HAVANT PARISH AND LIBERTY
Hamanfunta and Hafunt, x cent.; Havehunt,
xi-xiii cent.; Havonte, xiv-xv cent.; Havant, xvi
cent.
The market town of Havant is situated on the
approximate line of the Roman road from Clausentum
to Regnum, now the main road from Chichester to
Southampton, and is built very regularly round the
intersection of this road with that running north and
south from Hayling Island to Rowland's Castle. In
the south-west angle of the cross roads stands the
church of St. Faith, with a low central tower which
is nevertheless seen above all the houses near it, the
most interesting of which is the late sixteenth-century
half-timbered 'Old House at Home.' At a short
distance to the south-west of the church rises the
copious spring of Homewell, which never fails in
summer nor freezes in winter. West Street leads past
the church, by large parchment works and tanneries.
The fellmonger's trade, indeed, has prospered in
Havant since the seventeenth century. (fn. 1) A still older
industry, now extinct, was the manufacture of cloth.
In 1571 William Simpson, of Rye, cloth-merchant,
travelled to Havant in pursuit of 'some gainful bargain,'
and was detained there as a suspicious character until
the bailiff and constable (fn. 2) of the town were advertised
of his honesty. (fn. 3) This trade was also centred in West
Street, (fn. 4) which leads through Brockhampton tithing
towards Bedhampton, past the Roman Catholic church
of St. Joseph, and the Wesleyan chapel built in
1888. On the borders of the two parishes stands the
Primitive Methodist chapel, and by a high-walled
garden Brockhampton Road takes the traveller past
the Portsmouth Waterworks through green fields
watered by a small stream and across a bridge past
more tanneries back into the town. Brockhampton
Mill, on the right of this road, probably stands on the
site of a mill valued at 15s. in the Domesday Book. (fn. 5)
In the same Survey two mills are mentioned under
Havant; these seem to have been represented later
by South Mill and Asshewell Mill. (fn. 6) Amongst other
mills in the town the most picturesque is the disused
one at Langstone. It stands on the harbour of that
name, near the causeway which connects Hayling
Island with the main-land, and is surrounded by a
few houses, some thatched and some roofed with red
tiles, which, together with a coastguard station, form
the hamlet of Langstone. There were also salterns
here, one of which dated from the eleventh century, (fn. 7)
and close by across the meadows are the grounds of
Wade Court. The greater part of the parish is used
for pasture, 1,150 acres being permanent grass, while
only 557½ acres are employed as arable land, this
lying chiefly around the town, and in the north of
the parish there are over 750 acres of wood. (fn. 8) The
soil differs considerably, the subsoil near Langstone
being chalk while the town itself is built on a bed of
clay, and the northern part of the parish is also of
Eocene formation. This northern portion has been
formed for civil purposes into a separate parish, known
as North Havant. The road northwards skirts Leigh
Park, in a well-wooded and well-watered country.
Green slopes studded with fine old trees stretch up to
the house which is now the residence of the lord of
Havant manor. Beyond it, in the distance, are the
trees of the 'Thicket,' the old 'Havant Chace' of the
bishop of Winchester, which form the southern
extremity of the forest of Bere. Here at the Thicket
was obtained, in 1436, potters' earth. (fn. 9) When the park
is passed the road curves downhill, and in the hollow
lie a few houses, each with its garden abounding in
fruit trees. This hamlet is known as Durrants; still
further north on another slope of the road lies Redhill,
which was formed into an ecclesiastical district in
1840, when the little church of St. John was built
half-way up the hill.

INDEX MAP to the LIBERTY OF HAVANT
Havant has a station on the direct Portsmouth
branch of the London, Brighton, and South Coast
Railway. It is also connected with Hayling by the
Hayling Island Railway, laid down in 1851, (fn. 10) which
crosses Langstone Harbour. The shore along the
harbour is in most places shingly. The fishery, which
was once of considerable importance, has decreased
materially during the last two centuries, though the
oyster trade still flourishes.
