HUSBANDS BOSWORTH (fn. 1)
Husbands Bosworth is thirteen miles south of
Leicester on the borders of Northamptonshire.
Its name is derived from the Old English personal
name 'Bar'; the village during the Middle Ages was
therefore called Baresworth or Boresworth and
occasionally Borisworth. The prefix 'Husbands'
was not established until the late 16th and early
17th century, and is believed to have been adopted
in order to distinguish between the village of the
'husbandmen' and Market Bosworth, whose substantive name derives from a different root. (fn. 2) The
parish is one of the largest in the district, 3,560 a. in
area, about 4 miles from north to south and a little
over 2 miles at its widest extent from east to west.
The ground forms part of a ridge of hills, formed
by the Upper Lias clays, which runs north-eastwards into Leicestershire through Laughton and
Gumley and is believed to mark the course of a
Bronze Age trackway. (fn. 3) At Husbands Bosworth the
ridge forms the watershed between the Welland
flowing eastwards and the Avon westwards, rivers
which are the boundaries of both county and parish.
The village itself lies near the centre of the parish
to the east of the main road from north to south,
which crosses the Avon at Welford; throughout the
Middle Ages the principal traffic between London
and Leicester via Northampton followed this road
and in 1835 a daily coach from London to Liverpool
still followed it as far as Husbands Bosworth
before turning to Lutterworth and Hinckley; the
road was first turnpiked in 1765. (fn. 4) The main road
from Market Harborough to Coventry via Lutterworth, first turnpiked in 1755, (fn. 5) crosses this road at
Husbands Bosworth. There are two village greens,
one at the cross-roads and one on the east at the
corner of Church Lane and Mowsley Road; the latter
according to local tradition is the older, and the village
is therefore believed to have shifted westwards
towards the main road. The parish church and
Bosworth Hall and Park lie at the east end of the
village. In order to cross the watershed between the
Welland and Avon valleys, the Grand Union Canal
enters a tunnel about ¾ mile long just north of the
village. This canal was opened in 1814 to join the
Union Canal near Gumley with the Grand Junction
at Long Buckby (Northants.). (fn. 6) No wharves were built
near the village. The wharf at the George Hotel,
Welford, on the London Road, which was linked with
the main canal by a special branch running beside
the Avon and the parish boundary, lies just inside
the parish of Husbands Bosworth. Until 1946 the
proprietor of this public house retailed coal which
came by barge and until 1939 burnt lime on the
south side of the wharf in the kilns which are now in
ruins. (fn. 7) Similarly, the Wharf Inn, where the Lutterworth Road crossed the canal, possessed a coal
wharf. (fn. 8) The Rugby–Stamford branch of the London
& North Western Railway, opened in 1850, (fn. 9) was
constructed alongside the canal, but in a deep
cutting and not in a tunnel.
Husbands Bosworth has always been one of the
larger villages of the hundred. The recorded
Domesday population was 46. In 1377 there were
157 taxpayers. In 1563 there were 72 households
and in 1670 98. There were 320 communicants in
1603 and 360 in 1676. (fn. 10) In his Speculum (1705–16)
Bishop Wake estimated that there were 160 families,
though the figure was later revised to 119. (fn. 11) Throsby,
in 1789, noted 150 dwellings. (fn. 12) The first Census
figure (1801), 330 males and as many females, has the
appearance of a rough estimate. The next (1811) is
likewise suspect, for it implies a rise from 660 to
1,024 in a decade when the number of inhabited
houses rose only from 156 to 157. (fn. 13) From 1821
until 1851 the population slowly rose to 1,002 and
then slowly declined to 713 in 1931. In 1951 it was
781. (fn. 14)
There is no gas supply and there was no electricity
supply until the early 1930's. The waterworks belonging to Market Harborough U.D.C., which stand
in Bosworth Park opposite Husbands Bosworth
Rectory, were opened in 1956. Water is drawn
from 13 wells in the area, purified, and pumped
to a reservoir near Highfields House, the highest
point in the parish, and then distributed throughout
the U.D.C. and R.D.C. areas. (fn. 15) This scheme, which
provided the first piped water for the village, was an
extension of one started in 1890 to supply Market
Harborough only. (fn. 16)
The soil of the parish is chiefly clay, with some
gravelly loam; the greater part is permanent pasture,
used especially for dairy farming. (fn. 17) In 1950 there
were 18 farms in the parish, 9 worked from houses
in the village and 9 from houses standing in the
fields. (fn. 18) Apart from the former Bosworth Mill
on the Avon in the south-west corner of the parish,
probably the site mentioned in the Domesday
Book, (fn. 19) the most notable houses outside the village
are Wheler Lodge and Highfields House. Wheler
Lodge, the last home of Major Guy Paget (d. 1952),
is now an establishment for training horses; Highfields House consists of the reconstructed stables
belonging to the former house which was demolished
in 1950. (fn. 20) The public cemetery on the Welford
Road was established in 1858; its two chapels, which
were rarely used, were demolished in 1957 leaving
the bricked-in cloister as a gardener's shed. (fn. 21) The
airfield on the borders of Husbands Bosworth and
Sulby (Northants.) which was built in 1941–2 was
used by the R.A.F. until 1946. In 1948 its camp
buildings were placed under the control of the
National Assistance Board for housing Polish
families. They were still used for this purpose in
1958. (fn. 22) The Polish camp, which in 1950 housed over
500 people, had its own church, school, and recreation room. (fn. 23)
Around the Green on the Welford Road are the
principal public buildings, the school (1858), the
Methodist chapel (1913), and the Turville Memorial
Hall (1895)—a village hall erected in memory of Sir
F. C. F. Turville (1831–89) of Bosworth Hall. In
1957 part of an extension to the village hall to
commemorate the 1953 Coronation was completed,
and the Midland Bank converted a house opposite
into a sub-branch, open on one day a week. There
are three public houses in the High Street—the
'Cherry Tree', the 'Red Lion', and the 'Bell'. The
George Hotel at Welford Bridge is a brick building
of c. 1800 with a castellated parapet and brick portico.
Most of the houses in the village lie along the
road from Market Harborough to Coventry,
known as High Street, along the Leicester road, or
Bell Lane, and in the network of smaller streets
in the angle between them. Apart from the few
timber-framed houses which survive, red brick is
the almost universal building material. The former
Wheatsheaf Inn, probably the oldest house in the
village, is a timber-framed structure of two periods.
