MANORS
The manor of
WATFORD, according to a monastic writer of the fifteenth century, was granted by Offa, king
of Mercia, to St. Albans Abbey, (fn. 22)
and though no mention is made
of it in any of Offa's charters, it
may have been covered by the grant of Cassio (q.v.).
There is, however, still extant the will of Ethelgiva
or Ethelgifu (942–6), in which she leaves the 'land
of Watford' to Leofrune. (fn. 23) This land appears afterwards to have passed to Edwin of Caddington, who
left it to the abbey of St. Albans by a will earlier
than 1066. (fn. 24) Watford is not mentioned in the
Domesday Survey, but was probably again included
in Cassio (q.v.). (fn. 25)
In the civil wars in the reign of John a sum of
£100 and a palfrey worth 10 marks were exacted
from the abbot for this manor, and a little later a
further sum of 100 marks was demanded. (fn. 26)
Land in Watford, and various rents and services
there, were acquired by Abbot Roger (1260–90) of
William Blaket, (fn. 27) and at about the same time various
tenements and rents in the parish were bought from
William Atehale, Reginald de Ponte, William Chalfhunte and Edith his wife, John Dekene, Ralph
Clubbe and others, and Roger le Marchaunt gave
meadow land lying in the meadow 'de la Holme.' (fn. 28)
The men of Watford were amongst those who joined
with the men of St. Albans in rising against the abbot
at the time of Wat Tyler's rebellion. (fn. 29) They, with
the men of Cassio, obtained a charter in 1381 which
granted them the right of hunting all wild animals
and fishing in all the waters of the vill, and snaring
birds both in the demesne lands of the abbey and in
all other lands in the vill. They obtained freedom
from suit at the court of the abbot, and relief from an
imposition called 'Alepeny,' said to have been unjustly levied for a long time past, and from all other
tolls and works on bridges and parks. They also
extorted from the abbot licence to use handmills in
their houses, with the accompanying freedom from
suit at the abbey mill. (fn. 30) All these liberties were
taken away within the year, and the townsmen reduced to their former state of subjection. (fn. 31)

Watford: Houses in Church Street, Demolished in 1893
This manor remained part of the possession of the
monastery till the Dissolution, (fn. 32) at which time Sir
John Russell was farmer of the manor. (fn. 33) It continued in the crown till 1609, when it was granted
to Thomas Marbury and Richard Cartwright, (fn. 34) who
immediately conveyed it to Thomas Egerton, Lord
Ellesmere, (fn. 35) the Lord Chancellor, who was created
Viscount Brackley in 1616. (fn. 36) He died a few months
after, seised of the manor, which passed to his son and
heir, John earl of Bridgewater. (fn. 37) It descended with
the title (fn. 38) till Francis, third duke of Bridgewater, sold
it in 1767 (fn. 39) to Sir Lawrence Dundas, of Moor
Park, (fn. 40) who apparently mortgaged it, for it was bought
of the mortgagees in 1770 by William Ann Holles
Capell, fourth earl of Essex. (fn. 41)
This nobleman was one of the
lords of the Bedchamber to
George II, and succeeded
William Earl Cowper, in 1764,
in the Lord Lieutenancy of
Hertfordshire. From him
the manor of Watford has
descended with the title to
George, the present earl of
Essex.

Capell, Earl of Essex. Gules a lion or between three crosslets fitchy or.
Watford in 1605 included
the tithings of 'Caser,' Leavesden, Oxhey, and Sarratt. (fn. 42)
There is mention in the thirteenth century of Great
Oxhey, Little Oxhey, Est Oxhey, and Oxhey Abbatis. (fn. 43)
The metes and bounds of the manor and parish of
Watford were ascertained in 1605. Beginning at
Townesend Bridge, or the Great Bridge of Watford,
and thence by the lane called Carpenters' Lane to
Maroke, by estimation two miles; thence by le Shirediche to Potters Street, by estimation one mile; and
thence to Tredwager House or le Old Lodge, by estimation one mile, and thence to Rickmansworth More
Bridge, called Highe Bridge, by estimation one mile;
and thence by the meadow of the earl of Bedford
westerly to Blakemore Water, and by the same river
to Casho Bridge, by estimation a mile; and thence
by High Grove Lane to Redheath, to an oak there, by
estimation a mile; and thence by Cloblane to Peacche
Hill, by estimation half a mile; and thence to
Maplecrosse to Common Woodd Corner; and thence
to lez Cheritrees in Mans Greene, by estimation a
mile; and thence to Chipperfield Wood Corner, and
thence to a lane called Shepperdes Lane, by estimation a mile; and thence to the southward part of
Langley Bery groundes to the river, and thence to
Touley's House, by estimation a mile; and thence to
the house of William Hill, of Leavesden, by estimation a mile; and thence by the way leading from
Langley Abbatis towards Watford, to the north part
of Mayns Close, by estimation three parts of a mile;
and thence by the north part of Leavesden Wood to
Water Del Street, to the pond there, by estimation a
mile; and thence by the north and east parts of le
Great Springe to Garston Gate, by estimation a mile;
and thence by the north and east parts of Moredens
Groundes to Colney Stream, by estimation half a
mile; and thence by the river aforesaid to Leggatshot (?) Meade; and thence by the east part of the
meadow aforesaid to Garston Weare; and thence near
Bushye Mill to Townesend Bridge, or the Great
Bridge of Watford aforesaid, by estimation two miles. (fn. 44)
Owing to its situation between the two rivers, the
Gade and the Colne, there have from early times been
several mills here. There were four mills at Cassio
at the time of the Domesday Survey, (fn. 45) one of which,
it afterwards appears, was at Watford, another at
the Grove, a third at Cassio, and the fourth at Oxhey. The mill of Watford belonged to the abbey of
St. Albans, and was the one at which all the men of
Watford were obliged to grind their corn. (fn. 46) This
mill was close to the mill of Bushey, and in the reign
of Edward I trouble arose between the abbot and
David de Jarpenville, lord of Bushey, because the
latter had damaged the abbey mill, but David
afterwards recognized his error. (fn. 47) The abbot also
had a fishery at Watford, and in the lawless times
under Edward II the townspeople of Watford trespassed in the abbot's several fishery. (fn. 48) John Wellys
of Watford seems to have laid claim to the mill-pond
of Watford in 1431, but the result of the suit which
thereupon arose between him and the abbot is not
given. (fn. 49) Under Abbot John of Wheathampstead a sum
of £41 3s. 6d. was spent on repairs to this mill. (fn. 50) In
the time of the same abbot certain of the inhabitants of
Watford began to erect a horse-mill at Watford, but
they were successfully opposed by the abbot. (fn. 51) The
mill and fishery at the Dissolution came to the crown.
