HURST
La or Le Hurst (xiv cent.); Hurste (xv cent.).
The parish of Hurst, formerly described as a
parochial chapelry, is of large extent, and in 1832
contained four liberties: Whistley in Charlton Hundred; Broad Hinton, then in Wiltshire, (fn. 1) but annexed
in 1844 to Charlton Hundred; Newland and Winnersh in the hundred of Sonning. The liberties of
Newland and Winnersh lie in the south of the parish,
the liberty of Whistley with the church and village
of Hurst in the centre, and Broad Hinton with
Twyford village in the north. Twyford is now a
separate ecclesiastical and civil parish (fn. 2) and Newland
with a part of Winnersh was formed into the ecclesiastical district of St. Catherine, Bear Wood, in 1846.
The area of the undivided parish was 6,898 acres,
of which 3,683 belonged to Charlton Hundred, the
Whistley Liberty having 1,933 acres, the Broad
Hinton Liberty 1,750 acres, Newland 1,170 acres
and Winnersh 2,045 acres. The Inclosure Act for
the parish was passed in 1807. (fn. 3)
The parish is flat and well wooded, its western
boundary being formed by the River Loddon. Its
physical structure shows three well-defined divisions,
a narrow strip of alluvial meadow land bordering the
river and liable to floods; running parallel with this a
slightly raised terrace of gravel, on which most of the
numerous hamlets and farms are built, and beyond
this terrace and rising rapidly from it a bank of
higher ground, connected with the forest country to
the east and cut into a number of separate hills by
a series of small streams tributary to the Loddon,
such as Embrook and the Broadwater. An almost
isolated hill of London Clay, not far from the
centre of the parish, is the site of the church and
manor-house.
The parish is traversed by many roads and bylanes. The Reading and Wokingham road crosses
it from west to east, and is intersected by the road
leading from Arborfield Cross to Twyford, with a
branch to Maidenhead.
The village of Hurst, which with Whistley Green
lies to the north of the church, is somewhat scattered,
and consists in the main of red brick houses and
cottages with roofs of slate and tile. Several of the
older cottages, however, are timber-framed with brick
filling, and a few are thatched. Opposite the south
side of the church is a row of almshouses, described
on a tablet as a 'hospital for the maintainance of 8
poor persons each at 6 pence per diem for ever.'
They were erected and founded in 1664 by William
Barker of Hurst and form a low range of brick buildings with a return wing at each end. The roofs are
tiled and have dormer windows.
Hurst House was originally built by Richard
Ward, grantee of the manor, in 1530, and was
largely pulled down and rebuilt in 1847 by the late
Rev. A. A. Cameron, vicar of Hurst. When the old
house was removed there were found some massive
old oaken door-frames, which had been hidden by
later woodwork and plaster, and some curious painted
tablets in the state bedrooms adorned with the heads
of angels and griffins and inscribed in roughly-painted
letters with such couplets as the following:
'Soon from thy bed as thou dost rise
Take heed, serve God in any wise.'
In the rebuilding, though the house was re-erected
on a smaller plan, great care was taken to preserve
the fine carved panelling and the old doorways with
their massive moulded wood jambs and lintels. The
original bricks were used in the reconstruction. Those
of the walling are about 9 in. by 2¼ in., and at the
eaves level is an ogee brick moulding. The moulded
ceiling in the dining room is an exact reproduction
of the original. The windows on the north or
entrance side have moulded wood frames and transoms and casement lights, the rest of the windows,
however, have modern stone jambs, mullions and
transoms. The chimneys form a feature of the
exterior, and are of various shapes on plan, some
square, some round and others star-shaped, while most
of them have projecting moulded bases and cappings.
The large stables are the only part of the original
buildings now standing. This house was inhabited
by the Harrisons, (fn. 4) and sold in 1720 by George
Harrison to Galen Cope. In 1740 John Cope,
his second son, disposed of it to James Waller of
Lincoln's Inn, gentleman, and in 1772 James Waller
and the Rev. James Waller sold it to John Wowen
of Hertford Street, St. George's, Hanover Square.
Mrs. Wowen lived there until her death in her
ninety-seventh year, when it was bought by the Rev.
Archibald Allen Cameron, late vicar of Hurst, and
it is now the property of his nephew Mr. Archibald J.
Mackey. (fn. 5)
The ancient manor-house of Whistley stood close
to the Loddon in a park which is now pasture land
of the Whistley Court Farm. The house passed with
the Bill Hill estate (q.v.) and was pulled down about
the middle of the 19th century by the late owner.
Mr. Leveson-Gower. The fine iron entrance gates
were removed to Bill Hill. An avenue of limes and
chestnuts that led to the house, some fish-ponds and
the stables still remain. There are also remnants of
the gardens, and some statues that adorned it were in
existence for some time after the demolition of the
house.
Haines Hill, in the liberty of Broad Hinton, is a
large house, the older portion of which is Elizabethan
or early Jacobean. Internally there is a long gallery
similar to that at Bramshill and other large houses of
the period. This part may have been built by William
Hide, called of Haines Hill, who died in 1589. (fn. 6)
The house was formerly H-shaped in plan and had
several courtyards. The windows and walls of the
ends of the gallery were rebuilt in the Queen Anne
style by the Biggs, as the date, 1716, on the outside
testifies. The front part of the house was built by
James Edward Colleton in 1760, and the old account
books relating to the building are still at Haines Hill.
Captain Garth added the servants' wing about 1825.
Most of the internal ornamentation of the older
portion is of the Queen Anne date; that of the later
mid-Georgian. There are many family portraits by
Reynolds, Gainsborough, Lely, Kneller and other
masters.
At the close of the 16th century the property was
acquired by the Windebanks, (fn. 7) who about this date
bought the manor of Odes (see below). (fn. 8) Sir Francis
Windebank (son of Sir Thomas who died in 1607)
was Secretary of State in the reign of Charles I and
a friend of Archbishop Laud, who frequently visited
him at Haines Hill, and records his visits in his Diary. (fn. 9)
Many of Windebank's letters dated from Haines Hill
are extant. (fn. 10) On one occasion, when he had to
transact business of state at Haines Hill owing to
the fear of infection in London, the Council of State
urged the establishment of a stage at Wokingham
with good horses and guides to run to Hartford
Bridge and Staines during the secretary's residence
in the country. (fn. 11) Haines Hill came with Odes (q.v.)
to the Bigg family, with whom it remained until
about the middle of the 18th century. It was
acquired in 1736 by James Edward Colleton, who
married Lady Ann Cowper, daughter of the first Earl
Cowper. After the death of James Edward
Colleton and subsequently the failure of direct
heirs in his line, Charles Garth, who had married
Elizabeth Colleton, granddaughter (fn. 12) of Sir John
Colleton, succeeded to the estates of Haines Hill and
took in addition the name of Colleton. On his death
in 1818 he left no male issue and his brother Captain
Thomas Garth inherited the property. He died in
1841, and his son Mr. Thomas Colleton Garth,
D. L., succeeded. He was the founder of the Garth
Hunt, and held his opening meet at Haines Hill on
8 November 1852, holding the mastership for half a
century. He died in 1907, leaving the estate to his
sister Mrs. Shifner. On her death in 1910 it passed
to Captain Godsal, the present owner. (fn. 13)
Hurst Lodge, about a quarter of a mile north-east
of the church, is a 17th-century building with a new
front of the latter part of the 18th century. It is
L-shaped on plan, the principal entrance being on the
north-west side. The hall has good oak panelling
with a white frieze immediately below the ceiling.
The principal beam across the hall is supported by
two wooden classic columns with moulded bases and
capitals, and at each end is a carved bracket support.
The dining room has a large Renaissance mantelpiece of wood painted white. The stairs are old
and have turned balusters and moulded handrails.
There is some old oak panelling, now painted white,
on the first floor landing and in one of the bedrooms.
The old part of the main block is built of thin red
bricks and the windows have wood framed casement
lights, the transoms being moulded in some cases. The
roofs are tiled, and on the north-east side is a row of
dormer windows to the attics. On the south-west side
is a small piece of formal garden with flower beds
and stone paving. The house was formerly the property
of the Barkers of Hurst, a branch of the Barkers of
Sonning. John Barker was for thirty-four years gentleman usher to Queen Elizabeth, married Frances
Manfield of Amerden in Taplow, Bucks., had three
sons and five daughters, 'greatly beloved of all good
men,' and died in 1620. (fn. 14) His son Henry Barker
succeeded him, and dying in 1651 was buried in the
church. (fn. 15) His only surviving daughter Frances married
Henry Fairfax, second son of Viscount Fairfax of the
peerage of Ireland, (fn. 16) who by right of his wife held
the house and estate. Their son Henry married Ann
daughter of Sir Thomas Browne, author of Religio
Medici, and his surviving daughter and heir married in
1697 David fourth Lord Cardross, eventually eighth
Earl of Buchan. (fn. 17) Owing to the distance of Hurst
from Scotland the countess sold the property about
1742 to Robert Palmer of Hurst, ancestor of the
Palmer family of Sonning. (fn. 18) The representatives of
the late Mr. Golding-Palmer of Holme Park sold the
house and land to Mr. Philip Hubert Martineau, the
present owner, and the name of the house has been
changed to Hurst Court.