The name Billy which survives in Billy Lawn and
Billy Copse dates from early in the seventeenth century,
when pastures called 'Billyes' were conveyed with
Havant manor to William Wolgar: (fn. 11) half an acre in
'Conquerauntescrouch' was owned by Jordan the Hayward in 1289, (fn. 12) and ' Boyes Buttes ' in Leigh tithing
was sold by Richard Softley in 1692. (fn. 13) In the same
tithing lies Stockheath Common, known in the fifteenth
century as Stoke Heath. (fn. 14) It was inclosed in 1870
together with Havant Thicket, Leigh Green, and
South Moor, (fn. 15) the award being in the custody of the
Deputy Clerk of the Peace.
MANORS
In 935 A.D. King Athelstan granted
seven ' mansae ' at HAVANT to his
thegn Witgar for three lives. (fn. 16) The
third in succession after Witgar was a certain widow
who gave the land to the monks of St. Peter and St.
Paul, Winchester, to whom King Ethelred confirmed
the gift in 980 and again in 984. (fn. 17) At the latter
date it was extended at 10 hides, its assessment before
the Conquest according to the Domesday Survey in
1086, at which time it was still held by the monks of
St. Swithun. (fn. 18) The monks were given a weekly
market there on Tuesdays in 1200, and the sheep and
cattle market is still held on that day. (fn. 19) In July, 1284,
the monks exchanged Havant manor with the bishop
of Winchester for certain privileges. (fn. 20) In January,
1450–1, the bishop was granted a market, probably
for corn, on Saturdays, and an annual fair to be held
on the eve and feast of St. Faith (6 October). (fn. 21) This
fair was held till 1871, when it was abolished together
with another formerly held in June. (fn. 22) From 1553
onwards the bishop leased the manor from time to
time. Under the Act of the Commonwealth for the
sale of bishops' lands it was purchased by William
Wolgar of Havant, (fn. 23) who obtained a lease of it after
the bishop's restoration in 1660. (fn. 24) Finally Sir George
Thomas Staunton, then lessee of the manor, purchased
the fee in 1827. (fn. 25) It ultimately passed to W. H.
Stone, from whom Sir F. W. FitzWygram purchased
it in 1875. He was succeeded by his son Sir F. L.
FitzWygram, the present owner. (fn. 26)
HAVANT LIBERTY
Under the terms of Ethelred's
grant to the priory Havant was free
from all service except the trinoda
necessitas, and before the exchange with
the bishop the monks had return of all writs there.
This privilege was confirmed to the bishop in 1284. (fn. 27)
The profits of court leet, formerly held twice yearly, (fn. 28)
were very valuable, since it seems to have been considered an advantage to be under the bishop's jurisdiction. Thus in 1337 Henry le Bold gave the lord 4d.
to be allowed to remain in his liberty and to come to
two lawdays yearly. Tithingmen of Hayling, Leigh,
Brockhampton, and Havant attended the tourns, and
as late as 1817 two constables for the liberty, a
coroner of the market, leather-sealer, ale-taster, and
haywards besides the tithingmen were appointed
at the court leet. (fn. 29) After the exchange between the
prior and the bishop the men of Havant still owed
suit at the prior's hundred-court of Fawley, for
Havant was included in Fawley hundred in 1316, (fn. 30)
and in May, 1465, the tithingman of Havant
paid a fine at the hundred-court of Fawley to
have release from suit of court of four men till
Michaelmas. (fn. 31) The lord of Havant also had wreck
of sea. (fn. 32) He was responsible for the repair of the
market house, and in 1645 was amerced £5, to be
paid to the poor of the town failing its repair
before a fixed date. (fn. 33)
BROCKHAMPTON
BROCKHAMPTON (Brochemtune, xi cent. ;
Brokhampton, xiv cent.), on the western borders of
the parish, was held of Earl Harold by Sired, who
also held Newtimber in Warblington. After the
Conquest the overlordship with that of the neighbouring manor of Bedhampton was vested in Hugh de
Port, Herbert the Chamberlain being the actual
tenant. (fn. 34) It was subsequently known as a hamlet of
Bedhampton, and was held in dower with that manor
by Joan widow of Reginald FitzPeter, (fn. 35) and the
histories of the two are coincident till 1428, after
which Brockhampton seems to have been merged in
Bedhampton manor (fn. 36) (q. v.).