The lower range, lying parallel to the road and now
cased in rendered brickwork, contains part of a
medieval cruck truss. The range was originally
single-storied, but an upper floor was later inserted,
the roof raised, and a massive stone chimney built
at its north end. South of this range and at right
angles to the road is a two-story wing of two bays,
probably dating from the 16th century. The upper
story is of close-studded timber-framing with
heavy angle-posts and curved braces, the gable-end
having decorative framing in the form of quadrant
panels and 'baluster' studs. The lower story is of
stone, retaining several mullioned windows. The
chimney against the back gable and the brick panel
filling are later additions. The building has been
enlarged at the rear and in 1958 was thoroughly
renovated, several of the ceilings being raised and
much of the timbering exposed and a porch added. (fn. 24)
No. 13 High Street is a timber-framed building of
a more humble type, probably dating from the 17th
century. It is a two-bay cottage, now rough-cast,
with additional bays, one of brick, at each end. The
framing consists of roughly-shaped timbers and
includes three roof trusses with curved principals.
A house at the junction of Honeypot Lane and
Mowsley Road has exposed timbers externally.
These are of the late type, forming large panels and
having short straight braces below the wall-plate.
The brick-filled panels, which are dated 1712, may
be later insertions. There is an outhouse with
similar timbering in Church Street. The High
Street contains mostly late-19th-century cottages,
but a few earlier buildings, including a disused
smithy, survive. In the smaller streets, particularly
in Mowsley Road and Honeypot Lane, most of the
houses date from the 18th and early 19th centuries.
'The Priory' in Bell Lane is the modern name for a
house which replaced an early-17th-century farmhouse. (fn. 25) Bosworth House and Hillsome House in
Berridge's Lane are gentlemen's residences of c.
1800, the former altered and enlarged, the latter (in
1958 a boarding house) re-fronted in the mid-19th
century. In 1950 there were over 220 houses in the
village, of which 44 were Council houses, some built
on the Welford Road and School Lane after the First
World War and some in Lammas Close off Butt
Lane after the Second World War. (fn. 26)
Husbands Bosworth Hall stands in a small park
on the east side of the village. It consists virtually of
two houses standing back to back. The older portion,
now mainly of brick but retaining evidence of
timber-framing and a medieval plan, is a gabled
structure with an entrance and projecting wings on
the west side. Behind it stands a taller late-18th-century brick house with its principal front facing east. (fn. 27)
There are late-19th-century additions to both
buildings. The older house is of two stories with
gabled attics and consists of a central three-gabled
block with cross-wings to the north and south. The
north wing has a single gabled roof; the south wing
is made up of three smaller blocks, roofed separately,
indicating additions or alterations at various dates.
The plan suggests that the central block originally
contained a medieval or 16th-century great hall with
an entrance and cross passage at its north end, that
the service quarters were always to the north of this,
and that part of the south end represented an original solar wing. Exposed timbering is visible on the
south front and there is little doubt that much of the
house was originally timber-framed. Behind the
staircase part of the back wall of the central block
is of ironstone, retaining two Tudor windows. The
bases of two massive chimneys, one in the hall and
the other in the north, or kitchen, wing, are also of
ironstone and may be of the same period. None
of the internal fittings dates from before the late
17th century and it is probable that the house was
remodelled at this time and that most of the exterior
was then cased in brickwork. On the first floor of
the north wing an embrasure beside the chimney
is occupied by a 'priest's hole', masked by cupboards and having access only from the attic above. (fn. 28)
The later part of the house was built in 1792–3 by
F. F. Turville (d. 1839). (fn. 29) It stands a few feet to the
east of the older structure and was originally connected to it only by a passage. The new house had
a symmetrical front facing east and internally the
central hall was flanked by a dining room to the
north and a drawing room and library to the south.
The main staircase is lit from above by a circular
lantern. On the occasion of a wedding reception in
1838 (fn. 30) a blind bay containing a large mirror was
added to the east wall of the drawing room. In 1873–
4 the older house was re-roofed, (fn. 31) some of the
gables being raised in height. Further alterations
were made soon after the marriage of Sir Francis
Fortescue Turville to the Dowager Lady Lisgar in
1878. (fn. 32) A westward extension of the library, built
to house the books of Lady Lisgar's first husband,
closed the gap between the old and new houses,
giving a continuous facade to the south. Lady Lisgar
was also responsible for new kitchens built against
the north wing of the older part and a tall baywindowed block containing a new dining room,
bedrooms, and dressing-rooms to the north of the
later house. Also in the late 19th century 'Tudor'
features were added to the main or west front of the
old house and a second doorway, now blocked, was
inserted to give separate access to the chapel room.
Colonel Turville-Petre raised the height of the
second-floor windows on the east front c. 1910 and
about ten years later replaced a 19th-century Gothic
porch with the present classical one. (fn. 33)
The ownership of the hall is traced below. (fn. 34)
While Sir Francis Fortescue Turville was on diplomatic service the hall was let for several years to
Sir Charles Tempest, Bt. (1834–94). (fn. 35) The Fortescues and the Turvilles, being recusant families, have
inherited several relics of interest to Roman Catholics, particularly through the Fortescues of Salden
(Bucks.). A notable past possession was the 10thcentury Bosworth Psalter, which was given to the
British Museum in 1907. (fn. 36) The collection of portraits includes one of Sir Kenelm Digby (1603–65),
a brother-in-law of Sir John Fortescue, 1st Bt. (fn. 37) The
chapel room, which served as a Mass centre for
Roman Catholics in the district until the erection
of the present church, is in the south-east corner of
the older part of the hall. (fn. 38)
An earthwork in the parish described in the late
18th century (fn. 39) has not been identified in recent
times; nor has the exact site ever been located of the
gravel pit where a late Bronze Age merchant's
hoard was discovered in 1801. (fn. 40) About 1795 a
brooch was found which later discussion attributed
to an Anglo-Saxon burial. (fn. 41)
During the 19th century an annual fair was held on
16 October, and a village feast soon after the patronal festival of the parish church, All Saints (1
November). (fn. 42) Local histories have given particular
prominence to the execution of nine women at
Leicester in 1616 for bewitching one of the sons of
Erasmus Smith (d. 1616) of Husbands Bosworth
Hall, (fn. 43) and also to the lighting that struck the
parish church on 6 July 1755 and caused great
damage. (fn. 44)
MANORS.