Situated to the north-east of the village is Hinton
House, a square red brick building with a low office
wing at the north-west. The walling is of long
thin bricks and the windows, which have apparently
been restored with plaster, have chamfered jambs,
transoms and square heads. The chimneys are
unusually high and much resemble those at High
Chimneys, described below, both houses probably
having been built about the same date in the late
16th or early 17th century. The principal entrance
is on the north-east side, and opens into a narrow
hall. The principal rooms face south-east, and some
of them contain very good panelling, particularly the
dining room, which has pilasters with carved flat
ornament and moulded capitals. The frieze has
carved grotesque animals, and above is a dentil cornice.
The fireplace has small double shafts in the jambs and
an elaborate overmantel with two large and five small
panels containing circular wreaths and figures. The
hall and staircase have an oak panelled dado, and the
stairs have turned balusters and square newels with
moulded finials. On the first floor the room over the
dining room is panelled from floor to ceiling and has
a moulded cornice, probably all of oak, but now
entirely painted white. The chimneypiece is of
carved oak and the overmantel has panels separated
by small pilasters which support a dentil cornice.
The room on the opposite side of the landing has
painted deal panelling of the 18th century. At one
time the house was much larger and had another
wing at the west end, which has been pulled down.
It was built possibly by William Hide (who died in
1624 seised of a capital messuage called Hinton
Hatch, see below), for the letters 'W.H.' appear on
the north chimney in the brickwork. It was formerly
the property of Mrs. Shifner, who inherited it from
Mr. T. C. Garth, her brother, and is now owned by
Captain W. Godsal, her nephew.
Further north is Stanlake Park. The present
house dates from the latter part of the 16th century.
A wing was added on the south-west in the 18th
century, when the house was considerably renovated,
while in recent years further additions have been
made to the south of the house, a central entrance
porch built, and the building generally restored and
modernized. The Elizabethan building was H-shaped
and symmetrically designed both on plan and elevation.
It is two stories in height with attics in the roof, and
is built of red brick with stone dressings and roofed
with tiles. In the centre block of the original house
was a large hall, apparently entered directly from the
outside, though now through a modern porch. On
either side of the hall were smaller rooms, lighted
from the front by large bay windows. The staircase,
an open one with turned balusters and moulded
handrail, was situated behind the northernmost of
these two rooms in the space now converted into a
boudoir, it having in recent times been removed to
its present position on the south side of the hall.
The offices, it would appear, were on the site of the
18th-century addition, and were rebuilt when this
addition was made. At the same time the present
drawing room at the back of the hall was added,
though it is possible that a smaller room previously existed
here. The rooms on the ground floor have all been
redecorated in the 18th century or later. One bedroom alone retains its original fireplace. Most of
the bedrooms, which open off a central passage, have
18th-century panelled dados and plaster cornices of
the same date. In the window of the bedroom
called the King's Arms bedroom, at the northernmost
corner of the house, are the royal arms of the Stuarts
with the garter and supporters; under the motto is
the date 1626. The front of the Elizabethan house
has three gables, the two side wings projecting in
front of the central block and having bay windows
carried up to the level of the attics. Most of the
windows in this part of the house are mullioned and
transomed, but may have been restored. The 18th-century addition, which is three stories in height, is
built of red brick and, as with the earlier building, is
roofed with tiles. In this block and the modern
additions are accommodated the offices and servants'
quarters. To the south-west of the house are the
stables, one block of which dates from the 16th
century, while in the garden beyond is a domed brick
ice-house.
High Chimneys, appropriately so called, is a small
H-shaped house of 17th-century date, situated about
half a mile to the south-west of the church. The
entrance and garden fronts are almost exactly alike,
and at one end a modern wing has been added. The
entrance doors have rectangular moulded panels and
are hung in heavy moulded frames. The house was
until recently in the possession of the Barker family,
but is now the property of Captain Godsal.
There is an interesting inn close to the church,
now called the 'Castle,' but formerly known as the
'Church House' or the 'Bunch of Grapes.' (fn. 19) A
curious mural painting has been recently discovered
beneath several layers of wall-paper. It has an old
bowling-green, which has been in use for a very long
period. (fn. 20) Hurst Cottage, now rented by Mr. G.
Roupell, contains a curious mantelpiece. There is a
Baptist chapel in Hurst dating from 1849.

Stanlake House
The forest of Windsor was in the time of James I
divided into sixteen 'walks,' and Norden's map shows
the Bear Wood Walk on the west of the forest
bordering on the Loddon and embracing Winnersh,
Newland, Arborfield and Barkham. It was stocked
with fallow deer, and the keeper was Sir Francis
Knollys. Bear Wood was known earlier as Bishop's
Bere Wood or Bisshopesber and was chase of the Bishops
of Salisbury appurtenant to their manor of Sonning.
It came to the Crown with that manor in 1574 and
was reserved when the manor was granted out of the
Crown in 1628. (fn. 21) The lands which now constitute
the park of Bear Wood remained Crown lands until
about 1830, when Mr. John Walter, the proprietor
of the Times newspaper, the son of the founder and
second of that name, purchased it and built a residence
there. Besides building the house Mr. Walter
erected the church of Bear Wood, and the ecclesiastical parish of Bear Wood was formed in 1846,
including portions of the liberties of Newland and
Winnersh, together with part of Wokingham. In
1860 his son and successor Mr. John Walter, the
third of that name, pulled down the former house
and erected a large mansion. He laid out beautiful
and extensive gardens, constructed a huge lake, and
rebuilt most of the village of Sindlesham. The plan
of the house is so arranged that a large picture
gallery forms the central and principal chamber,
wherein is placed a notable collection of paintings,
chiefly of the Dutch school. Mr. John Walter
greatly enlarged the estate, purchasing land in Wokingham, Parkham, Finchampstead and Sandhurst. He
was M.P. for Nottingham from 1847 to 1859, represented Berkshire from 1859 to 1865 and again from
1868 to 1885. He was high steward of Wokingham,
governor of Wellington College and alderman of the
Berkshire County Council. In 1894 he died and
was succeeded by his son Arthur Fraser Walter, who
was followed on his death in 1910 by his son
Mr. John Walter, the fifth of that name.
Sindlesham House, formerly Sindlesham Lodge, was
acquired by Thomas Rickman Harman by his marriage
with Miss Forbes about 1810. Harman was succeeded by his son Thomas Rickman Harman, who died
in 1913, leaving the property to his niece, Mrs. Foster.
the present owner. The estate was largely increased
by the Inclosure Act, which came into force about
1814, and the house was much enlarged.
Sindlesham Mill is the property of Mr. Charles
Simonds.
A Baptist chapel was built at Sindlesham in 1881.
Bill Hill, the seat of the Leveson-Gower family,
was owned in the early years of the 18th century
by Lord Blundell (Sir Montague Blundell, fourth
baronet), who was raised to the peerage in 1720 and
died in 1756, when the title became extinct. He
was M.P. for Haslemere. In 1734 he sold Bill Hill
to Lady Harold, the fourth daughter of Thomas
Earl of Thanet by Catherine Cavendish, daughter of
Henry Duke of Newcastle. In 1736 she became
the third wife of John first Earl Gower, and on her
death was succeeded by her son Rear-Admiral the
Hon. John Leveson-Gower. The second Earl Gower,
a son of the first earl by a former wife, brought an
action to secure the property, but as the estate was
purchased by Lady Gower with her own money it
was decided that it should descend to her own son.
The admiral married Frances daughter of Admiral
Boscawen, and was succeeded by his son General
John Leveson-Gower, M.P., who died in 1817. He
was second in command in the disastrous La Plata
Expedition of 1805. His son John Leveson-Gower
was the next owner. His son John Edward succeeded
in 1883, married Miss Katherine Elizabeth Cochrane,
died in 1892 and was succeeded by his son John
Henry Leveson-Gower, who died in 1912, his mother,
Mrs. John Edward Leveson-Gower, being the present
owner. The house was probably a hunting lodge
in the forest. Lady Gower built the stables, east
wing, the present dining room and drawing room.
