STROUD
Growth of the Town and Outlying Settlements, p. 104. Manors and Other Estates, p. 111. Economic
History: Agriculture, p. 119; Mills and the Cloth Industry, p. 120; Other Industry and Trade, p. 130;
Markets and Fairs, p. 132. Social Life, p. 132. Local Government and Public Services, p. 134. Churches,
p. 136. Nonconformity, p. 140. Jews, p. 141. Education, p. 141. Charities for the Poor, p. 144.
The Town of Stroud, the centre of the industrial
and former cloth-producing region of mid
Gloucestershire, lies near the western edge of the
Cotswolds at the meeting-point of five valleys
formed by the river Frome and its tributaries.
Tenurially and ecclesiastically Stroud parish was
once part of Bisley, but its emergence as a distinct
unit had begun by the 13th century when the fees
held from the lord of Bisley included the manors of
Over and Nether Lypiatt in the principal, eastern
portion of the later Stroud parish and the manor of
Paganhill in a detached western portion. The
bounds of those manors were evidently adopted as
the rough limits for the area to be served by the
church at Stroud when it was assigned parochial
rights by the rectors of Bisley in 1304. The church,
which had no endowment of tithes, continued to be
regarded as a chapel to Bisley until the early 18th
century when the finances of the living were finally
placed on a sound footing, and, although the region
served by the church apparently received the organs
of parish government in the 16th century, until the
mid 17th it was still often described as part of the
parish of Bisley or as 'the limitation of Stroud
within the parish of Bisley'. (fn. 1)
Although the most ancient habitations of the
parish were at the manor-houses of Over and Nether
Lypiatt and at Paganhill, the parish took its name
from the settlement which grew up by the Frome in
an outlying part of the manor of Over Lypiatt but
at the centre of important local routes of communication. The settlement was first recorded in 1221 as
'la Strode', a name which apparently referred to a
piece of marshy ground at the confluence of the
Frome and the Slad brook, (fn. 2) although the earliest
houses of the town were evidently built on the welldrained slope at the end of the ridge which lies
between the two streams. The name Stroudwater,
besides being used as an alternative name for the
river Frome and to designate the whole of the Stroud
Valley region, was also sometimes applied to the
town. (fn. 3) By 1248 the settlement at Stroud was
accorded the status of a vill (fn. 4) and by 1279 it had the
church which became the ecclesiastical centre of the
parish in 1304. In 1477 10 houses at Stroud, held
from Over Lypiatt manor, were recorded. (fn. 5)
From the 16th century the town developed fairly
rapidly and, on the evidence of the houses of the
older part of the town, the later 17th century in
particular was a time of growth. By the beginning
of the 17th century Stroud was the site of a market
and fair. The production of woollen cloth centred
on the mills along the streams which formed its
boundaries was by then the dominant industry of
the parish, but Stroud town also became the
commercial and social centre for the wider clothproducing region of the surrounding valleys. It was
described in 1714 as 'the metropolitical town . . . for
the clothing trade' (fn. 6) and in 1757 as 'a sort of capital
of the clothing villages', (fn. 7) and its name became
synonymous with high-quality richly-dyed broadcloth. Improved road communications and the
canals, which had linked Stroud to the Severn in
1779 and to the Thames in 1789, stimulated the
growth of the town in the early 19th century, and the
coming of the railway in 1845 produced further
development. During the 19th century the town
roughly doubled in extent, new broad streets of
brick being grafted upon the old Cotswold town
with its steep streets and gabled stone houses. Its
position as the focus of an important industrial
region was recognized in 1832 when it was made the
centre of a parliamentary borough. The cloth
industry had lost its dominance in the parish by the
end of the 19th century but the adaptation of the
mills to a variety of light industrial purposes
maintained the growth of population during the
20th century.
