RICKMANSWORTH
Prichemareworde (xi cent.); Rykemersworye, Rykesmaresworth, Rickmersworth (xiii cent.); Rickmersworth or Rickmansworth (xvi cent.).
Rickmansworth is a large parish on the Buckinghamshire and Middlesex border of the county, and has
since 1898 been divided into three civil parishes,
Rickmansworth Urban, Rickmansworth Rural, and
Chorleywood. (fn. 1) There is also a detached portion of
Rickmansworth Rural. The area of Rickmansworth
Urban is 574 acres, that of Rickmansworth Rural
7,463 acres, and that of Chorleywood 1,986 acres. In
1846 part of the parish was formed into the district
chapelry of West Hyde, (fn. 2) and parts were assigned to
the chapelries of Northwood in 1854, (fn. 3) of Croxley
Green in 1872, (fn. 4) and of Mill End in
1875. (fn. 5) Batchworth and Mill End are
hamlets south and west of the town, and
West Hyde beyond Mill End is a chapelry
in Rickmansworth Rural. O'Connorville,
Herringsgate or Heron's Gate is to the
south-west of Chorleywood. Here Feargus
O'Connor the Chartist leader bought an
estate designed to be divided into small
holdings, to be let to the subscribers to
the 'National Land Company.' Extravagant hopes were held out to the factory
hands and others who subscribed, that on
this and other estates bought by the company, they would be able to live an
idyllic country life.
The broad flat valley of the River
Colne runs east and west through the
centre of the parish of Rickmansworth.
The Rivers Chess and Gade flow in from
the north and are parted by a low
watershed. These streams are lost in the
Colne, which bends westwards on leaving the town.
The Grand Junction Canal, which was made early
in the nineteenth century, (fn. 6) joins the Colne for
some three-quarters of a mile in the south of
Rickmansworth. The town of Rickmansworth is
in the centre of its parish, and is set in a network of water, formed by these curving streams
and their many tributaries, which flow under bridges
or cross the open road. The High Street which
runs east and west is part of the Watford and
Uxbridge high road. On the north side is a low
one-storied brick building, consisting of five almshouses built in 1682 by John Fotherley, then lord of
the manor. On the south side of the street is the
manor-house of the Moor, a plain red-brick house
now used as three dwellings. There is also in this
street the Old Swan Inn. This inn used to have
a pew in the church by prescriptive right for many
years, (fn. 7) but all old pew rights fell out of use when
the old church was pulled down in 1826. Many
other old houses still stand in this quiet, though slowly
growing, country town. At the east the High Street
bends northwards, passing on the left, a little back
from the road, a high red-brick house, with parapet
and tiled roof, called Basing House. This was the
home of William Penn, the founder of Pennsylvania,
for a few years after his marriage in 1672. It is now
the residence of Mr. Roderick W. Henderson, J.P.
Beyond, the road curves, and crossing the Chess ascends
a steep hill. At the foot of the hill and on the Chess
is a large modern plaster and timber house known as
Scotsbridge House, formerly the property of the late
Mr. Sidney Roberts, J.P., and at the top is the
church and parish of Croxley Green. A road branching
from here north to Sarratt runs through Croxley
Green, a long open piece of grass land edged with
a few houses, and many cherry orchards. Some of
the houses are old, brick and timber, and at the north
end of the green is a long slated house called Croxley
House, the property and residence of Mr. W. R.
Woolrych, J.P. Micklefield Hall, which lies to the
west, is the property of Mr. T. Meadows Clutterbuck,
the lord of the manor.

King's Farm, Rickmansworth
At the east end of Rickmansworth town, Church
Street turns off abruptly from the High Street, and
bending south passes near the vicarage on the right.
A little farther at a bend 10 the road is the church
in its churchyard, and close by, to the north-west, is
The Priory, an old red-brick and tiled house, now the
residence of Mrs. Allan Edward and the property of
Lord Ebury. The road next leads by the terminus
of a branch of the London and North Western Railway,
and crossing streams and the canal passes through a
little group of houses called Batchworth hamlet. It
then skirts Moor Park and ascends a steep hill towards
Pinner. On the top of the hill is the hamlet of
Batchworth Heath, with its open common.
West of the town, the High Street follows the Colne
river and is the Uxbridge high road. Meadows lie
on either side and many small residences are here
springing up. The road leads through the district called Money Hill, where there is a large stucco
house called The Cedars, the 'Dalrymple Home' for
inebriates, situated on a beautifully-wooded terrace
overlooking the Colne. Beyond Money Hill is Mill
End. There is a good red-brick house here called
Money Hill House, the residence of the Hon. Mrs.
Louis Guy Scott. In the north-west of the town a road
leads to Amersham and passes through Chorleywood.
The River Chess flows through this parish and forms a
small part of the north-eastern boundary, but the rest
of Chorleywood lies above this valley and is in one
part some 300 ft. high. There are two houses of importance near the village, both standing in large parks:
Chorleywood House, the residence of Lady Ela
Russell, and Chorleywood Cedars, the property and
home of Mr. J. Saunders Gilliat, J.P. A mill called
Solesbridge used to stand on the Chess, the site of
which belongs to Mr. T. M. Clutterbuck. The water
there is now used to hatch trout for the Chorleywood
and Colne Fisheries. Near the site of the mill is
Loudwater House, a large white stone verandahed
house belonging to Mr. H. W. Birch, and tenanted
by Mr. John Kerr. Near it is a house called Loudwater or Glen Chess.
The Metropolitan Railway passes through the parish,
and has a station close to the town. A branch
of the London and North Western Railway has a
terminus in the east of the town. The growth of the
town is chiefly seen near these stations.
Rickmansworth became a market town by a charter
of Henry VIII in 1542, whereby the bailiffs and
inhabitants were licensed to hold a market on Saturdays and a fair on the feast of the Assumption. (fn. 8) A
large timber-framed market-house was erected in the
High Street, and was granted in 1627–8 to William
earl of Pembroke. (fn. 9) It formed an obstruction to
traffic, and was pulled down in 1805, when another
market-house was opened nearly opposite, chiefly for
the sale of corn. This building is described in 1808
as a mean fabric supported by pillars, and open
beneath. (fn. 10) After the opening of the railway, local
trade passed almost entirely to Watford, which is
much more conveniently situated on the main line,
and the market-house was disused. In 1868 it
was pulled down and a town hall erected on the site.
The market has long been discontinued, but two fairs
were held on 20 July and 24 November, chiefly for
the sale of horses, cattle, sheep, and hogs. The
July fair was abolished in 1882, and the statute
fair, held on the second Saturday in September for
the hiring of farm servants, was abolished at the same
date. (fn. 11) This fair was locally known as a 'statty,' and
by the middle of the nineteenth century had quite
lost its usefulness, for the greater number of the
labourers who resorted thither had no intention of
leaving the service they were then in, and the fair
simply afforded the farm labourers a time-honoured
excuse for spending their harvest-money in beer at
some of the many inns and beershops, of which there
were no less than forty-nine in the parish at the time
when Mr. Cussans wrote his History of Hertfordshire. (fn. 12)
In 1819 the town was governed by two constables
and two headboroughs. (fn. 13)
In 1905 Rickmansworth included 3,216 acres of
arable land, 3,024 acres of permanent grass, and 611
acres of woodland; and Chorleywood 275 acres of
arable land, 543 acres of permanent grass, and 149
acres of woodland. (fn. 14) The soil is gravel, sand, and
clay, producing crops of wheat, barley, oats, and
turnips.
The parish, which is well-wooded, contains many
beautiful parks and several commons, among which
are Fortune Common and Grove Green and other
small greens. Lockhill Wood Common was in–closed in 1859. (fn. 15) The Common Moor, south-west
of Croxley Mills, though lying almost entirely in the
parish of Watford, is an adjunct to Croxley manor,
and the inhabitants of Watford have no rights with
respect to it.
Watercress beds abound on the banks of all three
of the rivers, and the cultivation of this plant is an
important industry of the townspeople. Strawplaiting was also largely carried on in the parish.
During the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries many
of the principal inhabitants were described as
'clothiers,' from which it may be inferred that the
manufacture of cloth was at one time carried on in
the parish, but this industry has long since ceased. (fn. 16)
There were also silk and flock mills here, described in
1808 as recently built. (fn. 17)
The town is lighted by gas and supplied with
water from an artesian well at Batchworth belonging
to the Rickmansworth and Uxbridge Valley Water
Works, which were opened in 1889. The mineralwater works of Messrs. Franklin & Sons are in
High Street.
Place-names which occur are Great Culvershott,
Pullingspit, Scottes Bridge, Scottes Hill, Gorewellmade,
Personesfeld, Cowemore, Sexteyn-lane, le Burywater,
le Red Heath, Wyddemore, Philpottsmeade, Blackett,
Porthors, Crowches, le Newlond, Bebirifeld, and
Hawkwelleslond.
John Mitchell Kemble, the philologist and historian, lived for a short time in a small house near
Rickmansworth. He was then engaged on Saxons in
England, and was contemplating a History of Roman
Law. His reputation as an Anglo-Saxon scholar was
established in England by the publication of his
edition of the poems of Beowulf in 1833. From
1835 to 1844 he was editor of the British and
Foreign Review. The best-known of his works is the
Codex Diplomaticus. (fn. 18)
Thomas Brugis, a surgeon of some reputation,
practised at Rickmansworth. He was the author of
the Marrow of Physicke, and Vade Mecum or a Companion for a Chirurgion, of which the first edition
appeared in 1651. (fn. 19)
George Swinnock, the Nonconformist divine, was
intruded as vicar of Rickmansworth in 1650. He was
the author of several religious works, which were
collected and published in 1665. (fn. 20)
Giles Lawrence, Regius Professor of Greek at
Oxford, was vicar of Rickmansworth for about six
months in 1580–1. He was a friend of Jewell,
and assisted in his escape to the Continent in 1555.
John Clarke-Whitfield, the organist and composer,
was the son of Amphillis, daughter of Henry Whitfield
of the Bury. He was appointed professor of music
to the University of Cambridge in 1821, and held the
post till his death in 1836. He did good work in
editing the scores of Purcell, Arne, and Handel.
William Prowting Roberts, a solicitor and tradeunion advocate, died at Heronsgate House, and was
buried at Chorleywood church in 1871.
Sir Thomas White, the founder of St. John's
College, Reading, was the son of William White,
a clothier of Rickmansworth. He was born in 1492
at Reading, and was a friend of Sir Thomas Pope,
founder of Trinity College, Oxford, to whose example
the foundation of St. John's College is perhaps due.
MANORS
The manor of RICKMANSWORTH
is said to have been granted to the abbey
of St. Albans by Offa, (fn. 21) and was confirmed
to the abbey and convent by King John. (fn. 22) In 1278 it
was presented that Rickmansworth was ancient demesne
of the crown, and had been from time immemorial, and
the manor had been in the possession of the abbots of
St. Albans before the Conquest of England. (fn. 23) In the
twelfth century Rickmansworth supplied towards the
maintenance of the abbey forty-eight hens and one
pig at Christmas, and 1,000 eggs and one pig at
Easter. (fn. 24) Various parcels of land in Rickmansworth
were acquired for the abbey by Abbot Roger in the
latter part of the thirteenth century. He bought of
John de Britewelle certain land and rent in Rickmansworth and elsewhere, which formerly belonged
to William son of John de Shelford. (fn. 25) Ralph Clobbe
gave a yearly rent of 6d. from two tenements in
Rickmansworth, and also a piece of moor there. (fn. 26)
Robert le Porter gave a rent of 3s. from 11 acres of
land and 2 acres of meadow, and Adam Cave gave a
moor. (fn. 27) The abbot in 1284 bought of Richard son
of Alfred land called 'le Newlond,' and a messuage
and 4 acres of land in Bebirifeld, and a messuage
and 3 acres of meadow in Rickmansworth, (fn. 28) which,
two years later, were assigned to the sacrist. (fn. 29)

