WOKINGHAM
Wokyngham or Wokynham (xiii cent.); Ockingham, Okingham, Okyngeham, Oakingham, Wokinghame (xvi cent.).
Wokingham was formerly situated in two counties,
most of the town being in Berkshire, a part of the
town and about a sixth of the parish to the north-east of it, including the church and extending to Bill
Hill, forming a detached part of Wiltshire. (fn. 1) This
has now been annexed to Berkshire, (fn. 2) and the parish
divided into the two civil parishes of Wokingham
Within and Wokingham Without. The former has
an area of 557 acres, of which 4½ consist of arable
land and 140 of permanent grass, the remainder
being occupied by the town, while the latter, with
an area of 7,930 acres, has 2,005 acres of arable land,
3,171 of permanent grass and 1,039 of woods and
plantations. (fn. 3) The soil is a rich loam with a subsoil
of sand and gravel, and the principal crops are wheat,
barley and oats. A number of the inhabitants find
employment in the brick-fields, of which there are
several in the district, and until the last century the
manufacture of silk stockings and cloth formed one of
the staple industries. This flourished as early as
1625, (fn. 4) and was still being carried on in 1813, (fn. 5) but
has now quite died out.
The average height of the land is 200 ft. above
the ordnance datum. An altitude of about 300 ft. is
reached near Buckhurst, in the east of the parish.
The main road from Reading to Staines and London
enters Wokingham from the north-west and then
runs east through the parish. Another road, which
forms part of the eastern boundary of Wokingham,
runs south to meet the Devil's Highway, which for a
little way runs through the parish parallel with its
southern boundary.
Wokingham is watered only by the stream called
the Emm Brook, which flows through it from south-east to north-west. The town is supplied with water
from an artesian well sunk 408 ft. in the upper
chalk beds.
The parish church of All Saints lies to the east of
the town just off the London Road. The present
town hall, opened by Lord Braybrooke in 1860, is a
modern Gothic building of red brick, at the junction
of the London to Reading and Finchampstead roads.
There is a fire station under the hall. The old town
hall on the same site was taken down in 1858. (fn. 6)
The houses of Wokingham are mostly of red brick
with tiled or slated roofs; one or two, however, are
of 18th-century date, and there are also some half-timber houses, the most noteworthy being those in
Rose Street, a road running westward from the
parish church to the Reading Road. Near the town
hall there are some ten or twelve of these cottages of
some age, probably of the 17th century, with overhanging upper stories and tiled roofs. The Rose
Inn has been made famous by the ballad of 'Molly
Mog,' written in honour of the landlady's daughter
when Gay, Swift, Pope and Arbuthnot were all there
together, detained by the weather. (fn. 7)
The hospital at Luckley Green was founded under
the will dated 1663 of Henry Lucas, secretary to
the Earl of Holland, which provided that his executors
should build an almshouse for old men, inhabitants of
the forest of Windsor, in Berkshire or Surrey. His
executors bought a plot of 1½ acres at Wokingham from
Richard Palmer, (fn. 8) and built a hospital with a chapel
and cubicles for the master or chaplain and sixteen
pensioners, and inclosed the rest of the ground as a
garden. Licence for the foundation was obtained in
1667. (fn. 9) It is managed by the Drapers' Company, who
elect the master and pensioners. (fn. 10) The buildings are
of brick with tiled roofs and consist of a main block
of two stories with central pediment and lantern
and two wings containing respectively the residence
of the master and the chapel.
In the town there is a convent of French Sisters
of the Presentation of the Blessed Virgin, from Tours,
to which a public chapel is attached.
The Baptist chapel dates from 1774, but was rebuilt
in 1861, the Primitive Methodist chapel was built
in 1857 and the Wesleyan chapel in 1870.
The Roman Catholic church of Corpus Christi,
Shute End, was consecrated in 1911. In connexion
with it is the iron church of the Holy Ghost in
Wokingham New Road.
The town has a railway station on the Staines and
Wokingham railway, which joins the London and
South Western railway at Staines. The station also
serves the Reading, Guildford and Reigate branch on
the South Eastern railway.
The antiquities found in the parish have been
dealt with in an earlier volume. (fn. 11) Among the
distinguished inhabitants of Wokingham may be
mentioned Thomas Godwin, Bishop of Bath and
Wells (d. 1590) (fn. 12) ; 'Fred Lucas,' the Quaker, afterwards founder of The Tablet, the principal Roman
Catholic paper of to-day; and Henry Lucas (d. 1663),
founder of the Lucasian Mathematical Professorship
at Cambridge and of the hospital at Luckley Green
(see above).
Among place-names found in Wokingham are
Wodecrithe (now Woodcray) and Infoldes More (fn. 13)
(xiii cent.); a messuage called Bardhouse, (fn. 14) lands
called Uppeynges, (fn. 15) Byddelsmor, and Frithland, a
common called Coslowe and Shetham, houses in
Peache Streate and Rothstreat, (fn. 16) Gurnard's Common, (fn. 17)
Great and Little Gurnardes (fn. 18) (xvi cent.); a copyhold house called Whits by Limmer Hill (fn. 19) (xviii cent.);
certain closes called Inner Sowthlands and lands called
Welmers (fn. 20) (xvii cent.).
The principal residences in the neighbourhood are
Heathlands, about 2½ miles from the town, which is
the property of Mr. W. Howard Palmer, J.P.;
Ashridge Wood, the residence of Mr. Vere Allfrey;
Ravenswood, the seat of Mrs. Charles Smith, which
stands in a well-timbered park (fn. 21) ; Keep Hatch, the
residence of Mr. Denis de Vitré; Bill Hill, which
is only partly in Wokingham and is the property of
Mrs. Leveson-Gower; Buckhurst, a modern house
belonging to Mrs. Murdoch; Cantley, formerly
Mathew's Green, (fn. 22) belonging to Mrs. Raymond
South Paley; Holme Grange, the seat of Mrs.
Anderson Weston; and Mertonford, occupied by
Mr. Henry Bilson Blandy, J.P.
BOROUGH
Wokingham is an ancient borough,
probably owing its origin to the market
granted to the Bishop of Salisbury in
1219. (fn. 23) Its earliest existing charter was granted by
Elizabeth in 1583. This recites and confirms certain
privileges enjoyed by the town of Wokingham, 'parcel
of our manor of Sonning,' from time immemorial,
describing its courts as a leet held yearly about Easter
and a court baron held every three weeks, both held
before the steward of the manor of Sonning in the
presence of the alderman of Wokingham. At the
leet the officers of the borough were selected, viz., one
alderman, two constables, two bailiffs and two aletasters, who were chosen by the steward of the manor
of Sonning with the consent of the alderman of
Wokingham, who was the governing officer of the
town. The courts had cognizance of actions of debt
and trespass and the profits were taken by the Crown.
