AVENING
The ancient parish of Avening, two miles north of
Tetbury, comprised two detached portions separated
by a small area of Cherington parish: the larger,
western portion, containing the village of Avening,
part of Nailsworth, and the hamlets of Forestgreen
and Windsoredge was elongated in shape, stretching
for seven miles from the Inch brook on the northwest to near the Tetbury-Cirencester road on the
south-east; the smaller, eastern portion was a compact
area of 1,157 a. north of Cherington parish and
comprised the ancient estates of Aston and Lowesmore. (fn. 1) Industrial development in the area around
Nailsworth led to the creation of Nailsworth civil
parish in 1892 (fn. 2) out of the north-western half of the
larger portion of Avening and parts of Horsley and
Minchinhampton; the area transferred to Nailsworth
from Avening had long been accounted a separate
tithing. (fn. 3) In 1935 the detached eastern part of the
parish was transferred to Cherington (fn. 4) so that in 1972
Avening parish comprised 2,567 a. The account
which follows deals with the ancient parish except
for the area, comprising 775 a., (fn. 5) included within
Nailsworth, which is treated below.
The western part of the parish had the Avening
stream, from which the parish was named, (fn. 6) for part
of its northern boundary, and much of the eastern
boundary followed an old road from Minchinhampton to Malmesbury. The southern boundary followed
ancient field boundaries for two miles before following the Cotswold ridgeway (fn. 7) as far as Longtree
Bottom, from where the boundary continued northwestwards for two miles along a path to a junction
called Shipton's Grave. In 1892 the boundary
between Nailsworth and Avening was drawn northwards from there along an ancient lane leading
through Hazel wood to a crossing of the Avening
stream at the Iron Mill. (fn. 8) The boundaries of the detached eastern portion of the parish followed old
field boundaries.
With the exception of the valleys of the Avening
stream and its tributary, the Ledgemore brook, most
of the parish lies on a plateau at a height of c. 500 ft.
The valleys are formed in the Inferior Oolite with a
band of fuller's earth on the higher slopes. Strata of
the Great Oolite are found on the higher ground
which is formed principally by Forest Marble. (fn. 9) The
soil is stone brash and mostly given over to arable
farming, formerly conducted in open fields which
covered most of the plateau. (fn. 10) Woodland was recorded at Avening in 896 (fn. 11) and measured 2 leagues
by ½ league in 1086 when some was evidently in the
Nailsworth area; a hawks' eyrie was then recorded at
Avening. (fn. 12) The tenants at Avening in the later 12th
century complained that timber sales and charcoalburning had halved the value of the woodland, including Hazel wood (formerly Hazel holt) near the
western boundary of the parish; (fn. 13) Hazel wood was
fenced off c. 1200, presumably to promote its
recovery, and three several woods, groves of hazel
among the open fields, were also recorded then. (fn. 14) In
1542 Hazel wood was said to be a common wood
measuring 200 a. and planted with beech trees of 80
years' growth, (fn. 15) and in 1656 it was said to cover
300 a. (fn. 16) In the later 18th century the woodland of the
parish supplied timber for gun-stocks, card-boards,
and saddle-trees. (fn. 17) During the earlier 19th century a
large part of Hazel wood was cleared for agriculture, (fn. 18) and in 1901 the woodland of the parish
measured 331 a. (fn. 19) and included three small areas of
park-land. A park had been created at Avening Court
east of the village, and Gatcombe park crossed the
northern boundary of the parish; during the later
19th century another area of plantation was laid out
as grounds for Avening Lodge west of the village. (fn. 20)
A number of ancient routes of local importance
traversed the parish. The Minchinhampton-Tetbury
road, which runs from north to south through the
parish, was said to be in disrepair in 1667, (fn. 21) and in
1758 it was turnpiked. (fn. 22) The old route from Avening
village to Nailsworth ran along the hillside through
Hazel wood (fn. 23) until 1822 when a new turnpike road
was made along the valley bottom. (fn. 24) On the southern
boundary of the parish the Minchinhampton-
Tetbury road is crossed by a road which is on the
line of the Great Cotswold ridgeway (fn. 25) and appears to
have been used by the Romans. (fn. 26) It continued to be
of some importance as a route to Cirencester and was
called London way by 1612 (fn. 27) and in 1824 was said to
be a coach road. (fn. 28) Star Farm, at its junction with an
old alternative route from Minchinhampton to
Tetbury, (fn. 29) was formerly called Star and Garter