The fishery and all the shops newly erected upon the
waste at Watford were granted in 1579–80 to John
Farnham, (fn. 52) and the mill in 1609 to Edward Ferrers
and Francis Phillips, (fn. 53) the fee-farm rent of £13 from
the mill paid by them being granted at the same date
to Sir Christopher Hatton and others. (fn. 54) Ferrers and
Phillips sold the mill in the same year to Sir Thomas,
Lord Ellesmere, (fn. 55) who died seised of it in 1616–17, (fn. 56)
and it subsequently passed, with the manor, to the
earls of Essex. (fn. 57) The present Watford Mill is the representative of this old abbatial mill.
The water-mill at Cassio was called Tolpade, and
was in 1364 held by John son of William Aignel. It
was then in a ruinous condition, (fn. 58) and probably was
never repaired, as nothing more is heard of it, and
there is no mill at Cassio at the present day. This
mill is perhaps the same as the fulling-mill at Cassio
which was given in 1255–6 by John abbot of St. Albans to Petronilla de Ameneville for life. (fn. 59)
Grove Mills seem always to have been appurtenant
to the manor of Grove (q.v.), and are described in
1631–2 as two water-mills called the Grove Mills,
standing under one roof. (fn. 60) The present representative of these mills is on the Gade, on the border of
Grove Park.
The mill of Oxhey was held in early times by the
tenants of the manor of Oxhey (q.v.). (fn. 61) After the
division of the manor a second mill must have been
built, for there appears to have been one attached to
each part. (fn. 62) Oxhey Mill came after the Dissolution to
George Zowche, from whom it took the name of
'Souches mill.' (fn. 63) He conveyed it in 1542–3 to the
king, (fn. 64) and it was apparently afterwards granted to
Thomas Heritage, who was holding it in 1556. (fn. 65) It
was then called Hamper Mill, and that name has survived to the present day. Heritage evidently held
the mill under a lease from the crown, for the mill was
granted by Philip and Mary to their servant Francis
Pitcher for forty years, and in 1578 he surrendered
this lease to John Pople. (fn. 66) In 1597 Sir William
Brooke, Lord Cobham, died seised of Hamper Mills,
which were then two water corn mills. (fn. 67) Sir William
was succeeded by his son Henry, and Hamper Mills
passed from him to Sir James Altham, (fn. 68) from whose
family it passed, in the same manner as Oxhey, to
John Heydon. At the time of the sale to Heydon
in 1639 three mills were included under the name
Hamper Mills. Later on the mills came into the
possession of the Clothworkers' Company, and in
1881 were the property of Mr. J. G. Smith. (fn. 69) These
mills are on the Colne, to the south-west of Oxhey
Hall, and now belong to Mr. J. G. Smith.
In the middle of the last century there was a silk
mill belonging to Thomas Rock
Shute, called Rookery Silk Mill,
situated a short distance north-east
of Hamper Mill. It was closed
before 1881, (fn. 70) and on its site the
Watford Steam Laundry and Dye
Works now stand.
The manor of CASSIO or CASSIOBURY (Caegesho x cent.; Caissou, Chaissou xi cent.; Caishoo xiv
cent.). By a doubtful charter of
Offa, thirty-four 'mansiones' at
Cassio were granted to the abbey
of St. Albans. (fn. 71) At the time of the
Domesday Survey Cassio was assessed
at twenty hides, and contained
woodland to feed a thousand swine. (fn. 72)
This holding, which probably included the whole manor of Watford,
belonged to the abbey of St. Albans,
and had belonged to it in the time
of King Edward. (fn. 73) One hide in
Cassio, which Turold held of Geoffrey de Mandeville, had formerly
been held by Alwin the huntsman, one of Queen
Edith's men, but Geoffrey attached this hide to
Bushey, one of his principal manors in this part of
Hertfordshire, to which it did not belong in the time
of King Edward. (fn. 74) Abbot John in 1255–6 leased
the capital messuage of Cassio and a fulling mill to
Petronilla de Ameneville in exchange for land in
Micklefield and elsewhere, (fn. 75) reserving to himself all
perquisites of court, tallages, and escheats. The
grant was confirmed by Henry III in order that
Petronilla might not be ejected during a vacancy of
the abbey, (fn. 76) and was to endure as long as she
should wear the religious habit, which, however, she
discarded on her marriage with John de Grava, when
this lease became void. In 1271 she and her husband
released to the abbot all their claim in the manor, saving
to themselves the right to fish and hunt in the
demesne and the use of a house at St. Albans near
the tannery of the monastery. (fn. 77)
This manor provided twenty-four hens at Christmas, six hundred eggs at Easter, and twenty-four
cheeses at the Passion of St. Alban, to the abbey
kitchen. (fn. 78) Abbot John de la Moote built a new barn, (fn. 79)
and under Abbot John of Wheathampstead a new cowhouse was built there. (fn. 80) In 1428 the manor was
farmed by Thomas Lavenham, (fn. 81) and at the Dissolution it was held by William Dauncey under a lease of
1532 for thirty-one years. (fn. 82)
The manor of Cassiobury, with the woods called
Cashio Grove and Whependen Grove, was granted
in 1545 to Sir Richard Morrison, (fn. 83) who began a mansion at Cassiobury, which was completed by his son
Charles, who succeeded his father in 1556. The
manor was held for life by Bridget relict of Sir
Richard, (fn. 84) who had married Francis earl of Bedford
as her third husband. (fn. 85) Bridget outlived her son,
who died in 1599 seised of the reversion, leaving
Charles his son and heir, a minor, whose wardship
was committed to Bridget his grandmother, Henry
earl of Kent, and Thomas lord Grey of Wilton. (fn. 86)
Bridget died in 1600, (fn. 87) and the property passed to
her grandson Sir Charles, who died in 1628, leaving
an only daughter Elizabeth, (fn. 88) who married Arthur
Capell, created Lord Capell of Hadham in 1641. As
a loyal adherent of Charles I he forfeited all his estates
under the Commonwealth, Cassiobury and the rectory
of Watford being granted in 1645 to Robert Devereux
earl of Essex, leader of the Parliamentary forces. (fn. 89)
Lord Capell was beheaded in
1648–9, but at the Restoration his lands were given back
to his son Arthur, created
Viscount Malden and earl of
Essex in 1661. (fn. 90) He had in
the previous year been made
custos rotulorum and lord lieutenant of Hertfordshire, and
in 1668 was made lord lieutenant of Wiltshire also. He
became lord lieutenant of Ireland in 1672, and the purity
of his administration there,
which lasted five years, was in striking contrast to the
general corruption prevailing at the time. He was
imprisoned in the Tower for complicity in the Rye
House Plot, and died there before his trial, whether
by murder or suicide has never been satisfactorily
determined. (fn. 91)

WATFORD HIGH STREET: 'THE HIT OR MISS'

Morrison. Or a chief gules with three wreaths or therein.