Five holdings in Husbands Bosworth
were listed in 1086. The largest, 11½ carucates, held
by Robert under Guy de Reinbudcurt, (fn. 45) had been
part of a Saxon estate centred upon Stanford-onAvon (Northants.). It remained the chief manor in
Bosworth and by 1130 had been united with another
holding, 4 carucates in extent, which in 1086 was
held by Laurence under Robert de Vescy. (fn. 46) Of the
three other Domesday holdings, 5 carucates held
under Gilbert de Gand by William Peverel (fn. 47) became part of the fee of the Trussell family of Marston
Trussell (Northants.); 2 carucates and 2 bovates
held under Robert de Buci by Suavis (fn. 48) became
part of the fee of the Basset family of Weldon
(Northants.), although the greater part was granted
to Sulby Abbey (Northants.); and 2 carucates and
2 bovates which had been bought from Guy de
Reinbudcurt in the reign of William I by Abbot
Bennet remained the property of Selby Abbey
(Yorks.) until the Dissolution. (fn. 49) Selby Abbey also
acquired Stanford-on-Avon, five miles south-west
of Bosworth, and Leicester Abbey with a grange at
Pynslade on the northern boundary of Bosworth
parish received gifts of land there.
The chief manor of Bosworth, later known as the
HALL FEE, combined the first two of the five
Domesday holdings above. About 1130 it was held
by Ansketil. (fn. 50) Probably before 1135 it had passed
to Robert (perhaps the Robert fitz Ansketil mentioned in two charters of Henry I) (fn. 51) who was succeeded by his son Roger Cute and by Roger's son
Richard de Bosworth who died before 1218. (fn. 52) The
latter had a son and heir called Richard, but by
1247 his inheritance belonged to John de Lodbrok
and his wife Joan, (fn. 53) a daughter of Richard de Bosworth. In 1279 the property of John's son, William
de Lodbrok, was still described as two separate
holdings, 10½ carucates and 4 carucates, although
for both he acknowledged the same overlord,
Richard de Harcourt, who held under the Earl of
Winchester. (fn. 54) The Harcourts and their successors as
lords of Market Bosworth remained the mesne
lords of this fee. (fn. 55)
By 1293 Robert de Stoke had succeeded to the
estate of William de Lodbrok for the service of ½
knight's fee under Richard de Harcourt. (fn. 56) The
Hall Fee remained in the hands of the Stoke family
until the later 16th century when it changed hands
at least five times. (fn. 57) By 1562 Francis Cotton was
holding the manor court of this fee; by 1570 Brian
Cave of Ingarsby; (fn. 58) and by 1574 William Brocas of
Theddingworth. (fn. 59) In 1594 John Gobert of Coventry
sold this manor to Erasmus Smith (d. 1616) of
Somerby who already owned the advowson of Husbands Bosworth church. (fn. 60) James I in 1615 confirmed
this sale to his son Roger Smith (d. 1655). (fn. 61) But in
1617 Roger Smith conveyed the manor to George
Walker of Market Harborough who in 1626 again
conveyed it to David Papillon of Lubenham. (fn. 62) In
1630 the latter sold it to the Manners family. (fn. 63)
Grace, daughter of Sir John Manners and Dorothy
Vernon of Haddon Hall (Derbys.), and widow of Sir
Francis Fortescue (d. 1624) of Salden (Bucks.), came
to live in Husbands Bosworth Hall. (fn. 64) The senior
branch of the Fortescues, descendants of her eldest
son John, who was created a baronet in 1636, (fn. 65)
remained at Salden, but a junior branch settled at
Husbands Bosworth. (fn. 66)
Maria Alethea Fortescue, who died unmarried in
1763, devised the estate to three trustees on behalf
of an infant, Francis Fortescue Turville, the greatgrandson of William Turville of Aston Flamville
who had married her aunt Frances Fortescue. (fn. 67) F. F.
Turville's father William (d. 1777) was then alive
but, although described as of Husbands Bosworth
on his tombstone, was excluded from the inheritance, probably because, unlike his family, he was
not a Roman Catholic. (fn. 68) F. F. Turville's grandson
Sir Francis C. Fortescue Turville (1831–89), who
left no children, was succeeded by his widow the
Dowager Lady Lisgar (d. 1895) (fn. 69) and his unmarried
sister Mary (d. 1910). The property then reverted
to his third cousin Oswald Petre (1862–1941).
George Talbot (d. 1753), a younger brother of
Gilbert, Earl of Shrewsbury (d. 1743), and father of
George, Earl of Shrewsbury (d. 1787), had two
other sons, Charles (d. 1766) and Francis (d. 1813):
the former was a great-grandfather of Sir Francis
Fortescue Turville through his daughter Barbara
(d. 1806), the wife of F. F. Turville; the latter, a
great-grandfather of Oswald Petre through his
granddaughter Gwendoline (d. 1910), the wife
of E. H. Petre. (fn. 70) In 1907 Oswald Petre assumed the
name Turville-Petre. (fn. 71) On his death in 1941, the
hall descended to his daughter Alethea and her
husband David Constable Maxwell jointly, the
present owners. (fn. 72)
In 1086 William Peverel held 5 carucates in Bosworth under Gilbert de Gand. (fn. 73) In the early years
of the 12th century Helgot gave tithes from his
demesne here to Lenton Priory (Notts.). (fn. 74) Robert the
son of Helgot forfeited his lands to Henry II who
enfeoffed Peter de Goldington of Stoke Goldington
(Bucks.). While the overlordship belonged to the
honor of Peverel of Nottingham, the Goldington
family remained nominally the mesne lords of this
manor. (fn. 75)
By 1130 the demesne tenant was Osbert Trussell, (fn. 76)
and this fee descended in his family, to his son William
and his grandson Richard. (fn. 77) It was still called
the TRUSSELL FEE in the late 18th century. (fn. 78)
But by 1235–6 William de Medbourne was the
demesne tenant, (fn. 79) and in 1279 Beatrice de Lokington held 5 carucates of William Trussell and he of
Peter de Goldington. (fn. 80) During the 14th and 15th
centuries tenants of this fee in Bosworth probably
held of the manor of Marston Trussell (Northants.)
which remained in the Trussell family until the
16th century. (fn. 81)
In the early 13th century William and Amice
Trussell gave 1 virgate and ½ virgate respectively in
Bosworth to Sulby Abbey (Northants.). (fn. 82) In 1202 the
Abbot of Sulby was reported to be already the
tenant of 3 virgates of this fee. (fn. 83)
In the reign of William I, Abbot Bennet of
Selby Abbey (Yorks.) (fn. 84) bought from Guy de Reinbudcurt the estate of Stanford-on-Avon (Northants.) which included 2 carucates and 2 bovates in
Husbands Bosworth. (fn. 85) The SELBY FEE remained
the property of the abbey until the Dissolution. The
gift of Stanford to the abbey was also attributed
to R. Foliot and in 1279 the 9 virgates in Bosworth
were ascribed to the fee of Foliot: 9 tenants held of
the abbot in libero servicio. (fn. 86) In the 15th century
there were 12 tenants paying small money rents
ranging from 2d. to 1s. 8d. (fn. 87) In 1540 the whole
estate of Stanford-on-Avon, including parts of Bosworth, was granted to Thomas Cave. (fn. 88) The property
in Bosworth descended in the Cave family. (fn. 89)
By 1130 2 carucates and 2 bovates, held in 1086 by
Suavis under Robert de Buci, had become part of
the BASSET FEE belonging to the Bassets of
Weldon (Northants.). (fn. 90) In the late 12th century
Walter son of Thomas de Bosworth held land in
Bosworth of Richard Basset, (fn. 91) but by 1279 only
2 virgates remained in lay hands. (fn. 92) Six virgates
had been granted to Sulby Abbey, probably by
Roger de Kilworth, a tenant of Ralph Basset (d.
