FELTHAM
Felteham (xi cent.); Feltenham, Felthenham
(xvii cent.).
Feltham lies to the south of the main road from
Hounslow to Staines, which runs just beyond and
parallel with the northern boundary of the parish,
The country is almost level, with a slight upward
trend from south to north, but the highest point
reached is only 73 ft. above ordnance datum. (fn. 1)
The River Crane forms part of the eastern
boundary, and 'the Queen's or Cardinal's River'
(v.s. East Bedfont) flows diagonally across the
northern part of the parish, passing under the
railway near the station, and a few hundred yards
farther under the Feltham-Hounslow road, by a
bridge which was built about 1800. (fn. 2) Of the
1,789½ acres in Feltham, about two-thirds are
composed of arable land, and 371 acres are laid
down in permanent grass. (fn. 3) There are only 20
acres of woodland, (fn. 4) and these lie mostly about the
private houses in the north-east. The parish was
inclosed in 1800 with Hanworth and Sunbury. (fn. 5)
Until that date Hounslow Heath extended over
the eastern part of the parish, and apparently the
only roads which then existed were those from
Ashford and from Hanworth. Even what is now
the principal road, that which leads from the
village to Hounslow, was not constructed till after
this date. (fn. 6) The cross-road from Hatton, and the
ways leading west from St. Dunstan's Church
towards Bedfont and south through Feltham Hill,
were also laid out at this time, the two latter following the courses of ancient tracks. (fn. 7)
The village is long and straggling, and extends
for over a mile along the road to Hounslow. The
older part lies towards the south, about the parish
church of St. Dunstan. The houses stand close on
to the narrow road, which curves sharply to the
right, and then with a right-angled turn to the left
proceeds past Feltham Farm to the central portion
of the village. It is here known as the High
Street, and widens out slightly before reaching the
Red Lion Hotel, just beyond which a large pond
lies to the right of the road. Northwards again
are the more modern houses and shops, which are
increasing year by year. Farther to the northwest is Southville, which at present consists of two
streets of workmen's houses. The modern buildings lie within easy reach of the station, which is
on the Windsor branch of the London and South
Western Railway.
The spiritual needs of this growing population
have been met by the erection of St. Catherine's
Church, which was built in 1880 as a chapel of
ease to the parish church, which stands at the
upper end of the village. A north porch was
added in 1890, and the tower and spire in 1898.
There are two large Congregational chapels, one of
which was founded in 1805 and rebuilt in 1865,
while the second was built in 1905. A Wesleyan
chapel was erected in 1870, and a Baptist chapel
in the same year. A cemetery, extending over
1½ acres, was formed in 1880 at a cost of about
£1,400. It has no mortuary chapels, and is now
under the control of the Urban District Council.
The convent of SS. Mary and Scholastica, belonging
to an Anglican community of nuns living under
the rule of St. Benedict, was founded in 1868 by
Father Ignatius. (fn. 8) It was supported mainly by the
sale of plain needlework and church embroidery
worked by the sisters, and there was a small
orphanage and day school attached to it. The
establishment was broken up and removed in
1873. (fn. 9)
The hamlet of Feltham Hill lies on the southern
borders of the parish, and is composed mainly of
a few private houses standing in their own
grounds. Mr. Alfred William Smith, one of the
chief landowners in Feltham, lives at The Park in
Feltham Hill. The old Manor House at Feltham
is the residence of another landowner, Mr. Robert
Smith.
William Wynne Ryland, the well-known engraver, who was the first to use the chalk or dotted
line in his art, is buried in the churchyard. He
was executed at Tyburn in 1793 for forging
bonds of the East India Company. (fn. 10) Mrs. Frances
Marie Kelly (Charles Lamb's 'Barbara S-'), actress
and founder of the School of Acting in Dean
Street, Soho, spent the last years of her life at Ross
Cottage, and is buried at Feltham. She died in
1882. (fn. 11)
The parish is known chiefly for the Middlesex
Industrial School for Boys, which occupies a large
tract of ground in the south-west between the
roads to Ashford and to East Bedfont. It was
built in 1859 to hold about 1,000 boys, and consists of a large principal building, a chapel, infirmary, workshops, gas factory, residences for
officers, and other detached buildings. About 70
acres of land are cultivated by the institution.
