HUSBORNE CRAWLEY
Crawelai (xi cent.); Husseburne Crawel (fn. 1) (xiii cent.).
The parish of Husborne Crawley covers an area
of 1,610½ acres, of which 413½ are arable land, 862¾
permanent grass and 202 woods and plantations. (fn. 2)
The chief industry is agriculture, and the soil,
which is light sand with parts of heavy Oxford clay
on a gravel subsoil, yields crops of wheat, barley and
beans.
The southern portion of the parish is within the
bounds of Woburn Park, including the parks known
as Butt Close, Deane Hills, Sandyplane Plantation,
Brickground Plantation and the Deer Park.
The ground varies from 250 ft. to 350 ft. above
the ordnance datum, though a small part of the Deer
Park is over 400 ft. high.
The village lies between Ridgmont and Woburn,
on the high road which skirts Woburn Park. There
are two or three examples of half-timber and thatched
cottages, but generally speaking the village is modern.
The mill has disappeared, and its memory only
survives in the name of Crawley Mill Farm, which
now forms a portion of the Woburn Experimental
Farm. The church is situated about half a mile to
the north of the village, on the road to Aspley Guise.
This portion of the village is known as Church End,
and consists of several farms and cottages, with a
Methodist chapel. By the cross roads at this spot is
the entrance to the grounds of Crawley House,
through which a right of way exists to Aspley Guise.
The house is an unpretending Georgian structure.
The present owner is Mrs. Ellis Wynter, the representative of the Orlebar family, who resides there.
The grounds cover about 100 acres, and include
Crawley Park Farm.
Opposite the entrance to the park is the Manor
Farm, past which a road leads north, leaving Crawley
Hall on the west. It is a modest Georgian building,
formerly known as Crawley Farm, and is rented by
Mrs. Bowen from the Duke of Bedford.
The open country in the north of the parish is
farmed by the Charity and Redfield Farms, and is
crossed by the Bedford branch of the London and
North-Western Railway, on which Ridgmont station
in this parish is situated.
In 1228 a treasure valued at about 50 marks was
found in Husborne Crawley churchyard and duly
presented before the king's itinerant justices, by whose
judgment it was granted to the new hospital at Dover. (fn. 3)
An Act of Parliament for inclosing the parish was
passed in 1795, (fn. 4) and awards of the commons and
open spaces were made by a commission in 1800,
when certain turnpike roads were appointed and the
vicar was allotted certain land in lieu of glebe. (fn. 5)
MANORS
Two manors appear in Crawley at
Domesday, of which CRAWLEY
MANOR, afterwards HUSBORNE
CRAWLEY, which was held by Grimbald under
Edward the Confessor, belonged to William Lovet,
and was assessed at 5 hides. (fn. 6)
The overlordship of William Lovet's lands passed
to the Earls of Albemarle, (fn. 7) whose interest in this
manor extended from the middle of the 13th century
to the year 1368, (fn. 8) when Robert son and heir of John
de Lisle released his rights to the Crown. (fn. 9) The
manor was held after that date by the canons of
Dunstable. (fn. 10)
No tenant is mentioned at Crawley in Domesday.
Philip de Saunvill granted the church, which was
attached to the manor, to Dunstable Priory circa
1170, (fn. 11) and in the middle of the 13th century this
manor was held in two moieties, one by Nicholas de
Tingry and the other by David de Flitwick, (fn. 12) descended from the Saunvills. (fn. 13) The moiety held by
the latter will be treated below.
