CHURCH LENCH
Circelenz (xi cent.); Ciricleinc, Lench Roculf
(xiii cent.).
The parish of Church Lench lies on the eastern
border of the county. The parish includes the
hamlets of Ab Lench or Hob Lench, (fn. 1) Atch Lench
and Sheriff's Lench, the first being a chapelry
of Fladbury until 28 December 1865, when, for
ecclesiastical purposes, it became part of Church
Lench. (fn. 2) The Whitsun Brook flows northward and
then westward through the parish, and the land
gradually rises from the valley of this stream, which
near the western boundary of the parish is 154 ft.
above the ordnance datum. Sheriff's Lench is
378 ft. above the same level. Church Lench has an
area of 2,572 acres, of which, in 1905, 1,321 acres
were arable land, 1,130¼ permanent grass and 90¾
acres woodland. (fn. 3) Ab Lench includes 884 acres.
The subsoil is lower lias clay, the surface clay and
sand. Farming is the chief occupation; wheat, barley and beans are grown.
The Inclosure Act for Church Lench was passed in
1783, (fn. 4) and the award is dated 19 December in that
year. (fn. 5)
17th-century place-names are: Hommeangswicke,
Golden Butts, Hippitts, Woodcocke Thorne Coppice,
Balloe Hill. (fn. 6)
MANORS
It is stated in the Evesham Chronicle
that CHURCH LENCH formed part of
the gift made by Kenred of Mercia in
708 to Evesham Abbey, (fn. 7) but Church Lench is not
mentioned in the grant as given in the Harleian
Manuscript. (fn. 8) A grant of five 'manentes' at Lench
was made to the abbey by King 'Eadward' of Mercia
between 860 and 865. (fn. 9) No such king is known, and
the charter is an obvious forgery. Church Lench seems
to have been afterwards alienated, as Abbot Mannig
(1044–54) is stated to have recovered this township for
his church. (fn. 10) His successor, Æthelwig II, is also said
to have acquired at great cost certain lands, among them
Church Lench, from 'King Edward and other good
men.' (fn. 11) In 1086 it was held by the abbot and convent
in demesne, (fn. 12) but it was shortly afterwards granted
by Abbot Walter (1077–86) to Urse d'Abitot the
Sheriff of Worcestershire 'for service' for the term of
his life only. (fn. 13) His heirs, the Beauchamps, apparently
retained it, however, as a survey of the lands of the
abbey of Evesham, the probable date of which is
about 1150, states that William de Beauchamp,
grandson of Urse, held 4 hides at Church Lench of
the abbey. (fn. 14)
The rights of the Abbot of Evesham in the overlordship were recognized until the 13th century at
least, when William de Beauchamp was said to be
holding Church Lench by gift of Robert the Abbot. (fn. 15)
After that time the rights of the abbot in the manor
appear to have lapsed.
The Beauchamps continued as overlords, and
occasional owners in demesne, (fn. 16) of the manor until
the 14th century. (fn. 17)
Under them the manor was held by the Roculfs,
from whom Church Lench took the alternative name
of Lench Roculf. (fn. 18) During the early part of the
reign of Henry III it appears to have been held by
Roger Roculf or Rotulf, who in 1229–30 conveyed
certain land to Ellis son of Giffard. (fn. 19) About the
same time the recently founded abbey of Halesowen
received from him several grants in which he is
designated 'lord of Church Lench.' (fn. 20) The property
which the abbot and convent thus received appears
to have afterwards become a distinct manor (q.v.),
now the capital manor of Church Lench.
The Roculfs continued to hold the manor, and
William Roculf paid a subsidy at Lench Roculf in
1280, (fn. 21) and in 1299–1300 he was in possession of
the manor, (fn. 22) and was succeeded before 1315 by his
son Thomas. It seems to have next passed to John
Roculf, who in 1346 held the fourth part of a
knight's fee there. (fn. 23)
The next mention of this property is in 1428,
when Thomas Serchesdene held John Roculf's estate. (fn. 24)
Thomas was still in possession in 1431. (fn. 25) After this
time nothing is known of this manor, which may
have become incorporated with Rous Lench, a manor
also held by Thomas Serchesdene, or perhaps lapsed
to the overlords, the Earls of Warwick, and became
annexed to Sheriff's Lench.