The manor descended from him with the title to
George, the present earl.
Sir Charles Morrison added several estates to the
manor. Jacketts Farm was bought by him in 1620
of Thomas Baldwin; Leavesden Woods in 1625 and
Tooleys Farm in 1628. Arthur earl of Essex added
land called Breaches to the park in 1681, and Hatters
Farm was parcel of the manor of Cassiobury in
1691. (fn. 92) Arthur earl of Essex in 1661 obtained
licence to preserve game within ten miles of Cassiobury. (fn. 92a)
The first mention of the park is in 1632, (fn. 93) but it
was probably made by Richard Morrison, (fn. 94) and in
1819 it was between three and four miles in circumference, and embraced an area of 693 acres, of which
310 acres were called the Home Park, 256 acres
the Upper Park, separated from the Home Park by
the River Gade, and the remaining 127 acres were
occupied by the house and gardens. (fn. 95) Defoe in his
Tour says that on the north and east sides of the house
are large wood-walks which were planted by the
famous Le Notre in the reign of Charles II.
The old north wing of the house which was
built in the H form was probably of an earlier
date than the grant to Sir Richard Morrison, and its
bay windows and plastered walls and the form of
its chimney shafts showed a monastic character,
possibly indicating its connexion with the abbey of
St. Albans. Since the time of Charles Morrison, who
completed the house, many additions and improvements were made. The first earl of Essex rebuilt
the house, with the exception of the west wing, and
in laying out the gardens he employed Moses Cook, (fn. 96)
the author of a work on forest and fruit trees, published in 1679. John Evelyn in his Diary gives some
account of Cassiobury, which he visited at the invitation of the earl of Essex. He says, 'the house is
new, a plain fabric built by my friend Mr. Hugh
May. There are divers fair and good rooms, and
excellent carving by Gibbons. The library is large
and very nobly furnished, and all the books are richly
bound and gilded, but there are no manuscripts except
Parliament rolls and journals, the transcribing and
binding of which cost him (the earl of Essex), as he
assured me, £500. No man has been more industrious in planting about his seat . . . . but the soil is
strong, churlish, and uneven, nor is the water near
enough to the house. . . . It is a pity the house was
not situated to more advantage; but it seems that it
was built just where the old one was, which, I believe,
he only meant to repair. . . . The land about is
exceedingly addicted to wood, but the coldness of the
place hinders the growth. Black cherry trees prosper
even to considerable timber, some being eighty feet
long; they make also very handsome avenues.' (fn. 97)
About the year 1800 May's house was pulled down
and the present one erected by James Wyatt, in the
pseudo-gothic style. Some portions of one or other
of the previous mansions are said to be incorporated
with the existing one, and a few years ago some
remains of brick cellars were discovered in front of
the house.
In the thirteenth century mention is made of the
soke and halimote of Caysho. (fn. 97a)
Manor of OXHEY (Oxonage, Oxangehaege, xi
cent.; Oxey Abbatis, Oxei, Oxeye, Oxsehaye, xiii cent.;
Oxeya, Oxeye Abbatis, xiv cent.). —Land called Oxonage or Oxan gehaeg(e) was given to the abbey of St.
