HAMBLEDEN
Hanbledene (xi cent.); Hamelden, Hameledene (fn. 1)
(xiv cent.).
Hambleden is a large parish extending over 6,598
acres, of which 2,553 are arable, 1,308 are permanent
grass and 2,034 acres (nearly one-third of the whole
area) are woods and plantations. (fn. 2) The land rises
sharply from 100ft. by the Thames, which forms its
southern boundary, till it reaches 618 ft. in the west
and north-west of the parish. The soil is light and
chalky, a thick stratum of chalk being worked in
various parts of the parish. The chief crops are
wheat and barley.
The main road from Great Marlow to Henley
runs through the southern part of the parish, and
another road in the valley of the winter-bourne runs
due north up the centre of the parish.
The village is about a mile from the southern end
of this road. In the middle of it stands the
church. The school, built by Viscount Hambleden
in 1897, is outside the village on the opposite
side of the road. Near the junction of the two
roads the foundations of Roman buildings were
noted in 1911 and have since been excavated by
Mr. A. H. Cocks, F.S.A., and are to be housed
in a museum near the school built by Viscount
Hambleden.
The Manor House, a picturesque, many-gabled
structure of dressed flint and red brick, standing to
the east of the church, is the residence and property
of Mr. Francis Scott-Murray. It was built in 1604
by Emanuel Scrope, afterwards Lord Scrope of Bolton
and Earl of Sunderland, but was altered, restored and
added to in the 19th century. The old part retains
some of its original features. In the hall is some mid17th-century panelling brought from a neighbouring
farm-house. The old Manor House stood to the
south-east of it and is partly incorporated in the
present rectory.
Yewden Manor House, the property of Viscount
Hambleden, and now occupied by Mr. Philip
Barnett, is at the south end of the parish. In its
grounds there is an avenue of yews of great age.
Yewden House and part of the water-mill on the
opposite side of the Marlow road both date from
the early 17th century, and a house on the south
side of the Henley road, further west, is partly of
the 16th century, but all have been modernized.
The village contains several cottages of early 17th-century date.
The two parsonage-houses, the Upper and the
Lower, remained until 1724, (fn. 3) when Dr. Kenrick,
then rector of Hambleden, built the rectory-house,
the front of which remains substantially unaltered to
the present day, on part of the site of the old manorhouse, utilizing a portion of its fabric. (fn. 4)
Near the mill is Hambleden Lock, newly erected
in 1376, when the London bargemen lodged a complaint against the tolls exacted from them at the locks
on the Thames contrary to their franchise. (fn. 5) At
the head of the deep bend in the river to the west
of the lock stands Greenlands, the seat of Viscount
Hambleden. The original house, which stood on
the river bank to the south of the site of the present
mansion, was garrisoned for the king in May 1644
by a force under Colonel Hawkins. In the first
week of June General Browne, in command of a
Parliamentary force, was ordered against it, but
various causes delayed the siege until 11 July following, when Browne's artillery overcame the resistance
of the Royalists: the house 'could no longer be
defended, the whole structure being beaten down by
the cannon.' (fn. 6) Hawkins marched out with all the
honours of war, surrendering only the house and his
ordnance; and the Parliamentary general, without
waiting for instructions, proceeded with the hearty
goodwill of the country side to demolish what was
left of the house. (fn. 7) Portions of the foundations have
been uncovered from time to time, and cannon balls,
relics of the siege, have been found in the garden and
are now preserved at Greenlands. The nucleus of
the present house consists of the smaller entrance
hall entered from a pillared portico on the south side
facing the river, which contains the staircase and has
the library and small drawing room to the west and
east. This part, built by Mr. Coventry early in the
19th century, was occupied for several years as a farmhouse. Mr. Edward Marjoribanks, the next owner,
who succeeded his father as Lord Tweedmouth in
1894, built the two bow-windowed additions containing
the billiard room and large drawing room on either side
of this portion; he also laid out the extensive walled
gardens and park. The Rt. Hon. W. H. Smith, M.P.,
who purchased the Greenlands estate in 1871, made
great additions, building the dining room, the tower
and the ranges of offices, &c., on the north side and
giving the house the appearance which it now has.
The main entrance on the west side opens into a
square and spacious hall with the billiard room leading
out of it on the right hand.

Yewden Manor House, Hambleden
Three miles north of Hambleden village is the
hamlet of Skirmett, with All Saints' Church, a chapel
of ease to the parish church, an infants' school and
a Congregational chapel. To the west of it are
Poynetts House and Wood, which derive their name
from the Poynants, who were 14th-century holders
of Skirmett Manor. The house is modern with a 17th-century nucleus; the foundations of an older house,
burnt down in the 14th or 15th century, lie about
50 yards east of the present structure. Among the
materials were some Roman brickbats, probably re-used
from the ruins of a Roman
house in the neighbourhood. (fn. 8) Poynetts is the
residence of Mr. A. Heneage
Cocks, F.S.A., who keeps in
his grounds otters, wild cats
and other beasts.
Frieth, (fn. 9) with St. John's
Church, another chapel of
ease to Hambleden Church,
a parsonage, village hall and
school, is 3 miles north-east of
Hambleden. To the north-west of it is Little Frieth,
with a few outlying cottages.