The present' manor of CHURCH LENCH seems
to have originated in land at Church Lench granted
in the reign of Henry III by Roger Roculf, lord of
Church Lench, to the abbey of Halesowen. (fn. 26)
In 1272–3 William Abbot of Halesowen conveyed a
messuage and 3 carucates of land in Church Lench
and a carucate of land in Ab Lench to Ralph de
Hengham, afterwards chief justice of the Common
Pleas, who was to hold the estate for life, with reversion to the abbot. (fn. 27)
No mention is made in Pope Nicholas's Taxatio of
any property held in Church Lench by the Abbot and
convent of Halesowen. The land and tenements
granted by Roger Roculf appear to have been retained
by them, (fn. 28) however, until in 1538 it was surrendered
to the king by William Taylor, the last abbot. (fn. 29) It
was granted in the same year to Sir John Dudley. (fn. 30)
It was probably sold by him to William Scudamore,
who died seised of it in 1560, when it passed to his
son John. (fn. 31) He in 1596 settled the manor in tailmale on his son Sir James, with remainder to his
brothers George and Roland. (fn. 32) Sir James died in
1619 in the lifetime of his father, leaving a son John, (fn. 33)
who was created a baronet in 1620. (fn. 34) In 1627 he
sold the manor to William Keyt, (fn. 35) who died seised of
it 12 October 1632. (fn. 36) He left a son and heir John,
who had livery of the manor of Church Lench in
1635. (fn. 37) He died in 1660, and was succeeded by his
son John, who was created a baronet in 1662. (fn. 38)
Sir John Keyt was succeeded in 1662 by his son
William, (fn. 39) who survived his four sons and died in
1702, when his estates passed
to his grandson Sir William. (fn. 40)
Sir William Keyt was burned
to death at Norton, co. Gloucester, in September 1741,
being supposed to have been
a lunatic and to have set fire
to the house, (fn. 41) and Nash states
that the manor was then sold
to Sir Dudley Ryder, (fn. 42) whose
son Nathaniel, created Lord
Harrowby in 1776, was the
owner of it in 1779. (fn. 43) In 1793
John Callow and Ellen his wife
conveyed 'the manor of Church
Lench' to John Clarke. (fn. 44)

Keyt, baronet. Azure a cheveron between three kites' heads razed or with three trefoils gules on the cheveron.
The Rev. William Chafy, D.D., of Sherborne,
co. Dorset, master of Sidney-Sussex College, Cambridge, purchased part of the manor about 1826,
and more has since been acquired by his grandson
the Rev. William Kyle Westwood Chafy, D.D., of
Sherborne and of Rous Lench. (fn. 45) About a third of
the manor was purchased by the Duc d'Aumale and on
his death passed by will to the Duc d'Orleans. This
part was sold in 1912 to Sir Charles Swinfen Eady.
SHERIFF'S LENCH
SHERIFF'S LENCH (Lenche, xi cent.; Shyreveslench, xiv cent.; Shrewlenche, xvi cent.) is said
to have been the Lench, Lench Bernardi or 'Lench
Alnoth juxta Chadelbure' (Chadbury in Norton
parish) asserted to have been given by Ethelbald of
Mercia to the abbey of Evesham in 716, (fn. 46) but it must
afterwards have been lost by the abbey, as it was among
the lands recovered by Abbot Æthelwig (1070–7) from
King Edward and other good men. (fn. 47) The manor comprised 4 hides and was acquired in moieties by Æthelwig; 2 hides he held in the time of King Edward and
the other two he bought with the money of the church
from Gilbert Fitz Turold with the permission of King
William. (fn. 48) The Domesday Survey gives the additional
information that the proceeds of the latter moiety of
the manor supported one monk in Evesham Abbey. (fn. 49)
It does not, however, agree with the chronicles of
Evesham as to the acquisition of the other 2 hides,
which are here stated to have been bought of King
William for 1 mark of gold. (fn. 50) The whole manor was
held by Abbot Æthelwig until his death in 1077, (fn. 51)
when it was stolen from the church by Odo Bishop of
Bayeux, who gave it to Urse the Sheriff. (fn. 52) It is
difficult to decide to what period to assign the statement made in the Domesday Survey that Lench had
been held as three manors, 2 hides being held by two
thegns and two by a certain woman named Aelfgifu, (fn. 53)
as in the Cotton MS. it is clearly stated that the
church of Evesham held the manor in demesne after
its acquisition by Æthelwig. (fn. 54)
In 1086 the manor of Sheriff's Lench was returned
among the possessions of Odo, Bishop of Bayeux, then
in the king's hands. Urse was still sub-tenant, (fn. 55) and
the Evesham Chronicle states that he held it 'contra
Rotulum Winton' in the time of Abbot Walter
towards the end of the 11th century. (fn. 56) In spite of
the title to the manor, which
the monks of Evesham had
made out at the time of the
Survey, they seem never to
have recovered it from Urse,
though they must evidently
have extorted some acknowledgement of seignorial rights,
for Urse's successors the Beauchamps recognized the Abbots
of Evesham as their overlords. (fn. 57) Though the manor
was said to be held for the
service of half a knight's fee,
'because it was in the hands
of the mighty it does nothing
for the abbot except homage, and the men of Lench
do suit at Blakenhurst.' (fn. 58) The abbot's overlordship
is mentioned for the last time in 1316, and afterwards, though it was known that the manor was not
held of the king in chief, it
could never be discovered who
was the true overlord. (fn. 59)

Evesham Abbey. Azure a chain with its padlock set saltirewise between three mitres argent.