A market was held every Tuesday and fairs on
St. Barnabas' Day and on 2 November. (fn. 24) In 1612 a
charter of incorporation was granted by James I, which
modified the constitution of the borough, incorporating
it as a free borough under the style of the alderman
and burgesses of the town of Wokingham. The
governing body was to be an alderman, seven chief
burgesses and twelve secondary burgesses, the latter
forming the common council. The alderman was to
be chosen on Wednesday in Easter week from the
head burgesses by the alderman and common council.
The other chief officers were a high steward, (fn. 25) a
recorder or sub-steward, and a common clerk. A
court of record was to be held every Friday before
the alderman and recorder and three of the chief
burgesses. The alderman, high steward and recorder
were to be justices of the peace. The charter also
provided for a gild merchant and a prison and confirmed the market and fairs. (fn. 26)
By-laws for the town drawn up in 1625 made a
fine leviable on the inhabitants of the town refusing
to fill the office of alderman, bailiff or constable. (fn. 27)
By the same laws it was enacted that artificers might
not take apprentices for less than seven years and that
strangers or unfree men might not exercise any trade
except the manufacture of malt for a man's own house
and the sale of victuals and the trade of carpenter,
mason, or bricklayer, and that a citizen of London
who entered into partnership with an inhabitant was
to pay 50s. to the corporation. With regard to the
trade of silk stockings which had been established 'for
setting poor people on work to maintain their living
thereby, notwithstanding divers of said poor people
very obstinately refuse either to work themselves, or
suffer their children to be put to work in said trade
or any other,' the by-laws provided that if any person
not having a trade or private means should refuse to
work in this trade he might be committed to the
house of correction. Moreover, no person might set
up the trade of silk knitter unless he had served
apprentice for seven years, and no one in the trade
might take more than three apprentices unless he kept
journeymen and women for every apprentice above
that number. In order to avoid the danger of fire
in the town the inhabitants were ordered to remove
their stores of turf, heath and peat from their kitchens
and a statutory number of leather buckets, long ladders
and iron hooks to be kept by the burgesses was laid
down, whilst a further rule provided that chimneys
should be made of brick or stone. Sunday closing
was made compulsory for all shops except taverns, and
these might serve travellers only during the time of
divine service. The by-laws end with directions for
the choosing of officers; the alderman, chief burgesses
and other burgesses were to repair to church in their
gowns and after divine service to go to the town hall
for the elections. (fn. 28)
The charter of 1612 was the governing charter of
the town in 1835. The only court then held was
the court of quarter sessions held twice a year before
the high steward, alderman, recorder and justice, or
any two of them. The jurisdiction was over all
offences not affecting life or limb, serious offences
being reserved for the assizes. The county magistrates
were not excluded, but were not in the habit of
interfering. There was a lock-up house built in
1675, but prisoners for trial were confined at
Reading. (fn. 29) The town had no property in the waste
and its only income was from the tolls, the town hall
and a few quit-rents. Freedom of the borough was
by election to the corporate body, and freemen had
formerly had privileges of trading enforced by by-law,
but no freeman had been created since 1796 and
there was no staple manufacture. The corporate jurisdiction as then observed extended over the town as
far as it lay in the county of Berks., but not over
the Wiltshire part of the town or over the outlaying
parts of the parish in both counties. (fn. 30) Under the
Municipal Corporations Act of 1882 the town was
constituted a municipal borough with a governing body
of a mayor, four aldermen and twelve councillors.
The weekly market on Tuesdays granted to the
bishop in 1219 was confirmed in 1227 (fn. 31) and again
in 1339. (fn. 32) The charter of 1583 mentions that it
was customary for the alderman to appoint a deputy
to collect the tolls and to have charge of the clock-house in the market-place. The alderman was himself clerk of the market. (fn. 33) In 1835 it was returned
that the alderman had no salary and received the tolls
to his own use. (fn. 34) The market, which was discontinued for a time and re-established in 1886, is still
held, but has ceased to be famous for its poultry as
in bygone days. (fn. 35) A weekly sale of cattle and other
live stock is held.
Two yearly fairs to be held on the vigil, feast
and morrow of St. Barnabas (10, 11 and 12 June)
and All Saints (31 October, 1 and 2 November)
respectively were granted in 1258. (fn. 36) The charter of
1612 added a new fair, to be held on Thursday
before Shrove Sunday. The November fair was
abolished in 1874. (fn. 37) The June fair was in existence
(on 11 June) in 1792, (fn. 38) but has now fallen into
abeyance. The fair on Thursday before Lent was
still held when Lysons wrote (1806). (fn. 39) Two more
fairs, held on Lady Day and Michaelmas Day, were
established about 1780, then changed to 5 April and
10 October, but of these only the latter survived
in 1806. (fn. 40) It is now held on All Saints' Day.
In the accounts of the Mayor and corporation of
Reading for 1385, 1422, 1423 and 1427 mention is
made of sums varying from 20d. to 15s. paid to the
players and archers of Wokingham. (fn. 41)
MANORS
Wokingham is not mentioned in the
Survey of 1086. The Berkshire part of
the parish formed a part of the manor
of Sonning, then held by the Bishop of Salisbury.
Wokingham proper has since remained a part of
Sonning Manor (fn. 42) (q.v.), although in one or two
instances it is referred to as a separate manor. (fn. 43)
The manor or farm of EVENDONS (Yevyndon,
Evyndens, Endens, Indens, Hendons) appears to have
been a part of the Bishop of Salisbury's manor of
Sonning. The first mention of it which has been
found occurs in 1316, when the Bishop of Salisbury
was returned as lord of Wokingham-cum-Yevyndon. (fn. 44)
It is uncertain how long it remained with the see,
but it was alienated before 1561, when Thomas
Cawood was holding it with Finchampstead East
Court. (fn. 45) He made a conveyance in that year to
Henry Hynde and Thomas Harrison, but apparently
did not part with the whole of his interest, for he
is found suffering a recovery in 1583. (fn. 46) Thomas
Harrison, however, died seised of it in February
1602–3, (fn. 47) and it remained with the Harrisons (fn. 48)
until 1661, when Richard Harrison conveyed it to
Mary Potenger, widow, (fn. 49) from whom it passed eight
years later to John Bucks and Mary his wife. (fn. 50) They
retained it only until 1678–9, when it became the
property of William Adderley, a cursitor of the Court
of Chancery, (fn. 51) who was holding in 1693. (fn. 52) In 1775
the manor was held by Richard Ward. (fn. 53) Later it is
said to have come to Sir Thomas Rich, who, when
he sold Sonning to Richard Palmer in 1795, retained
the manor of Evendons. After his death in 1806
(v. Sonning) it became the property of Mr. John
Roberts. (fn. 54) He sold it in 1834 to Mr. William Lane,
yeoman, who died in 1882, having bequeathed the
estate to his son Edward subject to certain annuities
and legacies. It was sold by mortgagees in 1896 to
Mr. Edwin Ifould, from whom it was bought in the
following year by Mr. John Francis Coston, the
present owner. (fn. 55) The old manor-house was pulled
down in 1837 when the present house was built.
