OLD SWINFORD
Swineforde (xi cent.).
The parish of Old Swinford is situated in the
north-west of the county on the border of Staffordshire. The total area, including the hamlet of
Amblecote, which is in Staffordshire, is 3,369 acres.
In the Worcestershire part of the parish there were
in 1905 615½ acres of arable, 966¾ of permanent
grass and only 7 of woods and plantations, while
Amblecote included 112½ acres of arable land and
304½ acres of grass. (fn. 1) The River Stour flows westward and then northward through the parish, separating it from Staffordshire. From its valley, which is
about 200 ft. above the ordnance datum, the land
gradually rises, especially towards the north-east of
Amblecote, where heights of 400 ft. are reached.
The south is undulating.
The subsoil of Old Swinford varies considerably;
the eastern portion is situated on the South Staffordshire coalfield, in the west the subsoil consists of
Bunter Pebble beds, and in the south of Keuper Sandstone. Coal and iron are found and a peculiarly
rich fireclay is mined in the district.
Old Swinford comprised the townships of
Stourbridge, Upper Swinford, Wollaston, Lye and
Wollescote, the hamlet of Amblecote in Staffordshire
and that of Norton to the south of Stourbridge.
The first settlement in Old Swinford may have
been on the higher ground, as the church of St. Mary
the Virgin was placed in the south of the parish at
more than 100 ft. above the level of the river, but
even in the later mediaeval period houses and a chapel
were built on the site of the present town of Stourbridge, and little by little the houses stretched along
that portion of the Bromsgrove and Wolverhampton
road known as the High Street. In modern times
a lateral extension of Stourbridge joined it to the
older settlements of Wollaston on the west and Lye
on the east, and Stamber Mill became of some
industrial importance.
In the 16th century there are said to have been
700 'houselyng people' in the parish. (fn. 2)
Among buildings of interest in Stourbridge the
Talbot Inn in the High Street dates from the early
17th century, when it was the residence of the
Foleys. The present front appears to have been
added in the 18th century. The principal stairs
are of the earlier date and have turned balusters and
massive newel posts. Original panelling and plasterwork remain in some of the rooms. The buildings, which are partly of half-timber, are grouped
round two courtyards. The Vine Inn, adjoining the
grammar school on the east side of the High Street,
is a good specimen of late 16th-century half-timber
work. In Smithfield, at the back of the modern
Market Hall, are some early 17th-century brick
houses, including the Bell Inn, which has been very
much altered and modernized.
The buildings of the grammar school were almost
entirely rebuilt in 1862. The head master's house,
though much altered internally and re-fronted at the
same period, appears to be the sole remnant of the
original structure. No detail of any interest remains
here with the exception of the stairs, which are of
the 18th century. The present front, facing on the
High Street, is in the Perpendicular manner, with
white brick facings and stone dressings. Various
additions were made in 1883 and 1893, and in 1899
the Science buildings on the south side of the playground were erected. Quite recently additional property has been acquired on the north side of the
school, on which four new class rooms, an Art room,
and the necessary cloak rooms were erected in 1910.
The initials S. J. on some panelling still preserved
are said to have been carved by Samuel Johnson
when at school here.
The buildings of Old Swinford Hospital consist at
present of a northern and a southern block, connected
by a covered corridor. The southern block is the
building of the original foundation of 1670, the
northern block and connecting corridor having been
added in 1882, by which the school accommodation
has been practically doubled. The original building,
which is of brick with stone dressings, is three stories
in height and faces east. The attic story was rebuilt
and heightened at the time of the additions above
referred to. The plan is oblong and two rooms in
depth. The eastern side of the ground floor is occupied by a large schoolroom, part of which is now used
as a dining hall, and by the board room which opens
out of it at the northern end. On the west, at the
rear of the building, are the kitchen, staircase and
the master's rooms. Some original wainscoting still
remains in the large schoolroom, into which the main
entrance opens directly. The board room, now
used as the head master's study, has its original
panelling in good preservation. Over the fireplace
at the west end of the room hangs the portrait of the
founder, Thomas Foley. The apartments at the
north-west corner of the building seem to have
originally formed the head master's house. The first
and attic floors are occupied on the east side by large
dormitories. The ground and first floors are lighted
by small stone-mullioned windows, and the stories
are marked externally by moulded string-courses of
stone. The entrance doorway is in the centre of the
east elevation, and has a moulded semicircular head
springing from panelled pilasters, surmounted by an
entablature, the centre of which is crowned by a
curved pediment. The whole is flanked by large
inverted consoles. In the head of the door itself,
which is a fine piece of 17th-century joinery, is a
small wooden figure of Charity. The walls of the
attic floor have been entirely rebuilt. From the
centre of the building rises a small brick turret,
capped by a modern lantern. The roofs are tiled.
At the rear of the main buildings is a small brick
building of contemporary date, converted into class
rooms about sixty years ago, and now utilized for
play rooms. The modern northern block is designed
in a style to correspond with the original southern
block. In 1906 a new school hall, board room and
head master's room were added.
At Wollaston, about a mile to the north-west of
the centre of the town, is Wollaston Hall, a much
modernized early 17th-century house of half-timber,
L-shaped on plan, and two stories in height, facing
north-west. The main limb of the L is two rooms
in depth, and in the centre of the principal front is a
recessed entrance porch, which probably opened in
the first instance directly into the large room which
occupies the southern end of this side of the building,
out of which the present entrance corridor appears to
have been taken. On the north side of the entrance
are two large rooms en suite, making up the rest of the
frontage, while to the rear of them are two narrower
rooms of equal length. The stairs, which are of
original date, are on the south side of the entrance
corridor, at the back of the original entrance hall.
The projecting wing on the east side of the house,
containing the kitchen and offices, is of brick, and
appears to be a later addition or rebuilding. With
the exception of the stairs and some linen-pattern
panelling in one of the rooms at the back, little
original detail remains on the ground floor. In some
of the first floor rooms the original roof-timbers are
exposed, and the construction displays great ingenuity.
The rooms to the south of the staircase are reached
by a narrow and lofty central passage lighted by
dormers. Generally the interior has been ruthlessly
restored and modernized. The front elevation is
crowned by a range of five gables, filled with ornamental half-timbering disposed in quatrefoil panels
with flat baluster-shaped uprights above them. On
one of the beams is carved the date 1617, and in the
apex of the southern gable are the initials R. M.
