SHEPHALL
Escepehale (xi cent.); Sepehale (xii cent.); Scepehale (xiii cent.); Schephale (xiv cent.); Shepehall
(xv cent.).
Shephall is a small parish entirely detached from the
hundred of Cashio, of which it is part, and locally
situated in Broadwater Hundred. It lies on a plain
about 350 ft. in height, shelving downwards in the
south and west to the Ware and Stevenage high road,
which bounds it on these two sides. The village is
in the centre of the parish, its chief feature being a
large triangular green shaded by trees. The houses
are largely poor except the vicarage, which is an old
farm-house of red brick, with a good wing added some
fifty years ago. About half a mile north-east of the
church is an old farm-house called Half Hyde, and a
modern house built about twenty years ago, the Red
Lion public house and Shephall Farm, lately enlarged.
A by-road running through the centre of the parish
from north to south turns sharply to the west, skirts
Shephalbury Park, and joins the high road in the hamlet of Broadwater, which lies partly in Shephall and
partly in Knebworth parish. In Broadwater is an old
brick house, a long row of modern flat-roofed cottages,
and a little to the north a good modern house of
concrete inhabited by Mrs. Seager. Completing the
part of the hamlet which lies in Shephall is an
old smithy, doubtless built in connexion with the
coaching inn called the 'Roebuck,' which stands on the
side of the high road in Knebworth parish. The inn
is of plastered brickwork with deep red tiled roof. An
inner wall of the wing bears the inscription 'W. 1769.'
The pond at Broadwater is fed by springs in adjoining meadows, and has never been known to dry up.
The nearest station is Knebworth, 2 miles south of
the village, on the Great Northern main line.
The area of the parish is 1,155 acres, and comprised
in 1905 about 697 acres of arable, which grows corn
and root crops, 391 acres of permanent grass, and
woodland to the extent of 80 acres. (fn. 1) The soil is
loamy clay and gravel, and the subsoil is chalk. Some
gravel is dug, but none is exported.
There was a windmill at Shephall before the Dissolution, but at that time it is mentioned as being
totally decayed. (fn. 2)
Place-names occurring in old deeds are Stapelfordfield, Dalhurst, Slangell Close, Hertford weye, le
Sumpe, Hagwell field, and Pynwell.
MANORS
The manor of SHEPHALL was given
to the abbey of St. Albans by a certain
powerful benefactor whose name is not
known. (fn. 3) It was at the time of the Domesday Survey
in the hundred of Broadwater, (fn. 4) but it was afterwards
added by the abbots of St. Albans to their hundred of
Cashio. It was divided into two parts, one of which,
consisting of 3 hides, was held by the abbot of St.
Albans as part of the demesne of the abbey, and the
other, containing 2 hides, was held by Anschitil de
Ros of the archbishop of Canterbury. These 2 hides
had formerly been held by Alvric, a man of Archbishop Stigand, and it belonged to the demesne of
the church of St. Alban in the time of King Edward
the Confessor, and he could not sell or alienate it from
that church. (fn. 5) Shortly after the Survey Abbot Paul
obtained these 2 hides held by Anschitil de Ros of
Lanfranc for the abbey, (fn. 6) and the whole manor reremained in the possession of the abbey till the
Dissolution (1539). It was confirmed to the abbey
by Pope Honorius III. (fn. 7) Abbot Geoffrey gave this
manor to Adam the cellarer, but later, under Abbot
Ralph (1146–51), it was granted to the kitchener. (fn. 8)
In 1331 it was leased for nine years to Geoffrey de
Hamele, (fn. 9) and later in the fourteenth century to a
certain Robert Brome for life, for a small sum of money.
This last lease seems to have been an injudicious one,
for we find later that Robert did much waste in the
manor and did not keep to his agreement, which led to
its being bought back by the abbot at great cost and
trouble to the convent. (fn. 10)
In 1542 the manor, with a pension of 5s. from the
rectory, was granted to George Nodes, serjeant at
arms, and serjeant of the Buckhounds to Henry
VIII, Edward VI, Queen Mary, and Queen Eliza
beth, (fn. 11) who had previously been farmer of the manor, (fn. 12)
to be held of the king in chief for a twentieth part of
a knight's fee. This grant was confirmed two years
later. (fn. 13) George in 1564 obtained licence to grant it
to his nephew Charles Nodes
and his heirs in tail male, (fn. 14)
having previously settled a
messuage called Copidhall,
parcel of the manor, upon
his daughter Jane and her
husband, William Kimpton. (fn. 15)
After the death of George in
1564, (fn. 16) his heirs, Jane Kimpton and Thomas Chapman,
son of Thomas Chapman and
Joan, a second daughter of
George, claimed the manor
against Charles Nodes, (fn. 17) but
the claim was not recognized, for Charles settled
the manor in 1571 upon himself and his brothers
George and William in tail male. (fn. 18) Charles died
seised of the manor in 1593, leaving George his
son and heir, (fn. 19) but his wife Elizabeth seems to
have held a third of the manor as her dower. (fn. 20)
George Chapman and Thomas Chapman conveyed
their interest in 1599 to George Nodes, (fn. 21) and in
1611 Thomas Kimpton, probably son of William
and Jane, gave up his interest to the same George, (fn. 22)
who died seised of the manor in 1643, and was
succeeded by his son Charles. (fn. 23) On his death in
1651, (fn. 24) he left by his second wife Frances, daughter
of William Pert, three sons, George, Edmund,
and John, who all died unmarried, George in 1654,
and John in 1652. (fn. 25) The next heir male was
George, brother of Charles, who succeeded his nephew
Edmund in 1663. (fn. 26) He died a few months after his
succession, (fn. 27) and the estate passed to his son George,
who died in 1697, leaving three sons, George,
Thomas, and John. George was succeeded in 1713 (fn. 28)
by his brother John, and he, who died unmarried in
1748, (fn. 29) by his nephew John, son of Thomas Nodes.
