ST. JOHN IN BEDWARDINE
The parish of St. John in Bedwardine, containing
about 3,775 acres, of which 901 are arable, 1,745
under permanent grass and 99½ woods and plantations, (fn. 1)
lies on the right bank of the Severn and stretches up
the Teme, which forms its southern boundary from
its junction with the Severn, as far as Cotheridge. On
the north it is bounded by Broadheath, the Tenbury
road and a tributary of Laughern Brook. (fn. 2) The
chief roads, those from Worcester to Great Malvern,
Hereford, Bromyard and Tenbury respectively, are old
roads, and so apparently is the by-road to Oldbury;
these are all mentioned in the court rolls of the 14th
century, when the bridges by which some of them
were carried over Laughern Brook and the Teme
seem to have been in a state of chronic insecurity. (fn. 3)
The Worcester, Malvern and Hereford branch of the
Great Western railway passes through the parish, but
there is no station nearer than Henwick.
The western part of the parish is made up of the
hamlets of Upper and Lower Wick; the latter and
part of the former were once parcel of the manor of
Wick Episcopi. (fn. 4) 'A house with its garden and
curtilage … and two fish ponds' is mentioned as
early as 1299. (fn. 5) At Wick the Bishops of Worcester
had a manor at which Godfrey Giffard often
stayed, and where he entertained Archbishop Winchelsey in 1300. (fn. 6) He seems to have spent a good
deal on building; the money, according to the Worcester monks, had been stolen from the sacrist of the
priory, but apparently their judgement was warped
by the joy of condemning a fault-finder. (fn. 7) The house
now standing on the site known as Wick Episcopi
is a U-shaped building, but nothing except the
foundations is older than the 16th century. The
present house at Lower Wick is modern, but has
an extensive moat on the south. Standing in the
farmyard is an ancient building long used as stables,
which, it is claimed, is the remains of the church of
St. Cuthbert. It is a rectangular building, probably
of the early 13th century, built of red sandstone
ashlar. The walls have been taken down to within
about 5 ft. of the window sills and a half-timber
and brick story erected upon them in the 17th century. The western portion of the south wall seems
to have been rebuilt. The east and west windows are
blocked, but the north external jamb of the latter,
probably a lancet, has a filleted edge roll, and the
internal jambs of the east window seem to have been
similarly enriched; internal chamfered jambs of north
and south windows remain, and on the old portion
of the south wall there are two original buttresses.
It is possible, however, that the building may be that
of a small house having a hall and two-storied block
at its east end.
There are at Upper Wick several 17th-century
half-timber cottages with thatched roofs and some
18th-century brick ones with tiled roofs. Upper
Wick manor-house to the west is an L-shaped brick
building of about 1700, with a slightly later addition
on the south. It is of two stories with an attic. The
house has been somewhat modernized internally, but
retains some old beams and the upper part of a fine oak
stairway of the original date which has square newels
with ball finials, heavy moulded handrail and twisted
balusters. A long, narrow pond extending round
the south for some distance was probably a moat.
On the western side of the parish, where the
Malvern road crosses the Teme, is Powick Old Bridge.
The two arches of the bridge on the St. John's side
were broken down during the Civil War and subsequently rebuilt. (fn. 8)
Rushwick, which is first mentioned about 1299, (fn. 9)
lies on the Hereford road between Laughern Brook and
the Teme. A branch lane connects this hamlet with
the Bromyard road, which it joins a little to the northeast of Crown East Court. The road here passes
between the Grove Covert and Crown East Wood,
at the western edge of which the ground after sloping
steadily upwards from the Teme bank reaches the
highest point in the parish; hence perhaps the name
of the place, properly Crow Nest. (fn. 10) This ridge is
well set with trees, for the greater part of the woodland in the parish lies about Crown East and Oldbury, though there is a strip of wood at Broadheath,
and Birchen Grove, once the property of the Precepoor
of Balsall (co. Warw.), (fn. 11) is still to be seen near the
northern boundary of Temple Laughern. The coil
is alluvium, the subsoil Keuper Marls. The common
fields at Upper Wick were inclosed in 1789. (fn. 12)
The following place-names occur in local records:
Portstraet (fn. 13) (x cent.); Nonham, Buttemefield,
Bromlingfield, Colewyke, Chirnemore, Pitemauston,
Pyrefield (fn. 14) (xiii cent.); Croppecroft, (fn. 15) Prichescroft, (fn. 16)
Kynaresfelde or Kynewardesfelde, Sleyhull, Eorthenbrugge, Hurdelemebrugge and Noggensbrugge (fn. 17) ;
Boddecroftesend, Pullestrete or Poelstret, Cloptones
lone, (fn. 18) Blakefield, Doddecroft and Clokhull (fn. 19) (xiv
cent.); le ffortey, Russhwycrosse or Rushwyke Crosse
and Waterelone, (fn. 20) Leystonesfelde, Ladycroft, Dynes
Grene, Standefast Brigge, Barewardyn and Parok
Diche (fn. 21) (xv cent.); Kychyns, Moncke Orchard, Le
Mytre, Leighton Corte (fn. 22) (xvi cent.); Pool Close and
Sling Meadow (fn. 23) (xvii cent.).