1265) who had himself granted 6s. rent; (fn. 93) and the
remaining virgate to Leicester Abbey, probably by
Robert Sampson. (fn. 94) The Leicester Abbey property
was attached to Pynslade Grange and the Sulby
property to Bosworth Grange Fee (see below).
Among the original endowments of Leicester
Abbey was the manor of Pynslade in the parish of
Knaptoft with 4 virgates, one of which lay in Bosworth parish. (fn. 95) Roger de Bosworth, who gave the
parish church to the abbey, also added a carucate
and 7 selions; Charyte's rental lists 15 other miscellaneous gifts, but nothing larger than a virgate. (fn. 96)
Tenants of the abbey in Bosworth appear to have
owed service and suit of court to Pynslade Grange. (fn. 97)
In the 1270's the abbot held only 3 virgates in
Bosworth; he later claimed free warren over 11
virgates of Pynslade land, but it is not clear how
much lay within Bosworth lordship. (fn. 98) In 1535 the
abbey's property in Bosworth with Pynslade was
valued at £5 18s. 9½d. a year (fn. 99) and after the Dissolution it was farmed by royal bailiffs. (fn. 1) In 1553
several messuages and over 100 a. of land, formerly
the property of Leicester Abbey, were granted to
Thomas Reve and George Cotton of London. (fn. 2)
The GRANGE FEE was created from the many
gifts of land in Bosworth made to Sulby Abbey. (fn. 3)
The abbot held a court for the tenants of Bosworth
Grange. (fn. 4) The 11 virgates attributed to the Abbot of
'Soleby' in the Hundred Rolls were probably the
extent of this estate, but by 1279 this figure had
risen to 12½ virgates. (fn. 5) A charter of 1315–16 recites
12 gifts made to the abbey before that date of property and rents in Bosworth, but there are many
others made before the Statute of Mortmain which
cannot be identified in this list. (fn. 6) Roger de Belgrave
in 1344 and William Sclater of Coventry in 1497
gave lands in Bosworth to the abbey. (fn. 7) In 1535 its
property in Bosworth was valued at £9 8s. 2d. with
14s. in perquisites of the court. (fn. 8)
After the Dissolution grants from this fee were
made to several people, (fn. 9) but the grange itself, in the
tenure of William Herment (d. 1558), had been
reserved in 1551 for Edward, Lord Clinton, later
Earl of Lincoln. (fn. 10) In 1580 Bosworth Grange with
Bosworth Cotes and 9½ virgates belonged to Edward Twickten. (fn. 11) His son John Twickten the elder
(d. 1619) had included the property in a marriage
settlement, (fn. 12) but by 1632 another John Twickten
was described as of Corby (Northants.) and Grace,
Lady Fortescue, as lady of the manor of the grange. (fn. 13)
The grange was therefore united with the Hall Fee.
The property which formerly belonged to Sulby
Abbey in Hothorpe (Northants.), with land in
Husbands Bosworth not attached to the grange, was
purchased in 1557 by William Cradock. (fn. 14) It appears
to have descended to John Cradock of Kelmarsh
(Northants.) whose grandson was living in Husbands Bosworth in 1619. (fn. 15)
ECONOMIC HISTORY.
Of the five manors of
1086 four contained a demesne and villein tenants.
On the fifth, Robert's manor, later the Hall Fee,
there were 20 socmen and 5 bordars; by 1130
it had been united with Laurence's manor which
in 1086 had 3 ploughs and 3 serfs on the demesne. (fn. 16)
By 1279 only the Hall Fee retained its demesne. (fn. 17)
Taken together the manors were reckoned as 24
carucates and 3 virgates in 1086, 23 carucates in
1130, and 24 carucates in 1279. (fn. 18)
Apart from the Hall Fee only the Selby Fee,
among the Domesday manors, retained its identity
until the 16th century; as part of the Stanford-onAvon estate it was still recognizable at the time of
the inclosure in 1765. (fn. 19) The Trussell Fee became
simply an outlier of the manor of Marston Trussell
(Northants.) and the Basset Fee was largely absorbed
into the Grange Fee, created by Sulby Abbey
probably in the 13th century. (fn. 20) No evidence of the
workings of Sulby Abbey Grange has been discovered; Sulby Abbey, a Premonstratensian house
on the banks of the Avon, lay in an extra-parochial
district which adjoined the south-east boundary
of Husbands Bosworth. (fn. 21) It is difficult to place the
10 free tenants recorded in 1381 into the known
manorial organization in the village. (fn. 22) A rental,
dated 1450–1, from the Hall Fee numbered 19 free
tenants paying money rents, 2 paying peppercorn
rents, and 25 tenants at will. (fn. 23)
About 1500 the Abbot of Leicester had inclosed a
common pasture in Husbands Bosworth called the
Dole containing 23 a., adjoining his manor of Pynslade, but had been opposed by the villagers led by
Robert Stoke, lord of the Hall Fee. The case was
brought before the Star Chamber in 1530. (fn. 24) Similarly William Birdyt and Frances Palmer in 1607 were
reported to have decayed two farm-house by
taking away their land. (fn. 25) Otherwise pre-inclosure
conditions are not easy to describe, but 17th-century
terriers mention three open fields, called NorthEast, South, and West Fields. (fn. 26) In 1764, during the
minority of the lord of Bosworth Hall, F. F. Turville,
a group of proprietors petitioned for inclosure;
they believed pasture in severalty would greatly
increase the value of the land. (fn. 27) The owners of 7
yardlands out of the 96 in the lordship objected. (fn. 28)
In 1801 there were only 488¼ a. of arable out of the
3,348 a. which were included in the inclosure; the
arable consisted chiefly of 150½ a. oats, 129½ a. barley, 93 a. wheat, and 86½ a. turnips. (fn. 29) In 1809
William Pitt noted a field of beans, one of wheat,
and one of turnips, 'but little tillage in sight'. (fn. 30)
As a result of inclosure the rector and the owner of
Bosworth Hall shared a third of the lordship between them: the rector was allotted 584 a. and the
trustees of F. F. Turville, 569 a. (fn. 31) There are several
documents relating to the lands of the Snelson family,
yeomen farmers for three or four generations, (fn. 32)
and similar families like the Burdetts and the Heygates. (fn. 33) Benjamin Snelson (d. 1767) was described
as a 'gentleman'; his daughter married William
Harrold of Welford, whose family came to own
Welford Mill. (fn. 34) After inclosure, land was concentrated in a few hands. In 1789 Throsby believed
