MANORS.
The manor of ISLEWORTH or
ISLEWORTH SYON, as it has generally been
called since the 15th century, (fn. 82) was co-extensive
with the hundred of Isleworth. (fn. 83) A small piece of land
east of the Brent was claimed to belong to the manor
in the 16th century, but the claim seems to have
failed, (fn. 84) and apart from one or two small and detached
areas the manor boundaries seem to have been
identical with those of the three parishes which
comprise the hundred. (fn. 85) Within these bounds the
only ancient manor with comparable jurisdiction
was that of Isleworth rectory: (fn. 86) other freehold
estates attained to the title of manor in the later
Middle Ages but Heston, Hounslow, and Twickenham were probably the only ones to have courts and
copyholders, and the tenants of Heston manor were
all transferred to it from Isleworth Syon. At the
inclosure of 1818 Isleworth Syon still retained about
125 acres of copyhold in Heston parish and a great
deal in Twickenham and Isleworth itself. (fn. 87) Most of
this was enfranchised before the Law of Property
Act, 1925. (fn. 88)
According to a later forged Charter 53 manentes at
'Gislheresuuyrth' were given to Barking Abbey by
King Ædilred (probably Ethelred of Mercia, 674-
704). (fn. 89) It is not certain whether this estate may be
identified with Isleworth. Twickenham was granted
at about the same time to the Bishop of London and
later passed into the hands of Christ Church, Canterbury. (fn. 90) Whatever the explanation of these transactions, the whole manor of Isleworth, including
Heston and Twickenham, belonged at the death of
Edward the Confessor to Earl Algar. By 1086 it was
held by Walter of St. Valery, one of the Conqueror's
companions. (fn. 91) He had a son Bernard, who presumably succeeded him, (fn. 92) and in 1130 Reynold of
St. Valery held the same amount of land in Middlesex as Walter had held. (fn. 93) Reynold's son Bernard had
seisin of his father's lands in Oxfordshire and Berkshire in 1166 (fn. 94) but is not known to have held Isleworth before 1183. (fn. 95) It was probably within twenty
or so years before this date that one Guy of St. Valery
confirmed and extended the grant of property in
Isleworth hundred which had been made to the
Abbey of St. Valéry (Somme) by his grandfather,
Walter, after the Conquest. (fn. 96) Bernard of St. Valery
died about 1191 (fn. 97) and his son Thomas (d. c. 1219)
alternately supported the kings of France and England in their wars, so that his lands underwent
corresponding vicissitudes: Isleworth was in the
royal possession between 1193 and 1195, but was
held by Thomas in 1202-3. (fn. 98) Thomas's English
property passed to his son-in-law Robert, Count of
Dreux, escheated to the Crown as lands of a Norman
in 1227, and was then granted to the king's brother,
Richard of Cornwall. (fn. 99) Isleworth formed part of the
dower of Edmund of Cornwall's widow, and at her
death in 1312 it again reverted to the Crown. (fn. 1) It was
granted to Queen Isabel in 1327 and to Queen
Philippa in 1330. (fn. 2) When the duchy of Cornwall was
created in 1337 the reversion of Isleworth, with the
rest of the honor of St. Valery, was included in the
grant of lands. (fn. 3) In 1374 the Crown granted a lease to
run for ten years from 1369, and the lessee continued
to hold the manor until his death in 1387. (fn. 4) It was
then granted to Queen Anne for life, and, in consequence of the earlier grant to the duchy of Cornwall, was later held by Henry V as Prince of Wales. (fn. 5)
In 1400 it was granted for life to Henry Bowet, later
Archbishop of York, who surrendered his lease in
1421. (fn. 6) The king then granted Isleworth to his newly
founded abbey of Syon, in whose possession it remained until 1539. (fn. 7) The abbey seems generally to
have leased the more distant demesne lands but,
except possibly for a short while at the end of the
15th century, to have cultivated most of those in
Isleworth. (fn. 8) From 1508 if not before these Isleworth
demesnes were known as the Dairy Farm or Dairyhouse lands. (fn. 9)
In 1539, after Syon Abbey was suppressed, Isleworth was added to the honor of Hampton Court, and
John Gates, a gentleman of the privy chamber, was
made bailiff and keeper of the abbey, manor, and
demesnes. (fn. 10) In 1541 he also received a lease of the
demesnes for 21 years. (fn. 11) In 1547 the Duke of Somerset, as lord protector, secured a grant of the estate to
himself. (fn. 12) He lost it on his fall from power in 1549
but regained it later and held it until his execution in
1552. (fn. 13) In 1552 the Crown leased the Dairyhouse
lands to Sir Thomas Wroth for his life, but in 1553
they were committed, with the house and steward
ship of the manor, to George Tirrell, a gentleman
usher of the privy chamber. (fn. 14) He in turn surrendered
his rights, and the whole estate was granted to the
Duke of Northumberland only a few months before
his fall. (fn. 15) How fully any of Somerset's successors
took possession is uncertain: the Duchess of Somerset was living at Syon as late as 1554, when the
queen ordered her to leave. (fn. 16) It may have been at
about this time that the Earl and Countess of Lennox
held the Syon lands: an undated document refers to
them as being in possession of demesne lands of
