PERTENHALL
Pertenhale (xi cent.).
The parish of Pertenhall on the Huntingdonshire
border has an area of 1,614½ acres divided (with the
exception of 10 acres of woodland) between arable
land and permanent grass, the latter predominating. (fn. 1)
The soil is stiff clay and gravel. The land slopes
from north to south; the highest point attained above
the ordnance datum is 207 ft., the lowest 104 ft. The
parish is watered by the River Kym, which forms its
eastern boundary with its tributary. The water
supply of the village, which is good and abundant, is
derived from wells. Pertenhall village is in the centre
of the parish. The church of St. Peter is off the
main road, and stands in a well-wooded churchyard.
Near by is the rectory, an 18th-century red brick
house bearing the date 1799, with spacious grounds
attached. On the south of the churchyard is the
old manor-house, a fine Elizabethan building. Some
thirty years ago it underwent a thorough restoration,
and in the course of the work portions of twenty-three
skeletons were discovered about the house. This discovery, however, is not the first of the same nature in
this parish, for in 1797, when the work of inclosure
was going forward, a considerable quantity of bones
was discovered (a few inches below the soil) in a
small piece of common land 150 yds. south of the
churchyard. (fn. 2) As the manor-house and grounds are
due south of the church the site of the two discoveries
is probably the same. The bones are possibly the
relics of a skirmish in the Civil Wars.
Some distance east of the village is Pertenhall Hoo
Farm, which preserves the name of the ancient manor,
and is a small 16th-century building with traces of a
moat some quarter of a mile to the north.
There are several outlying hamlets or 'ends' in
this parish. Wood End in the north of the parish
has a Moravian chapel beautifully situated on high
ground with a manse attached. Chadwell End is
west of the village, and Green End is in the south of
the parish, where there are a gravel pit and a small
wood known as Galley Oak Spinney.
Detached portions of this parish were in 1879
added to Bolnhurst, Little Staughton and Keysoe.
MANORS
No entry in the Domesday Survey has
been identified as referring to the manor
of PERTENHALL. It would seem
possible, however, that the property was considered to
be parcel of Kimbolton, as in 1286–7 Humphrey de
Bohun Earl of Hereford and Essex (and lord of
Kimbolton) claimed that onethird of Pertenhall belonged
to his fief, (fn. 3) while the overlordship of this manor
followed the same descent as
the honour of Kimbolton.
The earliest tenants of the
Earls of Essex in Pertenhall
were the Peyvre family.
Nicholas Peyvre was granted
rights of free warren in his
demesne lands in Pertenhall
in 1253. (fn. 4) His successor,
Roger Peyvre, held the property, which extended into
Little Staughton and other neighbouring parishes,
as a quarter of a knight's fee. (fn. 5) In 1308–9 Stephen
de Holcote conveyed to Roger Peyvre his right in
3 carucates of arable land, 60 acres of meadow with
woodland, and rents in Keysoe and Pertenhall. (fn. 6)
Roger Peyvre was still holding in 1316, (fn. 7) but was soon
afterwards succeeded by John Peyvre, who filled the
office of coroner for the county until 'being sick and
broken with age' he was removed in 1343. (fn. 8) He was
still lord of Pertenhall Manor in 1346, (fn. 9) but the date
of his death is not known, and no further evidence
concerning the descent of the manor has been found
until 1428, by which year it had come into the
possession of John Arthorw,
who held it by service of
a quarter of a knight's fee. (fn. 10)
John Arthorw was succeeded
in the tenure by Margaret,
presumably his daughter, who
first married a Darell and later
Arthur Ormsby. (fn. 11) Her son
and successor in the manor
was Thomas Darell, whose
wife Isabel survived him and
is found complaining that her
husband's executors refused to
give her seisin of the manor. (fn. 12)
Later she took for her second
husband Simon Harvey, and in 1467–8 placed the
manor (fn. 13) in the hands of trustees. (fn. 14) She was succeeded by her son Thomas Darell, who settled the
manor in 1472. (fn. 15) Thomas Darell died in 1490, (fn. 16)
leaving two sons, Thomas and John, each in turn
being given as heir in different inquisitions, (fn. 17) but
under his will his widow Julian (who later married
Thomas Boner) held the manor until her death
in 1501. (fn. 18) Her heirs were her granddaughters
Beatrice and Anastasia, the daughters of Thomas
Darell, who had predeceased his mother. (fn. 19) John
Darell, brother of Thomas, is found later claiming, however, that he was the rightful heir to his
brother, but that, being under age at the time of his
brother's death, he was taken into the custody of the
overlord, the Duke of Buckingham, and evilly disposed
persons presented his two nieces to the king as the
rightful heirs, and that the manor had come into the
hands of one Thomas Jermayn, who had purchased
the wardship of Beatrice and Anastasia. (fn. 20) In 1518
both John Darell and Thomas Jermayn made over
their rights in Pertenhall Manor to Michael Fisher
and others. (fn. 21) They were possibly acting for the
founders of Corpus Christi College, Oxford, which
was established in this year, and at the time of the
Dissolution owned Pertenhall Manor, then worth
£23 12s. 11d. (fn. 22) This manor has remained the
property of the college down to the present day.

