ECONOMIC HISTORY.
Agriculture. In 1086
the demesne of Painswick employed one plough and
11 servi. (fn. 35) The demesne was said to contain 60 a. of
arable with 4 a. of meadow and 4 a. of pasture in
1314, but in 1324 200 a. of arable, of which 80 a.
were of inferior quality, 4 a. of meadow, and 8 a. of
pasture were recorded. (fn. 36) That part of the demesne
situated at Ham was built on during the southward
development of the town along New Street in the
early 15th century. In the mid 15th century demesne
farming was abandoned when the lord gave up his
residence at Painswick. (fn. 37) Parts of the demesne at
Dudcombe, ¾ mile south-east of the town, and at
Ifold had already been leased to tenants by that
date (fn. 38) when the demesne also included some barren
land on Huddiknoll hill. (fn. 39)
The tenants of the manor in 1086 comprised 3
radknights, 35 villani, and 16 bordars, who worked
52 ploughs, but the manor was assessed formally at
only 1 hide. The value of the manor had increased
from £20 in 1066 to £24 in 1086 which suggests
recent conversion of woodland to fields. (fn. 40) There
were 17 freeholders recorded on the manor in 1324,
and the customary tenants included 17 yardlanders,
42 half-yardlanders, 18 fardellers, and 23 cottagers, (fn. 41)
but by 1496 a number of the holdings had been
amalgamated. (fn. 42) In 1324 the tenants owning a fardel
and more owed ploughing and harrowing services
to the lord and a total of 205 manual works in both
summer and winter. (fn. 43) Copyhold tenure was by
inheritance sibi et suis and in the mid 15th century
the position of the tenants was improved in view of
the death of 11 married tenants on military service
for the earl of Shrewsbury. The tenants were to
farm the demesne lands and were also granted the
herbage and pannage for the sum of £10; wiferip
and childrip, which had previously been commuted
for money payments, were no longer demanded. (fn. 44)
Widows did not have to pay heriots on their freebench and could remarry without forfeiting that
right. (fn. 45) A custumal of the late 15th century further
formalized the rights of tenants; inheritance could
be through the female line but tenements could not
be held jointly and ½ yardlands could not be fragmented; in the event of daughters succeeding to an
estate the homage decided on its monetary value and
the eldest daughter was given the right to enter the
property on condition that she bought out the shares
of her sisters. Mondaylands, of which there were
seven in 1496, (fn. 46) carried the obligation to keep for
one day and one night any prisoner taken within the
manor, and tenants of 'thirteens' had to drive
venison for one day and one night at the will of the
lord or commute for 8d. yearly. (fn. 47) Heriots were to be
paid on holdings of ½ yardland or more although
heriots had apparently been owed from fardels at an
earlier date. (fn. 48)
The rights of the tenants were challenged by
Henry Jerningham (d. 1619) who claimed rights of
wardship. The customs of the manor were agreed
upon in 1586, decreed in Chancery in 1613, and
confirmed by Act of Parliament in 1624. The
nearest relative of a minor was given the right of
wardship on payment of an entry fine of three years'
rent and the tenants asserted their rights to inclose
Wickridge hill, (fn. 49) recently assarted, (fn. 50) which the lord
claimed as waste. The tenants reasserted their rights
to herbage and pannage, and heriots were to be
commuted at £2 for a ½ yardland and £3 for a yardland; (fn. 51) in 1837 the lord of the manor tried unsuccessfully to reassert his claim to the best beast,
in that instance a prized stallion of the late Sir
Berkeley William Guise. (fn. 52) The lord, whose rights of
common were assessed at the equivalent of two
yardlands, received in return for the concessions of
1613 the sum of £1,450 from the tenants, certain
rights over the woodland of the parish, and an
increase in the entry fine payable on surrender of a
property. (fn. 53) The generally favourable nature of copyhold tenure on the manor meant that many estates
and mills remained unenfranchised to a late date. (fn. 54)
No early reference to open fields has been found
but the number of ploughs in use in the 11th century
suggests something more than scattered assarts. (fn. 55)
The relaxation of the fines for exchanging land
suggests that consolidation of holdings and inclosure were taking place in the late 16th and early
17th centuries (fn. 56) and most of the parish was said to be
inclosed c. 1703. (fn. 57) Four open fields were recorded in
Sheepscombe tithing: Bunnage field at the eastern
boundary covered c. 101 a. in 1820 and remained
uninclosed in 1839 although the strips had been
consolidated to form larger holdings; (fn. 58) Dell field,
recorded in 1548, (fn. 59) occupied the area around Dell
Farm north of the demesne at Dudcombe and had
been inclosed by 1820; Rownham field, which
covered the area north of Sheepscombe village, had
been partially inclosed by 1820, when 11 a. remained open, and was inclosed completely before
1839; (fn. 60) and Haw field, which was shared with
Cranham parish, (fn. 61) bordered Cranham west of the
Painswick stream and contained 27 a. in 1820. In
Spoonbed tithing four fields, all of which had been
inclosed before 1820, (fn. 62) have been recorded: Thistle
field, recorded in 1536, (fn. 63) has not been located;
Hawkwell field covered an area on either side of
Seven Leaze Lane on Huddiknoll hill; (fn. 64) Hill field
lay between the Painswick-Gloucester road and the
farm-houses at Holcombe; (fn. 65) and Washwell field lay
immediately north of the town. (fn. 66) In Edge tithing
two open fields have been recorded, Heygmon field, (fn. 67)
which has not been located, and Ifold field near
the demesne lands. (fn. 68) In Stroudend tithing two open
fields have been recorded, Tillick field, probably also
called Broad field, which lay across Wick Street
south of Brownshill, and Blackmore field, immediately south of Tillick field. Both Stroudend
fields remained open east of Wick Street in 1820
but had been totally inclosed by 1839. (fn. 69)
The valleys probably contained a good acreage of
meadow land. In 1496 the herbage belonging to the
lord, which was farmed for a yearly rent of 24s. 10d.,
included a meadow called Woodham, near Paradise,