The Bear Wood walk of the forest (see under Hurst)
is partly in the parish of Wokingham and is described
in 1693 as being 'upon the waste of the manor of
Evendons.' (fn. 56) William Adderley, lord of the manor of
Evendons, then petitioned to be allowed to fell timber
of fifty years' growth in his wood of Bear Wood. (fn. 57)
The manor of ASHRIDGE or HERTOKE, with
which the hundred of Ashridge descended, is locally
situate in Berkshire, but from an early period was
regarded legally as in the county of Wilts., and with
the hundred was appurtenant to the manor and
hundred of Amesbury. The hundred included
portions of Wokingham, Hurst, Shinfield and Swallowfield. The origin of this legal and territorial
anomaly may possibly be due to a transference of
lands in Berkshire acquired by the Longespees, Earls
of Salisbury, from the jurisdiction of the Berkshire
County Court to their county of Wilts. and their
hundred of Amesbury. Since these Berkshire manors
were so far from Amesbury, the creation of a local subhundred with a court at Hertoke or Ashridge would
have been not unlikely. In the late 15th century (fn. 58)
and probably before, a court with a view of frankpledge
was held at Hertoke, where the tithings of Farley and
Great and Little Sheepbridge in Swallowfield, Odes,
Broad Hinton, Hinton Hatch and Hinton Pipard in
Hurst, Didenham in Shinfield, Buckhurst in Wokingham, and Beche, probably in the same parish, were
all represented. Ashridge or Hertoke Manor proper
would seem to have originated in an assart of Windsor
Forest. A tract of 300 acres of woodland described
as lying in Hurst was held in demesne by the Earls
of Salisbury (fn. 59) after they had granted to sub-tenants
lands in Hinton, Sheepbridge and elsewhere. In
1281 an inquest was held to find whether it would
be to the king's damage for the Earl of Lincoln (who
then held Ashridge in right of his wife) to bring
100 acres of it into cultivation. The jury returned
that Ashridge lay between the Bishop of Salisbury's
wood of Bisshopesbere and the Bishop of Winchester's
wood of Billingbear, and that when the king hunted
in the district he generally went through Ashridge
Wood, so that the cultivation would be a damage.
It was also deposed that the inhabitants of the royal
vill of Binfield had common of pasture in Ashridge
Wood. (fn. 60)
In 1400 a steward of the hundred was appointed
by the Crown during the forfeiture of John Montagu
Earl of Salisbury. (fn. 61) Through the marriage of Alice
Montagu with Sir Richard Nevill the manor and
hundred passed to the Nevills, afterwards Earls of
Warwick, and later to the Crown. In the reign of
Henry VII the hundred and manor are found as part
of the duchy of Lancaster, (fn. 62) and the frankpledge court,
as already stated, was then held at Hertoke. (fn. 63) The
main value of Ashridge and Hertoke was in the woodland attached to the manor, and in 1526 Richard
Turnour, (fn. 64) clerk of the Privy Seal, was appointed
bailiff and wood-ward of the hundred of Ashridge in
the earldom of Warwick. By 1561 woods (fn. 65) in the
hundred and lordship of Ashridge had fallen to the
queen, owing to the escheat of one Blackman, and in
1593 timber from the Ashridge woods was assigned
for the repair of ships in the royal navy. (fn. 66)

Longespee. Azure six lions or.

Montagu. Argent a fesse indented of three points gules.

Nevill. Gules a saltire argent and a label gobony argent and azure.
The manor of Hertoke and hundred of Ashridge
remained in the Crown until 1604, when James I
granted them as part of 'Warwick's and Spencer's
lands' to Philip Tise and William Blake, (fn. 67) who
conveyed them to Sir Henry Nevill of Billingbear. (fn. 68)
Nevill before his death in 1615 granted 'the manor
of Hertoke and the ground called Ashridge' to Sir
Ralph Wynwood and Sir Maurice Berkeley in trust
for the payment of his debts and for providing for his
children. (fn. 69) He, however, died seised of the manor
of Hertoke, the hundred of Ashridge and the great
wood of Ashridge in 1615 and was succeeded by his
son Sir Henry. (fn. 70) At some proceedings taken against
Sir Henry Nevill, Humphrey Newberry and others
for encroachment on Windsor Forest a few years
later it was deposed that Ashridge was not part of
the forest of Windsor. (fn. 71) The lands claimed by Sir
Henry Nevill were Broad Ashridge, Blare Close,
Foxleyes, Herne and Rylands. He disclaimed any
title to the lands called Ashridge, Rowgrove and
Sellgrove, (fn. 72) which he said his father had conveyed to
Sir Ralph Wynwood, kt. (fn. 73) It was deposed also that
the land called Ashridge was included in the parish
of Hurst by the parishioners in their perambulations,
and moreover that 'a great letter H is here made in
the ground upon the outbounds of the said wast
ground called Ashridge neare
to a place called Julian Taylors Crosse.' (fn. 74) According to
another inquisition the lands
called Ashridge lay in Hurst
and Wokingham and contained 530 acres. (fn. 75) The hundred of Ashridge and the
manor of Hertoke alias Ashridge followed the descent of
Billingbear Manor in Waltham
St. Lawrence, (fn. 76) and are now
held by Lord Braybrooke. (fn. 77)

Neville, Lord Bray-brooke. Gules a saltire argent with the difference of a rose gules.
The manor of BEACHES
(Beches, Breaches), originally part of the manor of
Sonning, was held at the end of the 15th century by
William Whitlock. (fn. 78) There is a tradition that the
estate took its name from the De la Beche family (fn. 79)
and came to the Whitlocks through the marriage of
John Whitlock with Agnes heir of Robert De la Beche. (fn. 80)
There seems, however, no evidence that any branch of
the De la Beche family had lands at Wokingham. In
1327 a Geoffrey atte Beche was assessed for the largest
sum among the residents of Wokingham. (fn. 81) He probably was a landowner and may have been the ancestor
of Robert Beche of Wokingham living in 1441, (fn. 82)
who perhaps is the so-called Robert 'de la Beche.'
William Whitlock, according to a pedigree, was son
of a John Whitlock of Wokingham and father of
Richard Whitlock. (fn. 83) He apparently also had a son
William, for in 1549 William son of William Whitlock
sued his younger brother Richard (fn. 84) for unlawful
entry into the manor. (fn. 85) Richard is said to have
had a son John, (fn. 86) father apparently of William who in
1604 and 1620 was dealing
with the manor. (fn. 87) In 1628
John Whitlock was alderman
of the town and possibly
held Beaches. (fn. 88) Richard Whitlock was in possession of
the manor in 1644, (fn. 89) and his
successor was another Richard,
who was holding in 1688. (fn. 90)
One of the parties to a deed
executed by him at this date
was Thomas Hawe, and the
manor appears to have passed
into his family. Richard Hawes, called of Wokingham, was appointed a regarder of the forest in 1695. (fn. 91)
In 1729 Richard Hawe, brewer, of Richmond, co.