There was also at Brockhampton at the time of the
Domesday Survey land with a mill, part of the
possessions of the monks of St. Swithun. (fn. 37) It was
apparently amalgamated with the manor of Havant,
with which it was conveyed to the bishop of
Winchester. The farm of the mill there formed an important item in the profits of Havant manor. (fn. 38) According
to an account dated 1319 this land consisted of rather
more than 60 acres, and the jurors then stated that six
oaks had been felled in 'the Newgrove.' (fn. 39) It is doubtful
whether separate courts were ever held for the
bishop's tenants at Brockhampton. In an account
tendered by the bailiff of Brockhampton perquisites of
court are mentioned, but from other items on the
same roll it would appear that the bailiff was including
also the profits of Havant manor. (fn. 40)
The manor of FLOOD
(fn. 41) (Flode, xiii–xv cent.;
Fludd, xvii cent.) was held of Havant manor by a
certain 'Geoffrey de la Flode,' who was succeeded
late in the thirteenth century by Ralph de Swanewych,
the bishop's servant. (fn. 42) In 1483 Joan, wife of William
Vernon, joined John Goring the elder and John
Goring the younger in releasing the 'manor of Flood'
to Reginald Bray and others. (fn. 43) Sir Reginald Bray
bequeathed a large part of his estates, and apparently
Flood with them, to his niece Margery wife of Sir
William Sandys, knt. (fn. 44) afterwards Lord Sandys of the
Vyne, whose son and heir,
Thomas, Lord Sandys, died
seised of Flood. (fn. 45) In 1612
William Sandys conveyed the
manor to John Dean with
warranty against the heirs of
William, Lord Sandys, and
others. (fn. 46) Probably this conveyance was in trust to sell,
for Flood came with Hall
Place (fn. 47) to Francis Wooder, (fn. 48)
who bequeathed it to his halfsister Dorothy Evans, (fn. 49) whose sister and legatee,
Elizabeth wife of Ascanius Christopher Lockman,
conveyed it in 1725 to Isaac Moody. (fn. 50) Under
the will of his son John it passed to Richard Bingham
Newland, who conveyed it in 1812 to William
Garrett, (fn. 51) who sold it again in 1820. (fn. 52)

Sandys of the Vyne. Argent a ragged cross sable.
The manor of LIMBORNE, which includes
Wade Court, was probably parcel of Warblington
manor, for the lands of Wade were amongst the
'terrae Normannorum,' and as such were granted in
1204 (fn. 53) to the earl of Arundel, with whose successors
the overlordship remained. Rominus Hospinel, who
succeeded Juliane de Wade as actual tenant, gave
I carucate in Wade in marriage with his daughter
Agnes to Richard Falconer in 1205. (fn. 54) William Falconer, probably a descendant, was enfeoffed of a
messuage at Wade by Hilary wife of Adam de Wanstead in 1250 ; (fn. 55) and John Falconer, to whom Isabel
de Merlay in 1256 granted a messuage and land in
'La Wade and Nytimbre,' (fn. 56) died seised of Limborne
c. 1305, leaving a daughter and heir, Joan wife of
John Butler. (fn. 57) In 1352 John Butler was holding
Limborne of the earl of Arundel, (fn. 58) and twelve years
later settlement was made upon John Butler, probably
son of the former John and his wife Katherine. (fn. 59) It
was possibly the same Katherine who, as wife of
William Upton, was imprisoned there and almost
starved to death in 1389, (fn. 60) and whose husband,
William Upton, had been outlawed for felony in the
previous year, while his estates, including Limborne,
fell to the mortgagees, John Brinkebon, Gilbert
Bannebury, and Hugh Tildesleghe. (fn. 61) Nevertheless,
Isabel wife of Geoffrey Roukele and sister and heir
of John Butler, died seised of Limborne, (fn. 62) which
was inherited by her grandson William Wayte of
Wymering (q. v.), who apparently conveyed it to
Richard Dalingrigge and his wife Sybil, for it was released to them in 1441 by Margaret wife of William
Wayte. (fn. 63) Richard Dalingrigge died in 1470–1, having settled Limborne upon Thomas Pound and his
wife Mercy in payment of a debt of 200 marks. (fn. 64)
This Thomas died 23 November, 1476, leaving a
son and heir John, (fn. 65) afterwards Sir John, Pound, who
was succeeded by a son William, (fn. 66) whose son Anthony
inherited Limborne on his father's death in 1525. (fn. 67)
Anthony Pound entailed his estates on his son and
heir Richard Pound and Elizabeth daughter of William
Wayte of Wymering in 1542, with remainder in tailmale to his own daughters Honor and Mary. (fn. 68) The
