CHRISTCHURCH or CHRISTCHURCH TWYNEHAM
Tweoxneham, Tweonea (x cent.); Thuinham
(xi cent.); Crischarche de Twenham, Cristeschirche
(xii-xv cent.).
Up to the year 1843 the parish of Christchurch
comprised an area of 24,640 acres, with a coast-line
stretching for a distance of more than 8 miles. In
1843 the ecclesiastical parish of Highcliff was formed,
but the civil parish of Christchurch remained unaltered
until 1894, (fn. 1) when an extensive subdivision was made,
resulting in the formation of six separate civil parishes
—namely, Christchurch East, (fn. 2) Hurn, Southbourne, (fn. 3)
Pokesdown and Bournemouth (fn. 4) ; the remainder, comprising about 1,000 acres in and around the town,
constituted the new parish of Christchurch. In 1897
the civil parish of Highcliff was formed by cutting
off from Christchurch East a wide parallel strip along
the coast; and in 1901 this parish was further
increased by a transference to it from Southbourne
parish of the promontory known as Hengistbury Head. (fn. 5)
In the following year the civil parishes of Southbourne and Pokesdown (fn. 6) were absorbed into that of
Bournemouth.
A great part of the parish was formerly common
land, but in 1805 (fn. 7) the common lands in Hurn
Manor and Hinton Admiral and Winkton tithings
were inclosed. In 1806 Burton tithing was inclosed, (fn. 8)
and in 1827 Roeshott, Rushford and Scott's Hill
Commons, Saltmarsh and Stanpit Field. (fn. 9) In 1878
the common field known as Portfield, to the north of
Christchurch, (fn. 10) was inclosed and has since been much
built over; a 'stint' ground of 15 acres has, however, been allotted out of it to those whose rights of
pasture were prejudiced, while a further 10 acres have
been made into a recreation ground.
The present parish of Christchurch comprises
1,030 acres, (fn. 11) of which 139 acres are covered by tidal
water and 2 by inland water, 57 acres are foreshore,
100 are arable land and 309½ permanent grass. (fn. 12)
The town lies between the Rivers Avon and Stour,
on a triangular site, with the apex to the east. The
priory, with the castle to the north, is nearest to the
point of junction of the two rivers, and the centre
from which the town has grown is the meeting point
of Castle Street, which runs east and west, with
Church Street going southwards towards the priory
and High Street running north. The latter widens
out and forms the principal street, with Millhams'
Street turning eastward from it towards the Avon,
and its continuation from the point where Barrack
Street comes in from the north-west is known as
Bargates, and continues as far as the bridge over the
South Western railway, close to the station. On
the west side of Bargates are some groups of houses
now called Pit. Spicer Street is so named from the
chairman of a committee which set itself to repair
damages here caused by a fire in 1826. On the
east of Bargates is the pound.
The Avon is crossed by Castle Street over a pretty
stone bridge with low arches and pointed cut-waters,
apparently mediaeval, and the general view of the
town from the east bank of the river is very beautiful,
with the great church standing close to the water on
slightly rising ground, near the Norman hall of the
castle and the ruined keep. The houses of the town
are not of much architectural interest, and are for the
most part of comparatively modern date, the bulk of
the new building being to the north, where the
presence of the railway station has caused a suburb
to spring up.
There are, however, one or two red brick 18thcentury fronts, and in Castle Street is an ancient timberframed house which has been refronted and is now a
butcher's shop. The town hall, of red brick and
stone, on the east side of the High Street, was removed
from the Square in 1859. A Congregational chapel
with a tall spire is also in the High Street.
The harbour, formed by the junction of the Avon
and Stour, is for the most part shallow, with a winding
channel leading to the narrow mouth known as
the Run, where the harbour communicates with the
sea by a deep channel formerly running eastwards
between the cliffs and a low sand-spit outside. In
December 1910 the channel was altered to a southerly
direction, passing through the sand-bank at a point
opposite Sandhills and Gundimore. The land surrounding the harbour is mostly low and marshy, except
on the south, where it is shut in by the lofty
peninsula of Hengistbury Head.
A little way to the west of this is Southbourne, a
growing watering-place 1½ miles from Christchurch
town. West of the town is the picturesque village
of Iford on the River Stour, close to which is the
ground preserving traditions of Saxon battles.
There was probably always a school in connexion
with the priory; it was included among the possessions of the priory when these were confirmed by
Baldwin de Redvers in about 1140. (fn. 13) At the time
of the Dissolution a master was kept to teach the
children grammar, and a daily lecture in divinity was
given. (fn. 14) At a subsequent date, which is not known,
a free grammar school was founded, (fn. 15) and from 1662
until about 1870, when the school ceased, it was
housed in St. Michael's Loft in the church, above the
Lady chapel. (fn. 16) In 1845 the endowments amounted
to £15 yearly, instruction in reading, writing and
arithmetic being given to ten boys. (fn. 17)
There was formerly a hospital of St. Mary Magdalene for lepers in the Barrack Road. Nicholas
Crompton was made governor in 1609. (fn. 18)
The burial-ground in Jumper's Road, opened in
1858, covers 14 acres and contains two mortuary
chapels.
The parish of Christchurch East lies to the northeast of Christchurch and contains 6,755 acres, (fn. 19) of
which 1 acre is covered by tidal water and 27 by
inland water; 2,285½ acres are arable, 1,737¾ permanent grass and 1,224 woods and plantations. (fn. 20)
There are many gravel and clay pits in the parish,
mostly now disused.
The River Mude rises upon Poors Common and
flows south through the parish.
Just north of Hinton is the small hamlet of
Beckley. Hinton Admiral is the property and
residence of Sir George A. E. Tapps-Gervis-Meyrick,
bart., to whom Beech House also belongs; Heathfield Lodge is the property of Mr. Evelyn Geoffrey
Saye; Winkton Lodge of the Misses Lassell;
Winkton House of Mr. J. D. Mills of Bisterne; Burton
Hall, a late 18th-century house of red brick with
stone dressings, of Major Henry Lloyd Powell, late
R.H.A.; and Whitehayes of Mr. Alfred Treeby.
The parish of Highcliff lies on the shores of
Christchurch Bay between Milton on the east and
Christchurch on the west. It contains 2,615 acres, (fn. 21)
of which 120 acres are covered by tidal and 4 by
inland water; 141 acres are foreshore, 896¾ arable
land, 539¼ permanent grass and 154 woods and
plantations. (fn. 22) The greater part of the parish is flat
and low-lying, but the land rises towards the eastern
boundary, a height of 134 ft. being reached in the
north-east corner. The village, which lies upon the
Lymington and Christchurch road, is beautifully
situated in the east of the parish upon High Cliff.
The cliff does not attain an altitude of more than
100 ft., and gradually falls away to the west. Two
miles south-west of the village is the hamlet of
Mudeford, on the shores of Christchurch Harbour,
the southern and eastern portions of which are within
this parish. The River Mude falls into the harbour
at Mudeford, as does the Bure Brook, which rises
in the parish. The promontory known as Hengistbury Head, the reputed landing-place of Hengist the
Jute, which incloses Christchurch Harbour on the
south and east, has since 1901 lain wholly within
this parish. Here upon Warren Hill, (fn. 23) where a
height of 123 ft. is reached, are disused ironstone
quarries, formerly worked for their ore and also used
from early times as building stone. On the north
side of the earthworks known as Double Dikes are
four barrows. (fn. 24)
Highcliff Castle, standing in a beautiful park upon
the cliff, (fn. 25) is the property of Brig.-Gen. the Hon.
E. J. Montagu-Stuart-Wortley, C.B., D.S.O., and
the residence of Sir Harold Harmsworth, bart. It
is an imposing modern building in a style based upon
the French architecture of the 15th century. It was
built about 1830 by Lord Stuart de Rothesay on the
site of an unpretentious building erected by the
Penleaze family after their purchase of the estate
from the third Earl of Bute, who had built a house
here from the design of the brothers Adam, which
was rendered uninhabitable and ultimately destroyed
by the fall of the cliff; the lodge gates are those of
the first house, and the grounds, which are finely
wooded, are surrounded by a wall of large red bricks
with a serrated cornice.
The present house is roughly L-shaped, the arms
running south and west, and the principal garden
front being inclosed between them. The meeting of
the arms consists of a large block of three stages, with
tall ornamental chimney turrets rising above the level
of the pierced parapet. At the south-east angle projects a large porch of three stages with ogee-headed
entrances on the south and west, and an oriel
corbelled out on the east side. A short wing of two
stages runs north-eastwards from this porch to a tower
of three stages with angle turrets, and to the east
again a long wing of a single stage runs eastward.
The south arm is of a single stage with very large
windows and is cruciform, having a semi-octagonal
termination flanked by short straight wings ending in
three sides of an octagon. The centre face of the
south octagon contains a doorway opening to a flight
of steps into the garden. The whole building is
crowned by an elaborately pierced stone parapet, and
at the north-west angle is an imposing carriage porch
with ogee-headed side openings, and a two-centred
arch to the full height of the north face, which is
steeply gabled and flanked by panelled octagonal
turrets.
Louisa Marchioness of Waterford, the daughter of
Lord Stuart de Rothesay, records that her father
brought from 'la Grande Maison des Andelys, near
Rouen,' cornices and window settings for incorporation in the building, (fn. 26) and it is from these that the
style of the house was developed, with more success
than might have been expected from the period.
The house has its place in modern history as the
residence in 1907 of the German Emperor during
his 'rest cure.'
Wolhayes is the residence of Mrs. John Mills;
Nea House of Gen. Sir William Gordon Cameron,
K.C.B.; Hubborn of the Hon. Lady Curzon-Howe;
Bure Homage of Mrs. Ricardo; and Sandhills, the
property and residence of Sir George Rose. Somerford Grange, which was once the grange of the prior
of Christchurch, was inhabited by John Draper, the
last prior after the Dissolution. It is now owned by
the Rev. Gustavus Brander.
The extensive parish of Hurn lies north-west of
Christchurch, and stretches further north than any
other parish in the hundred. It contains 6,945 acres, (fn. 27)
of which 81 acres are covered by inland and 4 by
tidal water, 990¼ acres are arable, 1,236 permanent
grass and 1,528 woods and plantations. (fn. 28) The
village lies 3 miles north-west from Christchurch
upon a road leading to Hampreston. North of it,
at Hurn Bridge, (fn. 29) the road crosses the Moors River,
which turns Hurn water mill close to the village.
