9. THE ABBEY OF CROXDEN
In 1176 Bertram de Verdun, lord of Alton, a baron
of the Exchequer and a royal justice, granted land at
'Chotes', probably Cotton near Alton, to the Cistercians of Aunay-sur-Odon in Normandy as the
site for an abbey. (fn. 1) The first abbot, an Englishman,
was elected in 1178, but the following year the
monks moved to a new site at Croxden a few miles
to the south. This was in a remote but fertile valley
beside a tributary of the Dove, and the house was
styled the abbey of the Vale of St. Mary of Croxden.
The site (locus) was not dedicated until 1181.
Bertram founded Croxden Abbey for the souls of
his predecessors and successors and in particular of
his father and mother, of himself, and his second
wife Rose, and of Richard de Humez qui me nutruit. (fn. 2)
The endowment consisted of Bertram's lands at
Croxden (evidently including a mill), (fn. 3) Alton,
Madeley Holme (in Checkley), Crakemarsh (in
Uttoxeter), and Musden, and also at Oaken (in
Codsall) in the south of the county; a grove at Great
Gate near Croxden and half a wood at Crakemarsh;
land at Tugby (Leics.) and a carucate called Lees at
Hartshorne (Derb.); a salt-pit at Middlewich
(Ches.); a mill at Stamford (Lincs.); the service due
from Achard of Stamford for land there and at
Casterton (Rut.) and the 7s. due from Ralph de
Normanvile for land at Burton Overy (Leics.); and
the churches of Alton and Tugby. Henry II's confirmation of Bertram's charter included also Tugby's
dependent chapels of East Norton and Keythorpe. (fn. 4)
The Verduns remained patrons of the abbey, with
the Furnivalles succeeding them in the early 14th
century; members of both families were buried in
the abbey church. (fn. 5)
During the 13th century the abbey's possessions
steadily increased. Before he came to the throne in
1199 John gave the monks land in Ireland, and in
1200 he exchanged it for an annuity of £5 from the
Exchequer of Ireland; (fn. 6) in 1206 he gave the monks
Adeney in the manor of Edgmond (Salop.) in place
of this annuity. (fn. 7) The monks themselves exchanged
Adeney with Buildwas Abbey (Salop.) in 1287 in
return for Caldon Grange a few miles to the north of
Croxden. (fn. 8) After the foundation of Dieulacres in
1214 the abbots of Croxden and Dieulacres agreed
that Croxden should be allowed to acquire lands and
pastures within a mile of Dieulacres and should be
exempt from payment of tithes on lands in Leek
parish which it cultivated itself; Dieulacres, on the
other hand, was not to acquire any lands or pastures
within a mile of Croxden, except in the manor of
Leek and the demesne of the Earl of Chester. (fn. 9) By
1251 a dispute had arisen because Dieulacres had
acquired land at Field. A settlement was then
reached by which Croxden agreed that Dieulacres
should hold land in Field and promised not to accept
land there without the permission of Dieulacres. In
return Croxden was freed from tolls and market
dues at Leek and was allowed certain inclosures at
Onecote and 'Puthullis'; Dieulacres in addition
promised not to acquire any land nearer to Croxden
or 'the grange of Leyes' without the abbey's consent. (fn. 10) From the late 12th century the abbey was
acquiring property in the Dog Cheadle area of
Cheadle mainly from Rose de Verdun, the
Sacheverell family, and the Bassetts of Sapcote, and a
grange had been established there by 1275. (fn. 11) By the
1230s Henry de Audley had given the monks a
pasture on Morridge to the east of Leek. (fn. 12) Tugby
church was appropriated to the abbey by the Bishop
of Lincoln in 1224, (fn. 13) and Alton church had been
appropriated probably by 1263 and certainly by
1291. (fn. 14) A dispute with the Rector of Uttoxeter over
payment of tithes from abbey property was settled
in 1263; the rector renounced all claim and in return
the monks agreed to pay him 12s. a year. (fn. 15) By 1291
the abbey had acquired property at Riston (in
Bradbourne) and Trusley, both in Derbyshire, and
there was a mill at Caldon. Granges had been established at Musden, Oaken, and Riston as well as at
Caldon, Cheadle, and Croxden. The total value of
the temporalities and spiritualities in 1291 was some
£140. (fn. 16) At the beginning of the 14th century a jury
stated that all the Staffordshire property was held
in free alms. (fn. 17)
The 13th and early 14th centuries were evidently
a time of general prosperity for the abbey — the
