KIRTLING
Kirtling and the hamlet of Upend occupy
1,265 ha. (3,126 a.) on the Suffolk border 8 km.
(5 miles) south-east of Newmarket. (fn. 83) By the 16th
century at latest, the parish name had developed
a variant pronunciation and spelling, Catlidge,
which lasted into the 19th century. (fn. 84) Upend was
until the 15th century called Upheme (Old
English 'the up-dwellers'), (fn. 85) indicating its position further up the valley from Lidgate or
Dalham (both Suff.). Although it thus seems to
have originated separately from Kirtling, long
before 1066 it had been absorbed into Kirtling
manorially and ecclesiastically. (fn. 86) The parish
boundaries follow those of closes, woods, and
open-field furlongs, and a few short stretches of
roads and streams. (fn. 87) They enclose a compact
shape which may have been the core of a much
larger Anglo-Saxon territory before the other
parishes in Cheveley hundred and perhaps some
in Suffolk were shorn off. (fn. 88)
Kirtling lies on the eastern slope of the ridge
whose flat top is within Woodditton, Cheveley,
and Ashley. The rim of the parish from the
boundary with Ashley in the north round the
west side to that with Great Bradley and
Cowlinge (Suff.) in the south lies above 100 m.
(328 ft.); the land shelves gently down in a semicircular bowl to below 75 m. (246 ft.) at the
lowest point on the eastern boundary with
Lidgate. Small streams drain down the sides of
the bowl from the west and south as headwaters
of the river Kennett. Their original names of
Dashlake and Crowell ('the crow spring') passed
out of use but were preserved in the names of
parts of the open fields in the 16th century. (fn. 89)
Almost the whole parish is covered with boulder
clay overlying Chalk, the latter outcropping to
form a patch of lighter soils below 80 m. along
the eastern boundary, where there are also bands
of alluvium and gravels by the streams. (fn. 90) Flints
for building work were available from the Chalk
in the Middle Ages, (fn. 91) and continued in use
throughout the 19th century for minor buildings, but gravel for road-mending had to be
obtained outside the parish in the 1810s. (fn. 92)
Kirtling's open fields originally extended
across the east and centre of the parish on both
Chalk and clay, with pasture closes mainly in
the south and west on the heaviest soils, (fn. 93) but
probably in the later Middle Ages much arable
near Kirtling Street and Kirtling Green was
inclosed informally, leaving only scraps of open
field in the western half of the parish in addition
to a larger continuous block along the eastern
boundary. In all 1,200 a. remained to be inclosed
in 1815 under an Act of 1806 which also covered
Ashley. (fn. 94)
Clearance of woodland even on the heavy
clay had gone far by 1086, when perhaps three
quarters of the parish was ploughland. (fn. 95) The
manorial woods were relatively small, reckoned
to support only 60 pigs in 1086 (fn. 96) and to cover
30-35 a. in the early 14th century, (fn. 97) when several freehold estates also included a few acres of
woodland. (fn. 98) Both the surviving Lucy wood and
its lost northern neighbour Northey wood had
Old English names with the ending haeg (meaning 'enclosure'). (fn. 99) In the Middle Ages the manorial woods were coppiced on a seven-year
cycle, (fn. 1) and together with the park produced laths
and spars for building work, besides timber. (fn. 2) Up
to 10 a. at a time was cleared in Northey wood. (fn. 3)
Some of the customary tenants also had small
groves of trees, (fn. 4) which were protected from
felling by the manor court. (fn. 5)
In the mid 16th century Lucy wood was
reckoned to cover 31 a. and Northey wood 21
a., and the manor also included 60 a. of wood
and scrub in the old park and 38 a. at Bansteads.