The barge-boards and finials appear to be modern,
but the carved brackets at the intersection of the
gables are probably original. The back elevation is
also gabled, but the wall has been covered with
rough-cast, so that the timbering is concealed. The
windows have in nearly every case been renewed and
enlarged. The original brick chimney shafts have
for the most part survived. The roofs are tiled.
The garden slopes down in a succession of terraces to
the valley of the Stour.
The Corbett Hospital in Amblecote was presented
to the town by the late John Corbett. The house
and grounds cover about 30 acres.
From the town of Stourbridge main roads pass
to Dudley, Wolverhampton, Kidderminster and
Bromsgrove. The Oxford, Worcester and Wolverhampton branch of the Great Western railway,
opened to the town of Stourbridge in May 1852, (fn. 3)
passes through the parish northward, with a station at
Stourbridge Junction at the eastern end of the town.
From this junction a branch known as the Stourbridge
extension passes north-eastwards through the Black
Country to Birmingham. There is a station at Lye
on this line. Another branch known as the Town
Extension passes through Stourbridge to the riverside,
with a station at Foster Street.
Water communication is afforded by the River Stour
and the Stourbridge Canal. An attempt was made,
under the direction of Mr. Yarranton, towards the
end of the 17th century, to make the River Stour
navigable. It was made completely navigable from
Stourbridge to Kidderminster, but the project then
had to be given up for lack of funds. (fn. 4) In 1776
Acts were passed to make canals from Stourbridge to
join the Staffordshire and Worcester Canal near
Stourton, and from Dudley to join the first at Black
Delph. (fn. 5) In 1785 this canal was extended to meet
the Birmingham Canal. (fn. 6)
From the situation of a large part of the parish in
the Black Country and the presence of minerals
Old Swinford has become an important industrial
centre. The clothing trade was once carried on in
Stourbridge, but it died out at the beginning of the
19th century. (fn. 7) There are coal-mines and large ironworks; many of the inhabitants are employed in
nail-making; chains, anvils, spades, shovels and scythes
are also made. The district is especially noted for
the manufacture of fire-bricks, made from the valuable
fireclay which is mined here. The presence of this
clay induced a number of refugees from Hungary and
Lorraine, whose leader was Henzoil Henzey, (fn. 8) to
take up their residence in 1556 on the piece of
ground known as Lye Waste, and begin the manufacture of glass, which is still carried on, having
increased greatly about 1845 owing to the abolition
of the duties. The site of their first glass house is
still known as Hungary Hill.
Lye Waste originally formed an uncultivated part
of Lye, but became an irregular village on the
settlement of the glass-workers. Their right of
separate freehold was established on the passing of an
Inclosure Act. (fn. 9)
Stourbridge is the head of a county court district.
Petty sessions are held weekly at the court-house in
Hagley Road. Acts were passed in 1777 and 1846
to expedite the recovery of small debts in Old
Swinford. (fn. 10)
Under an Act passed in 1825–6 (fn. 11) Stourbridge was
governed by a board of commissioners, who established
there a town hall with a corn exchange and market.
Another Act was passed in 1866 dividing the town into
three wards—East, West, and South—and arranging
for the inclusion of Lye, Wollaston, or Amblecote if
the ratepayers of those hamlets should at any future
time desire it. (fn. 12) This Act was amended in 1891, (fn. 13)
and in 1894 the government of the town was vested
in an urban district council. The town is now
divided into five wards—East, South, West, Old
Swinford, and Wollaston. An attempt is being made
(1912) to have these wards incorporated into a
borough. Lye is governed by a separate urban
district council of nine members, formed in 1897.

Wollaston Hall, Stourbridge: Entrance Front
During the Civil War Basil Earl of Denbigh
retreated to Stourbridge after his victory at Dudley in
1644 to await the arrival of Sir William Waller. (fn. 14)
Shortly afterwards Wollescote became the head quarters
of Prince Rupert, who is said to have stayed at the
house of a certain Edward Milward. He was defeated
and almost taken prisoner in a battle fought on Stourbridge Common in 1645. (fn. 15) A Mr. Dovaston, clerk
to Thomas Milward, grandson of the above Edward,
gives the following account of the prince's escape:
The prince 'riding very hard to get towards Wollescote was pursued very close by a Parliament Trooper
with his sword drawn. When the Prince came to
the Heath Gate leading off the Common to Old
Swinford, the Gate being shut and the Trooper very
near to him, and there being a Boy near the Gate,
the Prince cried "Open the Gate," when the Boy
opened it, and when he was through he said hastily
"Shut the Gate," which the Boy immediately did. This
stopped the Trooper and saved the Prince.' The
defeat caused the prince to remove from Wollescote,
and before his departure he gave a signet ring to
Edward Milward, with the promise 'that when the
King's affairs turned out prosperously he should have
his loss repaired on presenting the Ring to the King
and stating the circumstances.' (fn. 16) Stourbridge was
the first place at which Charles II halted on his
flight from Worcester after the battle. The 'Talbot'
was in his line of march from Worcester to Staffordshire, but whether it was the inn where the king
stopped to refresh is uncertain.
Among the MSS. relating to Old Swinford in the
Prattinton Collection (fn. 17) are some extracts from the
account books of the above-named Thomas Milward,
who was an attorney at Stourbridge. These include
the following:—
1704, 20 Feb.—Paid at the Cocking at Naggs Head, 2s. 6d.
1717, 8 Mar.—To John Compton, junr., of Wollaston, which
he paid me at last Worcester Assizes in order to have agreed
with the Clerk of the Assizes for the indictment at the Riot and
pulling down Meeting House etc. (He gave 3s. 9d. for my
trouble), 14s. 9d.
1718, 23 Oct.—Paid for my ale and colt ale at Stourbridge
Court Leet, being my first time, 3s.
1719, 17 Aug.—Lost at the Cocking at Thomas Blount's,
13s. 6d.
1719, 19 Sept.—From Thomas Blount of Holloway for
baiting the bull on Monday and Tuesday, being Kinfare Wake,
9s. 6d.
Thos. Yorke drawing my Tooth, being the furthermost on
the upper and right side. He drew one for Duggall the servant
at the same time to shew me how easie. 1s.
1717, 15 May.—Paid to Mr. Philip Yorke for bleeding me,
tho' he first pricked my left arm and missed the vein, 1s.
Mr. Hopkins the Barber 1 yrs shaving and powdring me,
2s. 6d.
Gave in cash to my wife 2s. 6d. to be repaid as she said.