In 1248 Nicholas de Tingry released his demesne
lands in Crawley and Husborne, except one mill
and half a virgate of land, to the Prior of Dunstable,
who in the same year received homage, (fn. 14) and who
later built a new grange, two new sheepfolds, and a
cowhouse on his property there. (fn. 15)
In 1269 the prior suffered from the oppression of
the bailiff of the Countess of Albemarle, who maintained that the prior had obtained his estate in
Husborne Crawley without licence, and had not paid
homage due on his ingress to the manor. Twelve
ploughing oxen of the prior at Crawley were seized
as penalty and detained for twelve weeks. Peace
was afterwards made with the countess on payment
of 5 marks and 20s. for the custody of the animals. (fn. 16)
The prior's estate in Husborne Crawley comprised
2½ hides in 1276, (fn. 17) and ten years later he was
summoned to prove by what warrant he claimed a
view of frankpledge in Husborne Crawley. He
replied that half of the vill was held by him for a
quarter part of a knight's fee, and that his view at
Flitwick was attended by the tenants on his Husborne
Crawley property. (fn. 18) In 1341 the priory was granted
an exemplification of the charters by which this and
other properties had been acquired. (fn. 19)
The Flitwick moiety had been held by David de
Flitwick in the first half of the 13th century, (fn. 20) and
on his death in 1247 (fn. 21) it had passed to another
David de Flitwick, (fn. 22) thence to Bartholomew de
Flitwick, who held 2½ hides in Husborne Crawley
in 1276. (fn. 23) The heirs of Bartholomew held in
1302–3, (fn. 24) and in 1331 this estate, extended as a
messuage and a carucate of land in Husborne, was
restored to David de Flitwick, a member of the same
family, after having been in the king's hands for a year
and a day for the felony of his brother Bartholomew. (fn. 25)
He was still seised in 1346, but circa 1358 (fn. 26) he
conveyed this moiety to the Prior of Dunstable.
Thus the Prior of Dunstable was seised of the whole
manor from this date until the Dissolution. (fn. 27)
In 1535 the priory manor of Husborne Crawley
was held with the rectory on a forty-one years' lease
by William Markham, and was valued at £22 a year. (fn. 28)
The manor was rated at £196 15s. 5d. for Christopher
Smith, a possible purchaser in
1550, but the sale was not
effected. (fn. 29) Before 1597 it
was acquired with the advowson by John Thompson, (fn. 30) on
whose death it passed to his
son Robert. (fn. 31) He had been
a lunatic for five years, and
later in the year another inquisition was made to discover
the full extent of his property
and his heir. (fn. 32) Robert died in
1633, leaving the manor of
Husborne Crawley to his son
Sir John Thompson, kt., (fn. 33) who had married in 1607
Judith daughter of Oliver St. John. Their son St.
John Thompson (fn. 34) obtained licence 'to go beyond seas
for three years to study languages' in 1638, (fn. 35) and
succeeded his father in the property before 1660,
when he made a settlement of the Husborne Crawley
estates. (fn. 36) They descended before 1684 to his son
St. John Thompson, (fn. 37) by whom the manor was
conveyed in 1691 to John Lowe. (fn. 38) In 1709 Francis
Lowe suffered a recovery of Husborne Crawley
Manor, (fn. 39) which twelve years later was purchased
from him by the Duke of Bedford for £2,750. (fn. 40)
It has since remained in his family, (fn. 41) and at the
present day is held by Herbrand Duke of Bedford.

Thompson. Azure a leopard or.
The manor-house and rectory of Husborne Crawley
were not sold with the manor, but were retained by
St. John Thompson till his death in 1710, and were
then left to his daughters Catherine and Ursula, to
be sold to defray expenses, the remainder to pass to
his son St. John. (fn. 42) The property was purchased by
Edmund Williamson, who died at the manor-house
in 1737. (fn. 43) He was succeeded by his eldest son
Talbot, who continued his father's policy of buying
up all the surrounding farms and pieces of land, and
died in 1752, leaving the Husborne Crawley estate
to his widow for life, with reversion to the children
of his brother Edmund. (fn. 44) She lived until 1792,
and Edmund Williamson, nephew of her husband,
sold the estate and rectory two years afterwards to
the Duke of Bedford (fn. 45) for £9,444. The latter
pulled down the old house, of which the site is now
uncertain, and the wall of the garden, of which
interesting details are found in the Williamson Account
Book. (fn. 46)
The second Domesday manor of HUSBORNE
CRAWLEY was held by Nigel de Albini, (fn. 47) and thus
became part of the barony of Cainhoe (fn. 48) (q.v.), whose
overlordship is mentioned at the beginning of the
16th century. (fn. 49) Traces of an intermediary lordship
occur in the 13th century, when this manor was held
of Robert son of Walter, who held of the heirs of
Henry de Pinkney and they of the barony of
Cainhoe. (fn. 50)
Nothing is known of the heirs of Turgis, who held
the manor of Nigel de Albini in 1086, (fn. 51) but 4 hides
of this Domesday manor subsequently passed to the
Northwood family, which was settled in Husborne
Crawley in the middle of the 13th century. (fn. 52) In
1276 and 1284 John de Northwood held 3 hides
of land of the Cainhoe fee (fn. 53) and 1 hide of the
Hospitallers. In 1302 this estate was still in the
same hands, (fn. 54) and in 1316 John de Northwood is
returned with the Prior of Dunstable as holding half
the vill. (fn. 55) Before 1346, however, it was held by
Roger de Grey, kt., and Henry de Northwood.