MANORS
The manor of WICK EPISCOPI
(Wiche, xi cent.; Wyke, xii cent.; Wyke
by Worcester, xiii cent.; Wyke Episcopi,
xiv cent.) belonged to the church of Worcester before
the Conquest, (fn. 24) and its site is
said to have been granted by
Offa, King of the Mercians,
to Bishop Milred before 775. (fn. 25)
It continued to be held by
the Bishops of Worcester until
1558, (fn. 26) when Queen Elizabeth assumed possession of it
during a vacancy of the see
under the Act of 1558, (fn. 27) after
which it was held on lease
from the Crown by Richard
Maye till 1586. (fn. 28) In that
year the queen granted it to
Sir Thomas Bromley, (fn. 29) whose
descendants (q.v. in Holt) remained in possession of
Wick until 1743, (fn. 30) when Henry Lord Montfort sold
the larger part of the estate to Richard Vernon, (fn. 31)
who was probably a trustee for Thomas Vernon
of Hanbury, for the latter was in possession in
1745. (fn. 32) Other parts were sold by Lord Montfort
to William Bund. (fn. 33) The Vernon part followed the
descent of Hanbury (fn. 34) until recently, when the
greater part was sold to the tenant, Mr. John Edward
Powell. (fn. 35)

Bishopric of Worcester. Argent ten roundels gules.
It was the custom of the manor of Wick Episcopi
as well as the other manors belonging to the see that
the demesne lands should be let by indenture and
convent seal and all other tenantries of copyhold by
court roll. (fn. 36) In the 15th century some of the
parishioners obtained the convent seal for the purpose
of making fraudulent indentures 'by which the bishop
looses his heriots and fines and the King's pore subjects
hath no habytacons' (fn. 37) ; a commission of inquiry
was appointed, with the result
that the culprits were commanded to appear before the
council in 1522. (fn. 38)

Bromley of Holt. Quarterly fessewise indented gules and or.
The 15th-century court
rolls give an interesting record
of the growth of inclosures;
towards the end of the period
several tenants were accused of
encroaching on the common
land almost as regularly as the
court was held, (fn. 39) and in spite
of fines the practice seems to
have increased steadily. In
1387 the jurors presented
that Geoffrey Binn had 'built a dovecot by his
cottage to the damage of the whole community,
wherefore he was commanded to pull it down.' (fn. 40)
There were two fisheries attached to the manor of
Wick Episcopi in 1086, (fn. 41) and
one followed the descent of
the manor throughout. (fn. 42) The
other passed by the grant of
Bishop Giffard to the priory
of Malvern, and has since the
suppression of that house descended with the mills. It
now belongs to Mr. Willis-Bund. (fn. 43) In 1348 the prior
had also a fishery at Bedwardine. (fn. 44) A park at Wick belonging to the Bishop of
Worcester is mentioned in
1339, (fn. 45) and free warren in
the demesne lands there was
granted to Walter Cantilupe by Henry III in 1254. (fn. 46)

Bund. Ermine a pile gules from the foot between two like piles from the chief with an eagle's leg razed or upon each.
The manor of UPPER WICK (Goldhine Wic, xii
cent.; Goldginewike, Goldinewyke, xiii cent.; Wyke
Dabitot, Sapynswyk, Wick Sapey, Overwyke, xiv
cent.; Weeke Sapi, Gowld Weeke, Upper Week, xvii
cent.) is said to have been granted to Osbert
D'Abitot by Bishop Alfred, probably about 1158 (fn. 47) ;
it afterwards followed the descent of Redmarley
D'Abitôt (q.v.) until 1389, (fn. 48) when it passed on the
death of John de Sapy to Ellen de Arderne, who was
perhaps his daughter and heir. (fn. 49) Her descendants, the
owners of Pedmore (q.v. in Halfshire Hundred),
remained in possession of the manor until 1563, (fn. 50)
when it seems to have been sold by Edward Arderne
to John Nanfan, (fn. 51) who sold it in 1571 (fn. 52) to Jasper
Gower. Nine years later it was purchased of Jasper
by John Hall (fn. 53) of Henwick. His son Edward
demised part of the manor about 1614 to Paul
Tracy of Stanway (co. Glouc.), bart., (fn. 54) and died
seised of the remainder in
1617, leaving as his heir his
son and namesake. (fn. 55) This
Edward Hall together with
Sir Paul Tracy conveyed the
manor in 1633 to Henry
Best, (fn. 56) whose only child Katherine was married before 1650
to Scudamore Pytts, the
younger son of James Pytts of
Kyre Wyard. (fn. 57) Henry Best
was still living in 1669, when
he was a party to the fine by
which certain lands in Wick
were settled on Katherine
Cliffe, (fn. 58) afterwards the wife of his grandson James
Pytts. (fn. 59) She seems to have lived here during her
widowhood, (fn. 60) and died here, being buried in St.
John's Church. Her heir was her son Samuel Pytts,
then owner of Kyre Wyard, (fn. 61) and he sold the site of
the manor and other land at Wick to Thomas Bund,
whose great-grandson Mr. John W. Willis-Bund is
now the owner. (fn. 62)

Pytts of Kyre. Azure three bars argent with three stars or in the chief.