About half a mile to the
south-west of Frieth stands
Parmoor House, the property
and residence of Lord Parmoor of Frieth, K.C.V.O. It
is built of brick in the Queen
Anne style, and commands
a fine view of the surrounding country. Further south
is the hamlet called Rockwell
End, which may derive its name from the family of
Rocolte, of whom Thomas de la Rocolte is mentioned
in the early 14th century. (fn. 10) A later form of the
name is Rickoll (fn. 11) or Rockoll from 16th and 17th-century tenants.
The road between Parmoor and Hambleden village
leads over Pheasant's Hill and past the hamlet of the
same name, where there is a Congregational chapel,
built in 1810. To the west of Pheasant's Hill, but
the opposite side of the valley, on the Skirmett road,
is Bacres, known as Baker's Farm in 1714. (fn. 12) After
the death in 1866 of Mr. Thomas Raymond Baker,
who lived there for fifty years, the property was
bought by the Rt. Hon. W. H. Smith and the spelling
of the name altered from Bakers to Bacres. It has
been enlarged, and is now the residence of Mrs. Henry
Grenfell. North of Bacres Farm is another farm
called the Howe; this is bounded by a road which
formerly ran from Marlow past Parmoor and which
on the west of the valley is called Dudley's Lane,
leading to Luxters, an old farm-house which is said
to have sheltered for a night the Earl of Leicester on
his way from London to Cumnor. In the eastern
half of the parish on high ground about a mile south-east of the village is Burrow Farm (la Berewe alias
la Burgh, xiv cent. (fn. 13) ; the Burrow, xvii cent.), which
was bequeathed by Elizabeth Lady Periam in trust to
Archbishop Laud, (fn. 14) who founded with it two scholarships in Balliol College, Oxford. (fn. 15) It is a 16th-century
house with 17th-century additions and modern restorations. It retains a good many original features,
including the entrance doorway (now disused), a
chimney stack, windows, fireplaces and some old
panelling.
Huttons Farm, east of the village, and Chisbidge
(Chissebech, xiv cent.; Chesbeche, xiv cent. (fn. 16) ) Farm,
near the eastern boundary of the parish, both built
of flint and brick, are of early 17th-century date with
later alterations.
Hambleden was the birthplace of St. Thomas de
Cantelupe, (fn. 17) son of William de Cantelupe and his
wife Millicent (Hambleden Manor, q.v.). He was
Lord High Chancellor of England and Bishop of
Hereford, and was canonized in 1320, becoming
second only in popularity to St. Thomas of Canterbury among the later English saints, and was the
last English saint to be recognized by the undivided
Western Church. (fn. 18) Another parish worthy was
Dr. Roberts, who was sequestered from the rectory
of Hambleden for loyalty in 1644, (fn. 19) and at the
Restoration petitioned the king for the archdeaconry
of Winchester on the ground of the great misery that
he had suffered in consequence. (fn. 20) The parish register
notes on 17 May 1685 that Mary Wallington had a
certificate to go before the king for a disease called
the 'king's evil.' (fn. 21)
Palaeolithic and neolithic implements have been
discovered at Skirmett (fn. 22) and in other places, particularly at Burrow and in fields near the river.
The following place-names occur in Hambleden:
Bennetts, Grey, (fn. 23) Holmes (fn. 24) (xvi cent.); Adams
and Colsthorpe (fn. 25) or Collmanstrop (fn. 26) (xvii cent.);
Oliver's Mead (fn. 27) (xviii cent.).
MANORS
Before the Conquest HAMBLEDEN
MANOR was held by Earl Algar. (fn. 28) In
1086 it was assessed at 20 hides and
included in Queen Maud's lands. (fn. 29) It became
attached to the barony of Gloucester (fn. 30) and was held
in the 13th century by the service of one knight's
fee (fn. 31) and in the 14th century in socage. (fn. 32) Later in
the century it was included under the honour of
Christchurch (fn. 33) and was held by grant of Edward III
to the Earls of Salisbury (fn. 34) by the serjeanty of finding
a tent for the king and carrying it in time of war. (fn. 35)
An allusion to this service occurs in 1498. (fn. 36) The
sub-tenant held Hambleden Manor of the Earls of
Salisbury as part of Amesbury Manor, Wiltshire, (fn. 37)
by the service of finding a standard-bearer in time of
war. (fn. 38) The last mention of overlordship that has
been found occurs in 1611, (fn. 39) when the service by
which this manor was held of the Crown was stated
to be unknown.
In the early 13th century Aumary Count of
Evreux held Hambleden Manor, (fn. 40) as parcel of the inheritance of his mother Mabel, one of the daughters and
co-heirs of William Fitz Robert Earl of Gloucester. (fn. 41)
In 1213 Aumary's widow Millicent obtained seisin
of a third of the manor in dower, the remaining twothirds passing to the next male heir Gilbert de Clare, (fn. 42)
afterwards Earl of Gloucester. (fn. 43) In 1217 he gave
Millicent, who had married William de Cantelupe
the younger, the whole manor for her life in settlement of her other claims in dower. (fn. 44) In 1254 it
was held by Richard Earl of Cornwall, (fn. 45) who in
1231 had married Isabel widow of Gilbert de Clare. (fn. 46)
He died in 1272, (fn. 47) and in the same year his son
Edmund married Margaret daughter of Richard de
Clare Earl of Gloucester (fn. 48) and retained the manor. (fn. 49)

Clarf. Or three cheverons gules.

Cornwall. Argent a lion gules with a crown or in a border sable bezanty.