Herbert, Earl of Pembroke. Party azure and gules with three lions argent.

Fotherley. Gules a fesse dancetty argent.
At the time of the Dissolution the manor was in lease
to John Palmer for thirty-one years, (fn. 30) and in 1550 it was
granted to the bishop of London, (fn. 31) but on the accession of Mary he was dispossessed, and the manor was
granted to his successor in the see. (fn. 32) His lands in
turn were seized by Queen Elizabeth, who granted
the site of this manor in 1572–3 to Margaret Palmer
for twenty-one years, beginning at Michaelmas, 1595. (fn. 33)
In 1588–9 a further lease for twenty-one years was
granted to Francis Palmer. (fn. 34) In 1591 John bishop
of London granted the manors of Rickmansworth and
Pinchfield to Queen Elizabeth, probably in confirmation of her previous estate. (fn. 35) In 1608 the manor
was occupied by Sir Francis
Wolley, (fn. 36) and the site was
granted in 1610 for sixty
years to Sir Gilbert Wakering. (fn. 37) It was granted in the
same year to Henry, Prince of
Wales, and after his death to
trustees for Charles, Prince
of Wales, in 1616. (fn. 38) These
trustees sold the manor in
February, 1628, to William
earl of Pembroke, and in the
July following this sale was
confirmed by letters patent of
the king. (fn. 39) William died in
1630 without issue, and was succeeded by his
brother Philip, (fn. 40) who sold the manor in 1632 to
Thomas Fotherley. (fn. 41) Thomas was succeeded by his
son John, who held courts for
the manor from 1688 to
1698. (fn. 42) John married Dorothy daughter of Sir Ralph
Whitfield, but all his children
died without issue in his lifetime. (fn. 43) He died in 1702–3,
and by his will left this manor
to his widow Dorothy for life,
with remainder to her nephew
Temple Whitfield and his
brother Henry, and others in
tail male. (fn. 44) Temple died in
1732, and as his brother Henry had predeceased
him the manor came to his nephew Henry, son of
the said Henry. He died in 1747, and the manor
came to his son Henry Fotherley Whitfield, who
settled it upon himself and his heirs in 1753. (fn. 45)

Whitfield. Argent a bend between two cotises engrailed sable.
Till this time the manor-house had been The
Bury, near the church, but Henry Fotherley Whitfield built a new mansion in
the Bury Park, now known
as Rickmansworth Park. He
appears to have been an improvident man, and sold or
mortgaged large portions of
the estate. (fn. 46) He died in
1813, having bequeathed that
portion of the estate which he
had neither sold nor mortgaged
to his widow Mary. (fn. 47) In
1818 John Forster and Thomas Deacon, trustees of the
will of Henry Fotherley Whitfield, conveyed the manor to Robert and William
Williams and Thomas Lane, trustees of the last will
of Robert Williams the elder, of Moor Park. (fn. 48) In
1829 Robert and William, the surviving trustees, sold
it to John Alliston of London, who in the same
year resold it to William Windale. He immediately
mortgaged it, and it was sold by the mortgagee to
William Dimes of London, who sold it in 1853 to
his son William Piercy Dimes. (fn. 49) He sold it in 1858
to Francis Thomas Cuddon,
and he in 1868 to John
Saunders Gilliat, (fn. 50) of Chorleywood Cedars, the present
owner. Mr. Gilliat is a member of the Court of Lieutenancy of the City of London,
and a director of the Bank of
England, of which he was
governor from 1883–5. His
residence, Chorleywood Cedars, was bought by him in
1860, and the house, which
stands upon the site of a much
smaller one, for many years the
residence of William Longman, was built in 1865. (fn. 51)
The great feature of the place is the magnificent
cedars of Lebanon from which the house takes its
name. They are estimated to be of about the same age
as those at Cassiobury, which were planted in 1670.