Syon in Isleworth, and of lands in Heston belonging
to the queen, (fn. 17) and in 1555 Lennox's servants were
involved in an affray at Brentford. (fn. 18) In 1555 Joyce
Wastell or Page, a groom of the chamber, received
a 21-year lease of the Dairyhouse lands, but this had
apparently been surrendered by 1557, when Mary
refounded the abbey and included the Dairyhouse
lands in her first grant to it. (fn. 19) The abbey's former
park at Syon Hill, north of the London Road, and
other lands which had belonged to the manor were
also returned to it in 1558, but on the dissolution of
the abbey in 1559 the whole property again reverted
to the Crown. (fn. 20) In 1560 Sir Francis Knollys and his
wife received a 31-year lease of the Dairyhouse and
other lands and he was made keeper of the house and
woods and steward and bailiff of the manor for life. (fn. 21)
Knollys seems to have held the Dairyhouse during
pleasure before this grant, (fn. 22) and in 1577 his son
Robert secured the reversion of his father's lease for
a further 21 years, and of his keepership for life. He
then transferred all his rights to his father, who in 1584
reassigned the estate to him. Robert Knollys mortgaged the property in 1587 to John Stanhope, who
assigned his interest a year later to the Earl of Essex,
the son of Robert's sister. Essex and a creditor of
his own, Thomas Crompton, (fn. 23) to whom he had in
turn assigned his interest, transferred their rights to
Sir John Perrott, the father-in-law of Essex's sister
Dorothy. After the death of Perrott's son in 1594
Dorothy married Henry Percy, Earl of Northumberland. (fn. 24) By 1598 he had secured all Knollys's rights
in the Dairyhouse and received from the Crown a
new 40-year lease to run from 1612, when Knollys's
lease fell in. Who had been in actual possession of
Syon during these successive mortgages is uncertain,
but in 1590 Essex referred to himself as the queen's
steward of the manor. (fn. 25) Northumberland secured a
21-year lease of the park at Syon Hill in 1602, and
in 1604 finally received a grant in fee of the house
and manor, with the park, Dairyhouse, and other
appurtenances. (fn. 26) The property descended to Charles,
Duke of Somerset (d. 1748), who married the
daughter and heiress of Joceline, Earl of Northumberland (d. 1670). Their son (d. 1750) was created
Earl of Northumberland with remainder to his sonin-law, Sir Hugh Smithson, who was created Duke
of Northumberland in 1766. (fn. 27) Smithson and his
wife are said to have been given Syon by her father
on his succession to it two years before they inherited
it with the rest of his property. (fn. 28) Their descendant,
the 10th duke, owned Syon in 1958.
The medieval manor-house of Isleworth seems to
have stood between North Street and Church Street,
on the south of what is now called the Duke of
Northumberland's River. Richard of Cornwall surrounded the manor-house with a ditch and fence. The
house was burned down and pillaged in 1264 (fn. 29) by the
Londoners whose enmity Richard had aroused and
who also broke into the park he had made between
Isleworth and Twickenham, and emptied his fishpond at Baber Bridge. (fn. 30) The house was rebuilt, and
was visited in the 14th century by both Edward III
and Queen Philippa. (fn. 31) By 1370 it was in bad repair
but still included a hall, chapel, and several other
rooms within the moat, as well as farm buildings and
a mill outside. (fn. 32) It seems highly probable from other
evidence that this mill stood on the site of the later
Isleworth Manor Mill behind Church Street. (fn. 33) After
the manor came to Syon Abbey the manor-house was
no longer needed, though the abbey continued to use
farm buildings (later the Dairyhouse Farm) which
stood across the Duke's River to the north. (fn. 34) The
manor-house and buildings within the moat were
leased about 1455 and were still leased in 1486. (fn. 35)
John Fox, Bishop of Winchester, held a lease in 1506
of the Moatplace and the adjoining derelict millhouse. (fn. 36) Among the later lessees was Thomas, Lord
Darcy (d. 1537). (fn. 37) Robert Cole or Plume leased the
Moatplace under Elizabeth I (fn. 38) and one Plum is
marked on a map of 1607 as the occupier of a moated
house on the site described above. (fn. 39) Glover in 1635
ascribes the same house to 'Ofley kt.', (fn. 40) and in 1643
Sir John Offley received a lease from the Earl of
Northumberland of the Moat House in Isleworth
where he then lived. He was to rebuild it in two
years. (fn. 41) The same property was leased again in
1661, (fn. 42) and a house on the same site or nearby was
said to have been occupied by the widow of Charles,
Duke of Somerset. It was called Somerset House,
and after being used for some time as a school was
pulled down in 1803. (fn. 43) By 1851 the only evidence of
the former existence of the moated manor-house was
the small arm of the Duke's River east of Percy Gardens, which seems to represent the west side of the
moat. (fn. 44) Syon House is described elsewhere. (fn. 45)
In addition to the park made by Richard of Cornwall (fn. 46) there were fairly extensive demesne lands.
In 1296 171 acres of demesne arable were sown,
but the total demesne arable in the 14th century
seems to have been between 150 and 164 acres.