Bohun. Azure a bend argent between two cotises and six lions or.

Peyvre. Argent a chief gules with three fleurs de lis or therein.
The manor of HOWE AND PERTENHALL
alias COVINGTON FEE appears to have belonged
to the Knights Templars. There is but slight documentary evidence relating to the tenure of the Templars
in Pertenhall, but property in the parish retained the
name of Templars' Lands down into the 19th century, (fn. 23) and there is still a moat that is pointed out as
the site of their manor-house.
The Knights Templars' manor
of Pertenhall passed, with the
bulk of the property of their
order, to the Knights of St.
John of Jerusalem, who had a
preceptory in the neighbouring parish of Melchbourne.
These latter appear to have
made a temporary grant of
the manor in the early part
of the 14th century to John
Merlyn, to whom Edward II
granted rights of free warren
in 1319. (fn. 24) The Prior of the
Knights Hospitallers held a
view of frankpledge in Pertenhall. (fn. 25) After the Dissolution
no further mention of this
manor occurs until the year
1660, when Richard Spicer
alienated it to Simon Grey, (fn. 26)
who retained it until 1690,
when he conveyed it to
Francis Brace (fn. 27) ; he sold it five years later to
James Oliver. (fn. 28) The manor remained in the hands
of the Oliver family for a considerable period, and it
is probable that an heiress of that family married
Simon Taylor, who, with his son Simon Oliver,
suffered a recovery of the manor in 1772. (fn. 29) It was
purchased from Simon Taylor in 1790 by a clergyman
named Paget, (fn. 30) whose heirs held the manor in 1801. (fn. 31)
It was purchased from them by William Bricheno, (fn. 32)
who sold it to John King Martin in 1820. (fn. 33) His
representatives still hold property in Pertenhall at the
present day.

Corpus Christi College, Oxford. Tierced in pale: 1. Azure a pelican or, for Richard Fox, Bishop of Winchester, the founder; 2. Argent a scutcheon of the see of Winchester surmounted by a mitre; 3. Sable a cheveron or between three owls argent and a chief or with three roses gules therein, for Hugh Oldham, Bishop of Exeter.