Surrey, died, leaving the manor of Beaches to his wife
for life with remainder in equal shares to her six
nieces. (fn. 92) In 1754 John Twigwand and Anne his
wife, who was presumably one of these heirs, held
a fourth part (fn. 93) together with a similar share in an
adjoining property called Mays or Mayswith (in
Berkshire and Wiltshire), (fn. 94) while in 1762 Laetitia
Sutton, widow, of Kensington, held another quarter,
including the capital messuage called Holt House,
and at that date executed deeds for the barring of the
entail. (fn. 95) The share held by John Twigwand evidently
remained in his family, since in 1813 an eighth of
the manor was in possession of Thomas Henry
Twigwand. (fn. 96) Lysons states in 1806 that Jeremiah
Crutchley and William Lamplough held six parts of
the manor, (fn. 97) while in 1809 George Henry Crutchley
was returned as coparcener with William Lamplough. (fn. 98)

Whitlock. Azure a cheveron indented between three falcons or.
The front door of the manor-house of Beaches bears
the date 1624 and the initials R. and E.H., which are
believed to represent Richard Harrison and his wife.
The house is now the property of Mr. Herbert
Pearson, who bought it from Mr. F. C.C. Barnett. (fn. 99)
The reputed manor of BUCKHURST may be
identified with the tithing of 'Bokehurste,' which was
represented at the frankpledge court (fn. 100) at Hertoke or
Ashridge in 1488, and therefore was reckoned to be
in the county of Wiltshire. The manor was held in
the 15th century by the family of Drew or Dru of
Littleton Drew, Wiltshire. In 1453 Thomas Drew
and Agnes his wife settled the manor in conjunction
with their daughter Margaret and her husband Walter
Samborne. (fn. 101) Margaret Samborne died in February
1494–5 seised of a tenement in Wokingham called
The Cage. (fn. 102) The manor of Bucjhurst is not mentioned
in her inquisition, but apparently no return was made
for Wiltshire. It descended to her son Drew Samborne, who died in January 1506–7. (fn. 103) It then devolved on his granddaughter Margaret, the daughter
of his son William, and by her marriage to William
Lord Windsor passed into that family. (fn. 104) Lord Windsor
died in 1558, leaving a son Edward, whose heir
Henry Lord Windsor conveyed the manor in 1588 to
Henry Samborne. (fn. 105) In 1611 the latter conveyed it to
Thomas and Edward Barker, the former of whom
died seised of it in 1630, when it passed to Edward
to hold until William the son of Thomas, then aged
seventeen, should come of age. (fn. 106) Henry Barker of
Chiswick, who was dealing with the manor in 1660 (fn. 107) ,
was presumably William's heir. Scory Barker of
Chiswick, mentioned by Ashmole as impropriator of
the tithes, (fn. 108) was probably holding this manor also at
the end of the 17th century. In 1727 Henry
Barker and Barbara his wife conveyed it to Daniel
Beard and others. (fn. 109) In 1806 the manor was in
the possession of Mr. Daniel Wheeler. (fn. 110) It passed
to Sir Charles Broke Vere, bart., who sold it in
1834 to Samuel Day. In 1837 it was bought
by Thomas Hopper, who by will of 1853 left his
property to his daughter Jessalina Lady Smith. She
sold it to Mr. Samuel Palmer, from whom it was
purchased by his son Mr. W. Howard Palmer of
Heathlands. (fn. 111)

Drew. Ermine a lion passant gules.

Samborne. Argent a cheveron sable between three molets gules pierced or.
In the 16th century the family of Norreys held an
estate in Wokingham known as NORREYS MANOR.
John Norreys founded a chantry in the church in
1443 and held lands in the
parish at his death in 1466. (fn. 112)
His son William Norreys died
seised of a manor of Wokingham called 'Norres Manor'
in 1507. (fn. 113) It subsequently descended in this family, passing
in 1623, by the death of
Francis Norreys Earl of Berkshire, the last male heir, to
his daughter Elizabeth the
wife of Edmund Wray. (fn. 114) She
with her husband conveyed it
in 1625 to John Peacock, in
whose tenure it then was. (fn. 115)
In 1674 Henry Peacock and Frances Peacock, widow,
conveyed the manor to Richard Hawe, (fn. 116) and with
Beaches (q.v.) it was divided among his heirs.

Norreys. Argent quartered with gules fretty or with a fesse azure over all.
A mill in Wokingham belonged in 1228 to
Christian de Wudecride (Woodcray ?), to whom
Alice daughter of Julian quitclaimed her right
(probably as co-heir) in that year. (fn. 117)
CHURCHES
The church of ALL SAINTS consists of a chancel 40 ft. 3 in. by 20 ft.
9 in., north chancel aisle 22 ft. 5 in.
by 19 ft. 6 in. serving as an organ chamber, south
chapel 25 ft. 9 in. by 18 ft. 9 in., north-east vestry,
nave 70 ft. 7 in. by 26 ft. 8 in., north aisle 14 ft. 10 in.
wide, south aisle 15 ft. 2 in. wide, south porch and a
west tower 13 ft. 2 in. by 12 ft. 11 in. These
measurements are all internal.
The building dates from about the end of the
14th century, to which date the nave, with its rather
ill-proportioned arcades, may be ascribed. There
was doubtless an earlier church on the site, containing
work of the 12th century, but whether the present
walls are on the older foundations is not certain.
The south doorway is mostly of modern stonework in
the style of the 12th century, but a few stones in its
inner arch-order appear to be old and may have
belonged to a doorway of that date, originally in the
aisle wall. The tower was added about the middle
of the 15th century. The rest of the building has
been so completely modernized as to obscure the
architectural history. The clearstory was probably
raised in the 15th century, perhaps when the tower
was built. The chancel and its aisles are entirely
modern, and an old print shows the church apparently
without a chancel. All the windows of the aisles are
also modernized, and probably only the western lights
are copies of their predecessors. Much of this work
was probably done in 1864, when the building was
restored. The external stonework of the tower was
largely renewed in 1880.
The chancel, which is designed in the style of the
14th century, has an east window of five lights under
a traceried head with a foiled rear arch. North of
the altar is a trefoiled recess with a credence shelf,
and the south wall is pierced by twin two-light
windows. An arcade of two bays divides the chancel
from the organ chamber, and to the east of it is a
doorway into the vestry. On the south side is an
arcade of two similar bays with the addition of
another smaller one to the east, all opening into the
chapel.
Each of the nave arcades has five bays, of which
the easternmost and westernmost are wider than
the three intermediate. The columns are circular
and of unusual height; the bases are octagonal with
a roll and hollow-chamfer mould; the circular
capitals have shallow mouldings and an octagonal
abacus. The arches of the end bays are four-centred,
those of the intermediate bays being two-centred,
and each is of two orders, moulded respectively with
a double ogee and a swelled chamfer. The responds
of the north arcade and the second pillar on the south
are of stone and are modern, but the original columns
are of chalk. The clearstory has five square-headed
windows of two lights on each side, one above each
arch, apparently all modern. The north aisle is
lighted by three modern windows, each of three lights
with tracery under a square head, in the side wall,
and a pointed window of the same number of lights
in the west wall. The windows of the south aisle
are of the same number and design. The south
doorway, between the second and third windows, is
in the style of the 12th century, and has zigzag
ornament in the outer order of the round arch; the
only old stones are a few in the inner order, which
has a plain edge roll. The porch has two small
windows in either side wall and a pointed entrance
archway.