At this period there were about 25-40 acres of
meadow in severalty, some of them by the river in
what is now the park of Syon House. (fn. 47) More land in
this area and near Worton was acquired in the 15th
century, (fn. 48) and from the 15th century the more
distant demesne lands outside Isleworth parish were
generally leased. (fn. 49) By the Dissolution the demesne
farm of some 320-40 acres, much of it inclosed, lay
largely to the north of Isleworth town on both sides
of the London Road. It centred upon a house or
buildings known as the Dairyhouse or Dairyfarm
lying on the north of the Duke's River behind Church
Street. (fn. 50) These lands did not include the 30 acres
within the monastery walls or the 90-100 acres
of the abbey's park at Syon Hill. (fn. 51) The demesne
underwent some changes during the 16th century as
parts of it were separately leased or granted away
altogether. (fn. 52) By 1606 the whole of it, including the
park at Syon Hill, the gardens round the house, and
leased lands of which the Earl of Northumberland
had the reversion, covered about 560 acres. (fn. 53) During
the 17th century the two chief farms included in the
demesne seem to have been the Dairyhouse, to which
43 acres were attached at one date, and the Lion
Farm, with about 105. (fn. 54) The Lion, a former inn,
stood to the north of Syon House in what is now the
park. It was later called Syon Farm and was pulled
down after most of its lands had been converted to
parkland. (fn. 55) The Dairyhouse survived into the 19th
century though its lands were curtailed. (fn. 56) Part of the
18th-century park attached to Syon Hill House was
leased from the Duke of Northumberland, and he
bought the rest with the house in 1823. (fn. 57) As Syon
Hill Park West Farm it formed a separate unit for a
while, but the house was apparently pulled down by
1865. (fn. 58) Syon Park East Farm, or Syon Hill Farm, on
the other side of Syon Lane, had 146 acres around
the farmhouse by the late 18th century: this included
the old abbey park. (fn. 59) The farm survived until the
Great West Road was constructed just to the south
of the house, which was then pulled down. (fn. 60)
In 1840 the Duke of Northumberland owned 700
acres in Isleworth parish, of which 496 were said to
have belonged anciently to Syon Abbey. Another
174 acres in other ownership-147 of them belonging to the Earl of Jersey-were also said to have
belonged to Syon. (fn. 61) The duke's property in Heston
and Twickenham amounted after the inclosures of
1818 to about 55 and 190 acres respectively. (fn. 62) By
1958 all this had been sold, apart from the 208 acres
of the park at Syon House, and a few acres elsewhere
in Isleworth. (fn. 63) The park is discussed elsewhere, with
Syon House itself. (fn. 64)
The manor of ISLEWORTH RECTORY, also
known in the 17th century as THE WARDEN'S
HOLD or WARDEN HOLD, (fn. 65) originated in the
grant by Walter of St. Valery (fl. 1086) to the Abbey
of St. Valéry (Somme) of the churches of Isleworth,
Hampton, Twickenham, and Heston. (fn. 66) He may have
given them to the abbey after 1086, as Domesday
Book mentions one priest in the manor who held 3
virgates. (fn. 67) The rectorial estate at Hampton became
detached during the Middle Ages. (fn. 68) Twickenham
rectory, though the parish and vicarage were distinct,
was never separated from Isleworth. Heston rectory,
consisting only of a house and barns to the north of
the church, 2 acres of meadow, and the great tithes
of the parish, was separately leased by the end of the
Middle Ages, (fn. 69) and was in different ownership from
Isleworth rectory after 1547. In 1562 it was granted
to the Bishop of London, (fn. 70) who still owned it in
1818, when the great tithes were commuted for 316
acres of land around the Bath Road. This land was
later known as the Rectory farm. (fn. 71) Suit of court from
tenants in Heston was meanwhile retained until the
17th century or later by Isleworth rectory manor. (fn. 72) In
the late 16th century the rectory of Twickenham,
presumably consisting only of the great tithes, was
leased separately from Isleworth rectory, (fn. 73) though it
had been held as part of it in 1544 and was again
united with it from the 17th century onwards.
By the 14th century the manor comprised 4½ virgates and about 17 acres held at will, as well as a
number of free tenements, one of which became
Woodhall manor in Heston. (fn. 74) Most of the customary
lands probably lay at Whitton, where St. Valéry had
villeins in 1300, and where much of the later copyhold
was concentrated. (fn. 75) The tenants paid pannage and intercommoned with Isleworth manor on the heath. (fn. 76)
By the 18th century the exclusive jurisdiction of the
manor was restricted to the part of Isleworth town
between Mill Bridge and the Rectory House,
including all that part of Church Street and the ait
nearest the church. (fn. 77) In 1818 there were also a few
acres of copyhold elsewhere in Isleworth parish, 24
acres in Twickenham, but none in Heston. (fn. 78) In 1693
the rectorial glebe, or manorial demesne, comprised
about 40 acres north of Smallberry Green, 18 acres
near the Railshead, and 10 acres in Twickenham,
together with the Rectory or Parsonage House
behind Isleworth church. (fn. 79)
In 1211 Isleworth seems to have been the administrative centre of St. Valéry's English lands, for the
'Prior of Isleworth' then paid to have seisin of his
lands and rents in Essex. (fn. 80) Later, Takeley in Essex
was apparently the centre. (fn. 81) In 1391 St. Valéry sold
Isleworth, which had been in the king's hands as the
possession of an alien house, to Winchester College. (fn. 82)
In 1543 Winchester granted it to Henry VIII in exchange for other lands. (fn. 83) St. Valéry had leased the
rectory for at least four years about 1338. (fn. 84) By 1543
Winchester's lessee had been replaced by Thomas
Young, a friend of Thomas Cromwell. (fn. 85) In 1547 the
rectory glebe was included in the Isleworth property
granted to Somerset but this part of the grant may
not have taken effect, for a few months later the
rectory was given, in fulfilment of Henry VIII's will,
to St. George's Chapel, Windsor. (fn. 86) Among St.