The ancient parish of Stroud covered 3,990 a.
and lay in two main divisions. (fn. 8) The larger, eastern
part, which contained Stroud town, the hamlets of
Thrupp and Bourne, and part of the hamlet of
Brimscombe, formed roughly a diamond shape and
was bounded on the south-west by the river Frome,
on the north-west by the Slad brook, on the northeast by a small tributary of the Slad brook and by
field boundaries, and on the south-east by the
Toadsmoor brook. That division comprised three
ancient tithings: Nether Lypiatt lay in the south;
Over Lypiatt lay in the centre extending from the
eastern corner to the western and having as part of
its boundary with Nether Lypiatt the small stream,
formerly called the Lime brook, (fn. 9) which flows into
the Frome at Bowbridge; and Steanbridge tithing
lay in the north-west. Over and Nether Lypiatt
tithings originated as manors but the origin of
Steanbridge tithing is obscure; the name was
originally applied to an important crossing-point
on the Slad brook a short way above Stroud parish,
but by the 16th century the name Steanbridge
Slade was being used to designate the whole valley
of the Slad brook below the bridge. (fn. 10)
The smaller, western division of the parish,
divided from the eastern by a long southern arm
of Painswick parish, was known as Paganhill
tithing and contained the villages or hamlets of
Paganhill, Ruscombe, and Whiteshill, and part of
the hamlet of Dudbridge. It was bounded on the
south by the Frome, on the east by the Painswick
stream, on part of the north-east by a tributary of
the Painswick stream, and on part of the west by the
lower course of the Ruscombe brook, known
variously as the Cuckold's, Woosley's, or Ozel
brook. (fn. 11) Various smaller detached parts of Stroud
parish lay in the area of confused boundaries that
adjoined Paganhill tithing on the west (fn. 12) and
several detached parts of Randwick and Standish
were islanded within Paganhill tithing. Two pieces of
Standish lay at Ruscombe and one or both evidently
represented the house and land there which were
assigned to the vicar of Standish in 1348. (fn. 13) There
were also small detached parts of Stroud, of which
the origin is unexplained, adjoining the bridge at
Steanbridge on the boundary between Painswick
and Bisley, and at Newtown on the boundary
between Stonehouse and Eastington. (fn. 14)
During the rationalization of the boundaries in the
area west of Paganhill tithing in 1882 two detached
parts of Stroud were transferred to Randwick, and
Stroud absorbed three parts of Randwick and four
parts of Standish; in 1884 four parts of Stroud were
transferred to Stonehouse. Also in 1882 the
detached part at Steanbridge was absorbed by
Bisley. (fn. 15) In 1894 Stroud parish was dismembered:
the civil parish of Thrupp, which in 1901 had a
population of 1,294, was created out of the southern
part of the eastern division, and the north-eastern
part of that division, with a population of 274 in
1901, was transferred to Bisley to form the parish of
Bisley-with-Lypiatt; most of the northern area of the
western division of the old Stroud parish was
included in the new civil parish of Whiteshill,
which had a population of 1,327 in 1901, and two
smaller areas were transferred to Randwick and to
the new civil parish of Cainscross; the remnant of
Stroud parish together with Uplands, a new civil
parish created from the southern arm of Painswick,
became the Stroud urban district. (fn. 16) In 1936 the
urban district was extended to cover the area of most
concentrated housing and industrial development
around Stroud town by the inclusion of large parts
of Cainscross and Rodborough and parts of Bisleywith-Lypiatt, King's Stanley, Painswick, Thrupp,
and Whiteshill. (fn. 17) This account deals with the ancient
parish of Stroud as it existed before 1882, with the
exception that the settlement at Dudbridge in the
south-west corner of the parish is dealt with
wholly under Rodborough.
In 1327 13 people were assessed for tax in Over
Lypiatt (with which was included Tunley in Bisley),
8 in Lower Lypiatt, and 12 in Paganhill. (fn. 18) In 1381
there were 36 taxpayers in Over Lypiatt with
Tunley, 32 in Lower Lypiatt, and 22 in Steanbridge; the return for Paganhill is illegible. (fn. 19) In
1551 there were c. 850 communicants in Stroud
parish (fn. 20) and in 1563 the population was estimated
at 130 households. (fn. 21) It was estimated at 600
families in 1650 (fn. 22) and at c. 3,000 inhabitants in 750
houses c. 1710. (fn. 23) In 1756 the population of Stroud
town was enumerated at 2,024 people. The whole
parish contained c. 4,000 people in the 1770s, (fn. 24) and
in 1801 it had a population of 5,422. There was then
a steady rise in population to 8,680 by 1841 and
11,519 by 1891. The dismemberment of the parish
in 1894 left it with a population of 7,673, and in 1931
the urban district, including Uplands, had a
population of 8,364. The enlargement of the urban
district in 1936 and building development gave it a
population of 17,468 by 1961. The population of
Whiteshill civil parish rose from 1,327 in 1901 to
1,364 in 1921, subsequently falling to 1,182 by 1961,
and during the first 60 years of the 20th century the
population of Thrupp civil parish rose from 1,294
to 1,650. (fn. 25)
The eastern division of the parish is formed by an
irregular spur of land surmounted by level or fairly
gently sloping ground at 700-850 ft. from which
steep slopes fall away to the streams on three sides.