Albans by Abbot Alfric, (fn. 98) and was confirmed to the
abbey in 1007 by King Ethelred. (fn. 99) In this charter
it is stated that the land once belonged to Offa king
of Mercia, who gave it to the monastery, but that on
his death it was taken away, and came into the hands
of Leofsig. Leofsig was banished in 1002 for the
murder of the king's reeve Aefic, (fn. 100) and the land
returned into the possession of the crown. Ethelred
gave it to Alfric and Leofric his brother, and they
granted it to the monastery. (fn. 101) There is no mention
of the manor in Domesday, but it was probably
included with the rest of Watford under Cassio. (fn. 102)
During the twelfth and thirteenth centuries the holders
of this manor took their name from it. Walchelin
de Oxhey was holding land in Hertfordshire in
1164–5, (fn. 103) and is perhaps identical with the Walkelin
de Oxen 'miles strenuissimus' who unhorsed and
wounded the earl of Arundel in the water of Haliwell in 1142, when the knights of St. Albans resisted
the entry of Stephen into the town of St. Albans. (fn. 104)
In 1182–3 this manor, with that of Croxley in
Rickmansworth, formed one knight's fee, which
was held by Richard de Croxley and Philip de
Oxhey, (fn. 105) and tenants of the same name were
holding this fee in 1210. (fn. 106) Shortly after this time
the manor or part of it seems to have been mortgaged by Colmer de Oxhey to Elias Episcopus, a
Jew of London, (fn. 107) and in 1244 an entry is made in
the Jewish Exchequer that Elias had received 50s. of
the farm of Oxhey, which Elias paid to the prior of
Hurley. (fn. 108) This rent had apparently been assigned
to the prior by Nicholas de Oxhey, and about 1245
the abbot of St. Albans disputed the right of Nicholas
as mesne tenant to mortgage the manor, (fn. 109) and eventually redeemed it from Elias. (fn. 110)
The descent of the manor after this date is obscure,
but from the annals of St. Albans it would seem that
the whole fee, including the manors of Croxley and
Oxhey, came into the hands of one man, bearing the
name de Croxley, (fn. 111) who had two sons, Richard the
elder who died without heirs, and Roger who left
three daughters, Petronilla the wife of Robert de
Ameneville, Beatrice wife of John de Shelford, and
Joan wife of Thomas de Wauncy. (fn. 112) Petronilla had
two daughters both called Petronilla. The elder
married Nicholas de Oxhey, (fn. 113) and the younger married
Hugh de Vynon, by whom she apparently had two
daughters, who married John de Westwick and
Nicholas de Whethamsted. Thomas and Joan de
Wauncy had a son Thomas, who died young, and
three daughters, Joan who married Ralph de Lynleye
or Glynley, Agnes the wife of Roger Cissor or le
Tailour, and Alice the wife of Richard de Tingwicke. (fn. 114)
Beatrice de Shelford left no issue, and her share in
the manors of Croxley and Oxhey came to her sisters. (fn. 115)
In consequence perhaps of the division of the manors
into so many parts, we find the various co-heirs granting their shares to the abbot of St. Albans, overlord
of the whole fee. (fn. 116) Richard de Oxhey was the heir
of Nicholas and Petronilla de Oxhey, and in 1276
he released all his claim to land in Oxhey to the
abbot, in exchange for which the abbot gave him all
the demesne and half a mill, given to the abbey by
Petronilla de Ameneville, reserving to the abbey perquisites of court and other dues. At the same time
an agreement was made whereby masses and prayers
were to be said by the convent for Richard and his
two wives H[uge]line and Joan. (fn. 117) On the anniversary of their deaths two poor people were to be fed
and given 6d. (fn. 118) The grant to Richard appears to
have been only during the lives of Richard and Joan
his wife, for in 1282 Richard regranted to the abbey
certain of the lands in Little Oxhey which he held by
grant of the abbot for life, namely a grove and pasture
which lay between the stream coming from Watford
and the highway as far as the mill of Oxhey, which
grove once belonged to the house of Waleran
Tyeis. (fn. 119) This grant is perhaps the origin of the two
manors which afterwards existed at Oxhey, one called
Oxhey Richard and the other called Oxhey Walround.
The part retained by Richard, called OXHEY
RICHARD, was held for the service of a quarter of
a knight's fee, and for suit at the court of the abbot at
St. Albans every three weeks, (fn. 120) and is found later in
the possession of Richard's descendants. The second
manor perhaps took its name from Waleran Tyeis,
and is later found in the possession of the other coheirs.

Red Lion Yard, Watford
Richard was presented in 1278 for preventing the
men of Oxhey from fishing in the waters of Great
Oxhey. He claimed the fishery through his mother,
but the right of the men of the vill was established. (fn. 121)
He died about 1295, and the manor came to his wife
Joan, who was an alien, a subject of the king of France,
and as such her lands were seized by the king. She
resisted the bailiff of the liberty of St. Albans, sent to
eject her, and was imprisoned for the offence. (fn. 122) An
extent of the manor was taken at this time and there
was there a dovecot and a water-mill with a fishery.
A detailed account is also given of the contents of
the house and the stocking of the farm. (fn. 123) In the
same year, however, Joan came to an agreement with
the king by which she was allowed to retain possession of the manor of Oxhey Richard. (fn. 124) It would
appear that she afterwards married Ralph de Hurle,
for in 1298 he and his wife conveyed the manor to
William Tolymer and John son of Geoffrey de
Whethamstede and Margaret his wife, who were the
heirs of Richard de Oxhey, in exchange for a rent of
5 marks, to be paid out of the manor to Ralph and
Joan, (fn. 125) and in 1303 these feoffees were holding a
quarter of a knight's fee in Oxhey Richard of the
abbot of St. Albans. (fn. 126) William Tolymer conveyed
his moiety of the manor in 1316 to Eubold de
Montibus and Elizabeth his wife, (fn. 127) who were still
holding it in 1332–3. (fn. 128) This half, which consisted
of an eighth part of a knight's fee, had in 1347–8
passed to Edward de Montibus son of Eubold, (fn. 129) and
was held by his heirs in 1428. (fn. 130)
The half of the manor held by John de Whethamstede had passed in 1320–1 to his son Thomas, (fn. 131) and
in 1347–8 it was held by William de . . ., (fn. 132) in
right of Christiana his wife. (fn. 133) It appears afterwards
to have passed to Roger de Louthe, for he in 1360
obtained a grant of free warren over his demesne
lands of Oxhey. (fn. 134) It is probable that his widow
Amice married Richard de Bromwych, for in 1370
they settled the manor of Oxhey Richard upon themselves and their issue, with remainder to Amice's
children, John, Joan, Katherine, and Margaret, and
to Thomas son of Thomas de Louthe in tail male