George's lessees was Gideon Awnsham (d. 1641),
who also held Hallplace, and whose lease had passed
to his son-in-law, Henry Mildmay, by 1650. (fn. 87) In
1651 the sequestered rectory was sold to William
Smith, who was referred to after the Restoration as
a 'committee man'. (fn. 88) In the 18th century one at
least of St. George's tenants sublet the land. (fn. 89)
In 1800 Edmund Hill, the then lessee, purchased
the Rectory House, glebe, and great tithes. St.
George's retained the manorial rights and court,
which had always been reserved out of the leases.
They also retained the Court House or Church
House, but this has not been identified. (fn. 90) After Hill's
death the land was divided. (fn. 91) The Duke of Northumberland bought the tithe barns by the Rectory
House in 1822 and the house itself was bought by
the parish and pulled down in 1847-8 so that the
churchyard could be enlarged. (fn. 92) In 1820 the great
tithes of Isleworth and Twickenham were put up for
sale in lots, (fn. 93) and a number of landowners, including
the Duke of Northumberland, (fn. 94) purchased those
arising from their own lands. By 1840, when the
tithes of Isleworth were commuted, only £150 were
payable to the owner of the remaining great tithes. (fn. 95)
Richard of Cornwall gave to the Trinitarian friars
of Hounslow his land of Babworth, reserving to himself the fishpond there. (fn. 96) The friary lands later included over 80 acres by or near the Crane above
Baber Bridge (i.e. in Chapel, South, or Lower
Beavers) and in the inclosure out of Hounslow Heath
farther north (the Beavers, North or Upper Beavers,
&c.). (fn. 97) The manor of HOUNSLOW is first referred
to in 1296, (fn. 98) and by the end of the Middle Ages this
title was commonly applied to the friary's land in
Hounslow and Heston: none of the property apparently extended into Isleworth. In the 19th century
there were three copyhold houses of the manor in
Kingston, a relic of the friary's property there. (fn. 99) A
manor court was held in the 16th century, and free
and customary tenants are referred to once or twice
at that time, (fn. 1) but there were only about 15 acres of
copyhold by 1849. (fn. 2) The 'manor' in fact seems to
have consisted chiefly of a freehold estate, part of
which was leased out by the friary in the early 16th
century. (fn. 3) In 1571 the estate or demesne comprised
the friary buildings, an inn in Hounslow, about 110
acres in Heston, and about 28 in Hatton (presumably
across the Crane in East Bedfont parish). (fn. 4) Of this
the friary had held about 96 acres in hand in
1535. (fn. 5) In 1537 the minister of the friary apparently
leased all his lands to one Cheeseman for 99 years,
but this lease was probably revoked by order of
Thomas Cromwell. (fn. 6) Richard Awnsham (d. 1539) of
Hallplace in Heston secured a 21-year lease of the
friary house and most of the demesnes in 1539. (fn. 7)
Another lease was granted to the Marquess of Northampton in 1552, but Awnsham's widow was still
in occupation (fn. 8) when the freehold reversion was
granted by Mary to William, Lord Windsor, in
1558. (fn. 9) According to the grant, Windsor, whose father
and brother were buried in the friary chapel, was
to found a religious house there, but this of course
was never done, and in 1571 his son Edward, Lord
Windsor, sold the house and lands to Anthony
Roan, auditor of the Exchequer. (fn. 10) Roan was then
already in possession. The manorial rights were reserved, together with a rent, while Roan covenanted
to maintain the Windsor tombs in the chapel, which
was conveyed as part of the manor- or friary-house.