Gilliat. Or a fesse sable with three ears of wheat or thereon between four martlets sable.
The Bury is charmingly placed in the angle of a
tributary of the River Colne, not far from its junction
with the river. Originally the park extended over a
large part of what is now the town of Rickmansworth,
but the grounds are now reduced to a few acres immediately about the house and are well wooded, with
a beautiful lawn on the west of the house, which
faces nearly east and west, with the entrance on the
east. The original plan is that of an early seventeenthcentury house, with a central block and two wings;
but about the middle of the nineteenth century the
north wing was pulled down. The materials are
brick and half timber rough-cast, with tile roofs, and
there are a few portions of rough flint walling in the
foundations which may belong to a still earlier building.
In the first half of the eighteenth century the house
was considerably altered and redecorated, and was
practically refronted to the west, while the greater
part of the south wing was converted into an orangery. About the middle of the nineteenth century
the place was allowed to fall out of repair, part of
it being used as a coal and grain warehouse, and
the north wing was pulled down, the material being
used to construct a bakehouse, the chimney of which
is still standing to the north of the house. In the
latter half of the same century it was in some measure
restored to its earlier condition. There is a considerable amount of good seventeenth-century panelling in
the house, chiefly in the present drawing-room and
dining-room, that in the former room having been
grained to represent walnut. The dining-room has a
handsome oak mantel with elaborate detail, and the
fireplace has a straight-sided four-centred head with
continuous mouldings. A second mantel in this
room, now used as a sideboard, was removed from
the room now used as the kitchen. A small square
panel in the centre has on it an ostrich carved in
relief. There are two staircases of about the same
date as these mantels, the main one in the central
wing, the other in the south wing. A large room on
the west front of the central wing has been completely redecorated in the eighteenth century, and the
two ends are treated with pilastered and coved recesses. Several of the bedrooms were decorated at
the same time and sash windows inserted. On the
east, however, the original wooden mullioned frames
remain much patched with later work. There are
also some good brick chimney-stacks with shafts placed
angle-wise.
There is an avenue from the Bury leading towards
Rickmansworth Park, the grounds of the two estates
having once adjoined. The Bury now belongs to
Lord Ebury, and is tenanted by Mr. T. W. Bevan.
RICKMANSWORTH PARK
RICKMANSWORTH PARK lies to the north of
the town, and formerly constituted part of the demesne
lands of the manor of Rickmansworth. In a deed of
bargain and sale by John Fotherley and Sir Thomas
Fotherley his son, in 1685, various closes are said to
be impaled and formed into a park. (fn. 52) The park
came with the manor to Henry Fotherley Whitfield,
who built the mansion house there shortly before his
death in 1813. (fn. 53) He left the estate to Mary his wife,
who afterwards married Thomas Deacon. Rickmansworth Park was sold in 1831 to Mrs. Temperance
Arden as trustee for the will of her husband. Under
the trusts of the will the estate came to Joseph Arden,
who died in 1879, when it was sold to Mr. John
William Birch. (fn. 54) Rickmansworth Park is now the
seat of Mrs. Birch, his widow, and daughter of Mr.
J. Arden. (fn. 55)
There was a mill at Rickmansworth at the time of
the Domesday Survey. (fn. 56) The water-mill, called West
Mill, belonged to the abbot and convent of St. Albans,
and was leased by them to Ralph Bukberd for a term
of years ending in 1539. In 1533 they leased it
from the end of this term for twenty-six years to
Richard Wilson of Watford. He was to keep in repair the mill and also two millstones, 10 in. in thickness, and 4 ft. 8 in. in breadth. (fn. 57) The mill was leased
in 1544 to William Hutchinson, yeoman of the spicery,
and Janet his wife for their lives. (fn. 57a) It afterwards
came to John Wilson, and was granted in 1576–7 to
Richard Master. (fn. 58) There was also a water-mill called
Batchworth Mill, and a fishery called Blacketts Mill
in Rickmansworth. (fn. 59) Batchworth Mill was later used
as a cotton mill, but was bought in 1820 by Messrs.
John Dickinson & Co., and converted into paper
mills. (fn. 60) It is now being pulled down and the site
used by the Rickmansworth and Uxbridge Valley
Water Company.
A mill at Croxley was given by Richard de Croxley
to the church of St. Mary, Clerkenwell. (fn. 61) There are
now mills on the Gade at Croxley called Croxley
Paper Mills, built in 1830, and owned by Messrs.
John Dickinson & Co. (fn. 62) There was also a paper mill
at Mill End on the Colne, which in 1881 belonged
to Mr. George Austin, (fn. 63) and now belongs to Peter
Clutterbuck, J.P. At Scots Bridge on the Chess, at
Croxley Green, there is a mill, formerly a paper mill. It
was sold in 1848 by Thomas Weedon to Herbert
Ingram, who sold it ten years later to William
McMurray. (fn. 64) It now belongs to the International
Photo Printing Syndicate, Limited. Loudwater Mill
also belonged to William McMurray, but has now
been demolished. At the junction of the three rivers,
the Colne, the Chess, and the Gade, just outside
Rickmansworth, there is a corn mill. Troy Mill is
on the Colne in the detached part of Rickmansworth
Rural.
Like many other of the tenants of the abbey of
St. Albans, at the time of Wat Tyler's rebellion the
men of Rickmansworth extorted from the abbot a
charter of liberties, two forms of which, both dated
1381, are given in the Gesta Abbatum. The inhabitants of Rickmansworth living within certain
boundaries obtained licence to sell and alienate their
land to whomsoever they would, paying to the abbot
and convent an annual rent for all services and demands. All the tenants were to have free fishing in
the water called 'Pichelesborne,' as was the custom,
and also free common in Burymore in Batchworth,
for all their animals except pigs and geese, paying to
the abbot 3d. annually for each animal. In the
second charter, licence to fish in the water called
'Gatesey,' and free common in Heyghmore, Hallemore, and Battesmore, with the same restrictions and
for the same payment, were added to the liberties
mentioned above, and the boundaries within which
the tenants enjoyed these liberties are different. (fn. 65)
The first mention we find of the manor of MOOR
(La More) is about 1182, when it was given by the
abbot of St. Albans to Adam Agnū [Aignel], in
exchange for two hides and a half in Horwood. It
had formerly been held by Master Ambrose, and was
from thenceforth to be held of the abbot for a rent
of 10s. and foreign service due from it to the king. (fn. 66)
From Adam it descended to his great great grandson
John son of William Aignel, who died in 1364,
holding it of the abbot and convent of St. Albans
by knight service. (fn. 67)
In an inquisition taken on his death it was found
that the manor was held of the king by petty serjeanty of rendering one axe, and the manor comprised
a principal messuage, 40 acres of land, 18 acres of
meadow, and 3 acres of pasture. On this account
the king claimed the custody of John son of John
Aignel, who was a child of three years. But the
abbot disputed this finding, and judgement was given
in his favour in 1366. (fn. 68) Katherine, wife of John
Aignel, afterwards married Andrew de Bures, who
sued the abbot for Katherine's dower in the manor. (fn. 69)
In 1416 Katherine, wife of William Curteys, late
wife of John Aignel, probably the infant son of
John son of William, conveyed the manor to William Flete and others, (fn. 70) and in the same year John
Impey and Joan his wife, kinswoman and heir of
John Aignel, conveyed their interest in the manor to
the same feoffees. (fn. 71) Under William Flete as tenant
the park of Moor was inclosed in 1426, when he
and his co-feoffees obtained licence to crenellate,
enturret, and embattle with stone, lime and 'brik'
their manor of Moor, and to impark 600 acres of
land in the wood there. (fn. 72) This tenant caused the
abbot trouble as to the services due for this manor
and various others which he held of the abbot in
Rickmansworth, by quoting the inquisition on the
death of John Aignel, which had been proved to be
a wrong finding. Judgement was again in 1431
given in favour of the abbot, and William was forced
to do the services due and pay arrears of rent. (fn. 73) In
this suit it is stated that the manor of Moor was
held by the service of finding a horse for the abbot
every time he rode to his cell of Tynemouth. (fn. 74) In
1456 the manor had by some means come to Sir
Ralph Boteler, Lord of Sudeley, and the abbot,
taking advantage of the fact that Sir Ralph was an
upright man, thought that he now had a good
opportunity of settling once for all the difficulty of
the overlordship of this manor. He, therefore, in
exchange for certain tenements in London on the
Thames, confirmed the manors of Moor, Ashleys,
Britwell, Batchworth, and Eastbury to Sir Ralph, quit
of all services and rents, except a rent of 1d. for each
manor in recognition of the fact that it was held of
the abbey. (fn. 75) Shortly after this time, however, Sir
Ralph lost his only son and heir, Sir Thomas Boteler,
and on this account determined to sell the reversion
of the manor after his death and that of his wife
Elizabeth, and expend the produce on pious uses. (fn. 76)
The abbot, thinking that it would save him much
future trouble, determined to buy it, and with the
aid of Lady Sudeley, his kinswoman, an agreement
was made by which he purchased it for 3,000 marks,
and the prayers of the convent for Sir Ralph, his
wife and son. (fn. 77) The manor was conveyed in 1460
to trustees, John Eure, Thomas Clopton, and others,
who conveyed it in the same year to the abbot and
convent. (fn. 78) It was apparently afterwards sold to
George Nevill, archbishop of York, brother of the
'king maker,' (fn. 79) who lived there during 1470, (fn. 80) when
his brother Warwick and the duke of Clarence had
been driven out of the country. He spent the
Christmas of 1471 at the Moor entertaining his
friend John Paston. After a visit of the archbishop
to Edward IV at Windsor, the king invited himself
to return the visit at the Moor. The archbishop
preceded him and made great preparations, bringing
out all the plate which he had hidden after Barnet
and Tewkesbury. But the day before the king was
to come Nevill was summoned to Windsor and put
under arrest on a charge of corresponding with the exiled
earl of Oxford. The king seized the manor of Moor,
with goods said to have been worth £20,000, (fn. 81) and
the custody of the park was granted in 1475 to John
Hawdeles. (fn. 82) The manor appears to have been granted
to the dean and canons of St. George's, Windsor, at
about this time, (fn. 83) and they, at the desire of the king,
granted it to him again in 1483. (fn. 84) In 1484 the
custody of the park was granted to Edward Gower, (fn. 85)
and the manor of Moor was granted in 1486 to
John de Vere, earl of Oxford, and Margaret his wife
and the heirs of their bodies. (fn. 86) John died without
surviving issue in 1513, (fn. 87) whereupon the manor again
came to the crown.

Wolsey, Cardinal. Sable a cross engrailed argent and thereon a lion passant gules between four leopards' heads azure with a chief or having a rose gules between two Cornish choughs therein.
It was immediately leased for seventy years to
Thomas Ruthall, bishop of Durham, (fn. 88) and in 1515
the king granted the manor, subject to the above
lease, to feoffees, Bartholomew
Westby and others, in trust for
Thomas abbot of St. Albans,
who in return gave the king
3,000 marks and certain lands
at the Steel Yard and Baynards
Castle in London. (fn. 89) In November following Bartholomew
Westby and his co-feoffees
conveyed their interest to the
abbot and convent. (fn. 90) Up to
the middle of 1518 the bishop
of Durham held the manor
under the lease above referred
to and resided there periodically, (fn. 91) but before April, 1520,
Thomas Ramridge, abbot of
St. Albans, must have compounded with him for the remainder of the lease,
as we find the abbot was at that time in possession. (fn. 92) Wolsey was elected abbot of St. Albans
between 1516 and 1521, (fn. 93) and perhaps in this
capacity came into possession of the Moor, which
he made one of his chief residences, and there
kept great state, frequently entertaining the king and
his court. He enlarged the house, and seems to have
maintained the gardens at great cost. (fn. 94) It would
appear that he also enlarged the park, for he expelled
one of his tenants from a messuage called Tollpotts
and 170 acres of land, and inclosed part of it within
the park, and made another part into a highway
leading from Rickmansworth to Watford. (fn. 95)
Here on 30 August, 1525, was concluded the
important treaty of peace between England and
France known as the Treaty of The Moor. Wolsey,
Norfolk, Suffolk, Warham, the bishop of Ely, and
others were present on behalf of Henry, and Brinon
and John Joachim on behalf of Francis. On
6 September following, the proclamation for peace
was issued from the Moor. (fn. 95a) On the fall of Wolsey this
manor seems to have been seized by the king, who
made it one of his principal residences, (fn. 96) and sent
Queen Katherine of Arragon there during the divorce
proceedings against her, (fn. 97) but as in 1531 the Moor
is mentioned as a house belonging to the abbey of
St. Albans, (fn. 98) Henry's possession at this time was
probably only permissive.
He granted the custody of the manor with 4d. a
day to Sir John Russell for life in 1529. (fn. 99) Sir John
was created earl of Bedford, (fn. 100) and surrendered the
custody to the king in 1531, (fn. 101) when it was again
granted to him and his son Francis for their lives. (fn. 102)
In 1531, probably to make his claim to the manor
secure, Henry VIII obtained a grant of it from
Robert, abbot of St. Albans, the successor of Wolsey,
in exchange for the possessions of the priory of
Pray. (fn. 103)

Russell. Argent a lion gules and a chief sable with three scallops argent therein.
Sir John Russell, keeper of the park, in 1533
addressed numerous complaints to Cromwell as to
the dilapidated state of the
park palings, for the repair of
which he was allowed no supplies. He stated that those
who went to the park with
carriages broke down the
hedges and made highways
through it. The garden also
was in a ruined state, and
of 400 or 500 deer only
100 remained, as they broke
out from the park, and were
killed daily. The king allowed
the gardener only 6d. a day,
and at that wage no one would
undertake the work. In a later letter Sir John stated
that the paling of the park would be 1,500 poles,
and that he had felled 200 oaks for the purpose.
In Wolsey's days £40 to £50 a year had been spent
upon the upkeep of the gardens alone. (fn. 104)
The Count Palatine paid a visit to Henry VIII at
Moor Park in 1539. (fn. 104a) In 1540 the king gave the
manor of Moor to Anne of Cleves for life, as a jointure after her divorce, (fn. 105) and frequent meetings of the
Privy Council took place here in 1542. (fn. 105a) In 1556
it was annexed to the Duchy of Lancaster. (fn. 106) It
was granted in 1576 to Francis, earl of Bedford, (fn. 107)
and his heirs male with reversion to the queen.
The manor was granted in 1614 to Anne, Lady
Harrington, (fn. 108) and in 1617–18 to Edward Woodward
and others, who also obtained a grant of free warren
in 1620, (fn. 109) but they held the manor only as trustees
for Edward, earl of Bedford, grandson of Francis.
A lease of the manor for 200 years was made by
Edward, earl of Bedford, in 1617 to Henry Baker,
Sir Thomas Smith, and Sir Richard Smith. (fn. 110) Various
conveyances of the manor took place between 1617
and 1624, (fn. 111) probably for the purposes of settlements,
and in 1626–7 Edward, earl of Bedford, and Lucy
his wife, Edward Woodward and others sold it to
William, earl of Pembroke. (fn. 112) William died in 1630
leaving Philip his brother and heir, (fn. 113) who sold the
manor to Sir Charles Harbord in 1631, (fn. 114) and the
park with the mansion to Robert Carey, earl of Monmouth. (fn. 115) Sir Charles held the manor until 1655,
when he sold it to Sir Richard Franklin of Moor
Park. (fn. 116) In 1672 Sir Richard sold it to Sir John
Bucknall, (fn. 117) who was succeeded by his son William.
His son John Askell Bucknall, who succeeded to the
manor in 1746, (fn. 118) conveyed it in 1761 to Thomas
Sheppard, probably for the purposes of a settlement. (fn. 119)
John died unmarried in 1796, and bequeathed this
manor in tail male to his nephews William and Harbottle, second and third sons of his sister Mary, wife
of James, Viscount Grimston, (fn. 120) and to their sister Jane
wife of Thomas Estcourt of
Estcourt. (fn. 121) William Grimston
on succeeding to the manor
adopted the surname of Bucknall in compliance with his
uncle's will, and died without
issue in 1814. (fn. 122) The manor
came to his brother Harbottle,
who dying unmarried in 1823
was succeeded by his sister
Mrs. Estcourt. On her death
in 1829 the manor came to
her son, Thomas Grimston
Bucknall Estcourt, who was
succeeded in 1853 by his son
Thomas Henry Sutton Sotheron Estcourt, who assumed
the surname of his father-in-law, Sotheron. (fn. 123) He
in 1866 sold the manor to the Rt. Hon. Lord Ebury,
in whose eldest son and successor, Robert Wellesley,
both manor and park are now vested.