Cottages and farm-houses are scattered over the
whole parish, and the open country is for the most
part low-lying. There are three tumuli on Foxbury
Hill and two on Matcham's Plantation in the far
north; upon the latter a height of 124 ft. is reached.
The highest point, however, in the parish (160 ft.)
is upon St. Catherine's Hill, near Christchurch. On
this hill are numerous tumuli and an ancient earthwork, (fn. 30) within which, to the south-west, can possibly
be traced the foundations of an ancient chapel. The
Cottage Homes and workhouse are in this parish. Just
off the main road, close to the county boundary, are
the hamlets of East Parley and Parley Green, while
those of West Hurn and Merritown are west of the
village. To the south, in beautiful grounds sloping
down to the Stour, is Heron or Hurn Court, once
the country house of the Priors of Christchurch and
now the seat of the Earl of Malmesbury.
Benjamin Ferrey the architect, who laid out
Bournemouth for Sir George Gervis, was born at
Christchurch in 1810. (fn. 31) John Stuart, third Earl of
Bute, politician and courtier, who died in 1792, spent
most of his time at Highcliff during the last years of
his life. Various members of the Rose family, who
lived at Sandhills in Mudeford, attained distinction;
William Stewart Rose was a great friend of Sir Walter
Scott, who, it is said, wrote Marmion at Sandhills.
Coleridge was living here in 1816. Sir Edmund
Yeamans Walcott Henderson, chief commissioner of
the Metropolitan police, who died in 1896, was
born at Mudeford in 1821. Charles Lamb lived for
a time at Burton, (fn. 32) as also, in 1800, did Southey,
who did much writing there. Edmund Lord Lyons,
admiral and diplomat, was born here in 1790.
Among the men of distinction educated at Christchurch Grammar School were Bingley the naturalist,
Warner the county historian, and Admiral Sir Harry
Neale. (fn. 33) The house built before 1787 by Gustavus
Brander on the site of the priory was once inhabited
by the Duke of Orleans, father of King Louis
Philippe.
The following place-names occur: Dudecompa (xii
cent.) (fn. 34) ; Dudmore (xiii cent.), (fn. 35) the modern Dudmoor;
La Grave, Bradefeld, and Hedenesbury (xii cent.), (fn. 36)
the modern Grove Farm; Bernsfield Heath in Hurn
parish, and Hengistbury Head, Waterditch (xii cent.
et seq.) (fn. 37) ; Burtoneslonde (xii cent.), the modern
Burton (fn. 38) ; Ochere (xiii cent.), (fn. 39) the modern Ogber;
Portfield in Christchurch (xiv cent.) (fn. 40) ; Milham
(xvi cent.), the modern Millhams (fn. 41) ; Pawmer's
Bridge (xvi cent.) (fn. 42) was probably the modern Palmer's
Ford in Hurn; Staple (xvii cent.), the modern Staple
Cross (fn. 43) ; Longlathes or Latches (xvii cent.), (fn. 44) the
modern Latch Farm in Hurn; Richedon (xii cent.),
the modern Ramsdown Hill (fn. 45) ; Portrenemede,
Hurlebat, and Ponsales (xiv cent.) (fn. 46) ; Benettyshey
(xv cent.) (fn. 47) ; Pounteslondes, Sedenhams and Crokker
(xvi cent.) (fn. 48) ; Cobland (xvi cent.) (fn. 49) ; Bromefelde
Farm (xvi cent.) (fn. 50) ; Buren or Burne Place in Hurn, (fn. 51)
Granborough and Stratford (xvi cent.) (fn. 52) ; Walmore,
Lykehaye and Nonnewade (xvi cent.) (fn. 53) ; Hamborough,
Bodyers, Gunters, and Ranckhams (xvi cent.) (fn. 54) ;
Mackcliffe (xvi cent.) (fn. 55) ; Duncombe Close and Scottes
Common (xvii cent.) (fn. 56) ; Garton, Little Podney,
Podney Magna, Ilesham, Morley's Cross and Creedes
(xvii cent.) (fn. 57) ; Horway Wood (xvii cent.) (fn. 58) ; Woor
and Mallards (fn. 59) (xviii cent.).
In 1590 a house called Gerrard stood on the site
of Somerford Manor, and near by was the Prior's
Withie. (fn. 60)
BOROUGH
To its position between the rivers
Avon and Stour the site of Christchurch owed its earlier name of
Twinham, representing an old English betwux thæm
eaum, 'between the waters.' The Hampshire Twinham first appears in the chronicle in the annal for
901, which relates the events of 899, the year of
King Alfred's death. Upon that event Ethelwold, a
younger son of King Ethelred I, seized the estates
of Wimborne of Twinham 'without the leave
of the king or the Witan.' The suppression of
his revolt was soon accomplished; its details are not
relevant here. (fn. 61) But it is important to note that in
the annal of 901 Wimborne and Twinham are
described, not as burhs, or strong places, but as hams,
the word most nearly approaching to the Norman
manoir. It is evident that in 899 Twinham possessed
no fortifications other than belonged to the normal
estate of the time. On the other hand, it is included
in the burghal hidage, which dates from approximately 920, and was therefore fortified and made a
borough at some time in the first quarter of the 10th
century. (fn. 62)
In 1086 the 'borough of Twinham' belonged
to the king, who owned thirty-one messuages there,
each of which paid 16d. land gavel. (fn. 63) Six others,
worth 13s. 4d., belonged to the priory. (fn. 64) In the
early 12th century the borough proper became a mesne
borough, being granted about 1100 to Richard de
Redvers as part of the honour of Christchurch (q.v.).
From that date the manor of the borough followed
the same descent as the rest of the honour till 1791,
when Sir George Ivison Tapps sold it in September
1791 to the Rt. Hon. George Rose, (fn. 65) who held various
official appointments during Pitt's administrations. In
1796 George Rose settled it upon his son Sir George
Henry Rose on his marriage, (fn. 66) who again in 1820
brought it into a settlement upon the coming of age
of his son George Pitt Rose. (fn. 67) Sir George Henry
Rose was still holding in 1834, (fn. 68) but in 1863 he
sold it to the trustees of the Earl of Malmesbury,
and the present earl is now lord of the manor.
The earliest grantor of municipal privileges was
probably Richard de Redvers. His son Baldwin
first Earl of Devon in a charter, known through a
later confirmation, (fn. 69) in about 1150 granted the burgesses exemption throughout all his land from gable
of standing in the market, from custody of thieves and
prisoners, from the Whitsuntide penny for ale, from
the reaping of half an acre and the carrying of writs,
from toll of salt and from every custom of trade; he
also remitted to them 10s. out of the 70s. (formerly
£4) which they were wont to render for the toll of
the town. (fn. 70) There is apparently no evidence of
another charter until that of Baldwin the seventh
earl, (fn. 71) quoted in the same confirmation. In this the
earl not only granted the burgesses market rights
(vide infra) but confirmed to them common of pasture
in the meadows of Stockmead, Beremead and Bernardsmead after his hay had been carried, on payment of
30s. yearly, and freedom from the obligation of
ransoming (fn. 72) their sons and daughters, both of which
privileges they had enjoyed in the time of his father,
in which matter the Lady Amice, his mother, gave
testimony in their favour. (fn. 73)
An extent of the borough given in the inquisition
on the death of Baldwin the seventh earl in 1262
shows that in burgo— that is to say, in terre nomine
burgi—there were 118 places or holdings. For the
most part each tenant held one place, but some held
fractions, and the rents of the places varied between
6d. and 2s. 4d., the more ordinary rent being 1s.
In the western part of the town were thirty-nine
holdings at the same varying rents, while there were
fifty-six general holdings also in the borough, representing 66 'places.' Thus altogether there were
224 places in the borough. (fn. 74) Another extent made
in 1300—that is, thirty-eight years later—shows that
there were then 228 places in the borough, forty-six
of which were counted in terra forinseca. This does
not, however, represent the total number of holdings,
as under the heading burgagia there are altogether
200 holdings, some of which represented more than
one 'place,' while many others were fractions of
places. Thus there are three holdings of four places
each, two of three places and several of two places,
while men like Godfrey the Baker or Alfred the
Butcher held only the fourth part of one place, or
Margery the Cordwainer and others held a small
portion of one place. Other holdings represented
portions of land. Thus Robert the Chaplain paid only
1d. rent at Michaelmas for land near the castle ditch,
or Richard Feron paid ½d. and 1s. at the feast of
Holy Trinity for a portion of land in aqua. One
seld also occurs in the list, and for this the almoner of
Christchurch Priory, who held it, paid 1s. at the
feast of St. John the Baptist. Similarly under the
terra forinseca the forty-six 'places' were divided into
thirty-seven holdings, one of which comprised five
places, another four, and several two; others comprised only a fourth or a third of a 'place.' The
rents as given in this extent differ little from those of
the earlier year, except that some special rents in
kind are added. Thus Robert Kene owed two
barbed arrows or 1d. for his portion of a 'place,'
John le Veylowed 1s. and 1 lb. of wax at Michaelmas
for his 'place,' and another man owed 1 lb. of cummin
or 1s. for his place. In the common field known as
Portfield, which evidently comprised 125 acres, there
were seventeen holders. Philip of Bathampton, the
largest holder, had 24 acres, for which he paid 4s.
yearly rent, at the rate of 2d. an acre; the smallest
holder, who had 1 acre only, paid a yearly rent of
two capons.
At the end of this extent there is an interesting
account of some of the customs of the borough. The
burgesses' rights of toll of the markets and fairs (see
later) and of common of pasture, as granted by Baldwin
the seventh earl, are recited in full. Further, the
burgesses owed the lord a heriot—that is to say, 'the
best beast if they have beasts.' Concerning the sale
of burgages, the seller and buyer had to give 2s. to
the lord—that is, each of them 1s.—for licence to
hold according to ancient custom. (fn. 75) The total amount
of the receipts of the borough had fallen from over
£23 to £11 10s. (fn. 76) between the years 1298 and
1301.