Samuel Rogers the poet (1763–1855) was a native
of Stourbridge, his paternal grandfather being a glass
manufacturer of that town. (fn. 18)
Seventeenth-century place-names are Hillmans
Close, Milwardes Meadow, Madewelles Meadow and
Ardens Meadow. (fn. 19)
MANORS
In the time of Edward the Confes or
OLD SWINFORD was held by Wulfwine, but in 1086 William Fitz Ansculf
was in possession. It was held of him by Acard, (fn. 20)
probably the same who held the adjoining manor
of Pedmore. (fn. 21) The overlordship of Old Swinford
followed the descent of Dudley (q.v.) until it lapsed
in 1320, when John de Somery acquired the manor
in fee. (fn. 22)
In the 13th century Acard's successor as tenant
was a certain Ralph de Merston, (fn. 23) from whom the
manor passed before 1285 to Bernard de Bruys. (fn. 24)
The latter was succeeded in 1300–1 (fn. 25) by his son
of the same name, who in 1320–1 surrendered the
manor to John de Somery, his overlord. (fn. 26) From
that date the manor followed the same descent as
Northfield (fn. 27) (q.v.) until the beginning of the 15th
century, when a third of both manors belonged to
Maurice Berkeley and the remaining two thirds to
James Earl of Wiltshire, on whom they had been
settled by his grandmother Joan Lady Bergavenny. (fn. 28)
It was decided in settlement of the disputes which
followed that the Earl of Wiltshire should have Old
Swinford and pay 40s. yearly to Maurice Berkeley. (fn. 29)
The manor then passed with Hagley until the death
of Fulk Stafford about 1462. (fn. 30) Margaret, widow of
Fulk, was given one third of the manor as her dower. (fn. 31)
The remaining two thirds and the reversion of
Margaret's share were granted on 22 January 1463
to Sir John Scott, (fn. 32) and confirmed to him in 1476. (fn. 33)
Sir John Scott appears to
have held two thirds of Old
Swinford until 1481; on 30
July of that year he had
surrendered his grants and
received another which did
not include Old Swinford. (fn. 34)
Margaret Stafford was then
said to be dead, but on 21
November two thirds of the
manor and the reversion of
Margaret's third on her death
were granted to the Dean and
canons of St. George's Chapel,
Windsor. (fn. 35) This grant was evidently cancelled, for
in 1485 the Earl of Wiltshire's attainder was reversed
in favour of his brother Thomas Earl of Ormond, (fn. 36)
and this manor was restored to him. (fn. 37) It then
followed the same descent as Hagley (fn. 38) (q.v.) until
1661, when Katherine Lady Lyttelton and her son
Sir Henry Lyttelton, bart., sold Old Swinford to
Thomas Foley. (fn. 39)

Butler. Or a chief indented azure.
It passed in the same way as the advowson of the
church of Pedmore (q.v.) to the Lords Foley, and
remained in their possession (fn. 40) until 1844–5, when it
was purchased by the trustees of William Lord Ward, (fn. 41)
who was created Earl of Dudley in 1860. (fn. 42) The
manor now belongs to his son William Humble
Ward, the present earl, who succeeded to the peerage
in 1885. (fn. 43)
On 14 November 1482 Edward IV granted to the
Dean and canons of St. George's Chapel, Windsor,
who then held the manor, a market weekly on
Tuesdays at their town of Old Swinford and Stourbridge, and two fairs yearly, one on the feast of
St. Edward the Confessor (18 March), and another
on the feast of St. Augustine (28 August), with a
court of pie-powder and all issues and tolls. (fn. 44) A
similar grant was made in 1486 to Thomas Earl of
Ormond. (fn. 45)
The right of a weekly market on Friday and two
fairs yearly, as in 1482, was afterwards held by the
Lytteltons. (fn. 46) The profits of the fairs belonged in
the 17th century to the bailiff of the manor, who
had no other fee. (fn. 47) In 1792 and 1888 the market
day was Friday, (fn. 48) but markets are now held on Friday
and Saturday. Fairs were held in 1792 on 29 March
and 8 September, but since 1888 there has been
only one fair on the last Monday in March. (fn. 49) The
latter was formerly a noted horse fair. The market
rights belong to the local authorities. (fn. 50)
The courts for the manor of Old Swinford were
held in Sir John St. Leger's time at a house called
the gate-house in Old Swinford, but Sir John
Lyttelton instituted the practice of holding them in
the town hall. (fn. 51) It was alleged in 1594 that the
court for the manor of Old Swinford and Stourbridge
used to be held at one end of the town hall of Stourbridge, and that for the manor of Bedcote at the
other end. (fn. 52) No court for either manor has been
held for many years. (fn. 53)
There was a mill in the manor of Old Swinford at
the time of the Domesday Survey. (fn. 54) In 1338 Joan Botetourt, lady of the manor, granted a water-mill called
Rotherford Mill with a stank, stew and watercourse,
with suit of multure by her tenants in Old Swinford
at the mill, to be held at a yearly rent of 14s. (fn. 55)
A mill at Bedcote is mentioned in deeds of 1317
and 1338, (fn. 56) and a water-mill belonged to the manor
of Amblecote in 1636. (fn. 57) A mill at Amblecote is
mentioned in deeds of 1663, 1680 and 1688. (fn. 58)
There were two water-mills built under one roof in
the manor of Wollaston in 1592 and 1628. (fn. 59) Bedcote and Wollaston Mills still exist on the River
Stour, and near the former is a corn-mill.
Before the Conquest AMBLECOTE (Elmelcote,
xi cent.; Emelecot, Amelecot, xiii cent.; Hamelcote,
xiv cent.) was in the hands of two men of Earl
Algar, who held it 'without soke.' It had passed
before 1086 to William Fitz Ansculf, of whom it was
then held by Payn. (fn. 60) It was held of the lords of
Dudley, at first apparently of the honour of Dudley,
but afterwards, probably from the beginning of the
14th century, of the manor of Old Swinford, and
the overlordship followed the same descent as that
manor, (fn. 61) being last mentioned in 1636. (fn. 62)
Under the lords of Dudley the manor was held by
the Birminghams, lords of
Birmingham, (fn. 63) co. Warwick,
during the 12th, 13th and
14th centuries, (fn. 64) but their
interest seems to have lapsed
shortly after 1322, as it is
not mentioned after that
date. (fn. 65)

Birmingham. Party indented argent and sable.