with contingent remainder to the right heirs of
Amice. (fn. 135) Amice de Louthe was holding the manor
in 1374 of the heritage of John de Louthe her son. (fn. 136)
Her daughters Joan and Katherine appear to have
married William Petevyn and Thomas Wybsnade,
and in 1397 conveyed their interest in the manor to
Edward earl of Rutland and others, (fn. 137) who were probably trustees for Robert de Louthe, who seems to
have been the heir of John de Louthe. In 1414–15
Robert, younger son of Robert de Louthe of Rokesford, granted all his right in the manor of Oxhey
Richard to Sir Hugh de Holes, justice of the King's
Bench, (fn. 138) who died seised of it in 1416, leaving
Thomas his son and heir. (fn. 139) Thomas died in 1420–1,
and the manor came to his son Thomas, a child of
two years of age. (fn. 140) He apparently died in infancy,
for in 1432 Margaret daughter and heir of Thomas de
Holes, then wife of John Troutbek, made proof of
her age, (fn. 141) and the manor was settled upon her and
her husband in 1444–5. (fn. 142) After the death of John
Troutbek it descended to his son William, (fn. 143) who
died seised of it in 1460, leaving William his son and
heir. (fn. 144) William Troutbek in 1482 conveyed the
manor to John Wode, Peter Curteys, and William
Daubeney and the heirs of Peter. (fn. 145) A few years
later the site of the manor of Oxhey called Oxhey
Hall was in the possession of Randolph Billington,
who sold it to John Brown. (fn. 146)
The history of the moiety held by Edward de
Montibus is lost from 1428, and probably passed with
the manorial rights of Oxhey Richard into the hands
of the overlord, the abbot of St. Albans, and was
included in the manor of Wiggenhall cum Oxhey,
which formed part of the possession of the abbey of
St. Albans at the time of the Dissolution. (fn. 147)
The estate called Oxhey Hall was held for the service
of suit at court at the manor of Croxley, (fn. 148) and half of it
was conveyed in 1566 by John Newdigate (to whom
it had descended from his father George) to Francis
Heydon, (fn. 149) and the other half was sold to the same
Francis in 1571 by Francis Newdigate and John
Newdigate and Martha his wife. (fn. 150) From Francis
Heydon this manor was purchased by John Franklyn
and his son Richard. (fn. 151) John died seised of it in
1596, leaving Richard his son and heir, (fn. 152) on whose
death in 1627 the estate passed to his son Sir John
Franklin. (fn. 153) It seems to have been leased by the
Franklins to John Anderson or Potter, and was occupied by him in 1604. (fn. 154) The further history of Oxhey
Hall is not known, but it probably became merged in
the manor of Wiggenhall (q.v.).
Oxhey Hall, now a farmhouse about a mile north-west of Oxhey chapel, has in one of the rooms a fine
old oak panelled ceiling. The house has been much
modernized, and contains nothing else of interest.
The estate now known as OXHEY was at one
time part of Oxhey Hall. (fn. 155) Roger de Louthe had
licence in 1360 to inclose and make a park of his
woods of Gipps and Edeswyk. (fn. 156) This park was disparked in 1598, when licence was granted to Francis
Heydon to cut down the timber in the park of Oxhey
and convert it into tillage, (fn. 157) and in 1601 Francis sold
to Henry Fleetwood of Gray's Inn all the capital messuage called St. Cleeres or St. Clowes in Oxhey, and
the impaled or warren ground with the Warren house
or lodge called Edeswick or Oxhey Lodge, and also
part of the old park called Oxhey Park, and the house
called Merry Hill House or Hamonds lying near
Oxhey Wood, in the tenure of William Hamond by
lease of Francis Heydon. The extent of these lands
amounted to about 500 acres. (fn. 158) In the following
year Henry Fleetwood sold the estate to Robert
Bowyer and Richard Fusse of London, (fn. 159) and two
years later they conveyed it to James Altham, serjeantat-law. (fn. 160) He was appointed one of the barons of
the Exchequer and knighted in 1606, and was one of
the judges whose opinion was taken in 1612 by Lord
Chancellor Ellesmere upon the case of 'two blasphemous heretics,' Legate and Wightman, whom Archbishop Abbot was desirous of burning. Probably
Altham concurred with Williams his fellow judge, who,
Abbot wrote, 'maketh no doubt but that the law is
cleere to burn them,' for eventually both the heretics
were burned, one at Smithfield and the other at
Burton-on-Trent. Altham died in 1617, and Lord
Keeper Sir Francis Bacon, in appointing his successor,
characterized the late baron as 'one of the greatest
and most reverend judges of the kingdom.' (fn. 161) He
was buried in a chapel erected by him in 1612 at
Oxhey, and left an only son James, who married
Elizabeth daughter of Sir Richard Sutton. James
died in 1623, leaving an infant son, Sutton, and two
daughters. (fn. 162) Sutton died in 1630 and the estate
passed to his sisters, Elizabeth wife of Arthur Annesley, son and heir of Lord Mountnorrice, and Frances,
who married Richard earl of Carbery. (fn. 163) These coheirs sold the estate in 1639 to John Heydon of
Lincoln's Inn, (fn. 164) of whom it was purchased in 1668
by William Bucknall of London. (fn. 165) William's son,
Sir John Bucknall, pulled down the old mansion
known as St. Cleere's in 1688, and erected in its
place a large square building of brick, reputed to have
a hundred windows on each side. (fn. 166) The estate descended in the family of Bucknall in the same way as
Wiggenhall (q.v.), and the mansion built in 1688 was
demolished in 1799 by Sir William Bucknall. (fn. 167) It
was sold by Thomas Sotheron Estcourt in 1866 to
the Right Hon. William Henry Smith. (fn. 168) By this
owner part of the estate was sold in building lots,
and the remainder was sold in 1877 to Thomas Blackwell of the firm of Crosse & Blackwell, (fn. 169) from whom
it descended to his son the late Thomas F. Blackwell. The estate is now the property of his son
Mr. Walter R. Blackwell, (fn. 170) who resides at Oxhey
Place, an entirely new house.
The chapel, built by Sir James Altham in 1612
possibly on the site of an earlier one, still stands near
Oxhey Place. The reredos is thought by Mr. Newton Price to have been erected about 1690, and to
have been made from oak taken out of the old house
pulled down in 1688. It was used for divine service
till 1799, but from that date till 1852 it was used
chiefly as a storage for lumber. Repairs were carried
out at the latter date, and the chapel was again
restored in 1897 at the expense of Mr. T. F. Blackwell, the stained deal introduced in 1852 being everywhere replaced by teak, the old Elizabethan windows
restored, and the seats placed quirewise. (fn. 171)
In a survey of Oxhey taken in the reign of
Charles I, Oxhey Place Hall is described as a very
large house, which with orchard and garden was encompassed by a brick wall containing from 5 to 7 acres.