chronicler noted the period of Abbot Billisdon
(1284-93) as one of particular prosperity. (fn. 18) The
abbey's wealth was drawn partly from sheep-farming. This may have started by the 1230s: in an agreement with the burgesses of Alton in 1239 the monks
promised not to erect a sheepfold on the burgesses'
land. (fn. 19) It was certainly in progress before the end of
the century, and in 1294 the chronicler complained
that as a result of the outbreak of war with France
that year it was difficult to sell a sack of the abbey's
wool even for 7 marks. (fn. 20) Some 20 years later, however, Croxden was supplying more wool for the
foreign market than any other Staffordshire house, (fn. 21)
and the monks were evidently still engaged in the
Florentine trade in the 1420s. (fn. 22) Charcoal burning
in the abbey's woodlands is recorded several times
between 1291 and 1369; £22 5s. was realized in 1316
from a wood at Cheadle called 'the Neweheye'.
Timber was also sold: underwood from the park
at Oaken fetched £24 in 1329. (fn. 23) The prosperity is
reflected in the constant building operations. The
first abbot, Thomas of Woodstock (1178-1229),
was noted for his building, while under the energetic
(strenuissimus) Walter London (1242-68) the church
was completed and very extensive work was carried
out on the conventual buildings. William de Houton
(1269-74) continued the work, notably by erecting
the abbot's house. (fn. 24) William of Over (1297-1308)
bought the abbey a house in London for £20,
apparently in the parish of St. Peter the Less in the
ward of Castle Baynard. (fn. 25)
There is very much less evidence available for the
internal history of the abbey. Some idea of the size
of the community can be formed from the lists of
admissions: 80 in the 26 years of Abbot London
(1242-68) and 25 in Abbot Houton's 5 years (126974), and thereafter a decline — 14 in 1274-84, 14 in
1284-93, 2 in 1294-7, 9 in 1297-1308. (fn. 26) Little can
be said about observance. Abbot Twyford (1294-7)
was noted for his great devotion to the Trinity. (fn. 27)
The abbots went occasionally at least to general
chapters at Cîteaux. Abbot Ashbourne evidently
died on the return journey in 1237, while Abbot
Houton died at Dijon, presumably on the way to
the chapter, and was buried at Cîteaux in the
presence of over 400 abbots. (fn. 28) Abbot Billisdon
evidently went in 1284 after his election and also in
1285. In 1298 Edward I forbade all Cistercian
abbots, including those of Croxden, Dieulacres, and
Hulton, to attend the general chapter and ordered
them to pay to the Crown the money which they
would otherwise have taken to Cîteaux. A similar
ban was imposed in subsequent years. (fn. 29) In 1308,
however, when apparently there was no royal ban,
Abbot Over was summoned to attend but failed to
go, whereupon the chapter deposed him. (fn. 30) A
visitation was evidently carried out by the motherhouse in 1313. (fn. 31) Several of these early abbots gave
some attention to learning. Thomas of Woodstock
wrote two large volumes containing most of the
Bible, and William de Houton bought a Bible of
nine volumes from Master Solomon, Archdeacon
of Leicester, for the sum of 50 marks. William of
Over made additions to the abbey's collection of
books. (fn. 32) It was probably in the late 13th century
too that the compilation of the abbey's chronicle was
begun. (fn. 33)
The 14th century was a time of increasing difficulty for the abbey. For the first time a serious dispute arose with the patron. (fn. 34) The last of the Verduns
died in 1316 and was buried at Croxden. The patronage passed with Alton to Joan, his eldest daughter,
and her husband Thomas de Furnivalle. Thomas
insisted on the abbey's stabling his horses and
hounds, feeding seven of his bailiffs every Friday
in a room specially set apart for them, and distributing alms daily at the gates. He confiscated a cart
belonging to the monks and impounded sheep, oxen,
and horses. Eventually 'no one dared to ride freely
through the gates of the abbey across the fee of
Alton', and the monks barricaded themselves in the
abbey for 16 weeks from March to July 1319. They
erected two thorn fences at the gates to prevent direct
access and made a small gate in the south wall so that
they could pass through unobserved. At last, with
the aid of several magnates, they secured a writ of
novel disseisin and vindicated their rights in July.