that the whole lordship was let in about 4 farms only. (fn. 35)
Although the number of owners assessed for the
Land Tax between 1775 and 1825 remained between
60 and 70, the greater part of the parish was farmed
by the same 5 or 6 tenants of a few small estates. (fn. 36)
Apart from the hall estate, Wheeler Lodge took
its origin from 122 a. allotted to Francis Wheeler in
1765, which in 1808 were acquired by Vice-Admiral
Sir Francis Mason, K.C.B. (d. 1853). (fn. 37) Soon after
inclosure the Revd. Peter Lafargue of Stamford
(Lincs.) acquired Bosworth House and a small
estate here on which his son Peter Augustus Lafargue
came to live. Despite the financial difficulties of
Peter's son Augustus Hubbard Lafargue, this
property appears to have descended in the family
throughout the 19th century. (fn. 38)
Husbands Bosworth (with North Kilworth) was
considered an important enough centre to be included in Pigot's Commercial Directory of 1835. (fn. 39)
The annual fair on 16 October, mentioned in 1846,
was reported in 1877 to have ceased. (fn. 40) During the
late 19th and early 20th centuries the village was
a fashionable centre during the hunting season, and
provided stabling for almost 100 horses. (fn. 41) For
instance, about 1880 Wheeler Lodge (George Stretton), Bosworth House (H.P.H. Hutchinson), and
Highcroft (Hermann Gebhardt) were used as hunting
lodges. (fn. 42) But the largest and wealthiest establishment was at Highfields House, the home of J.T.
Mills (1836–1924), the chairman of Union Assurance and a director of the Great Eastern and the
Weymouth & Portland Railways. (fn. 43)
MILLS.
The only mill in Bosworth mentioned in
1086 was on the fee of Laurence under Robert de
Vescy which by 1130 had been absorbed into the
Hall Fee. (fn. 44) Robert Stoke, lord of the Hall Fee, died
seised of a watermill in 1531, but in conveyances
involving the same manor in 1626, 1635, and 1657,
3 watermills were included. (fn. 45) A mill on the Trussell
Fee was in dispute in 1227, and the Abbot of
Sulby gave his windmill in Bosworth to the lords
of the Hall Fee in 1252. Three other mills were involved in a conveyance of 1569. (fn. 46) Bosworth Mill
on the Avon in the south-west corner of the parish
may be the site of the mill mentioned in 1086; it
belonged to the hall estate in the early 18th century. (fn. 47) After grinding cattle food for many years, it
went out of usec. 1910. (fn. 48) The brick buildings
appear to date from the 18th century, the mill
house having been repointed later. They were in
1958 occupied as two dwellings.
PARISH ADMINISTRATION.
There are several
surviving court rolls belonging to the Hall Fee. The
oldest is an enrolment of transactions made in the
court between 1300 and 1302. There is also a single
roll of bailiff's accounts for 1320–7. The other court
rolls are dated 1324, 1443–5, 1451–72, 1574, 1624–8,
and 1829, with a bundle of various rolls between
1505 and 1803. (fn. 49) A surviving court roll of the Grange
Fee dates from 1517–18. (fn. 50)
No document relating to the administration of
the Poor Law before 1834 has survived in the parish
chest, but for at least 60 years before 1834 it is clear
that the parish maintained its own workhouse,
which in 1802–3 housed 10 persons. In the latter
year, 31 adults and 43 children received out-relief. (fn. 51)
After 1834 the parish joined the Market Harborough
Union. (fn. 52)
Until the appointment of new charity trustees in
1859, the parish vestry was chiefly concerned with
the administration of charities. (fn. 53) With the school
land charity the parish school was maintained, and
with the causeway land charity the roads were
repaired. In 1869–70 the second of these was used
to pave some of the streets. There were some disputes about the levying of a church rate between
1817 and 1820 in order to repay the loan on the
church land charity when the parish church was
enlarged in 1812. (fn. 54)
A parish council was established in 1894 with a
membership of 6 councillors; (fn. 55) it had the same
composition in 1958. (fn. 56)
CHURCH.
In the early 12th century Robert, the
lord of the Hall Fee, gave the church of Husbands
Bosworth to Leicester Abbey. (fn. 57) The abbey exercised the patronage until the Dissolution, but
though c. 1220 (fn. 58) and in 1291 the abbot received a
pension of 60s. from the living, (fn. 59) the rectory was
never appropriated. In 1548 the Crown granted
the advowson to Robert Strelley (d. 1554) and his
wife Frideswide of Langton Hall. (fn. 60) She allowed
Francis, Earl of Huntingdon, to present in 1554, (fn. 61)
but made the next presentation herself in 1557. (fn. 62)
Strelley's interest passed to John Saville, who sold
the advowson in 1566 to Erasmus Smith (d. 1616),
later lord of the Hall Fee; (fn. 63) it descended with the
manor of Edmondthorpe which his son Sir Roger
Smith (d. 1655) acquired in 1620. (fn. 64) Roger was succeeded by his grandson Sir Edward Smith (d. 1707),
1st Bt., and his great-grandson Edward (d. 1720),
2nd Bt. (fn. 65) The estate, presumably including the
advowson, then passed twice to distant cousins,
first to Edward Smith (d. 1762), the great-grandson
of Sir Roger's third son by his second marriage, and
secondly to Thomas Smith of Louth (Lincs.). (fn. 66) Between 1765 and 1777 the ownership of the advowson
was in dispute. In 1764 Thomas Smith had conveyed the advowson for £525 to Thomas Holled,
an attorney of Lutterworth whom he had originally
engaged to sell it. But Smith accused Holled of
fraud for not disclosing that the inclosure of the
open fields, which was then contemplated, would
double the selling value of the advowson, from
about £2,000 to £4,000, and he instigated proceedings in Chancery against Holled. When the incumbent died in 1765, Holled presented his brother, but
while the dispute lasted the Bishop of Lincoln
refused to institute anyone to the living. The
disputants tried to settle the matter out of court
in Holled's favour, but Samuel Rogers (d. 1790),
whom Smith had presented in 1765, re-opened
proceedings and successfully secured the living for
himself in 1777. (fn. 67) The result of this long dispute was
that the advowson came into the hands of the
incumbents themselves or their close relations.