The valley bottoms lie on the Upper Lias which is
overlaid successively on the hill slopes by the
Inferior Oolite and a narrow band of fuller's earth,
and the high ground on top of the spur is formed by
the Great Oolite. (fn. 26) There were some open fields on
the high ground in the north of the eastern division (fn. 27)
but along the hill slopes was a more or less
continuous belt of woodland, the total area of wood
in that division covering 493 a. in 1842. (fn. 28) The woodland on the south-western and western slopes had
been considerably diminished by 1971, but thick
woods remained in the Toadsmoor valley in the
south-east and at Proud Grove, recorded in 1639 as
Proute Grove, (fn. 29) and Abbey wood in the north-west.
Swift's hill in the north of the division, covering
24 a. in 1842, (fn. 30) remained a piece of open common
land in 1971. The park around Lypiatt Park house
may be a feature of great antiquity, for the name
Lypiatt, recorded from 1220, derives from a deerleap in an enclosure fence. (fn. 31) The park had certainly
been created by the early 17th century, and in 1725
comprised 100 a. confined within a wall. (fn. 32) It was
grazed by deer in 1819. (fn. 33) Park wood on the southwestern slopes near Thrupp marks the position of a
park which once belonged to the lords of Nether
Lypiatt. (fn. 34)
The western division of the parish, Paganhill
tithing, also lies on steeply sloping land, rising from
the Frome to almost 800 ft.; the Ruscombe brook
forms a deep central coomb. The lower part of the
tithing lies on marlstone which is overlaid as the
ground rises by the Upper Lias and a small patch of
the Inferior Oolite. (fn. 35) The woodland of the tithing,
mainly in Ruscombe wood in the north, covered
71 a. in 1842. (fn. 36)
In 1971 the position of Stroud at the centre of a
network of road communications along the surrounding valleys appeared to be one of the most
obvious factors in the town's development, but it
was not a factor which operated to any great extent
before the early 19th century when the existing
roads, some of the most important of which ran
across the hills, were replaced by new roads built
along the valleys. At an earlier date the steepness of
the roads discouraged much through traffic. (fn. 37)
The most important ancient route affecting the
growth of Stroud town was apparently that which
came down the hill from Bisley and, curving round
on what became the main street of the town, crossed
the Slad brook at Badbrook and the Painswick stream
at Stratford to run to Paganhill village. The crossing
at Badbrook was by a ford with stepping-stones for
foot passengers until 1784 when a stone bridge was
built for horses and carriages; a small wooden
bridge for pedestrians was built soon afterwards. (fn. 38)
The crossing at Stratford had acquired that name
by 1306, (fn. 39) and a bridge had replaced the ford there
by 1522. (fn. 40) From Paganhill, where it appears to have
once formed a cross-roads with an ancient trackway
from Bath to Gloucester by way of Woodchester,
Dudbridge, and Randwick, (fn. 41) the road may originally
have continued westwards through Westrip to join
the ancient route called Greenstreet running across
Stonehouse parish towards the Severn; (fn. 42) but if that
was so all traces of its course between Paganhill
village and Cashe's Green have long since
disappeared. Instead the main road through the
village made a sharp southward turn to Cainscross (fn. 43)
and so along the valley to Stonehouse to join routes
to Gloucester and Bristol. Another road of some
importance left it at Cainscross, crossed the Frome
at Dudbridge, and forked at Selsley for Dursley and
for Nailsworth. The Paganhill road was turnpiked
west of Stratford in 1726 (fn. 44) and remained one of the
most important serving Stroud town until the early
19th century. Another important road branched
northwards from the Paganhill road at Stratford on
the line of Wick Street and linked the town with
Painswick and Gloucester. (fn. 45) It was also turnpiked
under the Act of 1726 and was placed under a
separate trust in 1778, (fn. 46) but owing to its steepness it
remained an unsatisfactory road, and at the beginning of the 19th century wheeled traffic between
Stroud and Gloucester usually took the longer route
by way of Paganhill, Cainscross, and Stonehouse. (fn. 47)