Some of the coppices had by then been left
growing for 20 years. (fn. 6) Northey wood was cleared
in the 1660s, perhaps leaving some timber trees, (fn. 7)
and in the 1690s much timber may have been
felled, (fn. 8) leaving the Kirtling estate with 65 a. of
wood in 1696. (fn. 9) The estate actively exploited its
woodland throughout the 18th century, (fn. 10) and in
1814 the parish contained over 160 a. (fn. 11) There
was some further clearance after inclosure, but
shelter belts and small game coverts were
planted in the later 19th century and the early
20th, (fn. 12) and most of them survived in the 1990s.
Kirtling lies well off any main route; minor
but direct roads linked it to Newmarket via
Saxon Street or Ditton Green (both in
Woodditton), but in all other directions there
was a tangle of lanes winding towards neighbouring hamlets and villages. Those to Lidgate
and Cowlinge were made public roads at inclosure, but not that to Great and Little Bradley, (fn. 13)
which ceased to be passable except on foot. In
the 20th century the metalled roads formed a
confusing continuous circuit in the centre of the
parish, from which the through roads radiated
to Ditton Green, Saxon Street, Upend (for
Cheveley, Ashley, and Lidgate), and Cowlinge
(two roads, neither direct).
With 53 tenants in 1086 Kirtling was the most
heavily and densely populated parish in the
neighbourhood, (fn. 14) and it remained so throughout
the Middle Ages, having 54 taxpayers in 1327
and 186 taxed adults in 1377, (fn. 15) perhaps over 300
people altogether. (fn. 16) It then fell back relative to
nearby places; the long lists of tenants who
petitioned for allowances of rent in the 1430s are
perhaps evidence for depopulation. (fn. 17) In 1603
there were 180 adult communicants, suggesting
a total of c. 240 inhabitants. (fn. 18) The natural
increase in the earlier 17th century averaged
almost four more baptisms than burials a year,
but, although that rate was resumed in the years
1667-78, epidemics struck in 1679-81 and by
1686 all the surplus births since 1660 had been
cancelled out by deaths. (fn. 19) Nevertheless, since
there were only 80 households in 1674 (apart
from that of Lord North at Kirtling Hall), (fn. 20)
representing a population of perhaps 360, there
must have been heavy migration out of the
parish throughout the 17th century. From the
later 1680s births were again much outnumbering deaths, despite epidemics in 1708-12 and
1727-9, producing on average two more baptisms than burials a year 1701-50 and four more
a year 1751-1800. By 1801, however, the population had grown only to 458, (fn. 21) showing that
many people had left the parish in the 18th century. It then doubled to 909 by 1851 even
though people were still leaving after 1820. The
population thus peaked in Kirtling fifty years
earlier than in the other parishes of Cheveley
hundred nearer Newmarket. Apart from the
1860s and 1890s it then fell inexorably, dropping
below 800 in the 1880s, below 600 in the 1910s,
below 500 in the 1930s, and to 300 in 1971, after
which it levelled off to c. 330 in the 1980s and
1990s. (fn. 22)
The earliest settlements in Kirtling are likely
to have been near the lighter soils in the valley.
Upend and the main village street, long called
Kirtling Street, were two such locations, and
two more may be referred to in 'Erneley' and
'Leighton', the former names of a close east of
Parsonage Farm and one of the open fields. (fn. 23) In
1587-8 Kirtling Street was called Ratton Row, (fn. 24)
perhaps incorporating another Anglo-Saxon
settlement name. (fn. 25)
The growth of population in the central
Middle Ages led to the expansion of settlement.