According to the register of Worcester Priory the
manor of HARDWICK (Hordewik, Herdewyk,
Hardewik, xiii cent.; Hardeswyke, xvi cent.) was granted
to the monks of that house by King Edgar between
961 and 975. (fn. 63) It is not, however, mentioned in the
Domesday Survey, nor does there seem to be any
reference to it earlier than 1236, at which date it
certainly belonged to the priory. (fn. 64) In 1256 the
monks obtained from Henry III a grant of free
warren in their demesne lands there, (fn. 65) which was confirmed by Edward III in
1355. (fn. 66) The manor remained
in the possession of the priory
till the Dissolution, (fn. 67) when
Henry VIII granted it to the
dean and chapter. (fn. 68) During
the Commonwealth it seems
to have been occupied by John
Oldbury, (fn. 69) who had obtained
a long lease of it from Dean
Potter in 1638, (fn. 70) but after
the Restoration it was recovered by the dean and
chapter.

Worcester Priory. Argent ten roundels gules and a quarter azure with our Lady and the Child or therein.
A court baron was held
there as late as 1857, (fn. 71) and
there are still (1912) at least two copyhold tenants. (fn. 72)
In 1291 the proceeds from the manor of Hardwick,
except the profits from stock, were assigned to the
pittancer of the priory, (fn. 73) from which it may perhaps
be concluded that PITTENSARYS FARM, for which
there is no separate entry in the Taxation, was at that
time regarded as a member of this manor. Its early
history was, however, quite distinct from that of
Hardwick, for there can be little doubt that this small
estate, which contained rather more than 31 acres in
1860, (fn. 74) was the odd virgate of the bishop's demesne held
by Urse D'Abitot at the time of the Domesday Survey. (fn. 75)
This land, which had been held of Urse by his chaplain
Alfred, (fn. 76) was granted by his son-in-law Walter de
Beauchamp to the Priory of Worcester (fn. 77) ; it is described
as being on the west side of the chapel of St. John, (fn. 78)
and the 14th-century court rolls show that it stretched
as far as the bridge called Hereford Bridge over
Laughern Brook. (fn. 79) It followed the descent of Hardwick until 1860, (fn. 80) and though called a manor in the
16th century never seems to have had a separate
court; it was, however, always leased to tenants as a
separate estate by the dean and chapter. (fn. 81) In 1857
a lease for twenty-one years was granted by them
to Mr. Francis Williams of Laughern Hill, (fn. 82) who
enfranchised the estate in 1860. (fn. 83)
The manor of CROWN EAST (Crawenest, Crowe
Nest, xiii cent.; Crowneast, xvii cent.) or RIDGE
HALL (Rugge, xii cent.; Rughall, Ruggehall, xiv cent.;
Rygehalhide, (fn. 84) Riggehallhide, xvi cent.) seems to have
been a collection of holdings bought during the 13th
century by Baldwin de Frevile
and his son Alexander. One
carucate of this land belonged
in 1236 to Walter Bufle (fn. 85) ;
his son and heir Robert sold
it in 1255 to Baldwin de
Frevile, (fn. 86) who settled it at
the same time on himself and
his wife Maud with remainder
to their younger son Alexander. (fn. 87) Baldwin died shortly
afterwards, (fn. 88) and before 1265
his widow had married Sir
William Devereux, who was
killed fighting for the king at
Evesham. (fn. 89) Maud released her right in Crown East
to her son Alexander before 1286, in which year he
obtained from Edward I a grant of free warren in
his demesne lands there. (fn. 90) These lands were said
in 1349 to be held of the Prioress of White Nuns
at Whistones. (fn. 91) Alexander seems also to have acquired before 1286 another virgate of land, which
he held of the Bishop of Worcester in 'Rugge' in
1299 (fn. 92) ; it had been held of Bishop Baldwin about
1182 by William of St. John's. (fn. 93) A second virgate of
land in 'Rugge' was added to the estate before 1349,
either by Alexander or his son Baldwin (fn. 94) ; this was
probably the virgate held of the bishop in 1299 by
Thomas son of Walter le Fleming. (fn. 95) Alexander
Frevile spent a great part of his long life in the king's
service both in France and Scotland, (fn. 96) and it was
perhaps as a reward that he received in 1305 a pardon
of the debts due from him to the Exchequer. (fn. 97) He
served in the Bannockburn campaign, (fn. 98) and was
again summoned to march against the Scots in
1327, when he must have been at least seventythree. (fn. 99) He died in the following year and was
succeeded by his son Baldwin, (fn. 100) who died seised of
'Croweneste and Rughall' in 1346, leaving as his heir
his son and namesake. (fn. 101) This Baldwin Frevile, who
was afterwards knighted, granted the manor to his
cousin John Hillary alias Grey of Sandiacre (co.
Derby). (fn. 102) John Grey died in 1403, leaving as his
heirs his daughters Isabel, who married first John Walsh
and afterwards Humphrey Halloughton, and Alice the
wife of John Leeke. (fn. 103) Isabel died in March 1435,
when the jurors presented that her son was of full age
and might hold when he had satisfied his lord of his
homage. (fn. 104) She had not, however, been living in
the neighbourhood for some
time, (fn. 105) and her son had presumably died before her, for
by the inquisition taken in
the following May her sister
Alice was found to be her
heir. (fn. 106)

Frevile. Or a cross gules with five lozenges vair thereon.

Leeke of Sandiacre. Argent a saltire engrailed sable with five rings or thereon.