Towards the close of the 13th century Edmund
Earl of Cornwall was overlord of land in Pertenhall, (fn. 34)
later known as HOO MANOR. This overlordship
was part of his honour of Wallingford; no mention
of its exercise has been found later than the 14th
century. (fn. 35) The first tenants of the property that
have been found are Robert Ingram and William
Oyldebœuf, who held it by the service of half a
knight's fee in 1284–6. (fn. 36) By the beginning of the
next century it had passed to Robert de Bayeux, (fn. 37)
who was still holding in 1323. (fn. 38) He was succeeded
by Richard de Bayeux before 1346. (fn. 39) At his death
the manor passed to his daughter Elizabeth, (fn. 40) whose
two daughters Joan and Margaret, or their descendants, are probably 'the heirs' of Richard de Bayeux
recorded as holding this manor in 1428. (fn. 41) No evidence concerning the descent of this manor has been
found for the next 100 years, and in the interval it
was divided into thirds. Edward Saunders in 1537
alienated one-third of the manor to Edward Montague
for forty years (fn. 42) ; the latter by his will dated 17 July
1556 left his interest in the manor to his sons Roger
and Simon. (fn. 43) Another third of this manor was in
the hands of Thomas Marborowe in the early part of
the 16th century. (fn. 44) After his death his wife held it
for her life, and later it came into the possession of
Henry Marborowe, his son, who in 1559 alienated it
to William Gery for £500. (fn. 45) It appears from a suit
which arose later that Marborowe intended this to be
only a temporary arrangement, but William Gery
claimed that it was a genuine sale, and in 1585
alienated it to Lord St. John. (fn. 46) One, or possibly
both of these thirds, was owned prior to the year 1607
by Robert Jackman, who in that year quitclaimed
'the manor of Hoo' to Walter Rolt. (fn. 47) His successor,
Edward Rolt, 'Esquire,' of Pertenhall, J.P. and
Recorder of Bedford, was eldest son of Thomas Rolt
of Bolnhurst. He was buried
here in 1616, leaving a son
Edward, who was similarly
Counseller at law and was
buried here in 1652. (fn. 48) By
Mary, daughter of Sir Oliver
Cromwell of Hinchinbrooke,
K.B. (the Protector's uncle),
he left three sons, of whom
(Sir) Thomas, the youngest,
became 'President of India'
and purchased Sacombe Park,
Herts, while 'Captain'
Edward Rolt, the eldest,
was a gentleman of the Protector's Life Guard, was 'ambassador' for him to
Sweden, and was afterwards a friend of Pepys. He
was buried at Pertenhall in 1698, (fn. 49) after which date
no trace of the manor is found (fn. 50) until the latter part
of the 18th century, when it was in the possession of
a Mr. Dean. (fn. 51) From the latter it passed to a relative,
John Sismey, (fn. 52) who held it into the 19th century, (fn. 53)
since which date no further trace of the manor has
been found.

Rolt. Argent a bend sable with three dolphins argent therein having crowns or.
The manor of BELLS is mentioned in a document
bearing the date 1772. (fn. 54) Its subsequent history is
the same as that of the manor of Covington Fee (q.v.).
In the time of Edward the Confessor Alwin Deule
held 1 virgate in Pertenhall of which King Edward
had the soke. (fn. 55) In 1086 it was held by William of
Bishop Remigius of Lincoln and was valued at 5s. (fn. 56)
The Bishops of Lincoln received service for land in
Pertenhall until the middle of the 14th century. (fn. 57)
Henry Bishop of Lincoln claimed a view of frankpledge in Pertenhall and neighbouring parishes in
1330. (fn. 58) The first tenant of this property of whom
mention has been found is Roger son of Jordan, who
in 1197–8 alienated it to his brother Richard. (fn. 59) His
son Jordan held the property by service of half a
knight's fee in the 13th century. (fn. 60) Jordan was
succeeded by his son Richard, who held it in 1284–6
by the same service, (fn. 61) but by 1302–3 the service had
been changed to a tenth of a knight's fee. (fn. 62) In 1346
this property had passed to John Hervy, (fn. 63) who is the
last tenant of whom mention has been found.
In the 13th century Richard de Pertenhall held
land by service of one-tenth of a knight's fee and
William le Gascon by service of one-twentieth of a
knight's fee in Pertenhall of the Earl of Hereford as
of his honour of Kimbolton, (fn. 64) but the property so
held has not been traced further.
CHURCH
The church of ST. PETER consists
of a chancel 29 ft. 5 in. long by 15 ft. 4 in.
wide, a north vestry 15 ft. 3 in. by
14 ft. 2 in., a nave 46½ ft. long by 16 ft. 10 in. wide,
a north aisle 14 ft. 2 in. wide, and a west tower
11 ft. 10 in. by 10 ft. 5 in.
In the 12th century the church seems to have
consisted of nave and chancel only, to which a north
aisle—narrower than the present one—was added
about the year 1190, when the present arcade was
built. The chancel was perhaps rebuilt in the
13th century; in the 14th century a chapel, since
destroyed, was added to it on the north, opening to
the chancel by an arcade of two bays. In the
15th century the aisle was rebuilt and widened, a
clearstory added on the north, the nave windows on
the south heightened and the south porch and west
tower and spire built.