Richard Pearce (d. 1814), Rogers's successor in
1790, was presented by Robert Pearce of Redburn
(Herts.). (fn. 68) J. T. Maine presented himself to the
living in 1828, and attempted to secure it for his own
son by presenting H. P. Costobadie in 1839 until
the son was of age and qualified to take it. (fn. 69) But
this arrangement was upset. In 1856 the benefice
passed to Costobadie's curate G. W. Phipps, on the
presentation of George Lamb, probably a solicitor of
Basingstoke (Hants), the mortgagee of the advowson.
In 1898 Maurice Lamb, who had been curate-incharge since 1896, was presented to the living by his
mother Margaret. (fn. 70) Lamb inherited the advowson
himself and remained rector until his death in 1945.
His executors presented the next incumbent, the
Revd. H. O. Newman, in 1945 and his widow Olive
Lamb (née Rickman) owned the advowson in 1958. (fn. 71)
The annual value of the rectory in 1254 was £15 (fn. 72)
and in 1291 £19 net. (fn. 73) In the early 12th century
Lenton Priory (Notts.) was enjoying 2/3 tithes arising
upon the demesne of the Trussell Fee, (fn. 74) a portion
which had been commuted to an annual pension of
10s. by 1535. The Abbot of Leicester's pension had
by the same time decreased to 13s. 4d. The gross
annual value of all tithes and of the glebe was then
£29 and the net £24 15s. 7¼d. (fn. 75) In 1648 Sir Roger
Smith enlarged the glebe by giving a plot of land near
the rectory house. (fn. 76) In the dispute over the sale
of the advowson already mentioned, between 1765
and 1777, the inclosure of the open fields was estimated to have increased the annual value of the
rectory from between £175 and £180 to between
£320 and £350. (fn. 77) The rector was allotted 33 a.
in compensation for a yardland of glebe, and 551 a.
in compensation for both great and small tithes. (fn. 78)
These allotments were estimated to yield a gross
annual income of £1,100 in 1855. (fn. 79) The income
fell to £400–£500 in the early 20th century. (fn. 80) In
1920 all the glebe was sold in two parts, about 335 a.
privately to L. W. Marsh and the rest (250 a.) by
public auction. (fn. 81) The money from this sale, invested
in stock by the Ecclesiastical Commissioners, produced an annual gross income of £734 5s. 8d. in
1945. (fn. 82)
At an unknown date Erasmus Smith gave land
in the parish in trust for the church, causeways, or
other charitable purposes. In 1765 the income was
said to be used for repairing and 'beautifying' the
church. This land, then called Church Land, was
let in 1834 for £39. Between 1950 and 1955 it was
sold and the proceeds invested in stock which in
1955 yielded an income of £39 (fn. 83) for the use of the
church. The 3 a. of chantry land mentioned in 1545 (fn. 84)
and the 'Chantry Land' mentioned in 1630 (fn. 85)
probably represent the endowment of a chantry in
Marston Trussell (Northants.) founded in 1346. (fn. 86)
The benefice changed hands five times between
1357 and 1367, (fn. 87) which may indicate that the
rectors were non-resident. In 1526 there was in
addition to the rector a stipendiary curate. (fn. 88) After
the Reformation some of the rectors were not resident. A translator of the Bible, John Duport, rector
from 1582 until his death in 1617, and also Rector of
Medbourne, probably never lived in Husbands
Bosworth, but he may have lived in the district
and may have been connected with the foundation
of the grammar school. (fn. 89) It is doubtful whether
William Levett (d. 1694), rector from 1672 until his
death, who became Dean of Bristol in 1685, ever came
to his parish, but he was succeeded by two members
of the Smith family, patrons of the living, who were
responsible for building a new Rectory. (fn. 90) The
rector instituted in 1754 who died in 1765 while the
ownership of the advowson was in dispute, Edward
Colquit, lived in Liverpool, and his curate Richard
Gardner continued in the parish until the dispute
was settled in 1777. (fn. 91) The new rector, Samuel
Rogers (d. 1790), lived in Bath and was also Rector
of Brampton (Northants.) and chaplain to Earl
Spencer. (fn. 92) The present rectory house is believed
to have been built in 1792 by Rogers's successor,
Richard Pearce (d. 1814), who also arranged the
addition of a north aisle to the church and was the
master in the parish school. (fn. 93) During the 19th
century rectors were usually resident, at least for
part of their incumbency. J. T. Maine, rector
1828–39, ran a fee-paying school of his own, (fn. 94)
and his successor H. P. Costobadie, rector 1839–56,
appears to have lived here until 1844 when there was
a sale of his household effects. (fn. 95) Costobadie, who
was a well-known 'hunting parson', died in 1856
on board ship off Wellington (N.Z.). (fn. 96) In the confusion which surrounded the mortgage of the advowson, probably caused by the debt of the Maines
to the Lamb family, G. W. Phipps, who had been
Costobadie's curate, was presented to succeed him.
Phipps was rector from 1856 to 1898. During his
later years he suffered from mental illness and was
licensed to be non-resident between 1883 and 1887,
but he could not be persuaded to retire. (fn. 97) In 1896
the son of the patron of the church, Maurice Lamb,
later rector and patron himself, was licensed to be
curate-in-charge until Phipps retired in 1898. (fn. 98) But
during his early years Phipps was very active. He was
instrumental in establishing the new school, the
burial ground, and the new body of charity trustees,
and much of the present structure and furniture of
the church date from the restorations of 1861 and
1867 which he supervised.
The church of ALL SAINTS stands on the north
side of the road from Market Harborough to Coventry, nearly opposite the entrance gates to Bosworth
Hall. It consists of a clerestoried nave with north
and south aisles, north and south porches, a chancel with a small south aisle and a north vestry, and
a west tower surmounted by a spire. The tower
dates from the mid-14th century but parts of the
church may be older. The clerestory is of the late
15th or early 16th century and the north aisle was
added in 1812. The chancel owes its present form to
the restoration of 1861 and the nave arcades were
rebuilt in 1867.
The south aisle has much mixed rubble in the
masonry and a decayed stone string at sill level. It
may date from the 13th century or earlier but
subsequent alterations have obliterated any distinctive features. Internally there was a double
piscina in existence until 1789 and probably until
the restoration of 1867. (fn. 99)
The 14th-century tower is of ironstone and limestone, the limestone renewed in places. It has octagonal angle-pinnacles and a broach spire with
two sets of lights. There are windows with reticulated tracery at belfry level and a modern window
above a blocked west doorway. Over this lower
window is an empty niche with a crocketed canopy.