Under the Birminghams
the manor was held early in
the 13th century for knight's
service by Robert de Wavere. (fn. 66)
Robert was probably succeeded
by Cecily, who was 'lady of
Amblecote' in 1255. (fn. 67) She appears to have married
William de Stafford, and is alluded to as Cecily de
Stafford in 1271. (fn. 68) The manor was held by tenants
named William de Stafford in 1284–5, (fn. 69) 1290, (fn. 70) and
in 1316. (fn. 71) In 1317 Sir William de Stafford gave it
to his grandson James son of William de Stafford, (fn. 72)
and James apparently held it until 1322, when he
forfeited it as a rebel, and it was granted by the king
to John de Somery, the overlord of the fee. (fn. 73) James
de Stafford was pardoned in October 1322, and
Sir William de Stafford, probably the grandfather of
James mentioned above, was pardoned and released
from prison in March 1323. (fn. 74) It does not appear
that the manor of Amblecote was ever restored to
James, for in 1338 his father, William de Stafford,
who, according to statements made later on by the
Erdeswicks, descendants of James, had ousted the
latter from the manor on the death of James's grandfather, Sir William de Stafford, was in possession of
the manor. (fn. 75) He granted it in that year to another
son, John de Stafford, and his wife Margaret in tail,
with remainder in default of their issue to James de
Stafford and his heirs. (fn. 76) John de Stafford seems to
have remained in peaceful possession of the manor
during his life, but after his death his widow Margaret,
and later their son Humphrey de Stafford, had to
make good their claim in a prolonged suit brought
against them by James de Stafford's daughter Margaret,
wife of Sir John de Hardeshull, and continued after
her death by her son Thomas de Erdeswick. (fn. 77) The
matter was finally settled in 1377 in favour of
Humphrey de Stafford. (fn. 78) From him the manor
passed in 1413 to his son Sir Humphrey Stafford of
Hook, (fn. 79) known as Humphrey with the silver hand.
Before his death in 1442 (fn. 80) Sir Humphrey settled (fn. 81)
the manor of Amblecote upon Amice, afterwards
Countess of Wiltshire, daughter of his eldest son
Richard, with remainder to the heirs of his other
sons John and William, and failing such heirs to the
Staffords of Grafton. (fn. 82) Amice died without issue,
and Humphrey son of John de Stafford succeeded to
the manor. (fn. 83) He also died without issue in 1461, (fn. 84)
and was succeeded by his cousin Humphrey, son
of William de Stafford, the youngest son of Sir
Humphrey. (fn. 85)
On 7 July 1461 he received a grant from the
Crown of all the manors and lands of which Humphrey
Stafford had been seised, (fn. 86) and Amblecote appears to
have been included. Sir Humphrey Stafford was
created Lord Stafford of Southwick in 1464 and Earl
of Devon in 1469. Shortly afterwards he fell under
the king's displeasure through having refused to assist
the Earl of Pembroke in suppressing Sir John Conyers'
rebellion, and was beheaded and attainted on 24 August
1469. His lands were forfeited, but on 9 November
the king granted licence to his heirs to take possession
of them. (fn. 87) As he died without issue, (fn. 88) these heirs
were the daughters of his aunt Alice Stafford, namely,
Elizabeth, who married Sir John Coleshill and died
without issue, Anne, who married Sir John Willoughby,
and Eleanor, who became the wife of Thomas Strangways. (fn. 89) On the death of the Earl of Devon Humphrey
Stafford of Grafton had entered into the manor, claiming it as the heir male under the settlement made by
Sir Humphrey with the silver hand, (fn. 90) and in spite
of the grant of 1469 he apparently enjoyed possession
of the manor until 1473, when he was ejected by
Robert Willoughby de Broke, son of Anne Willoughby. (fn. 91)
In the reign of Richard III, however, Humphrey,
being 'in favour and conceit' with the king, was able
to eject Robert and his coparceners, and seems to have
remained in possession of the manor until the beginning of the reign of Henry VII. (fn. 92) In 1485, on the
petition of Robert Willoughby, Elizabeth Coleshill
and Eleanor Strangways, the property was restored to
them by Henry VII. (fn. 93) The Erdeswicks seem to
have renewed their claim to the manor at about this
time, but gave up all their right in exchange for
1,000 marks in 1481–2. (fn. 94)

Strangways. Sable two lions passant paly argent and gules.

Grey of Groby. Barry argent and azure.
The manor of Amblecote seems to have fallen to
the share of Eleanor Strangways, for in 1504 her
son (fn. 95) Henry Strangways died seised of it, leaving a
son and heir Giles, (fn. 96) who as Sir Giles Strangways, kt.,
sold the manor in 1540 to Rowland Shakerley, who
conveyed it in the same year to Thomas Grey. (fn. 97) It
passed from him in 1559 to his son John. (fn. 98) In 1591
it was arranged that, as John Grey had no children,
Mary the daughter of his younger brother George
should marry either Henry son of Sir George Grey of
Pirgoe, co. Essex, or one of his brothers Ambrose and
George. If this marriage did not take place the
manor was to go to Henry, Ambrose and George in
tail-male successively, and £1,000 was to be paid to
Mary. (fn. 99) John conveyed the manor to Sir Henry
Grey for the purposes of this trust in 1591–2, (fn. 100) and
died in 1595. (fn. 101) Edward, his brother and heir, released
all his right in the manor to Sir Henry Grey. (fn. 102) In
March 1601 Mary, then aged about fourteen, expressed
her determination not to marry any one of the three
brothers. (fn. 103) Sir Henry Grey, who was created Lord
Grey of Groby in 1603, probably held the manor
until his death in 1614, (fn. 104) though Edward Grey was
party to a fine dealing with it in 1606. (fn. 105) It passed
on the death of Sir Henry to his son Ambrose Grey, (fn. 106)
whose two brothers George and Henry had died
without issue. (fn. 107) He died seised of it in 1636, when
his son Henry succeeded. (fn. 108) In 1652 Henry Grey
and his wife Mary conveyed the manor to Anne
Gerrard, widow, for ninety-nine years, if she should
live so long. (fn. 109)
Henry Grey died in 1686, and, his two children
both having died unmarried, (fn. 110) the manor of Amblecote appears to have passed to his cousin John Grey
of Enville, one of the grandsons of Sir John Grey,
the eldest son of Sir Henry Grey, lord of Groby. (fn. 111)
Harry Grey, son of this John, succeeded his cousin
Thomas as Earl of Stamford in 1719–20. (fn. 112) The
manor passed with the title (fn. 113) from that time until
the death without issue of the seventh Earl of Stamford in 1883. It was held by his widow Catherine
until her death in 1905, (fn. 114) and then passed under the
will of the earl to his wife's grand-niece Catherine
Sarah, wife of Sir Henry Foley Lambert, seventh
baronet, daughter of the Rev. Alfred Payne, rector of
Enville. (fn. 115) Sir Henry assumed the surname Grey in
lieu of Lambert in 1905 in accordance with the terms
of the earl's will, and his widow Lady Grey is now
lady of the manor of Amblecote.
