided over by a
steward nominated by one of the out-going sub
bailiffs. (fn. 33)
Two town, borough, or capital bailiffs governed the borough. (fn. 34) In 1563 a tenement described
as a capital messuage and called Milborne's Place
carried with it the tenant's obligation to serve as
portreeve or bailiff. (fn. 35) A second tenement, called
Bunbury House, was in 1689 similarly described. (fn. 36)
Those were two of nine tenements or bailiwicks
which at the end of the 17th century were described
as held 'of royal right'. (fn. 37) The tenements, named in
the 1680s after owners or occupiers in the early 16th
century including John Moleyns, John Hody, and
William Pauncefoot, may originally have been responsible together for raising the fee farm, payment
of which in the 1550s was discharged by the bailiff. (fn. 38)
In 1628 and 1640 the bailiffs headed the signatories of parliamentary election returns, (fn. 39) and by the
1680s ownership of those capital tenements came to
have political significance as the bailiffs for the time
being acted as returning officers and controlled
elections. (fn. 40) The office of bailiff or capital bailiff, held
by the owners of two of the nine bailiwicks in a strict
rotation known as the 'wheel', was occasionally
exercised by sub bailiffs from 1660 and regularly so
from the 1680s. (fn. 41) In the mid 18th century the bailiffs
were of little significance outside parliamentary
elections, their duties comprising the collection of
minor rents, warning the watch, and acting as
criers. (fn. 42) Bailiffs continued to serve in rotation until
1834 or later. (fn. 43) The sub bailiffs were always appointed at the Michaelmas court leet. (fn. 44)
By the 1530s two constables or headboroughs
were responsible for collecting taxes (fn. 45) as well as for
keeping the peace. (fn. 46) By c. 1800 they answered at the
annual borough court leet along with an aletaster
and a searcher and sealer of leather. (fn. 47)
In the later 17th century a charge was made,
apparently on borough tenants, which was known
as the stockdown watch, presumably for the care of
animals on the common pastures or downs in the
north of the parish. (fn. 48)
The stewards of the guild merchant had a guildhall which was let in 1535 in exchange for a
brewhouse. (fn. 49) It continued to be let until the 1580s
or later. (fn. 50) In the 18th and 19th centuries it was used
for meetings of the parish vestry and later for courts,
and in 1854 part was converted for a lock-up. (fn. 51) The
building appears to date from the 17th century or
earlier, but its entrance is by an ornate 12th-century
arch with zigzag and crenellation motifs. The lockup has subsequently become a butcher's cold store.
Manorial government
Kingsbury was described as a free manor in 1327 and in 1647 was
called a liberty. (fn. 52) In 1569 Kingsbury tithing
evidently comprised the whole parish with the
exception of the borough. (fn. 53) By 1821 the parish
was divided into the three tithings of Milborne
Port, Milborne Wick, and Kingsbury Regis. (fn. 54)
Records of the annual October view of frankpledge and court baron for Kingsbury Regis
survive for 1683-5. (fn. 55) By the 19th century it was
a court baron only, held for presentments and
for the payment of rents. (fn. 56) The court was held
at the guildhall in the early 20th century. (fn. 57)
Officers of the court were a constable, a tithingman, and a hayward, the last also serving within
the borough. (fn. 58)
In 1535 Cirencester abbey held an annual
court for the rectory manor. (fn. 59) Winchester college
held courts for the same manor between 1544
and 1824. (fn. 60) Records of 74 sessions have survived,
usually described simply as courts but from 1797
also as views of frankpledge when presentments
were made by the jury. In the 16th century
meetings were normally held in April but occasionally also in September. The date was more
variable in the 17th century and from the 1770s
May was the usual month of meeting. In 1812
no court was held for want of a jury and homage,
and in 1815, 1818, and 1820 there was no
business. Changes of tenants and exchanges of
land constituted most of the recorded business;
presentments in the early 19th century concerned repairs needed to a road and a bridge. No
court officers were named.