Beauchamp. Gules a fesse between six crosslets or.
From Urse the manor passed
to the Beauchamps, the hereditary Sheriffs of Worcester,
and thus doubtless acquired
its name Sheriff's Lench. It
passed with Elmley Castle in
the Beauchamp family until
about the middle of the 13th
century, when William de
Beauchamp gave to his brother
James the manors of Sheriff's
Lench and Church Lench and the advowson of the
church, with the exception of the land which he had
given to Bartholomew de Sudeley. (fn. 60) By an undated
charter James de Beauchamp granted Sheriff's Lench
to his nephew William Earl of Warwick and Maud
his wife, (fn. 61) and the manor descended with Elmley
Castle (fn. 62) until it was granted in tail-male by Thomas
de Beauchamp Earl of Warwick to his younger son
William, afterwards Lord Bergavenny. (fn. 63) It then
passed with Chaddesley Corbett (fn. 64) (q.v.) and was
claimed with that manor by the co-heirs of Henry
Duke of Warwick, and evidently assigned to Edward
Earl of Warwick, who was attainted in 1499. (fn. 65) It
was, however, like Chaddesley Corbett, granted by
Anne Countess of Warwick to Henry VII in
1487–8. (fn. 66)
In July 1511 the manor was leased for forty years
to George Throckmorton. (fn. 67) In November of the
same year it was granted in fee to William Dineley of
Charlton, (fn. 68) and this grant was confirmed in 1514, a
rent of £5 a year being reserved to the Crown. (fn. 69)
From that time the manor followed the same
descent as Charlton in Cropthorne (q.v.) to John
Dineley. (fn. 70)
From deeds among the Prattinton Collection it
appears that Sheriff's Lench was sold by a Mrs. Johnson towards the end of the 18th century to —
Masefield, and that it afterwards passed to a
Mr. Pulteney, who sold it to different owners, the
greater part passing to a Mr. Stokes, who sold it to a
Mr. Edwin, the owner in 1812. Half the manor
was purchased about 1824 by the Rev. Dr. William
Chafy, and the other half, including the old manorhouse, now called the Manor Farm, and about 500
acres of land, was bought of Mr. Winnall in 1873 by
the Rev. William K. W. Chafy, D.D., who now owns
the whole. (fn. 71) The manor-house is now undergoing
restoration, but contains nothing of interest except
a well-preserved dog-gate at the foot of the stairs.
By an undated charter, probably about 1253,
William de Beauchamp granted to Bartholomew de
Sudeley in free marriage with his daughter Joan 10
virgates of land and a messuage in SHERIFF'S
LENCH, with reversion to the donor in case Joan
had no children. (fn. 72) The manor, which was held of
the lords of Elmley Castle by the service of a pair of
spurs, (fn. 73) then followed the same descent as Fairfield in
Belbroughton (fn. 74) until 1496, when the lands of Ralph
Lord Sudeley were divided between Edward Belknap
and Sir John Norbury. Sheriff's Lench was assigned
to the former. (fn. 75) It was perhaps this manor which as
'the manor of Shrewlinche parcel of Warwick and
Spenser's land' was granted in 1560 to Sir Nicholas
Throckmorton and his heirs. (fn. 76) Sir Nicholas left the
manor in 1571 to his second son, Arthur Throckmorton, (fn. 77) and in 1596 he and his wife Anne were
in possession of it, (fn. 78) but nothing further is known of
the estate.