The next Lord Windsor conveyed the reserved rent
and manorial rights in 1596 to Thomas Crompton. (fn. 11)
Crompton also acquired Roan's estate in the house
and land, and the whole property had passed to his
son Thomas by 1602. (fn. 12) Sir Thomas Lyttleton and
his wife, who was probably the younger Crompton's
daughter, (fn. 13) conveyed Hounslow in 1625 to Justinian
Povey, another auditor of the Exchequer. He
held it in 1643 and 1650 and was succeeded by
his son Thomas (fl. 1633-85), also a civil servant. (fn. 14)
Lysons suggested that Henry Elsynge, clerk of the
House of Commons, who retired to Hounslow in
1648, was Justinian Povey's tenant in the manor. (fn. 15)
Lady Shannon, who occupied a house of considerable
size in Hounslow in 1664, and whose daughter
was married in the chapel there in 1663, may have
been another tenant. (fn. 16) The manor left the Povey
family in 1671 or 1672 and was acquired by Henry
Sayer. (fn. 17) By 1697 William III was Sayer's tenant and
used the house as a hunting-lodge. Sayer's heirs sold
it in 1706 to Whitelock Bulstrode. (fn. 18) Bulstrode, a
mystical writer, was buried in the chapel in 1724. (fn. 19)
His son and grandson, both called Richard, succeeded him in turn. (fn. 20) The widow of the second
Richard died in 1816 and the estate passed to a
cousin, G. C. Bulstrode. It was soon afterwards sold
in lots, the chapel being purchased by the Vicar of
Heston, and the house was pulled down. (fn. 21) The
estate purchased by Whitelock Bulstrode in 1705
apparently included only about 17 acres, but in 1731
Richard Bulstrode the elder held about 60 acres
which he claimed to have belonged formerly to
Hounslow friary, and in 1818 the estate contained
about 140 acres of old inclosures and 37 of allotments. (fn. 22) Richard Bulstrode the younger also inherited from his father over 285 acres copyhold of
Heston manor. (fn. 23)
Little information seems to survive about the
manor-house. It stood behind the chapel, which was
on the site of the present Holy Trinity Church in the
High Street. (fn. 24) The old friary buildings were at least
partially replaced in the 16th century, for Norden
says that there was a 'fair house' erected where the
friary had been. (fn. 25) In 1706 the house was built partly
of brick and partly of stone. (fn. 26)
The manors or estates of WORTON and AYDESTONES originated in two freehold estates which
were held of the manor of Isleworth in 1300. William
de Stanton and his wife Mabel then held a carucate
and 2 virgates, and William de Eyston and his wife
Emma held two houses and some land. (fn. 27) These lands
were presumably the same as the eighth of a knight's
fee at Imbury and the quarter-fee in Isleworth which
were respectively attributed to them at the same
date. (fn. 28) William de Stanton's estate passed to William
de Eyston and Emma, (fn. 29) including his rights in the
demesne pastures in the park and the meadows by
the river north of Isleworth town. (fn. 30) Emma de Eyston
was in possession as a widow in 1352 and by 1362
had been succeeded by her grandson, another William de Eyston. (fn. 31) In 1375 this second William conveyed to Edward III (then lord of Isleworth manor)
considerable estates in Isleworth and Heston, including a house called Worton and 93 acres in Isleworth;
a mill, 80 acres of land, and 20 of meadow at Imbury;
and 50 acres of inclosed land at Osterley in Heston
parish. (fn. 32) The house at Worton may have stood
within the moat which was marked on later maps,
but has now disappeared, on the west of the Duke
of Northumberland's River north of Worton Road.
This site later belonged to the demesne of Isleworth
manor. (fn. 33) Imbury is described in 1375 as lying in
Isleworth parish between Babworth pond (near
Baber Bridge) and the common heath of Isleworth:
it is not clear quite where William de Eyston's
property at Imbury can have been, since there were
no inclosures here later except to the north of Baber
Bridge in Heston parish. (fn. 34) There was some demesne
of Isleworth manor north of the bridge, but nothing,
whether arable or meadow, apparently approaching
80 acres. (fn. 35) The Osterley property was probably the
later Fawkeners fields (about 30-40 a.), which were
afterwards inclosed in Osterley Park. (fn. 36) Several life
interests in William de Eyston's lands were granted
in the next 50 or so years. (fn. 37) In 1416, when one of
these was still running, (fn. 38) the king granted the reversion to trustees for his new foundation of Syon, to
which, under the name of Worton manor, it was
transferred in 1424. (fn. 39)
After William Eyston's grant in 1375 his brother
Thomas tried to regain that part of his lands which
had descended from William de Stanton. (fn. 40) Thomas's
claim may have succeeded, for in 1422 his widow
conveyed to the Syon trustees, a house, a carucate,
and 2 virgates (i.e. the amount of William de Stanton's holding), with appurtenances including pasture
for 200 sheep in Isleworth, Twickenham, and Worton. This had belonged to Thomas and was also conveyed to Syon in 1424. (fn. 41) This transaction may
account for the presence of Worton and Aydestones
or Aystons as separate units of Syon's property,
though the position of the two estates remains obscure. (fn. 42) William de Eyston's house at Worton may
have stood on the site by Worton Road described
above, but the position of Thomas's house is unknown. In 1449 all the buildings of the chief messuage of Aystona or Aydstons had been pulled down
and carried to Syon Abbey, (fn. 43) and in 1486 three parts
of Thomas Aydston's tenement were in the abbess's
hand because the abbey was built on them. (fn. 44)
Thomas Eyston's widow also conveyed to Syon
Eyston wharf by the Thames. (fn. 45) In 1519 the abbey
held Haydestones wharf, (fn. 46) and in 1486 they also held
a 'wilstage', which had formerly belonged to Thomas
Maydstone. This was probably some sort of wharf
and seems to have lain near the Dairyhouse in Isleworth. (fn. 47) Whether Thomas Maydstone was the same
man as Thomas Eyston cannot be ascertained: in
1381 one Thomas Maydston had built a sewer in the
Thames between Isleworth and Brentford, which
was certainly in the approximate area where some of
Thomas Eyston's lands lay. (fn. 48) On the other hand, the
distinction between the two Thomases may be indicated by the continued existence in the mid-16th
century of a house or manor called Maydstones; (fn. 49)
this house, or other property belonging to its owner
(over 300 a.), was afterwards granted by the Crown
to Sir Thomas Gresham and became part of the
Osterley estate. (fn. 50) Whatever the explanation of all
this, it may be said that the Worton and Aydestones
properties considerably enlarged Syon's demesnes,
and that the Syon demesnes around Worton, including a moated site, probably came from them, like
part of the demesnes near Baber Bridge. It also
seems clear that Worton and Aydestones were manors
only in name: there is little evidence of either
possessing any courts or tenants. (fn. 51)
Although at a date probably fairly soon after 1560
Heston was said to be 'no lordship or manor, but
only a hamlet and member of Isleworth Syon', (fn. 52)
there had once been an estate known as HESTON
manor, and another one seems to have been created
in 1570. The earlier of these had originated in a
grant by Bernard of St. Valery (d. c. 1191), lord of
Isleworth, to the Hospital of St. Giles without London. (fn. 53) In 1293 St. Giles's claimed to hold the assize
of bread and ale for their tenants in Hounslow and
Heston, (fn. 54) and in 1308 they held the rents and services
of a hide of land in Heston. These rents and services
were intended to support one leper who was to be
presented to the hospital by the lord of Isleworth
manor. (fn. 55) Virtually nothing more is known of St.