Edmund Earl of Cornwall appears to have resided
at the manor-house of Hambleden, where he built an
oratory in or before 1296. (fn. 50) In 1302 his widow
was holding for her life, (fn. 51) but in 1314 Bartholomew de Badlesmere received a pardon for acquiring
Hambleden Manor without licence from Gilbert de
Clare, late Earl of Gloucester, (fn. 52) whose relative Margaret de Clare he had married. (fn. 53) The manor remained in his possession, (fn. 54) but when he died as a
traitor in 1322 for joining Thomas Earl of Lancaster
against the Despensers (fn. 55) it escheated to the Crown, (fn. 56)
and in the following year was granted to the younger
Hugh le Despenser. (fn. 57) In 1327 Margaret widow of
Bartholomew de Badlesmere was granted Hambleden
Manor to hold during the king's pleasure, (fn. 58) and in
1333 it was restored to her in accordance with the
agreement made by Edward III on his accession to
restore all lands confiscated for opposition to the
Despensers. (fn. 59) Giles son and heir of Bartholomew
de Badlesmere (fn. 60) died seised of this manor in 1338, (fn. 61)
when it was assigned to his fourth sister and co-heir
Margaret (fn. 62) wife of John Lord Tiptoft. (fn. 63) He held
it until his death in 1367, (fn. 64) when, his wife having
predeceased him, he was succeeded by their son
Robert, (fn. 65) who made a settlement of Hambleden
Manor in 1369. (fn. 66) At his death in 1372 it passed
to Walter Hewitt and Juliane Dastyn for their lives. (fn. 67)
In 1373 Juliane, then the
wife of Stephen Spere, quitclaimed her right in the manor
to Walter Hewitt, (fn. 68) who soon
afterwards surrendered both
life interests to Sir Richard
Scrope, (fn. 69) first Lord Scrope of
Bolton, guardian of the young
daughters and co-heirs of
Robert Lord Tiptoft. (fn. 70) He
was still holding the manor
for Juliane Spere's life in
1386, when, on the marriage
of the eldest daughter and
co-heir Margaret to his son
Roger, (fn. 71) he with others, probably trustees, surrendered
their estates in the manor to Roger and Margaret. (fn. 72)
Roger le Scrope succeeded his father as Lord Scrope
in 1403 (fn. 73) and died in the same year. (fn. 74) Hambleden Manor remained part of the family estates of
the Scropes (fn. 75) until the death of Emanuel last Lord
Scrope of Bolton and first and only Earl of Sunderland (fn. 76) in 1630, when it passed to his natural
children, John, Mary, Elizabeth and Annabel. (fn. 77)
John died without issue in 1646. (fn. 78) Mary with her
husband Henry Carey, son of Henry second Earl of
Monmouth, appears to have surrendered her share
in the manor in 1647 (fn. 79) apparently to her sisters.
That year Elizabeth married Thomas, later Earl
Rivers, (fn. 80) and they in 1668 mortgaged their estate in
the manor to Robert, (fn. 81) afterwards Sir Robert Clayton,
kt., (fn. 82) to whom it was sold by their son Richard Earl
Rivers (fn. 83) in 1696. (fn. 84) Meanwhile the third sister,
Annabel widow of John Howe, ancestor of the Earls
Howe, (fn. 85) had sold her interest in the manor to Sir
Robert Clayton in 1686. (fn. 86) Hambleden Manor
remained in the Clayton family, passing from Sir
Robert to his nephew and heir William, afterwards
Sir William Clayton, bart., (fn. 87) until the death of Sir
Robert Clayton, bart., in 1799. (fn. 88) He bequeathed
it in trust for sale, (fn. 89) and it was purchased in 1802 by
Robert Scott of Danesfield. (fn. 90) On his death in 1808 his
heir was his nephew Charles Scott-Murray (Medmenham, q.v.). His great-grandson Mr. Francis ScottMurray (fn. 91) is the present owner of Hambleden Manor.

Scroff, Lord Scrope Of Bolton. Azure a bend Or.

Scott. Or a bend azure with a molet between two crescents thereon and a border engrailed sable charged with scallops or.

Murray. Argent a bugle-horn proper with its strings gules and a chief azure with three molets argent therein.
View of frankpledge was held for the manor from
the 13th century. (fn. 92) Christmas geld was paid in
1338 amounting to £2 13s. 4d. (fn. 93) In 1315 a
charter of free warren was granted to Bartholomew
de Badlesmere and his heirs. (fn. 94) The right to hold a
weekly market on Mondays and a yearly fair on the
vigil, day and morrow of St. Bartholomew (23, 24,
25 August) was also granted in 1315. (fn. 95) The fair
on St. Bartholomew's Day was being held in 1325,
when Hugh le Despenser obtained an extension to
the two following days, (fn. 96) but no later reference has
been found to either market or fair.
The fishery at Hambleden in 1086 produced
1,000 eels (fn. 97) and was worth £1 yearly in 1338. (fn. 98)
The rent of Hambleden Mill, worth £1 yearly in
1086, (fn. 99) was granted before 1236 to Keynsham
Abbey, Somerset, (fn. 100) which had been founded by
William Earl of Gloucester during the latter half of
the 12th century. (fn. 101) Sir John Tiptoft disseised the
abbot, (fn. 102) whose successor in 1396 claimed the rent
(then worth £1 6s. 8d.) from Sir Richard Scrope. (fn. 103)
Two water-mills are named in 1338 (fn. 104) ; references
to them occur in the 17th and 18th centuries, (fn. 105)
and one is at present worked by Messrs. C. Barnett
& Sons.