A survey of Christchurch taken on behalf of the
Prince of Wales, who held the interest of the priory
of Christchurch in the borough in the early 17th
century, shows that there was considerable confusion
between the rights of Lord Arundell of Wardour,
who held the honour, and those of the prince,
particularly as to all waifs, strays and felon goods
within the castle, manor and borough, all fines,
amercements, recognizances and return of writs, the
office of admiralty within the hundred, castle, manor
and borough with royalties, wrecks, flotsam and jetsam,
sturgeons, whales, &c. (fn. 77)
Separate courts, consisting of the three weeks
court and the half-yearly view of frankpledge, were
held for the borough. The officers of the borough
were the reeve, two constables, a bailiff and an aletaster. (fn. 78)
The mayor of the borough is not mentioned on
the court rolls, although the office of Mayor of Christchurch is known to have been in existence as early
as 1486, when there was a bond between the Mayor,
burgesses and commonalty of Christchurch and the king
for the payment of £1,000 within a year. (fn. 79) Moreover, in 1518 John Bevyll, mayor, Thomas Hancock
and John Mody, constables of the borough, and others
were witnesses to a feoffment by William Peyntour,
younger son of John Peyntour, mercer, of Christchurch, (fn. 80) and it certainly seems strange that on the
court rolls only the reeve should be mentioned.
However, the probability is that the mayor was
only the reeve (fn. 81) under another title and held no
higher status. Of the mayoral office in Christchurch and its rights and duties we know little. In
the early 17th century the mayor was said to hold
the profits of the market, (fn. 82) which in the early 14th
century had belonged to the burgesses in toto. (fn. 83)
From the 16th century the mayor has always also
acted as returning officer for members of Parliament.
The borough received its first parliamentary summons in the last year of the reign of Edward I, and
similar writs were issued for the next two Parliaments,
in 1307 and 1308; no returns, however, were made,
and no further writ was issued until 1571. This
was probably due to the poverty of the town, a
matter of importance in the days of salaried representatives. (fn. 84) In 1571 a committee was appointed to
confer with the law officers about the return of
burgesses from Christchurch, (fn. 85) and from that year
until the passing of the Reform Act (fn. 86) two members
were regularly returned. The franchise was vested
in the corporation, which in 1832 consisted of the
mayor and thirty-five burgesses, of whom twenty at
the most had voted for the previous thirty years. (fn. 87)
Since the Reform Act only one member has been
returned and the borough extended so as to include
the whole of the then parishes of Christchurch and
Holdenhurst. (fn. 88) The nomination of one of the members belonged of ancient right to the lord of the
manor of the borough. (fn. 89) Many notable men have
represented Christchurch in Parliament: Sir Thomas
Clarges sat 1679–85, Francis Gwyn 1689–95, (fn. 90)
1701–10 and 1717–22, Edward Hooper 1740–61,
James Harris 1761–80, Sir James Harris, K.B.,
afterwards first Earl of Malmesbury, 1770–82, the
Rt. Hon. George Henry Rose 1818–44, and William
Sturges Bourne (Secretary for Home Affairs in 1827)
1802–12 and 1818–26. (fn. 91)
The town did not receive a charter of incorporation until 1886. Numerous complaints in connexion with this were made from time to time, (fn. 92)
and a charter, incorporating the borough under a
mayor and twenty-four chief burgesses, was actually
drawn up in 1670 at the request of the burgesses. (fn. 93)
It was further enrolled on the Letters Patent for that
year, but the enrolment was cancelled, and thus the
charter never came into force. (fn. 94) In the reign of
George I a report was made to the king recommending an incorporation, but nothing further was
done in the matter. (fn. 95) Before 1886 the government
of the borough was nominally vested in the mayor,
burgesses, bailiff and town clerk, but the town was
wholly in the jurisdiction of the county magistrates. (fn. 96)
The present corporation, under the charter of 1886,
consists of a mayor, four aldermen and twelve
councillors.
There was a yearly fair in Christchurch in the
12th century belonging to the lord of the manor and
held on Trinity Thursday. Baldwin the first Earl of
Devon about 1150 granted a tithe of the tolls
taken at the same to the priory, (fn. 97) and about 1200
Earl William granted a further sum of 20s. from the
proceeds of the fair to the priory. (fn. 98) In 1176
12 marks were paid as tallage by the borough. (fn. 99) In
1257 Baldwin the seventh earl received from the
king a grant of another fair, to be held on the vigil,
the feast and the morrow of St. Faith (fn. 100) ; shortly
after he granted the burgesses the entire toll and
stallage and all customs of merchandise of this fair,
both within and without the town, saving to himself
and his heirs attachments and pleas of the same.
In 1620 the Trinity fair belonged to the Prince
of Wales as owner of the Priory Manor (q.v.); it
was of little value, however, being leased to William
Colgill for 6d. yearly. The other fair belonged at
that time to Lord Arundell, lord of the manor of the
borough. (fn. 101) The fairs were still held in 1846, on
Trinity Thursday and 17 October (fn. 102) ; the former
was still held in 1862, (fn. 103) but was abolished in April
1872. (fn. 104)
The weekly market has always been held on
Monday. In about 1150 Earl Baldwin granted the
priory the first market in case of his absence,
otherwise the second, (fn. 105) and this was confirmed by
his descendants. (fn. 106) He also granted the burgesses the
toll of the market at the fee-farm rent of 70s. (fn. 107) In
1298 the farm of the market and toll was 100s., of
which 20s. was paid to the prior for the anniversary
of Countess Mabel, (fn. 108) and it was still 100s. in 1301. (fn. 109)
In 1620 the market was described as a poor one, for
which the town paid 30s. to the lord of the manor
of the borough; it seems, however, to have been
leased to the mayor for 6d. yearly by the Prince of
Wales as lord of the priory manor of Christchurch
Twyneham. (fn. 110)
The town has never enjoyed much prosperity
at any time. There seem to have been no special
industries here in early times, though the salmon
fisheries must have given occupation to a number of
persons; these have always been famous, and are
said to have produced at one time £1,000 yearly. (fn. 111)
In 1538 the town was described as being 'situate
and set in a desolate place, in a very barren country
out and far from all highways, in an angle or a
corner, having no woods nor commodious country
about it, nor nigh no good town, but only the said
poor town of Christchurch which is a very poor town
and slenderly inhabited.' (fn. 112) In 1579 there was a
suggestion to establish the manufacture of frizados
here. (fn. 113) In this connexion John Hastings, who had
introduced the industry from Holland, petitioned
the queen that whereas he had 'with great charge,
cost and travails sett up and brought to perfection
the making of frizados and other commodities in the
port toun of Christchurch,' he might be enabled to
'setle and see these workes to contynue to the better
maintenance of thinhabitantes and the better
upholding of the same towne.' For this cause he
besought that, whereas the houses in the town were
decayed and the queen thus defrauded of her rents,
he should be granted all her houses and lands at fee
farm, rendering the decayed rents for the same.
Further, that the manors of Hurn and Somerford,
which had been granted by the Crown for term of
one life with no rent reserved, should be granted to
him for a term of years after the death of the lessee.
If the queen would grant this request Hastings promised that he would be bound within a few years to
furnish 'with armour and weapons sorted mete and
serviceable a hundred able men of suche as shalbe
sett a wourk and inhabite there wich shalbe not
onlie to the strengthening of these partes being now
weak, thoroughe lack of habitacion but also maye
searve for the protectioun of the Isle of Wight or
any other service.' (fn. 114) But the queen remained
obdurate and the attempt was frustrated.
In 1644 the Parliamentarians under Sir William
Waller captured the town (fn. 115) ; the garrison left there
was, however, insufficient, and it was reduced to
great straits in the following January, orders being
given to relieve it from the Isle of Wight. (fn. 116) There
was a riot in the town in 1650 at the committee of
plundered ministers (fn. 117) and a more serious one in
1663, when the sheriff was stoned and the life of the
mayor threatened. (fn. 118) In the reign of Charles II the
Earl of Clarendon, who owned the manor, being
anxious to improve the town, conceived the idea of
making the Avon navigable from Salisbury to Christchurch. An Act for the purpose was secured, (fn. 119) but
the scheme was not carried out. The accumulation of
sand has long rendered it impossible. At this time
Andrew Yarranton reported Christchurch as a convenient place for building ships and suggested the
outlay of £2,000 upon a fort to prevent landings (fn. 120) ;
nothing, however, was done in either direction. As
a harbour Christchurch has never been of much
value, being inaccessible except to vessels of very
small draught. This is due to the ledge of rocks
which stretches from Hengistbury Head towards the
Needles in the Isle of Wight, and obstructs the
entrance. There is high water in the harbour twice
at every tide owing to the situation of the coast with
respect to the Isle of Wight and the curious projection
of the land at Hurst Castle.
The knitting of silk stockings was once a thriving
industry in the town, but it has been declining for
some time past; the most important industry, however, was the manufacture of fusee chains for watches
and clocks, which was encouraged here by Robert
Cox in the 18th century and which until recently
provided work for many women and girls in the
three factories devoted to it. (fn. 121) Christchurch has
several times. been visited by reigning monarchs.
King John stayed here, sometimes for two or three
days, in the years 1200, 1204–6, 1208, 1210, 1212
and 1215. (fn. 122) It was visited by Edward VI in 1552,
when the Privy Council met here, (fn. 123) and by Queen
Anne in 1702. (fn. 124)
The Boundary Commissioners of 1832 reported
that no trade or manufactures were then carried on.
'The town presents no symptoms of activity or
industry. The houses are of a middling description.
The appearance of the inhabitants, who are thinly
scattered, gives no indications of prosperity.' (fn. 125)
CHRISTCHURCH CASTLE
CHRISTCHURCH CASTLE was probably erected by Richard de Redvers after
he had received the grant of the manor
from Henry I. (fn. 126) Its descent was identical with that
of the manor or honour (fn. 127) of which it formed the
'caput.' The keep on its mound was excepted from
the grant of the borough to the Rt. Hon. George
Rose in 1791, and is now the property of Sir George
Meyrick. The eastern part of the court hall, however,
belonged, while standing, to the Earl of Malmesbury
as lord of the borough.
In an inquisition taken in 1262 is a list of those
owing castle guard at Christchurch. Foremost among
these was the prior, who had to provide ward
for eight days at his own cost for land he held
at Sway. (fn. 128) It can have been very seldom, however,
that this service was requisitioned, for the castle
did not figure very prominently in history and is
remarkable chiefly on account of the long list of
its famous owners. In December 1307 an order was
issued to keep securely and defend the castle, the king
being about to set out to foreign parts. (fn. 129) From a
survey of 1656 it appears that upon the apprehension of any felon within the liberty of Westover the
constable had to receive him and convey him to the
justice and to the gaol at his
own cost; or the tithingman
might bring the felon and chain
him to the castle gate and leave
him there. (fn. 130) The castle in the
days of Cromwell's wars witnessed stirring scenes, but in
May of 1650 a committee of
the Council of State conferred
with the army officers as to the
advisability of its demolition.