The manor of BEDCOTE (Bettecote, xiv cent.)
was held of the manor of Old Swinford. (fn. 116) In
1289–90 William de Boys conveyed a messuage and
land in Bedcote and Foxcote to Geoffrey de Kynsedele. (fn. 117) Early in the 14th century Sir William
Stafford, who held the adjoining manor of Amblecote, appears to have held some property at Bedcote
within the manor of Old Swinford. In 1317 he
enfeoffed his grandson James Stafford of a mill, &c.,
there to hold in tail with reversion in default to
himself. (fn. 118) This estate evidently descended with
Amblecote (fn. 119) to Sir Humphrey Stafford of Hook,
who granted it to his son Sir John Stafford and Anne
his wife in tail, with remainder to William Stafford,
another son. (fn. 120) From Sir John Stafford and Anne
his wife it passed to their son Humphrey, who died
seised of it on 6 August 1461. (fn. 121) From this time it
followed the same descent as the manor of Amblecote,
to the co-heirs of Humphrey Earl of Devon, (fn. 122) and
was apparently also assigned to Eleanor Strangways,
as in 1541 William Strangways (fn. 123) of Stockstrete alias
Lockets, in Dorset, sold the manor to Richard
Jervois, merchant. (fn. 124) Bedcote was sold in 1626 by
Sir Thomas Jervois, (fn. 125) grandson of Richard, to
Nicholas Sparry. (fn. 126) The manor seems afterwards to
have passed to the Lytteltons, for in 1660–1 it was
conveyed with the manor of Old Swinford to Thomas
Foley. (fn. 127) From that date the manor followed the
same descent as that of Old Swinford. (fn. 128)
Bedcote Manor is mentioned in 1868, when it
belonged to the Earl of Dudley, and its boundaries
are said to have been identical with those of Stourbridge. (fn. 129) There appears to be no manor at the
present day.
The manor of STOURBRIDGE (Steresbridge,
xiv cent.; Storebrige, Sturbrygge, xv cent.) is stated
to have been dependent on the chief manor of Old
Swinford, and to have been partly comprised within
the manor of Bedcote. (fn. 130) It was probably this part
which was granted with the manor of Bedcote by
Sir Humphrey Stafford of Hook to Sir John Stafford
and Anne his wife, from whom it descended to their
son Humphrey, who died seised of it with Bedcote in
1461. (fn. 131) It passed with Bedcote to the co-heirs of
Humphrey Stafford. (fn. 132) It seems to have become
identical with the manor of Bedcote from this time,
and no further mention of it occurs.
A second manor of Stourbridge followed the same
descent as the manor of Old Swinford. The first
mention of it occurs in 1482, when Edward IV
granted to the Dean and Chapter of St. George's,
Windsor, certain liberties in their manor of Old
Swinford and Stourbridge. (fn. 133) It was restored with
Old Swinford to Thomas Lord Ormond. (fn. 134) From
that time it apparently followed the same descent as
the manor of Old Swinford. (fn. 135) It still existed as a
separate manor in 1866. (fn. 136)
The earliest mention of WOLLASTON (Wullaston, xiii cent.) is in 1240–1, when William de la
Platte and his wife Hawise conveyed land and rent
there to Peter de Prestwood. (fn. 137) The manor afterwards belonged to the family of Perrott. William
Perrott of Wollaston and his son John are mentioned
in a deed of 1442–3, (fn. 138) and it passed afterwards to Roger
Perrott, who was succeeded by a son William and a
grandson Humphrey. (fn. 139) Anne
widow of William Perrott
married John Persehowse, and
in 1592 she and Humphrey,
with Richard Persehowse, who
then held the manor, but
whose relationship to John
does not appear, sold to George
Liddeatt, a merchant tailor of
London, the manor, with the
capital messuage called Wollaston Hall. (fn. 140) It seems that
George bought other property
at Wollaston of John Taylor,
sen., and John Taylor, jun. (fn. 141)
George was succeeded by John
Liddeatt of Cannock, co. Staff., who conveyed the
manor in 1616 to Thomas Banneste, (fn. 142) probably for
a settlement, as it was reconveyed to John in the
same year. (fn. 143) He and his wife Jane mortgaged it in
1628 to Frances Manning, widow. (fn. 144)

Perrott of Wollaston. Gules three pears or and a chief argent with a demi-lion sable therein.
John Liddeatt died in 1639, (fn. 145) and by his will,
dated 19 June 1639, he bequeathed it to his son John
for life, and then to 'such
son of his said son as should
be of best behaviour.' John
was then eleven years of age.
Edward Liddeatt was appointed executor of the will. (fn. 146)
Edward Liddeatt and John
Liddeatt and Elizabeth his
wife dealt with the manor in
1672, (fn. 147) but after that date all
trace of a manor here seems
to have disappeared.

Liddeatt. Gules a fesse erminois between three wolves' heads or cut off at the neck.
Wollaston Hall was the
seat of the Wheeler family for
some years at the end of the 17th and the beginning of the 18th century. (fn. 148) It passed from this
family to the Addenbrooks. (fn. 149)
PIRCOTE GRANGE was held by the Abbot and
convent of Halesowen in 1291; they had there a
carucate of land, the value of which was 10s., and a
fixed rent of 2s. 6d., (fn. 150) but it does not appear how
they gained possession of it. The abbey retained
this property until the Dissolution (fn. 151) ; it was then let
out at farm at a rent of 42s. Pircote Grange is not
mentioned in the conveyance of the abbey's property
to the king, made in 1538 by William Taylor, the
last abbot, (fn. 152) but it must have been included, as on
9 June the manor was granted with the other lands
of the abbey to Sir John Dudley. (fn. 153) . On his attainder
in 1553 it reverted to the Crown, and so remained
until 9 October 1557, when it was granted to
Sir John Bourne, chief secretary to Queen Mary,
and Dorothy his wife. (fn. 154) No further mention of this
estate has been found.