The wall of the kitchen garden was built by Lord
Blundell. The house contains several old family
portraits of the Tufton family and of Earl Gower,
Sir William Leveson-Gower and other members of
the family.
Twyford was constituted an ecclesiastical parish in
1876 (fn. 22) and a civil parish in 1895. It covers an
area of 693 acres, of which 180 acres are arable land
and 252 permanent grass. (fn. 23)
A number of palaeolithic flints, now in the Reading
Museum, have been found at Twyford. (fn. 24)
The main road from Reading to Maidenhead runs
through the village in an easterly direction and is
intersected near the church by the road from Hurst
to Wargrave. The Great Western railway runs
through the centre of the parish and has a station in
the village.
The principal settlement, which stands at the crossroads, is now quite of a suburban type. It is well
lighted and has a good water supply obtained from
wells in the neighbourhood. Leland describes it as
'a praty townlet,' and mentions that 'at the west
end runneth Loden a praty river and so breketh out
in armes that thereby I passed over four bridges.' (fn. 25)
Standing on the south side of the main road in the
middle of the village are the almshouses, a block
of brick buildings with two wings roofed with tiles.
They are one story high and accommodate six
inmates, three in each of the side wings, each inmate
having a bed-sitting room and a scullery. In the
centre of the front to the road is a slightly projecting
gable with a round-headed opening in the centre,
over which is a moulded brick pediment. A central
passage leads through into the square at the back.
On the west side of the passage is a fine panelled oak
screen dividing it off from the hall, while on the
other side a half-timber and brick partition separates
the passage from a similar room, now put to no
special use. Over the central entrance is a stone slab
inscribed 'Domino et pauperibus Ao 1640 | Vivet aīa
mea et laudabit te et | Judicia tua adjuvabūt me.'
There is a Wesleyan chapel in the village built in
1853 and a Congregational chapel dating from 1794.
Twyford was the scene of a skirmish in 1688
between the soldiers of the Prince of Orange and the
adherents of James II. There were two annual fairs
held here on 24 July and 11 October in 1792, but
they are not mentioned in the list of 1888. (fn. 26)
MANORS
The earliest mention of the manor
of WHISTLEY (Uuiscelea, x cent.;
Wiselei, xi cent.; Wysseley or Whysshele,
xiv cent.), later HURST alias WHISTLEY, is in the
chronicle of Abingdon Abbey,
wherein it is stated that King
Edgar in 968 A.D. gave 10 hides
in Whistley to his thegn Wulfstan, who conveyed it to the
abbey. (fn. 27) In the Domesday
Survey it is enumerated among
the possessions of the abbey,
and mention is made of a
mill worth 5s. and 250 eels
and a fishery worth 300 eels. (fn. 28)
The manor was appropriated
to the kitchen and remained
with the abbey of Abingdon
until its dissolution. (fn. 29)

Abingdon Abbey. Argent a cross paty between four martlets sable.
The abbot had sometimes much trouble with his
tenants and labourers on his manor. In 1393 the
bondmen and bondage tenants withdrew their
services from Peter, Abbot of Abingdon, and met in
assembly and swore to refuse to render their accustomed services. Power was granted to imprison the
delinquents. (fn. 30) In the following year they were still
contumacious. (fn. 31) In 1396 the king gave a confirmation to the abbot of his rights and privileges, reciting
the grant by Edgar to Wulfstan and a confirmation
of Richard I. It appears that the foresters claimed a
benefit of refreshment called 'Metehorn'—viz., a
right to be supplied weekly with two repasts of food
and drink for themselves or their servants, but the
king released the lord from all such obligation. (fn. 32)
In 1538 Thomas, Abbot of Abingdon, delivered up
the manor of Hurst with the other possessions of the
abbey to King Henry VIII. (fn. 33) Two years later the
king granted it as the manor of Hurst alias Whistley
to Richard Ward of Waltham St. Lawrence and
Colubra his wife, (fn. 34) daughter of William Flambert
of Chertsey, serjeant-at-arms to the king. Ward
was cofferer to Henry VIII, Edward VI, Queen
Mary and Queen Elizabeth. He died in February
1577–8, his wife Colubra having predeceased him, (fn. 35)
and was succeeded by his son Richard, who was
knighted at Reading in 1601. (fn. 36) Richard Ward
died at New Windsor in 1605, having bequeathed
the manor to his greatnephew Richard Harrison and
his nephew William Millward
the younger. (fn. 37) Katherine
Millward and Anne Weldon,
sisters and two of the heirs
of Richard Ward, released
their share in the manor
to Richard Harrison in the
same year. (fn. 38) Harrison, who
was knighted in 1621, (fn. 39) resided at his manor-house at
Hurst, and was a friend of
Archbishop Laud, who several
times mentions him in his
Diary in 1625 and 1626 on the occasion of Laud's
visits to Sir Francis Windebank at Haines Hill. He
was M.P. for Wootton Bassett (1621–2), for Berkshire (1624–5 and 1628–9), and for New Windsor
in 1640, (fn. 40) and was Sheriff of Berkshire. He suffered
greatly for his loyalty during the Civil War. He
died in 1655 and was buried, as his will, dated
8 November 1654, directed, 'in that place in the
chancell in Hurst heretofore by mee built, and neere
to the sepulcher of the Lady Saville, my wives mother
who lyeth interred there, as may be.' (fn. 41)

Harrison of Hurst. Or a chief sable with three eagles or therein.
Sir Richard Harrison was succeeded by his son
Richard, who was also a distinguished Royalist.
Impoverished by his loyalty and his sacrifices made
for the royal cause, he mortgaged the manor of
Hurst Wynhurst alias Whistley in 1659 to Samuel
Hyne, who paid £1,000 for that and other property
at Finchampstead. (fn. 42) Sir Richard Harrison was again
in possession in 1672, when with John Harrison,
LL.D., his son and heir, he made a settlement of the
manor. (fn. 43) In 1678 William Harrison, S.T.P., and
his wife Dorothy were holding it, (fn. 44) and William
Harrison continued to hold it until 1694. (fn. 45) The
manor court was then held by George Harrison,
presumably the son of William, who with Dorothy
Harrison, widow, levied a fine of it in 1697. (fn. 46)
In 1700 the manor court was held by Catherine
Harrison, widow (presumably of George Harrison),
and in 1705 by Charles Willis and Catherine
his wife. In 1711 the court is described as that
of George Harrison, an infant in the custody of
Dorothy Harrison, widow. (fn. 47) The last court of George
Harrison was held on 22 March 1719, John Dalby
being steward, and in 1722 George Harrison and
Sara Harrison alias Cornelius sold the manor and
other property to John Dalby. (fn. 48)
Thomas Septimius (sic) Dalby, who succeeded, (fn. 49)
conveyed the manor in 1785 to Richard AldworthNeville, (fn. 50) from which date it followed the descent of
the manor of Hinton Pipard (fn. 51) (q.v.).
The manorial privileges included free fishing, free
warren and view of frankpledge.
The liberty of WINNERSH (Wynhurst, xvii cent.)
was originally part of the Bishop of Salisbury's manor
of Sonning and was under the exempt jurisdiction of
the bishop. (fn. 52) Hence it retains the name liberty, but
as an estate it was probably broken up at a comparatively early date. Part of it was attached to the
manor of Hurst, which appears in 16th and 17th-century records as the manor of Hurst Wynhurst
alias Whistley. (fn. 53)
Another part of the liberty became the manor of
SINDLESHAM (Scindlesham, xiii cent.; Syndlesham, xiv cent.; Sinsam, xvii cent.), which was held
of the Bishop of Salisbury in the 13th century by
Robert de Sindlesham. (fn. 54) He enfeoffed another Robert
de Sindlesham, who was holding Sindlesham in 1284. (fn. 55)
In 1320 Robert de Sindlesham received a quitclaim of
the manor for life from Margaret de Lenham (possibly Margaret granddaughter and heir of Robert de
Sindlesham, sen.), with reversion to her sons Richard
and Thomas and the heirs of Richard. (fn. 56) Richard was
succeeded by his son John, who on his death left a
son Robert under age. (fn. 57)
Although the records of this manor are scanty, it
is evident that it remained in the Lenham family,
for in 1491 Robert Lenham died seised of it, leaving
a son Henry, (fn. 58) who was still a minor at his mother's
death in 1498. (fn. 59) In 1523 the reversion was settled by
Joan Lenham, widow, on Sir Thomas Englefield, who
died seised of the manor of Sindlesham and of property
called Sandfords in Sindlesham and Hurst in 1538. (fn. 60)
Sir Francis Englefield, son of Thomas, the recusant,
was attained for high treason in 1585 and
forfeited his estates. The manor remained in the
Crown until 1609, when it was granted to Salter
and Williams, (fn. 61) who conveyed it to Samuel Backhouse,
Sheriff and alderman of London. It was settled
on his son John Backhouse on John's marriage
with Flower daughter of Thomas Henshaw of
London. (fn. 62) This John, who succeeded his father
in 1626, was made Knight of the Bath at the coronation of Charles I. He suffered severely for his support
of the royal cause in the Civil War. At his death in
1649 the manor passed to his brother William, whose
daughter Flower married (secondly) William Backhouse, created a baronet in 1660, (fn. 63) and by her third
marriage with Henry Hyde Viscount Cornbury,
eldest son of the Earl of Clarendon, it passed to
that family. Henry succeeded to the earldom in
1674 and in 1675 he and his wife sold the manor
to Sir William Jones, the king's attorney-general. (fn. 64)
In 1723 Richard Jones with William his son and
heir suffered a recovery of the
manor. (fn. 65) From this family it
passed to the Spencers towards
the end of the century, (fn. 66) and
was purchased about 1800 of
Earl Spencer by the Right
Hon. Edward Golding (fn. 67) of
Maiden Earley, M.P. for
Downton (Wilts.), Lord of
the Treasury during the administration of Lord Sidmouth.