This was decided upon in the
following November, the task
being assigned to the Governor
of Southampton. (fn. 131) He seems,
however, to have neglected his
orders, for in July of the following year directions were sent to
three Hampshire justices of the
peace with regard to the fort
at Christchurch, which still remained undemolished. 'There
are guns mounted on it without any guard, which may give
an opportunity to enemies to
put their destructive designs in
execution, their disaffection
wanting no greater encouragement than such a hold. Demolish, and remove guns to
Pool.' (fn. 132) And so its fate was
sealed.
The site of the castle lies to
the north of the church, being
now cut up into gardens. Its
eastern boundary is a mill stream
on the banks of which is the
12th-century hall of the castle, the 'Norman House,'
now the property of Captain Douglas, who has
inherited from the Rose family. Some hundred
yards west is the earthen mound on which stands the
ruined keep, the only remaining part of the masonry
defences. Its external measurements are 50 ft. by
45 ft. 6 in. and the walls are 9 ft. 8 in. thick. The
plan is a simple rectangle, except that the four
external angles are cut back, leaving diagonal faces
7 ft. 8 in. wide at each corner. Of the north and
south walls only the base-courses remain, but on the
east and west the walls stand to some height, the level
of the first floor being marked by a few corbels. A
large window opening cut square through the wall,
but having lost its inner and outer faces, remains on
the west, and another of the same kind on the east,
both having lighted the first floor, and at the south
end of the east wall is a third opening at a lower
level, apparently the entrance to the basement. Over
it are corbels as for a wooden stair. At the southwest angle are the spring of a small arch and the jamb
of a window, but no other detail of any kind remains
and the walls in many places have been stripped of
their facing and repaired in modern times. They
are built chiefly of ironstone and Freshwater stone,
the ashlar-work being of Binstead, Bonchurch and
Freshwater stone, while a certain amount of rough
Purbeck marble is used in the walling. The 'Norman
House' is more remarkable in this respect, being
in large measure built of rough blocks of this
costly material, doubtless waste from the quarries.
Ironstone and sandstone are also used, and the wrought
details are in Binstead and Freshwater stone. A
conglomerate full of small broken white shells in a
red or red-brown matrix also occurs.

Christchurch Castle
The 'house' is a rectangular building 67 ft. by
23 ft. within the walls (the greatest length being from
north to south), two stories in height, and on the
whole in a very good state of preservation. Its western
gable stands to the full height, and though the roofs
and floors are entirely destroyed their lines may yet
be seen. The ground story was a basement, lighted
only by narrow slits, the principal room, which
probably formed the hall of the 12th-century castle,
being on the first floor. All the arrangements of the
building cannot now be seen owing to the dense ivy
with which the walls, especially on the south and
west, are smothered, but enough remains to make the
building of great value, dating as it does from the
second quarter of the 12th century. The east wall
is washed by the stream which forms at this point
the boundary of the castle site, and has three shallow
pilaster buttresses on its outer face, and at the southeast angle a block of masonry 13 ft. square projecting
into the stream. It contained the garderobes, and
has an arched channel through it from north to south
at the ground level, but its upper part is ruined and
overgrown with bushes and its original arrangement
is lost. To the north of it is a water-gate 5 ft.
wide, opening from the basement on to the stream,
and having a low segmental-arched head with a
chamfered label and abaci. The basement shows no
marks of subdivision by masonry walls, and is lighted
by narrow square-headed lights, three on the east and
one on the north. It was entered by a door on the
west near the north end, and by another in the south
wall. Close to the west door is a small square recess
in the wall. The southern window in the east wall
is blocked by the northern part of the projecting
garderobe, showing that this part of it at least is an
addition to the original building, and an opening
has been forced through the north jamb of the
window.

Plan of 12th-century Hall, Christchurch Castle
The hall on the first floor was a fine room, lighted
on three sides—north, east and west—by two-light
windows and having a large fireplace in its east wall.
The principal entrance seems to have been by a door
in the west wall, and at the south end, at the southwest corner, is another doorway, which probably led
to the kitchens and offices. At the south-east is a
passage in the wall leading to the garderobe. Old
engravings show a third two-light window on the
east side of the hall over the water-gate, and it is not
clear whether the south end was divided off by wooden
partitions or whether the whole area of the first story
was one room. Its floor was of wood, the holes for
the beams which carried it still remaining, and the
roof was probably an open-timbered one. The only
ornamental details are to be found in the windows,
which have two round-headed lights divided by a
Purbeck marble shaft rebated for wooden window
frames. The heads of the lights are carved with
zigzag and a diaper pattern, and over them is an
inclosing round-headed arch with a band of horizontal
zigzag and a chamfered label with a single line of
zigzag on the chamfer. The fireplace, which is a
fine and early example, is unfortunately much ruined,
though its circular chimney shaft remains. It probably
had a round-arched opening like that in the 12thcentury house at Southampton called King
John's House. In the north-east angle, now
much ruined, is a narrow newel stair leading to the basement.
It seems probable that the curtain wall of
the castle inclosure must have been continuous with the east wall of this hall, and
old engravings show the start of such a wall
at the south-east. At the present day all
evidence is hidden by the ivy at this point,
and the north-east angle is too much ruined
to preserve any traces of such a wall. The
garderobe tower was formerly as high as the
east wall of the hall, and was lighted by a
narrow slit on the east. In the south gable
of the hall is an original round-headed opening, but below this, down to the level of the
first floor, the wall seems to be blank as far
as it can be seen for ivy.
MANORS
The earliest record of CHRISTCHURCH that has been found is a grant
in the year 939 by King Athelstan to
the monastery at Milton in Hampshire of one weir
on the Avon there. (fn. 133) In 1086 the manor of Christchurch belonged to the Crown, but since the time of
the Confessor the woodland had been absorbed into
the king's forest, the profits of the manor having
thereby been halved. (fn. 134) About the year 1100 Henry I
granted the manor to his cousin Richard de Redvers, (fn. 135)
who had adhered to him in his contest with his brother
Robert. Baldwin son of Richard and first Earl of
Devon or Exeter sided with the Empress Maud
against Stephen and defended Exeter and Carisbrooke
Castle. He was compelled to fly to Flanders in
1136, and, being declared an outlaw, his possessions
reverted to the Crown; they were, however, shortly
afterwards restored to him. He was succeeded in
1155 by his son Richard second Earl of Devon; he
died in 1162 and was followed by his son Baldwin,
who, dying without issue in 1180, was succeeded by
his brother Richard. Four years later he too died
without issue, the family estates passing to his uncle
William de Redvers (styled de Vernon, from the
place of his birth in Normandy), the second son of
Baldwin the first earl. (fn. 136) He in the year 1200
granted the manor of Christchurch as dower to his
daughter Joan on her marriage with Hubert de Burgh
Earl of Kent, reserving, however, to himself a life
estate; this grant was confirmed by the king. (fn. 137) Joan
died without issue before 1209 and her father
survived her until 1216, when he was succeeded by
his grandson Baldwin de Redvers sixth Earl of Devon. (fn. 138)
His son Baldwin the seventh earl, who succeeded his
father in 1244, (fn. 139) had a son John, who, however, died
before his father, so that when the latter died in
1262 the estates devolved upon his sister Isabel widow
of William de Fortibus Earl of Albemarle. The
manor or honour of Christchurch included at that
date the borough of Christchurch, the manor of
Westover and the hundred of Holdenhurst. (fn. 140) In
1298 and 1301 it appears that the honour comprised
three distinct manors, viz. the manor of the borough,
the manor of Christchurch Foreign, embracing that
part of the modern hundred which lies east of the
Stour exclusive of the borough, and that of Westover,
which lies west of the Stour. (fn. 141) Isabel did not obtain
possession of the manor or honour until the year 1292,
when her brother's widow Margaret, then the wife
of Robert Aguillon, who held it of her in dower,
died. (fn. 142) There were at this time a number of liberties attached to the manor; that of free court with
sac and soc, tob and tem and infangenthef had been
granted by Henry I to the first earl. (fn. 143) In 1280 the
liberty of taking wreck of sea had been enjoyed by
the lord of the manor since before the time of King
Richard I, while that of plea of unlawful distraint levied
upon tenants of the manor was first exercised by the
seventh earl. The liberties of free gallows and
assize of bread and ale were appurtenant to the free
hundred annexed to the manor. (fn. 144) Isabel de Fortibus
died in 1293, (fn. 145) having a few hours before her death
executed a conveyance to Edward I (fn. 146) of the greater
number of her estates, including Christchurch Manor.
This the king alleged she was prompted to do 'from
the consideration that her next heir Hugh de
Courtenay was so remote in blood that if he were of
age she might have married him without a dispensation.' (fn. 147) There is little doubt that the transaction was
grossly fraudulent, and it is not improbable that the
countess's charter was forged by the notorious Adam
de Stretton, chamberlain of the Exchequer. (fn. 148) It is
true that when Hugh de Courtenay, heir of the
countess by descent from Mary the elder daughter of
William de Vernon, (fn. 149) petitioned Parliament for restitution of the estates in 1315, at the inquiry which
was ordered much episcopal and other evidence was
forthcoming tending to dispel all suspicion of foul
play (fn. 150) ; but this was inevitable under the circumstances, and the mere fact of such an inquiry being
held is very significant. Nothing, however, came of
this petition, nor of either of its renewals in 1347 (fn. 151)
and 1364 (fn. 152) by the petitioner's son Hugh. In 1299
Edward I granted as dower to Margaret his second wife,
daughter of Philip III, King of France, the castle,
hundred and borough of Christchurch and the manor
of Westover, (fn. 153) which together constituted the manor
of Christchurch, and as such continued to be held
together until the 16th century. In 1314 there
was a commission of oyer and terminer on the complaint of Queen Margaret touching certain trespasses
in the manor. (fn. 154) On her death in 1317 the manor,
then worth £120 yearly, was given as dower to
Queen Isabel the wife of Edward II. (fn. 155) The next
year she received a further grant of various incidents
and liberties, including return of the king's writs and
summonses and all fines and amercements of the
tenants in any of the king's courts, with forfeitures
and deodands, &c. (fn. 156) In 1330 she surrendered the
manor, (fn. 157) and a few weeks after the king granted it
to William de Montagu and Katherine his wife in
tail, (fn. 158) to include all profits since the surrender (fn. 159) ;
following this was a grant of various royalties and
liberties, including, besides those granted to Queen
Isabel, wreck, waifs and strays, chattels of felons condemned and fugitives. (fn. 160) These grants were confirmed
in 1337 (fn. 161) and 1338. (fn. 162) William de Montagu was
created Earl of Salisbury in 1337, (fn. 163) and from this date
Christchurch, like the other estates which belonged to
him, followed the fortunes of the Earls of Salisbury,
passing in 1471 to Isabel daughter of the 'Kingmaker' and wife of George (Plantagenet) Duke of
Clarence. (fn. 164) The story has been already told so often (fn. 165)
that it need not be repeated here.