Public services
By the mid 18th century the
overseers were supporting the poor by regular
monthly payments, by cash allowances for lodgings and clothing, and by offering the use of a
loom. Paupers were badged from 1764. An
apothecary and a physician were retained, and
at least two paupers were sent to hospital in
Bath. (fn. 61) By 1821 a salaried assistant overseer was
appointed and the vestry authorised weekly payments to paupers at the workhouse in the
1820s. (fn. 62) In 1835 the parish became part of the
Wincanton poor-law union, in 1894 of Wincanton rural district and in 1974 of the Yeovil, later
South Somerset, district. (fn. 63)
The workhouse, in Brook Street, had been
begun by 1795 and was completed by 1799. (fn. 64) In
1836 it was no longer used by the parish and was
put to other uses including a laundry. (fn. 65)
In 1733 Thomas Medlycott gave a fire engine
to the borough. (fn. 66) A salaried crew was appointed
in 1821 and was paid by the parish until 1887. (fn. 67)
The brigade survived until 1961. (fn. 68) The fire
engine was housed in the church where also c.
1785 fire buckets hung in the sanctuary. (fn. 69) In
1819 the marquess of Anglesey had a weighing
engine built and in 1825 had the street names
painted and all houses in the borough numbered. (fn. 70) In 1842 the new parish constable was
also appointed assistant overseer. (fn. 71) Street lighting was introduced in 1865, supplied by gas from
a works in Kingsbury; public electricity was
brought to the parish in 1931. A cemetery was
opened in Wheathill Lane in 1901, and in 1904
the waterworks at Bradley Head. A childrens'
playground was created at Gainsborough in 1947
and the Memorial Playing Field in 1955. The
Victoria Hall was built in 1887 by one of the
leather manufacturers; the present village hall
was built in 1981-2. (fn. 72)
A reading room was opened in the guildhall
before 1875, by which date it had been 'of late
years' disused. (fn. 73) The same or another room was
in use in 1890. (fn. 74) A public library was opened in
1947; in 1980 it was replaced by a mobile service,
but in 1988 new premises were opened. (fn. 75) A free
museum had been established by 1875, evidently
in the guildhall. (fn. 76) By 1883 it was in the market
house and comprised natural history specimens
collected and arranged by W. C. P. Medlycott. (fn. 77)
By 1910 until the 1930s it occupied premises in
the grounds of Ven House. (fn. 78)
PARLIAMENTARY REPRESENTATION
Between 1298 and 1307 Milborne Port sent
representatives to five parliaments. (fn. 79) The franchise was restored in 1628 by a vote in the House
of Commons, (fn. 80) evidently for the benefit of local
gentry in the persons of Philip Digby and Sir
Nathaniel Napier. During the Long Parliament
the two seats were occupied at various times by
Edward Kirton of Castle Cary, the earl of Hertford's steward, Thomas Grove of Stoke Trister,
Thomas Earle of Charborough (Dors.), William
Carent of Toomer, and two members of the
Digby family. (fn. 81) Carent and Grove were elected
in 1645, the latter a strong presbyterian and
chosen in spite of the presbyterian claim that the
town's bailiff, a sequestered royalist, had released prisoners from gaol in order to vote. (fn. 82)
By the later 17th century the franchise was in
those paying scot and lot, numbering 85 in 1659,
and two bailiffs chosen each year from the
holders of the nine capital burgages were the
returning officers. One burgage was owned by
the Milborne family, then living at Wonastow
(Mon.), and William Milborne was chosen for
the Restoration Parliament, with Michael Malet
of Poyntington (Dors., formerly Som.) as his
fellow member. Henry Milborne, a papist sympathiser, failed to replace his nephew later in
1660 against the opposition of Francis Wyndham of Trent (Dors., formerly Som.). Malet and
Wyndham were eventually returned in 1661
after the double return of Wyndham and Milborne. John Hunt of Compton Pauncefoot seems
to have controlled the six elections between 1677
and 1689 and was accompanied once by William
Lacy, an exclusionist, and three times by Henry
Bull, both men his brothers-in-law. Attempts in
1687-8 to break the Tory hold in favour of the
Whigs Sir Charles Carteret and William Strode
proved unsuccessful, and in 1689 Hunt's fellow
member was Thomas Saunders of Milborne