Reginaldde Grey, son of Roger, acquired the remainder
by a release in 1360, (fn. 56) after which date the Northwood
interest in Husborne Crawley ceases, and the Greys
only continue. Reginald succeeded his father Roger
de Grey before 1368, (fn. 57) and this property in Husborne Crawley descended
with Wrest Manor (q.v.) until
the beginning of the 16th
century.

Grey. Barry argent and azure with three roundels gules in the chief.
On the death of Richard
Earl of Kent without issue in
1524 this estate passed to his
half-brother Henry, (fn. 58) who
conveyed it in the following
year to Sir Richard Wingfield, Sir Henry Wyatt and
Richard Weston. (fn. 59) They
were possibly acting on behalf
of the king, who held this
property in 1527, (fn. 60) and who
in 1542 annexed it to the newly-formed honour of
Ampthill. (fn. 61)
In 1570 the lands formerly held by the Greys
Earls of Kent in Husborne Crawley were leased to
Robert Rookham, and nine years later were granted to
John Thompson. (fn. 62) From this date the Grey estate shares
the history of his Husborne Crawley manor (q.v.).
The remaining hide of the five held of Nigel de
Albini in 1086 was held by the Abbot of Thorney in
the latter half of the 13th century, (fn. 63) and in 1291 his
lands in Husborne Crawley were valued in rent at £2. (fn. 64)
The abbey retained this land in Husborne Crawley
during the next century, (fn. 65) and in 1343 their property
was further increased by a grant of a toft and 9½ acres
in Bolnhurst and Husborne Crawley from John de
Jakesle. (fn. 66) At the Dissolution the value had decreased
to £1 11s. 10½d. In 1541 the manor of Bolnhurst
and the lands in Husborne Crawley, both part of
the possessions of the late abbey, were granted to
Sir John St. John, (fn. 67) who obtained licence to settle
this property on his son Oliver on his marriage with
Agnes daughter of Sir Michael Fisher. (fn. 68) From this
date the Husborne Crawley property descended with
Bolnhurst Manor, the lords of which claimed free
warren extending into Husborne Crawley at the end
of the 18th century.
A manor of HUSBORNE CRAWLEY, afterwards
called BRAYS, was held in chief of the Crown by
Nicholas Ravenhill in 1422, (fn. 69) and descended with
his manor of Stagsden (q.v.) to his daughter Agnes,
whose son John Finaunce (fn. 70) is described as of Husborne Crawley in 1472. (fn. 71) It passed from this family
to Sir Reginald Bray, (fn. 72) who died in 1509, and
descended with his Eaton Bray estate (fn. 73) to Edmund
son and heir of Edward Bray, who conveyed it in 1566
to John Thompson, (fn. 74) having obtained a quitclaim of
the property from the reversionary heirs under a
settlement of 1538, (fn. 75) and also acquired the manor of
Husborne Crawley formerly held by Dunstable Priory,
whose subsequent history (q.v.) this manor shares. (fn. 76)
During the reign of Henry III the Abbot of
Woburn did suit at the hundred court of Manshead
for 2 virgates and a cotland in Crawley. (fn. 77) In 1291
his property there was of the total value of £2 12s. (fn. 78)
In 1368 the abbot received a grant of meadow from
Reginald de Grey. (fn. 79)
At the Dissolution the monks of Woburn held in
rent and farm in Husborne Crawley £10 16s. 6¼d.,
and paid to Dunstable Priory for certain tenements
there 1s. 6d. (fn. 80) Lands in this parish are mentioned in
the Ministers' Accounts of 1543, (fn. 81) but no further
trace of this property can be found.