Estcourt. Ermine a chief indented gules with three six-pointed molets or therein, all in a border or charged with cinquefoils sable.
Robert Carey, earl of Monmouth, died at Moor
Park in 1639 (fn. 124) and was succeeded by his son Henry, (fn. 125)
who sold the park to Sir Richard Franklin in 1652. (fn. 126)
Sir Richard bought the manor three years later and
thus for a short time the manor and park were united.
He sold the park in 1663 to James Butler, first duke
of Ormonde, (fn. 127) who being a strenuous supporter of
the house of Stuart, but poorly rewarded at the
Restoration, was obliged to sell Moor Park in 1670
to James FitzRoy, duke of Monmouth. (fn. 128) Upon his
execution in 1685 for his insurrection against James II,
his estates were forfeited to the crown, but in 1686
Moor Park was restored to his widow, the duchess of
Monmouth, (fn. 129) who sold it in 1720 to Benjamin
Heskin Styles. (fn. 130) Mr. Styles died in 1739, and under
his will Moor Park was sold in 1754 to Lord Anson, (fn. 131)
who died in 1762 leaving his estates to his brother,
Thomas Anson. In the following year Mr. Anson
sold the estate to Sir Lawrence Dundas, bart., on
whose death in 1781 it came to his son, Sir Thomas
Dundas. (fn. 132) He sold it in 1785 to Thomas Bates
Rous, who died in 1799 (fn. 133) without issue, leaving the
estate to his widow. (fn. 134) In
1806 Arthur Edward Howman and Louisa Jane his wife,
who may have been the widow
of Mr. Rous, sold a third part
of the manor of Moor to
Robert Williams and William
Williams. (fn. 135) Robert Williams
died in 1814, (fn. 136) and was succeeded by his son Robert, (fn. 137)
who in 1828 sold Moor Park
to Robert, second earl of
Grosvenor, (fn. 138) who was afterwards created marquis of Westminster. (fn. 139) On his death in
1845 Moor Park came to his third son Robert
Grosvenor, created Lord Ebury in 1857, (fn. 140) and in his
eldest son it is now vested.

Grosvenor, Lord Ebury. Azure a sheaf or with the difference of a molet.
The site of the ancient house, marked by two
moated inclosures, is about a third of a mile northeast of the present building, and on much lower
ground. The site of the present building is nearly
300 ft. above sea level, and was, as it is said, first
occupied by a house built by the duke of Monmouth
in 1673, which must have been almost completely
destroyed by Leoni in the second quarter of the
eighteenth century, when he laid out the existing
building for the successful South Sea speculator,
Benjamin Styles. It faces north-east and south-west,
the entrance being from the latter direction. Externally the elevations are pilastered; that on the northwest is developed into a tetrastyle portico, while the
other, which is the garden front, has in place of the
portico a central bay, treated with engaged columns,
and carried slightly in advance of the main wall face.
The details and proportions are of the most correct
type, while the scale is monumental and handled with
considerable skill. The material is Portland stone.
There were originally two wings right and left of
the entrance front and connected with the main
block by colonnades, but these were pulled down by
Mr. Rous, who acquired the place in 1785, to the
great detriment of the composition.
In plan the house is as typical of its time as in
design and decoration. The portico opens to a large
hall of the ideal cubical proportion, on either side of
which are smaller apartments, the grand staircase
being on the left. Beyond the hall is the saloon,
occupying the central bay of the garden front, and
from it open two suites of smaller drawing-rooms
which serve as ante-rooms to the grand dining-room
on the left, and to the 'white drawing-room' on the
right.
The hall is decorated with elaborate paintings by
Amiconi representing the story of Io and Argus.
The ceiling is painted to represent the lantern of a
dome, and there is a gallery at the first-floor level.
The five doorways have elaborate entablatures and
are somewhat overloaded with colossal statuary all in
white marble, while the floor is paved with large
slabs of polished marble. The staircase and saloon
are also decorated with paintings; in the case of the
latter by Sir John Thornhill, under whose superintendence the decorations generally were carried out.
The smaller drawing-rooms and the dining-room have
some early examples of Chinese wall-papers, that in
the dining-room being a remarkably fine one. The
mantelpiece of the dining-room, of white marble, is a
beautiful piece of work of late eighteenth-century
date with two caryatides supporting the shelf and a
frieze of exquisitely modelled dancing figures on a
background of lapis lazuli. The white drawing-room
is also most elaborate in its decorations, which in this
case are purely plastic. The ceiling is decorated with
mythological subjects in very high relief, and the walls
are panelled with elaborately-worked enriched mouldings. On the north-east is the Italian garden, apparently in its present state the work of Launcelot
Brown, who was employed during Lord Anson's
ownership, and to whom are also largely due the socalled 'Old Pleasure Gardens,' some 200 yds. southeast of the house. The main entrance to the park is
from Batchworth Heath, and there are also gates
towards Watford and Rickmansworth, and near the
latter, and separated from the park by the Watford
road, is a charming garden of an informal type with
a thatched cottage and summer-house said to be the
work of the Adam brothers, of early nineteenth-century date and probably by a pupil. The artificial
landscape gardening of 'Capability' Brown, referred
to in his customary disparaging manner by Pope, (fn. 141)
has left many traces to the present day, and the park
is very well timbered and contains a herd of fallow
deer.
Sir William Temple commends the garden as one
of the best laid out in the kingdom. Mr. Styles cut
a vista through the hill towards Watford, and another
towards Uxbridge.
From a survey of the manor of Moor made in
1556, it appears that the lord of the manor had
rights of fishing from le Newbridge to the west end of
Croxley Hall, and the osiers in three islands called
'Eightes.' Mention is made of a tenement called the
Tilehouse adjoining the south end of the parish
church of Rickmansworth. There were two parks,
the Great Park adjoining the Place containing 830
acres, wooded chiefly by hornbeam and maple, and
the Little Park containing 208 acres, much overgrown
with fern. The first of these the surveyors proposed to
dispark and turn into arable. (fn. 142) The manor place was
at that time much decayed. There were 415 deer
in the Great Park and 90 in the Little Park. The
house called Batchworth Heath Lodge was occupied
by the earl of Bedford, the keeper of the park. (fn. 143)
The manor of CROXLEY (Crokesleya, xii cent.;
Crokeslega, xiii cent.; Crokesle, xiv cent.) is stated to
have been given to the monastery of St. Albans by
Offa, king of Mercia. (fn. 144) Richard de Croxley was one
of the knights of St. Albans in 1166, (fn. 145) and paid a
fine for land in Hertfordshire ten years later, (fn. 146) and
in 1210–12 Richard de Croxley and Philip de Oxhey
held one knight's fee of the abbot of St. Albans. (fn. 147)
Later in the thirteenth century the whole fee seems
to have come into the hands of a member of the
family of Croxley, whose Christian name is not
known, (fn. 148) and who died leaving two sons, Richard
and Roger. Richard died without heirs, and Roger
left three daughters, Petronilla de Ameneville, Beatrice
wife of John de Shelford, and Joan de Wauncy. (fn. 149)
The manor of Croxley was conveyed by the numerous
co-heirs of these three ladies to the abbot of St.
Albans, (fn. 150) and in 1303 he was holding a quarter of a
fee in Croxley without any sub-tenant, (fn. 151) and the
manor does not seem to have
been again subinfeudated at
any subsequent time.