The sacrist of Evesham Abbey held an estate at
Lench during the 13th century, and before 1206 had
purchased of the commoners of Lench the right to
assart certain common land there. (fn. 79) In 1206 he
held 3½ hides of land at Lench. (fn. 80) In the Subsidy
Roll of 1280 this estate is called 'Lenche Sacriste de
Evesham' and the Abbot of Evesham paid a subsidy
of 22s. there. (fn. 81)
ATCH LENCH
ATCH LENCH (Eccheslenc, viii cent.; Eacesleinc,
Achelenz, xi cent.) was given to the abbey of Evesham
by Kenred son of Wulfhere, King of Mercia, in 708, (fn. 82)
and like Church Lench was afterwards alienated but
recovered by Abbot Æthelwig II (1070–7). (fn. 83) It was
held by the abbot and convent in demesne at the
time of the Survey, its assessment being 4½ hides. (fn. 84)
Atch Lench was probably the Lench which was
appropriated to the use of the pittancer of the abbey,
to whom, it is stated in a survey of the abbey made in
1206, Prior Thomas had granted the wood in Atch
Lench which he bought of Peter de Lens. (fn. 85) In the
reign of Henry III William Meldrope held half a
hide there by gift of Robert the Abbot. (fn. 86) Atch
Lench remained in the possession of the abbey of
Evesham until the dissolution of that house. (fn. 87)
On 15 August 1542 Henry VIII granted it to the
Dean and Chapter of Westminster. (fn. 88) Queen Mary,
who refounded the abbey, regranted it to the abbot and
convent, (fn. 89) but on the accession
of Elizabeth the abbey was
again dissolved, and Atch
Lench was once more in May
1560 granted to the dean
and chapter. (fn. 90) It remained
in their possession until the
Commonwealth, when, their
lands being sequestered, the
manor of Atch Lench was in
1650 sold to Sir Cheyney
Colepeper of Hollingbourne,
Kent. (fn. 91) At the Restoration
the manor was restored to the
dean and chapter. Their
estates were vested in the
Ecclesiastical Commissioners
about 1858, (fn. 92) and the manor of Atch Lench has
since belonged to the Ecclesiastical Commissioners. (fn. 93)
It has for many years been held under the Commissioners by members of the family of Bomford. (fn. 94)
Among the dean and chapter's documents at Westminster are court rolls of Atch Lench from 1666 to
1802. (fn. 95)

Dean and Chapter of Westminster. Azure a cross paty between five martlets or and a chief or with a pale of the arms of France and England between two roses gules.
In the time of Bishop Werefrith (873–915) Ethelred
the Earl gave to the church of Worcester Clceve Prior
with LENCH. (fn. 96) This was evidently the half-hide
which was held by Godric under Fritheric, custodian
of the church of St. Helen, Worcester, and was
restored to the monks in the 12th century by Fritheric
because it justly belonged to them. (fn. 97) This half-hide
at Lench was still held with Cleeve in 1086 by the
monks of Worcester, (fn. 98) and continued to be so held
until 1253, (fn. 99) when it is mentioned for the last time.
CHURCH
The church of ALL SAINTS consists
of a chancel 27 ft. by 15 ft. 6 in., with
a modern north organ chamber and
vestry, a nave 45 ft. by 16 ft. 6 in., a south aisle
9 ft. wide, a western tower about 8 ft. square, and
a south porch, all measurements being internal.
In the 12th century the church consisted of a nave
and a short chancel, but rebuilding has destroyed
almost all traces of its early history. A south transept
was added at some date previous to the 15th century,
in the early part of which the south aisle was built
to line with the transept end, the 12th-century south
door being reset in the later wall. Subsequent 15th-century alterations included the rebuilding of the
chancel arch, the addition of the nave clearstory with
the insertion of a large window in the north wall,
and probably the erection of the lower part of the
tower, the latter being completed in the 16th century.
In modern times the chancel and the parapet of the
tower have been rebuilt and the organ chamber and
vestry added.
All the windows of the chancel are modern, in
14th and 15th-century style, though a few old stones
have been used up in their jambs. The chancel arch
has a slightly blunted two-centred head of two chamfered orders. A projecting block of masonry in the
north wall of the nave contains the rood-stair, and
west of this is a single-light window with a modern
head. Half-way along the north wall is a large
15th-century window of three lights with rectilinear
tracery under a four-centred head, and further west
is the original 12th-century north door. The lower
part is now blocked up, and the round head forms a
lunette window in which are inserted some fragments
of 15th-century glass. The wall of the clearstory
above, being somewhat thinner, is set back externally,
and contains two 15th-century windows of two lights
each, with quatrefoils under the four-centred heads.