He amassed great wealth in
the East Indies, and spent his
large fortune in purchasing
his estate at Maiden Earley
and other property in the county. (fn. 68) He died in his
seventy-second year in 1818 at Lord Sidmouth's
house in London and was succeeded by his son
Edward Golding, J.P., D.L., who died in 1844.
His son the Rev. Edward Golding, vicar of Brimpton,
succeeded and died in 1857, when the lordship of
the manor descended to his son Captain William
Golding, who in 1878 sold it to Mr. John Hargreaves together with the Maiden Earley property, (fn. 69)
which in 1903 was sold to Mr. Solomon B. Joel.

Golding. Gules a cheveron or between three bezants.
The messuage and 30 acres of land in Sindlesham
called Sandfords (see above) were held by William
Irish at his death in 1623. (fn. 70)
A parcel of the manor of Sindlesham was separated
from the rest of the manor in the 14th century and
became the manor or farm of LEE. This was held
by Ralph Rastwold at his death in 1383, (fn. 71) and
descended to his son Richard Rastwold, who died
seised in 1475, (fn. 72) leaving a son Thomas. In 1550
Anthony Rastwold conveyed his estate under the
name of the manors of Lee, Warres and Hurst to
Sir Edmund Pecham, kt., (fn. 73) who in 1557 sold to
Richard Ward the manor or farm of 'le Lee' in
Hurst, and at the same time transferred his interest
in a lease for eighty years of Sandford Mill granted
by the Bishop of Salisbury. (fn. 74) The manor of Lee
followed the descent of Hurst alias Whistley until
1785, when Thomas Septimus Dalby sold the estate
to Lady Gower of Bill Hill, with which estate it
subsequently passed.
The reputed manor called Warres mentioned above
is found in 1607 in the possession of Sir Thomas
Windebank (fn. 75) (see manor of Woodes or Odes). This
property evidently took its name from a William
Warre of Hinton who held land there at the end of
the 14th century. (fn. 76)
The liberty of NEWLAND was part of the manor
of Sonning (q.v.) and was included in the Bishop's
Bear Wood. (fn. 77) The eastern part remained open and
uninclosed until 1814. The liberty extends to
Arborfield by Arborfield Cross (or Awfield Crosse), (fn. 78)
the east side of the street there being in Newland,
the west in Arborfield. In 1507 Nicholas Moore
of Barkham held lands and tenements in 'Syndlesham and Newlondfeld,' having acquired the same
from Humphrey Gardyner, Reginald Ireland, and
Joan Berton, daughter and co-heir of John Berton,
late of Hurst. These lands under the name of Mores
are found in the possession of Sir Thomas Englefield
at his death in 1538. (fn. 79)
Mr. Walter purchased from the Crown a large
portion of the liberty about 1830 for the laying out
of his park and the building of his house (see above).
The remaining portion of the liberty has for many
years been in the possession of the Simonds family,
who, under the Inclosure Act of 1814, acquired a
large increase to their estates. The Carter's Hill
property is owned by Mr. Charles Simonds, the rest
by Mr. John Simonds of Newlands.
Until 1844 the district of HINTON was in
Wiltshire. Hinton is not mentioned in 1086, but in
the 12th century it is found in the possession of the
Earls of Salisbury, of whose hundred of Ashridge the
three Hintons—Broad Hinton, Hinton Pipard and
Hinton Hatch—formed tithings (see account of Ashridge Manor and Hundred under Wokingham). (fn. 80) The
first mention which has been found of Hinton is in
1166, when Earl Patrick of Salisbury (so created
between 1142 and 1149) was holding it. (fn. 81) Before
the middle of the 13th century it was granted by
William Longespée Earl of Salisbury, son and heir of
Ela Countess of Salisbury, granddaughter of Earl
Patrick, to Henry de Mara, (fn. 82) who in 1256 had
licence to assart 240 acres of land out of the demesne
of his manor of Hinton within the forest of Windsor. (fn. 83)
This was the manor of HINTON or BROAD
HINTON, (fn. 84) from which the manor of Hinton Pipard
was apparently formed by subinfeudation. Maud
daughter and heir of Henry de Mara married Peter
de Montfort of Beaudesert, co. Warwick. (fn. 85) The
manor descended to John, their son, and to his son
John, who was killed at Bannockburn in 1314 and
was succeeded by his brother Peter. (fn. 86) In 1349 Peter
de Montfort settled Hinton on himself for life, with
reversion to John his illegitimate son for life and
remainder to Guy, son of Peter, and Margaret his wife,
daughter of Thomas de Beauchamp Earl of Warwick,
and contingent remainder in default of issue to the
Earl of Warwick. (fn. 87) Guy died in his father's lifetime,
leaving no issue, so that after the death of Peter and
John de Montfort the manor went to the heir of the
Earl of Warwick, his son Thomas, who succeeded his
father in 1369. (fn. 88) In 1396 he forfeited his lands, and
Hinton was granted by the king three years later to John
Marquess of Dorset. (fn. 89) The Earl of Warwick was restored in 1399, and died seised of the manor in 1401. (fn. 90)
His son Richard Earl of Warwick died seised of it in
1439. (fn. 91) Henry Earl of Warwick, who succeeded,
demised the manor to John Norreys for life, with
reversion to the earl and his heirs. Henry died in
1446, leaving an only daughter Anne, (fn. 92) who died in
infancy. Her heir was her aunt Anne, sister of Earl
Henry, who married Richard Nevill Earl of Salisbury, (fn. 93) slain at Barnet in 1471. The manor was
included in the quitclaim made by the countess of
her estates to the Crown in 1487, (fn. 94) but apparently
possession had been obtained as early as 1479 by
Sir George Nevill, (fn. 95) descendant through his mother
Elizabeth of William Beauchamp Lord Bergavenny,
brother of Thomas Earl of Warwick (who died in
1401). (fn. 96) In 1513 Sir George Nevill, son of the
above-mentioned George, conveyed Hinton to Thomas
Lathom, clerk, and others (fn. 97) in trust for Sir Thomas
Englefield. (fn. 98) From Sir Thomas Englefield the manor
descended in 1514 to his son Thomas, (fn. 99) who died
seised of it in 1538. (fn. 100) His son Francis in 1546
conveyed the manor to Nicholas Wood and Alan Lee, (fn. 101)
possibly in trust for Richard Ward, who was making
a settlement of it in 1575. (fn. 102) It thereafter descended
with the manor of Hurst alias Whistley (q.v.) until
as late as 1785. (fn. 103) It was in 1907 held by Mr. Thomas
Colleton Garth, and is now owned by his nephew
Captain W. Godsal.

Beauchamp. Gules a fesse between six crossless or.

Nevill. Gules a saltire argent with a label gobony argent and azure.