Until the early 19th century travellers from Stroud
to London often went up to Bisley to join the old
Bisley-Cirencester road, but an alternative route by
Wallbridge, Rodborough hill, and Minchinhampton
common, (fn. 48) was turnpiked in 1752 (fn. 49) and thereafter
was the more favoured Cirencester and London
route. There was a bridge over the Frome at
Wallbridge by 1527. (fn. 50) The route out of the
south-east corner of the town along the Frome
valley was of only local importance before the early
19th century. It ran by Bowbridge Lane down to the
river at Bowbridge and then turned up the hill again
by Gunhouse Lane to Thrupp hamlet; (fn. 51) from
Thrupp it ran along the hillside by Thrupp Lane
and Bourne Lane through Far Thrupp, Bourne, and
Blackness, coming down to the river again at Chalford. (fn. 52) From it minor access roads led southwestwards down to the mills on the river, some
continuing over to Rodborough and Minchinhampton. One of them crossed the river at Bowbridge, where the arched bridge which gave the
hamlet its name had been built by 1655, (fn. 53) and
climbed the steep hill opposite to provide another
link between Stroud town and the London turnpike; (fn. 54) others crossed at Brimscombe and at Bourne
where there were bridges by 1608. (fn. 55)
A route which was apparently once of some local
importance crossed the north of the larger division
of the parish, running by the track past Ferris Court
and by Daw's Lane to meet the ancient Painswick-
Cirencester road at Catswood Lane. Bismore
bridge, which was repaired in 1697, carried the road
across the Toadsmoor brook, (fn. 56) and it was presumably the 'way under Ferris Court' which c. 1516 was
said to belong to the lord of Over Lypiatt alone and
only to others by licence. (fn. 57) The road evidently then
ran close to Lypiatt Park house and left the park by
its 'middle entrance', recorded in 1823 (fn. 58) and still
marked by a gate in the park wall in 1971. Daw's
Lane was named as a road to Gloucester c. 1819, (fn. 59)
and, although the Act which turnpiked the BisleyStroud road in 1823 gave powers for its discontinuation, (fn. 60) it was still marked as a route to
Painswick in 1842; (fn. 61) in 1971 it survived only as an
overgrown field path. Another disused route
branching out of the Ferris Court track down
through Toadsmoor woods was marked as a road to
London c. 1819 (fn. 62) and presumably connected with
the road down the Toadsmoor valley to the new
London road. (fn. 63) The lane connecting Lypiatt Park
with the two other ancient manor-houses of Middle
and Nether Lypiatt was evidently a route of some
antiquity, and a number of paths and tracks ran
westwards from it to link Nether Lypiatt with
Stroud town and the scattered cottages lying in
between. Of those the track which ran by the
settlement called the Heavens to meet Bowbridge
Lane at a place called Crease Gate, and a branch
from it to Thrupp, were recorded c. 1690. (fn. 64) Slad
Lane running north-east from Stroud town to the
farmsteads and mills at the Vatch was also a route of
some local importance before 1800, for there was no
road up the valley bottom to Slad. (fn. 65)
The earliest of a series of road improvements for
the region, the making of the new Bath road along
the Nailsworth valley to Dudbridge in 1780, (fn. 66)
affected Stroud only indirectly by increasing the
importance of the route through Paganhill; but in
1800 a new road built from the Bath road at
Lightpill through the town and up the Slad valley
put Stroud on the main Bath to Cheltenham route. (fn. 67)
An even more significant improvement in 1814 was
the building of a new road out of the south part of
the town along the Frome valley through Chalford
to Cirencester; the new road, which was more
direct and passed some 300 yards lower down the
hillside than the old road to Chalford, also replaced
the route through Minchinhampton as the main road
to Cirencester and London. (fn. 68) In 1818 a new
turnpike built up the valley of the Painswick stream
past Pitchcombe replaced Wick Street as the main
road to Gloucester. (fn. 69) In 1823 the Stroud-Bisley road
was turnpiked and a new more southerly course
built between the east side of the town and a point
south of Kilminster Farm. (fn. 70) Finally in 1825 a new
road built between the south side of the town and