Peace was restored, and in 1321 the abbot baptized
the daughter of Thomas and Joan. In 1334 Joan was
buried before the high altar of the abbey church by
the abbot, assisted by the Abbots of Burton,
Dieulacres, Hulton, Combermere, and Beauchief
and the Priors of Worksop and Ecclesfield, and in
1340 Thomas was buried at Beauchief Abbey (Derb.)
by the Abbot of Croxden.
More serious were the abbey's economic difficulties. Royal exactions became heavier — the loan
of supplies for the Scottish expedition in 1310, the
imposition of a corrodian in 1318, the distraint of
the abbot in 1322 for refusing to pay his share of the
expense of a foot-soldier in respect of the property
at Dog Cheadle, subsidies, more loans in 1337 and
1347. (fn. 35) Bad harvests, plague, and murrain all had an
adverse effect. (fn. 36) Extensive repairs to property,
notably the reroofing of the conventual buildings,
much of it in lead instead of wood, in 1332, 1333,
and 1334, and the rebuilding of the abbot's house in
1335-6 at great expense were a further drain on
resources. (fn. 37) So desperate was the abbey's financial
state that in 1368 the Abbot of Aunay, the motherhouse, sent the Abbot of Garendon and Brother
Henry Foky from Aunay to investigate. The two
visitors deposed Abbot Colbeley, and William
Gunston was elected in his place. The abbey's debts
amounted to £165 2s. 3d. (fn. 38) The new abbot made
some attempt to improve matters. He recovered
Caldon Grange which had been mortgaged, and
within a few years he had raised 119 marks by the
sale of charcoal. (fn. 39) New problems soon faced him,
however. There was evidently a bad harvest in 1368,
and the following year there was another outbreak
of plague. (fn. 40) In 1369 also part of the abbey adjoining
the church collapsed. Abbot Gunston rebuilt it in
1370 and in 1372 renewed the ditches in the
neighbourhood of the abbey. In that year a great
flood ruined grass and grain growing by the
Churnet, and in 1372 a violent storm damaged the
fabric, uprooted trees in the orchard, and damaged
barns at Croxden and Musden. Abbot Gunston
continued to repair the damage. (fn. 41) It is not surprising
to find him in debt: in 1371 he was sued by the
executors of Philip de Lutteleye for a debt of 40
marks and in 1376 by the Warden of the Chapel
Royal at Windsor for three years' arrears of rent
amounting to 36s. (fn. 42) Yet in 1379 the abbey had to
lend the Crown 100s. (fn. 43) The great impoverishment
of the abbey was stated as the reason for the king's
permission, given in 1405, for the appointment of
monks of Croxden as vicars of Alton. (fn. 44) The general
decline is reflected in the small size of the community — an abbot and six monks in 1377 and
1381. (fn. 45)
The 14th century brought, however, certain
additions to the abbey's property. By 1331 90 acres
of waste at Bradnop had been acquired from Hulton
Abbey. (fn. 46) Royal licence was secured for the acquisition of two small plots of arable and meadow in
Combridge (in Rocester) and Sedsall (Derb.) from
Robert de Combridge in 1342, (fn. 47) a house and 60
acres of land in Alton from Robert Shaw in 1346, (fn. 48)
'Verdon maner' in Ellastone from John Pyghtesley
in 1392, (fn. 49) and a house in Ashbourne from Henry
Blore in 1402. (fn. 50) In 1398 the Crown granted a licence,
for 25 marks, for the appropriation of the vicarage
of Alton, and the bishop gave his approval in 1402. (fn. 51)
In 1403, however, the monks endowed the vicarage,
undertaking to build a house for the vicar; (fn. 52) this
may be connected with the fact that two years later,
as seen above, the Crown gave the abbey permission
to appoint its own monks as vicars.
