ST. PETER with WHITTINGTON
The parish of St. Peter, Worcester, lies to the
south and south-east of Worcester city. Together
with the civil parish of Whittington it covers an
area of 2,313 acres. The north-western corner of the
parish, including the church of St. Peter, lies within
the city and forms the southern quarter of Worcester
adjoining the main thoroughfare of Sidbury or
Sudbury Street (Suthebury, xiii cent.). At Sidbury
lived the earliest family of bell-founders known to
have exercised their trade in the city. (fn. 1) A chapel or
oratory dedicated in honour of St. Katherine stood
there in the 17th century. (fn. 2) At right angles to Sidbury ran La Knole or Studemery's Knoll (now Edgar
Street), the approach to the Great Gate of the
priory. (fn. 3) Sidbury Gate stood at the south end of
Sidbury (fn. 4) and was the chief entrance to the city
from the south. It was commanded on the east by
the earthwork called Fort Royal. On the other side
of the gate Sidbury becomes the London Road and
leads on towards Battenhall. The hospital of
St. Wulfstan lay just without the gate.
The meadow called Digleys or Dudleys, now
Diglis, south-west of Sidbury by the river, was partly
demesne of the Bishop of Worcester. Bishop Godfrey
granted pasture rights over his lands there to the
hospital of St. Wulfstan and the priory of Worcester. (fn. 5)
Part of it was apparently appurtenant to the castle
of Worcester, (fn. 6) and the Prior of Worcester had a
rent of £6 accruing from it in 1535. (fn. 7) In 1542
the 'first crop of the field called Digley' was
granted to the Dean and Chapter of Worcester. (fn. 8)
The close called Diglis, described as parcel of Warwick's and Spencer's lands, was leased to John Bourne
in 1546. (fn. 9) In 1669 the dean and chapter had three
closes called Diglis lying between Green Lane on the
east and the river on the west. (fn. 10) There was a hermitage of St. Ursula at Diglis, but no record has
been found of it until the 16th century, when it was
in decay. (fn. 11)
The southern part of St. Peter's parish is entirely
rural and consists chiefly of pasture land. There is now
no woodland within it, (fn. 12) although it was formerly in
the ambit of the forest of Feckenham, which came up
to Sidbury Gate. On the west the parish is bounded
by the River Severn, and the land adjoining the
river does not average more than 50 ft. above the
ordnance datum. In the north-east it rises to about
200 ft. The road to Tewkesbury runs south from
Worcester through the parish on its western side, and
the London road cuts through it in a south-easterly
direction, leading towards Pershore. Indulgences to
those who should assist in the repair of the latter
road between Worcester and Kempsey, where the
bishop had a palace, were granted in 1427 and
1448. (fn. 13) This road passes the farms of Barneshall and
Timberdine. (fn. 14)
The manor-house of Battenhall, a 17th-century
half-timber house of two stories and attic, with
modern additions on the south and west, stands
between the roads from Pershore and Kempsey. To
the north and south of the manor-house are Middle
Battenhall and Upper Battenhall Farms.
The civil parish of Whittington has an area of
1,108 acres. Ecclesiastically Whittington is now a
chapelry of St. Martin's, but before its transference
in 1910 it had been attached from an early date
to St. Peter's. (fn. 15) Other parts of St. Peter's were at the
same time transferred to the newly-formed parish of
St. Martin (q.v.). The church of St. Philip and
St. James stands on the east of the road to Pershore,
occupying the site of the ancient chapel of the same
name. To the south-west, on the other side of the
road, is Crookbarrow Hill, a very large elliptical
mound with artificial top; its character and origin
are unknown. Crookbarrow manor-house, now a
farm, stands under Crookbarrow Hill to the east of
the main road. It is a late 17th-century brick building of two stories and attic with modern additions;
it is partly surrounded by a moat which begins on the
north and goes round the west to the south side. In
the village on the main road are some 18th-century
brick houses.
At Swinesherd on the north-eastern boundary of
Whittington one of the leets for Oswaldslow Hundred
was held. (fn. 16) Swinesherd (Swinesheasdan) is mentioned
among the boundaries of Whittington in 989, (fn. 17) and
a 'cultura called Swynesheved' in the manor of
Whittington occurs in the 13th century. (fn. 18)
Where the London and Alcester roads join at Red
Hill in the north-eastern corner of the parish was the
spot at which all the county criminals were executed
until the early half of the 18th century. The gibbet
on which such of them as were hung in chains were
suspended also stood here.
