UPTON-CUM-CHALVEY
Opetone (xi cent.); Uptone, Upton (xii cent.);
Chalfheye, Chalveye (xiv cent.).
The ancient ecclesiastical parish of Upton-cum-Chalvey, in the south-east of the county, has since
1900 been mainly included in the modern civil parish
of Slough. Parts of it were added to Eton in the
same year and to Wexham in 1901.
Its area in 1831 was 1,943 acres, (fn. 1) the greater part
being rural in character and including a detached
portion near Wexham practically all woodland, Upton
Wood, Rowley Wood, Gallions Wood and others
being found there. A stream called Chalvey Ditch
borders the south of Upton, and eventually flows
into the Thames below Eton.
The main interest of the parish centres in the old
village of Upton, now continuous with the south-eastern part of Slough. It includes the ancient
parish church of St. Lawrence, Merton Grange,
which by its name recalls the estate formerly held by
Merton Priory in this parish, and Upton Court.

Upton Court from the East
The latter house until the Dissolution belonged to
the same priory. The building, which faces east,
probably dates from the late 15th century, and was
originally of the normal central-hall type with the
private apartments and staircase at the north end and
the kitchen and offices at the south end, but 17th-century alterations have obscured the original arrangements. A wing which projected eastwards from the
south end has been pulled down and the walls have
been faced with brick and rough-casted; large additions have also been made on the north and south,
but a small portion of the original half-timber work
is visible on the west front of the house. In the
centre of the east front is a two-storied porch, and at
either extremity of the elevation are the gabled ends
of the remaining portions of the solar and kitchen
blocks. Over the porch door is a modern inscription,
'Welcome ye cominge, 1383 (here is carved the
figure of a monk), 1434, speed ye parting gest.' The
older internal fittings are principally of the 17th
century, but the original doorways to the staircase at
the north-east and part of the roof of the solar remain.
In the window of the dining room, which is on the
north side of the hall, are some squares of Dutch
glass, on one of which is the inscription, 'In solo deo
salus,' and on another the date 1667. Traces of the
monastic fish-ponds are still visible in the grounds. (fn. 2)
The Red Cow Inn, to the north-west of the church,
is a half-timber 16th-century building, much altered
and added to, while Upton
Dairy, a little distance to the
north of the church, dates
from the first half of the
succeeding century, and has
also been considerably
modernized. It is built of
brick and was once an inn.
Upton also contains several
other buildings of the same
periods, but these also have
been considerably altered.
On the Datchet Road,
which runs through the village, is an astronomical observatory.
The estate of Upton Park,
which is in this neighbourhood, contains some good
modern residential houses.
The hamlet of Chalvey lies
to the south-west of Slough.
There is a Primitive Methodist and a Congregational
chapel. The other buildings
lie scattered round the neighbourhood, and consist mainly
of modern residences and farm-houses; one of the
latter is known as Manor Farm.
The lands of Upton-cum-Chalvey were inclosed
by Act of Parliament in 1808. (fn. 3)
MANORS
At the time of the Domesday Survey
UPTON MANOR, formerly included
among Earl Harold's lands, was held by
the king himself. It was assessed for 18 hides, and paid
£21 yearly, the appurtenances including a mill worth
4s. (fn. 4) It was subsequently held by the Beuchamp
family, a member of which, Payn de Beauchamp,
Baron of Bedford, gave the manor to Merton Priory
in Surrey, (fn. 5) presumably soon after its foundation in
1125. The priory continued to hold Upton until
the Dissolution. (fn. 6) In 1254–5 the prior had view of
frankpledge here, although by what authority was not
known. (fn. 7) In 1291 the value of the priory estates in
the parish was £12 4s. 9d. (fn. 8) This was augmented by
various gifts of land, (fn. 9) and in 1535 their temporalities
at Upton were worth nearly £60. (fn. 10)
During their lordship of Upton, as early, indeed,
as the 13th century, the successive Priors of Merton
appear to have had a cell where monks from the
priory were always in residence. (fn. 11)
After the Dissolution the manor was annexed to
the honour of Windsor, (fn. 12) and remained in the Crown
for many years, various grants of its stewardship being
recorded from time to time. (fn. 13) In 1630 a grant of
Upton was made to Charles Harbord and others, (fn. 14)
and in the following year it was sold by them to
Sir Marmaduke Darrell, kt., and to Sir Sampson
Darrell, kt., his son and heir. (fn. 15) The latter held after
his father's death and died in 1635, leaving his son