The tower arch, placed north of the central axis of
the nave, has three chamfered orders extending to
the floor without capitals or bases. In general the
tower has several features in common with that at
Market Harborough, although on a smaller scale.
The nave arcades of four bays have been completely rebuilt and their earlier character is not
known. The south clerestory, built of ironstone,
dates from the late 15th or early 16th century and
its four-centred windows appear to be the only
original ones left in the body of the church. The
rood-loft stair, south of the chancel arch, is of the
same period although the upper doorway was raised
in the 19th century. (fn. 1) The south aisle to the chancel,
probably a chapel added in the 15th century, appears
to have been remodelled for use as a school in 1683.
The blocking of the openings to chancel and aisle, the
external doorway, oval window, and date tablet
were part of these alterations. The south nave aisle
was altered in 1673 and the south porch built in
1746. (fn. 2) The latter, which has apparently been reduced in length, (fn. 3) carries a square sundial and a
curious octagonal finial. Internally the church was
'beautified' in 1778. (fn. 4) A north porch and a north
chapel, the latter probably built for a parish guild,
were in existence in the 17th century, (fn. 5) but the first
north aisle and arcade were built in 1812. A loan
for the purpose (£500) was raised on the Church
Land Charity. (fn. 6) In the same year the chancel was
repaired and the tower, which had been struck by
lightning and repaired in 1755, (fn. 7) was again restored.
Before the aisle was built there was a niche with a
'handsome canopy' at the north-east corner of the
nave. (fn. 8)
The reconstruction of the chancel in 1861 was
carried out at the rector's expense (£800) in memory
of his blind, deaf, and dumb sister. The trustees of
the Church Land Charity bore the cost of erecting
a new vestry north of the chancel and of opening
the blocked arches to the former chapel on the south
side. Also in 1861 the tower was restored and the
present west window inserted. A gallery dating
from 1812 was removed, and the tower arch was
opened up and the organ was transferred to the
altered south chapel. The restoration of the nave and
aisles in 1867 was paid for by subscription (£1,100)
and a loan (£240) raised on the Church Land
Charity. (fn. 9) The arcades, which have quatrefoil piers
with foliated capitals, were rebuilt and all the
windows were renewed. Some fragments of 14thcentury tracery which surmount the gateway from
the churchyard to the Rectory garden were probably
placed there in 1861 or 1867. In 1895 the tower was
once more restored. (fn. 10)
The pews date from 1867 except for a few in the
north-west corner—the seats for the poor—which
survive from 1812. (fn. 11) The present floor tiles were
laid in 1870. (fn. 12) The sanctuary was enlarged in
memory of Mrs. E. A. Mills (d. 1946). (fn. 13) Originally
in the chancel (fn. 14) but now on the north wall of the
tower is a tablet with incised figures and an inscription to Erasmus Smith (d. 1616). There was formerly a brass in the chancel bearing the figure of
Rice Jem, rector (d. 1648). (fn. 15) In the north aisle is
a handsome marble wall monument to the memory
of Anna (d. 1706), widow of Roger Smith. Other
tablets include those to Thomas Heygate (d. 1781)
and to members of the Lafargue family (1840–59).
The churchyard contains Swithland slate headstones of the 18th and early 19th centuries.
There are five bells: (i) no date; (ii) 1611; (iii)
early 17th century, by Newcombe of Leicester;
(iv) 1730, by Thomas Eayre of Kettering; (v) 1631.
These have been recast three times, in 1755, 1796,
and 1907. (fn. 16) Because of a dispute with the ringers,
the rector in 1861 installed a bell-ringing machine
which could be worked by one man; it was removed
in 1907 when the bells were re-hung. (fn. 17) The plate
consists of a cup, paten, and dish, all of silver and
dated 1812. The cup was bequeathed to the church
by Samuel Cotton (d. 1767), and was repaired by
Richard Pearce, rector 1790–1814, who gave the
paten and dish in 1812. (fn. 18) The registers of burials
begin in 1558, baptisms in 1567, and marriages in
1684; there is a gap in all three between 1653 and
1667, and other gaps are from 1691 to 1695 and
1740 to 1789 (baptisms), and from 1789 to 1799
(marriages). (fn. 19)
ROMAN CATHOLICISM.
Grace, widow of Sir
Francis Fortescue of Salden (Bucks.), came to
Husbands Bosworth Hall in 1630. (fn. 20) The Fortescues
were a Roman Catholic family and the hall became
a Mass centre which was served by the Jesuits. (fn. 21)
There is no documentary evidence to support the
belief that Mass was said at the hall throughout the
Reformation period; this is unlikely if only because the hall changed hands at least five times in the
second half of the 16th century. (fn. 22) Four recusants
were named in a visitation of the parish in 1634,
Lady Fortescue, John Cotes, Maria Eyre, and
John Vavasour. (fn. 23) In 1676 eight recusants were
returned. (fn. 24) The returns for the register of papists'
estates in the 18th century which have survived
relate to the property of the Fortescues in 1717 and
1749. (fn. 25) There were resident priests at the hall in
the 18th century, some of whom are buried in the
parish churchyard. (fn. 26) The present chapel room in
the hall was probably then in use, but in the 19th
century Mass was said upstairs. (fn. 27)
The church of St. Mary was built in the grounds
of Bosworth Hall in 1873–4. (fn. 28) It is said to have been
designed by an architect named Purdie, (fn. 29) a follower
of Pugin, and is built of ironstone and limestone
in an Early Decorated style. It originally consisted
of apsidal chancel, nave, north porch, and a west
bellcote containing one bell. After 1889 Lady Lisgar
added a north chapel containing a recumbent effigy
of her husband Sir F. F. Turville, who died in that
year. The chancel has painted decorations of c.
1900 by Romaine Walker. Several of the stained
glass windows were brought from the demolished
church at Witley (Worcs.). The crucifix was formerly
in the Roman Catholic school in the village. (fn. 30)
In 1936 Colonel O. H. P. Turville-Petre conveyed a house in trust as a presbytery. (fn. 31)
PROTESTANT NONCONFORMITY.