Redvers. Or a lion azure.

De Fortibus. Gules a cross vair.

Montagu. Argent a fesse indented of three points gules.

Nevill. Gules a saltire argent and a label gobony argent and azure.
On the death of Isabel, in 1476, her husband held
the manor until 1478, when he was beheaded and
attainted. (fn. 166) His son and heir Edward Plantagenet,
then aged two years, spent most of his short life in
the Tower and was executed in 1499 for planning an
escape. Henry VII on coming to the throne granted
the manor to his mother Margaret Countess of
Richmond, who owned it in 1494 (fn. 167) and probably
until her death in 1509. (fn. 168) In 1513 Henry VIII
restored Lady Margaret Pole, daughter of the Duke
of Clarence and the last of the Plantagenets, to the
family honours and estates. (fn. 169) She thus became
Countess of Salisbury and obtained possession of
Christchurch Manor. (fn. 170) In the year 1541, however,
she suffered the common fate of her family, her
possessions escheating to the Crown. (fn. 171)
From the records of this period it appears that the
manor or honour now comprised the castle, borough
and hundred of Christchurch, the lordships or manors
of Christchurch and liberty of Westover and the
hundred of Westover. (fn. 172) This estate was co-extensive
with that comprised in the former description of the
castle, borough and hundred of Christchurch and the
manor of Westover. (fn. 173)
Edward VI in 1547 granted the castle and
hundred of Christchurch to his uncle Edward Duke
of Somerset and Lord Protector. (fn. 174) The grant was
confirmed in 1550, (fn. 175) but on the attainder and death
of the Lord Protector in January 1552 (fn. 176) his escheated
estates were in May of the following year granted to
Sir John Gate, kt. (fn. 177) However, the latter was attainted almost as soon as he had obtained possession, (fn. 178)
and in June 1554 the whole of the estates (fn. 179) were
given to Francis Earl of Huntingdon and Catherine
his wife and the heirs of the body of Catherine, with
certain contingent remainders in favour of heirs of
the attainted Countess of Salisbury. (fn. 180) Catherine
survived her husband and died in 1576, (fn. 181) being
succeeded by her son Henry Earl of Huntingdon,
who in 1592 received a further grant of the estates,
together with a grant of the reversion expectant upon
the contingent remainders mentioned in the grant to
his father and mother, supposing they ever vested. (fn. 182)
In the same year he suffered a recovery of the
premises. (fn. 183) He died without issue in 1595, and was
succeeded by his brother George, who in 1597 conveyed the estates to his younger son Henry Hastings (fn. 184) ;
the latter in the year 1601 sold them to Thomas
Arundell, afterwards first Lord Arundell of Wardour. (fn. 185)
Doubts had arisen at that time as to what liberties
were attached to the manor, (fn. 186) and in 1616 there was
a grant and confirmation by James I to Lord
Arundell of all those previously granted to former
holders; these were set out in full, one of the most
important being that the estates should be free from
all Admiralty jurisdiction, with power for the lord
himself to hold an Admiralty court between high and
low water and to determine all Admiralty matters. (fn. 187)
This seems to have been a liberty which the grantee
found much difficulty in exercising. After the death
of James I there were complaints by the king's
officers with regard to the opposition they met with
from Lord Arundell, poor men who were summoned
by them to Vice-Admiralty Courts being afraid to
incur his displeasure by attending. (fn. 188)

Hastings. Argent a sleeve sable.

Arundell. Sable six hirondelles argent.
In 1636 Lord Arundell (fn. 189) settled the manor, after
the death of himself and Anne his wife, upon his six
daughters. (fn. 190) His wife died the following year and
he himself in November 1639. A month earlier,
however, he had purported to convey the settled
estates to Cecil Lord Baltimore, the husband of his
daughter Anne, who at his death entered upon them. (fn. 191)
His title was no doubt soon upset, but the daughters
do not appear to have obtained possession, for when
the lands of Henry Lord Arundell, grandson of the
first lord, were sequestered for his recusancy in 1646
Christchurch Manor was forfeited amongst the rest.
A claim was, however, at once made by four of the
daughters and the infant daughter of a fifth, who was
then dead, to have five-sixths of the manor delivered
to them. (fn. 192) Against this claim Lord Baltimore and his
wife asserted that they had been granted a lease of the
sequestered two-thirds of the manor. The next year
John Earl of Shrewsbury and his wife Frances, one of
the daughters, commenced an action to assert their
claims, (fn. 193) and in 1652 Frances made her will, leaving
her share, if it should be recovered, as portions
among her younger children. (fn. 194) In 1654 two of the
daughters contracted on the Recusants' Act for twosevenths of meir shares, (fn. 195) and in 1665 the co-heirs
and their representatives joined in selling the manor
to Edward Earl of Clarendon, the lord chancellor. (fn. 196)
In 1707 his son Henry, who had succeeded him in
1674, was anxious to find a purchaser for the estates,
which were then heavily mortgaged. (fn. 197) Robert Pitt,
father of William Earl of Chatham, described the
property in a letter to his father as the most desirable
then in the market. His father, however, in replying,
recalled that there were flaws in the title. (fn. 198) The
estates were sold in 1708 to Peter Mews, who was
knighted by Queen Anne. On his marriage in 1719
he settled Christchurch on Lydia Gervis or Jarvis, his
wife, who held it till her death in 1751 without
issue. She left it by will to her nephew, Jarvis
Clerke, with remainder to Benjamin Clerke, sons of
her sister Agnes and their heirs male. Jarvis died in
her lifetime, without issue, but Benjamin survived her
and left a son Joseph Jarvis Clerke, who, inheriting, (fn. 199)
barred the entail, (fn. 200) and died without issue in 1778,
leaving the estate to his cousin George Ivison Tapps,
great-grandson of Elizabeth, another sister of Lydia, (fn. 201)
who was created a baronet in 1791. He devised his
estates to his son Sir George William Tapps Gervis,
who died in 1842, leaving a son Sir George Elliott
Meyrick Tapps-Gervis-Meyrick, who died in 1896,
and whose son Sir George Augustus Elliott TappsGervis-Meyrick is the present owner. (fn. 202)

Tapps. Azure a fesse or between three rhinoceroses argent with three scallops gules on the fesse.

Meyrick. Sable a cheveron argent between three ragged staves or aflame with a fleur de lis gules between two Cornish choughs on the cheveron.
At the time of the Domesday Survey the canons of
the Holy Trinity owned 5 hides and a virgate in the
vill of Twyneham, which were stated to have always
belonged to the church. (fn. 203) When Henry I granted
Richard de Redvers the manor of Christchurch, the
latter confirmed to the canons all the land held by
them up to that time. (fn. 204) From his descendants the
priory received numerous grants and confirmations of
grants of land and liberties. (fn. 205) The priory was suppressed in 1539, and in the following year Henry VIII
granted Thomas Wriothesley and William Avery a
lease of the priory for twenty-one years. (fn. 206) Five years
later the king granted Thomas Wriothesley, then Lord
Wriothesley and Lord Chancellor, the site of the
priory with the new house upon it called the Church
House and the demesne lands, together also with a
fishery in the Rivers Stour and Avon and other possessions of the suppressed priory, to hold during his
life, (fn. 207) and two months later he granted the reversion
of the same premises to Stephen Kirton, a London
merchant, and Margaret his wife. (fn. 208) In 1557 Queen
Mary granted Robert White a thirty years' lease of
some land in Christchurch and another fishery which
had belonged to the priory, (fn. 209) and later he obtained
possession of the priory manor, which he owned at his
death in 1565. (fn. 210) In 1610 it was granted by James I
to Henry Prince of Wales, being then described as the
manor, vill, borough and grange. (fn. 211) Henry died in
1612, and five years later the same premises were
granted to his brother Charles Prince of Wales, (fn. 212) Sir
Francis Bacon, Sir John Daccombe, Sir James Fullerton and others being given a lease for the term of
ninety-nine years in the premises. (fn. 213) In 1628 the
surviving lessees conveyed the unexpired lease to
William Williams, Robert Michell, Walter Markes
and Robert Marsh, as representatives of the Mayor
and commonalty and citizens of the City of London, (fn. 214)
and later in the same year the king assigned the
reversion of the term and the reserved rent to Edward
Ditchfield, John Highlord, Humphrey Clarke and
Francis Mosse in fee farm as trustees of the Mayor
and commonalty and citizens of London. (fn. 215) Two
years later Richard Fenn, citizen and alderman of
London, purchased the manor and took the assignment
of the lease of ninety-nine years. (fn. 216) He then conveyed the manor to his brothers James and Robert,
subject to a yearly rental of £32 14s. 1d. In March
1664 Robert Fenn made a fresh settlement of the
manor, settling it on himself and Frances his wife and
afterwards on their son Richard. (fn. 217) In 1667–8
Frances Fenn, widow, and Richard Fenn (the son)
were holding the court of the manor; while from
1677 to 1678 Frances Fenn, widow, held the court
alone. (fn. 218) It appears, however, that Richard Fenn
her son did not die until 1683 and that on his death
the manor descended to his only sister and heir Jane,
widow of John Tregonwell. Already, however, Jane
must have held the manor in lease, since in 1679
she and her husband John Tregonwell were holding
the court of the manor and in 1681 she was holding
the court as a widow. (fn. 219) In 1690 she conveyed the