Moated sites were created at the castle, (fn. 26) Moat
Farm just east of Upend, Oak Farm on the
Woodditton boundary, (fn. 27) and Bansteads in the
south-east, (fn. 28) the last obliterated by 1815. (fn. 29) More
significantly, houses were built in tofts fronting
a chain of small greens linked by lanes winding
for at least 3 km. across the hillside in the south
of the parish. By 1359 the whole settlement was
called Kirtling Green to distinguish it from
Kirtling Street, (fn. 30) but separate stretches also had
their own names, such as Pratt's green, from
a family resident in the parish by 1327. (fn. 31)
Individual peasant houses and their associated
pasture closes were commonly named from their
owners, examples including Priggs and Rands
on the lane leading north from Kirtling Green
to the windmill, and Darbys (or Bachelors Hall),
which belonged in the later 15th century to one
Thomas Darby. The tofts did not have standard
sizes or regular layouts. (fn. 32)

Kirtling in 1815
Population decline after the Black Death
caused the abandonment of some tofts, though
not immediately of their names, so that by
1587-8 there were at least eight empty closes
where it was remembered that houses had once
stood, (fn. 33) besides many more with names suggesting the same. One of those abandoned was
Wigmores, named from a family prominent in
the parish in the generation before the Black
Death, (fn. 34) which had stood amid woods also called
Wigmores (later corrupted to Widemouth)
towards the Woodditton boundary north-west
of Lucy wood. (fn. 35)
In 1587-8 there were 75 houses and cottages,
including the enormous Kirtling Hall. (fn. 36) The
only ones near the hall and church were two
farms north of the castle moat, one of which
survives as the core of Hall Farm, which may
include a medieval hall and cross wing. Close by
and associated with the great house were the
conduit house west of the Saxon Street road and
a lodge in the park. Across the valley to the south
of Kirtling Hall, Kirtling Street ran up the slope
from Dam bridge, with 19 houses and cottages,
scattered thickly along the west side of the street
and thinly on the east, and Parsonage Farm set
back from the road on that side. At the junction
of the Street with Kirtling Green 1½ km. to the
south was Bachelors Hall and a cluster of cottages. To the west, more dwellings were scattered along the south side of the green, three or
four at Horn Lane branching off to the north,
and three at the later Oak Farm. East of
Bachelors Hall were a couple of houses on the
north side of the green, then a group on the
south. Further east again were two clusters of
five or six houses each at Pratt's Green and Mill
End, with three isolated dwellings to their
south-east, including Bansteads. The largest
concentration in the parish was at Upend, where
16 or more houses lined the road through the
hamlet, besides Moat Farm and a cottage at
Williams Green (later Upend Green) to the
north-west.
Not many more houses existed in 1666 than
in 1587-8, though new building may then have
been under way, as the total taxed went up by
six to 81 in 1674, (fn. 37) and in 1685 the Kirtling
estate built Hill Farm in the old park. (fn. 38) Perhaps
at about that period the two farms at Hall Farm
and the three at Oak Farm were consolidated
into the single farm which stood at each of those
sites by 1777 and 1815 respectively. The abandonment of Kirtling Hall as a great aristocratic
residence in the mid 18th century also led to the
loss of the conduit house and the park lodge.
The hall itself was demolished in 1801. (fn. 39)
Although in 1800 there were still about as
many dwellings as during the previous 250
years, their character had changed markedly,
probably mainly in the 18th century. (fn. 40) Between
1587-8 and 1815 many of the houses occupying
the tofts along Kirtling Street and Kirtling
Green were abandoned, and in their place
labourers' cottages were built encroaching on
the roadside waste or the edges of the already
small greens. Some of the last to be erected
before inclosure were licensed by the manor
court in 1792 and 1806, (fn. 41) and in all by 1815 there
were eight such cottages at Kirtling Green, three
at Horn Lane, three at Upend Green, and two
at Sharpe's Green. At Upend hamlet, in contrast, there was little abandonment of older
house sites, and no room for encroachment on
the road during the same period. (fn. 42)
Inclosure in 1815, effected at a time of rapid
population growth, triggered great changes in
the settlement pattern. Only one new farmstead