The south wall of the nave is pierced with an arcade
of three bays, the first arch, of wider span, being the
original entrance to the transept. It is four-centred,
with two chamfered orders, and dates from the middle
of the 15th century. In its eastern respond is the
canopy of an elaborate 15th-century image niche with
a foliated finial, embattled cornice and cusped panels
to the soffit. The two western bays of the arcade
are of early 15th-century date, with pointed arches of
two continuous chamfered orders stopped with a single
broach stop. The low, late 15th-century opening to
the tower has plain square jambs and a four-centred
head, and to the south of it is a door leading to an
open wooden belfry stair.
The three-light east window of the south aisle is of
late 14th-century date, with flowing tracery and a
four-centred head. To the south of it is a moulded
image bracket of slightly later date. The three
15th-century windows in the south wall are all squareheaded, the westernmost having two lights and the
others one only. The west window, of the same
date, has been considerably restored. The 12th-century south door was reset at the building of the
south aisle, and the round head is now the only
unrestored portion.
The south porch and the font are both modern.
The tower, three stages high, with angle buttresses,
has a single-light transomed west window of 16th-century date, and similar lights to the two upper
stages, all with square heads. The embattled parapet
and pinnacles are modern.
Preserved in a glass case in the nave are the remains
of an early 16th-century cope made into a desk cloth.
The material is blue velvet embroidered with a floral
pattern. The orphrey of the cope has been cut in
half and sewed on as a border to both edges. It has
six figures of saints under canopies on a gold ground. (fn. 100)
After a precarious existence of many years the cope
came under the custody of Dr. W. K. W. Chafy,
who exhibited it to the Society of Antiquaries
at Burlington House, when they reported on it.
Dr. Chafy handed it to the then rector, and had the
case made for it and the particulars attached.
The tower contains six bells, the treble, second,
third, fourth and sixth of which were cast by Taylor
of Loughborough in 1869 and 1870. The fifth is
dated 1600 and bears the inscription 'give thanke to
God' and the churchwardens' names.

All Saints, Church Lench : Nave and Tower from the North-east
The church plate is modern and consists of a silver
cup and paten with a silver-mounted glass flagon.
The registers before 1812 are as follows : (i) baptisms 1692 to 1754, burials and marriages 1702 to
1754; (ii) baptisms and burials 1755 to 1812; (iii)
marriages 1755 to 1812.
ADVOWSON
A priest at Church Lench is mentioned in 1086, and the fact that it
then bore its distinguishing prefix
points to the existence of a church there at that
date.
The advowson belonged to the Abbots of Evesham,
and was claimed by them in 1208. (fn. 101) It must shortly
afterwards have passed into the hands of the Beauchamps, for William Beauchamp was patron in 1261
when the Bishop of Worcester assigned to the nunnery
of Cookhill the great tithes of Church Lench. A
vicarage was then ordained, (fn. 102) the ordination being
confirmed by Bishop Giffard in 1279, when the
vicar's portion was assigned and a piece of land upon
which to erect tithe barns granted to the nuns. (fn. 103)
Though the rectorial tithes were thus granted to
Cookhill Nunnery, the advowson remained with the
Beauchamps, descending with the manor of Sheriff's
Lench. (fn. 104) On the attainder of Edward Earl of
Warwick in 1499 it passed to the Crown, in
which it remained until 7 November 1865, when
the patronage was transferred to the Bishop of
Worcester. (fn. 105)
The tithes of Church Lench which had been
granted to the nuns of Cookhill remained in their
possession until the Dissolution. (fn. 106)
The messuage and lands in Church Lench held by
the nunnery were granted on 1 July 1542 to Nicholas
Fortescue (fn. 107) and confirmed to John Fortescue in
1663–4 (fn. 108) ; their tithes of grain and hay in Church
Lench and Atch Lench, in the tenure of William
Milner, were granted in November 1561 to the
Bishop of Worcester and his successors in part compensation for manors retained by Queen Elizabeth. (fn. 109)
William Roculf by his will provided for the
establishment of a chantry, to which a chaplain
was admitted in 1269. (fn. 110) The church in which the
foundation took place is not stated, but the name
Roculf suggests that it may have been at Church
Lench.
On 26 May 1574 a chapel in Sheriff's Lench,
formerly belonging to Evesham Monastery, was
granted to John and William Mersh. (fn. 111)
At Atch Lench is a Baptist chapel, dating from
1825.
CHARITIES
In 1886 the Rev. Martin Amphlett,
by his will proved at Worcester
9 October, bequeathed £198 10s. 2d.
consols, the annual dividends, amounting to £4 19s.,
to be applied towards maintaining and keeping the
churchyard in good order. The stock is held by the
official trustees.