WITCHFORD
Witchford is a small and rather narrow parish near the
centre of the Isle proper. 'The Town stands on a
plesant Hill att 3 miles west of Ely,' (fn. 1) and the road
between the two places crosses some of the highest
ground in the Isle (about 80 ft. above sea-level), commanding fine views over the southern extremity of the
Fens to the Suffolk hills beyond Newmarket. Witchford is at present one of the smaller villages in the
county but was formerly of greater importance; Domesday Book refers to the two hundreds of Ely which meet
at Wiceford, (fn. 2) and the name 'Witchford Hundred' is
found from 1128. (fn. 3) North Witchford is still the name
of one of the rural districts, and the village is one of the
few in Ely Rural District which have increased in
population since 1931. (fn. 4) The soil and subsoil are both
clay, so that there is more permanent pasture around
Witchford than in the low lands, but as at Downham
there are some orchards,5 which take advantage of the
south-easterly slopes. The village straggles along the
main road (A 142) from Ely to Chatteris and St. Ives.
It contains no buildings of special architectural interest,
though Ivy House and the farm at the east end of the
village date from the 17th century. The general appearance is neat even if of no special distinction, but
a hundred years ago Witchford 'in point of filth would
bear comparison with the worst place in any part of
the kingdom', with an open drain all along the main
street. (fn. 6) At the eastern end of the village a by-road runs
southwards across Grunty Fen to the Ely-Cambridge
road near Stretham. An R.A.F. aerodrome was established at Witchford during the Second World War.
The landing ground was on the plateau east of the
village, in Ely; part of the buildings, on the north side
of the village, have been converted into a Youth
Hostel. An exchange of territory with Ely under the
Isle of Ely Review Order, 1933, (fn. 7) resulted in a net gain
to Witchford of 162 acres and 3 persons.
The proportion of land dealt with by inclosure
awards in Witchford was 1,087 acres or about 50 per
cent. of the total area of the parish, a proportion distinctly higher than anywhere else in the Isle except
Stretham, Thetford, Wentworth, and Witcham. There
were two Witchford awards. The first, made in 1813
under an Act of Parliament of 1806, (fn. 8) divided 460½
acres amongst 18 proprietors, the chief beneficiaries
being Thomas Moxon (76 acres), Charles Cross senior
(53 acres), John Cropley (52 acres in his own right and
32 as lessee under the Dean and Chapter of Ely),
Clement Hitch (42 acres), Edward Cropley (38 acres),
and Clare College (28 acres). Most of these families
and institutions figure prominently in the second award
of 1840, (fn. 9) which divided 626½ acres amongst 30
claimants. This time Clare College received the largest
allotment (110 acres), George Cropley (95¼ acres in
his own right and 74 with Luke Dench as devisee under
the will of Clement Hitch) and Christopher Pemberton
(79¾ acres) also taking large shares. The dean and
chapter had by this time parted with most of their land
and received only 1¼ acre; 8½ acres were awarded to
the vicar as glebe. The open fields of Witchford
numbered four-Belham's End and Marrow Way
Fields north and north-west respectively of the village,
Hale Field south-west, and Briery Field west of this
latter on the Wentworth border. The 'built-up' area
along the village street almost completely severs the
farm lands.
Thurstan, the last Saxon Abbot of Ely (d. 1072),
was a native of Witchford. (fn. 10) Samuel Bentham, father
of James Bentham the historian of Ely, was Vicar of
Witchford at the time of his son's birth (1708). (fn. 11)
MANORS
An area of 300 acres in WITCHFORD
and Wold was amongst the endowments of
Ethelwold and Abbot Brithnoth when they
revived Ely monastery after the Danish invasions. (fn. 12)
This estate was worth £8 when received, £12 in 1066,
and £10 in 1086. The fall in value was no doubt due
to the devastation caused by Hereward's exploits. It
was rated at 3 hide or 7 ploughlands. The demesne
was rated at 1½ hide and consisted of 2 or possibly 3
ploughlands. There were 5 sokemen with ½ hide who
could not depart from the land, 17 villeins each with
7 acres, 7 cottars, and 8 serfs. There was meadow for
7 ploughs and pasture for all the cattle of the vill.