Croxden never recovered its former prosperity,
but there is some record of achievement in its later
days. Abbot Walton, who occurs between at least
1467 and 1507, was engaged in building; the
chronicler, indeed, describes him as the good abbot
and a peacemaker (concordator) among both the
great and the poor, despite the fact that he was
involved in lawsuits. Abbot Shipton, who succeeded
in 1519, was a divine of some learning and a benefactor of the poor, and his many good works included the rebuilding of the chancel of Alton
church. (fn. 53) In addition the number of the community
had risen to 13 by 1538. (fn. 54)
In its last years the abbey was still poor. In 1533
the abbot was asked by Thomas Cromwell to lease
Musden Grange to Francis Meverell, but he gave
the excuse that 'neither God's service nor hospitality'
could be maintained without the grange, which had
not been leased out for 40 years. (fn. 55) The gross income
of the abbey in 1535 was given as £103 6s. 7d. —
£8 16s. 4d. from spiritualities, £57 13s. 7d from
rents, and £36 16s. 8d. from demesne at Croxden,
Musden, Caldon, and Onecote. Expenditure came to
£13 0s. 8d. including £7 in fees to 7 lay officials —
the steward of Tugby, the bailiff of Tugby who was
also collector of rents in Leicestershire, the steward
and the collector of Oaken, the steward of Croxden,
Ashbourne, and Caldon, the bailiff of Ashbourne
and Caldon, and the collector of Croxden and its
members. (fn. 56) The income as given was thus lower than
in 1291, but there is evidence that the valuation of
1535 was incomplete; a fuller account of the abbey's
property in 1538-9 gives the gross value for that
year as £163 8s. 10d. (fn. 57) Its estates were then listed
as the manor and grange of Oaken, Lee Grange in
Crakemarsh, and granges at Musden, Caldon, and
Trusley; lands and rents in Croxden, Combridge,
Great Gate, Ellastone, Alton, 'Whytley' in Leek,
Onecote, Cotton, Dog Cheadle, Uttoxeter, Denstone, Calton, Caldon, Stafford, Orberton (in St.
Mary's, Stafford), Walton (Staffs.), Ashbourne,
Doveridge, Derby, Hartshorne, Thurvaston (in
Longford), Langley (Derb.), Burton Overy, Tugby,
Mountsorrel (in Barrow-upon-Soar and Rothley,
Leics.), Casterton, Stamford, Misterton (? Leics.),
London, and 'Sutton Maney'; the appropriated
churches of Croxden, Alton, and Tugby and the
tithes of Oaken, Lee, Musden, Caldon, and Trusley
Granges; and a 'wichehouse' in Middlewich and
Hungarwall smithy in Dog Cheadle.