Early in the 13th century half a knight's fee in
Hambleden was held of the barony of Gloucester by
Thomas de Santford. (fn. 106) Land in 1248 was conveyed
by Adam de Pyrton, one of the heirs of Thomas
de Santford or of his son Thomas, (fn. 107) to Hugh Peverel
of Sampford Peverell, (fn. 108) Devonshire. (fn. 109) In 1254 he
was holding it under the name of YEWDEN or
EWDEN MANOR, (fn. 110) later alias GREENLANDS or
MILL END. He or a relative of the same name,
probably his son, was holding in 1284, (fn. 111) and two
years later gave the reversion of this manor after the
death of his wife Mary to Amice Peverel, his
daughter, (fn. 112) and her heirs. (fn. 113) By 1302 it had passed to
Henry de Montford, (fn. 114) presumably Amice's first
husband, and was assigned to her in 1338 on the
death of her second husband, Miles de Beauchamp. (fn. 115)
She was still in possession in 1346, (fn. 116) but her son
Reginald de Montford (fn. 117) in 1350 released his rights
in this manor to Thomas Lord Berkeley, (fn. 118) who sold it
four years later (fn. 119) to Thomas Doyley. (fn. 120) Nicholas
Aumberden and Martin Chaunceaux, who were
associated with him in the purchase of Yewden
Manor, released to him their rights in it in 1357. (fn. 121)
A settlement was made in 1366 on Thomas Doyley,
his wife Alice and their heirs. (fn. 122) He died in 1384, (fn. 123)
and Alice leased Yewden (fn. 124) to
their son and heir William, (fn. 125)
who retired there when a lawsuit had deprived him of his
other estates. (fn. 126) John his
elder son became a monk, but
Yewden remained in the family
of his younger son Richard,
whose grandson John changed
the chief seat to Greenlands (fn. 127)
in Yewden on acquiring that
estate from Sir William Stonor
about 1480. (fn. 128) On his tomb
in Hurley Church, where he
was buried in 1492, he is
described as 'a famous soldier
in France.' Thomas son
and heir of John Doyley
was buried at Hambleden in 1545, (fn. 129) and in the
following year his son John (fn. 130) received a pardon for
entering Yewden Manor without licence. (fn. 131) He died
seised in 1570 and was succeeded by his son Robert, (fn. 132)
who was afterwards knighted. (fn. 133) He was Sheriff of
Oxfordshire and died at the Black Assizes at Oxford (fn. 134)
in 1577. (fn. 135) On the death of his widow Lady Periam,
in 1620 (see Turville), Yewden Manor reverted to
his brother and heir John, (fn. 136) who died seised in 1622. (fn. 137)
His son Sir Cope Doyley, kt., on whom the rever
sion of the manor had been settled in tail-male in
1605, (fn. 138) succeeded. (fn. 139) He died in 1633, when his
heir was his son John. (fn. 140) He being greatly impoverished by the damage done to his estate during
the siege of Greenlands sold Yewden in 1651 to
Bulstrode Whitelocke. (fn. 141) After the Restoration it
passed into other hands, (fn. 142) and was conveyed in 1679
by Edmund and Sarah Harrington and Richard and
Winifred Chandler to John Morris. (fn. 143) Before 1687
it had been transferred to John Green, who died
lord of the manor in that year. (fn. 144) His son John
died in the following year. (fn. 145) He left two sisters
and co-heirs, Mary, who married Thomas Coventry, (fn. 146)
and Elizabeth, (fn. 147) who was unmarried in 1708. (fn. 148) The
Mill End part of the estate was purchased from the
heirs of Thomas and Mary Coventry by Richard
Lane of Poynetts, Skirmett, who died in 1785. His
eldest son and namesake (fn. 149) was Sheriff of Buckinghamshire in 1757, (fn. 150) and owned Mill End at his death in
1789. (fn. 151) His widow Ann Lane married the Rev.
Thomas Hynd, (fn. 152) who was the owner in 1797. (fn. 153) It
was probably their daughter Ann Hynd who was in
possession in 1847. (fn. 154) Meanwhile the Greenlands part
of the estate had been sold by Mr. Baker, husband
of Elizabeth Green, in 1719 to Mr. Robert Ayre. (fn. 155)
His daughter married Henry Stevens, and their son
the Rev. Thomas Stevens, rector of Bradfield, Berks.,
owned the property in 1797. (fn. 156) His son the Rev.
Henry Stevens, also rector of Bradfield, (fn. 157) sold it in
1801 to the Rev. Thomas Hynd, (fn. 158) who retained it
for a year or two and then sold it to Mr. Steers. (fn. 159)
It was purchased about 1810 by Mr. Coventry, who
still owned it in 1847. (fn. 160) Fifteen to twenty years
later it appears that both the Mill End and the
Greenland estates were purchased by Mr. Edward
Marjoribanks, who thus became owner of both moieties
of Yewden Manor. (fn. 161) In 1871 it was purchased by
the Right Hon. W. H. Smith, M.P., (fn. 162) whose wife
shortly after his death in 1891 was raised to the
peerage as Viscountess Hambleden with remainder to
his male issue. (fn. 163) His son Viscount Hambleden is the
present owner.

Smith, Viscount Hambleden. Argent a cheveron azure between three oak leaves vert each charged with an acorn or and with three fleurs de lis coming out of leopards' heads argent upon the cheveron.
A view of frankpledge was held at Yewden in
1254, but apparently without warrant, (fn. 164) and no later
reference to it has been found.