Marmaduke as heir. (fn. 16)
In 1662 Marmaduke Darrell sold the manor to
Charles, afterwards Sir Charles, Doe, (fn. 17) by whom it
was mortgaged to John Lane. The latter by his
will, made and proved in the autumn of 1670, gave
Sir Charles five years in which to redeem the mortgage. (fn. 18) The executor, Thomas Steane, died within
that period, and in a law-suit which John Doe, heirat-law of Sir Charles, brought in 1676 Steane's
executor, Richard Hodilow, was unable to state if
the debt had been paid, (fn. 19) though it is recorded in a
lay subsidy concerning four quarterly assessments made
'for the carrying on a vigorous war with France,'
that Lady Doe, being rated and having paid her
first three assessments, died before the fourth was
collected, (fn. 20) Upton evidently passed to Benjamin
Lane, brother and heir of John Lane. (fn. 21) He died in
1723 (fn. 22) and Anne Lane, who, as wife of Vigorous
Edwards, made a settlement of the manor in 1724,
was probably his niece. (fn. 23) Anne died in 1733
without issue, and on the death of Vigorous in
1760 (fn. 24) Upton passed to his relatives, the Edwards
of Henlow Warden, Bedfordshire, (fn. 25) of whom George
was in possession in the early 19th century. (fn. 26) A
claim to the manor appears to have been made by
Samuel Bedford Edwards, a member of the Arlesey
Bury branch of the family, on the attainment of his
majority in 1820, (fn. 27) but in the middle 19th century
the manorial rights were vested in George Edwards
of Henlow. (fn. 28) By 1862 Upton belonged to Henry
Darvill, (fn. 29) members of whose family, Miss K. F.
Darvill, Mrs. H. E. Hulton and Mrs. H. M. F.
Wilson, at present hold it as co-heirs.
A survey made in 1605 gives an interesting account
of the bounds of the manor, which were as follows (fn. 30) :—
Beginning at the house at Mr. Woodward's Spring Corner,
going after along the brookside parting Upton and Langeley and
by the same brook still southwards to a corner of the meadow
called Northmeade in Dachet, parting Upton and Dachet …
and from the corner …to Merke Bridge …and by the
Mill Ditch parting Upton and Dachet, to the Thames southward …and from the Thames by a ditch parting Eton
College iand from Upton, west to Stonebridge, and so along the
ditch …to Scipenham Parke …and along the same ditch
parting Scipenham and Chalvey, and parting Chalvey and
Farnham Royal, northward unto the king's highway by Farnham
Mill leading towards London …and so eastward along the
highway parting Upton and Stoke Poges to a great elme in the
middle of Slowe unto a corner house of Andrew Windsor
…and from the elme along by a lane northwards parting
Upton and Stoke Poges to a certain ground called Sowetts …
and from there to Mundaies Greene and after to Poke Lane
parting Upton and Wexham to Mr. Woodward's Spring Corner.
The same survey records that according to the
custom of the manor the heriot was the best clovenfooted beast. The tenants also had common of
pasture in lands called the Marsh, Marshmead and
Chalvey Green, Moor and Grove, together with
herbage and pannage in Upton Wood.
The site of the manor, known as UPTON COURT,
had been demised to Roger Erlewyn or Urlwyn and
his heirs on a fifty years' lease for an annual rent of
£20 a few years before the Dissolution. (fn. 31)
The survey of 1548 records that the tenant had
to find provision for the king's officers whenever they
came to hold a court at Upton. (fn. 32)
Successive grants were afterwards made from the
Crown to Edward Hungerford, Thomas Duck and
Robert Barker. (fn. 33) A permanent grant appears to have
been made later, for in 1711 Benjamin Lane conveyed to Edward Lascelles and his heirs 'all that
capital messuage or mansion house called Upton
Court.' (fn. 34) Edward Lascelles was probably the greatgrandfather of Edward Lascelles, who was created Lord
Harewood in 1796, as the
latter held the property in
1809. (fn. 35) He was raised to
the rank of earl in 1812, and
the present Earl of Harewood
now owns Upton Court.

Bulstrode. Sable a hart's head argent having horns or and an arrow or with feathers argent piercing his nostrils and between the horns a cross formy fiechy or.
Richard Bulstrode, who
married Alice daughter and
heir of — Knife, (fn. 36) died in
1502 seised of lands held
of Merton Priory, and of
CHALVEY MANOR in
Chalvey and Upton which he
held of— Worley of Upton,
and which was valued at £8
yearly. (fn. 37) The manor remained in the Bulstrode family, passing regularly
from father to son, (fn. 38) for many years. In 1636
Henry Bulstrode, the sixth head of the family to
hold Chalvey, redeemed the manor from Henry
Allen, to whom it had been mortgaged some years
before. (fn. 39) His son Thomas Bulstrode was also a party
to this transaction, (fn. 40) but whether Thomas eventually
held the manor himself does not appear.