MANORS
The manor of BATTENHALL. (Batenhale, x cent.) was in the possession of
the church of Worcester in 969, when a
lease for three lives of one 'mansa' there was made
by Bishop Oswald to a clerk named Wulfgar. (fn. 19)
The Domesday Survey makes no mention of Battenhall; possibly it is one of the two estates given under
the name of Whittington (q.v.), both of which were
held under the Bishop of Worcester by Walter Poer,
with whose descendants the
manor is next found. In 1249
Hugh Poer quitclaimed 2
carucates of land in Battenhall
to William Poer. (fn. 20) Sir William
Poer, son of Roger Poer, was
holding the manor at the end
of the 13th century (fn. 21) and
settled it on his brother Roger
for life with reversion to
William Walens and Walter
Hacket successively. (fn. 22) Afterwards, however, by a sequence
of grants of portions of the
manor from Sir William Poer, the whole estate seems
to have passed to Richard le Mercer, a citizen of
Worcester. (fn. 23) In 1306 John de Merton and Elizabeth
his wife, possibly a daughter (fn. 24) and co-heir (fn. 25) of Sir
William Poer, quitclaimed the manor to Richard le
Mercer, his wife Margaret and his son John le
Mercer. (fn. 26) Richard was apparently dead by 1327
when John le Mercer conveyed the manor through
his feoffees Bikerton and Braunsford to the priory of
Worcester, (fn. 27) a grant followed in 1330 by a quitclaim
of all the knights' fees appurtenant to the manor. (fn. 28)
The manor was appropriated to the cellarer (fn. 29) and
remained with the priory until the Dissolution. (fn. 30)

Poer. Or a fesse gules with two molets gules in the chief.
Battenhall was excepted from the grant of the
priory lands to the Dean and Chapter of Worcester, (fn. 31)
and in 1545 was granted in fee to John Bourne, (fn. 32)
who had been lessee under the prior (fn. 33) and afterwards
under the king. (fn. 34) In 1555 it was confirmed by
Queen Mary, (fn. 35) under whom
Sir John Bourne served as a
Secretary of State. At his
death in 1575 the manor descended to his son Anthony
Bourne, (fn. 36) who in January
1576–7 sold it to Thomas
Bromley, (fn. 37) then SolicitorGeneral and afterwards Lord
Chancellor. Henry Bromley
his son, who succeeded him
in 1587, alienated the manor
in 1614 to William Sebright
of Besford. (fn. 38) It then followed
the descent of Besford (fn. 39) (q.v.)
until the last quarter of the 19th century, when it
was sold in lots to a number of small proprietors, a
large part becoming building land. (fn. 40)

Sebright of Besford, baronet. Argent three cinqfoils sable.
A park pertained to the manor of Battenhall in the
time of the Prior and convent of Worcester (fn. 41) and
was granted with the manor to John Bourne. (fn. 42) The
16th-century manor-house stood within the park, (fn. 43)
but it had been destroyed before the end of the
18th century. (fn. 44)
William Poer was presented before the justices
for his warren in 1275, but is said to have shown
his warrant. (fn. 45) Free warren was exercised by the
Priors of Worcester and was the subject of a suit for
trespass brought by their successor Sir John Bourne (fn. 46)
against the lessee of certain demesne lands called
Warwick Furlong, Gylden Acrefield and Gyldenfield,
where contrary to the terms of the lease the lessee
had hunted conies. (fn. 47)
The manor of WHITTINGTON (Huitington,
ix cent. ; Widinton, xi cent.) was granted to Deneberht Bishop of Worcester by Coenwulf King of the
Mercians in 816 in exchange for other lands. (fn. 48) In
989 Oswald Bishop of Worcester leased Whittington
for three lives to Gardulf, (fn. 49) and later Bishop Britheah
gave it to his brother Ailric, but the latter was dispossessed by King William. (fn. 50) In 1086 it consisted
of two estates attached as members to the bishop's
manors of Kempsey and Northwick, (fn. 51) both held under
the bishop by Walter Poer. (fn. 52) Hugh Poer is returned
as tenant of the Kempsey member in an early 12th-century survey of Oswaldslow, (fn. 53) and another Hugh,
possibly his son, was holding both members at the
end of the same century. (fn. 54) About the middle of the
13th century Sir Roger Poer appears as witness to a
grant of land called Stocking in Whittington made to
the Prior and convent of Worcester, (fn. 55) and is probably
the Roger Poer who was called upon by Walter Poer
to warrant to him 2 virgates of land in Whittington
in 1226. (fn. 56) About the same time John Poer appears
as tenant of the Northwick member, (fn. 57) possibly by
subfeoffment.