Croxden came within the terms of the Act of 1536
for the suppression of religious houses worth less
than £200 a year, but in 1537 the abbey received a
licence to continue for a fine of £100. (fn. 58) In August
1538 Archbishop Cranmer wrote to Cromwell
asking for a commission to be sent to Croxden, and
on 17 September Dr. Thomas Legh and William
Cavendish received the surrender of the abbey from
the abbot and twelve other monks. (fn. 59) A month later
parts of the fabric were sold for £9 9s. 8d.; the
largest items were the roofs of the church and
dorter, which realized £6 and £1 13s. 4d. respectively, and 'a little gatehouse on the north side of
the common way' which went for 13s. 4d. (fn. 60) In 1539
the site, with a water-mill, lands, and the rectory
of Croxden, was leased for 21 years to Francis
Bassett, servant to Cranmer, on whose behalf the
archbishop had put in a plea when asking for the
commission to be sent to Croxden. This estate and
other property were sold by the Crown to Godfrey
Foljambe in 1545. (fn. 61) The abbot was granted a pension
of £26 13s. 4d. a year. Pensions were assigned to all
the monks, (fn. 62) and four still occur as pensioners in
1557-8. (fn. 63) One of these, John Stanley, was Vicar of
Alton from 1546 until his death in 1569 when he was
drawing a pension of £5 13s. 4d. (fn. 64)
The site lay on the north side of the valley with
the stream providing a water supply, a means of
drainage, and power for the mill. (fn. 65) Although the
area is now crossed by a road and part of it is
occupied by a farmhouse and farmyard buildings,
there are more remains at Croxden than at any other
monastic site in the county. In 1936 the site passed
into the care of what is now the Ministry of Public
Building and Works. In some places the walls of the
church and of the conventual buildings are still
standing; in others their foundations have been
exposed, making it possible to reconstruct much of
the original lay-out of the abbey.
The site was dedicated in 1181, two years after
the move from Cotton. Building occupied much of
the attention of the first abbot (1178-1229), but the
church was not dedicated until 1253, in the time of
the fifth abbot, Walter London (1242-68). (fn. 66) Copied
from the church at Aunay, the mother-house, it was
more elaborate in plan than most Cistercian churches
in England. It was 240 feet long and consisted of an
aisled nave of eight bays, transepts, a tower over the
crossing, and an apsidal presbytery with a chevet of
five radiating chapels. The altar of the Holy Trinity,
probably in the north transept, is mentioned in the
later 13th century, that of St. Benedict in 1312, and
that of St. Lawrence in 1326; two altars, evidently in
the south transept, were mentioned in 1334. (fn. 67) A
bell was hung in the tower in 1302; broken on Holy
Saturday 1313, it was recast later the same year.
The modern road runs diagonally across the nave
and south transept of the abbey church. To the
north of the road only part of one of the five
radiating chapels is left above ground; nearby are
the remains of four stone coffins. To the south of the
road much of the south wall of the church has survived, incorporating evidence that the south aisle
was originally vaulted. The west wall, with two west
doorways and three tall lancet windows above them,
is almost complete. Also standing to their full
height are the west and south walls of the south
transept. All this work is of the 13th century with
no sign of later alterations.
The conventual buildings lay on the south side
of the church, the cloister being entered through a
door at the east end of the south aisle. Most of the
buildings were erected or completed by Abbot London, though the cloister and parlour were rebuilt by
Abbot Walton about the end of the 15th century.
No remains of the cloister arcade are left standing.
The ground floor of the east range, much of which
survives, consisted of the sacristy and bookroom,
the chapter-house (partly built by 1229 when Abbot
Woodstock was buried there), the parlour, and a
slype or passage. The chapter-house was a vaulted
rectangular building, occupying the centre of the
range and projecting eastwards beyond it. To the
south of the slype was the vaulted undercroft of
part of the dorter; this was probably the noviciate
(probatorium) built by Abbot London. The southward extension may have contained the abbot's
'lower chamber' with his dormitory above it, both
built by Abbot Houton (1269-74). (fn. 68) Projecting
eastwards from the south end of this building was the
rere dorter. The upper floor of the east range, now
destroyed, contained the treasury and the monks'
dormitory; the doorway of the night stair from the
latter is still visible at a high level in the south wall of
the south transept.
The southern range is thought to have consisted
of the day-stairs up to the dorter, the warminghouse, the frater (which originally projected southwards but was reduced in size to the line of the rest
of the range, evidently in the late 15th century), and
the kitchen. There was a bell-tower over the frater.