which was worth 20s. yearly. At that time there was
also some meadow and pasture at Bangrove (fn. 70) near
Bull's Cross. (fn. 71) In 1820 155 a. of meadow, mainly in
Sheepscombe tithing, were recorded in the parish. (fn. 72)
In addition to the open fields lying fallow there
were several areas of common pasture. The largest
area was Painswick hill, on which the lord of the
manor had 160 sheep- or 50 cattle-pastures. By 1825
25 a. were inclosed in pursuance of the Chancery
decree of 1613 (fn. 73) but the rest, comprising 166 a.,
remained common in 1972 when part of it was a
golf-course. Other areas of common were Scott's
Quarr hill (55 a.), south-west of Edge, Juniper hill
(25 a.), part of Wickridge hill, which the lord
attempted to claim entirely as waste in the early
17th century, land at Sheepscombe, Slad, and Bull's
Cross, and a number of isolated parcels elsewhere. (fn. 74)
In 1820 there were 6 estates of more than 250 a.,
one of which was mainly woodland and two of which
covered c. 600 a. each. A further 8 estates of between
100 a. and 200 a. were recorded. There were 5 farms
of over 200 a., 8 farms between 100 a. and 200 a., 13
farms between 40 a. and 100 a., and over 40 holdings
of between 15 a. and 40 a., some of them attached to
mills. (fn. 75) The extent of arable farming decreased
between 1854, when the acreage of pasture and arable
were equal, (fn. 76) and 1901 when there were 1,892 a. of
arable and 3,093 a. of pasture. (fn. 77) The number of
farms in the parish declined from the earlier 19th
century as many of the smaller holdings were incorporated into larger farms, particularly after the
mills ceased work as cloth- or corn-mills. By 1856
there were 32 farmers recorded in the parish and the
number remained fairly constant until the Second
World War. (fn. 78)
Mills and the Cloth Industry.
Four mills were
recorded at Painswick in 1086, (fn. 79) and in 1346 a mill
was granted to Flanesford Priory by the lord of the
manor. (fn. 80) The cloth industry was apparently established at Painswick by 1440 when a list of purchases, presumably made by the steward of the
manor, included some 'Wick yarn', and quantities of
red cloth, green cloth, and black fustian. (fn. 81) In 1455
John Morley of Painswick was acting as mainpernor
for the farmer of the Shropshire cloth alnage (fn. 82) but
the earliest clothmaker found recorded in Painswick was Henry Loveday in 1512. (fn. 83) Seven mills
were held from the manor in 1496 (fn. 84) and some were
enfranchised during the 16th century (fn. 85) In 1608 5
clothiers, 10 tuckers, and 33 weavers were recorded
in the parish, (fn. 86) which was said to be chiefly supported by the cloth industry at the end of the century. (fn. 87)
The early clothing families of Webb, Fletcher,
Packer, and Loveday were generally succeeded by
the Palling, Wight, and Baylis families during the
prosperous years of the later 18th century. Of the 25
mills recorded in the parish in 1820 18 were employed in the cloth industry, as were other premises
in the parish. Near the town two buildings in
Edge Lane were then used in the industry, one by
Zachariah Powell; (fn. 88) premises in New Street were
later said to have been worked by the Wood family;
and in Vicarage Street there was a cloth-mill driven
by a horse-wheel in the early 19th century. (fn. 89) Workshops close to Painswick Mill in 1820 had apparently
closed by 1839; a near-by dye-house, a dye-works
near Peghouse Mill, and a press-shop in Slad village,
worked at one time by Nathan Driver of Peghouse
Mill, were in use in 1820 and 1839. (fn. 90)
Most of the mills in the parish were small concerns
and, despite the irregular supply of water, (fn. 91) only two
mills, Sheepscombe Mill and Brookhouse Mill, were
said to have steam-power in 1822 (fn. 92) although steam
was later introduced to some of the mills near Stroud
town. Recession in the industry, poor communications, and competition from the industrialized
Stroud and Nailsworth valleys contributed to the
rapid decline of cloth-making at Painswick from the
1840s. By c. 1860, when the smallest mills had already
closed, four or five continued the connection with
the textile industry but others had become cornmills, saw-mills, or pin-mills. (fn. 93) Most of the mills in
the parish had ceased to function by the early 20th
century when Peghouse Mill was the only one active
in the cloth industry, and in 1972 only three of the
sites were still in use for industrial purposes.
Outdoor weaving was the general practice although
Sheepscombe Mill did contain some looms in 1838. (fn. 94)
Weaving was carried on in the larger settlements and
also in the small settlements at Paradise and Back
Edge. In the town itself most of the weaving community inhabited the lanes on the east side, Vicarage
Street, Tibbiwell Street, and Tibbiwell Lane, which
descend to the Painswick stream. The numbers of
outdoor weavers had decreased by 1838 when 154,
of whom 41 were heads of households, were recorded
in the parish. (fn. 95) Millwrights were recorded at Painswick from 1608 until the later 19th century. (fn. 96)
Sixteen mills have been recorded adjoining the
parish on the Painswick stream; all were in the parish
with the exception of Pitchcombe Mill and the
lowest, Stratford Mill in Stroud. Tocknell's Mill,
the highest, was situated 1¾ mile NNE. of the
town. (fn. 97) It took its name from a local family, one of
whom was described as a clothier in 1602. (fn. 98) A Walter
Tocknell was recorded at Painswick in 1608 (fn. 99) and
Elizabeth, daughter and heir of Edward Tocknell,
married George Newland (d. 1721). In 1755
Newland's son, also George, (fn. 1) leased the mill to
William Clarke of Gloucester, who took a further
lease in 1765 when he was described as a millwright of Birmingham. The mill, equipped as a cornmill, was out of repair in 1786 when it was held
by William Hayle, Clarke's assignee. (fn. 2) In 1820,
owned by William Codrington, it was worked as a
corn-mill by William Cox, (fn. 3) and in 1839 by Joseph
Cox who also farmed 141 a. (fn. 4) By 1853 it was being
worked as a corn-mill by George Taylor, (fn. 5) but was
later demolished. The mill-house, called Tocknell's
Court, is a small gabled residence built c. 1600 with
a south wing added later in the 17th century. There
were some slight interior and exterior alterations c.