There are ivory works near the village, and a cartridge factory stands on the banks of the River
Crane. Saw mills have been erected near the
station, and there is a large gravel pit lying near the
railway line. A considerable portion of the parish
is cultivated by nursery and market gardeners.
The soil is gravel on a subsoil of gravel. The
following place-names occur:-Swanne, Fullers
and Loom Pit Closes, Mark Corner, the Greth.
MANORS
FELTHAM is mentioned in a
charter of King Edgar as one of the
members of Staines which had been
given to Westminster Abbey by Offa King of
Mercia. (fn. 12) This charter is, however, of doubtful
origin, (fn. 13) and though Feltham may have belonged
to Westminster at an early date, yet it is not
mentioned among the manors belonging to Staines
in the confirmatory charter of Edward the Confessor, (fn. 14) the authenticity of which is not questioned.
According to the Domesday Survey there were
two manors in Feltham before the Conquest; one
consisting of 5 hides was held by a vassal of King
Edward, the other, consisting of 7 hides, was held
by a vassal of Earl Harold. (fn. 15) Both were given by
the Conqueror to Robert Count of Mortain, and
were held by him as one manor. (fn. 16) The Mortain
lands were forfeited to Henry I after the rebellion
of Count Robert's son, William, in 1104. (fn. 17) Feltham seems to have been granted shortly after to
the Redvers family, who held it of the king in
chief. The grant was probably made to Richard
de Redvers, who received many gifts of land in
return for his services to Henry I before the
latter's accession, (fn. 18) and Richard's son, Baldwin de
Redvers, held land in Feltham, while his daughter
Hawise de Roumare, Countess of Lincoln, gave the
church to St. Giles in the Fields. (fn. 19) The manor
apparently descended in the direct male line, and
came eventually to William de Vernon, (fn. 20) also known
as de Ripariis, or Rivers, the second son of Baldwin
de Redvers, who succeeded to the family estates
and title of Earl of Devon after the death of his
elder brother's sons, the youngest of whom died in
1184. (fn. 21) William de Vernon died in 1216, (fn. 22) and
Feltham seems to have passed through the marriage
of his daughter Joan (fn. 23) to Hubert de Burgh, (fn. 24) the
justiciar of England. In 1228 the latter conveyed
all his right in the manor to Henry III, together
with his right in Kempton Manor in Sunbury
parish, in exchange for the manors of Aylsham in
Norfolk and Westhall in Suffolk. (fn. 25) From this
time Feltham was closely associated with Kempton, and as part of that manor lay within the jurisdiction of its larger neighbour. (fn. 26) In 1245 Richard
de Ponte, by virtue of his office as custodian of
Kempton Manor, was granted an exemption from
all customs and services due from 2 virgates and
1½ acres of land in Feltham, with a reduction of
rent from 11s. 5½d. to 5s. (fn. 27) In 1440 Robert
Manfield, then keeper of the manor, and William
Pope were granted 12s. a day from the profits of
the towns of Feltham and Kempton by reason of
their office of bearing the rod before the king and
the Knights of the Garter at the Feast of St.
George. (fn. 28) The king extended the protection in
1445 to all the men, tenants and residents in his
manor of Feltham, with the assurance that their
corn, hay, horse and carriages and other goods and
chattels should not be seized for the king's use
during a term of ten years. (fn. 29)
Feltham was annexed by Henry VIII to the
manor of Hampton Court, (fn. 30) and it was held of
that manor in 1594 and as late as 1631. In
1594 the 'perquisites and issues of the courts, all
franchises, privileges, emoluments, and hereditaments' in Feltham were granted to Sir William
Killigrew with a lease of Kempton Manor and park
for eighty years. (fn. 31) This grant was possibly made
with a view to inclosures. Sir William's son, Sir
Robert, obtained a grant in free socage of the same
manor and park in 1631, presumably with the
same rights over Feltham; for the deed recites the
grant to Sir William of the courts and profits of
the courts, and other emoluments in Feltham,
although in the ensuing confirmation to Sir Robert,
Feltham is not mentioned by name. (fn. 32) His son
and grandson, Sir William and Robert Killigrew,
held manorial rights over Feltham together with
the manor of Kempton in 1651, and conveyed
them with the latter manor to Sir Brocket Spencer
and William Muschamp. (fn. 33) It seems probable that
the manorial rights over Feltham died out about
the end of the 17th century. There is evidence
that courts were held there by the lords of Kempton in 1676 and 1700. (fn. 34) The manorial rights
probably died out very soon after.