manor, together with Somerford and Knapp farm
and fulling mill, to use for her life to her daughter
Mary Luttrell and after her to Tregonwell Luttrell
her son or any other of her sons. (fn. 220) Sir Jacob Banks
married Mary Luttrell and the manor passed to their
son Jacob Banks, who in 1728 suffered a recovery of
the same to bar all entailments. (fn. 221) In 1734 Jacob
Banks was still holding the manor, but in 1738 the
rents were paid to James Willis, who may have
been acting as steward only. (fn. 222) For the next few
years the history is uncertain, but shortly before 1775
the manor was purchased by Gustavus Brander, (fn. 223)
who, dying in 1787, left it to his cousin John
Spicker for life with remainder to his cousin's
sons successively in tail. John Spicker assumed the
name of Brander, and when his son Gustavus Brander
came of age in 1814 there was a re-settlement. (fn. 224)
Brander sold the manor in 1830 to Sir George Ivison
Tapps, and his descendant Sir George A. E. TappsGervis-Meyrick now holds it. (fn. 225)
At the time of the Domesday Survey there were
two mills in Christchurch, one owned by the king (fn. 226)
and the other by the priory. (fn. 227) It was probably the
former which Baldwin de Redvers in about 1140 gave
to the Abbot and brethren of Savigny, (fn. 228) and which
Isabel de Fortibus granted in about 1272 to the
abbey of Quarr. (fn. 229)
The manor of SOMERFORD, which extends from
the east side of the harbour to Black Stoke, was in 1086
included either in the king's manor of Twyneham
or in the priory estate. Baldwin first Earl of Devon
and Richard his son in about the year 1140 confirmed
an estate here to the priory, (fn. 230) and it was further confirmed by Baldwin the third earl in about 1175,
when it consisted of a hide and a virgate of land. (fn. 231)
The priory received further confirmations of the
estate from William the fifth earl (fn. 232) and Isabel de
Fortibus; in that of the latter, made in the year
1272, it was described as 'all the manor of Somerford with its hamlets.' (fn. 233) These hamlets were doubtless those of Bure, Chewton and Street. 'The land
of Beora and Chiuentone' was granted to the priory
early in the 12th century by Hawise Countess of
Lincoln, daughter of Richard de Redvers, (fn. 234) and the
grant was confirmed by his son the first Earl of Devon
and by subsequent earls. (fn. 235) 'The land of La Stret'
belonged to the priory before 1150, and was confirmed to it by various Earls of Devon. The three
estates were all held of the manor of Somerford, as
the charter of Isabel in 1272 (fn. 236) and subsequent
records show. All three hamlets were returned as
belonging to the priory in 1316. (fn. 237) The priory continued to own the manor, (fn. 238) receiving a grant of free
warren there in 1384. (fn. 239) At the Dissolution in 1539
John Draper, the prior, in addition to his pension of
£133 6s. 8d., was granted the mansion at Somerford
known as the Prior's Lodging. (fn. 240) The manor remained in the king's hands until 1553, when
Edward VI granted it to his uncle Sir Henry
Seymour for his life. (fn. 241) From this time a series of
leases of various parts of the manor were granted. (fn. 242)
In 1610 the manor was granted by James I to
Henry Prince of Wales, (fn. 243) and from this date it
followed the descent of the prior and convent's
manor of Christchurch Twyneham, being leased to
the same trustees, and granted in fee farm to the
same trustees in 1628, (fn. 244) and passing to Richard
Fenn, who bought the two manors for £5,400. (fn. 245)
It passed with Christchurch Twyneham into the
Banks family, being held by Jacob Banks in 1728. (fn. 246)
A little later it passed to Sir John Strachan, who
got into pecuniary difficulties and conveyed it to
John Spicker in trust for Charles Brander. (fn. 247) This
conveyance was declared by Chancery to have been
obtained by misrepresentation and by taking undue
advantage of the necessitous situation of Sir John.
Spicker was ordered in March 1759 to reconvey
the estate to Sir John, who thereupon sold it
in May following to Henry Dagge of the Middle
Temple. Sir John must have died very shortly
afterwards, as his widow Dame Jane Strachan
married Dagge in 1760. At Dagge's death it passed
to his nephew Henry (son of John Dagge), who sold
it on 27 July 1797 to John Purdue. In 1801 Purdue
sold it to Richard Debarry, who in 1809 sold it to
Sir George Ivison Tapps, whose descendant Sir George
A. E. Tapps-Gervis-Meyrick is now lord.
The farm-house or 'site of the manor' of Somerford was in lease to William Goldwyre in the reign
of James I, (fn. 248) and his family continued to hold it
down to 1781, when it was acquired by Gustavus
Brander, (fn. 249) who pulled down the old house and
built a new one on its site. It has descended in
the Brander family, and now belongs to the Rev.
Gustavus Brander. (fn. 250)
The 'mansion-house of Somerford known as the
Prior's Lodging' (distinct from the farm-house or
'site of the manor') was granted in 1539 to John
Draper, the late Prior of Christchurch, in addition,
as we have seen, to his pension. (fn. 251) In 1541 it
was included in the grant of the rectory of Christchurch to the Dean and Chapter of Winchester, with
whom it remained (fn. 252) until sold in 1799 to James
Harris, Lord Malmesbury, with the rectory of
Christchurch. The deed of sale was enrolled in
Chancery in 1801. (fn. 253) In 1834 James Edward
second Earl of Malmesbury exchanged 'my old
tythe barn called Somerford Grange' for some land
in Bure and Hurn belonging to John Spicer. (fn. 254)
This was presumably the ancient 'mansion-house.'
In 1086 an estate called Sclive (Cliff) was held by
Walkelin Bishop of Winchester, whose predecessors
had always owned it. It consisted at that time of
only 8 acres of meadow, though in the reign of the
Confessor, before its absorption into the forest, it had
been assessed at 3 hides. This estate was probably
the modern Highcliff. (fn. 255) It belonged to the priory,
being parcel of the manor of Somerford. (fn. 256)
Chewton water corn mill, which still stands, has
been always held of the manor of Somerford. (fn. 257)
The manor of HINTON or HINTON ADMIRAL
(Hentune, xi cent.; Henton, xiii–xvii cent.; Henton
Aumarle, xiv cent.; Hempton or Hompton Aumarle,
Henton Amerle or Amarle, Hynton Amerell, xv cent.;
Hington Amerell, Hynton Admyrall, xvi cent.) (fn. 258) lies
to the north-east of Christchurch. It was held of
the honour of Christchurch. In the time of the
Confessor Ulwi and Edric each held estates here. In
1086 both were held by Earl Roger of Salisbury in
chief, Fulcuin holding half a hide of him and Nigel
1 hide. Some of the land had by then been taken
into the king's forest. (fn. 259) Before the grant of Christchurch Manor by Henry I to Richard de Redvers
the overlordship passed to that family, and in about
1250 half a hide in Hinton, evidently Fulcuin's
portion, was held of the Earl of Devon by Gregory
and Maud de Kene for the eighth part of a knight's
fee, (fn. 260) while Reginald de Albemarle, Nigel's successor,
held Hammes and Hinton of the same earl for the
fourth part of a knight's fee, (fn. 261) the subsequent descent
of the overlordship being identical with that of
Christchurch Manor (q.v.).
Reginald de Albemarle was succeeded by William,
who owned the fourth part of a knight's fee in
Hinton at his death in 1288. (fn. 262) This passed to his
son Geoffrey, who apparently conveyed it to William
de Albemarle, for in 1316 he was returned as one of
the lords of Hinton, the others being Edmund le
Boteler (Butler) and Joan widow of Henry le Moyne. (fn. 263)
William gave his wife Agnes a life estate in the
manor, with remainder to John Gimmings for his
life; the latter afterwards conveyed his estate to
another William de Albemarle, who in turn conveyed
it to Sir William de Albemarle, kt., son of William
and Agnes. (fn. 264) Agnes held the quarter of a fee in
1346, (fn. 265) but died soon after, as in 1355 her son Sir
William conveyed his manors of Hinton and Hamme
Albemarle to Thomas Warren, an annual rent of
£100 to become payable by the heirs of the latter
two years after his death. (fn. 266) In 1379 the manor was
settled on Edith daughter of Thomas Warren in
tail, with remainder to Richard Horn (fn. 267) ; the latter
owned it at his death in 1394, his heir being Julia
his daughter, wife of John Syward, jun. (fn. 268) It soon
after came into the hands of the More family, Robert
More and his wife Joan owning it in 1406. (fn. 269) In
1419 it was settled by them, (fn. 270) and in 1428 John
More their successor owned the quarter of a fee in
Hinton which Geoffrey de Albemarle had once held. (fn. 271)
Three years later the manor was held by Katherine
de Styntesford, still for a quarter of a knight's
fee. (fn. 272)
The next record of the manor that has been found
is in 1536, when, in a chancery suit between Tristram
Fitch and Alice Storke, widow, it was ordered that
the manor should be assigned to the former, (fn. 273) although
Alice's husband had owned a considerable estate at
Hinton. (fn. 274) In 1558 John Machell settled all his land
at Hinton upon Thomas his third son in tail, with
remainder to John his eldest son in tail. (fn. 275) He would
appear to have owned the manor, as in 1560 there
was a conveyance of it by trustees to Thomas, (fn. 276)
who leased it for three lives to William Clatford.
John Machell, on succeeding to it, disputed the
validity of the lease, (fn. 277) and in 1592 conveyed the
manor to John Gundrey and John Crocker. (fn. 278) In
the 17th century the manor belonged to the Tulse
family and in the early 18th presumably to the
Hinxman family. (fn. 279) In 1767 it belonged, together
with the Christchurch estates (q.v.), to Joseph Jarvis
Clerke, (fn. 280) from whom Sir George Ivison Tapps
inherited it. (fn. 281) It is now the property of his greatgrandson Sir G. A. E. Tapps-Gervis-Meyrick, bart.