Alice settled the manor on
her younger son Thomas
Leeke, who was seised of it
in 1453, (fn. 107) and was apparently
succeeded about 1459 by
another Thomas Leeke, perhaps his son. (fn. 108) This Thomas
may have been still living in
1472, as there is no mention
of Crown East among the possessions of the Leekes of
Sandiacre at that date (fn. 109) ; by 1513, however, the
Worcest rshire manor seems to have reverted to the
elder branch. (fn. 110) John Leeke of Sutton-en-le-Dale, the
grandson of Alice's eldest son William, dealt with it
in that year, (fn. 111) but it subsequently passed to his younger
brother Thomas Leeke, who sold it in 1518 to John
Mucklowe. (fn. 112)
William Mucklowe, John's heir, died in 1529
seised of the manor of Crown East, which he left by
his will to Peter Mucklowe. (fn. 113) Peter was succeeded
by William Mucklowe's eldes son Richard, who
was seised of Crown East and Ridge Hall (described
at this time as separate manors) at his death in 1556. (fn. 114)
The estate afterwards followed the descent of Martley
in Doddingtree Hundred (q.v.) until 1619, (fn. 115) when
it was sold by Simon Mucklowe to Edmund White. (fn. 116)
Edmund White died in 1633, leaving the manor
by will to his son Edmund, with successive remainders
to Edmund's son and namesake and his heirs male
and James White, the testator's son. (fn. 117) In 1676 the
third Edmund White sold Crown East, with the
consent of his cousin and heir-apparent John the son
of James White, to Edward Barton, (fn. 118) who dealt with
it by fine in 1704. (fn. 119) The descent of the manor after
this date is not easy to trace, but as Nash states that
the family of John Wowen, owner of the estate in
1801, had held it for nearly 150 years, (fn. 120) Wowen
was perhaps descended from Barton. His father,
another John Wowen, was in possession in 1765, (fn. 121)
but the history of the manor during the first half of
the 18th century is obscure. The Wowens had considerable property in the parish. It was, however,
sold to various persons about 1820. The largest lot,
Crown East, with about 300 acres of land, was
bought by Josiah Patrick. It passed from him to
a solicitor in Worcester named Hughes, who sold it
about 1860 to A. H. Royds. At his death it was
sold to the present owner, Mr. Henry Bramwell,
J.P. (fn. 122)
According to the chartulary of Worcester Monastery
half a hide of land at LAUGHERN (Lawerne,
x cent.; Laure, xi cent.; Lauwern, Lauerne, xii cent.;
Lawerne Almoners, Lawerne Elemosinary, xv cent.)
was granted by Offa, King of the Mercians, to Bishop
Heathored between 781 and 796, (fn. 123) and bestowed on
the prior and convent by Bishop Cynewold before
957. (fn. 124) In the time of King Edward the Confessor
Kineward held it, 'doing such service as the bishop
willed.' (fn. 125) The monastic chartulary states that it had
been held by him of the convent, and reverted to the
monks at his death, (fn. 126) but they were deprived of it
shortly afterwards by Robert le Despenser, (fn. 127) who held
it at the time of the Domesday Survey. (fn. 128) Between
1108 and 1118 (fn. 129) it was held by Nicholas, (fn. 130) probably
of Walter de Beauchamp, whose son William de
Beauchamp was in possession of it before 1180. (fn. 131)
In 1299 the Prior of Worcester held half a hide in
Laughern by service of a quarter of a knight's fee (fn. 132) ;
this seems to have been the same estate and was
probably the land granted by John D'Abitot (living
1197) (fn. 133) to the priory. (fn. 134) Among the property of the
prior taxed in 1291 were certain lands in 'Lawerne
debetok' (? D'Abitot) held by the almoner, (fn. 135) and the
monks paid a rent of 2 marks yearly to the heirs of
Lord Beauchamp as late as 1536. (fn. 136) 'The Almoner's
manor in Lawerne' is mentioned in the 14th-century
court rolls, (fn. 137) but at a later date it probably lapsed;
it is not mentioned by name in the priory accounts
of the 16th century, (fn. 138) or in the Valor, (fn. 139) though it was
evidently included at this time among the priory lands
in Hardwick and St. John's. (fn. 140)
TEMPLE LAUGHERN (Lauwerne, xii cent.;
Lauuarne, Lawerne Willelmi, xiii cent.; Temple
Lauherne, Holberie Lawerne, xv cent.; Temple
Lawghern, xvi cent.; Holberie, Templars Lawerne,
xvii cent.).
According to the chartulary of Worcester Priory
a manor in Laughern was 'returned' to the cathedral
monks by Bishop Simon between 1125 and 1151, (fn. 141)
but, as both the manors mentioned in Domesday
Book were still held at that date by William de
Beauchamp, (fn. 142) this was probably a fresh grant from
the bishop's demesne. It seems to have been this
property which the prior and convent afterwards
claimed to have granted to William the son of Miles
de Laughern before 1236 at a yearly rent of half a
mark. (fn. 143) William was succeeded by another Miles,
who sold the manor in 1249
to the Master and brethren
of the Temple for £100. (fn. 144)

The Knights Templars. Argent a cross gules and a chief sable.