1716 when the garden walls were built and the house
given the appearance of a small country residence. (fn. 6)
Oliver's Mill, also called Cox's Upper Mill, (fn. 7) was
next downstream and was probably the mill held
from the manor in 1496 by Robert Frethe and by
John Oliver in 1566. (fn. 8) The mill, a copyhold of the
manor, was owned in 1749 by Nicholas Webb,
mercer of Gloucester (d. 1769 or 1770), whose
trustees sold it in 1779 to George Birch of London.
Birch sold it in 1785 to John Cox of Damsells (d.
1790) who left it in freebench to his widow Elizabeth
(d. 1839), with reversion to his eldest son John. (fn. 9)
John, who formed a cloth-manufacturing partnership with Weston Hicks, (fn. 10) was working Oliver's Mill
in 1820 (fn. 11) and until at least 1841. (fn. 12) In 1873 a farmer
occupied the mill (fn. 13) which was a corn-mill in the
early 1880s. (fn. 14) The site was marked by brick foundations in 1972.
Damsell's Mill, below, also called Cox's Lower
Mill, (fn. 15) was held from the manor by John Berry in
1548. (fn. 16) In 1732 Elizabeth Townsend, widow, transferred the copyhold to Thomas Small, from whom it
passed to William Packer in 1740. In 1745 Packer
transferred the copyhold to Edward Palling of
Brookhouse who sold it, probably in the same year,
to the clothier John Cox (d. c. 1785). Cox's widow
Mary surrendered her freebench in favour of her son
John, (fn. 17) and Damsell's Mill passed with Oliver's to his
widow Elizabeth, with reversion to his second son
William. William Cox pursued a military career (fn. 18)
and in 1818 Elizabeth and he leased Damsell's Mill
to John Cox and Weston Hicks. (fn. 19) The Cox family
sold the mill in 1854 to Charles Gardner, mealman, (fn. 20)
whose family worked it as a grist-mill until the end of
the century. In the early 20th century Damsell's Mill
was worked as a corn-mill in conjunction with a
farm. (fn. 21) The two-storey mill dates from 1674 (fn. 22) and
was enlarged in the 19th century, when dormer
windows were added. (fn. 23) In 1972 it was used as a
house.
At Highgrove, ½ mile downstream of Damsell's,
stood Baylis's Upper Mill, (fn. 24) also called Lodge Mill. (fn. 25)
It was worked as a cloth-mill in 1820 by William
Baylis (fn. 26) who also worked Loveday's Mill. Baylis died
in 1826 and was succeeded by his son William (d.
1837), (fn. 27) whose daughter Ann Baker (fn. 28) was leasing the
mill to Philip Foxwell in 1839. (fn. 29) The mill, probably
the Baker's Mill occupied by James Freeman,
woollen manufacturer, in 1853, (fn. 30) was worked as a
cloth-mill by Hogg & Cook in 1856. (fn. 31) It was disused
and in ruins by the 1890s (fn. 32) and only a subsidiary
building, formerly used as cottages and warehouses, (fn. 33)
and a small round wool-drying house remained in
1972.
The Washwell spring, a small tributary of the
Painswick stream about 300 yards below Highgrove,
drove a small mill in 1820. It was owned and worked
as a cloth-mill by Zachariah Powell, (fn. 34) who gave up
business in 1837. (fn. 35) The mill was later bought by
John Loveday, who demolished it. (fn. 36)
Loveday's Mill or Baylis's Lower Mill, on the
Painswick stream by the road to Jack's Green, (fn. 37) was
described in 1777 as Mr. Loveday's (fn. 38) and it was
apparently the copyhold comprising a fulling-mill,
gig-mill, and grist-mills, which was surrendered by
Theyer Townsend in favour of William Loveday, the
occupant, in 1792. (fn. 39) Loveday was dead by 1820 when
the mill was apparently being worked by Thomas
Loveday, a maltster. (fn. 40) By 1825 Loveday's Mill had
passed to William Baylis who surrendered it in
favour of William Baylis, junior, (fn. 41) and the mill was
worked in conjunction with Baylis's Upper Mill by
Philip Foxwell in 1839. (fn. 42) It had become a corn-mill
by 1853 when it was worked by Robert West. (fn. 43) In
the later 19th century it was worked with a farm by
John Fayers. (fn. 44) It ceased working c. 1914 and became
derelict. The 16th-century gabled house was later
enlarged by the addition of a two-storey mill on
the north-east and an industrial wing, demolished
by 1939, was added to the south-west of the old millhouse. The remaining buildings were remodelled
and converted for use as a residence in 1939. (fn. 45)
Brookhouse Mill, (fn. 46) formerly Ludlowes, (fn. 47) stands
by Greenhouse Lane, and was possibly the copyhold
called Phippes Mill which was transferred to William
Ludlow by Robert Minsterworth in 1413. (fn. 48) Members of the Palling family of clothiers were living at
Brookhouse in the 18th century but it is not certain
that they worked the mill (fn. 49) which was owned and
worked as a cloth-mill with dye-house attached by
Robert Wight in 1820. (fn. 50) Steam-power had been
introduced by 1822. (fn. 51) Wight went bankrupt in
1832, (fn. 52) and the mill passed to the Revd. William
Knight and was worked by Matthew Wood in 1839
when the dye-house was occupied by John Driver. (fn. 53)
William Clark later established an umbrella-stick
factory at the mill and the business passed into new
ownership in 1842. (fn. 54) By 1853 Brookhouse Mill was
being worked as a corn-mill by Paul Savory (fn. 55) but had
been converted for use as a hairpin factory by 1879
when it was worked by H. B. Savory. The mill remained a pin-mill worked by the family firm, later
called Savory & Sons, (fn. 56) which employed c. 300
people in 1904. (fn. 57) The firm, which had taken over
other pin manufacturers in the parish, (fn. 58) continued
at the mill in 1972 and employed 25 people. (fn. 59) A
water-wheel, although supplemented by a gasengine, remained in use to provide power until
1962. (fn. 60) The mill buildings date from the 17th century but were substantially rebuilt and enlarged
during the late 18th and the 19th centuries. The
millowner's house, on the opposite side of the road,
contains an 18th-century wing to which a threestorey early-19th-century main block was added.