Wick, a Tory and the first resident burgess
appointed since the franchise was restored. (fn. 83)
In 1689 Saunders sold his estate to the Tory
(Sir) Thomas Travell who in 1694 also acquired
Kingsbury Regis manor (fn. 84) which included several capital burgages. He himself was returned
nine times between 1690 and 1708, on the first
two occasions with Sir Charles Carteret of Ven,
also owner of capital burgages. (fn. 85) The results of
at least four of the elections were contested, once
on the grounds that Travell had been one of the
bailiffs and had illegally admitted deputies procured to return him. In 1702 he was accused of
distributing corn to electors. All petitions were
dismissed and the House of Commons resolved
that the right of election lay in the owners of the
nine capital burgages, their deputies, nine trustees of the commonalty lands, and other
inhabitants paying scot and lot. (fn. 86) Thomas
Medlycott, who acquired Ven from Carteret, (fn. 87)
was returned with Travell in 1705. Shortly
before the election he claimed he had 40 promises from 48 voters and in the event received 37
votes. (fn. 88) In 1715 Travell was owner of five of the
capital burgages, Medlycott of four. (fn. 89)
Travell died in 1724 leaving his political
interests to his widow Frances (d. 1732), from
1727 wife of John Gordon, earl of Sunderland
(d. 1733). (fn. 90) William Sclater, nephew and heir of
William Sclater, succeeded to part of Travell's
interest and continued to secure the return of
the Tory Michael Harvey. In 1734 Sclater,
presumably with the concurrence of the other
Travell heirs and with the influence of Harvey,
was able to ensure the return of Thomas Medlycott the younger and Harvey against Thomas
Medlycott the elder and another. At the election
of 1741 the younger Medlycott and Jeffrey
French were returned after a contest, French
perhaps already having bought the former Travell interest from Harvey and Anna Maria
Wyatt. (fn. 91) At that date it was not clear whether
Medlycott or his opponents had a majority of
the nine burgages. (fn. 92)
Medlycott lost his seat to Harvey at a by-election in 1742 after he had accepted office, but he
determined to regain it for he was a 'parliamentary beggar' dependent upon politics for his
livelihood. (fn. 93) Sclater was still owner of part of
Wick manor and of at least one capital burgage. (fn. 94)
The election of 1747 produced a double return,
Medlycott and Charles Churchill being eventually declared the winners. Harvey and French,
returned by one presiding bailiff, claimed that
their opponents had been returned only by a
deputy bailiff, a common day labourer employed
in Medlycott's garden. (fn. 95)
Before 1746 Michael Harvey (d. 1748) had
been forced to mortgage his Milborne property
to Peter Walter the elder (d. 1746). (fn. 96) Peter and
Edward Walter succeeded to the estates of their
grandfather, Peter Walter, and in 1753 also
acquired French's interest in the borough. (fn. 97) The
younger Peter died in 1753 leaving his property
to his brother Edward (fn. 98) and for the next five
elections until 1772 the Medlycotts and Edward
Walter shared the seats with a 'good deal of
skirmishing at election times'. In 1772 each
patron offered the single vacant seat to a candidate, and in 1774 there were three separate
returns because the election took place at the
time the bailiffs changed office. (fn. 99) One of the
successful candidates, Temple Luttrell, proved
an opponent of the government and much
money was spent to induce Walter to dispose of
his interest to Medlycott, provided Medlycott
undertook to support government candidates. (fn. 1)
The election of 1796 was complicated by the
intervention of two Whig adventurers and the
victory of Henry William Paget, Lord Paget,
heir to the earl of Uxbridge, and Sir Robert
Ainslie, a Medlycott relative, cost Lord Uxbridge well over £3,000 and Medlycott
something for entertainment. (fn. 2) Two years later,
and again in 1812 and 1819, Medlycott leased
some of his estate including his four capital
burgages to the Pagets, (fn. 3) thus leaving Pagets in
total control until 1818 (fn. 4) when the Whig borough-monger William Henry Vane, earl of
Darlington, supported two candidates in opposition, apparently at the instigation of John
Henning, one of the town's glove manufacturers.