CHURCHES
The church of ST. MARY THE
VIRGIN consists of a chancel with
north vestry and south chapel, a wide
nave with north, south and west galleries and a
western tower, the whole building being modern
except the tower. The present chancel was built in
1898 and has a large seven-light transomed east
window with tracery of the 'perpendicular' type.
In the north and south walls are two three-light
windows with flowing tracery, that on the south
opening into the south chapel. Two arches to the
west open into the chapel and organ chamber.
Against the walls are clusters of shafting, supporting a
wood barrel ceiling. The nave, built in 1842, is
extremely wide and lofty, the roof having elaborately
cusped and traceried queen post trusses. It is lit by
fourteen two-light windows on either side, divided
horizontally by the north and south galleries. On
the north is a pinnacled porch of 14th-century style.
In the westernmost window of the south chapel is
preserved some heraldic glass taken from the older
east window. Amongst the coats are those of
Lyttelton, Foley and Dudley.

Old Swinford Church: West Tower from the South
The western tower, the only ancient part of the
church, is a fine example of late 14th-century work,
and is of four stages with an embattled parapet, a
stone spire and angle buttresses. The spire has small
trefoil-headed lights at two levels and a little above the
parapet four two-light openings. The belfry windows
are of two lights with a quatrefoil over. There are
also openings to the north and south of the second
stage in which the tracery is modern. The west
window is of three lights and below it is the modern
west door.
The tower contains a ring of eight
bells: the first and second cast in 1902,
the third by Matthew Bagley, 1687,
the fourth by Matthew or Henry
Bagley in 1686, inscribed 'Cantate
Dominum (sic) canticum novum,' the
fifth by Henry Bagley, dated 1686, the
sixth recast in 1902, the seventh by
Matthew Bagley, 1686, and the eighth
by Abel Rudhall, dated 1740, and inscribed 'I to the church the living call,
and to the grave do summon all.'
The plate consists of a small chalice
dated 1646 and inscribed H/PA with a
shield, a bird in chief between three (?)
acorns, a cup (Puritan pattern) with
the letter R repeated four times, a
standing paten made in 1780, a small
modern paten, and a flagon given by
John Wheeler in 1708.
The registers before 1812 are as
follows: (i) all entries 1602 to 1692
(this is a large book enriched with
elaborate capitals and pen work); (ii)
1693 to 1718; (iii) 1719 to 1735;
(iv) 1736 to 1752; (v) baptisms and
burials 1747 to 1783, marriages 1753
only; (vi) baptisms and burials 1768
to 1800; (vii) baptisms and burials
1800 to 1808; (viii) baptisms and
burials 1808 to 1813; (ix) marriages
1754 to 1762; (x) marriages 1762 to
1774; (xi) marriages 1774 to 1780;
(xii) marriages 1780 to 1795; (xiii)
marriages 1795 to 1813 and three
duplicate books; (xiv) baptisms, burials
and marriages 1717 to 1746; (xv)
baptisms and burials 1747 to 1783, marriages 1747
to 1753; (xvi) baptisms and burials 1783 to 1805.
The church of ST. THOMAS, Stourbridge, consists of a chancel with an apsidal end, a north vestry
and south organ chamber, a nave, north and south
aisles, and a west tower with gallery entrances on
either side.
The church was erected in 1726 with a bequest of
£300 from Mr. Biggs, a clothier of Stourbridge, augmented by subscriptions, and was enlarged in 1890,
when the chancel was rebuilt, the original entrances
at the east end of the aisles converted respectively into
the organ chamber and vestry, and the present porches
built.
The building is faced with red brick with stone
dressings and the main cornice is carried round the
building. The chancel is designed to harmonize with
the older part of the building and is lighted by three
large windows. The body of the church is divided
into four bays by Doric columns raised on high plinths.
The roof is a large plaster barrel vault, intersected on
either side by similar vaults over each bay of the aisles,
and continued eastward over the chancel, terminating
in a semi-dome above the apse. The body of the
building is lighted by large semicircular aisle windows,
one to each bay, across which are carried the galleries.
The oak fronts of the latter are original 18th-century
work.
The tower is three stages high, finished with a
balustraded parapet with stone vases at the angles.
There is a peal of eight bells by Lester & Pack, 1759,
of which the seventh was recast by Mears & Stainbank
in 1901.
The plate consists of a silver salver probably of
1697, though the date letter is almost obliterated; a
1742 silver cup inscribed 'The Gift of Thomas Hill
1745'; a silver cup of 1749 inscribed 'Hanc
Lagenam in Usum Capellae in Oppido de Stourbridge
Dono dedit Johannes Cook de Stourton Generosus
1748'; a modern silver cup of the same pattern as
the older one, and a modern electro-plated paten.
At the time of the Dissolution there was a chapel
dedicated to the HOLY TRINITY at Stourbridge,
which had been founded in 1430 by Philip Harely
and Joan his wife and endowed by various other benefactors. (fn. 155) The priest who served in the chapel 'stood
charged to teach the poor men's children of the same
parish frely … to saye masse in the chapell there
… to assist the curate of Old Swinford, ye parish
beyng very large and brode.' (fn. 156) The chapel, which
is said by Nash to have stood where the school now
stands, (fn. 157) evidently disappeared soon after the Dissolution, the chantry priest's house being granted in 1550
to William Winlove and Richard Field. (fn. 158)
The ecclesiastical parish of HOLY TRINITY,
Amblecote, was formed in 1842. (fn. 159) The church was
erected on a site given by the Earl of Stamford and
Warrington. It is built of brick in the 13th-century
style, and consists of a chancel, nave, and west tower.
The living is a vicarage in the gift of Lady Grey, the
owner of the manor.
The ecclesiastical parish of CHIRIST CHURCH,
Lye, was formed in 1843 (fn. 160) from the townships of Lye
and Wollescote. The church was built and endowed
by Thomas Hill of Dennis Park, co. Staffs. The living
is a vicarage in the gift of the Bishop of Worcester.
The building consists of a chancel, nave, north
and south transepts, a west tower and vestries, and
three porches, one on either side of the chancel
opening into the transepts and one on the south side
of the nave. The body of the church was built in
1843, but the transepts and east end were not added
until later. It is a red brick building in the 'pointed'
style and has a slate roof, while above the tower rises
a light coloured brick spire, apparently a later
addition.
The ecclesiastical parish of ST. JAMES, Wollaston,
was formed in 1860, (fn. 161) and the living is in the gift of
William Henry Foster of Apley Park.