In 1253 the Templars received from Henry III a grant
of free warren in their demesne lands in Laughern, (fn. 145)
but after the death of Miles
their right to their property
was disputed by his sister and
heir Sabine and her husband
John de Donyngton, who
occupied the manor, (fn. 146) and it
was not until 1275 that the
master obtained a quitclaim
from them, promising in return to pay a rent of
8 marks yearly during the lives of John and Sabine. (fn. 147)
To this settlement the Prior of Worcester opposed
his claim, (fn. 148) but though he was unsuccessful the
Templars were not yet able to enjoy their manor
in peace, as the Donyngtons re-entered during 1276, (fn. 149)
and the new master was obliged to come to terms
with them in the autumn of that year. (fn. 150)
The Templars remained in possession of the manor
till 1311, (fn. 151) when it was granted on the fall of the
order with the Preceptory of
Balsall, to which it had become attached, to the Knights
Hospitallers, (fn. 152) who retained it
till the Dissolution. (fn. 153) In 1544
it was sold by Henry VIII to
Richard Goodyere and
William Gower. (fn. 154) In 1558
Richard Goodyere obtained
licence to alienate his moiety
of the manor to Roger Goodyere alias Onyon, (fn. 155) who in
1583 settled certain lands
there on his son Richard
Onyon alias Unwyn, retaining the rest of the property to his own use for life. (fn. 156) Roger was succeeded
in 1611 by his son Richard, (fn. 157) who together with
Roger his son sold much of the land to John Gower,
the owner of the other moiety of the manor. (fn. 158) The
descent of Unwyn's own share after this date is
difficult to trace; it was held in 1629 by Robert
Stanford, who left it at his death to his daughter
Frances the wife of George Middlemore. (fn. 159) By 1655
some of the land seems to have come into the possession of Francis Earl of Shrewsbury, (fn. 160) and this had
passed before 1679 to Jane Cotes, who with her son
Henry Cotes conveyed it in that year to Sir Edward
Sebright, bart. (fn. 161) The so-called manor was settled
on Richard Sebright, Sir Edward's younger son, in
1707, (fn. 162) but its history after this date is obscure.

The Knights Hospitallers. Gules a cross argent.
William Gower, who bought the second moiety of
Temple Laughern in 1544, was also the owner of
Boughton or Boulton (q.v. infra), and his property in
Laughern afterwards became known as the manor of
Boulton Colemarsh. (fn. 163) It followed the descent of
Queenhill in Ripple (fn. 164) (q.v.), and was still held by the
Gower family in 1766. (fn. 165) They sold it early in the
19th century to the Harrisons, who held it till about
1840, when it was sold to the Munns. On the
death of the last brother about 1900 it was bought
by James Best, whose widow now lives there. (fn. 166)
In 1086 Urse D'Abitot held 3 virgates at
LAUGHERN (Laure, xi cent.; Lawerne, xii cent.;
Lauerne, Lawarne Dabtot, Bechameslawerne, xiv
cent.; Lawarne Beuchamp, xv cent.; Lawgherne,
xvi cent.) which had previously been held by Sawine
as of the bishop's demesne. (fn. 167) This was afterwards
held of William de Beauchamp by John D'Abitot (fn. 168)
and followed the descent of Hindlip (q.v.) until
1286, (fn. 169) when it was resumed by the Earl of Warwick,
who settled it on his third
son Walter. (fn. 170) In 1300 Walter
de Beauchampobtained a grant
of free warren in his demesne
lands in Laughern. (fn. 171) By 1346
the estate had passed to
William de Beauchamp, Walter's second son, who settled
it in that year on himself
and the heirs of his body
with successive remainders to
William de Bradewell and his
own right heirs. (fn. 172) Before
1379 the rents issuing thence
were in the possession of Sir
Roger Beauchamp, who is said to have been a younger
son of Giles Beauchamp of Powick. (fn. 173) Sir Roger died
in 1379, leaving as his heir his grandson Roger, then
sixteen. (fn. 174) John Beauchamp, the grandson of the
younger Roger, died during his minority, leaving as
his heir his sister Margaret. (fn. 175) She married Oliver
St. John, who was seised of the manor of Laughern
Beauchamp in 1431. (fn. 176) They had several sons, but
the manor passed by settlement or purchase to their
cousin Richard Lord Beauchamp of Powick, who
settled it on his daughter Margaret and William
Rede on their marriage. (fn. 177) Margaret predeceased her
husband, who died in 1508 seised of the manor. (fn. 178) His
heir was his son Richard Rede, (fn. 179) whose wardship and
marriage were granted to his uncle Richard Lygon. (fn. 180)
Richard Rede died before 1544, leaving a widow
Joan, who held the estate for her life. (fn. 181) William
Rede, Richard's heir, conveyed the reversion to
Thomas Solley and other trustees in 1544, (fn. 182) but the
descent of the manor after this date is obscure.
Some of the land seems to have been bought by
the owners of Earl's Court (q.v. infra), and may have
formed the so-called manor of Laughern Grove (fn. 183) ;
the rest perhaps passed to the Dean and Chapter
of Worcester.

Beauchamp of Powick. Gules a fesse and six martlets or.