The so-called manor of PARMOOR (Pyremere,
xiv cent.; Permer, xv cent.; Pamer, Parmor, xvii
cent.; Palmoor, xix cent.) appears in Hambleden in
the latter half of the 15th century, but it is not
regularly called a manor until fifty years later. It
passed as a messuage and lands held as parcel of
Hambleden Manor for a small rent and suit at court
by Henry de Malyns and his wife Cecily at his death
about 1324. (fn. 165) His son and heir Edmund (fn. 166) was
living in 1340, when a general release dated at
Hambleden was made by John, another son of Henry
de Malyns, to Edmund and his son Reginald. (fn. 167)
The latter, then Sir Reginald Malyns, kt., died seised
in 1384, when his son and heir Edmund was aged
thirty-three. (fn. 168) In the next century Parmoor passed
into the possession of Sir Robert Whitingham, a
supporter of the Lancastrian cause, being included
in his confiscated estates, (fn. 169) which were granted by
Edward IV to Sir Thomas Montgomery in 1462 for
life (fn. 170) and in 1464 in fee-tail. (fn. 171) Three years later
his title to Parmoor was guarded by the insertion of
a saving clause in an act of restitution. (fn. 172) In 1472
the reversion of Parmoor in the event of the death of
Sir Thomas Montgomery without male issue was
granted to Sir Ralph Verney and his heirs. (fn. 173) His
son John married Margery daughter and sole heir of
Sir Robert Whitingham, and eventually obtained his
wife's lands, which descended to his son Sir Ralph
Verney, jun., kt. (fn. 174) He and his wife Anne in 1516
quitclaimed Parmoor Manor to Richard Janyns and
his heirs. (fn. 175) Later in the century it came into the
possession of the Saunders family, for in 1603
Richard Saunders conveyed it to Timothy Doyley
and his heirs. (fn. 176) Later claims to this manor made by
John Saunders (fn. 177) were finally settled in 1631 in
favour of Timothy Doyley. (fn. 178) He belonged to a
younger branch of the Doyley owners of Yewden
Manor, (fn. 179) and in 1637 leased Parmoor Manor for
forty years at a yearly rent of £30 to his son and
heir-apparent Robert, (fn. 180) who was buried at Hambleden in 1669, (fn. 181) three years after his father's death. (fn. 182)
Parmoor remained in Robert Doyley's family, passing
from father to son in the direct line until the
death, unmarried, of his great-grandson John Doyley. (fn. 183)
He was receiver-general of light duties, and dying intestate in Seething Lane, London, in 1800, (fn. 184) was buried
in the Doyley vault in Hambleden Church. (fn. 185) Parmoor
Manor passed to his nephews,
George Ramsey and Ambrose
Stephenson, who sold it. (fn. 186)
Mr. Henry Cripps, Q.C., to
whom the manor belonged in
1873, (fn. 187) had occupied it prior
to purchase as the tenant of
Mr. William Cook of London. (fn. 188)
He was succeeded in 1899
by his son, (fn. 189) now Lord Parmoor of Frieth, the present
owner.

Cripps, Lord Parmoor. Or a cheveron vert with five horseshoes argent thereon.
One-sixteenth part of a fee in Hambleden was
held in 1302 of the Earl of Gloucester. (fn. 190) In 1346
it was parcel of the manor of Headington (co. Oxon.),
having passed to Sir Richard D'Amorie, (fn. 191) greatnephew of Roger Lord D'Amorie, the third husband
of Elizabeth, one of the sisters and co-heirs of Gilbert
de Clare Earl of Gloucester, slain at Bannockburn in
1314. (fn. 192) On the death of Sir Richard D'Amorie
without issue in 1375 Headington Manor reverted to
Elizabeth Chandos and Eleanor Colynge, sisters of Sir
John Chandos, and Margaret de Annesley, his niece, (fn. 193)
and the connexion between it and Hambleden appears
to have been severed.
Thomas Poynant held this land, afterwards known
as SKIRMETT MANOR (Skirmot, xiv cent.), as
sub-tenant in 1302 (fn. 194) and Thomas Poynant and John
Notebem as sub-tenants in 1346. (fn. 195) The latter
surrendered his right in it in 1351 to Adam son of
Thomas Poynant, (fn. 196) who five years later successfully
opposed a claim to one-third of this manor in dower
made by Roger Baber and his wife Joan widow of
John Notebem. (fn. 197) Between 1381 and 1411 Elizabeth
wife of Richard Megre had rights in the manor, (fn. 198)
which she and her husband at the later date warranted
against her heirs to Thomas Senycle and his heirs. (fn. 199)
A reference to the vill of Skirmett occurs in 1416, (fn. 200)
but the manor appears to have been dispersed among
various owners. William second son of John
Doyley of Greenlands (fn. 201) left his lands called Skirmetts
and Bennetts by will proved in 1556 to his son
Thomas on the death or marriage of his widow. (fn. 202)
These afterwards came to his second son Robert, (fn. 203)
father of Timothy Doyley, later of Parmoor Manor
(q.v.), into which they were probably absorbed.