The tower is of three stages with square angle
buttresses and a stair turret in the south-east corner.
The tower arch has attached shafts in the jambs with
moulded bases and capitals; it is two-centred and of
two moulded orders, with a casement between two
double ogees. A gallery half-way up the arch is now
used as the ringing floor. The west doorway has
old jambs with a wide casement mould and a two-centred arch in a modern square head. The window
above is almost all modern; it has five cinquefoiled
lights under a traceried two-centred head. The second
stage has a west window, wholly restored, of three
cinquefoiled lights with a traceried four-centred head,
and on the south side a clock dial. The bell-chamber
has modernized windows of two cinquefoiled lights
under four-centred heads. The parapet is embattled
and the stair-turret which rises above it is finished
by a tall pointed stone pinnacle.
The tower is built of square conglomerate blocks
of a deep purple tint with stone dressings. The same
material is employed in the clearstory walls. The
rest of the building is of a grey squared rubble. The
nave roof is of a low pitch, and appears to date from
the 15th century, although one of the tie-beams bears
the date 1631 between two shields (with charges including a cheveron) and the churchwardens' initials
I.L. and T.S. It is divided into five bays by ornamental trusses with tracery between the tie-beams
and rafters and traceried spandrels to the four-centred
arches below the ties. The jacks are supported by
modern stone head corbels. The principal rafters,
purlins and ridge-piece are chamfered or simply
moulded and the whole roof is painted and varnished.
The aisles have modern lean-to roofs; these are
covered with tiles, as are also those of the modern
chancel and chapels. The nave and tower have lead
roofs, that of the latter having a device cast in the
lead with the date 1692 and the initials R.G. and
R.P. surrounding a circle containing a winged dragon.
The octagonal font is of the 15th century, and the
sides have traceried panels containing roses and other
flowers, while its hollow-chamfered under-edge is
carved with a sort of guilloche of bold design. The
stem also has panelled sides, and the base is moulded.
All the other furniture is modern. The high altar
has a carved stone reredos, and the side altar one of
oak panelling. An iron screen divides the chancel
from the chapel, and the chancel arch is closed by
an oak screen, as also is the lower archway below the
gallery or ringing floor of the tower.
The ancient monuments are few. In the organ
chamber is a small black marble slab with a Latin
inscription to Thomas Godwin of Christ Church,
Oxford, Dean of Canterbury and afterwards Bishop
of Bath and Wells, who was born in Wokingham and
died and was buried there in 1590. On the south
wall of the south aisle is an undated Elizabethan
mural monument with a brass inclosed in a round-headed panel of black marble, the arch being enriched
by a guilloche. On the brass are the figures of a
man and woman kneeling face to face at a desk, and
over them a shield with the arms, apparently, of
Daubeny. Below the figures is an inscription in
English verse. Near the last is an undated 18th-century monument of classic design to Humphry
Cantrel, sen., and Humphry Cantrel, jun., and on
the north wall is one to Edward Cotton of Wokingham, who died in 1682. There are also other 18th-century and later monuments and gravestones. In
the churchyard north of the tower lies a slab with
the indents of the figures of a man and his wife with
their children with an inscription. A date, 1525,
carved at the foot of the slab, probably at some later
period, appears to be the approximate date of the
figures. The slab was used afterwards for one Thomas
Goodwin, who died in 1718–19, and whose epitaph
is cut in the top of the slab.
There is a ring of eight bells: the treble and
second by Mears & Stainbank, 1903; the third by
T. Mears, 1814; the fourth, cast by Samuel Knight
in 1704, was recast by Mears & Stainbank in 1903;
the fifth is by Samuel Knight, 1703; the sixth by T.
Mears, 1814; the seventh and tenor, both by Samuel
Knight, and dated 1704 and 1703 respectively.
Besides these there is a small bell dated 1829, with
no maker's name, and another small modern bell
above the roof, to serve the clock.
The silver communion plate comprises a cup with
a cover paten, a flagon, one large and two small alms-dishes, all of 1729, a cup and paten of 1876, a cup
and paten of 1864, and a spoon of 1863. There is
also a silver processional cross set with stones.
The registers previous to 1812 are as follows:
(i) baptisms 1674 to 1747, burials 1674 to 1760,
marriages 1675 to 1754; (ii) burials 1678 to
1732; (iii) baptisms and burials 1761 to 1812;
(iv) marriages 1754 to 1765; (v) marriages 1765 to
1777; (vi) marriages 1777 to 1799; (vii) marriages
1799 to 1812.
The ecclesiastical parish of ST. PAUL was formed
from All Saints' in 1863. (fn. 118) The church, built by
Mr. John Walter of Bear Wood in 1864, is designed
in the style of the 14th century. It consists of a
chancel, south vestry, north and south chapels, a
nave, north and south aisles and a north-west tower
with a spire. The walls are of squared rubble with
Bath stone dressings. The advowson belongs to
Mr. Walter.
The ecclesiastical parish of ST. SEBASTIAN was
formed from All Saints' and St. Paul's in 1871. (fn. 119) The
church, which is at Heathfields, was built by public
subscription in 1864, and is a small structure of brick
with stone dressings, having a chancel, nave and a
narrow aisle to the north, divided from the nave by
wood posts. The roof is tiled, and above the west
end is a small wood bellcote containing one bell and
surmounted by a four-sided shingled spirelet. The
advowson belongs to the Bishop of Oxford.
ADVOWSON
A chapel at Wokingham, subject
to the mother church of Sonning, is
mentioned in 1146. (fn. 120) The advowson belonged to the Deans of Salisbury, rectors of
Sonning. The chapel in 1220 was held at farm by
Philip the chaplain for 10 marks. (fn. 121) It had a
cemetery and baptistery and received oil and chrism
at Reading. The living remained in the gift of the
Deans of Salisbury (fn. 122) until 1846, when the patronage
was transferred to the Bishops of Oxford.
In 1443 Adam Moleyns, Dean of Salisbury, John
Norreys and John Westende, chaplain, received licence
to found a perpetual chantry at the altar of the Virgin
within the church, to be called the chantry of
St. Mary. (fn. 123) In 1548 the incumbent kept a grammar
school within the chantry. The only article then
remaining in the incumbent's custody was a chalice
weighing 8 oz. (fn. 124) The chantry was granted in 1549
to Richard Ward and William Planner. (fn. 125) The
endowment included rent from land in Bray.
CHARITIES
The Municipal Charities.