Part of the south wall of this range, which is all that
remains, shows signs of the 15th-century alterations
and also of conversion to a dwelling-house after
the dissolution. The modern farmhouse and its
outbuildings cover the site of the kitchen and the
south end of the west range. The latter was presumably devoted to the lay brothers; at the northern
end part of a vaulted undercraft survives with a
door leading straight into the church. A building
called 'Botleston' — possibly a corruption of Billisdon, which would suggest a building of Abbot
Billisdon's time (1284-93) — evidently adjoined
the church; in 1369 it collapsed 'from the church as
far as the door of the hall' and was rebuilt in timber
in 1370. (fn. 69)
The abbot's lodging built by Abbot Shepshed in
1335-6 replaced the accommodation built by Abbot
Houton probably at the southern end of the east
range. The new lodging was a detached building
standing south-east of the rere-dorter; two of its
walls and part of a third survive. To the north of
this was the infirmary, built by Abbot London.
The site, partly covered by the modern road, was
determined by excavations in the 19th century;
further work to expose the foundations was in
progress in 1968.
The abbey gatehouse, also built by Abbot London, lay to the north-west of the church, and there
was a chapel to the east of the gatehouse. (fn. 70) The
chapel, a mid-13th-century building about 50 ft.
long, survived as Croxden parish church until 1886,
when it was replaced by the present church on a
site a little further north. (fn. 71) The stone wall round the
70-acre precinct was begun by Abbot London and
finished by Abbot Measham (1274-84); some of it
can still be seen.
Thomas of Woodstock, elected 1178 while still a
deacon, died 1229. (fn. 73)
Walter de Chacumbe, elected 1230. (fn. 74)
William of Ashbourne, elected 1234, died 1237. (fn. 75)
John de Tilton, elected probably in 1237, resigned
1242.
Walter London, elected 1242, died 1268. (fn. 76)
William de Houton, elected 1269, died 1274. (fn. 77)
Henry of Measham, elected 1274, resigned 1284. (fn. 78)
John de Billisdon, elected 1284, died 1293. (fn. 79)
Richard of Twyford, elected 1294, died 1297. (fn. 80)
William of Over, elected 1297, deposed by the
general chapter in 1308 for failing to obey the
summons to its meeting. (fn. 81)
Richard of Ashby, elected 1309, resigned 1313. (fn. 82)
Thomas of Casterton, elected 1313. (fn. 83)
Richard of Ashby, re-elected 1320, resigned
1329. (fn. 84)
Richard of Shepshed, elected 1329, occurs 1336. (fn. 85)
Alexander de Colbeley, deposed by the visitors in
1368.
William Gunston, elected 1368, occurs 1398. (fn. 86)
Philip Ludlow.
Roger Prestone, occurs 1433. (fn. 87)
John Dronefeld.
William Burton.
Ralph Leylonde, occurs 1439 and 1450. (fn. 88)
John Walton, or Checkley, occurs 1467 and 1507. (fn. 89)
Stephen Cadde, occurs 1509 and 1514. (fn. 90)
John Shipton, succeeded 1519, occurs 1521. (fn. 91)
Richard Snape, occurs 1529, died 1531. (fn. 92)
Thomas Chalner, or Chawner, elected 1531,
surrendered the abbey 1538. (fn. 93)
A common seal was brought into use in 1313. (fn. 94)
On the election of Thomas of Casterton in May the
abbot's counterseal was broken in the presence of
the visitors and community and it was decided that
a common seal should be made and placed in the
custody of four monks. This was duly done in
November. It was evidently the seal in use in 1538.
This is a pointed oval, 1¾ by 11/8 in., depicting the
Virgin seated beneath a pinnacled ogee arch with
the Child on her left knee; to the left is a shield
bearing the Verdun arms and in the base under an
ogee arch an abbot, three-quarters length, with a
pastoral staff in his right hand and a book in his left.
Legend, lombardic:
SIGILLUM ABBATIS ET CONVENTUS VALLIS
SANCTE MARIE DE CROKESDEN