The church consists of a chancel, with a north
vestry and south organ chamber, north and south
transepts, a nave and aisles, a south porch and a
north-west tower. At the west end of the nave is a
gallery. It was erected in 1860 in the 'decorated'
style, and is built in purple-coloured bricks with stone
dressings, while the open pitch pine roofs are covered
with tiles.
The parish of ST. JOHN THE EVANGELIST,
Stourbridge, was formed in 1862, (fn. 162) the living being a
vicarage in the gift of the Earl of Dudley.
The church consists of a chancel, a north vestry and
south organ chamber, a nave, north and south aisles,
and a south porch. Over the west end of the nave is
a small flèche. It was built from the designs of George
Street in 1860 in Early English Gothic, the material
being mainly red sandstone.
The ecclesiastical parish of Stamber Mill was
formed in 1873, the living being a vicarage in the
gift of the Bishop of Worcester. The church of
ST. MARK was built in 1870 on a site given by
F. T. Rufford.
It is a small red brick and timber building consisting of a chancel with an apsidal end, an organ chamber
at the north and a vestry on the south, a nave, north
and south aisles, and a north porch. The piers of the
nave arcades are of cast-iron and support pitch pine
arches, above which are clearstories of the same material.
The roofs are slated.
ADVOWSONS
A priest is mentioned in Domesday (fn. 163) and a church was in existence
at Old Swinford at least as early as
1284–5, when the Abbot of Missenden conveyed the
advowson, which had been granted to him by the
bishop in the same year, (fn. 164) to Bernard de Bruys and
Agatha his wife. (fn. 165) From that time the descent of
the advowson has been identical with that of the
manor. (fn. 166)
The vicar of St. Thomas's, Stourbridge, was at
first elected by the parishioners by vote, but, since
this led to very unseemly consequences, the church
was brought under the control of the Ecclesiastical
Commissioners in the middle of the 19th century. (fn. 167)
The building was claimed as a chapel of ease by
the rector of Old Swinford, but it was arranged, on
the petition of the inhabitants, that it should remain
a free chapel vested in the townspeople. (fn. 168) The ecclesiastical parish of St. Thomas was formed in 1866, (fn. 169)
the living being a vicarage in the gift of the Bishop
of Worcester.
The mission chapel at Chawnhill was registered
for marriages in 1877. (fn. 170) There are also mission
chapels in Union Street and at Lye.
The Roman Catholic church in Stourbridge was
established in 1823. The present church, dedicated
under the invocation of Our Lady and All Saints,
was consecrated in 1891. (fn. 171) Attached is a convent
of sisters of St. Paul and a school rebuilt in 1911.
There are also chapels for Baptists, Friends, Congregationalists, Methodists, Presbyterians, Unitarians,
Wesleyans, and Catholic Apostolic worshippers. At
Amblecote there are Primitive Methodist and Wesleyan
chapels.
The Quakers erected a meeting-house at Stourbridge in 1680, (fn. 172) and in 1689 it was certified that a
newly-built house at Stourbridge was set apart as a
Quaker meeting-place. (fn. 173) Presbyterians were established at Old Swinford in 1672, when the houses
of Richard Beckes and Jarvis Bryan were licensed for
their worship. (fn. 174) In 1698 a place of worship for
Presbyterians was erected in Coventry Street, Stourbridge. (fn. 175)
The Presbyterian chapel at Lye Waste was built
at the beginning of the 19th century with money
left by a certain William Scott of Birmingham in
1792. (fn. 176) Before that date services had been held in
a private house, but were discontinued owing to the
outbreak of the Priestley riots near Birmingham.
There was at that time no other place of worship,
and the inhabitants are said to have 'become proverbial for their ignorance and profaneness and their
incivility to the passing stranger.' (fn. 177)
CHARITIES
Educational Foundations.
— For
the Free Grammar School and Old
Swinford Hospital, see 'Schools.' (fn. 178)
Wheeler's School— The educational charity of John
Wheeler, founded by deed 1708, and further endowed
by will of Henry Glover, proved in the P.C.C. 1717,
is regulated by schemes of the Charity Commissioners,
1884 and 1900. The trust estate, which formerly
consisted of house property, is now represented by
£2,459 Lancashire and Yorkshire Railway 3 per cent.
stock, producing £73 15s. 4d. yearly.
The Waste Bank School, founded in 1782 by will
of Thomas Hill, is endowed with a sum of £200
consols, the annual dividends of £5 being applicable
for the instruction of poor children of the Waste, the
Lye and Carless Green.
In 1835 Francis Hill, by his will, proved in the
P.C.C. 29 October, bequeathed £333 6s. 8d. consols,
the annual dividends, amounting to £8 6s. 8d., to be
applied for charitable purposes at Lye School.
The Scott School, founded in 1792 by will of
William Scott, is regulated by scheme of the Charity
Commissioners, 1871. The trust property consists
of £1,970 Birmingham Canal Navigation stock and
£200 Great Western Railway 5 per cent. stock, producing together £88 16s. yearly, which under the
scheme is applicable towards instruction of poor
children of Stourbridge, or support of any public
elementary school, or in scholarships for children
attending such schools. The several sums of stock
above mentioned are held by the official trustees, who
also hold a sum of £316 Great Western Railway
5 per cent. stock, arising under the will of Sarah
Scott, dated in 1872, the dividends, amounting to
£15 16s. yearly, being applicable for the benefit of
the Wollaston Road schools. The original school
was closed by order of the Board of Education in
1912.
The hospital founded and endowed by John Corbett. By deed dated 13 September 1892 (enrolled)
John Corbett conveyed to the Rt. Hon. Charles George,
Viscount Cobham and nine others as trustees the
mansion-house and estates of 30 a. 2 r. 26 p. situate
at the Hill, Amblecote, upon trust for the establishment of a hospital for poor persons, inhabitants of
Stourbridge, Brierley Hill, Kingswinford, Pedmore,
Hagley, Lye Waste and Wollescote, irrespective of
their religious tenets. The said John Corbett, by his
will proved at London 30 October 1902, bequeathed
to the trustees £10,000 as an Endowment Fund,
which legacy was in fact superseded by a gift of
£10,000 in his lifetime. The invested funds in
1909 exceeded £20,000.