Caius. Or powdered with gilly flowers in the midst of the chief a houseleek resting on the heads of two serpents which support between them a book sable and are set upright with their tails knotted together on a square stone vert.
Abbot Richard in 1326
stayed at the manor-house of
Croxley on his return from
Rome, whither he went to
obtain from the pope a confirmation of his election to
the abbacy. (fn. 152) John son of
William Aignel held rent from
a tenement called Elyslond in
the hamlet of Croxley in
1364, of the abbot of St. Albans. (fn. 153)
This manor formed part of
the possessions of the abbey at
the Dissolution, and was then
held by William Baldwin under
a lease for forty-four years,
granted in 1538. (fn. 154) In 1556–7 the manor was
granted to John Kaye or Caius, (fn. 155) one of the physicians
of the royal household. In 1557 he refounded Gonville Hall where he had been educated, and to this
college, which from that time became known as
Gonville and Caius College, he granted the manor
of Croxley. (fn. 156) From this time the manor has remained in the possession of the master and fellows of
Caius College.
The existing manor-house was probably built about
the end of the sixteenth century. The exterior has
been much modernized and refaced with brick. Judging from the existing plan of the house, it would seem
to have consisted of a central hall extending from front
to back of the house. On the west side of the hall is an
old panelled parlour, and on the east side is the front
entrance with a narrow corridor, and a wing containing the kitchen offices. The building is of two stories.
At the west end of the house is a very massive old
projecting chimney of brick. Through the lower part
of this projecting brickwork is a deep arched opening
with a window into the parlour. This window, pierced
through the base of the chimney, appears to be an
original feature, and is somewhat unusual. The bricks
of this chimney are not more than 2¼ in. thick, and
the joints are wide. These are the only old bricks
visible in the building.
The parlour which adjoins the chimney is a room
about 17 ft. square, and the walls from floor to ceiling
are covered with oak panelling with moulded margins.
A heavy beam, cased in panelling, runs along the ceiling, and is supported at the ends by solid curved struts.
The existing fireplace is modern, but immediately
above it the panels have arched heads, instead of being
square as in the rest of the room. This evidently was
intended to stand in the place of an overmantel to the
old fireplace below. The door of this room has the
quaint old forged double ornamental hinges of the
period. None of the other rooms are panelled, but
the old beams supporting the upper floor have roughly
cut splayed edges with stops. The room, or old hall,
adjoining the parlour has the remains of an ingle-nook,
but the fireplace is modern.
The front door, which faces north, has a splayed
oak frame, with a low four-centred arched head. A
large baking oven projects outside, beside the fireplace
in the kitchen, and, like many others in the district,
has a tiled roof over it. All the chimneys, with the
exception of the stack at the west end, are modern,
that chimney being in fact almost the only external
sign of antiquity about the building.
Close to the manor-house and forming part of the
farm buildings is a very large and ancient tithe-barn
which dates from pre-Reformation times. It measures
internally 101 ft. long by 38 ft. 6 in. wide, and is
divided on each side into five bays by cross walls about
10 ft. long, leaving a clear passage from end to end of
the barn about 18 ft. 6 in. wide. These cross walls
and the external walls, which are about 5 ft. in height
from the floor, are built of flint with quoins and coping
of Totternhoe stone, though in many places outside
the walls have been patched with brick, and on the
west side where the ground slopes steeply down from
north to south, some buttresses of seventeenth-century
brickwork have been built.
The timber of the roof appears to be of chestnut,
though it is admittedly difficult to distinguish old
chestnut from old oak, and both timbers are recorded
to have been employed in mediaeval times.
In the centre of the east side is a lofty transept with
wide folding doors, and the main roof on that side is
carried down unbroken, so as to form low external
sheds against the barn, thus giving an immense sweep
of red tiled roof, and the picturesque appearance is
enhanced by the natural slope of the ground, which
is 15 ft. above the floor line at the north end of the
barn, and 4 ft. below it at the south end.
The height inside from floor to ridge is about
35 ft. and the cubical contents of the barn exceed
100,000 cubic feet.
A messuage or a manor called CROSLEY (now
called Parrot's Farm) was conveyed in 1541 by John
Wingbourn to Ralph Morres, (fn. 157) and in 1562 Ralph
Maurice and Henry Wingbourn and Elizabeth his
wife sold it to Henry Mayne. (fn. 158) Henry died seised of
it in 1605 leaving James his son and heir. The
messuage was held at this time of the master and
college of Gonville and Caius as of their manor of
Croxley. (fn. 159) James died seised of the estate in 1642
leaving John his son and heir, (fn. 160) who died unmarried
shortly afterwards, and was succeeded by his sisters,
Mary, afterwards the wife of Thomas Engham, and
Sarah, the wife of William Glascocke. Mary and her
husband sold their moiety of the manor in 1656 to
Daniel Parrett, (fn. 161) and in 1673 Sarah and William sold
their share to Daniel son of the said Daniel Parrett. (fn. 162)
From him the estate passed to his son Daniel, who
bequeathed it to his son-in-law Jeremiah Smith,
husband of his daughter Anne, who sold it in 1798
to Lord Clarendon. He sold it in the following year
to Humphry Cornwall Woolrych, (fn. 163) who, dying in
1816, was succeeded by his only son Humphry
William Woolrych, serjeant-at-law. He died in 1871
and the estate came to his third son William Richard,
the present possessor. (fn. 164)

Hyde. Azure a cheveron between three lozenges or.
Parrot's Farm is part of the CROXLEY HOUSE
estate which comprises about 265 acres. The house
occupies the site of two older tenements known as
'Harry Smith's' and 'Harwards' or 'Harwells.' In
1620 William Sansome conveyed 'Harry Smith's' to
trustees to the use of Mary, wife of Richard Tompson
of Watford, who by her will, proved in 1653, gave it
to her grandchild Mary wife of John Beckett. (fn. 165) It
subsequently came to the Tuffens, descendants of Mary
Tompson, and was conveyed
in 1737 by Richard Tuffen
to Solomon Andronin of Watford, who sold it in 1767 to
Thomas, Lord Hyde, afterwards
earl of Clarendon. (fn. 166) He built
the present house in 1770
and it was sold in 1794 by
his son Thomas, second earl
of Clarendon, to Humphry
Cornwall Woolrych. The
house was considerably enlarged and the name changed to Croxley House, (fn. 167)
which is now the residence of Mr. William Richard
Woolrych.
CROXLEY GROVE
CROXLEY GROVE, on the edge of the green at
the end of Baldwin's Lane, was built in 1834 by Miss
Mary Bentley, great aunt of Mr. William Richard
Woolrych, to whom it now belongs. (fn. 168) It is now the
residence of Miss Dugdale.

Woolrych. Azure a cheveron between three swans argent.
The manor of SNELLESHALL was acquired by
Abbot Thomas (1349–96) of
William, son of William Melman, for £80, (fn. 169) and it afterwards became annexed to the
manor of Croxley, (fn. 169a) and
passed with it to the master
and fellows of Caius College,
to whom it now belongs.
The site of the manor is lost.
Five manors (manenses) in
PINCHFIELD (Pynesfield)
were granted to the abbey of
St. Albans by Egfrid son of
Offa in 796. (fn. 170) William Pinefeld held land of the abbot of St. Albans in 1166. (fn. 171)
Land in Pinchfield was acquired by Abbot Roger in
the latter part of the thirteenth century of John de
Britewelle, (fn. 172) and the manor was mortgaged by Abbot
Hugh (1308–26) for sixteen years to Simon de Skote. (fn. 173)
The manor remained among the possessions of the
abbey until the suppression of the monastery, at which
time it was leased to John Randulph for forty-one
years. (fn. 174) It was apparently granted with the manor
of Rickmansworth to the bishop of London, in 1550,
for in 1591 John, bishop of London, surrendered it
to Queen Elizabeth, (fn. 175) and by her it was leased for
fifty years in 1591–2 to George Kirkham. (fn. 176) It afterwards descended with Rickmansworth (fn. 177) (q.v.) until
1806, when it was sold by
Henry Fotherley Whitfield to
the trustees of the will of Peter
Isaac Thellusson. (fn. 178) It is now
vested in his descendant, Mr.
Charles Thellusson, of Brodsworth Hall, Doncaster.