The Pagets were again successful but they,
Medlycott, and Darlington seem to have started
a building programme for potential voters (fn. 5) and
in 1819 Darlington began to build Newtown in
order to increase the number of voters from the
96 accepted in 1818 by c. 80. (fn. 6) In 1820 the Pagets
built Waterloo Crescent, named to record the
earl of Uxbridge's part in the battle. (fn. 7) Two
radical Whigs in 1818 had spoken of the thraldom of 'Meddlycoats, Turncoats, and any other
coats'; the Paget candidates were successful in
1820 but 37 special constables had been sworn
to prepare for trouble at the election, and the
annual audit dinner that year cost Lord Anglesey
over £104. (fn. 8) Darlington had to admit defeat and
in 1824 sold his interest to Anglesey, who also
renewed his lease of the Medlycott houses in the
borough. (fn. 9) Thereafter, although Newtown and
Waterloo Crescent came to be known by opponents as Blue Town and Rotten Row, Lord
Anglesey easily controlled elections until the
borough lost its franchise under the Reform Act
of 1832. In the following year he sold furniture
from several houses in the borough including
stools and cups 'which were used at the election
dinners'. (fn. 10)
CHURCH
There was a church at Milborne
Port by c. 950. (fn. 11) It was probably a minster with
dependent churches at Charlton Horethorne,
Holwell (Dors., formerly Som.), and Pulham
(Dors.). (fn. 12) The church was held in 1086 by
Rainbald of Cirencester, (fn. 13) dean of the college of
canons at Cirencester (Glos.) and formerly a
member of Edward the Confessor's household. (fn. 14)
It was part of the original endowment of
Cirencester abbey by Henry I. (fn. 15) An attempt was
made c. 1199 to make the church a prebend in
Wells cathedral (fn. 16) but in 1203 it was appropriated
to Cirencester, and by 1204 a vicarage had been
ordained. (fn. 17) The living remained a sole vicarage
from that date until 1964 when it was united
with Goathill (Dors., formerly Som.), with
which it had been held in plurality since 1940. (fn. 18)
The abbot and convent of Cirencester were
patrons of the living by the 12th century and
until the Dissolution. (fn. 19) In 1543 Winchester college acquired the advowson and held it until
1824, although the county committee presented
c. 1651, (fn. 20) the Lord Protector in 1656, (fn. 21) the
bishop of Bath and Wells in 1660 and 1661, and
the archbishop of Canterbury by lapse in 1665.
On the last three occasions the presentation was
made during prolonged litigation. (fn. 22) The advowson passed to the marquess of Anglesey by
exchange in 1824 and he sold his estate to Sir
William Coles Medlycott in 1835. (fn. 23) After the
union with Goathill the Medlycotts had two
turns out of three, and in 1990 the family was
represented by Mrs. J. E. Smith (neé Medlycott). (fn. 24)
In 1086 the church was valued at 30s. (fn. 25) In
1291 the vicarage was assessed at £5 6s. 8d. (fn. 26) and
in 1535 at £14 1s. 4d. net. (fn. 27) Its reputed value c.
1670 was £50, (fn. 28) and the net income c. 1830 was
£233. (fn. 29) In 1535 there was no glebe and in 1606
only a courtyard and adjoining buildings
amounting to 1 a. and the churchyard. (fn. 30) In 1835
there was just over 1 a. of glebe and in 1839
rather less. (fn. 31) A small amount was added in 1894 (fn. 32)
and in 1978 the united benefice had just under
27 a. of which 13 a. was in the parish. (fn. 33)
Tithes of the vicarage were worth £11 in
1535, (fn. 34) were leased for £300 a year for six years
from 1812, (fn. 35) and were valued at nearly £200 in
1835 (fn. 36) and £210 in 1851. (fn. 37)
In 1606 the vicarage house comprised a hall
and a buttery together with a barn, stable, stall,
and pigeon house. (fn. 38) Two trees were given by
Winchester college for its repair in 1616. (fn. 39) It
stood in the north-west corner of the churchyard
and was either rebuilt or altered by Nathaniel
Napper in 1661. (fn. 40) In 1815 it was described as
old and inconvenient, (fn. 41) but it continued to be
used until 1871 when it was replaced by a
19-roomed house on the Sherborne road designed by Henry Hall and paid for by Sir
William Coles Medlycott for the benefit of his
brother whom he had recently presented as
vicar. (fn. 42) In 1937 that house was replaced by the
present building in Bathwell Lane, designed by
Anthony Medlycott. (fn. 43)
Among the medieval vicars was Master
Geoffrey Brito, a canon of Cirencester and
nephew of Abbot Alexander Neckham, (fn. 44) and