Another portion of the manor called Poynetts was
sold in 1572 under the name of Poynetts Farm by
William Waller of Stoke Charity (Hants) and
Wormsley in Stokenchurch, which is under 4 miles
from Poynetts, to Richard Lane of Lee (Bucks.). A
later Richard Lane bequeathed it to his nephew
Richard Lane, who bought Mill End (q.v.). At the
death of his son's widow, Ann Hynd, it was inherited
by John Deane, cousin of Ann Hynd's first husband
and son of Elizabeth Lane by John Deane of Howe
Farm. It remained in the Deane family until purchased in 1900 from Colonel R. W. Deane, son of
the Rev. R. Deane, by Mr. A. H. Cocks, the present
owner. (fn. 204)
The hamlet in Hambleden called FRIETH, THE
FRIETH or OLIVERS FEE (Frith, xvi cent.) in
1384 was held of Hambleden Manor for 44s. yearly
and suit to one view by Sir Reginald Malyns and his
wife Florence (fn. 205) (Parmoor Manor, q.v.). A later
member of his family about 1429 granted Olivers
Fee to one Wimbush. (fn. 206) His lands came into the
possession of the Elmes family, (fn. 207) and were conveyed
by one of its members in 1548 under the name of
The Frith to John Doyley. (fn. 208)
The Rockolls, who held an estate in ROCKWELL
END (Rockall End, early xix cent.) (fn. 209) called the farm
of 'Rockholde ende' in 1577, (fn. 210) were also tenants in
the 16th and 17th centuries of lands called HOO,
HOW, or the HOWE-GROUND, to which references
occur from the middle 13th century. (fn. 211) In 1545 these
lands, lately held by Charles Duke of Suffolk (fn. 212) with
the service and 20s. rent appurtenant, at one time paid
by Henry Lord Scrope, were granted in fee, being
then in the tenure of John Rockoll, (fn. 213) to Christopher
Edmunds. (fn. 214) He transferred them in the same year
to John and William Doyley. (fn. 215) They remained in
John Doyley's family, following in the first half of
the 17th century the same descent as Yewden Manor
(q.v.). The Deanes, whose name as well as that of
the Rockolls, occurs in connexion with Hambleden
during the 17th century, (fn. 216) were said in 1845 to have
been seated at the Howe since 1709. (fn. 217) They retained the Howe with Poynetts (q.v.), which they
had inherited from the Lanes, until the end of the
19th century, when the Rev. R. Deane (fn. 218) sold the
Howe to Viscount Hambleden. The earliest property held by the Deanes in this parish appears to
have been at Colstrop, where they were seated as early
as 1577. (fn. 219) This branch, which is distinct from that
of the Howe and Poynetts, continued in possession
of Colstrop, (fn. 220) and is represented to-day by Mr. Louis
Deane of Colstrop Farm. The greater part of the
property, however, has been sold to Mr. Henry
Vivian.
Medmenham Priory owned some farms and rents
in Hambleden at the Dissolution. (fn. 221) This property
was granted in 1537 to Bisham Abbey, (fn. 222) and in 1546
as a parcel of land called Grey in the tenure of
Thomas Grey to Thomas More of the King's
household and his son Robert. (fn. 223) It has not been
found possible to trace it further.
CHURCHES
The parish church of ST. MARY
THE VIRGIN consists of a chancel
58 ft. by 20 ft., north vestry, north
chancel aisle 12 ft. wide, south chancel aisle, north
transept 27 ft. 6 in. by 15 ft., north transeptal aisle
11 ft. 6 in. wide, south transept 28 ft. by 20 ft.,
nave 69 ft. 6 in. by 18 ft., south porch and west
tower. These measurements are all internal.
The existing building appears to have been
developed from a cruciform church of the 12th
century with a central tower. The outer jamb and
head of a doorway, now reset in the west wall of the
north transept, are the only details remaining of
this date. The north transept was enlarged and an
eastern aisle added early in the 13th century; about
a hundred years later a rebuilding of the nave seems
to have been undertaken, followed in a few years by
the lengthening of the chancel and the enlargement
of the south transept. A west tower of red brick, subsequently encased in flint and heightened as a memorial to Canon Ridley, was added in 1721, the original
central tower having been destroyed a few years previously. The 12th-century doorway mentioned above
may have been the original west doorway of the nave,
the removal of which would have been necessitated by
the building of the west tower. In the 19th century
aisles were added to the chancel and the north vestry
and south porch were built, the last from the oak of
the old west gallery.
In the east wall of the chancel is a three-light
window with a traceried four-centred head. There
were till recently two windows in each side wall,
with old rear arches and labels, probably of the
14th century, but a window on the north side has
lately been blocked. The piscina, the basin of
which is modern, and the sedilia, three in number,
are good examples of mid-14th-century work with
trefoiled ogee heads and crocketed and finialled labels,
all of chalk. Beneath the east window, and visible
only externally, is a blocked square-headed window
of three lights. A doorway to the vestry and modern
arcades of two bays opening to the chancel aisles
occupy the western portion of the chancel. The
chancel arch is also modern.
The 13th-century arcade opening to the eastern
aisle of the north transept is of two bays with two-centred arches of two chamfered orders carried by a
central circular column and small semicircular respond
shafts. The transept is lighted by a modern window
in the north wall and by an original 13th-century
window of two lights under a two-centred containing
head, with a trefoiled piercing in the spandrel, at the
north-west. The 12th-century shafted jambs and
roll-moulded semicircular arch set beneath this window
externally belong to the doorway, the rear arch and internal jambs of which still remain in the southern half
of the same wall; they were removed here on the
construction of the heating chamber in the angle made
by the transept with the nave. The northern half of
the eastern aisle is lighted by two modern windows;
the remaining portion now forms a part of the north
aisle of the chancel. The windows of the south
transept are all modern, though some old work may
be incorporated in the internal jambs. In the east
wall is a modern arch communicating with the south
aisle of the chancel.