Thellusson. Quarterly wavy argent and or, in the first and fourth quarters two wings set fessewise sable each having a golden trefoil upon it and in the second and third quarters an oak tree torn up by the roots having a scutcheon gules with three drops argent hanging from the branches.
The manor of BIGGING
was granted by Edward de
Montibus, son and heir of
Eubold de Montibus, to his
wife, Margaret Pippard, for
her life, probably about the
middle of the fourteenth century. (fn. 179) Edward's eldest son
alienated the manor by fine
to Thomas Cheyne, who died
without issue. (fn. 180) Margaret,
however, survived him for a
long time, and on her death,
at the beginning of the fifteenth century, the abbot took possession of the
manor, probably owing to lack of an heir. (fn. 181)
In 1392–3 it was held by Henry de Chilterne
when a valuation of his lands was taken for debt. (fn. 182)
In 1535 John and George Wyngborn, sons of
George Wyngborn and Emma his wife, then wife
of George Herd, conveyed the manors of Bigging and
Fordes to Robert Curson, William Andrew and Robert
Andrew. (fn. 183) The manors were held by Emma and
George Herd for the life of Emma. (fn. 184) All trace of
this manor has long since been lost, and not even the
name of Bigging survives at Rickmansworth.
The manor of BATCHWORTH (Becceswurtha, xi
cent.; Bachesworth, xiv cent.; Baccheworthe, xv cent.)
is said to have been granted to the church of St. Albans
by Offa, (fn. 185) and was afterwards held of the abbey by
the service of a quarter of a knight's fee, and suit at
the hundred of Cashio. (fn. 186) In 1238–9 Geoffrey Est
conveyed a virgate and a half of land in Batchworth
to Richard Blaket, (fn. 187) and in 1328 Thomas, son of
William Blaket, obtained a grant of free warren in his
demesnes of Rickmansworth. (fn. 188) In 1456 a messuage
and four cottages in Rickmansworth, which formerly
belonged to Thomas Blaket, were held by Ralph le
Boteler, lord of Sudeley, of the abbot of St. Albans. (fn. 189)
The Blakets do not appear, however, to have held the
manor of Batchworth, for in 1289–90 Philip Burnel
conveyed it to John de Wanton and Margaret his
wife. (fn. 190) Agnes daughter of Hugh de Bachesworth
in 1221 claimed two messuages and half a virgate of
land in Batchworth, which were held by her uncle
Bartholomew the goldsmith. The jurors, however,
said that Hugh had never been seised of the tenement,
and that Agnes had no claim in it. (fn. 191) The manor was
held in 1301 by Richard de Bachesworth to whom it
had been granted about 1294 by his brother Roger. (fn. 192)
Roger de Bachesworth was holding land in 1244 and
1257 by knight service of the abbey of St. Albans, (fn. 193)
and in 1258 Geoffrey de Bachesworth presented a piece
of silken cloth to the abbey. (fn. 194) Isabel the wife of
Roger de Oxford recovered seisin of the manor in
1307–8 against John de Bachesworth, Margaret
daughter of Richard de Bachesworth, Elizabeth, Joan,
and Oraseth, sisters of Margaret and others. Margaret
claimed this manor jointly with her sisters as heirs of
their father Richard, who had held the manor by gift
of his father, Richard de Bachesworth. (fn. 195) Isabel, wife
of Roger de Oxford, claimed and recovered the manor
against the four sisters, (fn. 196) and in 1309–10 she conveyed
the manor to Roger de Frowyk, called 'le orfeure' or
the goldsmith, and Idonea his wife, and John their
son. (fn. 197) Richard de Bachesworth put in a claim,
but in 1311–12 he renounced it to Roger and
Idonea. (fn. 198) To this conveyance John son of John de
Dene and Margaret his wife, and Elizabeth sister of
Margaret, probably the daughters of Richard de
Bachesworth mentioned above, opposed their claim, (fn. 199)
but the question seems to have been settled in favour
of Roger de Frowyk, who in 1314–15 granted the
manor to his son John and Isabel his wife. (fn. 200) It
would seem that Isabel, or perhaps one of her daughters,
married Robert de Ashele, for in 1324–5 the reversion
after the death of Isabel, wife of Robert de Ashele,
was granted to John de Latimer and his heirs by John
Merlyn. (fn. 201)
John de Latimer in 1331–2 granted the manor to
John de Swanlond, parson of the church of Middleton. (fn. 202) This conveyance was made for the purpose
of a settlement on the children of Simon de Swanlond, i.e. Simon, William, John, Matilda, Elizabeth,
and Katherine in fee tail. (fn. 203) In 1385–6 William
Swanlond was lord of the manor, (fn. 204) and from him it
came to William Hampton. (fn. 205) In 1415–16 Richard
Selley, John Phelip, Richard Hampton, and others
held this manor for the life of William Hampton and
Joan his wife of the inheritance of John Cristemasse,
who granted the reversion to Edmund Brudenell and
Alice his wife, (fn. 206) and in the following year William
Shrewsbury, clerk, and John Bentley granted the
manor to William Flete. (fn. 207) William held the manor
in 1431 of the abbot of St. Albans for a third part
of a knight's fee, and aid, and suit at the court of the
hundred of Cashio every three weeks. (fn. 208) In 1435–6
Robert son of Henry Brudenell released to Thomas
Wandesford, William Flete, and others all his rights
in the manor of Batchworth. (fn. 209) The manor afterwards passed to Sir Ralph Boteler, lord of Sudeley, (fn. 210)
probably in the same way as the manor of Moor, (fn. 211)
with which it has passed to Lord Ebury.
In the reign of Henry VIII Thomas Ayleward died
seised of a capital messuage called Batchworth Hall,
which descended to his daughter Agnes, wife of John
Algood of Langley Mareis. (fn. 212) In 1520 John Heed
surrendered into the hands of the lord of the manor
of Moor the site of the manor of Hampton Hall, or
Batchworth Hall, lately in tenure of John Ayleward
and Helen his wife. The said site was then granted
to John Heed and Joan his wife. (fn. 213) In 1684 Gideon
Awnsham sold to Jermingham Chaplin the capital
messuage called Hampton Hall for a term of 500
years as a security for the payment of a certain sum
of money to Jermingham. Gideon, by his will, devised the estate to his wife Margaret Awnsham for
life, with remainder to his right heirs. After Gideon's
death Margaret purchased the reversion in 1685 from
Nicholas Awnsham, cousin and heir of Gideon, and
in 1694 Jermingham sold his interest in the manor
for the rest of the term of 500 years to Thomas Day
of Bray. Margaret sold the estate in 1700 to Henry
Warren and his heirs, and in 1705–6 Richard Phrip
purchased the estate from Henry Warren, and the
interest for the remainder of the term from Thomas
Day, thereby becoming the absolute possessor of the
estate. (fn. 214)
Hampton Hall, the old manor-house, has long
since fallen into decay, but the walls still stand.
The site is at the foot of the hill on which is Moor
Park.
The manor of ASHLEYS (Ashele), consisting of a
messuage, 1 carucate of land, 14 acres of meadow,
10 acres of pasture, and 5 acres of wood, together
with a virgate of land called Hawkwelleslond, and
4s. of rent was held by John son of William Aignel,
who died in 1364 leaving a son John aged three years.
In the inquisition taken on the death of John the
manor was said to be held of the heirs of Stephen
atte Grove in free socage for a service of 4d., and was
worth by the year £4. (fn. 215) This estate with others in
Rickmansworth was burdened with a rent of £20 per
annum for the life of John de Chilterne, father-inlaw of John Aignel, by grant of the said John. (fn. 216)
The finding of this inquisition was disputed by the
abbot of St. Albans, who claimed that John held the
manor of him by knight service, (fn. 217) and he also denied
that it was burdened with any rent to John de Chilterne, (fn. 218) whom he accused of intruding on the possession of the abbot. The finding of the jury was in
favour of the abbot, and seisin of the manor with the
custody of the heir was delivered to him in 1366. (fn. 219)
In 1416 Katherine wife of John Curteys, formerly
wife of John Aignel, and John Impey and Joan his
wife, kinswoman and heir of John Aignel, conveyed
their respective rights in the manor to William Flete
and others. (fn. 220) In 1431 a dispute arose between the
abbot and William Flete as to the tenure of this
manor. William, quoting the inquisition on the death
of John Aignel, claimed to hold it of the heir of
Stephen atte Grove, who had granted the manor by
fine to Robert de Ashele, it having been previously
held by William de Ashele. William Flete now
claimed the status of Robert in the manor. The
abbot acknowledged that there had been such a fine,
but that the said heir of Stephen atte Grove had held
the manor of the abbot, so that the effect of the fine
was to make Robert the immediate tenant of the
abbot. The jury again in this case upheld the right
of the abbot.
The site of the manor of Ashele was in the
hamlet of Batchworth, and it was parcel of Danielshide, which in turn was parcel of the abbot's manor
of Rickmansworth. The abbot had been seised
of services for this manor from time immemorial,
and it was held for a twenty-first part of a knight's
fee. (fn. 221) From this point the descent of the manor
is identical with that of Moor, in which it appears
to have become merged after the Dissolution. All
trace of the manor of Ashleys has now disappeared.
The manor of BRITWELL (Brittewell, Brutewell)
was held of the abbot of St. Albans by the service of
suit of court, (fn. 222) and was said to have been granted to
the abbey by Offa. (fn. 223) In the early part of the
thirteenth century Alice de Bretwelle held one hide
in Rickmansworth, (fn. 224) and in 1225 land in Britwell
was held by Peter de Bretwelle, against whom it was
claimed by John de Wittenham and Alice his wife
and Richard Grimbald and Martina his wife. (fn. 225)
Land in Britwell, formerly held by William son of
John de Shelforde, was held in the thirteenth century
by John de Britwell, and the abbot commuted his
service from suit of court to knight service in the
king's army. (fn. 226) In 1301–2 this land had come to coheirs whose names are not given, (fn. 227) and in 1303
Thomas de Wymundesham held a sixth part of a
knight's fee of the abbot of St. Albans in Britwell. (fn. 228)
John de Watford held this fee in 1320–1, (fn. 229) and in
1364 the manor under the name of a tenement called
'Brutewelles' was in the hands of John de Chilterne, (fn. 230)
who conveyed it in this year to Ralph de Harpele,
rector of 'Scheringe,' and Ralph Megre, chaplain. (fn. 231)
These grantees conveyed it in 1366 to Richard son
of Richard de Hemington and John son of John de
Radeswell, sons of Margery and Margaret, daughters
of John de Chilterne. The manor was to be held
by Richard and John for their lives with remainder
in tail male to Henry and Pain, sons of John de
Chilterne, and to Andrew de Bures, Richard de Hemington, John de Radeswelle, and John Aignel, grandchildren of John de Chilterne. (fn. 232) Henry de Chilterne
granted this manor in 1371–2 to Edmund de Gessinge and Katherine his wife and their heirs and
assigns for ever. (fn. 233) In 1381 Philip Bluet and Katherine his wife, who was the daughter of John de
Chilterne, conveyed the manor to John de Raddeswelle and Richard de Hemington, (fn. 234) and this conveyance was confirmed by Henry and Pain de Chilterne,
brothers of Katherine. (fn. 235) Richard and John then reconveyed it to Philip and Katherine to be held by
them for their lives for a rent of six marks to John
and Richard, with reversion after the death of Philip
and Katherine to John and Richard, and their heirs. (fn. 236)
In 1410–11, this same Katherine who was then the
wife of John Gloucester and her son Andrew Bures
conveyed the manor to Henry, bishop of Winchester,
William Flete and others, and this grant was confirmed by Pain de Chilterne. (fn. 237) They in return
granted Katherine a rent of 100s. from the manor. (fn. 238)
In 1414 Katherine, the wife of William Creke or
Creyke, daughter of Henry de Chilterne and Eleanor
his wife, (fn. 239) granted the manor to William Flete and
John Deryng, two of the grantees mentioned above,
probably in confirmation of the grant of Katherine
her aunt, as heiress of her father Henry. (fn. 240)
William Flete in 1431 claimed to hold this manor
partly of Robert de Louthe at a rent, and partly as of
the manor of Moor, which William himself held at
that time. The manor had once belonged to
Thomas Wymundham and afterwards to John Watford, clerk. (fn. 241) The abbot, however, said that William
Flete bought the manor, and that it was held of the
abbot for homage and fealty and rent, and it was
decided in the courts of law that the abbot was justified in his claim. (fn. 242) From this time the manor of
Britwell descended with the manor of Moor (q.v.),
and its site is now marked by Brightwells Farm in
Watford parish, near to Hamper Mills. This farm
was held in 1556 by copy of court roll of the manor
of Moor, by Thomas and William Wedon. (fn. 243)
The manor of MICKLEFIFLD or MICKLEFIELD HALL (Mekelfeld) is said to have been granted
to St. Albans by Offa. (fn. 244) Land in the vill of Micklefield was obtained: or the abbey of St. Albans under
Abbot Roger (1260–90) from John de la Grave and
Petronilla his wife. (fn. 245) In 1308 Thomas de Mickelfield died seised of the manor which he held of the
abbot of St. Albans. (fn. 246) John de Chilterne in 1364–6
settled this manor on his grandsons Richard de
Hemington and John de Radeswelle, with remainder
to Henry and Pain, sons of John de Chilterne, and
others in tail male. (fn. 247) In 1392–3 it was in the possession of Henry de Chilterne, (fn. 248) from whom it
descended to his daughter Katherine, wife of William
Creke. (fn. 249) Pain de Chilterne claimed the manor
against William and Katherine in 1419–20, (fn. 250) but
the entail mentioned above seems to have been barred
by a settlement on the marriage of William Creke
and Katherine. (fn. 251) William Creke, probably son of
William and Katherine, was succeeded in 1475 by
his son Thomas, (fn. 252) who with John Creke conveyed
the manor in 1518–19 to Sir Robert Brudenell and
others. (fn. 253) This conveyance was probably made for
the purposes of a settlement, for the manor descended
from Thomas to his son William, and from him to
his son John. (fn. 254) John left three sons, William,
Stephen, and Bonaventure, who were minors at the
time of their father's death. The abbot of St. Albans
claimed the custody, as the manor was held of him as
of the manor of Croxley by knight service. Joan,
widow of John, disputed his claim, saying the manor
was held by socage tenure, and in 1537 an agreement
was made whereby the abbot gave up his claim to the
custody. (fn. 255) It would seem that Joan had good reason
for wishing to retain the custody of her sons in her
own hands, for in a letter written to Cromwell,
asking his help, she stated that 'four score years ago
the then abbot of St. Albans had, wrongfully, my
husband's grandfather to his ward. When he was
fourteen years old the abbot sold him to a fishmonger
of London, who kept him two years. The child
then ran away from the fishmonger to a knight, Sir
Davy Philip, who married him to Mr. St. John's
daughter, of Kent. The friends of the wife sued the
abbot, and proved that he was not his ward, when
the abbot gave him, in recompense for the injury, a
farm called Ballards beside Luton, and when the
young man was dissatisfied, the abbot made him
master of his game.' (fn. 256)
In 1551 the manor was settled on Joan and her
second husband Thomas Bright for their lives, with
remainder to Stephen Creke son of Joan, (fn. 257) and in
1555 the manor was held by Thomas Bright freely
by fealty and suit at court. (fn. 258) In 1573 Stephen
Creke and Olave his wife conveyed the manor to
William Revett or Ryvett, (fn. 259) and in 1591 Thomas
Ryvett and Anne his wife sold it to John Robinson. (fn. 260)
Sir John Robinson in 1700 conveyed it to John
Merrick, (fn. 261) whose son John sold it in 1712 to John
Putnam. (fn. 262) John sold the manor, with the pew in
the parish church of Rickmansworth belonging to it,
to William Emmott in 1717, (fn. 263) and he and his wife
conveyed it three years afterwards to Thomas Houghton. (fn. 264) This conveyance was, however, made for a
settlement, for William Emmott devised the manor
by will dated 10 June, 1735, to his only son and
heir Thomas, who by his will dated 13 January, 1774,
gave it to his daughter Elizabeth wife of Joseph
Skidmore, with remainder to his grandson Emmott
son of Joseph and Elizabeth. (fn. 265) On the death of
Emmott in 1836 the estate
came to his son Thomas Emmott Skidmore, who sold it
in 1844 to Thomas Clutterbuck. (fn. 266) It now belongs to
Mr. Thomas Meadows Clutterbuck.