John Pratt (vicar 1509-13), a lawyer who also
held canonries at St. Paul's and Hereford. (fn. 45) The
assistant curate employed in 1548 was said to be
insufficient. (fn. 46) In 1557 much of the church plate
was still withheld from the parish and several
service books were lacking. (fn. 47) In 1562-3 Thomas
Meade or Meden (vicar 1561-70) was only moderately learned and lived in Bristol diocese. (fn. 48) His
immediate successor William White (vicar 1571-
1616), formerly chaplain of Winchester college,
was resident. (fn. 49) Lionel Gardner, appointed to the
parish c. 1651, preached and said prayers but
refused to baptise and give communion because
he was not ordained and had not been to a
grammar school. (fn. 50) William Hopkins, admitted
in 1656 and ejected after prolonged litigation in
1662, became minister of a nonconformist congregation in the parish. (fn. 51) The 18th-century
vicars were usually Wykehamists and graduates
of New College, Oxford. John Hall, vicar 1748-
65, was resident, but among his successors was
George Huntingford, appointed vicar early in
1789 and warden of Winchester college later in
the year, who retained both the vicarage and the
wardenship, combined from 1802 with the bishopric of Gloucester and from 1815 instead with
the see of Hereford, until his death in 1832. (fn. 52)
From 1786 until 1823 or later the cure was
served by William Owen, who in the 1780s
ministered to c. 30 communicants and said
prayers and preached twice each Sunday. (fn. 53)
Huntingford's successor Charles Bowle (vicar
1825-35) was resident vicar at Wimborne Minster (Dors.). (fn. 54) Under Owen an orchestra was
established which was replaced c. 1841 by an
organ and a choir which was surpliced in 1845. (fn. 55)
In 1851 there were 124 adults and 105 children
at the morning service on Census Sunday, and
in the afternoon 223 adults and 128 children. (fn. 56)
By 1870 communion was celebrated monthly. (fn. 57)
In the earlier 16th century there were endowed lights of the Virgin, St. Leonard, and the
Rood and by 1548 a brotherhood of St. John the
Evangelist. (fn. 58) The churchwardens had probably
rented a building for a church house by 1569,
perhaps the house in Church Lane which they
were leasing out until 1801 or later. (fn. 59) The present church house, proposed in 1894, was built
in 1897. The adjoining mortuary, incorporating
fragments of medieval carving from the parish
church, was built in 1867. (fn. 60) A mission church
was built by public subscription at Milborne
Wick in 1891 and a mission hall at Newtown was
begun in 1894. (fn. 61) The latter was last used for
services in 1943. (fn. 62)
The church of ST. JOHN THE EVANGELIST is built of rubble and ashlar and has a
chancel with north vestry and chapel, a central
tower with north and south transepts, and a nave
with north aisle. The chancel, crossing, and
something of the south transept survive from a
pre-Conquest cruciform church whose north
transept and originally unaisled nave were destroyed in 1867. The chancel retains, mainly on
the south wall, areas of external blind arcading
at two levels and the tower, each of whose sides
is longer than the width of the adjoining arm of
the church that abuts it, has the responds of the
original multi-order crossing arches. The middle
stage of the tower is probably 12th-century and
a staircase turret which gives access to it was
built then in the angle between the nave and the
south transept. A south doorway with a carved
tympanum was put into the nave at that time
and lancet windows were inserted into the nave
and chancel in the 13th century. The south
porch may have been 14th-century and it appears that the gable wall of the south transept
was rebuilt or remodelled then. The east and
west crossing arches of the tower were rebuilt in
the 15th century and the tower was heightened
by a stage. Other work of that time or of the
early 16th century included the north chapel,
several new windows, the west doorway, and the
reroofing of the nave whose parapet formerly
carried the date 1517. (fn. 63)
The chapel roof has the date 1641. In 1712 a
west gallery was built for the singers (fn. 64) and there
was also an east gallery by 1747. (fn. 65) Arms were
put on one of the galleries in 1720 and the
church, presumably the nave, was ceiled and
'beautified'. (fn. 66) The west gallery was enlarged in
1812-14 and in 1826 a two-bay north aisle with
a gallery was added to the nave. (fn. 67) In 1841 the
east gallery over the rood screen was taken down.