—These
charities, formerly administered by
the corporation, were by a scheme
approved by her Majesty in council on 24 June
1885, made under the Municipal Corporations Act,
1882, vested in seven 'trustees of municipal charities
in the borough of Wokingham.' They include the
charities of—
Thomas Wolley, founded by deed 1564, consisting
of a rent-charge of 6s. 8d. issuing out of the Catherine
Wheel Inn, Henley, which is distributed yearly
among the occupants of Westende's almshouses, who
in return present a nosegay to the distributor.
John Planner, will, proved in the P.C.C. 14
November 1606, consisting of a rent-charge of £3
issuing from the close called Millmead, situate near
the Lucas Hospital, now belonging to the Marquess of
Downshire, applicable in apprenticing children born
in the town of Wokingham.
William Thare, will, 13 August 1628, whereby a
rent-charge of £3 3s. issuing from three cottages in
Denmark Street, and land containing 1 a. 1 r. 11 p.
near the 'Three Frogs' in London Road, was granted
for distribution amongst six decayed tradesmen, 10s.
apiece, and 3s. for the expenses of the trustees. The
annuity is paid out of the general income of the
corporation, who hold the property charged.
John Merrywether, will, proved in P.C.C. 10
October 1633, whereby £200 was directed to be laid
out in land, one moiety of the rent to be applied in
the purchase of upper garments for poor people of
the town. The trust estate consists of a house and
11 a. 1 r. 36 p. at Longmoor, Finchampstead, let at
£16 a year of which £8 is expended in providing coats
for poor men in Wokingham and £8 is remitted to the
parish of Benson, Oxfordshire, for the like purpose.
George Staverton, by will dated 15 May 1661,
proved in the P.C.C., gave out of his Staines house,
Middlesex, a yearly sum of £6 to buy a bull, 'which
bull he gave to the poor of Wokingham town and
parish, being baited, and the gift money, hide and
offal to be sold and bestowed upon the poor children
in stockings of the Welsh, and shoes.' Until the
year 1821 the baiting of the animal took place yearly
on 21 December in the market-place. In that year
the corporation determined upon discontinuing such
a proceeding, which was accordingly omitted till
Christmas 1835, when the mob broke open the
place where one of the animals was kept in the night
and baited it in spite of the efforts of the magistrates
to prevent them. The present endowment consists
of a dwelling-house and builder's yard at Staines, let
at £35 a year, and £554 17s. 1d. consols, with the
official trustees, arising from the sale in 1884 of
2 acres acquired under the Staines Inclosure Act, 1843,
producing £13 17s. 4d. in dividends. The income
is expended in beef, which is distributed on
St. Thomas's Day.
Archbishop Laud's Charity.
—William Laud, Archbishop of Canterbury, by his will dated 13 January
1643–4, and proved in the P.C.C. 8 January 1661,
directed (inter alia) that lands of the yearly value of
£200 should be bought and settled to charitable uses,
that is to say, £50 to Wokingham, £50 to Henley-upon-Thames, £50 to Wallingford, and £50 to
New Windsor. In pursuance of the said will, and
of a decree of the High Court of Chancery by a
deed dated 2 October 1672, made between Sir John
Robinson, kt., and two others of the one part, and
Nathaniel Lord, Bishop of Durham (then Lord
Bishop of Oxford) and seventeen others of the other
part, certain fee-farm rents which had then been lately
granted from the Crown were settled upon trust to
pay yearly to the corporation of Wokingham the
sum of £50, to be applied for the first year as
marriage portions to three poor maids of eighteen years
at the least, born in Wokingham, who had served
one master or mistress for three years together at the
least, and for the two succeeding years for binding
apprentice at a premium of £10 each five boys of
fourteen years of age born of honest poor people of
the Church of England in the said town, with a
preference to the fatherless, the like trusts to be
observed in the case of the gifts of £50 to the other three
towns. The following are the rents which form the
share of Wokingham after deducting land tax, namely:
a yearly rent-charge of £27 17s. issuing out of the
manor of Aston Upthorpe, received from Lady
Wantage, and a yearly rent-charge of £12 6s. 9d.
issuing from lands in the parish of Aston Upthorpe,
received from Mr. R. H. Valpy. The official trustees
also hold £302 19s. 2d. consols, arising from
accumulations, producing £7 11s. 4d. a year. In the
administration of the charity the trusts of the deed
are observed as strictly as practicable.
Mrs. Sarah Yarnold, who died 16 October 1831,
by her will proved in the P.C.C., bequeathed a sum
of stock, now represented by £1,620 consols standing
in the corporate name of the aldermen and burgesses
of Wokingham, upon trust that the annual income,
amounting to £40 10s., should, subject to the repair
of her husband's tomb in the churchyard at Ruscombe,
be applied at certain prescribed days as to £10 thereof
to the benefit of four industrious and deserving
widows residing in that parish, as to £12 equally
amongst four female servants who should have been in
the same service for three successive years in the
parishes of Hurst or Wokingham, to be called 'The
Officers' Charity,' as to £3 to six poor married
women residing within the liberty of Hinton in the
parish of Hurst and being respectively in child-bed.
The testatrix further directed that the residue of the
dividends should be divided between two blind men
and two blind women. The four poor widows of
Ruscombe are selected by the vicar and parish council
of that parish. There is considerable demand for
the 'Officers' Charity,' but only a paucity of applications for the blind charity. The women's charity is
applied on the recommendation of the churchwardens
of Hinton, endorsed by the vicar of Hurst.
General Charities.
—The following charities were by
an order of the Charity Commissioners of 13 February
1885 placed under one body of trustees under this
title, namely, the almshouses, founded by John
Westende, clerk, by deed poll 1 September 1451,
described as eight eleemosynary (sic) cottages at the
eastern end of Le Peche Street, which were further
endowed by Ralph White, 1516, with a meadow at
Patten's Ashe, and in 1565 by Edmund Baucheler
with land known as Wimblehill Acre in Langborough
Common Field, and by an allotment by the Ashridge
inclosure award, 1814. (fn. 126) The trust property now
consists of a block of five almshouses, rebuilt in
1859 by Commander Elliot Morres, one of the
trustees, at his own expense, three almshouses known
as the 'Women's Almshouses,' rebuilt in 1870 at a
cost of £350, and two 'Jubilee Almshouses' erected
in 1887, the cost being defrayed partly by a public
subscription of £ and partly by Mr. T. M.
Westcott, the then mayor; thirteen cottages let at
weekly rents producing £120 or thereabouts yearly,
and £433 0s. 11d. consols, producing £10 16s. 4d.
yearly, arising from sales of land at Patten's Ashe,
Langborough Field and the allotment above mentioned. The houses are at present occupied by four
men and eight women and four in the Jubilee
almshouses. (See also charity of Mrs. Elizabeth
Mary Mollony, below.)
John Tickenor, by will proved in the P.C.C.
18 October 1603, trust fund, £66 13s. 4d. consols,
arising from the redemption in 1858 of an annuity
of 40s.
Ann Tickner and Mary Cotterell's eleemosynary
charity, deed 1714, trust fund, £120 consols.
Richard Young: a sum of 25s. a year was
formerly paid under a deed dated 19 July 1605, as
the rent of an acre of land bounding upon land
called Bills on the west and on the king's highway
leading from Reading towards Binfield on the north,
and distributed in bread in the month of February.