Witchford had always formed part of the demesne of
the church of Ely. (fn. 13) Its population and hidage as
recorded in 1086 exceeded those of some places in the
Isle now of greater importance.
Like most of the manors in the immediate neighbourhood of Ely, Witchford remained with the convent when the see was founded, and its subsequent
history is uneventful. The prior acquired the right of
free warren in 1252, (fn. 14) which was confirmed at a
general definition of the episcopal and monastic rights in
1418. (fn. 15) The valuation of the Taxatio (£52 16s. 6½d.) (fn. 16)
is much higher than any subsequently encountered, and
higher than that of the monastic property in Ely itself.
Perhaps the compilers of the Taxatio included in
Witchford that tract of land west of Ely, which includes
Emery Barn and Keten's manors. In 1324-5 the convent's receipts from Witchford amounted to £24 11s. 5d.
only, and its expenditure to £24 19s. 10½d. (fn. 17) There
was then a valuable mill, farmed at £4 8s. 11d.; the
profits of the court leet came to £3 2s. 9d. There was
a thriving trade in wool and fells; 108 fells were sold
to John de Whatefeld and 53 to Bernard de Bradefeld,
two East Anglian merchants who frequently occur in
Ely rolls at this time. The demesne was of 4 carucates. (fn. 18)
Various small gifts of property in Witchford were
made to the prior and convent during the 14th century, (fn. 19) but the manor seldom brought in much more
than £10 a year in the 15th century (fn. 20) and the valuation of 1527-8 (£19 1s. 10d.) ranked Witchford as
one of the less valuable of the monastic manors. (fn. 21)
Another valuation of 1541, however, records net profits of £36 9s. 1d., excluding the rectory. (fn. 22) In the
same year the manor, whereof the rents of assize were
appropriated to the custos capelle, (fn. 23) was formally transferred to the newly constituted Dean and Chapter of
Ely. (fn. 24) This grant was confirmed in 1587. (fn. 25)
In 1650 the manor was sequestered to William
Underwood and to Henry Whiston of London. It
was then valued at £141 9s. 11½d. a year gross and the
grantees paid £2,425 9s. 6d. for it. (fn. 26) In a survey made
in 1649 the manor was said to comprise 245 acres held
in demesne valued at £18 5s. and 224½ acres of rented
land valued at £128 3s. 8d. The meadow land, which
was rented, amounted to 100 acres. It had been let by
the dean and chapter for £72 yearly and by the sequestrators for £100. Rents of assize were valued at
£13 2s. 9d. and timber at £21 3s. 4d. (fn. 27)
A good deal of private inclosure had by this time
been carried out. Various closes are mentioned in the
deed of sale of 1650. Such are Dean's, Archdeacon's
(north of Grunty Fen), Mr. Boys's close now belonging to Archdeacon Wigmore, a close occupied by
George Coney in Alderforth and West Fen, Dr.
Collins's, Dr. Cannon's, Dr. Tanner's, Dr. Cressener's,
Dr. Knight's, Dr. Perkins's, Dr. Davies's, Dr. Ashton's,
Mr. Rogers's or Beele's Close, Thistle Close, Dr.