was built in the fields, at Vicarage Farm on the
Cowlinge road, and it had no farmhouse, only
cottages for labourers or a bailiff. (fn. 43) The Kirtling
estate already had suitable farmhouses distributed across the parish, while the smaller rentier
owners of 80-120 a. had farmhouses at Upend
or Kirtling Green. (fn. 44) There was, however, a great
need for new cottage accommodation, and it was
mainly the provision of that which more than
doubled the parish's housing stock between
1801 and 1851. (fn. 45) Already by 1815 the estate
owned 6 cottages and the rentiers 18, as against
25 belonging to tradespeople, smallholders, and
cottagers. (fn. 46) The estate may have been building
throughout the 19th century, and certainly from
the 1850s the agent was active in replacing dilapidated cottages, (fn. 47) while the manor court tried
to compel copyholders to improve theirs. (fn. 48) By
the 1870s the estate owned over 50 cottages, two
fifths or more of the total, while the smaller
absentee landowners, tenant farmers, and shopkeepers had also been building cottage property. (fn. 49) Estate work included two rows of four
high-quality brick-built cottages in Kirtling
Street, built in the 1840s and 1861, both of
which survived in 2001. (fn. 50)
The effect was to intensify settlement in the
Street (where the estate had 20 cottages in 1910),
while also scattering it more widely. For instance
six cottages were built by the road north of
Upend after 1885. (fn. 51) After Kirtling Tower was
occupied as a shooting lodge in the early 1830s
successive owners created an estate hamlet
around its gates: a vicarage house, six almshouses, and a pair of cottages north of Hall Farm
by 1843, (fn. 52) a foreman's house (Tileyard or
Toilyard Cottage) at the bend in the road to the
south apparently in the 1850s, (fn. 53) and a Roman
Catholic church and presbytery right by the
entrance to the Tower and Place Farm in the
1870s. (fn. 54)
Elsewhere in the parish, cottages were being
demolished as the population shrank rapidly
after 1851, until the total number of houses, 180
in 1851, stabilized at c. 130 after 1918. (fn. 55) The
Street, with thirty houses, and Upend, with
forty, were least altered, but Kirtling Green
shrank steadily from over seventy in 1851 to
under forty in 1910. By then Upend, Kirtling
Street, and Kirtling Green were self-contained
hamlets, each with its own nonconformist
chapel, public house, and shop, besides farms
and cottages. (fn. 56)
In the 20th century Newmarket rural district
council and its successor East Cambridgeshire
district council built 25 council houses and
bungalows, in two groups in Kirtling Street, of
which only 16 remained in the local authority's
ownership in 1991. (fn. 57) Planning policies after 1945
restricted private development almost entirely
to the infilling of vacant sites and the conversion,
modernization, and extension of existing buildings. (fn. 58) In the 1950s and 1960s, most of the small
amount of new private building was of bungalows. Between c. 1975 and 2000, however, several very expensive, often architect-designed,
individual houses went up, while the school, the
vicarage, the Beehive and Queen's Head public
houses, and several barns were lavishly converted into private houses, and most of the farmhouses ceased to be working farms. Wealthy
retired people and commuters (some to places
as far away as Milton Keynes and London)
formed a large proportion of the population by
2001.
In 2001 Upend, shrunken to barely twenty
houses by demolition and the knocking together
of pairs of cottages, consisted very largely of
16th- and 17th-century houses listed for their
architectural or historic interest and picturesquely preserved as a conservation area. (fn. 59)
Kirtling Street, by the 1950s sufficently built up
with almost sixty houses to have the feel of a
village street, also had eight listed buildings of
similar date. Kirtling Green had been stretched
to a thin scatter of twenty houses and barn conversions, eight of them also listed. Outside the
four hamlets were isolated dwellings at Peartree,
Bansteads, and Hill Farms, the old windmill,
and cottages on the Bradley road.
Under the first four Lords North from the
1530s to 1677 Kirtling Hall was one of the
homes of the wealthy household of a family
prominent in public affairs. Until 1625 it was
occupied only spasmodically because Edward
North (d. 1564) was in government office until
1558, while Roger (d. 1600) and until 1625
Dudley (d. 1666) were courtiers and soldiers.