The nave communicates with the transepts by
modern arched openings. In the north wall are two
mid-14th-century windows, each of two cinquefoiled
lights with sexfoiled tracery in a two-centred head.
At the west end of this wall is a small blocked doorway of the same date with chamfered jambs and a
two-centred head. The two windows in the south
wall are similar in date and design to those in the
opposite wall. To the west of them is the south
doorway, which is also original work and of three
orders. Below the sills of the windows is a moulded
string-course. The modern west tower is of two
stages externally. The nave roof is modern, but one
of the tie-beams appears to be an old timber from the
original roof re-used. The walling generally is of
flint rubble with dressings of stone and chalk
The font is of the 12th century and of tub shape.
Along the top is an indented moulding, and the sides
are ornamented with large lozenges, each containing
a floreated cross; the spandrels between the lozenges
are filled with foliage approximating in type to the
fleur de lis.
On the north wall of the nave is a brass to John
Berde, who died in 1492, and on the west wall are
the brass figures of a man in civil dress and a lady
in the horned head-dress of the 15th century, with a
later inscription commemorating Robert Doyley, who
died in 1617, and his wife Anne, who died in
1639. On the same wall are the figures on one
brass of a man and his two wives, in the costume of the
early 17th century. On the north wall of the north
transept, fixed on two boards, are portions of the
early 16th-century brass of Robert Scrope and his wife
Katherine. The inscription is in Latin and the date
has not been completed. The fragments include the
kneeling figure of a woman with a prayer inscribed
in Latin upon a scroll above her, which appears to
have belonged to a second figure facing her, two
other inscribed scrolls, and four shields of Scrope
quartering Tiptoft with a crescent for difference. In
the north transept are also brasses to John Shipwash,
who died in 1457, and his wife Joan, and to William
Shipwash and Margery his wife undated but of late
15th century, and in the tower are brasses to John
White and his wife Alice, 1497, Ralph Scrope, a
former rector, who died in 1516, and a shield of
Scrope quartering Tiptoft, Badlesmere, Clare, Scrope
of Masham, and Nevill. Set on the west wall is a
brass, with figures, to George Scrope, who died in
1614.
In the north wall of the chancel is a table tomb
with a panelled front containing quartered shields of
Sandys within a recess with a depressed four-centred
arch under a square inclosing moulding with shields
and foliage in the spandrels. The back of the recess
and the soffit of the arch are also panelled, the panels
of the former containing painted shields and an inscription which includes the following lines:—
'I believe in the resurrection of life
To see you again at the last day;
And now farewell Elizabeth my wife
Teach my three children, God to obeye.'
It has been supposed that this is the tomb of Henry
son of the second Lord Sandys, who died about
1555, in his father's lifetime, and left a widow
Elizabeth and three children. (fn. 224) In the tower there
is a monument with arms to Ralph Scrope, who died
in 1572. On the north side of the north aisle of
the chancel is an elaborate monument commemorating
Sir Cope Doyley, who died in 1633, and his wife
Martha, who died in 1618. Their effigies, with
those of their five sons and five daughters, are represented in alabaster. Above the monument is a crowning cornice with two allegorical figures. On the west
wall of the north transept is a monument to John
Green of Yewden Manor, who died in 1687, and to
his son, who died in the following year. A recess in
the north wall contains a stone coffin. On the north
wall of the nave is a tablet to Francis Gregory, a
former rector, who died in 1682.
Some early 16th-century panelling, traditionally said
to have formed part of Cardinal Wolsey's bedstead,
stands in the tower. It is divided by richly moulded
and carved shafts into eight compartments, arranged
in rows of four, and bearing the arms of Wolsey surmounted by a cardinal's hat and the royal arms in
the left-hand panel of the upper row, with those of
Foxe, Bishop of Winchester, encircled by the garter
in the next panel to the right. In the left-hand
lower panel is an unidentified shield; the remaining
panels are richly carved, those of the upper row
containing medallion heads. (fn. 225)
There are six bells: the treble by R. Phelps, 1724;
the second inscribed 'Feare God 1634'; the third,
'George Deane gave this Bell 1634'; the fourth by
John Warner & Sons, 1857; the fifth by Pack & Chapman, 1778; and the tenor inscribed in black letter
with ornate initial letters, 'Ora Mente Pia Pro Nobis
Virgo Maria.' This bell is of the early 15th century
and is from the Wokingham foundry. The second
and third bells are by Ellis Knight of Reading.
The plate includes a cup of 1635 presented by
Elizabeth dowager Countess of Sunderland and a
cover which is probably of the same year.
The registers begin in 1566.
The church of ST. JOHN THE EVANGELIST,
Frieth, was built by Canon Ridley in 1848. It is of
flint with stone dressings and consists of chancel, nave,
south aisle added in 1872, north porch, and bellcote
containing one bell. It is a chapel of ease to St. Mary.
The church of ALL SAINTS, Skirmett, was built
by the Rev. C. M. Wetherall in 1886. It is of flint
and brick and has a belfry containing one bell. It
is also a chapel of ease to St. Mary.