The manor of HINTON PIPARD was held of
the manor of Broad Hinton. (fn. 104) About the middle of
the 13th century a John Pipard is found as witness
to a grant by the Earl of Salisbury of rents to Reading
Abbey, including one payable by Sir Henry de Mara. (fn. 105)
A Simon Pipard of Hinton was living in 1297. (fn. 106)
Another John Pipard was holding lands in Hinton,
Hurst and Ruscombe in the
following century, which in
1362 were quitclaimed by his
daughter and co-heir Denise,
widow of Robert de Crokeford, to her sister Felicia,
widow of William Mawardyn. (fn. 107)
Rather later the manor came
to the Thorpe family of
Thorpe, co. Surrey. John
Thorpe, son of John Thorpe,
left a daughter Alice, who
inherited the manor. (fn. 108) She
married Robert Osborne, from
whom she was divorced, and afterwards as Alice
Flemyng granted the manor to certain feoffees, against
whom several suits in Chancery were brought about
1470 by her cousins and heirs, Maud wife of William
Revell and Ela wife of Robert Blount, the daughters
of Nicholas Stanlake, son of Elizabeth daughter of the
elder John Thorpe. (fn. 109) Probably at this date two properties in Hinton Pipard and Stanlake coalesced, as
the manor is generally found in later records as the
manor of HINTON PIPARD alias STANLAKES or
STANLAKE.

Thorpe. Azure a fesse dancetty ermine.
The manor came possibly through inheritance to
Henry Reynold and Agnes his wife, who were holding in right of Agnes in 1502, when they conveyed
it to Sir Reginald Bray. (fn. 110) The manor descended to
his niece Margery wife of Sir William Sandys, (fn. 111) created
Lord Sandys of the Vyne in 1523. (fn. 112) It descended
to their son Thomas Lord Sandys, whose son William
Lord Sandys suffered a recovery of it in 1599. (fn. 113) This
was possibly part of a transaction by which the manor was
granted to Miles Sandys (of
the family of Sandys of Latimers, co. Buckingham), fatherin-law of Elizabeth daughter
of William Lord Sandys above
mentioned, for he died seised
of it in 1601, (fn. 114) when Edwin
his son and heir (husband of
Elizabeth) succeeded. A life
interest was apparently reserved
to Elizabeth widow of Henry
Sandys, eldest son of William Lord Sandys, who died
in his father's lifetime, afterwards wife successively of
Sir George Paulet of Crondall (co. Hants) and
of Ralph Scrope of Hambleden (co. Buckingham). (fn. 115) She
held courts as Elizabeth Scrope Lady Paulet or as
Elizabeth Scrope from 1583 onwards. After her
death in 1601 Sir Edwin Sandys conveyed the manor
in 1606 to Sir Thomas Windebank. (fn. 116) Sir Thomas
died the following year, (fn. 117) and his son Francis sold
Hinton Pipard in 1610 to Richard Aldworth. (fn. 118) He
died seised in 1623, (fn. 119) when the manor descended to
his son Richard. It descended in the Aldworth
family (fn. 120) to Richard Aldworth of Stanlake, whose son
(by his second wife Catherine
Neville) Richard Neville Aldworth, (fn. 121) after 1762 Richard
Aldworth-Neville, was the
father of Richard AldworthNeville, second Lord Braybrooke, who assumed the name
of Griffin (fn. 122) and died in 1825.
His son Richard, who succeeded as third Lord Braybrooke, (fn. 123) was born at Stanlake.
He, who is well known as the
editor of Pepys' Diary, was
succeeded in 1858 by his son
Richard Cornwallis Neville,
fourth Lord Braybrooke, on whose death without
male issue in 1861 the manor passed successively to
his brothers, Charles fifth Lord Braybrooke and
Latimer sixth Lord Braybrooke, then to the latter's
son Henry seventh Lord Braybrooke. (fn. 124)

Sandys of the Vyne. Argent a ragged cross sable.

Neville, Lord Braybrooke. Gules a saltire argent with a rose gules thereon.
Stanlake Park was alienated from the manor during
the first half of the 19th century, and became the
seat of Sir Nathaniel Duckenfield, from whom it was
purchased in 1847 by George Barker. His grandson
Mr. Frederick G. Barker is the present owner. (fn. 125)
Part of Stanlake Park lies in the parish of Ruscombe,
and in Botany Bay Copse, near the park, is a quadrilateral moat which is thought to mark the site of the
original manor-house. (fn. 126)
The right of fishery in Stanlake is mentioned in
conveyances of the manor. (fn. 127) The house overlooks a
tributary of the Loddon, which has here been widened
to form a large sheet of water.
Hinton Hatch, which in the Court Rolls of Ashridge
Hundred (see Wokingham) appears as a separate
tithing, does not seem to have had manorial rights
attached to it. In the latter half of the 13th century
a John atte Hatch of Hinton and Scolastica his wife
were dealing with the half of a messuage and 70 acres
of land in Hinton. (fn. 128) Probably this was a holding
within the manor of Hinton Pipard. The capital
messuage called Hinton Hatch was in the reign of
James I in the possession of William Hide, who died
seised of it in 1624, when it descended to his son
William. (fn. 129) Hinton Hatch Corner lies between
Hinton Farm and Hinton Lodge to the south of
Stanlake Park.
The manor of ODES probably took its name from
a family of Ode or Oude (Wode ?). (fn. 130) William Ode
appears in the neighbourhood in 1224, (fn. 131) and in 1327
Thomas Oude was assessed at 2s. 11¾d. to the subsidy (fn. 132)
in the vill of Hinton. An Adam Ode was assessed
under Winnersh in 1332. (fn. 133) In 1363 the manor of
Odes was settled on Sir Peter de Montfort, lord of
Beaudesert, for life, with remainder to his illegitimate
son Richard de Montfort and Rose his wife and their
heirs. (fn. 134) By the early 16th century Odes was in the
hands of the Norreys family, (fn. 135) but when John Norreys
was indicted for the murder of John Enhold of
Nettlebed it formed part of the price of his pardon
paid to the king. Apparently, however, it was again
acquired by the Norreys family, for Henry Lord
Norreys sold the manors of Mordells (fn. 136) and Odes to
Henry Hawthorne, who had resided at Banisters.
His daughter Judith carried them in marriage to Oliver
Coxhead, and from him Sir Thomas Windebank
acquired these manors about the middle of the reign
of Elizabeth. (fn. 137) On the death (fn. 138) of Sir Thomas Windebank in 1607 his manors of Mordells and Odes, with
the capital messuage of Banisters, passed to his son
Francis, who later became Secretary of State to
Charles I. In 1640 Sir Francis Windebank was
arrested by order of the Parliament, but escaped and
crossed to France, dying there six years later. His
estates were sequestered. (fn. 139) and soon after his property
in Hurst passed into the hands of Richard Bigg, a
partisan of Cromwell. At Haines Hill is still preserved the pardon granted to Bigg by Charles II,
permitting him to retain possession of his property
in spite of his support of the Parliamentarian cause
during the Commonwealth period. It is a beautifully
inscribed document bearing a portrait of Charles in
the left-hand top corner. Richard Bigg left four sons,
of whom John succeeded his father in 1677. (fn. 140)
The manors of Mordells and Odes and the Haines
Hill estate remained with the Bigg family (fn. 141) till about
the middle of the 18th century. The subsequent
history of this property is given under Haines Hill
(see above). Thomas Garth suffered a recovery of
the manor in 1819. (fn. 142)
TWYFORD lay partly within the manor of
Hinton Pipard. Frequent mentions of holdings there
occur in the Court Rolls of that manor. In 1551
there was a croft called Tybyn Hatch in the common
field of Twyford, which occurs frequently in subsequent rolls. The messuage 'Signe of the Bull' is
mentioned in 1587, with 3 acres of arable land in
the common fields and half an acre in Hinton. (fn. 143) In
1680 the 'Rose and Crown' is mentioned and in
1709 the 'Bell.'
Another part of Twyford was owned by the abbey
of Abingdon, which at the Dissolution had besides
the manor of Hurst (then granted out at farm) also
rents from free and customary tenants in Twyford
and Hurst, amounting to £17 12s. 9d. (fn. 144) In the
surrender by the abbey to the king Twyford is mentioned as a separate manor, (fn. 145) but, as there seem to be
no further records of it, it was probably afterwards
included in the manor of Hurst alias Whistley.
In the 16th century there was a so-called manor
of Twyford, held in 1534 by Sir John Norreys. (fn. 146)
This may have been earlier part of the Montfort
property, (fn. 147) for in the settlement made of Odes on
Sir Peter and Richard de Montfort in 1363 (fn. 148) a watermill at Twyford (fn. 149) was included. (fn. 150) The manor is found
in the Norreys family as late as 1601. (fn. 151) Twyford
Mill was in the possession of William Hide at his
death in 1624, (fn. 152) as was also Woodes Place in Hurst,
which was part, perhaps, of the Odes estate owned
earlier by the Norreys family.