Cap Mill, (fn. 61) worked by Henry Webb in 1688 and
Joseph Selwyn in 1698, (fn. 62) is 200 yds. downstream of
Brookhouse Mill. In 1739 it remained a copyhold,
held by Mary Packer, widow, with reversion to her
son John. John also became owner of King's Mill,
and his younger brother Daniel Packer, clothier, was
working Cap Mill in 1743 (fn. 63) and carried on a fairly
extensive trade at Painswick until his death in 1769. (fn. 64)
In 1772 John's widow Anne and son Richard leased
Cap Mill, a fulling-mill with 2 stocks, a gig, and a
dye-house, to the clothier William Knight. (fn. 65) The
mill, owned and worked as a cloth-mill by Samuel
Wood in the 1820s, (fn. 66) was worked in 1839 by the
cloth manufacturer Nathaniel Iles Butler, (fn. 67) who left
it in 1841. (fn. 68) In 1853 it was converted for use as a pinmill by the firm of Watkins & Okey, later of King's
Mill, (fn. 69) and by 1867 it was used as a saw-mill by
Alfred Keene, a wood-turner. (fn. 70) It continued as a
saw-mill during the late 19th and early 20th centuries, (fn. 71) and the mill-house, a tall, gabled house of
the later 17th century (fn. 72) with a short mill building
abutting on to the east, was later converted for residential use. Across the stream to the east is another
small industrial building of the early 18th century.
Painswick Mill, formerly called Mason's Mill or
Cook's Mill, stands downstream of Cap Mill on
Knap Lane. (fn. 73) The mill was apparently worked by
the Webb family in the 1630s when the clothier's
house was built. (fn. 74) In 1795 the mill was owned by
John Gardner and worked by Mr. Perring and
William King but it was worked and owned by
Richard Mason before 1800. (fn. 75) It subsequently
passed to Edward Wood Mason who was working it
as a cloth-mill in 1820. (fn. 76) Mason continued to own the
mill, which was worked as a cloth-mill by Joseph
Wight in the 1830s. (fn. 77) By 1863 it was occupied by
Nathaniel Jones & Co., silk-throwsters, (fn. 78) but had
been converted for use as a pin-mill by the firm of
Trotman Bros. & Cole, later Thomas Cole & Co., by
1870. (fn. 79) In 1904 the firm, called W. H. Cole & Co.,
employed over 80 people and had introduced steampower to the mill (fn. 80) which was occupied by the firm
until shortly after the First World War. (fn. 81) The mill
buildings had been demolished by 1972 but the millowner's house, a three-storey gabled house built in
1634, (fn. 82) with 19th-century additions, survived near
the site.
Skinner's Mill, earlier called Spring's Borough or
Painswick Mill, just above Stepping Stone Lane, (fn. 83)
was possibly the mill held from the manor by members
of the Taylor family in the 16th and 17th centuries. (fn. 84)
In 1698 the Revd. Edward Taylor leased the later
Skinner's Mill, described as two water-corn-mills,
to Francis Hayward (alias Westropp). The mill subsequently passed to John Taylor of Tewkesbury (d.
c. 1742) who devised it to his wife Joyce, and then to
his nephews John and Samuel Mills; Samuel later
bought out the rights of the others, and in 1749 sold
the mill to John Pinfold, clothier of Salmon's Mill, (fn. 85)
but no evidence of its use as a cloth-mill has been
found. Pinfold devised it to Sarah Webb, (fn. 86) whose
husband Samuel Colborne survived her and retained the mill until his death in 1813. The mill,
which remained a copyhold, then passed to the Revd.
John Colborne (d. 1859). William Skinner took a 21year lease of it in 1787 (fn. 87) and it was worked as a cornmill by successive generations of his family until c.
1880. (fn. 88) By 1885, when G. A. Fawkes occupied it,
steam-power had been introduced to the mill, (fn. 89)
which continued in use for milling cattle-feed until
the 1920s. (fn. 90) The house and mill, which form a single
building, are mostly of the later 17th and the 19th
centuries but they incorporate a medieval, probably
late-14th-century, open hall and screens passage,
into which a chimney and first floor were inserted in
the later 16th century.