The reputed manor of LAUGHERN GROVE or
THE GROVE is first mentioned in 1564, and seems
to have derived its name from the 20 acres of woodland which had previously formed part of the manor
of Laughern Dabitot (fn. 184) ; the part of the property to
the south side of the Bransford road had probably
been bought by John Bund, whose family had held it
of the Bishops of Worcester as parcel of the manor
of Wick at least as early as 1457, (fn. 185) and in whose
descendant Mr. J. W. Willis-Bund it still remains. (fn. 186)
In 1546 John Bund alias Walcrofte and William
Gower were parties to a fine concerning this part, (fn. 187)
and by 1616 the estate had acquired the alternative
name of Bunde Grove. (fn. 188) The other part on the
north side of the Bransford road was held in that
year by William Ingram of Earl's Court (fn. 189) (q.v. infra),
and subsequently followed the descent of that property. (fn. 190)
The reputed manor of EARL'S COURT seems
to have been a collection of holdings bought by
Arnold Gower before 1542 and settled by him in
that year on his illegitimate son John Gower, (fn. 191) who
afterwards conveyed the estate to Arnold and his wife
Eleanor for their lives. (fn. 192) John Gower died before
1559 (fn. 193) and was succeeded by his son John, who
died childless, leaving as his heir his sister Elizabeth
the wife of Richard Ingram. (fn. 194) Elizabeth's right to
the property was disputed about 1561 by William
Gower, the grandson of Arnold's brother and heir
William, (fn. 195) but in 1599 she and her son William
Ingram succeeded in obtaining a quitclaim. (fn. 196)
Henry Ingram, the son of William, succeeded
before 1637 (fn. 197) ; he mortgaged his property in that
year to Richard Briggenshawe, who entered in
default of payment in 1639, though he is said not
to have paid the extra money agreed upon for the
absolute purchase, (fn. 198) and conveyed it in trust to his
son William Briggenshawe. (fn. 199)
But Timothy Colles, who had
married Margaret the daughter of Henry Ingram, expressed
himself willing to redeem the
estate and complained that
Ingram and Briggenshawe prevented him. (fn. 200) The descent of
the reputed manor after 1649
is not clear. Sara the daughter
and heir of Timothy Colles
married Thomas Geers, (fn. 201) and
Eleanor the daughter of
William Briggenshawe became
the wife of Francis Geers, (fn. 202)
who dealt by fine with Earl's Court in 1691 (fn. 203) ; the
estate does not, however, seem to have been in the
possession of the heirs of either. Thomas Geers
married as his second wife Elizabeth the widow of
Robert Whitney, (fn. 204) and her grandson Edward Cope
Hopton was the owner of the property in 1745 (fn. 205) ;
it afterwards descended with Iccomb (q.v.) to the
Rev. John Parsons, afterwards Hopton. (fn. 206) On the
death of his son and successor John in 1891 the
estate passed to the latter's daughter Bertha Maria
wife of Walter Thomas Mynors Baskerville of Clyro
Court, Radnorshire. She died in 1892, and her
daughter Sybil Maud is now the owner of Earl's
Court. Sybil Maud Baskerville assumed the name
Hopton in 1898, and Colonel John Dutton Hunt,
whom she married in the following year, also took the
name Hopton. (fn. 207)

Ingram. Ermine a fesse gules with three scallops or thereon.
BOUGHTON or BOULTON originally belonged
to the manor of Wick Episcopi. (fn. 208) William de
Pechesleye had tenements there in 1345 of the gift
of Alexander vicar of Hallow and Richard de
Hindlip, chaplain, (fn. 209) and William de Habington
held lands in the neighbourhood about 1431. (fn. 210) At
about the end of the 15th century John Gower of
Suckley, second son of Thomas Gower of Woodhall
by Catherine daughter of John Lord Dudley, (fn. 211) bought
lands here, and, in the words of Habington, built
'a faire house at Boulton.' (fn. 212) Several adjoining
holdings were bought during the 16th century by
Arnold and William Gower, sons of John Gower, (fn. 213)
and William Gower eventually succeeded to the
whole estate, (fn. 214) which was afterwards termed a manor.
William Gower died in 1546, (fn. 215) and it then passed to
his son Henry Gower, (fn. 216) who
sold it in 1617 to his cousin
Abel Gower, son of George
Gower of Colemarsh. (fn. 217) Abel
Gower was succeeded in 1632
by his eldest son Abel, (fn. 218) who
died in 1669. (fn. 219) He was succeeded by his eldest son Robert
Gower, who married Catherine daughter of Sir William
Childe of Kinlet, co. Salop, (fn. 220)
and, dying in 1689, (fn. 221) was
succeeded by his eldest son
Abel Gower, (fn. 222) who died in
1710, having two sons Abel
Eustace and William Gower,
both minors. (fn. 223) Abel Eustace Gower dying some
few months after his father, the estate passed to his
brother William Gower. (fn. 224) John Gower of Queenhill
was dealing with the manor of Boughton in 1719. (fn. 225)
The manor was sold in 1729 by William Gower,
then of Chiddingstone, co. Kent, to Joseph Weston,
a merchant of Worcester. (fn. 226)

Gower of Suckley. Argent a cheveron between three wolves' heads razed gules with the difference of a crescent.
In 1778 Mary Weston, Joseph's widow, and her
son Joseph sold a portion of the estate to William
Lilley (fn. 227) and the remainder to Thomas Bund. The
Rev. John Lilley, son of William, sold part of the
land in 1810 to Mr. Elias Isaac (fn. 228) ; the remainder
with the reputed manor he had already sold in 1808
to Mr. Joseph Helm, (fn. 229) from whom Mr. Elias Isaac
bought it in 1814. (fn. 230) The present owner is his
great-grandson Mr. Arthur W. Isaac.