Farm (fn. 30) and tradition records its use as an inn. (fn. 31)
Before it was turnpiked the Minchinhampton-
Tetbury road may have descended the north side of
the valley by Step's Lane to cross the stream further
to the west, for the west part of Avening village,
including the church, the rectory, (fn. 32) and a number of
17th-century houses, is the oldest. The village later
developed in an eastwards direction to the turnpike
route, on which stands the Cross inn, an 18th century building recorded as an inn since 1856. (fn. 33)
Two substantial residences were built near the
church. Avening House, a two-storey house with
attics built by Robert George before 1803, was enlarged after its sale by the George family to Edmund
Kimber in 1870 (fn. 34) by the addition of two-storey
equivalent north and south wings and a Doric porch
to the designs of William Clissold. (fn. 35) In 1972 the
house was used by the education department of the
Gloucestershire county council for short residential
courses for schoolchildren. (fn. 36) Old Quarries, a similar
but larger house, was built in the mid 19th century
by the rector T. R. Brooke, (fn. 37) and was also the
residence of his successor Francis de Paravicini until
1897. (fn. 38) The house was enlarged c. 1938 by building a
gallery to house the picture collection of Arthur Lee,
Viscount Lee of Fareham (d. 1947), the then owner. (fn. 39)
In 1972 the house was used as a hostel by the Home
Farm Trust, a voluntary body formed to help
mentally handicapped young adults. (fn. 40)
Much building, including a Baptist chapel, was
done in the village during the 19th century. Other
cottages were built on Point Road which runs from
near the Cross inn to Avening Lodge. (fn. 41) Also on
Point Road is Church Farm, an 18th-century house
with extensive farm-buildings. The farm-house was
doubled in size by the addition of a south residential
block in the 19th century when it was owned with an
estate of c. 570 a. by members of a family called
Wiltshire. (fn. 42) There were said to be 13 cottages at
West End near Avening Lodge in 1858, when in
Avening village itself 15 houses and 165 cottages
were recorded. (fn. 43) In the mid 20th century a large
council estate was built immediately north-east of
the village and a smaller, private residential estate
was under construction in the centre of the village,
on the south bank of the Avening stream, in 1972.
There was little development east of the Tetbury-
Minchinhampton turnpike in Avening village but in
1858 15 cottages were recorded near the 17th-century
manor-house, Avening Court, which stands ½ mile
east of the village. (fn. 44) North of Avening Court a settlement, called Nag's Head by 1824 (fn. 45) from the publichouse recorded there until 1939, (fn. 46) emerged in the
later 18th century. In 1858 the settlement contained
31 cottages, (fn. 47) some of which were derelict in 1972.
The eastern, detached portion of the parish, called
Lowesmore or Aston, was recorded as a vill c. 1248 (fn. 48)
and 11 people were taxed at Aston in 1327. (fn. 49) A
chapel was recorded there in 1491 (fn. 50) but by the early
18th century there were only 3 houses, (fn. 51) presumably
including the houses of Aston and Lowesmore farms.
In 1972 the two farm-houses (fn. 52) and a few labourers'
cottages remained.
In addition to public-houses already mentioned,
the parish had the New Inn, recorded from 1749 and
housed in an 18th-century building on the west side
of New Inn Lane, used as a private house in 1972. (fn. 53)
Of others recorded in the later 19th century, when
there were usually five public-houses in Avening, (fn. 54)
the Bell inn remained in 1972. A friendly society met
at the New Inn in 1828. (fn. 55) In 1928 the former tithebarn by the churchyard was converted to a village
hall as a memorial to the war dead. (fn. 56)
Population figures for Avening parish before 1891
include that part of the parish later transferred to
Nailsworth. (fn. 57) In 1327 38 people were assessed for
tax in Avening. (fn. 58) In 1551 there were said to be 260
communicants in Avening (fn. 59) and the population
apparently remained stable until 1650. (fn. 60) By the early
18th century there were 600 inhabitants living in 160
houses, 60 of which were at Nailsworth. (fn. 61) The
population of Avening in 1801 was 1,057 and numbers increased to 2,396 in 1831, after which there was
a steady decline to 2,018 people in 1881. The formation of Nailsworth parish left only 894 people at
Avening in 1891 and, after a slight increase, numbers
declined to 823 by 1911. The population remained
fairly stable until 1931 but the further boundary
change reduced the number of inhabitants to 768 in
1951. Building in the village increased the numbers
to 790 by 1961. (fn. 62)