Cainscross by-passed the old turnpike through
Paganhill village; at the same time an old road from
the east end of the town by Bowbridge Lane into
Rodborough was made a turnpike. (fn. 71)
The first London stagecoach service from the
town was apparently the Stroudwater Flying
coach, established in 1769, making the journey three
times a week through Cirencester and Oxford. (fn. 72) It
remained the only London coach until the early
19th century when various companies in succession
or in competition maintained the service. One
company formed by local subscribers in 1807 had
failed by 1809. Another London coach established
in 1817 had branch-coaches to Dursley and to
Gloucester. By 1806 a Bristol coach had also been
started, (fn. 73) and by 1830 there were daily services to
London, Bath, Birmingham, Bristol, Gloucester,
and Cheltenham. (fn. 74) The carriers, particularly those
who transported the locally produced cloth for sale
in London, were of more importance to the economy
of Stroud; in the late 18th and early 19th centuries
the chief routes were served by carriers based in
Rodborough by the old London turnpike, (fn. 75) but in
1763 Daniel Ballard was running stage-waggons to
Gloucester and Bristol from his headquarters
in King Street. (fn. 76) In 1821 a number of inhabitants
of the town were employed in road transport,
namely 2 coachmen, 5 ostlers, 4 carriers, a haulier,
and 4 chaise-drivers. (fn. 77)
A long-planned scheme to link the Thames and
the Severn by a navigation through the Stroud
Valley was realized in the late 18th century in two
stages, the Stroudwater canal from the Severn as far
as Stroud, and the Thames and Severn canal from
Stroud to the Thames. An Act for a Stroudwater
navigation by improving the existing river Frome
was passed in 1730 but, mainly because of the
opposition of millowners along the river, the scheme
failed and a revival of the scheme in 1759, when it
was planned to avoid the millowners' objections by
dispensing with locks and transhipping the cargoes
at each mill-weir, was also unsuccessful. The plan
was finally realized between 1775 and 1779 when a
new canal was built alongside the river from
Framilode on the Severn to Wallbridge at Stroud; (fn. 78)
at the latter was a small basin and wharf and the
company agent's house, a building of stone with a
pediment and flanking wings designed by William
Franklin in 1797. (fn. 79) The link with the Thames was
completed between 1783 and 1789 by the building
of the Thames and Severn canal from Wallbridge
to Lechlade. At Brimscombe an inland port was
constructed for the transference of cargoes from the
Severn trows to the Thames barges, and a building
by the basin, put up by Thomas Cook in 1789,
housed the company offices, agent's dwelling, and
warehouses. (fn. 80) At Bourne, a little way above, the
company, which initially did its own carrying,
established a boat-building yard, and the company's
lessees, who from before 1870 were members of the
Gardiner family, continued to build barges there
until c. 1920. (fn. 81) There was also a wharf and warehouses immediately south of Stroud town. (fn. 82) In
1821 the inhabitants of the larger division of
Stroud parish who gained a livelihood from the
canals were 9 bargemen, a barge-owner, 5 wharfingers, a waterman, a shipwright, a ship's
carpenter, and 2 boat-builders. (fn. 83)
The canal system did not, as was hoped,
become an important national artery for commerce,
its main use being the supply of coal to the
industrial region of the Stroud Valley. It was
inevitably severely hit by the arrival of the railway
in the 1840s, and did little business afterwards. In
1910 the Thames and Severn canal was taken over
by the Gloucestershire county council which carried
out a programme of reconstruction, but the canal
proved no more profitable and the upper part,
above Chalford, was abandoned in 1927, and the
lower part in 1933. (fn. 84) The Stroudwater canal
carried no commercial cargo after 1941 and was
abandoned in 1954. (fn. 85) The basin at Brimscombe and
a short length of the Thames and Severn canal on
either side were sold to the adjoining factories
during the 1950s and 1960s and filled, and the
company building was demolished in 1966; (fn. 86) the
remainder of the course of the canals adjoining
Stroud parish survived, though mainly in a derelict
state, in 1971.