Husborne Crawley Church form the South-east
CHURCH
The parish church of ST. MARY
consists of a chancel 29 ft. 4 in. by
18½ ft., a nave 34 ft. by 19 ft. 4 in.,
north aisle 10½ ft. wide, south aisle 9½ ft. wide,
south porch, and west tower 12½ ft. by 14 ft. The
south arcade of the nave is 13th-century work, and
the aisle walls are perhaps of this date or rebuilt
c. 1330; the chancel seems to be 14th-century
work, though much altered; the north arcade and
aisle seem entirely of the 15th century, as does the
tower, and the south porch may be c. 1500. There
are traces of a wooden north porch. The materials
of the church are, in the tower and north aisle and
in parts of the chancel, a dark brown stone mixed
with a peculiar deep green stone, making a very
effective and unusual combination. The south aisle
is built of small thin stones. The exterior of the
church has been mended up in Roman cement,
which still covers most of the stonework details.
The chancel walls have been thrust out of the perpendicular by the roof, which is of fairly steep pitch
and covered with modern slates. The east window
has a square head and three cinquefoiled lights of
15th-century work fitted to the jambs of a 14th-century window which had a pointed head, and near
it on the south side is a two-light window with
divisions of repaired tracery. At the south-west is a
square-headed 15th-century window of two cinquefoiled lights, to the east of which is a blocked doorway,
and opposite is an uncusped two-light window, probably of the 17th century. The piscina has a pointed
trefoiled head, and east of it is a plain square recess.
In the north-east corner of the chancel, against a
blocked window, is an alabaster tomb with effigies of
John Thompson and his wife Dorothy; he was an
auditor of the Exchequer. The west wall of the
chancel was probably destroyed when the rood loft
was fitted up, and there is now a modern arch.
The nave has a north arcade of three 16th-century
bays with octagonal piers and responds with moulded
capitals; to the east is a corbel which once supported
the rood loft, and on one of the columns is a small
bracket. The south arcade is of three bays with
octagonal shafts and moulded capitals, which are
perhaps not original, and to the east are the blocked
doorways of the rood loft. The tower arch is in
three orders, the inner resting on half-octagonal
shafts with foliate capitals. The roof is flat, and has
a plaster cornice cutting across the crown of the
tower arch. The north aisle has an east window of
three cinquefoiled lights and two three-light north
windows, between which is a blocked doorway with
the marks of a porch; at the west end is a squareheaded window of three cinquefoiled lights. In the
east wall of the south aisle is a niche with 14th-century foliage in the spandrels, and near it in the
south wall is a trefoiled piscina. There are two
16th-century windows of three cinquefoiled lights,
and between them a moulded 14th-century doorway
with an external holy water stone in its east jamb.
The porch is large and lit on each side by a squareheaded 16th-century window of two cinquefoiled
lights; the doorway is in two hollow-chamfered
orders with a four-centred head. The tower is in
three stages, with an embattled parapet, moulded
plinth, and south-east stair turret, the angles being
strengthened by diagonal buttresses in four stages.
The west doorway has a square head with an inner
order forming a four-centred arch, and the label has
a carved figure stop on the north side, that on the
south having disappeared. The window above it
has three cinquefoiled lights and perpendicular
tracery; the top story is lighted on all sides by twin
windows of two trefoiled lights. Besides the monument already described there is a small mural tablet
on the east wall of the south aisle to Robert Slingsby,
who died 1634, and his wife Abija, and in the chancel
are several of the 18th century to the Williamson
family. In the tower is an old chest with a rounded
top bound all over with iron, and having three locks
and three hasps for padlocks; the south door is also old
and probably of the 16th century. One part of the
rood screen remains and is used in the reading desk.
The font is a plain cylinder of stone set against one
of the pillars of the south arcade; it is ancient, but
there is nothing to fix its date.
There are six bells: the treble and fifth are by
Taylor of St. Neots, 1820; the second, fourth and
tenor by Newcombe of Leicester, 1611, 1616
and 1613 respectively; the third by Emerton of
Wootton, 1779. There is also a small priest's bell
of 1661.
The plate consists of a silver flagon given by
Jane Thompson, 1638, a silver chalice and paten of
1636, a silver chalice, undated, and a plated chalice,
paten and credence paten.
The registers are in four books:—(1) all entries
1558 to 1678; (2) continues marriages to 1754
and baptisms and burials to 1765; (3) has marriages
1754 to 1813; (4) baptisms and burials 1765 to
1812.