latter evidently married Edward White, for in November, 1580, Edward White died holding Limborne
by courtesy after the death of his wife Mary. He
was succeeded by his son John White, (fn. 69) who conveyed
the manor in 1594 to Robert Paddon, (fn. 70) from whom
it was purchased in 1604 by Henry Best, (fn. 71) who
immediately conveyed it to Arthur Swayne of Anne
Savage. (fn. 72) In 1615 Edward Swayne of Anne Savage
died seised of Limborne, leaving a brother and heir
Robert, (fn. 73) who conveyed the estate in 1619 to William
Dunches and Thomas Southe, (fn. 74) perhaps in trust for
sale, for Arthur Hyde was in possession in 1646, (fn. 75) and
was succeeded in 1654 by Lawrence Hyde. (fn. 76) Late
in the same century it seems to have become the property of Sir John Stonehouse, with whose daughter
Elizabeth it passed in marriage to Thomas Jervoise of
Herriard, (fn. 77) who conveyed it
to trustees, from whom it was
purchased in 1752 by Robert
Bold. (fn. 78) His son James died
without issue, and his co-heiresses sold the manor to
John Knight, (fn. 79) who bequeathed it to his two sons
John and William. (fn. 80) John
Knight, having purchased his
brother's moiety, in his will
dated 6 March, 1824, directed
that the whole manor should
be sold. It was purchased by
Messrs. Knight and Moore,
who sold it in 1846 to Charles John Longcroft,
author of a history of the hundred of Bosmere, (fn. 81) in
whose family it still remains.

Longcroft. Party fessewise nebuly gules and sable a lion argent between six crosslets fitchy or.
CHURCHES
The CHURCH OF ST. FAITH,
HAVANT, is an interesting cruciform
building, with a vaulted chancel, 30 ft.
6 in. by 19 ft. 3 in. ; north vestry and south organ
chamber ; central tower, 18 ft. 7 in. square ; north
transept, 21 ft. 9 in. by 19 ft. 6 in. with north
porch and west aisle, 13 ft. wide ; south transept of
practically the same dimensions ; and nave 55 ft.
long by 19 ft. 3 in., with north and south aisles
7 ft. 6 in. wide. (fn. 82)
The oldest architectural details date from the end
of the twelfth century, and are to be seen in the
tower, transepts, and nave. The chancel belongs to
the first quarter of the thirteenth century, the north
vestry to the fourteenth, while the stair-turret at the
north-east angle of the tower is a fifteenth-century
addition. There was no doubt an earlier church on
the site. From a note on the destruction of the
nave in 1832, (fn. 83) it appears that a concrete foundation
of Roman brick and cement underlay the pillars, and
several Roman coins were found during the work.
The only feature in the present building which suggests the incorporation of work older than the end of
the twelfth century is the fact that the west wall of the
tower is 6 in. thinner than the others, and may therefore represent the east wall of an earlier nave. The
unusual western aisles to the transepts (if indeed they
are contemporary with the transepts) may owe their
existence to some previous arrangement. The whole
building has been much repaired ; in 1832 the nave
arcades were taken down, apparently to give more
room for galleries, and the nave practically rebuilt.
In 1874 the central tower was found to be unsafe,
perhaps by reason of the loss of abutment brought
about by the destruction of the nave arcades, and it
was taken down, except the north-east stair-turret,
and rebuilt with the old materials. A plaster ceiling
which hid the vaulted roof of the chancel was taken
away, an organ-chamber added at the south-west of
the chancel, and the nave was entirely rebuilt on the
old lines, the capitals being copied from a late twelfth-century capital belonging to the nave destroyed in
1832, and now reset on the first pillar from the east
in the south arcade. The chancel is of two bays with
a quadripartite stone vault with moulded ribs springing from Purbeck marble corbels, the rubble filling of
the vault being set in courses parallel to the ridge.
The east window is a modern triplet of lancets, but
in the north wall the original lancet window remains
in the east bay, blocked on the outside by the fourteenth-century vestry. In the west bay on this side
is a fifteenth-century window of three cinquefoiled
lights with tracery in the head, set somewhat to the
west in the bay in order to clear the west wall of
the vestry.