One or two other so-called manors occur in the
records of Hurst. In 1579 a manor of Berry was
among the manors possessed by Richard Ward. (fn. 153)
Lands in Hurst Berry appear later as appurtenant to
the other manors of the Ward estate in Hurst. (fn. 154)
A manor of Hurst was included with Lee and
Warres in the sale by Anthony Rastwold to Sir
Edmund Pecham, kt., in 1550. (fn. 155) In 1516 the
manors of Odes Hinton (Odes-Hinton ?) and Hurst
were among those held by John Norreys when
attainted of high treason. (fn. 156) Probably neither of
these manors of Hurst was a genuine manor. One
of them may be the manor of Hurst held by Sir
William Compton and left by will of 1758 to his son
Walter with remainder to his daughters. (fn. 157) In 1773 a
settlement of this manor was made on Jane Compton,
one of the daughters and surviving heirs of Sir William
Compton, and her husband John Berkeley. (fn. 158) Jane
Berkeley, widow, and Robert Berkeley were dealing
with it in 1780, (fn. 159) and Catherine Berkeley, spinster,
held it in 1798. (fn. 160)
CHURCHES
The church of ST. NICHOLAS
consists of a chancel 31 ft. 9 in. by
17 ft., a north chapel 31 ft. by 17 ft.
7 in. with vestries on the north side, nave 53 ft. by
18 ft., north aisle 18 ft. wide, south aisle 14 ft. 10 in.
wide, west tower 14 ft. 5 in. by 11 ft. 10 in. and
south porch. These measurements are all internal.
The oldest part of the church is the north arcade
of the nave, the easternmost bay being of 12th-century date, the next of later work in the same
century, while the third marks an extension of the
14th century. The rest of the building has been so
much restored and rebuilt that there is little left to
tell its history, but there are corbels in the nave and
north aisle which give further evidence of 12th-century work. There is a 13th-century north doorway,
and the supports for the roofs of the nave and north
chapel are of 15th-century date. The roofs themselves are also probably work of that century. The
tower was added in 1612, but its windows are
modern. The chancel and the north chapel were
restored in 1855. In 1875–6 the south aisle was
added and the rest of the building was restored and
reseated. The porch is also of this date, but a few
old timbers from its predecessor were used. The
priest's vestry has only just been added.
None of the old windows are left. The east
window of the chancel has three trefoiled lights with
tracery of 14th-century design, and the two south
windows are of the same style, the easternmost having
two lights and the other one. The north arcade of
the chancel is of two bays with a circular column
having a moulded base and capital. The western
respond is semicircular and abuts directly upon the
east respond of the original nave arcade. The arches
are two-centred and of two chamfered orders.
The east window of the north chapel has three
trefoiled lights with tracery of decorated character.
In the north wall is a doorway into the vestry, which
takes the place of another one further east, now
blocked. A considerable portion of this wall is occupied by tombs. There is no chancel arch, but the
chancel is separated from the nave by a wooden screen,
now painted and gilded, but apparently of late 15th-century date. The lower part is panelled, and above
are cinquefoiled lights with traceried heads. The
cornice is small and contains carved cherubs' heads,
fleurs de lis, Tudor roses and foliage. The cresting
is a Jacobean addition, and consists of pierced scrollwork with the royal arms as borne by the Stuarts, with
supporters, in the centre. The chapel is separated
from the north aisle by a similar screen and has the
Prince of Wales' feathers in a garter in the place of
the royal arms in the cresting.
The north arcade of the nave is of three bays; the
first two, which are of the 12th century, are separated
by a circular column having a scalloped capital with
a square abacus and a modern moulded base. Near
the top of the shaft is a projecting band, above which
the diameter of the column is slightly reduced. The
eastern respond is semicircular and has a chamfered
base, and the capital has apparently been recut in the
14th century to stand on a clustered column. The
second pier of the arcade has on the east a semicircular
respond with a capital and base similar to the first
pier, while the other side of the pier, which forms
the respond of the 14th-century bay, has two square
orders. Near the springing line of the arch these
orders are brought into one by trefoiled stops with
carved heads under the small canopies thus formed.
The eastern arch of the arcade is segmental and of a
plain square section. This arch and the masonry
above are of stone, the rest of the arcade being in chalk
except the modern restorations. The central arch is
two-centred and also has only one square order. The
third is a two-centred drop arch of two chamfered
orders. The modern south arcade of the nave has
three bays with circular columns, having moulded
bases and capitals, and the arches are heavily moulded
and have moulded labels.
The north wall of the north aisle has three modern
lancet lights. Between the second and third of these
is the 13th-century doorway, which has jambs and a
pointed arch of two chamfered orders and a plain
double-chamfered label. The moulded abaci and the
base stops are modern. The west window of this
aisle has three lights with tracery of 14th-century
type. The south aisle has three-light east and west
windows and two two-light south windows, all with
tracery of 14th-century design. The south doorway
is modern and has shafted jambs and a moulded twocentred arch.
The modern two-centred tower arch is moulded
and is supported on semicircular shafts attached to the
jambs. The tower is of brick in three stages, and is
finished with an embattled parapet. In the ground
stage is a west doorway with modern stone jambs and
above it is a three-light window with tracery of
14th-century character in modern stonework. There
are similar two-light windows in the upper stages.
All the other walls of the building are faced with
modern flint and stone dressings and the roofs are
tiled. The open-timber roofs have arched trusses
and are all old except that of the south aisle. The
nave and north aisle have large tie-beams. The
chapel and nave roofs have moulded semi-octagonal
corbels supported by hollow-chamfered pilasters with
carved heads at the top and bottom; these are of
original 15th-century date.
The hexagonal pulpit, which is painted and gilded,
is Jacobean with enrichment of the usual type.
Attached to the pulpit is a wrought-iron hour-glass
stand formed of an oak-leaf and acorn design with the
date 1636 over the initials EA. The ironwork is
painted and gilded, and on a separate scroll attached
to the respond of the arcade is the quotation, 'As this
glasse runneth, so man's life passethe.' All the other
internal fittings are modern.
On the north wall of the chancel is a large and
elaborate wall monument to Henry Barker of Hurst,
who married Magdalen daughter of William Cade of
Essex, by whom he had four sons and one daughter.
He died in 1651. The monument is of marble, and
contains in an architectural frame the recumbent figure
of a man in a long robe holding a book in his right
hand. A child is seated at his head and a figure of
Death at his feet. In the crowning pediment on a
cartouche are the arms of Barker of Hurst quartering
Burley and in the recess are two shields both bearing
the above arms impaling Argent a fesse azure between
two leopards gules each charged on the shoulder with
a bezant with a castle between two fleurs de lis or
upon the fesse, for Cade.
Against the north wall of the chapel is a large
monument in black marble and alabaster to Margaret
Lady Savile, daughter of George Dacres. She was
married three times—first to George Garrard, second
son of Sir William Garrard, secondly to John Smith
of Essex, and thirdly to Sir Henry Savile, kt., warden
of Merton College and provost of Eton, where he is
buried. On the front of the base, which has a curved
central projection bearing the inscription, are three
black marble panels. In the centre, kneeling on the
base, are the figures of Savile and his lady face to face
at a desk. To the west are two kneeling female
figures, and to the east the figures of a man in half
armour and a woman kneeling face to face at a desk.
Below the easternmost panel of the base are five
kneeling figures of their children, which are now
headless. The back of the monument is divided into
three bays by shallow pilasters and over it is an
entablature, broken forward in the centre like the
base, from which hang curtains lifted by two female
figures. The top is finished with a curved pediment
in which is a concave recess containing a small urn,
and bears a shield with the arms of Savile impaling
Dacres of Cheshunt. Surmounting the entablature
on the west is a cartouche in memory of Anne
Viscountess Dorchester, Lady Savile's eldest daughter
by her first husband, bearing the arms, Argent a bend
sable with three voided lozenges argent thereon, for
Carleton, impaling Argent on a fesse sable a lion
passant argent with the difference of a molet gules for
Garrard of Dorney. The cartouche at the other end
is a memorial of Frances wife of Sir Richard Harrison,
kt., youngest daughter of Lady Savile's first marriage.
It has the arms of Harrison of Hurst quartered with
Ward and Garrard. On the back of the monument
are two shields, the west one bearing the coat Azure
a fesse wavy between three goats' heads argent for
Sidley impaling Savile, for Elizabeth daughter of her
third marriage, who was wife of Sir John Sidley, bart.
The other shield is of Harrison impaling Garrard.
To the west of this monument is the Purbeck
marble altar tomb of Richard Ward. The front of the
base is divided into four panels with feathered quatrefoils inclosing shields of copper, the second of which
is missing. The ends of the base have each one
similar panel. A black marble slab covers the top of
the base and over this is a canopy supported by
panelled sides faced with octagonal shafts. The front
of the canopy has a quatrefoil panelled frieze, some
panels containing copper shields and above this is a
Tudor flower cresting. The back has several brasses
let into it. One is the figure of a man in a long
gown kneeling at a desk with eight sons behind him.