The land was exchanged in 1791 for land belonging
to the Hon. John Leveson-Gower, and the annuity
in question was by deed dated 31 December 1792
charged upon a messuage and lands at Slowbridge in
Wokingham. The rent-charge has for many years
ceased to be paid.
Robert Challenor, D.D., by will proved in the
P.C.C. 5 July 1621, consists of a rent-charge of 40s.
payable out of a farm called Rowse's Farm, now the
property of the Marquess of Downshire.
Robert Ball, founded by deed 10 December 1638,
endowed with a rent-charge of £12, payable out of
lands now belonging to Mr. Denis de Vitré. Grants
are made to the nurse funds of All Saints' and St. Paul's
parishes, also the relief of the poor fund.
Charity of Richard and Robert Whitlock, founded
by deeds 1642 and 1667, trust fund, £800 consols,
arising from the sale in 1856 of the real estate
formerly belonging to the charity. The income of
£20 a year is applied with the charity of Robert
Ball above mentioned.
Bartholomew Bromley, by will proved 6 December
1656, whereby certain lands in Garsington, Oxon.,
were devised upon trust that the rents and profits
should be employed for the charitable purposes
therein mentioned, subject, however, to the yearly
payment of £9 14s. to the parish of Winkfield for the
like purposes. The trust estate consists of 23 a. 1 r. 27 p.
allotted on the inclosure of the parish of Garsington,
in 1813, (fn. 127) in lieu of lands originally devised, let for
£34 10s., and £1,068 1s. 10d. consols arising from
the sale in 1860 of 'Hallings' Closes,' derived from
the same inclosure. The sum of £1 6s. 8d. is paid
to the rector, as prescribed, for preaching sermons on
24 June and 24 August (St. Bartholomew's Day), on
which day a distribution of bread is made in the
market-place by the churchwardens and overseers,
who receive 20s. allowed by the will for refreshments, whilst the remainder of the income is expended
in tickets for bread, the recipients being mostly
widows.
Jay's charity, by will date unknown but prior to
1664, formerly consisting of a cottage and 1 a. 1 r.
in Langborough Field, which were sold in 1869,
when the proceeds with accumulations were invested
in £303 1s. 1d. consols.
Richard Palmer, by deed dated in 1664, charged
certain meadow land in the parish of Finchampstead
with £2 a year, to be paid to the sexton of Wokingham
for ringing a curfew bell at eight o'clock every evening
from September to March and in the morning at
four o'clock, so that 'strangers might be informed of
the time of night and receive some guidance in their
way.' The rent-charge was paid by Mr. J. Walter,
but was recently disputed. The expense is now
borne by an anonymous donor.
William Monke, by his will proved in the P.C.C.
3 July 1669, charged certain property at Slowbridge
with 52s. a year for the distribution of bread
weekly. The land, subject to the rent-charge, now
forms part of the Bear Wood estate belonging to
Mr. J. Walter, who pays the charge.
John Brookbank, will proved in the P.C.C. 3 July
1669, trust fund, £104 2½ per cent. annuities,
representing the redemption in 1899 of the charge
created by the donor's will.
Thomas Hedger, by will, 1704, devised a messuage
in Down Street and a parcel of land in Langborough
Common Field, the rents to be applied in the distribution of bread, one-half among the poor of Wokingham and the other half among the poor of St.
Nicholas Olave, London; also a piece of ground in
Shute End, on which stood a house called Astwood
House, the rent to be laid out in bread among the
poor of Wokingham. The real estate now remaining
is Astwood House, let at £30 a year, the other estate
and certain lands allotted in respect thereof on the
inclosure having been sold at different dates and the
net proceeds invested in £1,016 1s. 1d. consols, of
which £541 7s. 2d. consols belongs to Wokingham
and the remainder to St. Nicholas Olave.
Richard Brackstone, by will proved in the peculiar
of the Dean of Salisbury 2 May 1715, charged a
close, known as Page's Croft, with 10s. a year, to be
distributed in bread on St. Thomas's Day, which is
paid by Mr. J. Walter, the present owner.
Richard Hawe, founded by will, 1727, proved in
the P.C.C., trust fund, £1,135 13s. 7d. consols, arising
from sale of lands allotted on the inclosure in lieu of
land originally devised. This charity is administered
with the charity next mentioned.
— Davis, date unknown, trust fund, £317 7s. 5d.
consols, with the official trustees, arising from the
sale in 1903 of 2 a. 2 r. on the road to Embrook.
This charity is administered with Hawe's charity.
There is also a sum of about £200 accumulating in
the savings bank.
John Bateman of Eton, Bucks., who died in 1732,
by his will directed £200 to be laid out in the
purchase of land, one moiety of the rent to be applied
for the benefit of the poor of Eton and the other
moiety for the poor of Wokingham. The land was
sold in 1855 and the proceeds invested in £549 9s.
consols, one-half of which represents the share of
Wokingham.
Richard Crutwell, by deed 1 December 1751
(enrolled), settled certain lands, augmented in 1833,
the rents to be applied in gifts of upper garments
among six ancient poor men and the residue in bread
among poor housekeepers of the town. The real
estate was sold in 1887. The endowment fund now
consists of £894 18s. 5d. consols. There is also a
sum of £120 accumulating in the savings bank arising
from the sale of timber. Great-coats to the value of
£1 each are distributed, £3 a year being reserved for
distribution of bread weekly.
William Nash, by a codicil to his will (date not
stated), bequeathed to the minister and churchwardens
£200 stock, the income to be distributed at Christmas
time in bread. The legacy is represented by £200
consols, the income of £5 a year being distributed by
the rector and churchwardens of All Saints.
John Nash, by will proved in the P.C.C. in
December 1819, left £300 consols, the dividends to
be applied in gowns and aprons among twelve poor
old women, attendants at divine service. The income
of £7 10s. a year is expended in material for clothing
of the value of 10s. to each recipient. A sum of £50
consols, derived under the will of the same testator, is
held in trust locally, to keep in repair, &c., the family
tombs in the churchyard.
The several sums of stock, unless otherwise stated,
are held by the official trustees. The income of the
'General Charities,' irrespective of the Westende
almshouses, amounts to £235 a year, or thereabouts,
of which, after deduction of expenses, about £30 is
expended under the head of 'relief of poor,' £17 in
the distribution of meat, £40 for other objects defined
by the trusts, and the remainder in the distribution
of bread on St. Thomas's and St. Bartholomew's Days,
and monthly or weekly.
Educational Charities. (fn. 128)
—The charities of Richard
How, Thomas Martin, Ann Tickner and Mary
Cotterell are regulated by a scheme of the Charity
Commissioners of 19 May 1893. The land at
Finchampstead (How's gift) was sold in 1904, and the
proceeds invested in £600 consols, of which one-fourth
belongs to this parish and one-fourth to each of the
parishes of Binfield, Winkfield and Waltham St.