There were many ponds on the demesne, and the
house built by Baron Altham cost £3,000. (fn. 172) At that
time the house called Merry Hill House, now in
the parish of Bushey, was occupied by a certain
Riccardo. (fn. 173)
The manor of OXHEY WALROUND seems to
have included all that part of Oxhey which was not
retained by Richard de Oxhey, and in 1303 was
divided into three parts as follows among the various
co-heirs:—The abbot held an eighth part of a knight's
fee, Richard de Tingwicke, Ralph de Glynley, and
Roger le Tailour, the heirs of Thomas de Wauncy,
held a quarter of a knight's fee of the abbot, and
Nicholas de Whethamsted and John de Westwick, heirs
of Petronilla, the second daughter of Petronilla de
Ameneville, held the remaining eighth part of a knight's
fee. (fn. 174) Before 1320 the quarter of a knight's fee held
by the heirs of Wauncy had been demised to the
abbot, (fn. 175) who then held an eighth and a quarter of a
knight's fee. Nicholas de Whethamstede and John
de Westwick still held an eighth part of a fee at that
date. (fn. 176) The abbot held the same proportion of the
manor in 1347–8. Nicholas's share seems to have
passed to John Mahew of Wheathampstead, and the
share of John de Westwick had been divided between
co-heirs or feoffees, William de la Marche and Thomas
Blaket. (fn. 177) This William de la Marche is perhaps
identical with the William de la Marche of Watford, the
cook of Edward III, who came to the aid of the
abbot when he was at strife with the men of the town
of St. Albans, and did good service to the abbey. In
reward for this he was granted an annuity of £10, a
gown, and a cart-load of hay from the manor of Croxley, and undertook to be for ever faithful to the
abbey. (fn. 178) William de la Marche and Agnes his wife
conveyed a fourth part of the manor of Oxhey Walround in 1352 to John Lebard, of Strixton, chaplain,
and William de Langeleye, (fn. 179) who were probably trustees for some settlement. The quarter of the manor
not held by the abbot must soon after this time have
become vested in Clementia wife of Richard de
Eccleshale, for a plea arose between Abbot Thomas
(1349–96) and Thomas Fitz John and William Windesore, husband of Alice Perrers, the famous mistress of
Edward III, on account of this manor. (fn. 180) The
abbot's story was that Clementia had conveyed all
her estates in Oxhey and elsewhere to feoffees; part
of them were to be used to support a perpetual chantry
of four chaplains, and the rest, half the manor of Oxhey
Walround being amongst them, were to be sold to
raise money to pay for the alienation in mortmain of
the other part. Oxhey Walround was sold by these
feoffees to John Whitwell, steward of St. Albans, and
Joan his mother, and after the death of John, Joan,
in 1374, granted it to the abbot and convent, who
would thus have become possessed of the whole
manor. Thomas Fitz John claimed that he was heir
of Clementia, and that the moiety of the manor of
Oxhey Walround had been conveyed by Clementia
to trustees to be alienated in mortmain to support a
chantry. This condition had not been fulfilled, so
Thomas entered upon the manor, and afterwards made
a feoffment of the same to Alice Perrers. Between
1374 and 1377 the abbot and Alice seem to have
been alternately in possession of the manor, but as she
was 'of great power and eminence in those days,' the
abbot was advised to postpone any open complaint in
the king's court until a more favourable season. Alice
was banished in 1377, and her lands were seized by
the king, but were afterwards granted to her husband,
Sir William Windesore. The lands at Oxhey were
specially mentioned in the grant, but the abbot remained in peaceful possession until July, 1381. In
that month forcible possession was taken of the
premises in the name of Sir William, and much
damage was done to the crops and to Oxhey Mill.
John, son and successor of Sir William Windesore, in
1385 obtained a protection so that the suit pending
with the abbot could not proceed, but in 1386 an
agreement was made and judgement entered for the
abbot. (fn. 181) In the course of this suit it appears that
the capital messuage of the manor was called Whithynhalle, (fn. 182) and after this time the manor is known as
Wiggenhall or Oxhey Walround. It also appears that
the manor was leased by John Whitwell to Richard
de Bromwich, probably the same Richard who was
holding half the manor of Oxhey Richard in 1370. (fn. 183)
On coming into possession of the manor the abbot
assigned it to the sub-cellarer. (fn. 184) After this time successive abbots remained in peaceful possession of the
manor till the Dissolution. (fn. 185) The site of the manor
and of Oxhey Mill had been leased to Thomas Heydon for a term of years ending in 1546, and the
reversion of this lease was granted for a further term
of years to Hugh Byrde of Pinner, (fn. 186) the abbot reserving to himself the right to fish in the waters of Oxhey
Mill. (fn. 187)

Red Lion Court, Watford
At the Dissolution the manor came to the crown,
and was granted in 1540 to James Joskin, of London,
and Joan his wife. (fn. 188) James died in 1549 leaving
two sons, Robert and John, infants of a year old at
the time of their father's death. They both died in
1552, and their sister Katherine, then aged twelve, was
their heir. (fn. 189) Katherine married Thomas Brokesbye,
by whom she had a son William, (fn. 190) but the manor of
Wiggenhall was held for life by James's widow Joan,
who married Gregory Lovell as her second husband.
