THE HUNDRED OF WILLEY
CONTAINING THE PARISHES OF
|
|
|
BIDDENHAM |
ODELL |
| BLETSOE |
PAVENHAM |
| BROMHAM |
PODINGTON with HINWICK |
| CARLTON |
SHARNBROOK |
| CHELLINGTON |
SOULDROP |
| FARNDISH |
STAGSDEN |
| FELMERSHAM with RADWELL |
STEVINGTON |
| THURLEIGH |
| HARROLD |
TURVEY |
| WYMINGTON (fn. 1)
|
The hundred of Willey included, in the Survey of 1086, Carlton,
Chellington, Farndish, Felmersham with Radwell, Harrold, Odell, Podington with Hinwick, Sharnbrook, Thurleigh, Turvey and Wymington,
assessed at 95 hides and a small fraction short of 3 virgates, of which the
value was £80 10s. as opposed to
£133 2s. in the days of the Confessor. (fn. 2)

INDEX MAP to the HUNDRED of WILLEY.
The remaining places, with the
exception of Souldrop, which is not
mentioned in the Survey, are found in
the half-hundred of Bucklow, which
also included 12 hides in Goldington and Colmworth (Great Barford
Hundred). This half-hundred was
assessed in the Survey at 58 hides
2¼ virgates worth in all £69 1s.; here
also there was a depreciation in value
since the Confessor's reign, when
Bucklow was estimated at £91 14s. (fn. 3)
Until the 17th century the hundred
of Willey and the half-hundred of
Bucklow continued to be associated
together for administrative purposes, after which Bucklow became absorbed
in the larger hundred, and in 1831 the parishes were all grouped under the
one heading.
Willey and Bucklow were originally royal hundreds, and in the 13th
century the office of 'Keeper of the bailiwick of Wilie and half bailiwick of
Bukkelowe' appears to have been hereditary, being held in return for
4 acres of land in Milton and a messuage in the same parish. (fn. 4) It was held
by Hugh de Willey until his death in 1278, when his son Roger succeeded
him. (fn. 5)
In 1629–30 Onslow Winch obtained a forty years' lease of Willey and
Bucklow from the Crown. (fn. 6) Although there were still eighteen years of
this lease to run, a parliamentary survey of 1651 states that at that date all
the hundredal rights were vested in Oliver Earl of Bolingbroke, (fn. 7) in whose
family they continued to remain. Thus in 1755 Lord St. John of Bletsoe
suffered a recovery of what is here called—from a natural confusion of idea
where the rights had ceased to have much meaning—'the half-hundred of
Willey,' (fn. 8) and in 1780 another recovery was made. (fn. 9) It seems probable that
these hundreds—to which no rights or profits are now attached, and which
are only used as units of local jurisdiction, as, for example, in defining the
swine-fever areas—still technically belong to the St. Johns of Bletsoe.
Willey and Bucklow have at different times furnished varying sums
towards national aids and subsidies. In 1346, when an aid was levied for
knighting the king's eldest son, they, assessed at 15 fees and a fraction,
furnished £30 2s. 5d. (fn. 10) In 1517 on the occasion of a subsidy the parishes
contained in these hundreds provided £49 17s. (fn. 11) A certificate of a general
muster of the county taken by Lord Mordaunt and other commissioners in
1539 states that Willey could furnish 67 archers, 179 billmen and 24 pairs
of harness towards national defence. (fn. 12) A general subsidy in 1586–7 produced
only £12 1s. 7½d. from Willey and Bucklow, showing a deficit of
£62 17s. 4½d. on the official assessment, (fn. 13) whilst in 1638 ship-money,
levied on 70 persons in these hundreds, produced £29 14s. 8d. (fn. 14) During
the Interregnum a very heavy tax was levied on the county for the
maintenance of the forces under Sir Thomas Fairfax, and Willey alone
was mulcted of £206 9s. 4d. (fn. 15)
In 1651 a survey was made of Willey and Bucklow, when their value
from quit-rents and royalties was declared to be £29 5s. 5d., (fn. 16) the leaseholder paying a rent of £22 6s., whilst possible improvements were
estimated at £6 14s. 8d. (fn. 17)
Willey and Bucklow held two courts leet yearly, and also a threeweekly court at which the tenants performed their suit and service to the
lord of the hundred. In 1651 these courts were worth £6 yearly, (fn. 18) but
have long since fallen into desuetude.
The parishes included within these hundreds have always been of an
essentially agricultural character, (fn. 19) and include no great manufacturing
centres, the industries being principally those peculiar to a rural district,
lace-making—a home industry, a little straw plaiting, rush-work and wickerwork. There are at the present day no market towns in the hundred of
Willey, but Odell had a market in the 13th and 14th centuries and a fair
in the 19th, whilst Harrold also enjoyed these privileges from the 17th to
the 19th century. The proximity of Bedford probably accounts for this
comparative lack of markets and fairs.