In 1704 it was held by John Montagu son of
Ralph Earl of Montagu, (fn. 41) and in 1718 was sold by
him to Henry Godolphin, Provost of Eton College. (fn. 42)
Godolphin died in 1733, and at a court baron of the
manor held in 1743 it seems that his widow Mary
Godolphin was lady of the manor. (fn. 43) Their son
Francis Godolphin died without issue, and his heir
and cousin by marriage, Lord Francis Godolphin
Osborne, was afterwards lord of the manor. (fn. 44) His
son became eighth Duke of Leeds, and the present
duke now owns this estate.
In 1600 a 'capital messuage or manor of Chalvey'
was held by Thomas Asteley and Frances his wife. (fn. 45)
They, together with Mary Asteley, widow, sold the
property to Henry Bell in 1601. (fn. 46) Henry Bell still
held in 1612, (fn. 47) but it was not apparently in his possession when he died, (fn. 48) and there is no other record of it.
During the first half of
the 13th century Peter de
Goldington had an estate
in Upton - cum - Chalvey,
which he held for one
knight's fee of the honour
of Bedford belonging to
William de Beauchamp. (fn. 49)
In 1254 Miles de Hastings
and Dionisia his wife, one
of the three daughters and
co-heirs of Peter de Goldington, (fn. 50) conveyed lands in
Upton and Chalvey to
Eustace, Prior of Merton. (fn. 51)
In 1254–5, when Upton
was held by the prior, a
certain part of Chalvey belonging to Upton was held
by Geoffrey Cumbaud. (fn. 52)
A survey of the manor
made in 1605 records that there was a certain fee
called Gumbald's fee, which was paid annually to the
king's manor of Upton by certain of the tenants for
land in Chalvey. (fn. 53) It only amounted to 12d., but it
was probably for the same land or part of the land
held in the 13th century by Cumbaud.
In 1263 Guy de Chanceus held 12 acres of land
and a mill in Chalvey and Upton (fn. 54) ; in the same year
he quitclaimed a messuage, land and rent there to
Andrew Chanceus. (fn. 55) The Prior of Merton and
Andrew de Chanceus held a third of a knight's fee in
Chalvey in 1302, (fn. 56) and in 1346 the same land was
held in chief by the prior and Nicholas Knife in the
proportion of two parts to one. (fn. 57)
The prior finally acquired the mesne lordship of
the latter's land, as appears from a 16th-century
survey, where the free tenants of Upton Manor
include Thomas Bulstrode holding land in Chalvey,
formerly belonging to Thomas Knife, for rent of
39s. 6d. (fn. 58)
Eton College acquired property in Upton in
1443. (fn. 59) The grant was afterwards confirmed by
Parliament, (fn. 60) and the lands are now part of Eton
parish (q.v.).
CHURCHES
The church of ST. LAWRENCE,
Upton, consists of a chancel 21 ft. by
16 ft., central tower 12 ft. 6 in.
by 12 ft., nave 55 ft. 6 in. by 19 ft. 6 in., south
aisle 19 ft. wide, south vestry and organ chamber.
All these dimensions are internal.
The nave and central tower appear to date from
the early part of the 12th century, while the chancel
was added or rebuilt, and the nave lengthened about
1160. The building having become very dilapidated,
services were practically suspended after 1835. The
new church at Slough was built in 1837, and the
old building, the tower of which had been struck by
lightning, was only saved from demolition by the
action of Mr. Beach, a farmer, who gave £50 to the
parish on condition that it should be left standing. (fn. 61)
A general restoration was undertaken in 1850, when
the south wall of the nave was rebuilt and the south
aisle added, and new windows in the 'Norman' style
replaced the windows which had been inserted in the
15th century in the east wall of the chancel and the
north wall of the nave. At the same time the east
and west arches of the tower were rebuilt. In 1879
the south vestry and organ chamber were added.
The walls are of flint and stone and the roofs are tiled.

Plan of Upton Church
The modern pair of round-headed lights in the east
wall of the chancel replaces a three-light 15th-century
window. In the gable above is a small round-headed
light opening to the roof. In each side wall are two
round-headed windows with internal edge-rolls; the
south-east window appears to be a restoration, but
the others are original, though those on the north
have been repaired externally with cement. An
original string-course runs along the wall internally
on both sides below the sills, and the lateral walls
are strengthened by pilaster buttresses. At the east
end of the south wall is a small 12th-century pillar
piscina with a scalloped head and a square basin.