Whittington was one of the knights' fees granted
to the priory of Worcester by John le Mercer in
1330, (fn. 58) when a toft and a carucate of land there
were held by Roger Poer, clerk, as a quarter of a
knight's fee. Later this estate does not seem to have
preserved its identity as a manor. Part of it seems
to have been attached to the manor of Spetchley (fn. 59)
and part to Woodhall in Norton. (fn. 60) Nash says that
the 'principal farm' in his time was held by Richard
Ingram, who had bought it of Randall Stevens. (fn. 61)
Mr. R. V. Berkeley of Spetchley Park is now the
principal landowner.
The manor of TIMBERDON or TIMBERDINE
consisted of lands granted at various times to the Prior
and convent of Worcester, chiefly to the use of the
almoner. (fn. 62) A weir there (possibly the fishery mentioned under Whittington in the Survey of 1086) is
said to have been given to
them by Walter Poer. (fn. 63) In
1535 the convent's demesne
lands at Timberdine were
valued at £5. (fn. 64)

Lechmere. Gules a fesse or with two pelicans or in the chief.
The site of the manor with
the fishery in the Severn and
a wood called Pylgrove was
granted to John Bourne in
1545. (fn. 65) It descended with
Battenhall (fn. 66) (q.v.) to Henry
Bromley, who as Sir Henry
Bromley, kt., sold it in 1611
to Edward Mytton. (fn. 67) Mytton
died seised in 1620 (fn. 68) and his
son Edward (fn. 69) in 1627, (fn. 70) the latter leaving a son and
heir of the same name. In 1799 the manor was in
the possession of Anthony Lechmere, who with his
wife Mary conveyed it in that year to Isaac Pickering. (fn. 71) The Lechmeres, however, retained the manorhouse and a considerable part of the land until
1912, when Mr. Anthony Lechmere sold the property in lots. (fn. 72)
In this manor on the Kempsey road is a publichouse called the Ketch, in a low window of which
looking down the river Samuel Butler is said to have
written part of 'Hudibras.' (fn. 73)
The manor of BARNES or BARNES HALL was
another priory estate originating in a carucate of land
at 'La Neweberne' and Timberdine granted with
the manor of Battenhall to the convent of Worcester
in 1327. (fn. 74) In the 14th century this estate was, as
the name suggests, the priory stock farm. (fn. 75) In 1535
the lands called 'Le Barnys' were farmed out by the
priory for £5. (fn. 76)
The site of the manor was granted with Battenhall
(q.v.) to John Bourne in 1545. (fn. 77) It descended with
that manor to Sir Henry Bromley, (fn. 78) who sold it in
1611 to Thomas Andrewes. (fn. 79) Andrewes died seised
in January 1636–7, leaving a son and heir Jonathan. (fn. 80)
The manor descended in this family (fn. 81) until it came
to two heiresses—Abigail, who married John York,
and Anne, who married William Hopton. It was sold
by Hopton and by York's
eldest son to Treadway Nash,
D.D., in 1767. (fn. 82) Nash settled
it on his daughter Margaret,
who married John Lord
Somers. (fn. 83) Their eldest son
Edward Charles Cocks, on
whom a settlement was made
in 1811, (fn. 84) was killed the following year at the siege of
Burgos. It descended with
the other Somers estates and
is now the property of Lady
Henry Somerset.

Andrewes of Barnes Hall. Gules a saltire or voided vert.
The manor of CROOKBARROW (Crokbarwe,
Crockebergh, xiv cent.) was one of the knights' fees
granted with the manor of Battenhall to Worcester
Priory in 1330. (fn. 85) In 1314 it was held in demesne
by Alexander de Montfort and his wife Elizabeth.