Clutterbuck. Azure a lion ermine and in the chief three scallops or.

Day. Party cheveronwise erminois and sable with two pierced molets sable in the chief and a like molet or in the foot and between them a cross paty parted cheveronwise sable and or.
The MICKLEFIELD
GREEN ESTATE adjoins
Micklefield Hall, and was at
one time in the possession of
the family of Creke, lords of
the manor of Micklefield. In
1515 William, son and heir
apparent of Thomas Creke,
conveyed it probably for the purposes of a trust
to John Newdegate and others. (fn. 267) In 1556 Stephen
Creke sold the estate to Ralph Day of Abbots
Langley, in whose family it
remained till 1750, when it
was sold by Ralph Day to
John Merry. (fn. 268) Sixty years
later Thomas son of Ralph
bought it back, and dying in
1827 left it to his grandson
Thomas Day Branton, on
condition that he assumed the
name of Day. Thomas Branton Day died in 1862 and
was succeeded by his eldest
son Ralph Branton Day, (fn. 269)
who held in 1880. It has
descended in the family of
Day, and the present tenant
is Mr. Forbes Woodhouse.
Micklefield Green is wholly
in the parish of Rickmansworth, but adjoining lands
have been purchased from time to time, so that the
estate now extends into the parishes of Sarratt and
Watford.
The manor of NEWHALL forms part of this
estate. An account of it will be found under the
parish of Watford.
The manor of LANGLEYS or LINSTERS. In an
undated Chancery suit Thomas Congreve and Elizabeth his wife, formerly the wife of Roger Lynster,
claimed this manor against John Clyfton and Richard
Dunton. (fn. 270) At about the same time Elizabeth fell
out with Henry Lynster as to her title in this manor.
It seems that she was to dwell in the manor-house
until a certain date, and when the time came for her
to leave she refused to do so. (fn. 271) The manor consisted
of one messuage and a carucate and a half of land,
and it was held by William Heynes and William
Beaufitz in 1460, and had previously been held by
Roger Lynster. It was held at this time of the abbot
and convent of St. Albans for a rent of 9s. 11d.
which had been granted in 1456 to Sir Ralph Boteler, lord of Sudeley. (fn. 272) In 1520–1 the master of
the Savoy held land called Langleys and Congrevys,
lately of Ralph Bukberd, of the lord of the manor of
Moor. (fn. 273) When the lands of the Savoy came to the
crown this manor was granted in 1553 to the
governors of St. Thomas's Hospital, by the title of the
manor of Linsters or Langleys, (fn. 274) and they are the
present lords. The estate now consists of one farm
north of West Hyde.
The manor of WOODWICKS (Woodoakes) was
held of the abbot of St. Albans by knight service. (fn. 275)
Richard de Wodwick was holding a hide in Hertfordshire of the abbey of St. Albans in 1210–12, (fn. 276)
and a tenant of the same name held it in 1257. (fn. 277)
Richard must have died at about this time, as in 1258
the hide had passed to William de Wodwick. (fn. 278) In
1303 John de Wodwick held a seventh part of a
knight's fee in Rickmansworth of the abbot, (fn. 279) and in
1347–8 this fee had passed to William de Wodwick, (fn. 280)
and was held by his heirs in 1428. (fn. 281) The manor
of Woodwicks was held in 1570 by Robert Colte,
who with his son Roger conveyed it to Richard
Peyton and Thomas Shadbolt, (fn. 282) probably trustees
for a settlement. Roger succeeded his father and
settled it in 1570–1 upon his wife Mary, only
daughter of George Basford. (fn. 283) Roger died seised of
the manor in 1575, leaving a son John, one year
old. (fn. 284) John settled the manor in 1596 on his wife
Frances, (fn. 285) and died seised of it in 1610, (fn. 286) leaving his
son and heir John a minor. This John was afterwards knighted, and married Anne, daughter of
Albericus Gentilis, (fn. 287) an eminent writer on civil and
international law. Their daughter Gentilis married
Sir Benjamin Tichborne, who was lord of the manor
in 1700. (fn. 288) Sir Benjamin was succeeded by his son
Colte Tichborne, (fn. 289) and from Colte the manor passed
to Frances Tichborne and afterwards to James
Patten. (fn. 290) From him it came to John Sedgwick and
afterwards to William Sedgwick, but these last two
seem to have held it only
under a lease for twenty-one
years. (fn. 291) The manor was
bought in 1816 from Samuel
Leightenhouse and Hannah
his wife by Robert and William Williams, (fn. 292) and they in
1827 sold it to the Thellusson trustees. (fn. 293) The estate,
which has now lost all manorial
rights, belongs to Lord Rendlesham. The site of the
manor still remains at Woodoaks Farm in Maple Cross. Near this Farm at Warren
Hill is a remarkable echo which will repeat twelve
times to a trumpet.

Tichborne. Vira a chief or.