The so-called manor of NORTH HINTON
(Northentone, xii–xiii cent.; Northynton, xvi cent.;
Northington, xvii cent.) originated in an estate held
by the priory of Christchurch. In 1199 Richard
Breton owned land there (fn. 282) ; Roger Breton succeeded
to it, and in 1249 his sister and heiress Maud granted
the prior 2 virgates there. (fn. 283) In 1263 the prior was
liable for castle guard at Christchurch in respect of
land at Hinton called Brutons. (fn. 284) A few years later
the prior received from Isabel de Fortibus Countess of
Albemarle a part of the land which had been given
to her and her deceased husband by Eustace of
Hinton, and this was confirmed by the king in 1313. (fn. 285)
At the time of the Dissolution the priory estate was
worth £9 0s. 6d. yearly, £8 3s. 10d. being the farm
of the capital messuage now known as North Hinton
Farm, and 16s. 8d. the rent of the customary land. (fn. 286)
Five years later, in 1544, it was granted to Sir
William Berkeley, kt., (fn. 287) whose successor Sir John
Berkeley, kt., sold it in 1570 to Robert Bond. (fn. 288)
William Bond in 1604 conveyed the greater part of
it to Harry Hastings, (fn. 289) whose successor George
Hastings owned 430 acres there in 1670. (fn. 290) The
first record of the 'manor' that has been found is in
1733, when it belonged to Joseph Hinxman, jun. (fn. 291)
In 1798 it was conveyed by Thomas Gale and Susan
his wife to John Elliott. (fn. 292) It is now the property of
Sir G. A. E. Tapps-Gervis-Meyrick, bart.
At the beginning of the 12th century the vill of
HURN (Heorne, xii cent.; Horne, xvi–xviii cent.)
passed with the royal grant of Christchurch Twyneham to Richard de Redvers, by whom it was shortly
afterwards granted to the priory of Christchurch. (fn. 293)
Baldwin de Redvers his son, first Earl of Devon,
confirmed this grant and his son, the second earl,
added a further confirmation describing the estate for
the first time as 'the two Hurnes.' (fn. 294) In 1285 the
prior and convent had a grant of free warren in their
demesne lands in Hurn, (fn. 295) and they held this manor, to
which various additions were made in the next
centuries, until the Dissolution. (fn. 296) In March 1540
the king granted Thomas Wriothesley and William
Avery a twenty-one years' lease of the manor, (fn. 297) and
in 1553 Edward VI gave the manor to his uncle Sir
Henry Seymour, kt., for his life. (fn. 298) The reversion
was granted by Queen Elizabeth in 1574 to Thomas
Henneage, Miles Finch and Michael Henneage, (fn. 299) and
they in the following year assigned it to Sir Henry
Seymour for £400, (fn. 300) his life estate thus becoming
merged in the freehold. He died in 1578, having
by his will directed the manor, then held in chief for
the twentieth part of a knight's fee, to be sold within
three years after his death. (fn. 301) Presumably his son
John Seymour, then aged eighteen years, purchased
it, for in 1598 he settled it upon his wife Susan, (fn. 302)
and in 1616 on payment of £2399s. 4½d. he secured
from James I a grant and confirmation of the manor
to be held as before for the twentieth part of a
knight's fee. (fn. 303) He died the following year and was
succeeded by his son Edward, then aged thirty-seven, (fn. 304)
who in 1624 suffered a recovery of the manor. (fn. 305) It
was soon after sold to Robert Jason, who, dying possessed of it in 1637, was succeeded by his son Robert, (fn. 306)
who was made a baronet in 1661; he died in 1675
and was followed by his son Robert, the second
baronet, who resettled the manor in 1680. (fn. 307) His
son George dying unmarried about 1697, it passed
to his sister Anne, wife of Thomas Partington, (fn. 308) who
in 1706 conveyed it to Robert Southam for ninetynine years. (fn. 309) However, in December 1751, before
the lease had expired, William Webb was dealing
with the freehold of the manor, which he conveyed
to Joseph Lyne and Elizabeth his wife, (fn. 310) who in the
following April conveyed it to John Willis for £2,200.
James and John Willis sold the manor in June 1754
to Edward Hooper, who already held Heron Court.
Edward son of this Edward Hooper died a bachelor
and left the manor at his death in 1795 to James
Harris Lord (afterwards first Earl of) Malmesbury,
his first cousin once removed, (fn. 311) from whom it has
descended to his great-great-grandson, James Edward
Harris, fifth and present earl.

Hooper. Or a fesse between three boars passant azure with three rings or upon the fesse.

Harris, Earl of Malmesbury. Azure a cheveron erminois between three hedgehogs or and a chief of augmentation argent with the Black Eagle of Prussia therein.
The mansion-house of Heron or Hurn Court
formed part of the manor of Hurn until 1575, when
it was leased by Sir Henry Seymour to Robert Odber
for a term of ninety-nine years. In June 1652
Robert Odber assigned the lease to Parkinson Odber,
to whom in June 1658 it was renewed for another
term of ninety-nine years, namely until 1674, by
Sir Robert Jason, then lord of Hurn. Parkinson
Odber's will was proved in November 1661, in
which month his executors assigned the leases of
Hurn Court to Edward Hooper. Before 1674 the
latter secured a renewal of the lease from Sir Robert
Jason until Michaelmas 1773. In May 1700 the
remainder of the lease was settled on Edward son of
Edward Hooper on his marriage with Lady Dorothy
Ashley, and in the following July Edward Hooper
the elder bought the reversion of the fee simple from
the devisees in trust of Sir Richard Hawkins, to
whom in 1680 Sir Robert Jason had conveyed the
same. Edward, grandson of Edward Hooper the
purchaser dying unmarried in 1795, left Heron
Court to James Harris Lord (afterwards first Earl of)
Malmesbury, from whom it has descended with the
manor to the present earl. (fn. 312)
Heron Court, which is on the site of the manorfarm of the prior and convent, is an E-shaped house, the
north front and main block being part of the old
house. A drawing of the house made in 1806
shows out-buildings to the east and west; those on
the west are still standing, but the others were
cleared away in about 1807. Another story as well
as a west wing were then added to the house by
Lord Fitz Harris, afterwards second Earl of Malmesbury, improving the interior but rather spoiling the
symmetry of the external proportions. The park is
well wooded, and contains several very fine cedars of
Lebanon.
There is a mill on the Moors River at Hurn.
At the time of the Domesday Survey Hugh de Port
held both HURN and KNAPP (Chenap, xi cent.;
Cnoppe, xii cent.; Cnappe, xiii–xiv cent.; Knape,
xvi cent.) of the Bishop of Bayeux, and both were
held of him by a certain Hugh. Both were also
assessed as they had been in the time of the Confessor
at 1 hide, but whereas Hurn had been then held by
two allodial owners, Knapp had been held by three
and there had been three halls there. (fn. 313) In the 13th
century these two estates were represented by half a
knight's fee held by the St. Johns, as heirs of Hugh
de Port, in Hurn, Knapp and Murding. This halffee was then held of Robert de St. John by Aubrey
de Botreaux, of whom the heirs of Philip de la Hurn,
Richard Bacon and Hugh de Murding held separate
portions. (fn. 314) In 1316 (fn. 315) and 1347 Maurice le Brune
and other heirs of Aymer de Valence held the same
half-fee of Edmund de St. John, (fn. 316) to whose widow
the same was confirmed in dower in 1349. (fn. 317) In
1392 Isabel de Poynings, sister and heiress of Edmund
de St. John, granted all her estate in Hurn and Knapp
to the Prior and convent of Christchurch. (fn. 318) Thus the
Port estate in Hurn and Knapp (fn. 319) became absorbed
into the priory manor of Hurn and followed the
same descent (q.v.). Other land in Knapp was
included in the manor of Funckton or Merritown
(vide infra).
There was a mill at Knapp in 1086 worth 20s.,
together with a fishery worth 50d. (fn. 320) These both
continued to belong to the priory. (fn. 321) The mill was
destroyed by fire in 1760, at which time it belonged
to Matthew Aldridge, (fn. 322) but it was rebuilt and is still
standing.
The land which belonged to the priory in 1086
included an estate at 'Bostel' with a third part of a
mill. It was held of the king by Alnod the priest,
who had held it of the Confessor. (fn. 323) It was confirmed
to the priory by Richard de Redvers in about 1100 (fn. 324)
and on several subsequent occasions. (fn. 325) It is probably
represented by Bostell or Bosley Farm, which was
conveyed to James Hooper in July 1700 by Matthew
Blucke and Richard Webb. In 1716 it was held by
the Rev. Thomas Hooper, of whom it was purchased
by Edward Hooper, his elder brother. From the
latter it has passed with Hurn to the present Earl of
Malmesbury. (fn. 326)
The manor of FUNCKTON or MERRITOWN
(Fonkehurne, xiv cent.; Fonketon, Fowncktowne,
xvi cent.; Funk Town, xvii cent.; Founthill, Fincton,
xviii and xix cent.) seems to have originated in an
estate there and in Christchurch, Knapp and Murding
which was in 1308 conveyed by William Bolymer
to Elias de Godele and his wife Christine, (fn. 327) and
which was held for half a knight's fee of the honour
of Christchurch. (fn. 328) For the next 200 years its descent
was the same as that of Sandhill Manor, near Fordingbridge (q.v.), and on the death in 1507 of Richard
Molines it passed to his son William. (fn. 329) He settled
the 'manor' of Funckton (so called for the first time)
on John Due and Margaret his wife for their lives,
and in 1542 he settled the reversion, after his own
death, upon George Molines in tail. (fn. 330) In 1587 there
was a settlement of the manor by Anthony Molines, (fn. 331)
and three years later there was a further settlement
of it upon Michael Molines. (fn. 332) In 1627 it was conveyed by Sir Barentine Molines, kt., and Michael
Molines to Mark Bidlecombe. (fn. 333) It remained in the
Bidlecombe family until 1728, when, after the death
of Martin Bidlecombe the younger, it was sold to
John Gore, who settled it on his wife Lucy in 1730 (fn. 334)
and was holding it with his wife in 1731. (fn. 335) In
1738 Mary daughter of John and Lucy Gore married
Robert Hippesley, and the manor was settled on her
and her husband. (fn. 336) In 1786 it was conveyed by
their heir John William Hippesley and John Long
and his wife Ellen, presumably a daughter of Robert
and Mary, to George Aldridge. (fn. 337) However, in 1800
an exchange was effected by which Droxford Farm in
the parish of Droxford with a sum of £5,600 was
transferred from Lord Malmesbury to George Aldridge
in return for the manor of Funckton or Merritown. (fn. 338)
From that date the manor and lands have descended
with the title and now belong to the present Earl of
Malmesbury.
Only one block of the original manor-house of
Merritown is now standing, the rest having been
pulled down late in the 18th century. Since that
time it has been used as a farm-house, and the long
disused ice-house is nearly overgrown by vegetation.