King's Mill, (fn. 91) also known as Lower Mill, (fn. 92) at the
confluence of the Painswick stream and the Wash
brook was held from the manor by Agnes Mills in
1496. (fn. 93) The mill was held by Robert Poole in 1569
when his son John received a reversionary lease. In
1587 the lord of the manor sold the freehold at a
quit-rent to Edward Kynne, who bought out the
Pooles' interest. Edward died in 1604 and his widow
Margaret and son William sold the mill in 1625 to
Richard Packer (fn. 94) (d. 1639), who settled it, described
as a corn- or tuck-mill, on the marriage of his son
Thomas in 1634. Thomas was working it as a clothmill in 1671 and his son Richard (fn. 95) occupied it in
1677. (fn. 96) Richard Packer (d. 1718 or 1719) devised the
mill to his son Daniel (d. 1739), (fn. 97) and it passed to
Daniel's nephew John Packer, who was trading as a
mealman and clothier at his death in 1768. John was
succeeded by his son Richard, a wool-stapler, who
died in 1774, having settled the mill on his wife
Susannah. (fn. 98) It was equipped as a corn-mill in 1787,
though it included wool-lofts. (fn. 99) Soon afterwards it
returned to cloth production and was rebuilt in 1818
to house all processes of cloth-making except weaving, (fn. 1) and the clothier John Palling of Sheephouse
owned it in 1820. (fn. 2) Palling worked the mill in partnership with his son William in the 1830s and 1840s,
and William, sole proprietor of the firm after his
father's death c. 1847, (fn. 3) continued to make cloth there
in 1853. (fn. 4) Henry Fletcher, a scarlet- and billiardcloth manufacturer recorded in 1856, (fn. 5) was presumably the Mr. Fletcher who was working King's
Mill in 1858 when he went bankrupt. (fn. 6) The mill was
converted for use as a pin-mill in 1860 by the firm of
Watkins & Okey, (fn. 7) which remained there until c. 1908
when they were taken over by Savory & Sons of
Brookhouse Mill. (fn. 8) King's Mill continued to be
operated as a pin-mill until after the First World
War when production ceased and some industrial
buildings to the north were demolished. (fn. 9) The small,
gabled mill-house dates from the mid 17th century
and was extended to the south and east during the
18th century to incorporate industrial buildings. A
further range of industrial buildings was added
in the earlier 19th century but had been demolished
by 1972 when the remaining buildings were used as
houses and as show-rooms for an antique furniture
business.
Small's Mill, downstream of King's Mill, (fn. 10)
descended with the Brownshill estate (fn. 11) and was
evidently worked by members of the Palling family
during the 18th century. (fn. 12) William Palling was
making cloth for the Indian and Levant trade c.
1720. (fn. 13) In 1735 Sarah, William's widow, surrendered
her freebench in the mill, which contained 2 fullingmills, a gig-mill, a shear-shop, and a dye-house, in
favour of her son Thomas who transferred the mill
immediately to his brother William. (fn. 14) Thomas was
the copyhold tenant again in 1771 when he settled
the mill, from after his death, on the marriage of
William Caruthers. (fn. 15) Thomas's brother Edward
was then making cloth at the mill, (fn. 16) and in 1788 and
1789 William Caruthers was making uniform and
ladies' cloth. (fn. 17) In 1795 the mill was occupied by
James Stanley of Rock Mill. (fn. 18) In 1811 Grace
Caruthers and her children sold Small's Mill to the
Revd. Joseph Jones, (fn. 19) who was perhaps a trustee for
Nathaniel Jones who was leasing it to a Mr. Mills in
1820. (fn. 20) In 1825 the clothiers James, Thomas, and
Matthew Rice were probably lessees under Jones (fn. 21)
and Matthew was operating there in 1833 (fn. 22) when
John Papps, clothier, was also recorded at the mill. (fn. 23)
The business, known as Thomas Rice & Sons in
1839, (fn. 24) had been replaced by William Clarke & Sons,
umbrella-stick manufacturers, by 1853. (fn. 25) The business passed c. 1857 to William Ridler (fn. 26) who expanded
it to general saw-milling. (fn. 27) Ridler remained there
until the late 1870s when Thomas Hooper, an
umbrella-furniture manufacturer, was recorded
there. (fn. 28) The mill was disused in 1882 (fn. 29) but was used
by a timber-merchant from c. 1885 until 1910. (fn. 30) The
mill buildings, dating from the 17th century, were
in a dilapidated state in 1972 but still contained a
water-wheel.
By the Stroud-Gloucester road, a mile downstream of Small's Mill, stood Rock Mill, (fn. 31) which was
a fulling-mill in 1738 when it was occupied by
William Packer. (fn. 32) Anthony Bidmead was working it
in 1743 (fn. 33) and Job Gardner occupied it at his death in
1768. (fn. 34) In 1776 Zacharias Horlick, senior, and John
Horlick were making cloth at the mill, (fn. 35) which was
owned and occupied by James Stanley in 1795. (fn. 36)
John Adey, clothier, was recorded there in 1797 and
Timothy Stanley in 1809. (fn. 37) The mill was put up for
sale after the death of James Stanley in 1815 when it
contained 3 stocks and a gig-mill. (fn. 38) A Mr. Hicks,
possibly Weston Hicks, (fn. 39) owned the mill in 1820 and
occupied part of the premises. (fn. 40) Hester Miles & Son
later made cloth there but went bankrupt in 1826. (fn. 41)
The steam-engine was removed from the mill in
1850 (fn. 42) and during the 1850s it was worked as a pinmill by the Stroudwater Pin Co. (fn. 43) Dye-wood manufacturing was carried on at the mill by John Thomas
& Co. in 1863 and by Thomas Gold in 1870. Gold
remained at the mill until the 1880s but in 1889 it was
again used in the cloth industry by Tabram & Co.,
flock and shoddy manufacturers, (fn. 44) who worked the
mill for only a few years. (fn. 45) By 1894 it was worked by
the British Sports Supply Co. (fn. 46) and in 1897 the
British Chess Co. was recorded there. (fn. 47) Soon afterwards the mill was converted for use as a corn-mill
and was later demolished. A small later-17th-century gabled house, perhaps built by a member of the
Gardner family, (fn. 48) was partly refenestrated and
enlarged to the east, the original entrance front,
by the addition of a small service wing in the early
19th century.