Goodridge's, and Mr. Buckeridge's. The names suggest considerable investment by cathedral dignitaries
and their families in landed property in Witchford
during the previous century. (fn. 28) The dean and chapter,
as lords of the manor, had recently received 40 acres
in Alderforth in the Vermuyden draining of the fens. (fn. 29)
At the Restoration the manor was returned to the
dean and chapter, who, with their successors the
Church Commissioners, have continued to be lords. (fn. 30)
In the early 18th century the tenant was Sir Roger
Jenyns. He was succeeded in 1725 by Soame Jenyns
who paid in rent £31 10s. a year together with a brawn
valued at £1 6s. 8d. He was also required to meet the
expenses of an annual court dinner given to the dean
and chapter and their officials. (fn. 31)
WOLD, which in Bentham's time survived only as
'some arable and pasture lands near Witchford', (fn. 32) and
is now completely lost, was of some importance in the
Middle Ages. In 1299 William Berewyk de Todeham
and his daughter Alice, Ela relict of Simon de Insula
and John and Agatha (le Despencer) his son and granddaughter were accused of ejecting John Deen and
Amice (de Insula) his wife from property in Wold and
Haddenham, which was settled by Simon de Insula
on Amice on her marriage to John Deen. (fn. 33) The
plaintiffs described Wold as a 'manor', but the phrase
was not used in documents which they submitted in
evidence. The suit was decided in favour of the plaintiffs, and in 1302-3 William de Todeham and his coparceners held a knight's fee in Wold, Sutton, and
Chatteris of the Bishop of Ely for 40s. In 1346 this fee
was shared between William de Ruston, the Prior of
Ely, and John de Deen. The prior alone was in possession in 1428. (fn. 34) Wold was still a separate estate in
1649, when it comprised 120 acres (41 in pasture).
About 1730 the tenant was Henry Stevens at £2
yearly. (fn. 35)
CHURCH
Between 1219 and 1224 Bishop de
Fontibus granted the church to the prior
and convent and ordained a vicarage of 5
marks value, (fn. 36) Pope Honorius III confirming the grant
in the latter year. (fn. 37) The vicarage was not actually
instituted until after 1291, when the church, described
simply as an ecclesia, was worth £10; (fn. 38) earlier valuations had been £10 13s. 4d. in 1217 and £10 in 1254. (fn. 39)
In 1535 the vicarage was rated at £9 18s. 9d., the
rectory, which was appropriated to the hosteller, being
returned with the spiritualities of the convent. (fn. 40) In
1541 the rectory was let to Thomas Rayne for £3
yearly. (fn. 41) In 1562 a pension of 19s. 10½d. was paid to
the Bishop of Ely, as a tenth of the value of the vicarage. (fn. 42)
The prior and convent, and since the Reformation the
dean and chapter, have always been the patrons, though
they have occasionally made grants of a turn, as in 1616
to Dr. Andrew Willett, prebendary of Ely and a wellknown divine and controversialist. (fn. 43)
The rectorial and vicarial tithes were commuted for
rent charges of £430 and £140, with 24 and 20 acres
of glebe respectively, in 1839. (fn. 44)
The church of ST. ANDREW consists of chancel,
nave, north porch, and west tower. The material is
rubble and brick with stone dressings, and the roofs are
tiled. The tower is of the 13th century arid is the survival of an earlier church. In the third quarter of the
14th century the nave and chancel were rebuilt on an
extended scale. The reconstructed building was consecrated in 1376. (fn. 45) In the 15th century the present
porch was added. There were considerable repairs in
the first half of the 19th century, which included the
reconstruction of the porch and the partial rebuilding
of the top stage of the tower. Later in the century there
was much 'restoration' of the interior, with unhappy
results.
The chancel has an east window of three lights with
rather elaborate tracery of 14th-century date, the
mullions of which have been much renewed. There
are angle buttresses with one set-off and a similar
buttress in the centre of the north and south walls. In
the north wall there is a window of two cinquefoilheaded lights with a quatrefoil above. There are two
windows of two trefoil-headed lights with a quatrefoil above in the south wall and to the west of these a
low side window with cinquefoiled head. There is a
piscina in a cinquefoil-headed recess in the usual position and a double aumbry in the north wall of the
sanctuary. The chancel arch is two-centred and of two
orders with moulded caps and bases to the rounded
responds. On either side of the arch in the east wall of
the nave is a cinquefoil-headed niche.