The chancel retains its original quad ripartite stone
vaulting in two bays; the moulded ribs spring from
attached shafts with scalloped capitals, those in the
angles stopping on the string-course, while the
intermediate pair are carried down to the floor.
The modern painting on the ribs is said to be a
restoration of the original scheme.
The central tower is of two stages with a plain
parapet. The lower stage has modern arches at the
east and west. In the north wall is a window like
those in the side walls of the chancel, the masonry of
which is either modern or has been re-dressed, and
to the east of it is a small modern window. The
south wall is occupied by a 15th-century four-centred
doorway, the semicircular rear arch of which is probably of the 12th century, and a modern arch opening
to the organ chamber. The bell-chamber has plain
rectangular openings on the north and south and
traces of similar blocked openings in the other walls.
In a modern niche on the south wall of the groundstage of the tower is placed a remarkable representation in alabaster of the Holy Trinity; it is probably
of 15th-century date, and is about 18 in. in height,
and, though much mutilated, retains traces of the
original colouring.
At the east end of the north wall of the nave, set
in a recess which may be of the 13th century, is a
window of two lights, some of the jamb-stones of
which appear to be of the 15th century. To the
west of this is a restored round-headed light, probably
inserted in the latter half of the 12th century, when
the nave was lengthened. The next window, which
is now blocked, but is visible externally, is a small
early 12th-century light, and immediately to the west
of it is a modern window, copied from the later
12th-century work in this wall, which replaces a
15th-century insertion. The north doorway was
originally here, but appears to have been moved
westwards to its present position when the nave was
lengthened. It has been much restored, only the
inner order and the angle shafts being original.
Partly above the doorway is a second modern window
like that just described, which also replaces a 15th-century insertion; the window at the west end of
the wall, though much restored, is probably contemporary with the lengthening of the nave. On
the south is a modern arcade of four bays, and in the
west wall is a modern three-light window, above which
is an original round-headed light.
In the east wall of the south aisle a remarkable
pointed oak arch of the 13th century has been reset
in the opening to the organ chamber; the moulded
arch is enriched with dog-tooth ornament, and the
responds have shafts with foliated capitals and moulded
bases. Another arch of the same design is said to
have formerly existed, the pair being placed on either
side of the original western arch of the tower, where
they probably formed reredoses to the nave altars.
Built into the wall to the south of this are a 12th-century round-headed arch and a moulded two-centred
arch of the 13th century, while reset at the south-east
is a recess similar to that at the north-east of the
nave and containing a window of the same character.
The open king-post roof over the nave probably dates
from the 15th century.
The font has a 12th-century circular bowl enriched
with arcading in low relief, and standing on a modern
stem and base.
In the central recess at the east end of the south
aisle is placed a brass commemorating Edward Bulstrode, who died in 1599, and Cecily his wife,
daughter of John Croke, with their figures, the man
wearing plate armour, and those of their four sons
and six daughters. In the same recess are two other
brasses, one engraved with the kneeling figure of a
woman in a shroud, and the other bearing an inscription in Hebrew. The shrouded figure apparently
formed part of the brass of William Bulstrode and his
wife Agnes, who died in 1472. (fn. 62) In the adjoining
arch are figures of a man in armour, two women,
ten boys and two girls, and four shields with the
arms of Bulstrode and their alliances. The inscription, now lost, is quoted by Lipscomb and commemorates Edward Bulstrode (d. 1517), esquire of
the body to Henry VII and Henry VIII, with two
of his three wives Mary, Ellen, and Margaret. On
the west wall is a brass inscription commemorating
Mary daughter of Thomas Read and first wife of
Henry Bulstrode, the son and heir of Edward
Bulstrode, who died in 1614, and one of their
daughters. In the aisle is a slab with the matrices for
two figures, an inscription, and two shields. There
is also a mural tablet with arms to Henry Bulstrode,
son and heir of Edward Bulstrode, the date of whose
death is not filled in, and Bridget his wife, widow of
John Allen, who died in 1631. At the north-east
corner of the tower is a mural tablet in memory of
Sir William Herschell, who died in 1822, and was
buried here. On the south side of the churchyard
is the tomb of Bazakell Gael, who died in 1668, and
Elizabeth his wife, 1676; and a slab against the
south wall of the nave is from the tomb of Margaret
widow of Sir John Trevor, kt., 1614.