Grove Mill or Hermitage Mill, the next downstream, (fn. 49) belonged to the Grove estate. (fn. 50) In 1820 it
was worked as a paper-mill by John Ward, (fn. 51) but
after his death in 1826 (fn. 52) it was converted into a gristmill, and the adjoining house into a malt-house, and
it was operated by Thomas Creed, mealman, between
1827 (fn. 53) and c. 1840. (fn. 54) In 1842 it was worked by
William B. Price, mealman, (fn. 55) and in 1853 by the
Luker family. (fn. 56) By 1870 Godsell & Sons, brewers of
Salmon's Mill, shared the use of Grove Mill with
Henry Holmes, a millwright and engineer. (fn. 57) By 1882
it was again a corn-mill (fn. 58) and remained in use until
after the First World War. (fn. 59) The malt-house
apparently continued to be used by Godsell &
Sons. (fn. 60)
Salmon's Mill (fn. 61) was held from the manor in 1439
by William Bliss. (fn. 62) In 1496 Thomas Bliss surrendered the reversion of the mill in favour of John
Sewell, (fn. 63) possibly only a trustee, for in 1523 William
Bliss transferred the copyhold to his son Thomas. It
was later occupied by John Gardner and then by
George Fletcher whose tenure was confirmed by the
lord of the manor in 1574. (fn. 64) The mill was evidently
worked by Edmund Fletcher, who built the house
near by, at the end of the 16th century. (fn. 65) It was
probably the fulling-mill owned and worked by
Thomas Fletcher (d. 1621) whose second son
Henry (fn. 66) was possibly the man of that name recorded
at Salmon's Mill in 1681. (fn. 67) By 1749 the mill was
being worked by John Pinfold, clothier (fn. 68) (d. 1764 or
1765), who devised it to Samuel Webb. (fn. 69) In 1783 a
Mr. Berwick was rated for the mill, (fn. 70) and in 1786 it
comprised both fulling- and grist-mills with a dyehouse attached. (fn. 71) It was worked as a corn-mill by
William Drew in 1820 (fn. 72) and a malt-house was recorded there in 1822. (fn. 73) By 1839 the mill was owned
by N. S. Marling who was leasing it to the firm of
Biddell & Bishop. (fn. 74) In 1855 Marling leased it to
Thomas Godsell, brewer and maltster (d. 1885), (fn. 75)
who worked it as a corn-mill in conjunction with a
brewing business in the 1870s (fn. 76) when a brick-yard
and kilns were also attached to the premises. (fn. 77) The
brewery business, later called Godsell & Sons,
expanded rapidly and the site, known as Salmon's
Spring, also included a distillery from the early 20th
century. (fn. 78) The firm was taken over by the Stroud
Brewery Co. in 1928, and in 1934 the mill was
demolished and replaced by a brick beer-bottling
factory. (fn. 79) Malting ceased in 1967 and the beerbottling plant was closed in 1969, from which date
the site was used as a storage depot, employing c. 100
people in 1972, by Whitbread's. (fn. 80) Salmon's Spring
House, a substantial gabled house of the late 16th
and early 17th centuries, (fn. 81) has been remodelled
internally on several occasions and stands in the
midst of industrial buildings of the late 19th and 20th
centuries.
The brook running to the Painswick stream
through Sheepscombe, where clothiers were recorded from the 18th century, (fn. 82) formerly drove at
least two mills. (fn. 83) Flock Mill, (fn. 84) formerly called
Ebworth Mill (fn. 85) and Back Mill, (fn. 86) was recorded in
1777 (fn. 87) and formed part of the Ebworth estate in
1797. (fn. 88) The mill has not been found recorded as a
cloth-mill although its name, used throughout the
19th century, is suggestive. In 1820 the mill was
worked by William Morgan (fn. 89) and in 1839, by which
time it was separated from the Ebworth estate, it was
worked by Richard Sollars as a corn-mill. (fn. 90) By 1856
Sollars had apparently ceased working the mill and
was farming from it. (fn. 91) The mill was standing in
1901 (fn. 92) but was demolished soon afterwards. (fn. 93) In
1972 the mill-pond remained and had a modern
farm-house to the west.
Wight's Mill, or Sheepscombe Mill, (fn. 94) was situated at Brooklands. The mill was recorded in 1777 (fn. 95)
and in 1820 was owned and worked as a cloth-mill
by John Wight. (fn. 96) Steam-power had been introduced
by 1822 (fn. 97) and in 1838 the mill contained 8 handlooms. (fn. 98) John and Edward Wight owned and worked
it in 1839 (fn. 99) when the firm of John Palling & Son of
King's Mill was also recorded there. (fn. 1) The Wights
apparently gave up the business in 1840 although
they remained owners of the mill for some years
afterwards. (fn. 2) It was demolished c. 1871. (fn. 3) A Gothicstyle residence was built close to the site for the
clothier in the early 19th century.
The Wash brook and a tributary leading from the
grounds of Painswick House drove five mills in the
early 19th century. Upper Dorey's Mill, also called
Dorey's Mill, (fn. 4) was possibly in existence in 1777. (fn. 5) In
1820 the mill was owned and worked as a cloth-mill
by Thomas Wood. (fn. 6) The mill-pond is said to have
burst soon after 1830 and never been repaired (fn. 7) but
the mill on the site, called New Mill, was owned and
apparently used by N. S. Marling in 1839. (fn. 8) In 1853
the mill was occupied by John Pearce but the nearby weaving shops were said to be vacant. (fn. 9) In 1863 a
firm of cabinet-makers and fancy umbrella- and
parasol-stick manufacturers, King & Co., occupied
the mill (fn. 10) which has not been recorded in use since
that date. Weavers' cottages adjoining the mill were
said to be in an unhealthy condition in 1849 (fn. 11) but by
1972 had been restored to make three dwellings.
Lower Dorey's Mill, on the north side of Edge
Lane, (fn. 12) may have been worked in conjunction with
Upper Dorey's Mill in 1820, (fn. 13) but the building was
apparently used mainly as a dwelling by 1839 when
Samuel Wood owned the site. (fn. 14)
A stream which rose in the grounds of Painswick
House and entered the Wash brook by Edge Lane
drove Little's Mill. (fn. 15) The mill was built by John
Little before 1820 and worked by him as a clothmill. (fn. 16) He was still apparently using it in 1839 (fn. 17) but
he leased it to Henry Gyde before 1845 when it was
put up for sale. (fn. 18) It is not recorded later and only the
site of the pond was visible in the bed of the stream
in 1972.