Facing him is the figure of a lady, the head of
which has gone, with nine daughters behind her.
Below the figure of Richard Ward is a long black
letter inscription in Latin showing him to have been
cofferer in the reigns of Henry VIII, Edward, Mary
and Elizabeth. Over the woman and daughters on
a scroll is inscribed 'Colubra Ward dyed ye xiiii
daye of Aprill anno 1574.' On a shield in the
middle of the back are the arms of Ward with
his crest, a fox's head razed. Over the man is
Ward impaling Gules a bend argent with three
dolphins vert thereon for Flambert. Over the
woman is a shield of the last-named arms. In the
frieze there were originally three shields, but the first
is now missing. The second is Ward impaling Argent
six moorhens sable. The third is Ward impaling
Flambert. In the base the first and fourth shields have
Ward, the second one is missing, the third is Ward
impaling Flambert, and the fifth is Flambert.
On the wall to the west of this tomb are two
brasses, the upper one representing the figure of a
woman in a bed. It has been removed from a stone
slab on the floor below, which bears an inscription
to Alse Harrison, the wife of Thomas Harrison, and
eldest daughter of Richard Ward, cofferer to Queen
Elizabeth. The other brass is about 18 in. square
and has a marginal inscription to Richard Kippax,
who died in 1625, examiner in the Star Chamber,
with memorial verses on another plate.
On the south wall of the chapel is a marble monument to Sir Richard Harrison, d. 1683 (eldest son of
Sir Richard Harrison), of Whistley and Hinton.
He married Dorothy, the only daughter of William
Deane of Nethercot in Oxfordshire. In the centre
of the monument between Ionic columns are the
figures of a man in armour kneeling opposite his
wife at a desk and behind them is a man standing.
On a shield in the pediment are the arms of Harrison,
with the crest, a talbot's head erminois in a golden
crown, and in the east spandrel below the entablature
is the same coat with three bars in a border, for
Deane, in pretence. The opposite spandrel has
Harrison with a quartering.
On the east wall of the chapel to the north of the
window is a marble tablet to John Barker, who
died in 1620, and Frances (Manfield) his wife. Above
it is a tablet to Thomas Septimus Dalby of Hurst Grove,
who died in 1790. On the opposite side of the
east window is a tablet to William son of Henry
Fairfax and Ann his wife. He died in 1684. Above
it is a monument dated 1694.
On the floor of the chapel are slabs to the following: Henry second son of Thomas Viscount Fairfax,
1650, (fn. 161) Francis grandson of Henry Fairfax of Burlington, co. York, who died in 1678, aged fifty-six years,
William and Ann Alathea Fairfax, 1684, John Barker,
1661, and his wife Elizabeth, 1677, Elizabeth wife of
James Marsh, 1634, Frances Turner, 1663, and five
children of John Lewis of Coydmer, Cardigan.
At the west end of the north aisle is a brick
monument with a large black marble slab to Richard
Bigg, 1677. On the north wall of this aisle is a
small monument to Lady Phoebe, one of the daughters
of James Ley Earl of Marlborough and wife of
Richard Bigg, 1653, with the arms of Bigg impaling
Ley. Near this is another small monument to
Thomas Bayley of Hurst, 1684, with his arms, Or three
lozenges azure. In the south aisle is a wall monument to William Clark, vicar, 1675, with his arms,
Argent a bend gules between three roundels sable with
three swans argent on the bend.
There is a peal of six bells, the treble bearing the
inscription 'Prayes the Lord 1634'; the second has
'I as trebl be gin'; the third 'Henry Knight made
this bell 1613'; the fourth 'I as third will sing';
the other two both have 'Feare God,' the fifth
being dated 1642 and the tenor 1639.
The plate comprises a silver-gilt cup of 1613, given
in 1633. Another cup, also silver-gilt, was made
out of one similar to the first, which was melted
down and recast in 1852. There are also two patens
and two flagons, all in modern silver-gilt.
The registers previous to 1812 are as follows:
(i) baptisms and marriages 1585 to 1607, burials 1585
to 1604; (ii) marriages 1633 to 1720; (iii) is an
18th-century copy, and contains baptisms and burials
1633 to 1763, marriages 1633 to 1753; (iv) marriages 1754 to 1769; (v) baptisms and burials 1764
to 1812; (vi) marriages 1769 to 1812.
The church of ST. MARY, Twyford, consists of a
long chancel with a north organ chamber, south
priest's and quire vestries, north and south transepts,
a nave, north and south aisles, a north porch and a
south-west tower, the bottom stage of which is used
as a baptistery.
The church was built in 1847, chiefly at the expense of the Rev. A. A. Cameron, then vicar of Hurst,
and Miss Currey. The north aisle was added in 1883,
and in recent years (1908–10) the original structure
has been considerably enlarged, the chancel extended
eastward, the nave westward, the organ chamber and
priest's vestry added, and the tower and baptistery built,
the old church at the same time being thoroughly
cleaned and restored. Lighting the chancel from the
east is a tall three-light window, and in the east ends
of both the north and south walls are six pointed
windows, three in each wall; in the west end of the
north wall is a pointed opening into the organ chamber, and in the wall opposite an arched opening into
the vestry. An arcade of four pointed arches carried
on circular piers opens into the north aisle, while
to the west of a similar arcade on the south is a
pointed opening into the baptistery. At the west
end of the nave is a large five-light window. The
aisles are lighted by small lancet windows, and at
the west end of the south aisle is a pointed opening
into the baptistery similar to the opening from the
nave. The roofs are open and over the baptistery
is a diagonal ribbed stone vault. The tower is built
in three stages with diagonal buttresses at the angles
and has a spire covered with tiles. Each side of the
top stage is arcaded in three bays with openings
between the arches into the bell-chamber. The
walls are faced with flint with stone dressings and
the roofs are covered with tiles.
There are eight bells, which were added in 1913.
The plate is modern.
The church of ST. CATHERINE, Bear Wood, is
a small building in 14th-century style erected in
1845. It consists of a chancel with a north vestry,
a wide aisleless nave and a west tower with an embattled parapet. The walls are of squared ashlar
and the roofs are tiled. The building stands in the
centre of a churchyard, which is bounded by yew
and laurel hedges and is entered on the west side.
There are two modern bells.
The plate consists of a chalice, paten, flagon and a
smaller paten, all of silver, with date mark 1865.
ADVOWSON
Whistley or Hurst was part of
the parish of Sonning. At the close
of the 11th century, as the people
found much difficulty in attending the offices at the
church at Sonning on account of the fords to be
crossed, Abbot Athelelm built at Whistley a church
of wood, which was consecrated by Bishop Osmund
of Salisbury and dedicated in honour of St. Nicholas,
but when Rainald (ob. 1097) was abbot the priest
of Sonning complained that his church suffered on
account of the chapel at Whistley, and the bishop
caused all services there to cease. However, an
agreement was soon after made between the abbot
and bishop that the abbot should provide his own
priest for the chapel at Whistley, who should receive
all the offerings, and that the abbot should give the
bishop on the feast of All Saints half a mark of silver,
the church of Sonning not to receive less dues
than in the days of King Edward from the vill of
Whistley. (fn. 162)
At the beginning of the 13th century the presentation to the chapels attached to Sonning Church
seems to have been conducted most irregularly. In
1220 the Dean of Salisbury found the church served
by a chaplain, John, who had been presented by the
Dean and Chapter of Salisbury and was farming the
chapel for 10 marks. It was then returned that
the chapel had a baptistery but not a cemetery, that
it received oil and chrism at Reading, that it had no
lands and no house for the vicar on church ground. (fn. 163)
Two years later at another visitation it appeared that
the chapel was served by Richard, apparently the
nominee of the former chaplain John, who was
described as a young man knowing nothing. (fn. 164)
Apparently notwithstanding the composition with
the abbey of Abingdon, the advowson was vested
normally in the Dean and Chapter of Salisbury. In
the 16th century it was farmed out with the rectory. (fn. 165)
It remained with the dean and chapter until 1846,
when it was assigned to the Bishop of Oxford, to
whose diocese it had been transferred with the other
Berkshire parishes in the diocese of Salisbury in 1836. (fn. 166)
The Taxatio of 1291 enters the chapel of Hurst as
appropriated to the kitchen of Abingdon, (fn. 167) but in
1535 the rectory was held by the farmer of the Dean
and Chapter of Salisbury (fn. 168) (parsons of Sonning). In
the 17th century it was farmed by the family of
Barker of Sonning. (fn. 169) At the beginning of the 18th
century David eighth Earl of Buchan (fn. 170) held it with
Frances his wife, a descendant of Henry Barker who
died in 1651, (fn. 171) and he in 1742 sold it to Robert
Palmer. (fn. 172) It remained in the Palmer family (fn. 173) until
1874, when Miss Caroline Palmer handed over the
great tithes for the endowment of the church. (fn. 174)
There was in 1220 a chapel of St. Nicholas at
Sindlesham of the fee of Robert de Sonning. At the
visitation of that year the vicar of Sonning produced
a convention made between Robert de Sonning and
the Dean of Salisbury which provided that Robert
de Sonning should hold the chapel and chantry
of Sindlesham, and he and his wife and all his household, servants and guests should hear service there,
but that his rustics should not hear service save at
the mother church at Sonning. Robert was to give
annually to the vicar of Sonning 2s. as a mark of
the chapel's dependence. (fn. 175) In 1220, however, the
chapel was unserved. (fn. 176) No further records of it have
been found. In 1535 the tithes of Sindlesham were
accounted part of the rectory of Sonning. (fn. 177)
The living of St. Catherine's, Bear Wood, was
declared a rectory in 1866. (fn. 178) The advowson is in
the hands of the Walter family. The advowson of
St. Mary, Twyford, belongs to the Bishop of Oxford.