The grant of jurisdiction in Feltham and Kempton to Sir William Killigrew in 1594 did not of
course affect the king's possession of his lands in
Feltham (vide supra). In 1631 Francis Lord Cottington received a grant through his trustees, Sir
Henry Browne and John Cliffe, of these lands
under the title of 'all lands, tenements, and hereditaments known as the manor of Feltham,'
together with certain specified tenements. (fn. 35) A
great fire broke out in 1634, which destroyed
Lord Cottington's manorhouse, together with thirteen dwelling-houses and
sixteen barns, causing a loss
of nearly £5,000. (fn. 36) Lord
Cottington was on the
king's side in the Civil War,
and was amongst those excepted by Parliament from
indemnity or composition. (fn. 37)
His estates were confiscated, and were assigned
in 1649 to John Bradshaw the regicide, (fn. 38) but they were recovered at
the Restoration by his nephew and heir, Charles
Cottington. (fn. 39) The latter sold Feltham in 1670
to Sir Thomas Chambers. (fn. 40) He died in 1692, and
was succeeded by his son Thomas, who left two
daughters. (fn. 41) By the marriage of the elder, Mary,
Feltham came to Lord Vere Beauclerk. (fn. 42) It was
inherited by their son, Aubrey (Beauclerk) Baron
Vere, who succeeded his cousin in 1787 as Duke of
St. Albans. (fn. 43) He still held the manor in 1802, (fn. 44) but
it was sold probably after his death in 1803 to a
Mr. Fish, who himself died before 1816. (fn. 45) It
came before 1874 to Thomas and Edward Barnet,
and Peregrine Birch, by whom with others it is
still held.

Cottington
Azure a fesse between three roses or.
By an order stated in the court roll for 1676
no person was allowed 'to bring or receive into
the parish of Feltham or to entertain there any
foreigner or stranger as an inhabitant' without the
consent of the majority of the parish, and without
giving security to the churchwardens or overseers
of the poor for the care of any such 'foreigner.' (fn. 46)
Any one transgressing in this manner was liable to
a fine of 11d. to be paid to the lord of Kempton
manor. The parish not being inclosed at that
time there was a great expanse of common pasture
for pigs, and consequently two 'hogg-drivers' were
appointed for the year in the manor court. (fn. 47) One
of their duties was to give warning to the owners
of every 'un-ringed' hog or pig which they found
in the commons or fields, and if after two days the
warning was still disregarded, they were entitled
to 4d. for each hog and 2d. for each pig over and
above the amount of the fine paid by the owner
to the lord of the manor. (fn. 48)
THE RYE
(Reye, Ray, Raye, xvi and xvii cents.)
was held of the lords of Feltham. William de Vernon
gave land in Feltham to the convent of Cheshunt, (fn. 49)
and the gift was confirmed by Hubert de Burgh as
lord of the manor of Feltham before 1229. (fn. 50) Land
was held of the convent by Agnes de la Rye, who
was probably the daughter or the widow of Richard
de la Rye. (fn. 51) Whether he took his name from the
land or the land was named after him, it seems to
have been known as the Rye from that time. At
the instance of Dionysia, Prioress of Cheshunt,
and as the result of a lawsuit which was perhaps
collusive, Agnes conveyed her land in 1257 to
John the Warrener of Kempton, to hold at a
yearly rent of 7s. from the convent. (fn. 52) In 1311
Alice de Somery, who was then prioress, released
all the convent's right in the land to John, (fn. 53)
who seems to have added to it to a considerable
extent; this sub-tenancy is here lost sight of. (fn. 54)
The Rye, having passed as part of the manor to
the Crown in 1228, (fn. 55) was granted by Henry VIII
to the Hospital of St. Giles in 1524, in return for
other lands in Feltham which Henry VII had
taken for the enlargement of Hanworth Park, and
for which no recompense had been made. (fn. 56) The
Rye then consisted of a barn and toft, a croft, a
close, and 30 acres of land. (fn. 57) After the lands of
St. Giles had been ceded to the Crown in 1537,
the Rye was granted to John Welbeck in 1543,
on a lease of twenty-one years. (fn. 58)
It was included in the grant of the manor to
the trustees of Lord Cottington in 1631, (fn. 59) and was
at that time, as it had been in 1543, divided into
two parts-the Great Rye, containing a barn, two
closes and 4 acres of pasture and woods; and the
Little Rye, which consisted of 3 acres. (fn. 60) Both
were included in the manor in 1670. (fn. 61) Rye Close
was still known in 1800. (fn. 62) It lay on the southern
borders of the parish to the east of Feltham Hill.