John died in 1761, (fn. 30) having left this manor by his
will dated 31 October, 1761, to his sons George,
Charles, and Henry in tail male, with remainder to
his daughters Catherine, Sarah, and Margaret Mary,
as co-parceners. (fn. 31) The sons all died without issue,
and the daughters succeeded to their father's estates.
Catherine died unmarried, and her share came to her
sister Margaret Mary, wife of Richard Price. The
third daughter, Sarah wife of Robert Jaques, conveyed her third in 1782 to Francis Abell, (fn. 32) who may
have been a trustee for Michael Heathcote of London,
to whom it afterwards came. (fn. 33) Mrs. Price had an
only daughter, Catherine Nodes Price, who married
Jacques-Clement de Warburg, and in 1838 she sold
her share of the estate inherited from her mother to
Samuel Heathcote Unwin Heathcote, who already
possessed one-third as heir of his mother, the daughter
of Michael Heathcote. (fn. 34) On his death in 1862, (fn. 35)
the manor of Shephall came to his son Unwin Unwin
Heathcote. From him the manor has descended to
Colonel Alfred Unwin Heathcote, R.E., the present
possessor, who resides at Shephalbury, a Gothic building of red brick faced with Bath stone, built about 1865,
standing in a large well-wooded park. This house
is near the site of the older manor-house, which stood
where the rose garden is now.

Nodes. Sable a pile argent with three trefoils sable therein.
There was another estate in Shephall, which seems
to have possessed the qualifications of a manor, held
during the thirteenth and fourteenth centuries by the
family of Broc. In the reign of Henry III or
Edward I, Robert Wyoth of 'Sepehale' granted
6 acres of land in Shephall to Laurence de Broc for a
sum of 24s., (fn. 36) and in 1228–9 Laurence held 2 hides
of land there. (fn. 37) In 1275 the executors of the will of
Laurence handed over the manor of Shephall to his
son Hugh. (fn. 38) The estate had
come to Laurence son of
Hugh in the early years of the
fourteenth century. (fn. 39) Hugh's
widow Ellen probably married
Lord William de Melksop,
who held a third of a fee
in Shephall of the abbot of
St. Albans in 1303. (fn. 40) The
manor afterwards came to
Ralph son of Hugh de Broc
and Ellen, to whom a grant
of free warren in Shephall was
made in 1330. (fn. 41) Ralph left
three daughters, Joan, Agnes, and Ellen, (fn. 42) and this
land was assigned in 1346–7 to Ellen, who married
Edmund Mordaunt. (fn. 43) Their son Robert Mordaunt
sold it in 1375 to Thomas Dardres. (fn. 44) Its further
descent is not known. (fn. 45)

Broc. Gules a thief argent with a lion passant gules therein.
CHURCH
The church of ST. MARY (fn. 46) is a small
building, red-tiled, and overgrown with
ivy, consisting of chancel 21 ft. 6 in. by
13 ft., with modern north vestry, nave 42 ft. 2 in. by
17 ft. 6 in., with north aisle, south porch, and wooden
bell-turret at the west end. Externally it shows
nothing of age, both the flint facing and stone dressings being renewed throughout, and the east wall of
the chancel with its copings is of modern brickwork. The chancel was repaired about sixty years
since.
Within the church nothing older than the first
half of the fourteenth century is to be seen. The
south wall was rebuilt in 1865, and the north wall
removed at the same date, when the aisle was added.
The west wall may contain some old masonry. The
chancel has a modern three-light east window of fifteenth-century style, and a north window of three
square-headed uncusped lights, the masonry of which,
except the two mullions, is old, but of uncertain date.