At the east end of the nave is a small poor-box of
16th or 17th-century date. In a circular window
over the south doorway are preserved some fragments
of old glass. Parts of the rood screen and other
fragments from this church are now in the modern
parish church.
There is one bell by Richard Eldridge, 1619, and
a sanctus by C. & G. Mears, 1859. The former
bell was hung for some years in the ring at Slough
(q.v.).
The communion plate includes a cup of 1616.
The registers begin in 1538.
The church of ST. PETER, Chalvey, was built in
1860–1, from the designs of G. E. Street, on a site
given by Mrs. Beauchamp of Finefield. It consists
of chancel, nave, north porch and western bellcote
containing two bells. It serves as a chapel of ease
to St. Mary's, Slough.
ADVOWSON
This church was granted to Merton
by Payn de Beauchamp and was
held by the priory with the manor
until the Dissolution. (fn. 63)
A vicarage was ordained during or before the
early years of the 13th century. (fn. 64) In 1232, when
Simon de Gumecestre was instituted as vicar by the
prior, he was ordered to have 'a suitable chaplain as
associate until he is competent himself.' (fn. 65)
The advowson was vested in the Crown after the
Dissolution, (fn. 66) and so remained until 1867, when it
passed to the Bishops of Oxford, (fn. 67) by whom it is at
present held.
In 1655 an augmentation of £20 to the vicar's
living at Upton was proposed by the Committee of
Maintenance for Ministers and was approved. (fn. 68)
The living remained a vicarage until about 1883,
at which period it was converted into a rectory, the
great tithes having been purchased for that purpose
by gift of Mr. F. Charsley. The parish church is
St. Mary's in Slough. At the time when this was
built in 1837 the old parish church of St. Lawrence
in Upton had fallen into absolute decay, so that the
parish rights were granted to St. Mary. (fn. 69)
The survey of 1605 records that the 'gardian of
the Church of Upton' held a house and garden containing a rood of land, and also 1 acre of arable
land at Stonebridge. This property was held by the
warden at the will of the lord for money rent
according to the custom of the manor. (fn. 70)
At the Dissolution the rectory of Upton was valued
at £10. (fn. 71) A grange was attached which at that time
and for many years after was held to farm by the
family of Erlewyn. (fn. 72) In 1664 the grange and tithes
belonging were held by Edmund Duck, George
Duckens and William Williams. (fn. 73)
CHARITIES
In 1720 Benjamin Lane by a
codicil to his will charged his lands
called Henscrofts with an annuity of
£20 to be applied as follows: in the purchase of
six Bibles to be distributed at Christmas, in supply
of suits and hats to six poor men and coats and
petticoats to six poor women, £1 to the vicar for
preaching a sermon annually on the Sunday after
the date of the donor's death (19 October), showing
the excellency and use of the Holy Scriptures, 5s.
to the parish clerk, and £1 for entertainment of
the trustees at their meeting. The directions of
the donor are specifically observed so far as is
practicable.
In 1728 Robert Webb by his will charged his
estate in Upton and Stoke Poges with an annuity of
£10 to bind out one boy every year, born in the
parish, to a trade. The charity is regulated by a
scheme of the Charity Commissioners of 29 July 1910.
The Church Land, the origin of which is unknown,
consists of three pieces of land containing in the
whole 1 a. 2 r. of the annual value of £5, which is
carried to the churchwardens' account.
In 1832 Mrs. Harriet Ladbrooke Thomas by her
will bequeathed £400 consols, the dividends to be
applied in keeping the family vault in repair, and the
residue to be distributed in bread on the Sunday following the donor's interment (7 October). In 1909
£1 2s. 6d. was expended on the tomb and £8 19s.
in bread.
In 1847 Charles Hatchett by will, proved
14 April in that year, bequeathed £100 stock, now
£101 10s. 10d. Local Loans 3 per cent. stock, the
dividends, amounting to £3 0s. 10d. (subject to
repair of tomb in the churchyard), to be distributed
among deserving poor.
In 1859 Mrs. Ann Mason by will, proved
26 February, founded a charity to be known as the
Chappell Fund, consisting of £690 consols, the yearly
dividends, amounting to £17 5s., to be applied in
December and January of every year in the distribution of beef and coals, preference to be given to
widows and farm labourers out of work and having
families.
In 1879 Mrs. Ann Beauchamp by will, proved
17 April, bequeathed £200, the income arising
therefrom to be distributed in meat, coals and bread
among poor families in Chalvey on Christmas Eve.
The legacy was invested in £205 7s. 10d. consols,
producing £5 2s. 8d. yearly.
The several sums of stock above mentioned are
held by the official trustees.