An estate called HAUBERGERS in Feltham
was apparently held in chief. John le Hauberger
held a considerable estate in Feltham in the reign
of Edward II. About 40 acres of land had belonged
to Thomas atte Brugge, who held of the king, and
these had been acquired by John le Hauberger from
Thomas le Spenser in the preceding reign. (fn. 63) As
the transaction had been carried out without gaining the consent of the king, the lands were taken
into the king's hands. On payment of a fine,
however, the offence was pardoned, and John le
Hauberger was allowed to enter again into possession in 1326. (fn. 64) He died about 1335, and in
common with his wife Margaret he held a certain
amount of land in Feltham of the king at a yearly
rent of 15s., payable to the manor of Kempton. (fn. 65)
He held also a smaller estate of the Hospital of
St. Giles, (fn. 66) and both were inherited by his son
Edward le Hauberger, who was born and baptized
at Feltham. (fn. 67) It was probably these lands which
were known later as Haubergers or Lucyes. A
farm of this name was bought from Nicholas
Townly by Francis Lord Cottington in the 17th
century, (fn. 68) and descended with the latter's manor
to his nephew Charles Cottington. (fn. 69) The manor
was sold to Sir Thomas Chambers in 1670, but
Haubergers was specially excepted. (fn. 70) It was the
cause of litigation shortly afterwards between
Charles Cottington and Francis Philips, who held
Kempton Manor, (fn. 71) and the farm was finally sold
to the latter in 1674 for the sum of £150, and in
consideration of the release of £29 13s. 4d. which
Cottington owed him as costs and charges in the
foregoing suit. (fn. 72) It was then known as Feltham
Farm, (fn. 73) and seems to have descended with the
manor of Kempton, for in 1800 it was supposed
to form part of the property of Edmund Hill, who
had bought Kempton in 1798. (fn. 74) The present
Feltham Farm lies on the main road near the older
part of the village. (fn. 75)
The RECTORY MANOR, which was also
known as the manor of Feltham, was held of the
king in chief. The Hospital of St. Giles in the
Fields received a grant of land in Feltham at an
early date from Earl Baldwin de Redvers. (fn. 76) The
gift has been ascribed to the reigns of Richard I
and John, (fn. 77) but no member of the family named
Baldwin was living at that time, (fn. 78) and it was probably made by the Baldwin de Redvers who was
son and heir of Richard de Redvers, and first Earl
of Devon, (fn. 79) whose daughter gave the church of Feltham to the hospital. (fn. 80) In this case the grant
must have taken place before 1155, the year in
which Baldwin died. (fn. 81) It was confirmed to the
hospital by Pope Alexander IV in the time of
Henry III. (fn. 82)
In the reign of John the master and brethren of
St. Giles granted land in Feltham to Robert
Simple at a yearly rent of 14s. (fn. 83) When any of
the brethren passed through Feltham he was bound
by the terms of his lease to receive them in the
house (hospicium), and to give them such food as he
had. He was also to give to the hospital a tenth
of the produce of the land, and a third of all his
chattels at his death, in return for which the land
was secured to him and his heirs, though he could
neither pledge nor alienate it, and the hospital
undertook to compel the villeins on the estate to
work for him. (fn. 84)
It was perhaps the same house which was
mentioned in 1307 as in the custody of Robert
Simple. An inquiry was then made as to the
advisability of stopping up a way in the village of
Feltham which led to the village well through the
middle court of the house belonging to St. Giles. (fn. 85)
The village seems to have been just within the
king's manor of Feltham, (fn. 86) but on condition that
the hospital made a new and equally convenient
approach to the well they were allowed to stop up
the old way. (fn. 87) The alteration really benefited both
parties, for not only did the hospital ensure the
privacy of their house, but also the new way was
considerably shorter and broader than the old. (fn. 88)
The Hospital of St. Giles held the rectory manor
until 1537, when, in exchange for the manor of
Burton Lazars, it was ceded to the king. (fn. 89) All the
land which the hospital had held in Feltham was
granted in 1544, after the dissolution of the house,
to John Dudley, Viscount Lisle, the son of the
Earl of Northumberland. (fn. 90) He sold it in May
1545 to John Welbeck, (fn. 91) who conveyed it during
the same month to John Leigh of London,
probably in mortgage, (fn. 92) as Welbeck had licence to
alienate to Andrew Bury in the following December. (fn. 93) It is uncertain how the rectory came to
Edward Bashe or Baeshe, who died seised of it in
1587. (fn. 94) He had settled it the preceding year on
his son and heir Ralph, on the latter's marriage
with Frances daughter of Edward Cary. (fn. 95) Ralph
and Frances conveyed it in 1595 to Walter Gibbes
and Elizabeth his wife. (fn. 96) By his will (dated 7 June
1612) Walter settled it on Elizabeth for twentyone years. (fn. 97) She apparently died before May 1620,
for Walter Gibbes, eldest son and heir of the elder
Walter, came into his inheritance at that time. (fn. 98)
He conveyed it in 1626 to William Penfather,
from whom it passed to Francis Lord Cottington, (fn. 99)
who had a grant of the reputed manor of Feltham
in 1631 (q.v.). From that time the rectory and
manor have passed through the same hands.