In the south wall is a fifteenth-century window of
two cinquefoiled lights with tracery in the head, and
below it modern sedilia and piscina, with a small south
doorway to the west of them, also of modern stonework. In the west bay on this side is a modern arch
opening to the organ-chamber. The vestry on the
north of the chancel opens to it by a plain fourteenth-century doorway, and has also a modern external
doorway at the north-west. It is lighted on the east
by a fourteenth-century window of two trefoiled
lights, and in the north gable is a second window,
much restored, set at a height which suggests that the
vestry once had an upper floor.
The four arches carrying the central tower are
pointed, of two orders with edge-chamfers, the outer
orders on the west side of the east and west arches
having a keeled roll between hollows, as being those
which are most conspicuous from the nave. Their
capitals are scalloped and of late twelfth-century type,
and the jambs have half-round shafts to the inner
orders, flanked by fine Purbeck marble nook-shafts,
while the responds of the north and south arches are
of plain half-round section, and have modern foliate
capitals. The rood-loft was set against the east arch,
and the fifteenth-century stair leading to it still exists
at the north-east angle of the tower, and is continued
upwards to the battlements. The upper stage of
the tower has in each face a belfry window of two
pointed lights divided by a shaft with base and capital
of late twelfth-century style, and the level of the
eaves or parapet of this date is shown by a row of
corbels projecting from the wall. The tower has been
heightened, and now ends with an embattled parapet,
the turret being carried up above it and having a like
finish.
The north transept has an early sixteenth-century
east window of three cinquefoiled lights, and a north
window with modern stonework of three cinquefoiled lights and tracery of fifteenth-century style.
Both transepts have the unusual addition of a western
aisle, that in the north transept having an arcade
of two bays in late fifteenth-century style with
moulded arches and octagonal columns. It is
lighted by a west window of two uncusped lights,
perhaps fifteenth-century work with the cusps cut
away, and is entered at the north end through a
modern porch and doorway, over which is a window,
also modern.
The south transept has no window on the east, its
place being taken by an arch opening to the modern
organ-chamber.
Its south window is of three lights and modern, and
in the west aisle, which is separated from the transept
by a modern arcade of like detail with that in the
north transept, is a fifteenth-century south window of
three cinquefoiled lights with tracery over, and a
round-headed west window of late twelfth-century
date. This if in position shows that the west aisles
are contemporary with the rest of the transepts. In
the nave the eastern responds of the late twelfth-century arcades remain in position, and as before noted
the capital of the first column of the south arcade is
in part original work re-used. The rest of the arcades
are modern, but old material is worked into the west
respond of the south arcade. The clearstory has
round windows enclosing quatrefoils or cinquefoils.
The height of the original nave roof may be recovered
from openings on the west face of the tower below
the present roof, one in the centre being a round-headed doorway formerly opening on to the nave
roof, while on either side of it at a higher level
are two blocked pointed windows which looked over
the roof.
Into the west wall of the nave is built a Purbeck
marble slab with a curved lower edge, on which is
carved in twelfth-century style a lion between two
rosettes. It is perhaps part
of a font. The existing font,
which stands near the west
door of the nave, was made
in 1847.

Aileward. Sable a cheveron between three sheaves or.
None of the wood fittings
of the church are old, and the
only monument of interest is
the fine brass of Thomas Aileward, rector, who died 6 April,
1413. His effigy is shown in
a cope, fastened with a morse,
bearing his initials T. A., while
on the orphreys are sheaves,
roses, and fleurs-de-lis. The sheaves are taken from
his arms, which are shown on the only remaining one of
the four shields which formerly surrounded the effigy
and inscription. The inscription ends with the couplet:
Sis testis Christe quod non jacet hic lapis iste
Corpus ut ornetur sed mors ut permedicetur.
Thomas Aileward was rector 1397–1413, and was
chaplain to William of Wykeham, becoming his executor and biographer.
In the central tower is a ring of eight bells, the
treble and second given by Sir F. W. Fitzwygram in
1876, the third, fourth, fifth, and tenor being cast in
1714, the seventh in 1723, and the sixth recast in
1896.
The plate is modern, comprising a communion cup
of 1825, and a cup, flagon, two plates, and glass flagon
with silver stopper of more recent date.