Giles's holding, save that it passed with the hospital
itself into the possession of Burton Lazars Hospital
(Leics.) and was granted to Henry VIII in 1536. (fn. 56)
In 1567 Sir Thomas Gresham asked for a grant of
'Heston and other quillets', saying that he wanted
them 'rather for quietness and to be lord of the soil
than for profit, as most is quit-rents, and the rest out
on long leases'. (fn. 57) When he received his grant in 1570
no demesne lands were specified in it; it comprised
the overlordship of the estates of Hallplace and
Groveplace, and of nearly 600 acres of copyhold
land, all in Heston parish. (fn. 58) This became the manor
of Heston. In a successful chancery suit of 1598 the
tenants, producing copies of court roll going back
over a century, claimed that it had formerly been
part of Isleworth Syon, from which rents and
services in Heston had been detached by the grant
of 1570. (fn. 59) In 1818 there were about 330 acres of
copyhold old inclosures and nearly 645 more were
allotted for open-field and common land. There
was, however, no waste belonging to the manor. (fn. 60)
Manorial courts continued to be held until the late
19th century, and there was some copyhold until the
tenure was finally abolished. (fn. 61)
By 1570 Sir Thomas Gresham already held a good
deal of land in Heston, most of which was included in
the manor or estate of OSTERLEY. In 1300 John of
Osterley held 2 carucates in Isleworth and Heston, (fn. 62)
and about 1335 a man of the same name had lands in
Heston worth 40s. (fn. 63) In 1443 John Ford quitclaimed
to John Somerset, physician to Henry VI and Chancellor of the Exchequer, all the lands called Osterley
and all other lands in Heston and adjoining parishes
which had formerly belonged to Thomas, son and
heir of John Osterley. Somerset had acquired the
lands from Richard Dunket and others: Ford's and
Dunket's claims or titles to the lands are not explained. (fn. 64) Somerset held other land in Heston and
Isleworth, including Wyke manor. (fn. 65) When he died
about 1455 his whole estate covered nearly 500 acres
in the two parishes, and another 260 in Norwood,
and was in the hands of feoffees who were to support
the chapel of All Angels which Somerset had founded
at Brentford End. (fn. 66) The feoffees sold Somerset's
house in Isleworth parish to Syon Abbey, and also
possibly alienated one or two other pieces of property, (fn. 67) but the remainder was kept intact. In the
late 15th century it was described as the manor of
Osterley, 16 houses, 550 acres of arable, and over 100
acres of other land, but this description almost certainly included Wyke manor. In 1490 it passed from
Thomas Grafton and his wife Agnes to Joan Luyt,
widow: it had apparently been Agnes's land. (fn. 68) By
1498 it belonged to Edward Cheeseman (d. 1510),
the owner of Norwood manor. (fn. 69) From him it was
purchased by Hugh Denys (d. between 1507 and
1516) (fn. 70) who left Osterley and Wyke manors to Sheen
Priory in trust for All Angels and for a hospital to be
founded in connexion with it. In 1530 Sheen transferred them to Syon under various covenants, for
convenience of administration. (fn. 71) Syon leased Osterley
in 1534 to Edward Cheeseman's son Robert. (fn. 72) The
chapel lands, as they were called, were granted to
the Duke of Somerset in 1547, along with the rest of
Syon's possessions in Isleworth. (fn. 73) 'Osterley farm'
then comprised 202 acres lying together, with a farmhouse on the site of the present house at Osterley
Park. (fn. 74) In 1557 it was sold to Augustine Thayer and
Alexander Chesenall and was said to be still occupied by Robert Cheeseman. (fn. 75) Since Sir Thomas
Gresham held it by 1565 (fn. 76) it may have been the
estate in Heston which he acquired in 1559. (fn. 77) From
Gresham's time Osterley became in effect the manorhouse and demesne of Heston manor. To the two
estates were added other lands in Heston and Isleworth which Gresham acquired. (fn. 78) Among them was
land named ALLCOTTS, which was occasionally
called a manor at about this time. It had belonged to
Sheen Priory and had been granted to Somerset with
Isleworth manor. It was granted to Gresham in
1565, when it comprised 146 acres, all lying together
in what became the north-east part of Osterley
Park. (fn. 79) The house and the park, to which other
former Crown lands contributed, are discussed elsewhere. (fn. 80)
Osterley and Heston, with the lands that had been
absorbed in them, were held by Gresham's widow
after his death in 1579. (fn. 81) They then passed to her
son by a former marriage, William Read. (fn. 82) Read was
succeeded by his daughter, Anne, who married Sir
Michael Stanhope and left three daughters, who held
the Osterley estate jointly with their husbands. (fn. 83) The
third daughter, Bridget, and her husband George,
Earl of Desmond, lived at Osterley between 1639 and
1651. (fn. 84) The representatives of the Stanhope coheirs