CHURCH
The church of ST. DUNSTAN has
a nave and chancel of equal width,
built in 1808, with a west tower and
wooden spire covered with shingles. North and
south aisles, in a feeble Romanesque style, were
added in 1853, and to the north of the chancel is
a vestry. The whole is built of yellow and purple
stock bricks, with round-headed windows, and has
no architectural merit; but being set in a thicklyplanted churchyard, with a path shaded by yews
leading to its principal doorway in the west wall of
the tower, can hardly be said to detract from the
simple charms of its surroundings. It retains its
high pews, and a western gallery, and has nothing
worthy of note beyond a tablet to Sir Thomas
Crewe of Steane, Northamptonshire, 1688.
There are three bells by Thomas Mears, 1803.
The plate consists of a flagon of 1801, 'the gift
of Henry Capel to Feltham 1802,' two chalices of
1787, a paten of 1769, and a credence paten of
1777, all presented in 1802; there is also a large
secular Georgian salver of 1769 presented in 1900.
The registers previous to 1634 were burnt in a
fire in that year, and the earliest now existing are
in two books in which those from 1634 onward
are placed in irregular order; a third contains
baptisms 1711 to 1806; a fourth marriages from
1754 to 1812 in printed forms, and a fifth burials
1754 and 1812.
ADVOWSON
The church is first mentioned
in a 12th-century grant, when it
was given to the Hospital of St.
Giles in the Fields by Hawis, the wife of
William de Roumare, Earl of Lincoln, (fn. 100) the sister
of Earl Baldwin de Redvers who gave other lands
(v.s. rectory manor) in Feltham to the same
hospital. (fn. 101) The gift of the church was confirmed
by Henry II, and about 1221 by Eustace, Bishop
of London, and again by Pope Alexander IV,
and later by Edward I. (fn. 102) Before 1322 a vicarage
was ordained and endowed, to which the warden
and brethren continued to present until the
Dissolution. (fn. 103)
In 1293, when the brethren of St. Giles were
resisting the claim of the Bishop of London to
exercise jurisdiction over the hospital and all its
possessions, a special exception was made in the
case of Feltham, and it was stated that as the
church was quite outside London, yet in the diocese of London, the bishops had been wont to
make visitation there, and apparently they continued to do so. (fn. 104)
In 1398 Richard II gave the Hospital of St.
Giles, with the church of Feltham, to the abbey
of St. Mary Graces by the Tower of London. (fn. 105)
It is doubtful, however, if the grant took effect,
and in either case, the custody of St. Giles was
confirmed to the monastery of Burton Lazars by
Henry V. (fn. 106)
When the master of Burton ceded the rectory
manor of Feltham to the king in 1537 the church
was excepted from the grant, (fn. 107) and probably did
not come to the Crown until the suppression of the
monastery in 1539. (fn. 108) From this time onwards
the advowson was held with the rectory manor
(q.v.).