ADVOWSON
Hambleden Church, which is a
rectory, was valued at £23 6s. 8d.
in 1291. (fn. 226) The advowson appears
to have belonged to the lords of the manor from the
first. (fn. 227) In 1314 the king withdrew a presentation
he had made (fn. 228) in favour of one made by Bartholomew
de Badlesmere pending an inquiry. (fn. 229) From this
time the descent of the advowson corresponds with
that of Hambleden Manor (fn. 230) (q.v.) until 1790, when
it was sold by Sir Robert Clayton, bart., to Richard
Troward, (fn. 231) and purchased from him by Jeremiah
Smith in 1791, (fn. 232) apparently as agent for Benjamin
Colborne of Bath, who died in 1793. (fn. 233) It passed
from his trustees (fn. 234) before 1840 to Lord Colborne, (fn. 235)
second son of Sir Matthew White-Ridley, second
baronet of that name, and of Sarah daughter of
Benjamin Colborne, (fn. 236) who died without surviving
male issue in 1854. (fn. 237) The advowson of Hambleden
passed to Canon W. H. Ridley, (fn. 238) rector from 1840
until his death in 1882. (fn. 239) It was purchased from
the next owner, Mr. H. C. Ridley, (fn. 240) about 1899 by
Viscount Hambleden, who is the present owner. (fn. 241)
Before 1862 the tithes had been commuted for
£1, 210. (fn. 242)
Edmund Earl of Cornwall founded a chantry
chapel in Hambleden, which was newly built in 1296
without licence from the bishop. (fn. 243) On this account
he suspended it and also because superstitious things
were venerated, miracles said to be performed and
pilgrimages made there under colour of devotion. (fn. 244)
Later in the year, however, the bishop withdrew the
suspending order (fn. 245) and issued a licence to the Earl of
Cornwall. (fn. 246) In the following year the earl obtained
a licence to alienate in mortmain to Ashridge College,
which he had founded in 1283, (fn. 247) a fee-farm rent in
Aldbury (Herts.) for the maintenance of a chaplain. (fn. 248)
The chapel appears to be that which in 1579 under
the name of the late free chapel called More Chapel
in Hambleden was granted to Edward Tomlinson
and Anthony Page. (fn. 249)
In 1493 Reginald Davy bequeathed [money for] the
rood lightand for the repair of the fabric of the church. (fn. 250)
CHARITIES
Eleemosynary Charities.
Charity
of Agnes Lewyn, founded by will
and comprised in deed 11 June 1577,
consists of a rent-charge of 40s. yearly issuing out of
a farm at Rockwell End.
The Pit House charity, comprised in deeds
19 August 1634 and 2 September 1654, consists of a
house and 5 acres situate in Remenham (Berks.), let
at £21 a year.
Unknown donors' charities, mentioned in the
Parliamentary returns of 1786 as gifts of £20 and
£50, are now represented by £74 15s. 4d. consols
with the official trustees, who also hold a sum of £100
consols, arising from the sale of an acre of land called
in the same Parliamentary returns the Church acre,
also given to the poor by an unknown donor.
The Poor's Piece, consisting of 6 acres or thereabouts in the Lord's Field, purchased with the sum of
£50 belonging to the poor and conveyed to trustees by
deed 28 August 1692, let for £3 10s. a year.
The net income of these charities, amounting to
about £26 a year, is applied in doles varying from 5s.
to 15s. to each recipient or in articles in kind of that
value.
In 1864 Ann Hynd by will bequeathed £1,000,
now represented by £1,085 9s. 8d. consols with
the official trustees, for the benefit of the parish
church schools or the poor of the parish generally.
In 1908 the dividends amounted to £27 2s. 8d.
Previous to the Education Act of 1902 the income
had been applied for the benefit of Skirmett infants'
school.
Educational Charities.
In 1733 Augustin Varnell
by will gave a rent-charge of £1 10s. yearly out of
his estate in the manor of Yewden for teaching four
poor children to read.
In 1762 the Rev. William Fairfax, curate of the
parish, by will proved in the P.C.C. 7 June, bequeathed
£100, now represented by £110 consols with the
official trustees, for teaching poor children to read.
The income of these charities was applied for the
benefit of Hambleden and Frieth schools.
The Church of England school, founded by the
Rev. H. Ridley by deed in 1806 and placed in trust
in hands of the minister and churchwardens by deed
of 19 December 1876, is now used as a parish room.
Viscount Hambleden built a handsome new school
in 1897 in memory of his father and to commemorate Queen Victoria's Diamond Jubilee.
Ecclesiastical Charities.
The Clerk's Piece consisted of a piece of land given to the parish by Lord
Scrope, the rent to be expended in strewing the
church with straw at Christmas and grass at Easter.
It is now used in part payment of the clerk's salary.
By an order of the Charity Commissioners 4 June
1913 the rector and churchwardens were appointed
trustees and the income directed to be applied in
payment to the parish clerk, or, failing such, to the
sexton or other person performing the duties of parish
clerk. The sale of the land has been authorized.
In 1882 Miss Augusta Eliza Anna Murray, by her
will proved at London 18 February, bequeathed
£1,333 6s. 8d. stock, now a like sum of consols with
the official trustees, producing £33 6s. 8d. yearly,
the dividends to be applied as a stipend for an
additional curate, if any such be appointed, otherwise
the income to be invested in augmentation of the
principal fund.
In 1887 John Keene by will bequeathed £1,000
towards the salary of the minister of the Congregational church at Pheasant's Hill. The legacy, less
duty, is represented by £900 2s. 6d. consols, standing
in the names of Charles D. Keene and Alfred Keene,
producing £22 10s. a year. The will contains a
reverter clause in favour of certain of the legatees in
the event of the church being discontinued.