sold the estate, probably in 1655, to Sir William
Waller (d. 1668), the parliamentary general. (fn. 85) Waller sold the western part of Osterley Park, with
Heston farm, to Anthony Collins, the owner of Hallplace, (fn. 86) in 1663, and in 1670 his son William sold
the house, manor, and the rest of the estate to Daniel
Farington. From Farington it passed in 1674 to Sir
William Thompson, whose son Samuel sold it in
1683 to Nicholas Barbon (d. 1698), the London
building speculator. Barbon conveyed Osterley to
two mortgagees, of whom one was the banker, Sir
Francis Child the elder (1642-1713). Child took
possession on Barbon's death and in 1713 the heir of
his co-mortgagee sold his interest to Child's son,
Robert, who thus became possessed of the whole
property. (fn. 87) Robert Child died unmarried in 1721
and was succeeded in turn by his brothers Sir Francis (d.s.p. 1740) and Samuel (d. 1752), and by
Samuel's sons Francis (d.s.p. 1763) and Robert
(d. 1782). Under the will of Robert Child, who regained the part of the estate alienated by Waller,
Osterley and Heston passed after the death of his
wife, later Lady Ducie, to his granddaughter Sarah,
who married George Villiers, Earl of Jersey. (fn. 88) The
estate then descended with the Jersey title until 1949,
when Lord Jersey gave Osterley House and Park
(140 a.) to the National Trust, who leased it to the
Ministry of Works. (fn. 89) In 1958 the Villiers Estates Co.
still owned 528 acres between Heston village and
Syon Lane. (fn. 90) In 1905 the then Lord Jersey had
owned about 900 acres in Heston and Isleworth. (fn. 91)
Virtually all of this lay east of Heston village and
north of Scrattage Lane and Wyke Green, (fn. 92) and it
included the former Wyke manor, which, after passing through other hands, had returned to the same
ownership as Osterley. (fn. 93) About 320 acres of the 1905
total were included in the park, but part of this was
leased to farmers. (fn. 94) The chief units into which the
leased part of the estate was divided at this time, and
for some time before, were Heston farm (generally
c. 200 a.), Scrattage farm (c. 134 a., nearly all in the
park), Wyke farm (158 a. in 1885), and Osterley Park
gardens (c. 60 a. and a house in the park). Other parts
of the lands were leased with farm-houses in Southall
and Norwood. (fn. 95)
The manor or estate of WYKE is first mentioned
in 1444, when it belonged to John Somerset, along
with 200 acres of arable and over 200 acres of other
land in Isleworth, Heston, and Twickenham. (fn. 96) In
1449 Somerset held the house of Wyke and other
lands of Aydstons manor. They were said to have
belonged formerly to John Harpdon and once to
Andrew Gilford. (fn. 97) There had been freehold land in
Wyke from the 13th century, (fn. 98) and in 1428 William
Loveney (a former lessee of Worton manor), had
delivered seisin of lands there, apparently constituting the manor, (fn. 99) to William Harpdon and others: (fn. 1)
beyond this nothing is known of the earlier history
of the manor. Wyke descended with Osterley to All
Angels' Chapel and to Augustine Thayer and Alexander Chesenall in 1557: (fn. 2) it was then occupied under a
40-year lease granted by Syon Abbey in 1537. (fn. 3) In
1547 'Wyke farm' comprised 104 acres of land and
wood on each side of Wyke Lane (now Syon Lane). (fn. 4)
Sir Thomas Gresham held Wyke by 1570 (fn. 5) and had
perhaps acquired it with Osterley. It remained with
his successors until 1638 when they sold it to Sir
William Washington. (fn. 6) It then passed to Sir Richard
Wynn (d. 1649), and to his brother's widow Grace
Wynn (d. 1680). (fn. 7) Wynn apparently lived at Wyke at
one time, (fn. 8) though he also owned, and in 1635 occupied, the house later known as Little Syon in the
London Road. (fn. 9) Grace Wynn's granddaughter married Robert, 1st Duke of Ancaster, who sold the
manor in 1724 to Joshua Fletcher. From Fletcher's
widow it passed in 1731 to John Jacob under whose
will it was sold in 1755 to William Baker. It then
comprised nearly 140 acres. Baker's son sold it in
1778 to John Robinson (d. 1802), the politician. (fn. 10) It
was sold after Robinson's death to the Earl of Jersey,
and became part of the Osterley estate. (fn. 11)
Rents belonged to the manor in the 15th century
but there is no evidence of any courts or copyhold
tenants, and by the 16th century the 'manor' was
simply a freehold estate lying around and to the
south of the house. (fn. 12) This stood on the west side of
Syon Lane on a moated site now more or less obliterated by the Underground railway. (fn. 13) Some time
after 1635 this house seems to have been replaced by
one further south on the site of Wyke House. (fn. 14) In
1778-9 Robert Adam designed what was presumably
an addition to this already existing house for its
owner, John Robinson, (fn. 15) and the rest of the present
house appears to have been rebuilt within the next