On the confiscation of Lord Cottington's estates
in 1649 the advowson was assigned with the manor
to John Bradshaw. (fn. 109) On receiving the tithes of
Feltham he issued an address in 1651 to the inhabitants of the parish, stating that his anxiety
'touching spyrituals' had led him to provide and
endow a minister for them without putting them
to any charge. (fn. 110) He left a bequest in his will for
maintaining a good minister at Feltham, (fn. 111) but all
his property was confiscated under the Act of
Attainder of May 1660, (fn. 112) and the advowson was
restored to Lord Cottington's nephew and heir,
Charles Cottington. (fn. 113)
It continued with the manor (q.v.) for over a
century, (fn. 114) and thus was held by the Duke of St.
Albans in 1802, (fn. 115) but it seems to have been
separated from the manor early in the 19th century.
The Rev. Joseph Morris held it from about 1816
to 1840, (fn. 116) after which it was held by the Rev.
P. P. Bradfield until about 1850. It then came
to Charles E. Jemmet, after whose death it was
held by his executors. It now belongs to Mr. E. J.
Wythes of Copped Hall, Essex, whose father married
Catharine Sarah, daughter of Mr. C. E. Jemmet.
CHARITIES
The Poor's Stock, which, as
appeared from the table of benefaction, formerly consisted of payments made to the overseers of £2 6s., £2, and
12s. annually, and carried to the poor rates, has
ceased to be paid.
In 1798 Robert Lowe by his will bequeathed
£200 stock, the dividends to be applied in bread.
The legacy is now represented by £202 13s. 4d.
consols, producing £5 1s. 4d. a year, which, together with certain fixed payments amounting to
£1 5s. a year, granted in 1774, is duly applied by
the vicar.
In 1804 almshouses for poor and aged inhabitants were erected on a piece of land formerly part
of Feltham Common, in pursuance of a resolution
of the vestry, and endowed with £202 0s. 6d.
consols. They are further maintained out of the
income of the Poor's Land. See below.
In 1844 Mrs. Mary Anne Paine (as recorded
on a tablet in the church) gave £100 consols
to be laid out by the vicar and churchwardens
in bread to be distributed among twenty aged
poor persons during January, February, and
March.
In 1852 William Paine by a codicil to his will
bequeathed £179 12s. 2d. consols, one moiety of
the dividends to be annually applied for benefit of a
clothing club, the other moiety annually in January
in purchase of clothes to be distributed amongst
ten aged poor persons regularly attending services
of the Church of England at the discretion of the
vicar and churchwardens. The dividends, amounting to £4 9s. 8d., are duly applied.
In 1867 John Ashford, by will, proved at London 10 April in that year, bequeathed a legacy,
represented by £618 9s. 4d. consols, the dividends
to be applied at Christmas time in the purchase
of fuel, clothes, meat, or bread for distribution
among old men and women. The dividends,
amounting to £15 9s., are distributed in meat and
clothing under the title of the Ashford and Moore
Charity.
In 1826 Thomas John Burgoyne by deed dated
9 December (enrolled) assigned to trustees a piece
of ground in St. Pancras, with a messuage thereon
for the residue of a term of twenty-one years, and
subject as therein mentioned to accumulate the
rents to form a fund, the income thereof to be
applied towards the salary of the organist, repair of
organ, and for the encouragement of psalmody, or
of the church music. The trust fund consists of
a sum of £404 0s. 2d. consols. The sum of stock
has by an order of the Charity Commissioners
been apportioned equally between this parish and
the parish of Potton, Bedfordshire.
The several sums of stock are held by the official
trustees.
The Poor's Land or Fuel Allotment, acqu red
by an award made under the Inclosure Act, 40
Geo. III, consists of 30 a. 3 r., known as the
'Gibbet Ground,' awarded to the lord of the
manor of Colkennington alias Kempton, and the
vicar, churchwardens, and overseers of Feltham for
providing fuel for the poor. In 1890 2 acres
were purchased for £324, and in 1902 land with
greenhouse and buildings erected thereon and five
greenhouses at Bedfont were purchased for £425,
provided by sale of stock, with the official trustees,
leaving in their name a sum of £478 8s. 5d.
consols.
In 1905-6 the gross rental of the real estate
amounted to £217, and the dividends to
£11 19s. 4d.
The charity is administered under the provisions
of a scheme of the Charity Commissioners of
18 July 1890, whereby the net income is applicable primarily in defraying the cost of supplying
with coal deserving and necessitous poor residents in the parish, one-twelfth of the residue
in defraying the expenses incidental to letting of
lands in allotments, and one-twelfth of such residue in maintenance and repair of the almshouses
above referred to, and for the benefit of the inmates.