Two mills in Wick were attached to the bishop's
manor in 1086 (fn. 231) ; these seem to have been Wick
Mill on the Teme and Cut Mill (Cottemulne,
Cuttemill, xiii cent.; Cuttenmill, xiv cent.) on
Laughern Brook, both of which followed the descent
of Wick Episcopi till the end of the 13th century. (fn. 232)
About that time another mill was built on the Teme, (fn. 233)
and in 1300 Giffard granted all three to the Prior of
Great Malvern. (fn. 234)
In 1475 the tenants in Wick Episcopi complained
that the prior had dug a canal from the Teme to
Wick Mills, greatly to the damage of their land, (fn. 235)
and that he had not paid the yearly sum agreed on
before he had obtained leave to do this, or repaired
the bridge over the water as he had promised. (fn. 236) In
1536 the prior paid 4s. rent for his water-course and
held the mills (Powick Mill and Cut Mill), valued
at £5 4s. 8d. yearly, at a fee-farm rent of £4 0s. 8d.
to the bishop. (fn. 237) In 1543 the two water-mills called
Powick Mills in the tenure of William Moore were
granted to Richard Andrews and Nicholas Temple, (fn. 238)
who had licence to alienate them to William Moore
in the same year. (fn. 239) He died in 1565 seised of three
water-mills called Powick Mills, (fn. 240) and his son Richard
sold two of them in 1578 to William and Anthony
Gower. (fn. 241) The reversion of two mills at Wick was
granted by Queen Elizabeth to Sir Thomas Bromley
in 1586, (fn. 242) and they afterwards passed with part of the
manor of Wick Episcopi to William Bund. (fn. 243) Three
mills at Wick were sold by Mr. J. W. Willis-Bund in
1904 to the City of Worcester, and are now their
electricity works. (fn. 244) Cut Mill seems to have been
one of those sold by Richard Moore to William
Gower in 1578, (fn. 245) and afterwards followed the descent
of Boughton, (fn. 246) until it was sold about 1760 by Mary
Weston to William Bund. The mill was then pulled
down and the mill-pond filled up. About 1780
Thomas Bund redeemed the quit-rent payable from
it to the Crown. (fn. 247) With Cut Mill William Gower
also acquired another water-mill, (fn. 248) which like Cut
Mill followed the descent of Boughton till 1693, (fn. 249) but
no mention of it occurs after this date.
The New Mill in Laughern D'Abitot was probably
the mill that formed part of that manor in 1086. (fn. 250)
It was granted before 1294 to the cathedral
monastery (fn. 251) and probably descended to the dean and
chapter. (fn. 252) It seems to have been on the site of St.
John's Mill; the court rolls show that it stood on a
high road near a bridge close to the borders of
Laughern D'Abitot and the Pittensarys. (fn. 253) St. John's
Mill, on the Bromyard road, is now the Worcester
Cold Storage Works.
Ambrose Mill (Aumbreyesmille, Awmbreys, xiv
cent.) was perhaps part of the tenement in Laughern
granted to the Prior and convent of Worcester by
John son and heir of Geoffrey Ambrose. (fn. 254) After the
Dissolution it came into the possession of the dean
and chapter. (fn. 255) It still exists on the road from
Worcester to Dines Green.
Wandesford Mill is first mentioned in 1236 (fn. 256) ; it
was situated in the same tithing as the New Mill
and Ambrose Mill, (fn. 257) and like them paid tithes to
Worcester Priory. (fn. 258) It is last mentioned by name
in 1392, (fn. 259) but may have been one of the three
unnamed mills belonging to the dean and chapter
after 1630. (fn. 260)
A water-mill called Ivall's Mill is mentioned in
1630, when it was occupied by George Worfield (fn. 261) ;
it had previously been held by William Worfield and
Michael Worfield, (fn. 262) and was afterwards apparently
in the possession of the dean and chapter. (fn. 263)
Another water-mill was attached to the manor of
Earl's Court in 1647. (fn. 264)
A windmill outside Hardwick is mentioned in
1236, when it belonged to the priory of Worcester. (fn. 265)
It was perhaps this mill which was 'removed from
its place by means of Mr. Richard Cupper' about
1626, (fn. 266) and set up on some copyhold lands in the
manor of Wick Episcopi. (fn. 267) No further mention of
it occurs.
CHURCH
The church of ST. JOHN BAPTIST
in Bedwardine consists of chancel with
south chapel, nave with south aisle and
a western tower, with a wide north aisle of modern
work. The north arcade of three bays is of the 12th
century, but the arches were destroyed some years
ago, so as to give more view from the pulpit. The
south arcade is of the 14th century, and the south
wall has two large windows under gables of which
the eastern represents the transept. On a pillar of
the south arcade is a shield with the Gower arms.
The south chapel of the chancel is of the 14th
century with the original roof. (fn. 268) The font is
modern. There is a good monument in the north
aisle, and there are several monuments to the Bund
family, which with others have been moved from their
original positions when the church was restored and
the chancel built about twenty years ago. At the
same time some old glass in the east window was
taken out and worked up in the chancel windows.
The parish chest of 1693 is plain with iron straps.
The 15th-century tower at the west end is wide
and low and contains a ring of six bells by Thomas
Mears of London, dated 1816 (the second 1815),
also a small bell by John Greene, a Worcester
founder, dated 1626. The former bells were by
Richard Sanders of Bromsgrove, 1707.