They in that year granted it to Edmund Hakelut, (fn. 86)
who in 1330 received a grant of free warren in his
demesnes of Crookbarrow and Whittington. (fn. 87) The
manor remained in the hands of tenants under the
priory. Thomas Gower died seised of it in February
1439–40, when it descended to Thomas his son and
heir. (fn. 88) It then followed the descent of Woodhall
Manor in Norton by Kempsey (fn. 89) until 1676, when
both manors were settled upon Thomas Stevens. (fn. 90)
It is said by Nash to have been bought by Edward
Ingram of Upper Home, Clifton. (fn. 91) His son Richard
Ingram suffered a recovery of it in 1799, (fn. 92) and in
1814 it was in the possession of John Richard
Ingram. (fn. 93) It afterwards passed to the Berkeleys of
Spetchley, who now own it.
A park was appurtenant to the manor of Crookbarrow in 1504. (fn. 94)
CHURCHES
The church of ST. PETER stands
at the extreme south-east corner of
the city upon the walls, and is a
large barn-like structure of brick and stucco, erected
about 1820. The old church consisted of chancel
and nave with north and south aisles, and had a 15th-century tower at the north-west angle panelled in the
Somerset manner. (fn. 95)
There are three bells: the first by Godwin Baker,
inscribed 'LORDE IN THEE IS OVR HOOP 1615,' with the
churchwardens' names; the second by John Martin,
1661, and the third by the same, 1693 (his latest
bell); also a 'ting-tang' by Warner, 1885.
The plate consists of a cup without cover and
illegible hall mark, a large paten, and an almsdish
inscribed 'The gift of Mrs. Anna Dennis of the
Commandry in Worcester, 1721.' There are also a
cup, paten and flagon in plated ware. (fn. 96)
The registers before 1812 are as follows: (i) all
entries 1686 to 1745; (ii) baptisms 1745 to 1797,
burials 1745 to 1782, marriages 1745 to 1754; (iii)
marriages 1754 to 1783; (iv) marriages 1783 to
1812; (v) burials 1783 to 1812; (vi) baptisms
1798 to 1812. (fn. 97)
The church of ST. PHILIP AND ST. JAMES,
Whittington, erected in 1842, stands 100 yards east
of the main road upon the site of the ancient
chapel. It is built of coursed rubble with sandstone dressings in 13th-century style, and consists
of chancel, nave, south porch and small west tower.
The walls are plastered internally and have opentimber tiled roofs. There are some early 19th-century mural monuments in the nave; one on the
north wall is to Francis Best, 1795, Ann his wife,
1819, and their two daughters: and one on the south
wall is to Henry West, 1798, and Ann his wife,
1817. On the nave floor are two 18th-century slabs
to the Hampton family.
There is one bell by G. Mears of London.
The plate consists of silver chalice, paten and
almsdish, all Victorian.
The registers previous to 1812 are as follows: (i)
all entries 1653 to 1708; (ii) baptisms 1709 to
1796, marriages 1710 to 1755, and burials 1710
to 1795, rather confusedly intermingled; (iii)
marriages 1755 to 1811; (iv) baptisms 1796 to 1812
and burials 1796 to 1811.
ADVOWSON
The advowson of St. Peter's
Church was granted to the convent of Pershore by John Poer in
the first half of the 13th century. (fn. 98) In 1384 the
abbot obtained licence to appropriate the church. (fn. 99)
The rectory and advowson were granted in 1542
to the Dean and Chapter of Worcester, (fn. 100) with whom
they have since remained. (fn. 101) Leases were made of
the advowson, the rectorial tithe and parts of the
glebe lands during the 16th and 17th centuries. (fn. 102)
The chapel of Whittington was originally appurtenant to the church of St. Helen in the city of
Worcester. (fn. 103) A pension of 2s. from it is said to have
been granted to Worcester Priory by Hugh Poer. (fn. 104)
Later it seems to have been held as a chapel to
St. Peter's by the Abbot of Pershore, (fn. 105) but at the
end of the 15th century the inhabitants claimed
parochial status for it. The matter was compromised
by an agreement with Pershore that the latter should
pay 20s. yearly towards the support of a chaplain. (fn. 106)
The living was held with St. Peter's until 1910,
when it was annexed to St. Martin's.
CHARITIES
The following charities are distributed on St. Thomas's Day,
namely, John Hughes', mentioned
on the church table as founded by will, 1636, consisting of a rent-charge of 40s., issuing out of the
Crown Inn, Friar Street.