Joan died in 1570, and her grandson William Brokesbye was left to the care of Gregory, Thomas his
father having become insane. (fn. 191) William, in return
for the kindness of Gregory, settled this manor in
1580 on him and his second wife Dorothy for their
lives, with remainder to his half-brother Bartholomew
Brokesbye and others. (fn. 192) William died soon after,
and Gregory and Dorothy held the manor till the
death of Gregory, when Dorothy had some trouble in
proving her claim against Bartholomew Brokesbye and
Francis Heydon, (fn. 193) who held the part of the manor
called Oxhey Hall (q.v.) as tenant of Dorothy. Bartholomew Brokesbye was found guilty of complicity in
Watson's conspiracy to poison James I, and was
attainted in 1603. (fn. 194) He was pardoned, however, in
the following year, and his lands,
among them his interest in the
manor of Wiggenhall, were
granted to Sir Thomas Tresham
of Rushton (Northants), and Sir
William Rooper of Eltham, in
Kent, as trustees for Bartholomew. (fn. 195)
Dorothy Lovell married Sir
Robert Cross as her second husband, (fn. 196) and they, with Bartholomew and Gregory Brokesbye,
conveyed the manor in 1609
to Francis Ryder and William
Leake. (fn. 197) This conveyance was
evidently made for the purpose
of a settlement, and further conveyances were made in 1624 by
Gregory Brokesbye, probably son
and heir of Bartholomew, (fn. 198) who
held a court for the manor in
1647. (fn. 199) In 1664 a court was
held by William Stych and Josua
Brokesbye, widow, (fn. 200) probably
relict of Gregory Brokesbye, Stych no doubt being a
trustee. Thomas Stych, Josua Brokesbye, Edmund
Chapman, Ralph Snowden, and Mary Wake conveyed the manor in 1675 to Sir William Bucknall, (fn. 201) knighted in 1670, (fn. 202) who was succeeded on
his death in 1676 by his son Sir John, who died
in 1711, when the manor passed to his son
William. (fn. 203) On the death of William in 1746
the manor descended to John Askell his son, (fn. 204) who
died without issue in 1796 (fn. 205) and was buried in
Oxhey chapel. By his will Wiggenhall passed to his
nephew William Grimston son of his sister Mary, and
James, second Viscount Grimston, (fn. 206) with remainder
to William's brother Harbottle and his sister Jane in
tail male. (fn. 207) William Grimston assumed the name
Bucknall in compliance with the will of his uncle, and
died in 1814 without leaving issue male. (fn. 208) His
brother Harbottle on succeeding to the estate also
assumed the name Bucknall, and died unmarried in
1823, when the manor came
to his sister Jane, the wife of
Thomas Estcourt. On her
death in 1829 her son Thomas
Grimston Bucknall Estcourt
succeeded. His son Thomas
Henry Sutton Estcourt assumed the surname of Sotheron
on his marriage with Lucy
Sarah Sotheron, but dropped
it and resumed the name of
Estcourt on the death of his
father in 1853. (fn. 209) He sold
the manor of Wiggenhall in
1866 to the Rt. Hon. William
Henry Smith, M.P., publisher
and newsagent of the Strand, (fn. 210)
of whom it was purchased in 1872 by William
Thomas Eley of Oxhey Grange, an adjoining estate.
It is now in the possession of his son, Major Eley.

Estcourt. Ermine a chief indented gules with three six pointed molets therein within a border or charged with eight cinquefoils sable.
The manor-house of Wiggenhall, which is quite
apart from the estate of that name, seems to have been
occupied by the Deacon family towards the end of
the seventeenth century. In 1678 a rent from the
manor was paid by Thomas Deacon, (fn. 211) and Thomas
Deacon of Wiggenhall died in 1780 and was buried
in Watford church. (fn. 212) There are other inscriptions
to members of the family as late as 1864. (fn. 213) The
east window in the church of St. Andrew is the gift
of Jonathan King who lived at Wiggenhall in 1873, (fn. 214)
and probably succeeded the Deacons. It is now the
property of Mr. Joseph Gutteridge Smith.
The manor of MUNDEN or MERIDEN was given
by Abbot Richard (1097–1119) to Geoffrey de
Mappeham in exchange for the land of Bradway, (fn. 215)
and was confirmed to the monastery by Henry II and
King John, (fn. 216) as lands of the knights of St. Albans.
Raicus de Meriden was holding land of the abbot of
St. Albans in 1166, (fn. 217) and Roger de Meriden his son
held land of the abbot in 1210–12. (fn. 218) He was probably succeeded by his brother Thomas, and Roger
son of Thomas was holding a sixth and a thirtieth
part of a knight's fee in Meriden towards the end of
the thirteenth century. His son Roger held courts at
Meriden in 1298–9, (fn. 219) and must have died between
1303 and 1308, for he was holding the manor at the
earlier date, and had been succeeded by his son John
before 1308. (fn. 220) In 1351–2 the manor was granted
by John de Meriden to John de Raynford, clerk, who
already held it for life. (fn. 221)
This grant seems to have been made for the purpose of conveying the manor to the abbey of St.
Albans, for Abbot Thomas (1349–96) bought it of
John de Meriden for £80 and an annuity of 10 marks
and a robe yearly during his life. (fn. 222) The abbot
assigned this manor to the bursar of the monastery. (fn. 223)
Half an acre of land in the meadow called 'Myrydenmede' was granted in 1367 by Thomas abbot of
St. Albans to the prioress of Markyate. (fn. 224) In 1440
the abbot was presented for not mending the bridge of
Meriden, but proved himself to be exempt from the
liability. (fn. 225)
The manor was held under a lease from the abbot
at the time of the Dissolution by Robert Betryce, (fn. 226)
and it was granted with the woods called Bondegrove
and Bondbushes, and tithes in Largerstrete and Walshall meade, in 1546 to Edward Waldegrave. (fn. 227) He
sold it in the same year to Sir Anthony Denny, (fn. 228)
who died seised of it in 1549 leaving Henry his son
and heir. (fn. 229) Henry died in 1574, when the manor
passed to his son Robert, (fn. 230) who dying a minor two
years later was succeeded by his brother Edward, then
aged seven years. (fn. 231)
Edward, Lord Denny, sold this manor with the
exception of the site in 1607 to Robert Briscoe of
Aldenham, (fn. 232) who conveyed it in the same year to Sir
Baptist Hicks and William Toperley, of London. (fn. 233)
They sold the manor in the following year to Sir
Charles Morrison, son-in-law of Sir Baptist, (fn. 234) who
thereupon settled it upon himself and Lady Mary his
wife. (fn. 235) Upon the death of Charles in 1628 the
manor, which already seems to have become merged
in that of Parkbury, (fn. 236) came to his daughter Elizabeth
the wife of Arthur Capell, (fn. 237) and its subsequent descent
is the same as that of Cassiobury (q.v.).