The south aisle was largely rebuilt, apparently
reproducing its earlier features, in 1842 and in
the following year the north chapel wall was
rebuilt. (fn. 68) In 1867 the nave, aisle, and north
transept were demolished. The transept was
rebuilt to its old dimensions but the nave and
aisle were lengthened and widened and given a
steep roof and windows in the 15th-century style
to the designs of Henry Hall. (fn. 69) The chancel was
restored in 1908 by Sir Walter Tapper and
includes plaster medallions high on the sanctuary walls. The glass in the east window is by
Bainbridge Reynolds; the carved figures by John
Skelton were put in the damaged 15th-century
niches in 1972. (fn. 70)
The 12th-century font was originally square,
decorated with shallow blank arches, and was
subsequently made octagonal. It has a 17th-century cover. The rood screen is of the 15th
century, the same date as the ceiling of the
crossing tower. The rest of the furnishings are
of the 19th century.
There are eight bells, three of 1736 by
Thomas Bilbie, two by A. and C. Mears of 1846,
and the rest recast in the 20th century. A ting
tang bell was sold in 1922. (fn. 71) The plate includes
a paten of 1688 by Benjamin Pyne and a flagon
of 1733 by Gabriel Sleath. (fn. 72) The registers begin
in 1538 and are complete. (fn. 73)
ROMAN CATHOLICISM
Mass was celebrated in a room in the Town Hall until 1973
when the congregation began to use the parish
church. The arrangement continued in 1993. (fn. 74)
PROTESTANT NONCONFORMITY
Quakers first met in the parish c. 1656, had
resumed meetings by 1673-4, and were licensed
in 1689 to meet in the Red Lion inn. Meetings
continued until c. 1700. (fn. 75) In 1669 William Hopkins (d. 1700), ejected from the living, had a
congregation of 60 hearers and was described as
a Presbyterian. (fn. 76) A licence for a meeting place
was granted in 1672, (fn. 77) and further licences were
issued c. 1696, 1719, 1732, and for a new meeting
house in 1751. (fn. 78) In 1718 there were 300 members, (fn. 79) and in the following year possibly a
second congregation. (fn. 80) Until 1743 the main congregation remained Presbyterian but in that year
became Independent, and licences for Independent meetings in private homes were granted
in 1754 and 1755. (fn. 81) The church, which was
enlarged c. 1830 and in the 1840s and was
galleried, (fn. 82) had adult congregations on Census
Sunday 1851 of 180 in the morning and 386 in
the evening, with 120 Sunday school children at
the morning service. (fn. 83) The building, in Chapel
Lane, formerly known as the Old or Independent Meeting House and in 1981 as the
United Reformed Church, (fn. 84) was closed in 1991.
Wesleyan Methodism was introduced in 1820
and by 1824 services were held both in the village
and in Newtown. (fn. 85) From 1826 there was only
one place of worship and in 1829 a chapel was
built at Coldharbour. (fn. 86) In 1851 the adult congregation on Census Sunday was 110 in the
morning and 136 in the evening with Sunday
school children numbering 44 in the morning,
66 in the afternoon, and 25 in the evening. (fn. 87)
Services were held at Newtown between 1871
and 1894 and at Milborne Wick from 1876 to
1886. (fn. 88) The chapel at Coldharbour, designed by
Alexander Lauder with seating for 400 and
opened in 1866, included rooms for school and
other meetings. (fn. 89) The church was closed in 1988
and was converted to flats; services and other
meetings were held in the former manse in
1996. (fn. 90)
Primitive Methodists were meeting in the
parish by 1849 and were still there in 1863. (fn. 91)
EDUCATION
John Sprint (d. 1717), minister
of the Presbyterian meeting, is said to have
opened a grammar school in the town. (fn. 92) A
schoolmaster was mentioned c. 1747, (fn. 93) and in
1784-5 a Sunday school for 50 children was
being promoted. (fn. 94) In 1818 there were five day
schools with a total of 100 children and two
Sunday schools for c. 70 children. (fn. 95) A Wesleyan
Methodist Sunday school was begun in 1820, (fn. 96)
and between 1820 and 1828 the marquess of
Anglesey supported a Sunday school in the
market house which had 82 pupils in 1825-6. (fn. 97)
In 1833 there were 5 infant schools with 91
pupils, 5 day schools supported by parents for
156 children, and Sunday schools attached to
each of the three churches for a total of 315
children, the largest belonging to the Independent chapel. (fn. 98) One of the day schools was
held at the market house from 1835. (fn. 99)
By 1846 the Church school, affiliated to the
National Society, had a total of 176 pupils on
weekdays and Sundays and was supported by
the Medlycott family. (fn. 1) It occupied new buildings from 1864 on land at the west end of the
village leased by the Medlycotts. The building
was extended in 1899 and in 1903 had 237
children on the books. (fn. 2) Two years later the
average attendance was 121 girls and boys and
64 infants. In 1935 the total was 153 and in 1945
it was 99. From 1950 until 1953 the school took
infants from 5 to 7 years and seniors from 11 to
15 years, and from June 1953 until April 1958
it took seniors only. (fn. 3) From April 1958 the school
took pupils aged between 7 and 11, from 1974
between 8 and 11 and in 1978 between 9 and 11.