The present nave is considerably wider than the
tower, and the junction of the lateral walls with the
latter is effected rather clumsily by means of a short
section of slanting wall on either side, probably done
with the object of economizing in quoins. The southeast window is of three lights with rather clumsy
tracery of 14th-century date. The remaining two
windows on this side and the three in the north wall
are all similar and consist of two trefoil-headed lights
with a quatrefoil above. Beneath the north-east window
is a double aumbry. In the slanting curtain walls at the
west end are two large and clumsy lancets of 19thcentury date. (fn. 46) The south doorway is plain 14thcentury work with continuous chamfers and hoodmould.
The east gable of the nave has been rebuilt in brick,
and the south buttresses have been repaired in brick.
The large porch is of 15th-century origin, but the side
walls and much of the front were rebuilt in brick in
1838, which date appears over the outer doorway.
There is a stone seat along the east and west walls.
The outer doorway is original and is of two orders with
semi-octagonal responds having moulded caps and
bases; there is a hood-mould terminating in heads. The
inner doorway is of the 14th century with mouldings
dying into the chamfered jambs.

Plan of St. Andrew's Church
The tower is of three stages. It opens to the nave
by a low arch turned in brick, which is of uncertain
date. The west window of the ground stage consists
of coupled lancets, which have been renewed. There
is no west door, but a small brick buttress, probably of
the 16th century, is placed beneath the west window.
In the second stage there is a plain lancet in the north
and south walls. The west face of the top stage has
been rebuilt in brick. The belfry windows consist of
coupled lancets. The embattled parapet is a 19thcentury restoration in brick. There is a gable cross
built into the east face of the tower. The nave roof is
ancient and of braced rafter construction, and has been
much patched at various times; the chancel has a
modern braced rafter roof and the porch a plastered
ceiling.
The 14th-century font has a plain octagonal bowl
with a round shaft and base. The rest of the fittings
are modern and poor.
The plate includes a silver chalice and paten of
1694-5.
The tower contains three bells by Christopher
Graye, 1671, probably cast at Haddenham.
The registers of baptisms begin in 1788, marriages
in 1754, and burials in 1788, and are complete.
NONCONFORMITY
There were no Papists or
Dissenters in Witchford in
1676. (fn. 47) A Primitive Methodist chapel was established in 1846 and one for
Wesleyan Methodists in 1849. (fn. 48) The Wesleyan chapel
ceased to be used about 1880; the Primitive Methodist
chapel before the end of the century. (fn. 49) A Baptist
chapel was founded in 1871; the existing building was
erected four years later on land presented by James
Cropley. (fn. 50)
SCHOOLS
In 1789 there was a small dame school
in Witchford. The older boys went to
Ely for their schooling, if they received
any. (fn. 51)
By the time the National Society made their inquiry
(1846-7) Witchford had become one of the bestprovided villages in the Isle. About 100 children, in
a population of 561, were said to be attending school
both weekdays and Sundays. The cost of running the
school amounted to £30, of which the master received
£20 a year in salary. (fn. 52) In 1851 the numbers attending
were stated to be 74 on weekdays and 100 on Sundays,
but the existing room could properly contain only about
half that number. The parents were charged 1d. a
week for each child, or 1s. a quarter; farmers were
charged extra. The school seems to have been con
ducted in hired premises, but in 1851 a site for a new
building was given by Christopher Pemberton, of
Cambridge, one of the local landowners; the National
Society contributed £30 towards the building costs and
the Dean and Chapter of Ely, lords of the manor, £15.
The total cost, £164, was unusually low, since it was
possible to use a converted cottage as master's house.
The addition of an infant's classroom in 1869 brought
the accommodation up to 129. The following year a
new master's house was built at a cost of £204, of which
the National Society contributed £12. (fn. 53) In 1910 the
recognized accommodation was reduced to 106 (61
mixed, 45 infants), but the average attendance has
never in recent times been as much even as the lower
figure; it was 53 in 1899, (fn. 54) 69 in 1919, and 61 in
1938. Wentworth school was closed in 1922 and the
children transferred to Witchford. Since the Second
World War the school has been 'decapitated' by the
removal of the older children to Ely, (fn. 55) but by 1951 the
numbers had risen to 73. (fn. 56)