The registers begin in 1653, the first book containing baptisms to 1703, marriages to 1726, and
burials to 1731. The second contains the burials in
woollen, 1678–1730, and the third the burials from
1730–1812. The fourth contains baptisms 1713–
1812, and marriages 1730–54, and there is also
a list of inductions of the rectors from 1618 to
1892. The fifth book is the printed marriage
register 1754–93, and the sixth continues the
marriages to 1812.
The oldest book of accounts runs from 1719 to
1748 and the vestry minutes from 1834 onwards are
preserved.
There is no mention of a church in the Domesday
Survey of Havant, though one of the two churches
included in the survey of Warblington may have been
at Havant.
The CHURCH OF ST. JOHN is of flint in the
Norman style, consisting of small chancel, nave, transepts, and aisles. The register of baptisms dates from
1841, and of burials from 1842.
ADVOWSONS
The advowson of the church of
St. Faith was, like the manor, a
possession of the monks of St.
Swithun, and was transferred with the manor to
the bishop, in whose gift it has been ever since. (fn. 84)
Under Bishop Stratford inquisition was made for the
ordination of Havant vicarage, (fn. 85) but no appropriation
seems to have taken place, for the living was and is
still a rectory. (fn. 86) The rector had peculiar jurisdiction
in the parish, (fn. 87) but these rights were virtually abolished
early in the last century. (fn. 88) There was also a rectory
manor the lands of which are now practically enfranchised. (fn. 89) Special privileges had been attached to
the church before the reign of Henry I, who confirmed
to it exemption from pleas as in the time of William II
and Bishop Walkelin. (fn. 90)
A parish was assigned to the chapelry of St. John
Redhill in 1840, (fn. 91) the chapel having been built there
two years before. (fn. 92) The living, which is a rectory,
is in the alternate gift of the rectors of Havant and
Warblington.
Under the will of Richard Dalingrigge of Wade, a
chantry was founded in the church about 1471, and
maintained for a time from the profits of his manor of
Iford in Sussex. Two priests were provided to sing
continually in Havant church for the souls of Richard
Dalingrigge, his wife Sibyl and their ancestors, but
four years after his death, Roger Lewkenor, his
nephew and heir-at-law, entered upon the manor of
Iford, declaring that Richard had made no such will,
and that Iford had descended from Sir Roger Lewkenor to Thomas Lewkenor, his father. (fn. 93) The chantry
evidently fell into disuse, for no mention of it occurs
in the certificates of chantries returned in 1547 ;
mention is made, however, of a stipendiary priest
maintained in Havant church for the ministration
of a brotherhood there, founded ' of the devotion
of the inhabitants,' and endowed with land and
money. (fn. 94)
A chapel in connexion with the church was built
at Langstone in 1869. There is also a Roman Catholic
church (St. Joseph's) in West Street, founded in
1874–5.
The elementary school was built in 1895, and
another in connexion with St. Joseph's was opened in
1875, while of the two Nonconformist schools, that
at Redhill was opened in 1860 and the Havant and
Bedhampton school in 1871.
CHARITIES
The Congregational Chapel trust
property and charities consist of the
chapel, schoolroom, and other buildings
erected on a site conveyed by deed of 13 January,
1891, with the proceeds of sale of the old chapel (1791),
and of a piece of land on the south side of the vestry
thereto ; the Lecture Hall erected on part of the same
site with the proceeds of sale in 1893 of the British
School formerly in Market Road; the Parsonage House,
let at £18 a year ; £252 2s. 8d. Consols given by
Thomas Bayly Silver, two-thirds of dividends for the
pastor and one-third for the chapel alms fund ;
£203 13s. 1d. Consols given by Isaac Clements, by deed
of 1880, for the benefit of the pastor ; and £46 17s. 2d.
Consols left by will of Miss Elizabeth Moore, proved
1886, dividends for the poor of the chapel. The
sums of stock are held by the official trustees, and the
trusts are administered under a Scheme of the Charity
Commissioners, dated 11 December, 1891.
In 1876 William Henry Stone by deed gave 5 acres,
5 poles adjoining the cemetery on the east side,
to let in allotments for the poor, the rents to be applied
in prizes to the cultivators. In 1894 1 acre, 3 roods,
8 poles were taken for the enlargement of the cemetery,
and a like quantity of land to the north of the allotment
was acquired by exchange.