All three often lived elsewhere, though Roger
in particular spent much time at Kirtling,
where he was an efficient lord lieutenant of
Cambridgeshire and an active magistrate of
puritan inclinations. (fn. 60) When in residence he was
accompanied by a very large household which
included a secretary, a physician, several dozen
gentlemen and yeomen retainers, a cook, footmen, a fool, a groom porter, and many menials. (fn. 61)
When they were away from Kirtling, the house
and estate were in the custody of a senior gentleman servant: in 1574 Hugh Wood, the lessee of
the rectory manor, (fn. 62) and in 1600 the wealthy
William Ball. (fn. 63)
In 1625 Dudley, 3rd Lord North, retired from
court and from then until his son's death in
1677 the house was occupied almost constantly.
In the 1650s the household rather conservatively
still included gentlemen ushers, a resident
steward, and a clerk of the kitchen, besides
two French servants (a valet de chambre and
a gentleman waiter). (fn. 64) The dowager Lady
North (d. 1677) had her own usher, footman,
gentlewoman, and chambermaid. (fn. 65) The 3rd
and 4th Lords were notable patrons of music
at Kirtling Hall, (fn. 66) went shooting and coursing
over the estate, kept up a large and well-stocked
deer park, (fn. 67) pursued literary interests, and
played an active part in local and county
administration. (fn. 68)
Between 1677 and the demolition of Kirtling
Hall in 1801, however, the house was little used
by its owners and had only a small permanent
staff. (fn. 69) The 5th and 6th Lords North (1677-
1734) were preoccupied with business elsewhere, Lord and Lady Elibank (1734-62)
visited only occasionally, and the earls of
Guilford (from 1762) lived at Wroxton Abbey
(Oxon.), in London, or abroad. (fn. 70) In their
absence the estate was managed by non-resident
agents, (fn. 71) from 1762 efficiently by Thomas
Pennystone for the 1st earl of Guilford, who
initially visited at least occasionally and took a
close interest in his tenants, the labourers, and
the church as well as the house and estate. (fn. 72) The
North family vault in the church was last used
(before 1841) for Katherine, widow of the 6th
Lord North, who died in Barbados in 1695 but
was brought to Kirtling in 1708. (fn. 73) In the 18th
and early 19th century various members of
the Wroxton Norths were commemorated by
hatchments. (fn. 74)
The sisters who owned the estate from 1827,
Maria, marchioness of Bute (d. 1841), and
Susan, Lady North (d. 1884), showed a much
warmer attachment to Kirtling. Maria and her
husband both chose to be buried there, the marquess despite his considerable concerns in
London, Cardiff, Scotland, and elsewhere. (fn. 75)
Susan or her eldest son evidently visited for at
least a fortnight each autumn for the shooting,
and probably regularly at other times of the year,
and took an interest in both the tenant farmers
and the labourers. (fn. 76) The 11th Lord North also
visited for the shooting while living mainly at
Wroxton, (fn. 77) but his son moved permanently to
Kirtling Tower after retiring from the army c.