CHARITIES
The parochial charities, the trust
funds of which are held by the
official trustees, are administered
under the provisions of a scheme of the Charity
Commissioners dated 2 March 1886, conveniently
arranged in parts, and comprising the charities of:
Part i:—Barker's almshouses, built by William
Barker in 1664 and endowed in 1682, consisting of
almshouses with garden ground, opposite the church,
for eight almspeople, to be selected in certain proportions from the different liberties in the parish.
Endowments.
—£3,337 9s. 10d. Metropolitan
Water (B) Stock, producing £100 2s. 6d. a year,
arising from redemption in 1905 by Mr. Robert
Reginald Fairfax Wade Palmer of the amounts
charged on the Holme Park Estate for pensions for the
almspeople, gowns, repairs, &c., and £1,476 0s. 3d.
consols, known as the 'Hooton and Pooley Augmentation Fund,' representing a legacy by will of George
Pooley, proved 29 June 1883.
The almshouses at Twyford, erected by Sir Richard
Harrison for six almspeople, and half an acre of land
adjoining, let as gardens at £3 a year, endowed by
Lady Frances Winchcomb, the granddaughter, by
deed dated 30 June 1707, with a rent-charge of £25
a year, issuing out of the Brokenborough estate (with
an additional £6 for gowns in alternate years) and
with £159 15s. 9d. consols, representing a legacy by
will of George William Barker of Stanlake Park,
proved 21 May 1870.
Part ii:—Richard Bigg, founded by will, dated
20 July 1677, trust estate, No. 1 Clark's Buildings and No. 24 Broad Street, St. Giles, London, let
respectively for £45 and £68; and £3,568 15s. 5d.
consols, producing £89 4s. 4d. a year, arising from
sale in 1884 of two other houses in St. Giles; also
the following charities primarily applicable in limited
areas of the parish, namely:—
Abraham Spoore, by deed dated 1697, gave an
annuity of 20s. charged on lands in Maidenhead for
the poor of Twyford.
Mary Beard, by will, 20s. a year for poor of
Winnersh Liberty, now paid by Mr. John Walter
of Bear Wood in respect of certain property in King
Street.
Moses Sadgrove, will proved in the P.C.C. 19 July
1758, annuity of 20s. issuing out of land at Ruscombe, for bread in the liberties of Broad Hinton
and Whistley.
Alice Allwright, deed 1758, now consisting of
£296 consols, representing investment of moiety of
proceeds of sale of real estate (with accumulations)
for poor of the liberty of Newland. (For other
moiety see parish of Barkham.)
William Sanbury, deed 1783, annuity of 40s. out
of lands in Hinton, to be distributed in bread
amongst poor families in Broad Hinton on the
Sunday next before Christmas Day.
William Harman, will proved in the P.C.C. 1838,
trust fund, £619 consols, income for distribution of
coal among the poor in the liberty of Winnersh
about Christmas.
Mrs. Sarah Glasspool, will proved at Oxford, 1881,
trust fund, £199 10s. consols, income for distribution
on 9 November, of blankets or flannel amongst the
aged poor of the liberty of Whistley.
The Rev. Richard Ebenezer Leach, will proved
at Wakefield, 1873, trust fund, £434 18s. consols,
income for distribution on 8 October among the
poor of Twyford.
Part iii:—Dame Dorothy Harrison's, founded by
will dated 22 July 1690, consisting of a yearly sum
of £18 charged on lands in Binfield and belonging
to Lord Braybrooke and £160 12s. 3d. consols.
Part iv:—Barker's coal charity, founded by will
of George William Barker, proved 1870, trust fund,
£319 11s. 6d. consols, for distribution of coal among
the poor of Hurst.
Part v:—Charity of Rev. R. E. Leach for education in Twyford, trust fund, £154 12s. 7d. consols.
Part vi:—The Barker Foundation Fund for the
National school founded by deed poll 17 August 1857.
Part vii:—The church-house and land consisting
of 'The Castle' public-house, near the church, formerly the 'Bunch of Grapes,' let at £30 a year,
and £71 17s. 9d. consols arising from sale in 1898
of the bowling-green adjoining.
By the scheme the above-mentioned charities are
consolidated, each of the eight Barker's almspeople
and the six Twyford almspeople to receive out of the
endowments in parts i and ii a stipend at the rate of
not less than 6s. and not more than 8s. a week, and
subject thereto the endowments in part ii and onethird of the net income of the endowments in part iii
to be applied for the general benefit of deserving and
necessitous persons resident in the parish, by way of
donations to a dispensary, or any provident club or
society, provision of nurses, &c., due regard, however, to be given to the wants of the poor of the
districts or liberties for which the endowments were
primarily given.
One-third of the income of the endowments in
part iii to be applied in putting out as an apprentice
a poor boy of the parish. The remaining third part
of the income of the endowments in part iii and the
whole income of those in part v to be applied in the
advancement of the education of children attending,
or who have attended, a public elementary school by
way of rewards or prizes, or in tuition fees.
The net income of Barker's coal fund (part iv) to
be applied in accordance with the trusts of the donor's
will or for the general benefit of the poor indicated
above.
The income of the Barker's Foundation Fund
(part vi) to be applied in accordance with the trusts
of the deed of 1857, or in the advancement of
education in the manner above indicated, and the
income of the endowments of the church-house
(part vii) towards the maintenance and repair of the
fabric of the church.
For the charity of Mrs. Sarah Yarnold, founded
by will proved in the P.C.C. 1831, see under Wokingham. £20 a year is applicable for blind persons,
those residing in Hurst and Ruscombe being preferred;
a further £15 a year is usually availble for gifts to
female servants and four married women of Hurst.
For the hospital founded by Henry Lucas by will
1663 and Letters Patent bearing date 18 January
1667 see under Wokingham. The parish of Hurst
is entitled in rotation with other places to present a
person to the Court of Assistants of the Drapers'
Company, London, for admission as one of the poor
brethren on this foundation.
Liberty of Winnersh.
—The fuel allotment originally acquired by an award, dated 23 November
1814, made under the Act for the inclosure of
lands within Windsor Forest, (fn. 179) now consists of
9a. 2 r. 3 p. in Winnersh, let at £9 10s. a year,
and £853 1s. 8d. consols with the official trustees,
arising in part from an investment of a sum received
for equality of exchange, and in part from proceeds
of sale. The net income of about £30 a year is
distributed by the parish council of Winnersh in the
distribution of coal.
Liberty of Newland.
—The fuel allotment. The
lands originally acquired by an award, dated 1 July
1817, made under the above-mentioned Act, were
sold in 1861, and proceeds invested in £391 18s. 11d.
consols with the official trustees, producing £9 16s.
a year, which is distributed in coal just before Christmas among poor persons resident within the liberty.
A school in Twyford was founded by Edward
Polehampton, will, 1721. (fn. 180) The trust estates in
addition to the school buildings now consist of
house, coach-house and stables, cottages and about
6 acres of land, and £7,462 3s. 10d. consols with
the official trustees, producing about £300 a year.
The trust was reconstituted by the Polehampton
Estate Act, 1885, (fn. 181) and is regulated by a scheme
established by order of court of 1 December 1886,
as amended in 1890 and 1893 by the Charity Commissioners.