The school closed in 1979. (fn. 4)
The British school, physically attached to the
Independent chapel, was built in 1850 and enlarged in 1865 and 1892. It was supported by
donations from both nonconformist chapels and
by school pence. In 1903 it had 121 children on
the books and was taken over by the county
council in 1909. (fn. 5) It was removed to a new
building off North Street (now Glovers' Walk)
in 1912. In 1935 the average number on the
books was 77 and was 44 in 1945. From 1950 it
took only pupils aged 5 to 11, (fn. 6) from 1958
between 5 and 7, and from 1974 gradually
increased the age range until 1979, using premises at the Methodist chapel as well as the
original buildings. In 1979 new buildings on the
site provided accommodation for all local children between 5 and 11. In 1988 there were 214
children aged 4-11 on the books, and in 1992-3
232. (fn. 7)
Among private schools was a boys' boarding
school kept by Edward Shapcott in 1815-18, (fn. 8) a
boarding school for girls in Kingsbury in 1851
and 1861, (fn. 9) a school at Newtown in 1861, (fn. 10) and
a girls' school in East Street by 1883 and until
after 1894. (fn. 11) Willingdon college, a boarding
school for boys evacuated from Sussex, occupied
Ven from 1939. (fn. 12)
CHARITIES FOR THE POOR
Charities established by William Hallett (d. 1581), Thomas
Clench (d. 1584), William Plucknett (d. 1592),
and Silvester Hulet of London (d. 1611) had
been lost by the late 18th century. (fn. 13) Thomas
Prankerd by will dated 1609 gave £40 to his
family trustees to be distributed quarterly to the
poor of the parish. James Prankerd by will of
1699 gave £60 for the same purpose. In 1758
John Prankerd of Sherborne (Dors.) used the
combined sums to create a rent charge on land
in Nether Compton (Dors.) to be given on St.
Thomas's day. (fn. 14) About 1788 the money was
distributed to the second poor of the parish, and
in 1846 was confined to the second poor of
Kingsbury. (fn. 15) In 1906 the charity income was £6
and from 1980 came from investments after the
release of the rent charge. (fn. 16) Its value was increased in 1993 when the assets of the Horsey,
Huxtable, and Winter charities were united with
it. (fn. 17)
By deed of 1860 Mrs. Ann Harris Hutchings
gave £500 in consols to provide coals and clothing at Christmas. The gift was named Horsey's
gift after her first husband, John Bondfield
Horsey. (fn. 18) The income was used in 1927 to
provide 44 people with coal and in 1986 small
cash vouchers were given. (fn. 19) In 1993 the assets
were transferred to Prankerd's charity. (fn. 20)
In 1903 Susannah Maria Huxtable left £783 6s.
9d. in consols to provide biscuits, and in 1951 a
Scheme established the gift of Frank Mark Winter
(d. 1938) of £150 for the poor. Both charities were
amalgamated with Prankerd's in 1993. (fn. 21)
By 1788 income from the commonalty estate
amounting to £11 15s. 8d. was distributed to
the second poor of the parish. (fn. 22) By 1824 the
sum was £32 10s., chiefly given to widows and
aged and infirm women. (fn. 23) In the 1830s distributions were made on St. Thomas's day and
Shrove Tuesday, and in 1836 amounted to £52
9s. 4d. (fn. 24) In the 1840s money was given to
people only within the borough of Milborne. (fn. 25)
The value of the commonalty estate was reduced during the 19th century, but in 1938 the
gifts amounted to £80. (fn. 26) The charity continued to distribute gifts to the poor in 1994.