Although
no conventicles were reported in 1669, Roger
Buswell's house was licensed as a dissenters' meeting-place in 1672; 4 nonconformists were reported
in 1676. (fn. 32) During the 18th century several different
houses were licensed as meeting-places, in 1717,
1718, 1726, 1744, 1780, and 1794. (fn. 33) The meetinghouse serving several denominations described by
Throsby in 1789 was perhaps the 'new building'
registered in 1785. (fn. 34) By the early 19th century
only two denominations persisted, Methodists and
Particular Baptists. The former used the chapel
next door to 27 High Street, which may be 'the
chapel of Nathaniel Shenton' registered in 1808, (fn. 35)
but this was abandoned when the present Methodist chapel on Welford Road by the Green was
erected in 1913. (fn. 36) The sect of Particular Baptists
founded here in 1793 did not erect their present
chapel in Berridge's Lane until 1807. (fn. 37) This chapel
is a plain building of red brick with burnt headers
and round-headed windows. It was altered and
refitted internally in the second half of the 19th
century. On the west wall are two plaques to former
resident ministers, Michael Shore (1812–69) and
Richard Lowe (d. 1904). There is a minister's house
beside the chapel. The present schoolroom was
built in 1905 over the former burial ground.
SCHOOLS.
A grammar school, founded according
to local tradition in the late 16th century, was
reported to be in a chapel on the north side of the
parish church in 1619. (fn. 38) There was a graduate
master in 1638. (fn. 39) The school was apparently moved
to the south chancel aisle in 1683. (fn. 40) In 1720 the
master taught 30 children and was provided with
a house and a salary of £16 a year. (fn. 41) The school was
therefore probably supported by church rates and
subscriptions. The first endowment was the bequest of John Bryan who, by will proved 1724,
left some land, the rent arising from which was to be
used to teach 2 or 3 children to read and learn the
catechism. (fn. 42) In 1797 the archdeacon recommended
that the school, which was still in the south chancel
aisle, should be moved from the church to a house
in the village. (fn. 43) It is not known whether this was
done, but in 1798 and 1819 a master was being
supported out of Bryan's charity to teach 10 boys. (fn. 44)
J. T. Maine, rector from 1828, built a schoolroom
and taught in it. (fn. 45) In 1833 39 boys and 3 girls
attended this school. All paid fees except 12 poor
boys whom another master, rewarded with a salary
out of Bryan's charity, taught in his own house. (fn. 46)
By 1836 no schoolroom existed. (fn. 47)
By 1857 a National school had been established,
the master being paid out of the Bryan trust. (fn. 48)
Thanks to the efforts of G. W. Phipps, rector from
1856 to 1898, a new National school was opened in
1858 with the aid of government grants. An infants'
room was added in 1860. The school benefited from
capitation grants for many years (fn. 49) and, owing to its
good reputation, drew children from neighbouring
villages, so that by 1871 the average attendance was
103. (fn. 50) A rebuilding programme aided by government grant in 1902 increased the accommodation;
the average attendance in 1906 was 130. (fn. 51) After
1923 the school carried a 'Senior Top' for the
seniors from reorganized junior schools in neighbouring villages, but in 1931 all seniors were transferred to Lutterworth. (fn. 52) The average attendance
of the juniors that remained was 83 in 1933 and 80
in 1950. (fn. 53) Husbands Bosworth National School
chose 'controlled' status in January 1952 as 'Husbands Bosworth (C. of E.) School', and Bryan's
charity was applied to the upkeep of the schoolmaster's house. (fn. 54)
In 1831 Miss M. F. Turville of Husbands Bosworth Hall established a school for Roman Catholic
children in a house opposite the south porch of the
parish church. The school contained 20 children
in 1833, 15 in 1871, and 12 in 1906. (fn. 55) It was closed
in 1907 after the Board of Education had withdrawn
recognition. (fn. 56) In 1833, apart from the Church and
the R.C. schools, there were 6 other private day
schools educating a total of 34 boys and 69 girls at
their parents' expense. (fn. 57)
CHARITIES.
The charities of Erasmus Smith, (fn. 58)
Bryan, (fn. 59) and Turville-Petre (fn. 60) have been referred to
above. In addition to his gift for the benefit of the
glebe (fn. 61) Sir Roger Smith, also in 1648, settled in
trust 4 a. of land, the profits of which were to be
used in buying coals for the poor. In 1836 the rent
was sufficient for the purchase of 14 tons. (fn. 62) In
1955 the rent was £4 and was joined with the £2
14s. dividend from F. Turville's coal charity to provide gifts of 10s. in lieu of coal to the poor. (fn. 63) Sir
Roger Smith also devised, by will proved 1656, a
rent-charge of £8 to the poor. In 1836 this was
spent in clothing and flannel. (fn. 64) In 1955 the rent was
distributed with the £2 dividend from the gifts of
Smith and others in calico tickets to 32 recipients. (fn. 65)
Before 1789 several pieces of land had been given
by unknown persons for the repair of the parish
road. By the inclosure award of that year these
were exchanged for the Causeway Land near
Bosworth tollgate. Its rent in 1836 was £6 10s.
which was always applied in accordance with the
donor's intentions. (fn. 66) After the County Council
assumed responsibility for the roads the income
was spent in additional work. (fn. 67) In 1951 the Air
Ministry purchased the lands for £75 which, invested in stock, yielded £3 5s. In 1955 and for several
preceding years no payments had been made. (fn. 68)
Before 1672 a Mr. Gill of London conveyed to the
town of Bosworth a house and some lands, whose
rents were to be given to the poor. These were
known as Poor's Land. By the inclosure award of 1765
the lands were exchanged for lands lying in East
Field. Before 1836 the greater part of the new lands
had been allotted among 44 poor labourers, and the
rents, £7, were then being divided among such poor
as had no portion of land. The income from one
acre, let as an osier bed, was distributed with the
calico charities. (fn. 69) The land was sold to the Air
Ministry in 1951 for £465 and the proceeds
invested in stock which yielded £20. In 1955 the
sum of £19 was divided between 19 poor people. (fn. 70)
Before 1836 one Smith and 5 others had left
£50. In 1836 these gifts were thought to be represented by £76 stock, the income of which was spent
on clothing for the poor. (fn. 71)
Thomas Blakesley, by will proved 1720, charged
his land in Husbands Bosworth with the payment
of 1s. weekly for 12 penny loaves to be given every
Sunday to the poor, preferably to those who had
been to church. (fn. 72) The rent-charge was being paid
in 1954 when 2 recipients shared bread worth
£3 6s. In some years less was given. (fn. 73)
A second bread charity was established when
John Horton, by will dated 1751, gave £300, the
interest to be used for bread for the poor. In 1836
when this had been added to Blakesley's charity
28 twopenny loaves were distributed after divine
service. (fn. 74) In 1955 this bread charity yielded £8
and in the same year 7 beneficiaries had bread worth
£13 from accumulated funds. (fn. 75)
By will dated 1829 Francis Fortescue Turville
left £100 in trust to provide coal for the poor. In
1955 it yielded £2 14s. (fn. 76)