The east half of the chancel with the north
chapel was rebuilt in 1848, according to a date
over the east window, which is of three lights,
round-headed and modern, but with some re-used
14th-century stones in its jambs and mullions. In
the glass is set upside down a 14th-century shield of
France ancient quartered with England. In the
north wall is a blocked 14th-century arcade of two
bays with clustered pier and responds and moulded
capitals; in the west bay a small pointed doorway
opens to the vestry, which is modern. In the south
wall are a small chamfered doorway, which seems to be
13th-century work reset, and a two-light 15th-century
window containing a little original glass; the west jamb
of another window is to be seen east of the doorway.
The roof has two moulded 15th-century tie-beams
with carved heads in the middle and an eastern tiebeam, dated 1684, referring to some reconstruction.
The chancel arch is of two chamfered orders with
half-round responds and moulded capitals, much
altered by re-cutting, but perhaps of the 13th century;
the jambs are thicker than the arch and are part of
the 12th-century walling.
The nave has a north arcade of three pointed
arches built about 1190, the arches being of one order,
edge-chamfered, with double-chamfered labels, which
in the case of the middle arch have small dog-tooth
ornament on the under chamfer. The capitals have
square abaci and plain spreading bells on round columns
and round moulded bases. The capitals of the
responds and half of that of the second column are
modern. In the south wall are three tall three-light
windows, two of them having transoms at half height,
while the middle one is in its lower half a squareheaded 14th-century window with trefoiled lights, a
15th-century top having been added above it. The
south doorway, with a roll on the inner order,
appears to belong to the 13th century and is under
a 15th-century porch with remains of a large holy
water stone in its north-east corner; there is a second
holy water stone inside the church to the east of the
doorway. In the east and west walls are windows of
two trefoiled lights and the doorway consists of two
chamfered orders, the inner of which rests on a halfround shaft with a moulded capital and base; the
roof is of the same date. At the south-east angle of
the nave is a blocked rood stair.
The north aisle has a recessed arch at the east
springing from strings of 13th-century character with
nail head and masks, but the date of the arch is
doubtful; under it is a damaged late 13th-century
mailed effigy of poor workmanship, with crossed legs
and wearing a surcoat to the knees; the surface of
the armour is smooth and the mail must have been
shown by colour or gesso. In the north wall are two
windows, one towards the east, of 1848, with a round
head and wooden mullion, and the second a threelight 15th-century window. There is another like
it in the west wall. The north doorway is in two
moulded orders and of 15th-century date, and at the
west end of the aisle is a raised platform over a vault,
on which is placed part of a 14th-century coffin lid
with scrolls on the stem of the cross.
The tower is of four stages with a tall broach
spire and two tiers of spire lights. The belfry
windows are simple of two trefoiled lights, and
diagonal buttresses run up the angles to the eaves of
the spire. The stair is at the south-west, and in the
third stage on the south is a small two-light window.
The west doorway is of three continuous-moulded
pointed orders and above it is a three-light window,
all details being very simple.
The font is octagonal, on a central and four
outer shafts, the capital of one of which has 13th-century foliage. By a curious trick of varying the
angles of the sides of the bowl each side is
wedge-shaped, wider alternately at top and bottom.
Some of the pewing is of the 15th or 16th
century and some of the 17th. The rood screen is
a very beautiful fragment, complete up to the level
of the loft, but without the vaulting, and has many
traces of colour and gilding. The central opening
has an ogee head, and apparently had as a finial a
group of the Transfiguration, for on the arch is
'Transfiguracio Domini Nostri Ihesu Cristi.'
The heads of the three bays are divided each into
three traceried lights, and the solid lower panels
have blank tracery and a very effective running
pattern on the middle rail. The colour on the
north side stops at a definite line, all beneath
having been hidden by the north nave altar.
On the south wall of the nave is a tablet recording
the deaths of members of the Rolt family between
1616 and 1698, and in the vestry is a good mural
monument to Susan (Fisher) wife of Simeon Grey,
1685. In the nave floor is a slab inscribed with the
names of Richard Gisby and his younger son of the
same name, who died in 1699 and 1690, and on
the chancel walls tablets to five former rectors.
In the vestry is a good panelled chest inscribed
'I. B. I. S. C. W. 1640.'