few years. In 1827 the house was used as a school
and soon afterwards it became a private mental hospital. (fn. 16) In 1958 it was still a nursing home for nervous disorders. (fn. 17) Except for the land attached to the
house (30 a. in 1923), the rest of the Wyke estate
continued during the 19th century to be leased as a
single farm by the earls of Jersey together with a farmhouse standing to the north of the old moated site. (fn. 18)
The present building there probably dates from
about 1800. It was no longer used as a farm in 1958. (fn. 19)
The estates of WOODHALL, HALLPLACE,
and GROVEPLACE seem originally to have been
distinct, though by the end of the Middle Ages they
were in the same ownership and their names were
often combined or used as alternatives for one
holding. (fn. 20) In 1336 Nicholas de la Woodhall held of
Isleworth rectory manor a house and 30 acreware (fn. 21)
of land in Heston. (fn. 22) The rectory's overlordship of
Woodhall was remembered as late as 1642, while
Hallplace manor and the farm or house called Grove
or Groveplace were said to be held of Heston manor. (fn. 23)
In 1483 the manor of 'Woodhallplace', with four
houses and 100 acres of land, was conveyed to Sir
Thomas Bourchier and his wife Isabel, who had
possibly inherited it from her father Sir John Barr. (fn. 24)
In 1488 it passed from Bourchier to Richard Awnsham. (fn. 25) Richard Awnsham, probably his son, who
also held a lease of Hounslow manor, (fn. 26) died in 1539
leaving his house at Heston called Hallplace to his
wife Eleanor with reversion to his eldest son William.
He left to William his free land with 'the place called
the Grove place' which he had just bought from
Thomas Dewell. (fn. 27) This is the earliest definite reference to the Grove, though it may have originated
in the three virgates in Heston which Matthew atte
Grove held freely in 1300. (fn. 28) William Awnsham died
shortly before 1565 holding Hallplace of Isleworth
Syon, and was succeeded by his son William. (fn. 29) In
1570, however, when the overlordship was transferred to Heston manor, Eleanor Awnsham was said
to be still in occupation of 'Woodhall or Hallplace', while William-presumably her grandson-
held Groveplace. (fn. 30) It was perhaps this William who
had two sons called Robert and William, and the
elder of these who was the Robert Awnsham who
held the three estates in 1621 and died in 1627. (fn. 31)
Gideon Awnsham, who held them at his death in
1641, (fn. 32) and also leased Isleworth rectory, (fn. 33) was probably the son of Sir Gideon Awnsham of Isleworth
(d. 1631). (fn. 34) Sir Gideon's father was named William
and may have been the younger brother of Robert
(d. 1627). (fn. 35) The younger Gideon left a son Robert
who died soon after him leaving as coheirs his sisters
Margaret and Jane. (fn. 36) Margaret, who held the property for life under a settlement of 1651, died unmarried and it reverted to Jane and her husband
Henry Mildmay. (fn. 37) In 1668, after Mildmay's death,
Hallplace and about 100 acres in Heston were sold
to William Denington (d. 1687). (fn. 38) After Denington's
death his estates were divided among his sisters'
heirs. One of these, Abel Bradley, received the house
and 33 acres, and later also got the share (18 a.) of
one of the others. His son conveyed most of this land
to Samuel Child of Osterley in 1746, and Child also
bought the third share in the same year. (fn. 39) Abel Bradley had, however, parted with the house separately
before 1698. At this date it belonged to Henry Collins
(d. c. 1704), (fn. 40) whose father Anthony had bought 365
acres on the west of Osterley Park from the Osterley
estate in 1663. (fn. 41) Henry Collins's son Anthony, a
deist writer, (fn. 42) married Martha, the daughter of Sir
Francis Child (d. 1713), and after the death of their
daughter and eventual heir Elizabeth Cary in 1763,
part at least of the Osterley land was transferred to
Robert Child. Hallplace house, however, was not
included. (fn. 43) In 1818 it belonged, with about 23 acres
round it, to John Westbrook. (fn. 44) It stood back from
the road in the angle of Heston Road and Church
Road, and had been pulled down by 1865. (fn. 45) In 1635
Gideon Awnsham's house had stood on this site,
though possibly nearer the road. It seems to have
been larger than the house of 1818, and to have been
built round a courtyard. (fn. 46) Where Groveplace lay is
unknown.
About the end of the 17th century there was said
to be a manor called SAWYERS HOLD in Heston,
which held courts baron. (fn. 47) Since Heston manor is
mentioned separately in the same document, and
Hounslow is not mentioned, this may possibly have
been an alternative name for the latter. No other
reference to Sawyers Hold has been found.
The Manor House in Heston and the Manor
House in Sutton were probably both 19th-century
houses and had been demolished by 1958. Neither
is known to have been connected with any manor.