Palmer and Seabright's Charity consists of four
houses erected on land in the street of Stourbridge,
comprised in a deed of feoffment, 1632. They are held
upon a lease for ninety-nine years from 24 June 1839
at £15 5s. yearly. The income is applied in outrelief of widows and orphans of Old Swinford and
Stourbridge, Lye and Wollescote.
The charity, founded by will, of John Iddins, 1795,
consists of £257 17s. 9d. consols with the official
trustees, the annual dividends of which, amounting
to £6 8s. 8d., are in pursuance of a declaration of
trust, 13 May 1817, distributed in bread to the poor
monthly, some at St. Thomas's Church, Stourbridge,
and some by the vicar of Lye.
In 1832 Anne Iddins, by her will, proved in the
P.C.C. 22 August, left a legacy, now represented by
£167 12s. 10d. consols with the official trustees, the
annual dividends, amounting to £4 3s. 8d., to be
applied in bread in equal proportions at the churches
above mentioned monthly to poor widows and infirm
persons.
In 1620 William Seabright, by his will (among
other things), gave a yearly rent-charge of £3 7s. 4d.
out of property in Bethnal Green, London, £3 0s. 8d.
thereof to be distributed weekly in bread to poor of
Old Swinford and 6s. 8d. to the parish clerk for his
pains in the distribution. See also under Wolverley.
Edward Archbould—as appears from an old tablet
in the church—gave 40s. a year for the poorest
housekeepers in Old Swinford and Stourbridge in
equal portions. This is paid out of a house adjoining
the Talbot Inn.
In 1720 Thomas Milward, by his will, gave £1
yearly to poor housekeepers of Old Swinford and £1
yearly to poor housekeepers of Stourbridge, to be
distributed on St. Thomas's Day. The annuities are
paid out of three houses in the High Street, Stourbridge.
In 1781 John Wells, by his will, directed that
£420 should be invested in the public funds, and
that out of the dividends £6 should be distributed
among 120 poor of Old Swinford and the remainder
in bread every Sunday among the poor of Stourbridge.
The legacy is represented by £735 consols with the
official trustees, producing £18 7s. 4d. yearly.
In 1820 Joseph Lea, by his will, bequeathed
£1,000, the income to be applied preferentially for
the benefit of the poor resident at the Lye and Lye
Waste. The legacy is now represented by £573 South
Eastern Railway 5 per cent. stock, producing £28 13s.
yearly. The charity is regulated by a scheme of the
Charity Commissioners, 9 August 1910.
In 1825 James Batson, by his will, proved in the
P.C.C. 15 January, left £100 for the poor of Old
Swinford and Stourbridge. The legacy is represented
by £82 10s. 8d. consols, producing £2 1s. yearly.
In 1843 John Harris, by his will, proved in the
P.C.C., left a legacy, represented by £501 18s. 8d.
consols, the annual dividends, amounting to £12 11s.,
to be applied during the winter in good warm clothing
to destitute poor. The distribution is made in halfcrown clothing tickets, two-thirds in the parish of
St. Thomas and one-third in St. John's.
In 1857 John Hopkins, by his will, proved in the
P.C.C. 13 November, left a share in the Birmingham
Canal Navigation, now represented by £93 8s. 4d.
consols, the annual dividends, amounting to £2 6s. 8d.,
to be distributed on 14 February in every year to
poor regularly attending divine service.
In 1862 Henry Bate, by a codicil to his will,
proved at Worcester 14 November, left a legacy, now
represented by £891 14s. 1d. India 3 per cent. stock,
the annual dividends, amounting to £26 15s., to be
applied for the benefit of necessitous poor of the
ecclesiastical districts within the parish of Old
Swinford.
In 1866 Joseph Cole, by his will, proved 20 September, bequeathed £300, the interest to be applied
in wearing apparel, bed-clothes, or food to poor men
and women. The legacy was invested in £309 5s.
consols, producing £7 14s. 4d. yearly.
In 1871 Elizabeth Hopkins, by her will, proved at
London 24 February, left a share in the Birmingham
Canal Navigation, now represented by £96 12s. 5d.
consols, the dividends, amounting to £2 8s. 4d., to
be distributed on 14 February yearly in sums of not
less than 5s. each to the poor.
In 1873 Charles Grove, by his will, proved at
Worcester 24 January, bequeathed £100, the interest
to be applied in bread on Christmas Day to the poor
of St. Thomas, Stourbridge. The legacy was invested
in £101 13s. consols, producing £2 10s. 8d. yearly.
The several sums of stock are held by the official
trustees, who also hold a sum of £1,037 12s. 3d.
consols, arising under the will of Elizabeth Hunt
(date not stated), the dividends of which, amounting
to £25 18s. 8d., are distributed in sums of not less
than 5s. to widows and old men over seventy years
of age.
The Presbyterian or Unitarian chapel at Stourbridge is endowed with £60 London and North
Western Railway stock, purchased with a legacy by
Miss Emma Evers; also with freehold ground rent
in Tiverton Road, Smethwick, amounting to £20 8s.
yearly, purchased with a legacy of £500, bequeathed
by will of John Richards, proved in the P.C.C.
29 June 1847, for the maintenance of the Sunday
schools in connexion with the chapel or for the promotion of psalmody.
In 1874 the Rev. Thomas Warren, by his will,
proved at Worcester 15 September, bequeathed £200,
the income—subject to keeping in order a tomb in
the burial yard of the Presbyterian chapel—to be
applied in the distribution of warm clothing for the
poor of the Presbyterian congregation. The legacy
was invested in £209 3s. consols with the official
trustees, producing £5 4s. 4d. yearly.
In 1898 Charles Cochrane, by his will, proved at
Worcester 5 July, bequeathed £2,000, the income to
be applied towards payment of minister's stipend, or
expenses of management, or repairs of the Unitarian
chapel at Stourbridge. The legacy was invested in
£1,850 London and South Western Railway 3 per
cent. stock, in the name of the treasurer of the chapel,
producing £55 10s. yearly.
The same testator bequeathed £2,000 for the same
purposes in connexion with the Unitarian chapel at
the Lye. The legacy has been lent on mortgage of
freehold property in Redcliff Street, Swindon, at
3½ per cent. interest.
In 1900 Miss Ellen Frances Lee, by her will,
proved at Lichfield 15 October, left £400, the
interest to be applied in augmentation of the stipend
of the minister of the Presbyterian chapel at Stourbridge. The legacy was invested in £250 London
County 3 per cent. stock and £120 Birmingham
Canal stock, in the name of Thomas Grosvenor Lee,
producing together £12 6s. yearly.