Sarah Hodgkins' (date of foundation unknown, but
mentioned in Parliamentary returns of 1786), consisting of a rent-charge of 20s., payable out of the
Red Lion Inn, Sidbury.
Richard Adams' (mentioned on the same table),
will 1702, being 20s. yearly issuing out of a farm
at Alfrick in Suckley.
Charities of Henry Staunton and others, which
consist of a freehold house, 5 Edgar Street, Worcester, producing £28 10s. a year, one moiety of
the net income being applicable for the poor and the
other moiety for expenses in connexion with the
church.
Mrs. Sarah Hall's (mentioned on the church table),
will 1776, trust fund, £350 consols, the dividends
to be applied in warm gowns for six poor maids or
widows.
Charles Geary's, will date unknown, mentioned on
church table as a legacy of £20, now represented by
£30 11s. 9d. consols, the interest to be given to ten
poor women.
Thomas Taylor's, date of foundation not stated,
trust fund, £103 9s. 10d. consols, arising from sale of
two cottages in Meadow Row, Worcester, dividends
applicable in the distribution of articles in kind.
William Otley's, will proved at Worcester 19 September 1864, trust fund, £49 11s. 1d. consols, dividends applicable in the distribution of bread.
Anna Farrell's, will proved at London 10 March
1894, trust fund, £176 5s. 1d. consols, dividends
applicable in the distribution of bread and coal.
The several sums of stock are held by the official
trustees, producing in annual dividends £17 4s. 4d. In
1910 the sum of £23 was expended on St. Thomas's
Day in the distribution of dresses, sheets and petticoats, £4 13s. on bread and groceries and £10
towards church expenses.
Other donations mentioned on the church table
appear to have been lost.
In 1855 William Dent, by his will proved
22 January, bequeathed £1,000, the interest to be
applied in the purchase of coats, gowns and blankets
for poor men, women and housekeepers. The legacy
was invested in £1,063 16s. 7d. consols with the
official trustees, producing £26 11s. 8d. yearly.
In 1861 Robert Allies, by his will proved
18 March, bequeathed £500, the interest to be
distributed in October in blankets to poor housekeepers. The legacy was invested in £514 2s. 9d.
consols, producing £12 17s. yearly. The stock is
with the official trustees, who also hold a sum of
£514 2s. 9d. like stock, arising from a legacy by the
same testator, for the benefit of the Church of
England day schools.
The official trustees likewise hold a sum of
£594 15s. 10d. consols, representing a legacy of
£600 by will of Thomas Nicholls Stratford, proved
at Worcester 8 March 1883, producing £14 17s. 4d.
yearly, of which two-thirds are applied in the distribution of groceries to the poor of St. Peter's and
one-third for the poor of the chapelry of Whittington.
In 1908 John Darke, by his will proved at London
24 March, left as an endowment fund for St. Mark's
Mission Church a legacy which is represented by
£348 17s. 2d. India 3½ per cent. stock and a sum
of £67 5s. 7d. cash with the Worcester Diocesan
Trustees. The charity is regulated by a scheme of
the Charity Commissioners 23 March 1910.
Chapelry of Whittington.
—In 1668 Elizabeth
Stephens by her will left £50, now represented
by £51 5s. 5d. consols, for the poor. The annual
dividends, amounting to £1 5s. 8d., are distributed
in small money doles.
In 1881 Miss Alice Bateman, by her will proved
at Worcester 31 May, left a legacy, represented by
£95 9s. 8d. consols, the annual dividends, amounting
to £2 7s. 8d., to be applied towards the salary of the
organist.
In 1883 Thomas Nicholls Stratford, by his will
proved at Worcester 8 March, bequeathed £600,
which was invested in £594 15s. 10d. consols, the
annual dividends, amounting to £14 17s. 4d., being
applicable as to two-thirds for the poor of St. Peter
the Great, city of Worcester, and one-third for the
poor of Whittington.
In 1888 Miss Fanny Clifton, by a codicil to her
will proved at Wells 13 March, bequeathed £900,
the interest to be applied in the purchase of coal and
fuel for distribution on St. Thomas's Day, with
power for the trustees to provide a fund for any
special time of want. The legacy is, with accumulations, represented by £955 7s. 6d. consols, producing £23 17s. 8d. yearly. In 1910 5 cwt. of
coal was distributed to each of seventy-one recipients.
The several sums of stock are held by the official
trustees.