ADVOWSON
The church of Husborne Crawley
was granted to Dunstable Priory by
Philip de Saunvill circa 1170, (fn. 82) and
confirmed to the canons there by Osmund de Saunvill
and the Countess of Albemarle, (fn. 83) and by David
de Flitwick in 1286. (fn. 84)
The vicarage was ordained in 1220 by Bishop
Hugh of Lincoln, (fn. 85) who appointed that the cost of
the hospitality due to the archdeacon on his annual
visit, and the providing of books, vestments and
utensils for the church, should be borne by the prior, (fn. 86)
and other expenses by the vicar. The total value of
the church at this time was 12 marks, and that of
the vicarage 5 marks 4s. (fn. 87) In 1291 the latter value
is given as £4 6s. 8d., (fn. 88) and in 1535 it was £9,
including £1 received for the site of the vicarage
and the adjoining pasture. (fn. 89) Both rectory and
advowson passed to the Crown at the Dissolution.
The latter was acquired by John Thompson with
the Dunstable Priory Manor in Husborne Crawley
before 1597, (fn. 90) and shares its subsequent history (q.v.).
The rectory was held on a forty-one years' lease
from 1534 by William Markham, who conveyed it
for the latter part of the term to Humphrey Fitzwilliam. (fn. 91) He received an extension of the lease
from the Crown in 1569, (fn. 92) but ten years later it was
granted to John Thompson for three lives, (fn. 93) and in
1590 was purchased by him for £492. (fn. 94) The rectory
then descended with the manor (q.v.) until 1691.
The great and small tithes, with considerable lands,
were sold by Mrs. Ursula Thompson and her brother
St. John Thompson, according to the will of their
father, to Edmund Williamson for £3,000. (fn. 95) The
rectory and advowson passed with the manor-house
(q.v.) to the Rev. Edmund Williamson, who sold
them in 1794 to the Duke of Bedford. His
successors have since been both patrons of the vicarage
and impropriators of the great tithes. (fn. 96)
The living was consolidated with that of Aspley
Guise in 1796, (fn. 97) but after the middle of the 19th
century they were again separated. (fn. 98) The tithes of
the rector and vicar were commuted and allotments
of land made to them in 1800. (fn. 99)
In 1546 lands to the value of 15s. 8d., and
money in the hands of various persons, yielding 30s.
a year, formed the endowment for perpetual obits
and lights in Husborne Crawley Church. (fn. 100)
CHARITIES
The Charity Estate, of which the
original settlement or acquisition is
unknown, consists of a farm of 50 a.
let at £70 a year, a house and garden let at £12 10s.,
and two cottages producing £8 9s. a year, together
with £212 0s. 5d. consols, with the official trustees,
the annual dividends being £5 6s.
The charity is regulated by schemes of the Charity
Commissioners of 4 July 1865, 8 August 1871, and
29 July 1884.
By an order dated 28 January 1896, made under
the Local Government Act 1894, a yearly sum of
40s. out of the income and a fourth part of
the residue of such income was apportioned as an
Ecclesiastical Charity, to be called the Church Estate,
of which the vicar and churchwardens were appointed
the trustees, and the remainder to be called the
Poor's Estate Charity, to the governing body of
which the parish council might appoint four additional
members.
By an order dated 25 August 1903, made under
the Board of Education Act 1899, the trustees of
the Poor's Estate are authorized to apply a sum not
exceeding £15 in any year for educational purposes.
In 1907–8 the sum of £25 4s. 5d., including
40s. to the parish clerk, was applied to ecclesiastical
purposes and £64 8s. in doles to the poor.
Fuel Land.
On the inclosure in 1795 an allotment containing 19 a. 0 r. 36 p. was awarded for fuel
for the poor. It is let at £30 a year, which in
1907 was applied in the distribution of faggots to
sixty-four recipients.
In 1728 Mark Slingsby by will, proved in the
P.C.C. on 17 January, devised to the minister,
churchwardens and overseers two closes of pasture
grounds in the parish of Moulsoe, Bucks., containing
7 a. more or less, upon trust that the yearly rents and
profits should be distributed amongst the poor of
Husborne Crawley upon the feast day of St. Mark
the Evangelist, such gift to be inscribed on his gravestone. The land is let at £15 10s. a year, which
in 1907 was distributed in doles to seventy-two
recipients.