The second Earl of Malmesbury discovered encased
in the wainscoting of what was once the drawingroom of Merritown a fine 17th-century threequarter length portrait of George Villiers, second
Duke of Buckingham, by Michael Wright. It now
hangs in the dining-room at Heron Court. The
resident at Merritown in 1760 set up an obelisk on a
barrow on the common nearly a mile north of the
house and planted some fir trees round it. Writing
in 1834 Lord Malmesbury described the firs as a
battered clump known as 'Hobluss,' a corruption of
the name of the otherwise forgotten obelisk. (fn. 339)
The manor of WINKTON (Weringetone, xi cent.;
Winton, xvi-xviii cent.; Winckleton, xvii cent.),
lying to the north of Christchurch, was held of
Edward the Confessor by Earl Tostig. In 1086 it
belonged to Waleran the huntsman, of whom it was
held by one Robert; 1 hide and half a virgate of
land, together with all the woodland, had by this time
been absorbed into the king's forest, while a further
virgate had been given by William I to a certain
priest (fn. 340) ; the remainder was gelded at 3 hides and
1 virgate. In about 1280 John of Monmouth held
one knight's fee in Winkton in chief. (fn. 341) John de
Campeny held this fee of him as of his barony of
Walter Waleran, and attached to another fee which
John de Campeny owned in Wiltshire. (fn. 342) A hundred
years later the overlordship was in the hands of
Oliver de Ingham, and at his death the knight's fee
he owned in Winkton—valued at 40s. yearly—was
assigned to Joan his daughter and Roger Lestrange her
husband. (fn. 343) In 1406 the manor was held of Miles
de Stapleton as of his manor of Dean, (fn. 344) and ten years
later it was held of his heirs, (fn. 345) that being the last
record that has been found of the overlordship.
John de Campeny sold part of his estate in Winkton
to Christchurch Priory, (fn. 346) while the remainder, or the
greater part of it, was acquired by William Gundeville,
and was owned in 1316 by Robert Gundeville. (fn. 347)
The latter still held it in 1344, (fn. 348) but two years later
it belonged to Richard of Fernhill (fn. 349) and Henry
Gundeville, (fn. 350) being then described as half a fee in
Winkton and Steeple Langford in Wiltshire which had
belonged to William Gundeville. (fn. 351) Henry's quarter
of a fee descended to Alice the wife of Sir Thomas
West, kt. She died in 1395 seised of half the manor
of Winkton, (fn. 352) which passed to her son Thomas, the
estate at his death in 1406 being regarded as a distinct
manor. (fn. 353) He was followed by his son Sir Thomas,
whose brother and heir Reginald succeeded to the
manor on his death in 1416. (fn. 354) Richard of Fernhill's
quarter of a fee descended to Ralph Bush, and in 1431
Sir Reginald West owned 'the manor of Winkton,'
while Ralph Bush held 'another manor in Winkton.' (fn. 355)
This other manor was in all probability that afterwards known as the manor of Fernhills Court in
Winkton (q.v. infra).
Sir Reginald afterwards became the sixth Lord
De La Warr and died in 1450, being succeeded by
his son Richard, (fn. 356) who died in 1476, having eight
years before settled the manor of Winkton upon his
wife Katherine. (fn. 357) She died in 1494, the manor
passing to her son Thomas West, the eighth lord, (fn. 358)
at whose death in 1525 it devolved upon his son
Thomas. In the year 1538 he appears to have had
thoughts of selling it, according to a letter from
Harry Huttoft, customer of Southampton, to Lord
Cromwell. (fn. 359) At his death in 1554 the manor
passed to his grandson William, tenth lord, who
owned it in 1568. (fn. 360) Two years later his son
Thomas West, with others having interests in it,
conveyed the manor, together with that of BOCKHAMPTON
(fn. 361) (Bachameton, Bochamton, xiii cent.;
Brokehampton, xv and xvi
cent.; Bockington, xvi and
xvii cent.), to Sir John
Berkeley, kt., and John
Griffithe, probably on mortgage or by way of settlement. (fn. 362) This is the first
record that has been found
of the manor of Bockhampton, which from this date
until the year 1603 passed
with Winkton. It may be
suggested that up till then it
had been parcel of Winkton
Manor, from which at this
date it became detached, (fn. 363) being held as a separate
manor, which ultimately became known as that of
WINKTON WESTBURY (vide infra).

West, Lord De La Warr. Argent a fesse dancetty sable.
In 1591 both manors, together with that of Fernhills Court (which reappears for the first time since
1431), belonged to William Waller, who mortgaged
them in that year to John Berkeley, (fn. 364) who in the
same year conveyed them to Edward Read. (fn. 365) Numerous fresh encumbrances were created by William
Waller, and in 1601 the three manors were sold by John
Berkeley as mortgagee to John Moore, who took conveyances from the various encumbrancers, including
Edward Read. (fn. 366) Two years later John Moore conveyed all three manors to William Tulse. (fn. 367) That of
Winkton belonged in 1646 to Edward Lewen (fn. 368) ; eight
years later it was held by Richard Stephens, (fn. 369) but
Edward Lewen still owned it in 1670. (fn. 370) It soon after
became known as the manor of WINKTON LEWEN,
and in 1722 it belonged to Jacob Perkins, (fn. 371) whose
successor Edmund Perkins held it in 1752. (fn. 372) No
further record of the manor of Bockhampton has been
found until 1707, when it was owned by John
Hoskins. (fn. 373) It was then called the manor of Winkton,
but by 1738 it was known as the manor of Winkton
Westbury. In that year a third part of the moiety
of it was conveyed to John Miller by Philip, Elizabeth and Anne Walter. (fn. 374) In 1752 it was owned by
Edmund Perkins, (fn. 375) who, as has been seen, also possessed the manor of Winkton Lewen. Both manors
continued in the Perkins family until 1802, when
the widow of James Francis Perkins conveyed to
Charles Jenkinson, who in 1816 sold to James Procter
Anderdon. In 1829 Anderdon sold to Sir George
Pocock, who ten years later sold to Thomas Jesson.
The latter sold in 1848 to Henry Castleman, whose
widow sold the manor in 1867 to J. H. Dart, after
whose death in 1887 the trustees of his will sold it to
Sir George Meyrick in 1890. (fn. 376)
The manor of FERNHILLS COURT (Farnelles or
Fernile Courte, xvi cent.; Farnels Courte, xvii cent.) in
Winkton originated, as has been seen, (fn. 377) in the half of
Winkton Manor which Richard of Fernhill held in
1346 (fn. 378) and Ralph Bush in 1431 for a quarter of
a knight's fee. (fn. 379) No record of the manor has been
found from that time down to 1591, (fn. 380) when it
was held by William Waller. (fn. 381) Its descent during the
next twelve years was identical with that of Winkton,
William Tulse owning it in 1603. (fn. 382) It was still in
his family a century later, when it belonged to another
William Tulse. (fn. 383) In 1732 Katherine Tulse sold it to
William Goldwyre for £500, (fn. 384) and in the late 18th
and early 19th centuries it belonged to the Mansfield
family. Its identity is now lost.
At the time of the Domesday Survey there were
two mills in Winkton, which paid a rent of 450 eels. (fn. 385)
The manor of EAST PARLEY (Porle, Perleye,
Esperle, Est Purle, xiii cent.) lies to the north-west of
Christchurch, near the county boundary. In the 13th
century Robert de St. John held half a knight's fee
there of the king in chief; William de la Falaise held
it of Robert, and Aubrey de Linguire held it of
William. (fn. 386) The St. John overlordship continued for
many years. The manor was held of Robert's grandson John, the first Lord St. John, in 1300 (fn. 387) ; also in
1307 for the service at this date of a quarter of a
knight's fee. (fn. 388) When he died in 1329 he owned
half a fee in East Parley and Rockford, (fn. 389) as did his
son Hugh, the second lord, when he died eight years
later, (fn. 390) and his grandson Edmund, the third lord, at
his death without issue in 1347. (fn. 391) Two years later
the half-fee, worth 40s. yearly, was ordered to be
delivered to Margaret eldest sister of Edmund and
John de St. Philbert, her husband. (fn. 392) In the years
1450, (fn. 393) 1486 (fn. 394) and 1572 (fn. 395) the manor was held of
the Prior of St. John of Jerusalem in England, but
no further record of the overlordship has been found.
William de la Falaise and Aubrey de Linguire
held the manor of Robert de St. John (fn. 396) in the 13th
century, and from that date the manor followed the
descent of Rowner (q.v.) until 1382, when Sir
Maurice le Brune, kt., conveyed the manor to
William Ringbourne, the latter granting him a life
estate in it. (fn. 397) Seven years later Sir Ingram le
Brune, kt., son of Sir Maurice, confirmed the manor
to William Ringbourne. (fn. 398) William died in 1422, (fn. 399)
and must have granted the manor to his wife Agnes
in dower, for six years later her second husband John
Holcombe owned it. (fn. 400) William Ringbourne, son of
William and Agnes, owned the manor when he died
in 1450, and was succeeded by his son Robert. (fn. 401)
The latter died without issue possessed of the manor
in 1485, his heir being his brother William. (fn. 402) On
the death of the latter in 1511 the manor reverted
to the Brune family, and from that time followed the
descent of Rowner (q.v.). A moated house, now
used as a farm, represents the manor-house.
Several other estates in Christchurch were mentioned in the Domesday Survey. HUBBORN
(Hoburne, xi–xiv cent.; Huburne, xii–xiv cent.)
was held at that time by Saulf's wife; her husband
had held it in the time of the Confessor. (fn. 403) It was
granted to the priory about 1100 by Richard de
Redvers, (fn. 404) and most of his descendants confirmed
the grant. (fn. 405) The house, now known as Hubborn,
marks the site of the estate, which, however, never in
fact became a separate manor.
STANPIT (Stanpeta, xi–xiv cent.; Stamputta,
xii-xiv cent.) was held in 1086 by Hugh de Port of
the Bishop of Bayeux. He had two estates there;
one had been held of the Confessor by Wislac and
the other by Godwine. (fn. 406) William II granted the
priory an estate here, which was confirmed by Stephen
in 1150. (fn. 407) Another grant of a hide and a virgate
there was made to the priory by Witro the Falconer
and Adeline his wife, and was confirmed by Baldwin
de Redvers about 1175. (fn. 408)
BECKLEY (Bichelei, xi cent.), near Hinton, was
in 1086 held by Nigel of Roger Earl of Shrewsbury,
who held it in chief. It had been held by Holengar
in the reign of the Confessor. (fn. 409)