Lawrence. The lands subject to the charge under
the will of Thomas Martin were sold in 1901, and
this charity is now represented by £786 0s. 8d. consols. The annuity of £5 granted by Ann Tickner
and Mary Cotterell is paid by Mr. Denis de
Vitré, the owner of Bean Oak Close in the tithing
of Charwood, charged therewith. The annual income
of these charges, amounting to £28 8s., is under the
scheme applied in encouraging attendance at the public
elementary schools by granting prizes or rewards,
including articles of clothing, &c. The trustees are
also empowered to grant exhibitions of a yearly value
not exceeding £10 in each case at any place of
education higher than elementary.
Charity of Martha Palmer—The endowments now
consist of the Palmer School and master's house, the
Old Maiden School with yard and shed let at £12 a
year, the old infants' school adjoining let at £5 a year,
and £100 consols.
Charity of Charles Palmer, M.D. —The trust fund
now consists of £667 consols, arising from the redemption in 1864 of a rent-charge of £20; the dividends,
amounting to £16 13s. 4d., are applicable under a
scheme of the Board of Education of 25 August
1905 as to £4 for the purposes of any Sunday school
in the ancient borough in which instruction is given
according to the doctrines of the Church of England,
as to £4 in prizes for religious knowledge for children
in attendance at the Palmer's School and at a Church
of England Sunday school, and the residue in
exhibitions. The official trustees also hold a sum of
£333 10s. like stock, representing the redemption of
£10 a year bequeathed by the will of Dr. Palmer to
the minister of the parish church for preaching a
sermon on 15 February towards the promotion and
encouragement of charity.
Elizabeth Parker, by will proved in the P.C.C.
19 September 1795, bequeathed £10 for the support
of Sunday schools, invested in £15 consols.
Thomas Wilmot, by will 5 December 1796, proved
in the P.C.C., bequeathed £5 a year for Sunday
schools and £1 1s. for the minister. Under the
direction of the Court of Chancery a sum of £201
13s. 4d. consols was set aside to provide for the legacies,
a sum of £100 thereout was expended in 1846 in
adding two class-rooms to the National school, reducing the amount of stock to £94 11s. 4d. consols.
The several sums of stock, unless otherwise stated,
are held by the official trustees.
The Fuel Allotment. By an award 3 July 1817,
under the Act for the inclosure of Windsor Forest, (fn. 129)
allotments containing in the aggregate 120 acres or
thereabouts were made to the churchwardens and
overseers of the town and parish, which were sold at
different periods, with the exception of 32 a. 2 r.,
situate on the eastern boundary of the parish, and the
proceeds invested in £1,888 7s. 9d. consols, with the
official trustees, producing yearly £47 4s. The land
retained consists of rough pasture and heath, producing
£6 a year. The net income is expended in coals
and distributed on St. Thomas's Day.
Charity of Thomas Winder, founded by will
proved in the P.C.C. 12 February 1651. By an
order of the Charity Commissioners of 26 February
1892 the sum of £1,205 Great Northern Railway
3 per cent. debenture stock, arising from the sale of
the real estate and from the sale of timber, being
twenty-one sixtieths of the whole, was apportioned a
the share of Wokingham (see also under Winkfield and
Warfield). The yearly income, amounting to £36 5s.,
is, under a scheme of the Charity Commissioners
of 30 May 1873, applied by the rector and churchwardens as follows: £1 yearly is paid to the rector
for sermons on 5 November and St. Thomas's Day,
10s. to the clerk, £2 about the beginning of each
year is divided equally among four poor persons,
2s. 6d. a week in bread among four poor helpless
persons and the residue of the income mainly in
medical and surgical assistance.
Charity of Mrs. Elizabeth Mary Mollony, founded
by will and codicils proved at London 14 July 1857.
The minister and churchwardens also hold a sum of
£78 19s. 6d. in the savings bank, the interest of
which, subject to the repair of certain tombs in the
churchyard, is divided equally among the women in
Westende's almshouses (see above).
The Lucas Hospital, founded by will of Henry
Lucas, bearing date 11 June 1663, proved in the
P.C.C., and by Letters Patent 18 January 1667,
for a master and sixteen brethren, is under the
management of the court of assistants of the Drapers'
Company, London. The endowments of the charity
are now as follows: the hospital buildings and gardens
at Wokingham, in hand; Greenfield Farm in the
parishes of Flitton, Flitwick and Pulloxhill, Beds.,
containing 52 a. 3 r. 34 p., let at £65 a year; land,
Grange Mill, and two cottages in the parish of
Harlington, Beds., and land adjoining, containing
together 66 acres or thereabouts, producing yearly
£108; £6,559 15s. 7d. consols standing in the corporate name of the Drapers' Company, arising from
accumulations of income from time to time, and
£3,134 3s. 7d. consols, with the official trustees,
arising from the sale in 1874 of an allotment at
Great Heath, Finchampstead, and from the sale in
1887 of the Hermitage Farm at Flitton, producing
in yearly dividends £242 6s. 8d., making a total
annual income from endowments of £415 6s. 8d.
The Drapers' Company have in addition since 1890
made an annual contribution of £120 out of their
corporate funds. The master and chaplain of the
hospital, who must be a university graduate in holy
orders, receives a stipend of £100, and each of the
brethren, who are now twelve in number, receives
£25 a year and 10s. a quarter for firing. They are
selected in rotation from certain parishes in Surrey
and Berkshire, and must be single men, either
bachelors or widowers, and be labouring men who
are past work and upwards of fifty years of age.
In 1703 Benjamin Griffine, by will proved in the
P.C.C. 25 February, bequeathed 50s. per annum,
payable out of Larmor's Meadow, Wokingham, for
the maintenance of the Baptist minister of Wokingham
and of the Baptist minister at Reading. The rentcharge was redeemed in 1899 by the transfer to the
official trustees of £100 2½ per cent. annuities.
The Atkins Trusts: The minister of the
Wokingham Baptist chapel also receives annually a
sum of £3 7s., and the deacons of the same chapel
the like sum of £3 7s. for the benefit of the poor of
the congregation, &c., being one-fourteenth part of
the dividends of £3,926 6s. 9d. consols, held by the
official trustees, arising from the sale of lands by order
of the Court of Chancery, settled by Abraham Atkins
in 1786 for the benefit of fourteen Baptist chapels,
of which Wokingham was one. The minister is
further entitled to one-sixteenth part of the dividends
of £3,533 13s. 4d. India 3½ per cent. stock, held by
the official trustees, arising under the will of the said
Abraham Atkins, dated 12 July 1791, left for the
benefit of the ministers of sixteen Baptist congregations, of which Wokingham was one. The sum of
£8 10s. 4d. is paid from this source.
The Wesleyan Methodist chapel and trust property
in Rose Street, comprised in deeds 1820, 1869, 1871
and 1893, is regulated by a scheme of the Charity
Commissioners of 30 June 1896. The property not
actually used for purposes of public worship consists
of two cottages separated by a passage from the chapel,
let at weekly rents producing £12 7s. a year.