A mill on the Wash brook, south of Edge Lane, (fn. 19)
descended with Washbrook Mill, the next below,
and was being worked with it by Edward Baylis in
1820. (fn. 20) In 1839, however, Elizabeth Gainey was
leasing it to Nathaniel Iles Butler. (fn. 21) It may have
been the building called the Little Mill that was
leased with Washbrook Mill in 1881. (fn. 22) It was a
working corn-mill in 1882 but had gone out of use by
the end of the century (fn. 23) and was used as a dwelling
in 1972.
Washbrook Mill, (fn. 24) called Merrett's or Gyde's Mill
in the early 19th century, (fn. 25) was built in 1691 by
Walter Hawkins. (fn. 26) In 1724 it was a grist-mill owned
by Hawkins, then a brewer of Bristol, and he was
succeeded before 1733 by his son Francis. In 1775 it
belonged to William Lane of Gloucester (d. c. 1789),
who devised it, subject to his wife Amy's lifeinterest, to Jane Bromwich. Jane sold the reversion
in 1797, when John Gyde was tenant of the property,
to Nicholas Barnes and he sold it two years later to a
clothier, John Baylis, who converted it to a clothmill. Baylis (d. 1818) was succeeded by his son
Edward, who worked it until his bankruptcy in or
before 1823. It was acquired by the mortgagee,
Elizabeth Gainey. (fn. 27) The lessee in 1838 was H.
Gardner (fn. 28) and in 1839 the mill was being worked by
Henry Padbury. (fn. 29) In the later 19th century it was
worked as a corn-mill, but had gone out of use by
1901. (fn. 30) The building, which dates from the late 17th
century but has many later additions and alterations,
contains an 18th-century decorated stone entrance.
Five of the mills on the Slad brook were usually
considered to be in Painswick parish. Lower Steanbridge Mill, below the bridge, (fn. 31) was presumably
worked by Richard Webb in 1608 when he owned
the water-course from the bridge to his mill. (fn. 32) The
mill was probably occupied by the clothiers Henry
Townsend of Steanbridge (d. 1714) and William
Townsend (d. 1754). (fn. 33) It was owned with Steanbridge House by the Revd. Robert Lawrence
Townsend in 1820 when it was worked, apparently
as a cloth-mill, by Benjamin Wood. (fn. 34) Robert died in
1830 and his son, also Robert Lawrence (fn. 35) leased the
mill in 1836 to N. S. Marling, who sub-let it, described as a fulling-mill with 3 stocks and 2 waterwheels, to Horatio Collier in 1854. (fn. 36) It has not been
found recorded as a working mill later.
By 1824 a mill had been built below Slad
village where a stream from Elcombe joined the Slad
brook. (fn. 37) The mill was owned by R. L. Townsend in
1839 and occupied by N. S. Marling. (fn. 38) It is said to
have been used later as a silk-mill and ruined c. 1914
when the pond broke. (fn. 39)
Hazel Mill, (fn. 40) situated below Vatch Mill (in Stroud
parish), contained 1 gig-mill, 2 new stocks, and 4
cloth-racks when put up for sale in 1763. (fn. 41) The mill
subsequently passed to Nathaniel Winchcombe,
whose son Nathaniel surrendered the copyhold in
favour of Thomas Baylis in 1798. Baylis immediately
transferred it to William Reeves, from whom it
passed to Thomas Hughes in 1800. The following
year Hughes transferred the copyhold to John
Knowles (d. by 1816) whose widow and heirs surrendered it in favour of Robert Hughes in 1816.
Robert sold it to John Mills in 1819 (fn. 42) and it was
leased to the clothier George Wyatt from 1820. (fn. 43) By
1839 N. S. Marling occupied the mill (fn. 44) which was
converted for use as a logwood-dye-mill before 1870
when it was worked by Alfred Haycraft, whose family
occupied the mill until the end of the century. (fn. 45) In
1901 the mill was apparently an out-building for the
early-18th-century house, called the Gables, (fn. 46) later
Hazel Mill House.
Wade's Mill, downstream of Hazel Mill, (fn. 47) was
worked as a corn-mill between 1820 and 1839 by
Thomas Holmes, a farmer. (fn. 48) The mill was worked as
a corn-mill during the later 19th century (fn. 49) but had
closed down by 1901. (fn. 50)
Peghouse Mill, (fn. 51) later called Woodlands Mill, (fn. 52)
was 400 yds. downstream of Wade's Mill. It was
owned in 1608 by Samuel Hopson (fn. 53) who conveyed it
in 1630 to Giles Davis, mercer of Stroud (fn. 54) (d. 1639).
Giles's infant son, Thomas, inherited the mill, decribed as a fulling- and grain-mill. (fn. 55) In 1678 John
Gardner was recorded at the mill (fn. 56) but it was still
owned by Thomas Davis in 1713 when he conveyed
it to his son Thomas. The younger Thomas conveyed it in 1721 to William Aldridge of Stroud,
clothier, from whose heirs it was acquired in 1730 by
John Cripps. In 1739 Cripps sold out to his mortgagee Daniel Fowler (fn. 57) of Minchinhampton, mercer
(d. 1740), who left it in trust for his son Joseph (d.