The plate consists of an Elizabethan flagon, a cup
and cover for paten of 1571, a paten of rude work and
inscribed 'The gift of G. Wryfall, 1736.' There
are also a cup, cover and flagon of recent date. (fn. 269)
The registers before 1812 are as follows: (i)
baptisms and burials 1558 to 1774, marriages 1559
to 1754; (ii) baptisms and burials 1775 to 1812;
(iii) marriages 1754 to 1812. All are in good
condition. (fn. 270)
ADVOWSON
The church of St. John the Baptist in Bedwardine was originally a
chapel of ease to the church of
St. Cuthbert, Wick Episcopi. St. Cuthbert had in
its turn been a chapelry attached to the church of
St. Helen, Worcester, and as such had been granted
by Fritheric to the monks of Worcester Priory,
according to their chartulary, in the 12th century. (fn. 271)
William of Blois, however, seems to have disputed
the right of the convent to the chapelries belonging
to St. Helen, for in 1234 he made an agreement
with them by which they should hold only those of
Wick and Wichenford. (fn. 272)
Wick was still a chapelry in 1236, (fn. 273) and seems to
have been appropriated about this time to the Prior
and convent of Worcester together with the chapels
of St. John, Golden Wick and Laughern. (fn. 274) The
chapel of St. Cuthbert at Wick became the parish
church before 1283, (fn. 275) though the vicarage-house was
always at St. John's. (fn. 276)
It is not clear when the chapel in St. John's
began to be more important than the mother church;
possibly an increase in the population of the suburb
and the duties of its vicar led to Bishop Giffard's
suggestion in 1283 that his work was underpaid. (fn. 277)
This was also the opinion of William Lynn, bishop
in 1370, who stated that the prior and chapter took
so large a proportion of the tithes that there was not
enough left to support a separate vicar at all. (fn. 278) He
therefore determined, at the request of the parishioners,
to abandon the church of Wick, which was already
'half deserted and attended by very few,' and make
St. John's Chapel the parish church. (fn. 279) The new
church was consecrated in 1371. (fn. 280)
The advowson belonged to the priory till the
Dissolution, (fn. 281) and was granted in 1542 to the Dean
and Chapter of Worcester, (fn. 282) who are still the patrons. (fn. 283)
The chapels of Golden Wick and Laughern are
mentioned in 1236. (fn. 284) These were both private
chapels belonging to the lords of those manors, who
paid a certain sum yearly to the priory for leave to
hear divine service. (fn. 285) The latter chapel was at
Laughern Willelmi, (fn. 286) and probably fell into disuse
after the estate was granted to the Templars The
chapel at Golden Wick is not separately mentioned
after this date. Another chapel was attached to the
manor of Crown East; in 1256 Maud de Frevile
founded a chantry there for the health of her husband's soul. (fn. 287) The licence for this chantry was to
last only during her life, (fn. 288) and probably after her
death the chapel too was disused, as her son cannot
have spent much time there, and the manor-house
itself was a ruin in 1349. (fn. 289) There was also a private
chapel belonging to the bishop's house at Wick. (fn. 290)
CHARITIES
The United Charity School was
founded by deeds of Milberrow
Doelittle, 1719, and Mercy Herbert,
1722. (fn. 291)
In 1852 Mary Harrison, by her will proved
19 May, left £50 for the benefit of the Sunday
school. The legacy is on deposit in the Post Office
Savings Bank; the income of £1 5s. yearly is applied
to the Sunday schools.
The charities of John Carwardine and others are
now represented by £508 9s. 6d. consols with the
official trustees, arising from the sale in 1904 of
certain lands and hereditaments comprised in deeds
of lease and release 4 and 5 November 1719. These
had been purchased with sums given by several
charitable persons for the use of the poor. The
annual dividends, amounting to £12 14s., are applied
as to £1 in the distribution of Bibles in respect
of a gift of £20 by Margery Carwardine for that
purpose, as to £5 in the distribution of bread on
St. Thomas's Day, and the residue towards repairs of
the church.
This parish participates in the general charity of
Henry Smith. In 1909 £12 12s. was received and
applied in the distribution of twenty-four gowns and
in bread to the value of £2 10s.
In 1698 Timothy Nourse by his will devised an
annuity of £25 for binding poor children as apprentices and for clothing poor old men and women.
The annuity was redeemed in 1866 by the transfer
to the official trustees of £833 10s. consols, now
producing £20 18s. 6d. yearly, which is applied
chiefly in the distribution of coats and in subscriptions
to the clothing club.
In 1701 Henry Johnson by his will devised 3 r.
of land, the rents to be distributed equally among
twelve poor widows. The land was sold in 1874 and
the proceeds invested in £162 12s. consols with the
official trustees. In 1877 a sum of £78 14s. 10d.
consols was sold out and the proceeds remitted to the
trustees, leaving a sum of £83 17s. 2d. with the
official trustees, producing £2 1s. 8d. yearly.
In 1880 Mrs. Janet Amelia Meredith, by her will
proved at London 13 May, bequeathed £300 in
augmentation of one or more of the parochial charities.
The legacy was invested in £303 0s. 7d. consols,
producing £7 11s. 4d. yearly.
The Church Lands.
—The parish has from time
immemorial been in possession of certain lands and
hereditaments for the repairs of the church and such
other godly uses as the major part of the parishioners
approve, the earliest deed extant being dated in
1640. In 1910 the gross income, including the
dividends on a sum of £113 12s. 9d. consols with
the official trustees arising from the sale of a cottage
and garden at Dines Green, exceeded £200.