To the west of this window is a modern arch opening
to the vestry. In the south wall is a square-headed
window of two trefoiled lights with tracery, all the
masonry being modern, and near the south-west angle
a tall low side window with a square-headed light,
probably contemporary with the north window of the
chancel. (fn. 47) There is a cinquefoiled piscina recess of
fourteenth-century date east of the two-light window
on the south of the chancel, and a square drain in the
sill of the window. The recess was formerly in the
east wall of the nave, on the south side. There is no
chancel arch, but the truss at the west end of the
chancel, which has arched braces and a collar, seems to
be plain work of c. 1340, and a moulded wall-plate of
this date remains on both sides of the chancel, though
the rest of the roof is modern. The nave has a modern
north arcade and aisle of three bays, lighted by small
two-light windows, and in the south wall are two
square-headed windows with trefoiled lights and tracery
over of fifteenth-century style, though the stonework
is nearly all modern. The south doorway is plain,
under a modern south porch, and the west window of
four lights with geometrical tracery is entirely new
(1865). In the east wall of the north aisle is set a shallow
square recess containing a piscina drain. The trusses
of the nave roof are probably coeval with the old
work in the chancel roof, and are of the same design
as that at the west end of the chancel, modern cusped
timbers being inserted at the back of the arched
braces. In the west bay are two trusses close together
to carry the bell-turret, but the western of these is
modern. The wall plates have a hollow chamfer
only, and in the west bay are plain. Both nave
and chancel have modern arched plaster ceilings between the trusses. The modern bell-turret has three
trefoiled openings on each side, and a high-pitched
red-tiled roof.
None of the fittings of the church are old, except
the chancel screen, which is of the fifteenth century,
with a wide centre opening, in which a modern
tracery head has been inserted, and three traceried
openings on each side with a top rail to which a
modern embattled cresting has been added. The
solid lower panels have been replaced by modern
openings with tracery in the heads. Until lately
an iron hook with a rose was attached to the screen.
The font is modern, and stands at the end of the north
aisle, while the old font is set in the churchyard, and is
so thickly overgrown with ivy that none of its stonework can be seen. Near the south door is a good
painted almsbox. In the church are a number of monuments to the Nodes family, who formerly lived at
Shephalbury, the oldest being two brass plates fixed
to the walls below the sills of the north and south
windows of the chancel. That on the north is to
George Nodes, 1564, serjeant of the Buckhounds to
Henry VIII, Edward VI, Mary, and Elizabeth, and
the other to his wife Margaret, 1582. There are
marble mural tablets to other members of the family
as follows :—On the south wall of the chancel Jane
Nodes, 1697; south wall of nave, George 1697,
John 1761, John 1748, and Elizabeth 1731; north
wall of nave, George 1713; and west wall of north
aisle, Susan 1695.
At the east end of this aisle is an alabaster tablet
with strapwork borders to John Rudd, 1640, pastor
of Shephall for forty-five years, with a small circular
painting above, showing him as a shepherd with a
lamb on his shoulders and a crook in his hand. It
was formerly on the north wall of the chancel, and
bears these verses :—
Sonne of thunder soon of the dove
Full of hott zeale full of true love
In preaching truth in liveing right
A burneing flame a shineing light.
In the bell-turret are two small bells.
The plate consists of a modern silver chalice and
paten (1876–77) of mediaeval pattern, a second paten
of 1849, and a pewter almsdish, bought in 1769, and
inscribed 'Shephall Church, Herts.'
The first book of the registers begins in 1560, and
contains baptisms to 1730, and marriages and burials
to 1735. The second has baptisms and burials to
1812, and marriages of 1759; and the third has
marriages from 1754 to 1812.
The first book of churchwardens' accounts begins
in 1708, and the second in 1770, with an inventory of church goods at that date, the latter book
having a parchment cover dated 1587.
ADVOWSON
The church of Shephall belonged to the monastery of Reading,
but was renounced by them in
1151–4 in favour of the abbey of St. Albans. (fn. 48)
The church was confirmed to the abbey by Pope
Honorius III in 1219. (fn. 49) From this time till the
Dissolution (1539) the church remained in the
possession of the abbey. At the Dissolution it came
to the king, and has remained in the crown till the
present time.
There is only one registration for a place of worship for Nonconformists under the Toleration Act,
which occurred in 1691, (fn. 50) but there is no Nonconformist chapel now in the parish.
CHARITIES
In 1668 Thomas Chapman charged
a cottage and yard in Stevenage with
the annual payment of 5s. for bread
for the poor of this parish. The charge has been
redeemed by the transfer of £10 £2 10s. per
cent. annuities to the official trustees of charitable
funds.
In 1730 Elizabeth Nodes by her will left £100 to
be laid out in land in the parish, the rents to be used
for the benefit of the poor; 5 a. of woodland was purchased, which under the Inclosure Act of 50 Geo. III
was exchanged for 15 acres, now let at £12 a year.
The official trustees also hold £397 18s. 9d. India
3 per cent. stock, arising from the investment of gifts
of various donors.
In 1737 John Nodes, in consideration of certain
gifts to the poor, in the hands of members of his
family, settled a meadow called 'White's Mead,' at
Letchmoor Green, in Stevenage, containing 2 a. 2 r. 7 p.
for the benefit of the poor, now let at £6 a year.
In 1763 Thomas Threader by his will devised an
annual sum of 10s. issuing out of two cottages in
Shephall, to be distributed to the poor in bread.
The payment is made by Colonel Alfred Unwin
Heathcote, R.E.
The income of these charities, amounting to about
£30 a year, is applied by a body of trustees appointed
in 1893 in the distribution of money and bread
among poor families.