1764) who devised it to his brother Richard and
sisters Mary and Elizabeth. (fn. 58) Benjamin Pitt was
making cloth at Peghouse Mill in 1767 and for a
time had a dyeing business there in partnership with
John Parish. (fn. 59) Mary Fowler (d. 1793 or 1794) survived her brother and sister and devised the mill to
her nephew Thomas Whitehead. Thomas contracted
to sell the mill to Thomas Hodges, clothier, and the
sale was completed in 1798 by Richard Whitehead,
Thomas's brother and devisee. (fn. 60) Hodges apparently
leased the mill, or part of it, to Robert Gordon, who
was declared bankrupt in 1804. (fn. 61) In 1814 Hodges
sold the mill to Nathan Driver the younger, who was
declared bankrupt in 1827, the mill passing in the
following year to his chief creditors, some London
bankers, who leased it to N. S. Marling for 10 years
from 1831. (fn. 62) Marling worked the mill, which had
been partially rebuilt in 1823 and was powered by
steam and water, in conjunction with Vatch and
Upper Vatch Mills in Stroud, using Peghouse solely
for fulling. (fn. 63) In 1846 the mill was sold to Eli James,
a rope-maker, who sold it to Richard Barton, silkthrowster, in 1857. Barton mortgaged the mill to
James who later regained possession and sold it in
1864 to George Rowland and William Davis; they
sold the following year to John Libby of New Mill,
Stroud. (fn. 64) In 1885 the mill was being worked by
Northcott, Cartwright, & Co., woollen manufacturers, (fn. 65) who were succeeded there in 1902 by
Humphreys & Co., (fn. 66) who continued to produce
cloth at the mill until c. 1925. (fn. 67) Part of the mill was
used as a ropeyard in the mid 19th century, worked
by the firm of James and Brookes. (fn. 68) The mill buildings were mostly demolished soon after the mill
closed but some early-20th-century brick buildings
remained in 1972. The site was occupied from 1958
by Danarm Ltd., manufacturers of chain saws and
components, who employed c. 65 people in 1972. (fn. 69)
Other Industry and Trade.
The quarries in the
parish have contributed greatly to its economic
prosperity. Tradition maintains that the stone used
in building Llanthony Priory at Gloucester came
from a quarry at Painswick. (fn. 70) The priory was leasing
quarries from the manor in the late 15th century (fn. 71)
when the church at Painswick was being rebuilt. (fn. 72)
The quarries held by the priory were unused in
1540. (fn. 73) A number of the quarries were being worked
by the Capener family in the 16th century (fn. 74) and in
1608 5 masons and a tiler were recorded at Painswick. (fn. 75) The reputation of Painswick stone and the
high quality of the stonework in the town itself,
notably the churchyard monuments and internal
domestic features such as fire-places, owe much to
the Bryan family of masons, Joseph (d. 1730) and his
sons John (d. 1787) and Joseph (d. 1780). (fn. 76) The
building firm of Thomas Spring & Son operated in
the locality from 1823 until c. 1874 and worked on a
number of the chapels and country houses of the
neighbourhood, (fn. 77) but the most important building
fim has been Burdock & Sons, founded c. 1840, (fn. 78)
which still existed in 1972. The firm worked Catsbrain Quarry, the large quarry on Painswick hill
recorded from the 15th century, until 1950 when the
quarry was bought by the South-Western Stone Co.,
which employed 26 men there in 1959. Stone from
the quarry was used in important buildings in
London and elsewhere, (fn. 79) but the quarry was later
used for the production of reconstituted stone and
closed in 1968. In 1972 the buildings were used as
stores for a building firm. (fn. 80) The large quarry at the
Edge was closed c. 1950. (fn. 81) The parish contains a
great number of small disused quarries.
The industrial use of the mills after the decline of
the cloth industry included saw-milling, pin-making,
and brewing. (fn. 82) Pin-making had been introduced to
the parish in 1796 as a means of employment at the
workhouse (fn. 83) and brewing was a long established
household industry in the town, many of the inns
having malt-houses attached. Apart from the
Salmon's Spring brewery mentioned above, there
was a small brewery at Uplands in the late 19th
century (fn. 84) and another by Rock Mill c. 1900. (fn. 85) The
only other industry of any scale has been the tourist
industry; the attractive aspect of the town and surrounding countryside has made Painswick a popular
place for day visitors since the Second World War.
During the summer months the Guild of Gloucestershire Craftsmen hold an annual exhibition in the
town, which has two small commercial art galleries,
some antique shops, and a small bookshop.
The parish and outlying settlements have been
well supplied with craftsmen. In 1608 there were 5
tailors, 5 shoemakers, 5 smiths, 4 carpenters, 3
glovers, 2 turners, a joiner, a butcher, a saddler, a
hatter, a sawyer, a collier, a cooper, and a tinker
in the parish. (fn. 86) A baker was recorded at Sheepscombe
in the later 19th century and blacksmiths, carpenters,
and wheelwrights were recorded there until
1939. (fn. 87) At Slad a shoemaker was recorded in
the late 19th and a painter in the early 20th
century. A carpenter was recorded at Edge from the
late 19th century (fn. 88) and in 1940 there were 2 blacksmiths, 2 wheelwrights, and a saddler working in the
parish. (fn. 89)
Markets and Fairs.
A weekly market, on Thursdays, and an annual three-day fair, held on 14-16
August, were granted to the lord of the manor in
1253. (fn. 90) By a grant of 1321 the market was transferred
to Tuesday and the fair to 7-8 September. (fn. 91) The
market was said to have declined because plague in
the town in the early 17th century forced its removal
to Wick Street as a result of which much trade was
subsequently lost to the expanding market at
Stroud. (fn. 92) By 1737 the lord's right in the market was
reckoned to be worth only £7 yearly and had declined in value to £2 yearly in 1758. (fn. 93) It was said to
be poorly attended c. 1775 (fn. 94) but apparently continued, principally as a corn-market, until the
1870s. (fn. 95) The September fair had been joined by a
fair held on Whit Tuesday by the early 18th century, (fn. 96) both fairs later catering for sheep and cattle (fn. 97) .
Perhaps because of the flourishing state of the cloth
industry a great market for sheep was also being
held c. 1775 on the Tuesday before All Saints (old
style) (fn. 98) and that and another special sheep-market,
held on 1-3 April, were recorded in 1794. (fn. 99) The fairs
and the autumn sheep-market apparently continued
to be held until the 1870s but had been abandoned
by 1879. (fn. 1) A market-hall at the south end of Friday
Street was still in use in 1739 when it was repaired by
the churchwardens. (fn. 2)