There are three bells: the first is of 1666,
inscribed 'William Hull made me, Robert Smith,
Edward Pecoke, churchwardens'; the second by
Thomas Russell of Wootton, 1716, John Wadsworth,
churchwarden; the third by John Chandler, 1683.
The plate consists of a cup of 1684, a foot paten
of 1719, which was given by Robert Paradine, rector,
and a modern silver-plated flagon and cup.
The first book of registers commences in 1582, and
contains all the entries until 1751, the second continues
the baptisms and burials till 1812 and the marriages
until 1753, and the third marriages up to 1812.
ADVOWSON
No mention of the advowson of
Pertenhall Church occurs before
1361, when Humphrey de Bohun
Earl of Hereford and Essex died seised of it. (fn. 65) It,
however, seems probable that it had been in the hands
of the Earls of Essex from a much earlier period, as
were the manor and church of Tilbrook (q.v.).
Like the latter church, Pertenhall passed to Thomas
Duke of Gloucester, (fn. 66) who married the heiress of the
Bohuns and held it in the right of his wife, and later
to Edmund Stafford Earl of Stafford. (fn. 67) Though no
documentary evidence can be quoted, the advowson
probably remained in the hands of the Stafford
family until 1521, when Edward Stafford Duke of
Buckingham was executed and his property escheated
to the Crown. (fn. 68) Edward VI granted the advowson
of Pertenhall Church to Henry Duke of Suffolk
(the father of Lady Jane Grey), on whose attainder
and execution in 1554 the Crown confiscated his
property. (fn. 69) Between this date and 1607 this advowson was granted to Sir Richard Dyer, who died
seised of it in this latter year. (fn. 70) He was succeeded
by his son Sir William, (fn. 71) whose son Sir Lewis Dyer
presented to the living in 1660. (fn. 72) In 1680 Noah
Neale with other persons presented, (fn. 73) and in 1690
Joseph Aris. (fn. 74) The latter's daughter Elizabeth
married John King, who became patron and rector
in 1690. (fn. 75) The advowson remained the property
of the King family throughout the 18th century, (fn. 76)
though the exercise of the patronage would appear
to have been constantly leased. (fn. 77) Thomas Martyn,
the well-known botanist, a grandson of John King, (fn. 78)
who was rector and patron in the early years of the
19th century, (fn. 79) wrote in 1814: 'It is melancholy to
see several of our neighbouring parishes, without so
much as a resident curate, served irregularly once on
Sunday in haste. In this parish the rectors have
been constantly resident ever since the Reformation.
For the last 120 years my family have been both
patrons and rectors and we have considerable influence in it.' (fn. 80) Thomas Martyn's son John King
Martyn held the advowson from 1822 to 1854, (fn. 81)
when it passed to John Bredham, who held it for
thirty years. (fn. 82) His successor was S. K. Morley,
whose representatives are patrons at the present day.
The value of the church in 1291 was £6 13s. 4d., (fn. 83)
some 100 years later it was valued at £8. (fn. 84) At the
time of the Dissolution the rectory was valued at
£18 10s. 6d. gross. (fn. 85)
The commission of 1548 reported that there was
provision for the continuance of a light in the church
to the amount of 20d. per annum. (fn. 86)
CHARITIS
Poor's estate.
This parish has
from time immemorial been possessed
for the use of the poor of 2 a. 3 r. 37p.
known as the 'Poor's Close,' 1 a. 2 r. 15 p. known as
the 'Town Close,' producing an annual rental of
£9 5s.; also of a small pasture field let at £2 a year.
The charity is also endowed with a public-house
known as the Bricklayers' Arms, with 3 a. 2 r. 8 p.
of land let at £11 a year.
In 1834 Jonathan Tebb, by his will proved in
the P.C.C. 12 March, bequeathed a legacy, now
represented by £316 14s. 1d. consols with the
official trustees, the annual dividends of which,
amounting to £7 18s., are in pursuance of a deed
poll of 22 December 1834 applied on St. Thomas's
Day in the distribution of clothes, books, bread or
meat.
The charities are administered together by the
rector and churchwardens. In 1910 the sum of
£10 a year was paid to the school, (fn. 87) also £1 3s. for
coal to the school; and gifts of bread, tea and coal
were made to thirty-seven families.