King's College, Cambridge. Sable three roses argent with a chief azure a fleur-de-lis or parted with gules a leopard or.
In 1314 Oliver de Burdegal [Bordeaux ?], the
king's secretary, granted to the abbey of St. Albans
land called LA TROY, now TROY FARM, 'near the
manor of Sarratt,' with the land and tenements of
Geoffrey, Turkild, and Alexander le Fool, and their
bodies and 'sequela.' These
possessions had been granted
to Oliver by the king. (fn. 294) This
grant was confirmed by Edward III in 1338. (fn. 295)
Troy farm is now in the
ecclesiastical parish of West
Hyde, and belongs to the
master and scholars of King's
College, Cambridge.
No mention of the manor
of the RECTORY of RICKMANSWORTH is found before the Dissolution. After
that time it was held by the
bishops of London (fn. 296) until
1650, when it was sold by Act of Parliament to
William Newbold and Henry Flatman. (fn. 297) At the
Restoration the manor was restored to the bishop, and
it is now vested in the Ecclesiastical Commissioners.
The parsonage house and farm belong to Mr. John
Saunders Gilliat, who bought them about 1870. The
manor-house is a fine old farm-house of brick and
rough-cast, containing some large rough-hewn beams,
and there is a picturesque old barn near, a favourite
study for artists.
CHURCH
The church of OUR LADY is not of
much architectural interest, no part of
the present building being older than
the seventeenth century. It consists of a chancel
with north chapel and south vestry and organ chamber, nave with aisles, and west tower. The tower is
dated 1630, and is a good specimen of the Gothic
work of the time, built of flint and stone in three
stages with clasping buttresses, and finished with an
embattled parapet and short leaded spirelet. The
belfry windows are of three lights with uncusped
tracery, and those in the second stage of two trefoiled
lights under square heads, while the west window of
the ground stage, above which is the stone giving the
date of the tower, has wooden tracery. Below is a
plain west doorway of a more modern date. The
aisle walls are of red brick with four-centred windowheads and wooden mullions, poor, mean-looking work
of early nineteenth-century date, and until lately the
body of the church was entirely in this style. It has
now, with this exception, been rebuilt in flint and
stone in fifteenth-century style, the chancel having
an east window of five lights, and the nave north and
south arcades of five bays with three-light clearstory
windows. The woodwork of the church is all
modern, and the font, at the south-west of the nave,
appears to be of the seventeenth century. At the
east end of the north aisle is a brass to the memory
of Thomas Day, 1613, and his two wives, and on
the north side of the chancel is the raised tomb of
Henry earl of Monmouth, 1661, with an alabaster
panel bearing his arms with supporters at the
west end.
The materials of the altar-table, a slab of black
marble carried on two white marble columns, once
formed part of this tomb.
The glass in the east window was brought here
from the church of St. John at Rouen, and is of midsixteenth-century date.
There are eight bells and a priest's bell; all the
eight are by Lester & Pack of London, 1765. There
were five bells in 1552, which are traditionally said
to have been very heavy, and to have been cast into
the present eight in 1765. (fn. 297a)
A plan of the church dated 1825, and showing its
arrangements before the rebuilding of c. 1850, is
given in Cussans's History of Hertfordshire.
The plate is a fine and interesting set, comprising
a good communion cup and cover paten of 1559; a
second cup and paten made to match the first in
1628; a large silver-gilt cup and paten, c. 1600,
bearing no marks except that of the maker, v s; a
silver-gilt flagon of 1695; and a gadrooned silver
salver of 1692, given by Lady Ann Franklin in
1694. This last has apparently been refashioned
from a piece of slightly earlier date, c. 1670, and on
it is to be seen a partly defaced shield with feather
mantling and an impaled coat, the dexter side of
which has a pheon in base, and the sinister a
cheveron and a cross paty, the upper charges being
obliterated.
The first book of the registers contains baptisms
and burials from 1653 to 1716, and marriages from
1653 to 1704; the second book, baptisms and burials
from 1704 to 1722, and marriages from 1716 to
1722; the third book contains baptisms and burials
from 1723 to 1766 and marriages from 1723 to
1753; the fourth book, baptisms and burials from
1766 to 1797; the fifth, baptisms and burials
from 1797 to 1812; the sixth, marriages from
1754 to 1798; and the seventh, marriages from 1798
to 1812. There are Bishop's Transcripts for 1570,
1581, 1590, 1592, 1593, 1596, 1598, 1599, and
1629. (fn. 297b) The first book contains, in addition to the
ordinary entries, a list of persons touched for the
king's evil by Charles II.
ADVOWSON
The church of Rickmansworth
belonged to the abbey of St. Albans,
and was confirmed to them by Pope
Honorius III in 1219. (fn. 298) It was granted by
Abbot Geoffrey to the sacrist of St. Albans. (fn. 299) At
the time of the Dissolution Henry Gunner was
farmer of the rectory. (fn. 300) In 1550 the rectory and
advowson of the vicarage were granted to Nicholas
Ridley bishop of London, (fn. 301) and in 1553–4, when
Bishop Bonner was reinstated, the advowson of Rickmansworth church was granted to him by Queen
Mary. (fn. 302) It remained vested in the bishops of London
till 1852, when it was transferred to the bishops of
Rochester, with a reservation that the bishop of
London should present to the next vacancy either of
Fairsted, Kelvedon, Southweald, Thorley, or Rickmansworth, as he should select. (fn. 303) In 1877, on the
foundation of the bishopric of St. Albans, the patronage was transferred to that see.
It appears to have been leased at various times, for
Roger Hutchinson, in his will proved in 1555, mentions a lease of the advowson of Rickmansworth, (fn. 304) and
in 1570–1 it belonged to Roger Colte, the owner of
Woodwicks. (fn. 305)
During the time when Cardinal Wolsey was at
Rickmansworth, some of the inhabitants showed their
Protestant tendency by destroying the chancel, vestry,
organ, and rood-loft by fire. They also broke open
the font, which was kept locked to prevent the holy
water being used for improper purposes, and scattered
the water on the pavement. The cardinal issued an
indulgence of a hundred days, to which the bishop of
the diocese added forty more for all who would contribute to the rebuilding of the church. (fn. 306) Further
damage was done in the church in 1640, when
Edmund Aylee and others 'did come into the church
of Rickmansworth, and after sermon and service
ended in the forenoon did there wittingly and suddenly pull down and break in pieces the rayle about
the Communion table, and also in the afternoon
of the same day did also wittingly and suddenly
break down and deface a part of the cover of the
font.' (fn. 307)
There is a church dedicated in honour of All Saints
at Croxley Green, erected by the subscriptions of
the parishioners, and opened in 1872. (fn. 308) The living
is in the gift of the vicar of Rickmansworth, and the
vicarage house was built in 1876.
Christ Church, a chapel-of-ease, was built at
Chorleywood in 1845, and rebuilt in 1870. (fn. 309) The
living was originally a perpetual curacy, but became
a vicarage in 1868. (fn. 310) The right of presentation
was vested in James Hayward, who sold it in 1868
to John S. Gilliat. (fn. 311) Later on, in order to obtain
an increase in the endowment from the Ecclesiastical
Commissioners, it was vested in five trustees. (fn. 312) The
vicarage house was presented to the parishioners by
John S. Gilliat.
There is a church dedicated in honour of St. Peter
at Mill End, erected in 1875. The living is a vicarage in the gift of the vicar of Rickmansworth. At
Herringsgate there is a chapel-of-ease to the church
at Mill End, dedicated in honour of St. John the
Evangelist. The church of St. Thomas, West Hyde,
was built in 1845. The living is a vicarage in the
gift of the bishop of St. Albans. There is also a
mission hall at West Hyde, erected in 1889.
There was a church-house at Rickmansworth in the
fifteenth and sixteenth centuries, which had belonged
before the Dissolution to the inhabitants of the town.
It was granted in 1588–9 to William Tipper and
Robert Dawe. (fn. 313)
The vicarage, which stands on the west side of
Church Street, at a short distance to the north-west
of the church, is in part a mediaeval building, originally consisting of a hall and two wings, and has on
the north front some moulded brickwork, probably
of early sixteenth-century date, with trefoiled panels.
The house was originally of timber construction on a
brick base, but has been added to at various times, and
the result, though very picturesque, gives little clue to
its ancient arrangements.
There was a chapel of the B. V. Mary in the churchyard of Rickmansworth in the fifteenth century, also
called the chapel of St. Mary 'de Insula,' (fn. 314) and
'our Lady of Ilond,' and another chapel of St. Katherine. (fn. 315) Fraternities of the Holy Trinity, St. Katherine
the Virgin and Martyr, and of le Charnell House also
existed in the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries, (fn. 316) but
seem to have disappeared before the Dissolution.
There was an altar of St. Edmund, and lights of
Trinity, Holy Cross, St. Mary, St. Edmund, St.
Katherine, and many others were maintained in
Rickmansworth church. (fn. 317)
Rickmansworth has long been a stronghold of Nonconformity. Thomas Hemmingforth, the vicar in
1480, was ejected five years later for apostasy, which
probably meant Lollardism. Several inhabitants of
Rickmansworth were among the persecuted Lollards
who, in 1511, had their head quarters at Amersham.
Owing to William Penn's residence at Rickmansworth this parish became an important centre of
Quakerism. The Quakers who did not accompany
him to America used to meet at a house in Chorleywood, and the garden belonging to it was used as
a cemetery by the society. Miss Groom's house is
now on the site of this cemetery. There is a notice of
a conventicle held at Rickmansworth in 1669, and
many houses were registered by Presbyterians, Baptists, Independents, and Protestant Dissenters. The
Independents opened a chapel at Mile or Mill End
in 1798, and a Congregational chapel was built in
1811. (fn. 318) An Ebenezer chapel for Baptists was
opened in 1825, and Baptist and Wesleyan Methodist
chapels were registered for marriages in 1865. (fn. 319)
There is a Primitive Methodist chapel at Chorleywood, and another in New Road, in Croxley Green,
which was built in 1893 upon the site of an earlier
one erected in 1868. The Wesleyan chapel at
Herringsgate was built in 1884. The Roman Catholic
chapel in High Street, opened in 1891 and enlarged
in 1898, is dedicated in honour of our Lady of Help
of Christians, and is served from Boxmoor.
CHARITIES
Charity School Fund.
—A school
for the poor of this parish was founded
in or about 1711, to which, in 1729,
Mrs. Osborne by her will left £50, Mrs. Frances
Tichborne also bequeathed £50, and in 1763 Mrs.
Sarah Holme gave £100, which several sums were
invested in South Sea annuities. Sir Thomas Franklin by his will dated in or about 1729 gave to the
use of the Charity School a rent-charge of £4, free
of all taxes, issuing out of a close containing 4 acres,
called 'Andrews,' at Ascot in the parish of Ruislip, so
long as the school continued, and in the event of its discontinuance, to be applied for the benefit of the poor.
In 1814 a piece of ground was purchased and a
new school erected thereon with the legacies above
mentioned and with accumulations of income.
By an order of the Charity Commissioners, dated
22 December, 1899, the trustees were authorized to
sell the site and old schoolhouse for £1,000, and
thereout to expend £400, increased to £800 by an
order of the Board of Education of 9 June, 1902,
towards defraying the cost of enlargement of the girls'
and infant school founded in 1854.
The proceeds of sale were invested in consols with
the official trustees, and a balance of £105 19s. 2d.
consols remains in their corporate name.
By an order of the Board of Education of 27 July,
1903, trustees of the Charity School Fund were
appointed, and a scheme established authorizing the
dividends to be applied (a) in payment of not less than
10s. or more than £1 each in the nature of exhibitions
to children resident in the ancient parish of Rickmansworth attending public elementary schools; (b)
in providing in such schools apparatus suitable for
object lessons.
The Manor Almshouses alias the Fotherley Almshouses.
—In 1701 John Fotherley by deed conveyed to
trustees five cottages or almshouses which he had then
lately built, and endowed the same with an annuity
of £10 issuing out of certain estates in this parish
(including the market-house), free of all deductions
upon trust to permit five poor widows of the parish
to inhabit therein.
The property charged became the properties of
several owners, and by agreement the sum of £5 was
charged on the market-house, and £5 on Rickmansworth Park. The inmates are also entitled to receive
on 16 January in each year the dividends of £100 7s. 6d.
consols, called 'Howard's gift,' bequeathed in 1889
by will of Elizabeth Harman, subject to an existing life
interest.
The Parish Almshouses were founded by will of
John Beresford, who devised two messuages at the
town's end upon trust to permit four aged poor people
of the parish to inhabit therein.
In 1681 William Ford by his will left £100 to be
laid out in land, the rents to be applied for the benefit
of the poor; a close in the parish containing about
13 acres, called 'Hutchinworth,' was purchased therewith. The close was sold in or about 1880, and the
proceeds invested with the official trustees, who now
(1906) hold £1,294 19s. 5d. consols in trust for this
charity. In 1708 Lady Ann Franklin by her will
directed that a yearly sum of £10, free of taxes,
issuing out of the Moor Park estate, should be distributed amongst the poor. This is now included in
the official scheme for the maintenance of the above
almshouses.
In 1883 Mrs. Mary Fellows by her will directed
that the dividends on £55 18s. 2d. reduced 3 per
cents. (now consols) should be annually paid to the six
poor women, occupants of the six parish almshouses at
Christmas in equal shares, and the testatrix further
directed that the dividends on £55 18s. 2d. stock
(now consols) should be paid to the inmates of the
almshouses in equal shares.
In 1894 a scheme was established by the Charity
Commissioners authorizing the sale of the old almshouses, which had become unfit for habitation, for
£400, and the expenditure of £600 in building new
almshouses on a site gratuitously conveyed by Lord
Ebury, and providing that these charities should form
part of the endowments of the parish almshouses.