The Great Western railway line between Swindon
and Gloucester, following the Stroud Valley, was
opened in 1845; (fn. 87) there was a station on the south of
Stroud town and another, called Brimscombe
station, at Bourne, and there were halts at Downfield
(at Paganhill), Bowbridge, Ham Mill, and Brimscombe Bridge. (fn. 88) The Midland railway was brought
to Stroud in 1886 by a short branch from the
Nailsworth line to a station just south of the Great
Western station. (fn. 89) The Midland line was closed for
passenger traffic in 1947 and closed entirely in
1966. (fn. 90) Brimscombe station and the halts on the
Great Western line were closed in 1964 (fn. 91) and the
goods depot at Stroud in 1967, (fn. 92) but Stroud remained
one of the stops for passenger trains from Cheltenham and Gloucester to London in 1971.
Among natives of Stroud who have achieved
prominence are the Revd. Joseph White (1745-
1814), the son of a Ruscombe weaver, who became a
noted orientalist and theologian, (fn. 93) Sir George
Nayler (1764?-1831), herald and genealogist, who
was the son of a Stroud surgeon, and John Canton
(1718-72), an early experimenter with electricity. (fn. 94)
Two early-19th-century inventors who worked in
the parish, John Lewis and Edwin Budding, are
mentioned below. (fn. 95) Among those who played a
prominent part in the affairs of the town in the 19th
century were Sebastian Stewart Dickinson (d. 1878)
of Brownshill House, Painswick, (fn. 96) and George
Holloway, a clothing manufacturer and promoter of
benefit societies, who was also M.P. for Mid
Gloucestershire from 1886 until his death in
1892; Holloway is commemorated by a statue,
sculpted by T. R. Essex, which was erected in the
town at Rowcroft in 1894. (fn. 97) Paul Hawkins Fisher,
who died in 1873 at the age of 94, had two years
earlier published Notes and Recollections of Stroud
in which he combined documentary research with
personal reminiscences reaching back into the 18th
century. (fn. 98)
Few events of more than local significance have
occurred at Stroud. Lypiatt Park house, then
owned by John Throckmorton, is connected with
the Gunpowder Plot by a cryptic note addressed by
Lord Mounteagle to Robert Catesby at Lypiatt, (fn. 99)
and in the early 18th century a room in the house
was known as the Plot Room from its supposed use
by the conspirators. (fn. 1) In February 1643 the
parliamentary forces at Gloucester had an outgarrison at Lypiatt Park, (fn. 2) and at the end of 1644 the
house was once more garrisoned and a party of horse
and dragoons sent to Stroud. On New Year's Day of
1645 royalist troops under Sir Jacob Astley captured
and burned Lypiatt Park house, (fn. 3) whose owner,
John Stephens, was temporarily granted part of
Astley's estates in 1647 in compensation for the
damage. (fn. 4) At some time during the war, probably
in 1644, soldiers and prisoners were quartered in
Stroud church. (fn. 5) In 1659 several parishioners were
involved in Massey's preparations for a royalist
rising at Gloucester; they included William Warner
of Paganhill, who borrowed £300 to advance the
project, and Thomas Freame of Nether Lypiatt. (fn. 6)
In 1756, when a depression in the cloth industry led
to much discontent and disorder among the local
weavers, a group of clothiers who had come to
Stroud to negotiate on wages were besieged in a
house by an angry mob, (fn. 7) and during the strike of
1825 the streets of the town were again thronged by
rioting weavers when the ringleaders in an incident
at Vatch Mill were being brought before the
magistrates. (fn. 8) In 1824 a traditional 5th of November
celebration at the Cross in the town degenerated
into a violent riot. (fn. 9) A duel between two army officers
in which one received fatal injuries excited much
interest in 1807. (fn. 10) George III and Queen Charlotte
passed through Stroud in August 1788 on their way
from Cheltenham to Woodchester. (fn. 11) Some of the
incidents and personalities of the town were
satirized in the 18th century in occasional pieces
known as The Chronicles and Lamentations of
Gotham, a device which was adopted in the later
19th century for the purpose of electoral squibs. (fn. 12)