1929. (fn. 78)
The 11th Lord North and his wife had converted to Catholicism before he inherited the
estate and introduced a number of Catholic tenants and domestic staff, besides, briefly, a
Catholic orphanage. (fn. 79) His objection in 1905 to
the new vicar's use of the family chapel for services caused a furious row between the two
which almost led to litigation and ended with
the vicar's resignation. (fn. 80)
Kirtling's longest-established public house
until its closure in 1999 was the Queen's Head
at the north end of Kirtling Street. Associated
by local tradition-probably spurious-with the
visit of Elizabeth I to Kirtling Hall in 1578, (fn. 81) it
incorporates a 16th-century wing of two storeys
and three bays, (fn. 82) and occupies a freehold
encroachment on the road at the foot of an
impressive approach to the hall, (fn. 83) but seems not
to have been built before 1587-8. (fn. 84) It was probably the establishment which could stable six
horses and had three beds for guests in 1686 and
had the name Queen's Head by 1764. (fn. 85) It
belonged to the North estate until it was sold to
a brewery c. 1900. (fn. 86) A smaller alehouse at Upend
also provided for travellers in 1686 (fn. 87) but there
was no licensed house in the hamlet in 1764 and
it is uncertain whether the 1686 house was the
same as the North Arms beerhouse which stood
on the east side of the street just north of the
Lidgate road by 1858 and closed before 1972. (fn. 88)
The Chequers on the south side of Kirtling
Green near Whybrows Farm was licensed by
1764, was leased to a family of brewers at Bury
St. Edmunds by 1813, and had probably closed
by 1847. (fn. 89) It was succeeded by two beerhouses,
the Lion or Red Lion at the corner of Kirtling
Green and Kirtling Street and the Beehive at
the corner of Kirtling Street and Redlands
Lane. (fn. 90) The Beehive closed in 1992 (fn. 91) and the
Queen's Head in 1999. (fn. 92) In the 19th century a
limited range of organized social activities
revolved mainly around the churches and savings clubs. (fn. 93) A horticultural society was set up
perhaps in 1900, (fn. 94) and continued to hold an
annual show in the 1990s. (fn. 95) A village hall was
opened in 1919. (fn. 96)
From the 1960s Kirtling was increasingly
divided between a few long-established local
families and many more newcomers. Some of
the new arrivals became interested in the local
heritage, founding a short-lived local history
society, and commissioning, through the parish
council, a village sign to mark the silver jubilee
of Elizabeth II in 1977 (unveiled 1981,
destroyed by 2000) and a parish history for the
millennium. (fn. 97) Other community projects were
prompted by the tragic death of two children in
1991. (fn. 98)
Kirtling was in Norwich diocese and Sudbury
archdeaconry until 1837, (fn. 99) and looked to
Newmarket as its market town. (fn. 1) Bury St.
Edmunds exerted a stronger influence than
Cambridge even when the Lords North were
active in Cambridgeshire and Cambridge borough politics in the 16th and 17th centuries; in
1664-5, for example, the Norths' servants were
sent on household business three times to Bury
but only once to Cambridge, (fn. 2) while in 1661-2
the steward bought luxury groceries and commonplace domestic goods such as coal, paper,
and ink at Bury, and livestock for the home farm
from the fairs at Cowlinge and Woolpit (both
Suff.). (fn. 3) The parish's economy and topography
allied it with a region which stretched along the
fringes of Cambridgeshire, Suffolk, and Essex,
and before 1900 its people rarely looked much
beyond Newmarket, Bury, Clare, and Haverhill.
Men's and women's horizons may have differed.
Four fifths of the women who married in
Kirtling church between 1660 and 1837 married
Kirtling men, and of the other hundred half had
husbands from Cambridgeshire and half from
Suffolk, nearly all from within 10 miles. (fn. 4) By contrast, in the fifty years or so before 1851 probably more than three times as many men came
to live in Kirtling from Suffolk as from
Cambridgeshire, and from a greater distance and
a wider social range. (fn. 5) Tenant farmers in particular came from deeper into Suffolk than the handful of Cambridgeshire parishes represented,
though almost none of them put down roots
locally. (fn. 6) It was the farmers of Suffolk (not
Cambridgeshire) who congratulated John
Clover of Place Farm on his successes as a cattle
breeder in 1857. (fn. 7) Paupers who fell under the
scrutiny of the settlement laws between 1730
and 1830 rarely moved beyond Kirtling's vicinity as defined above but had a stronger association with Suffolk than with Cambridgeshire,
though in the 1730s and 1740s three poor
Kirtling boys were apprenticed further afield in
Isleham, Burwell, and Braintree (Essex), all in
non-agricultural trades. (fn. 8)