The site and farm of the manor were sold by Sir
Edward Denny in 1607–8 to Thomas Ewer of the
Lea, (fn. 238) with remainders for life to John Warner and
Anne, wife of Thomas Ewer, and after their death to
David Ewer, son of Thomas. (fn. 239) John Warner predeceased Thomas, on whose death in 1628 the site
came to his son David, (fn. 240) who dying in 1630 was
succeeded by Henry his brother and heir. (fn. 241) It descended in the family of Ewer till 1715, when Henry
Ewer of Bushey Hall, son of Thomas Ewer, sold it to
John Rogers of New Brentford and Lewis his brother
in trust for John and his heirs. (fn. 242) John Rogers died
in 1750 and bequeathed Meriden to his brother
Humphrey with remainder to Elizabeth daughter of
another brother Francis. (fn. 243) Elizabeth, to whom the
estate eventually passed, married Armstead Parker of
Peterborough, and on her
death in 1787 it came to her
son Rogers Parker, who died
unmarried in 1828–9. He
left the estate to Elizabeth
Margaret wife of George Hibbert, (fn. 244) daughter of his sister
Mary Fonnereau, on whose
death in 1841 it came to
Nathaniel Hibbert her eldest
son. (fn. 245) He died in 1865
without surviving male issue,
leaving Meriden to his wife
Emily, on whose death in
1874 it passed under her will
to her grandson the Hon.
Arthur Henry Holland, son
of her daughter, Elizabeth
Margaret and Henry Thurstan Holland, first Viscount
Knutsford, who on coming
of age took the additional
surname Hibbert, (fn. 246) and is the present owner of
the estate.

Holland-Hibbert. Ermine a bend nebuly sable with three crescents argent thereon and a crosslet fitchy sable in the cantle, for Hibbert, quartered with Party argent and azure powdered with fleurs-de-lis and a leopard rampant all countercoloured with a bend engrailed gules over all, for Holland.
The property has for some years been called Munden
and comprises about 1,100 acres. (fn. 247) The house is in
the parish of Watford, but a large part of the estate lies
in the parish of St. Stephen's, and a small part of it in
Aldenham. At the time of the death of Rogers
Parker in 1828 Munden was merely an old fashioned
farm-house and was converted into its present form
by George Hibbert, (fn. 248) and by the present owner.
There is a gravel-pit about 250 yards south of the
house which marks a Roman interment. (fn. 249)
The manor of GARSTON extended into the
parishes of St. Albans, Watford, Abbots Langley, and
Leavesden. (fn. 250) By an undated charter, probably of
the thirteenth century, Nicholas son of John de
Garston gave to John de Westwick and Ellen his wife
a messuage and land at Garston; (fn. 251) the manor was
apparently held of the kitchener of St. Albans, who
held a fourteenth part of a fee in Garston during the
fourteenth century. (fn. 252) In 1355 Margaret wife of
John de Westwick granted to Thomas Purchacour for
life a capital messuage and land in Watford and elsewhere, which she held of Bartholomew Blaket. (fn. 253)
Bartholomew, in 1368, conveyed the manor of
Garston to John Curteys of Wymington. (fn. 254) In 1412
John Burgeys of Maldon and Joan his wife held it for
the life of Joan, (fn. 255) and they in 1427 granted it to
Robert Darcy. (fn. 256) By the middle of the fifteenth century it had come into the possession of William Halle
of Shillington, co. Beds, 'a good and benevolent
man,' of whom Abbot John of Wheathampstead purchased this manor in 1453. (fn. 257)
At the time of the Dissolution the manor was held
by Richard Carter under a lease made in 1534 for
thirty years, (fn. 258) and was granted by Henry VIII in
1544 to the said Richard and Thomas Palmer together with woods called Mote Grove and More
Grove. (fn. 259) Richard and Thomas in the same year obtained
licence to alienate half the
manor to John Randoll and
Agnes his wife. (fn. 260) Richard
Carter died seised of half the
manor in 1558 leaving William his son and heir, (fn. 261) on
whose death in 1567 it passed
to his son Robert, then a
minor. (fn. 262) The other half
passed from John Randoll and
Agnes to co-heirs, William
Pierson and Agnes his wife,
Richard Haysse and Cecily his
wife, and Michael Sare and
Margaret his wife, the ladies probably being daughters
of John Randoll. These co-heirs in 1582 conveyed
their moiety to Henry Sare and Richard Wood, (fn. 263) who
were probably trustees for Michael Sare and Margaret,
for they in 1586 granted half the manor to Robert
Carter and Petronilla his wife, who already held the
other moiety. (fn. 264) In default of issue of Robert and
Petronilla the manor was to pass to Walter, Francis,
and Richard Curll, sons of William Curll in tail male,
with remainder to the heirs of Robert Carter. (fn. 265)
Robert died seised of the manor in 1632, holding
one half in demesne and the other in tail male, leaving William his son and heir. (fn. 266) William sold the
manor in 1666 to John Edlin and William Kentish, (fn. 267)
who were probably trustees for John Marsh, who was
lord of the manor in 1672, and whose house at
Garston was licensed in that year as a place of worship
for Nonconformists. (fn. 268) He died in 1681 and was
buried in Watford church. (fn. 269) The manor passed to
his son Joseph, whose daughter and heir Anne married
Thomas Beech. (fn. 270) Thomas and Anne conveyed the
manor in 1728 to Samuel Raymond, (fn. 271) who may
have been a trustee for Richard Capper of Bushey, to
whom the manor passed at about that time. (fn. 272) On
his death Garston came to his son Francis, whose
eldest son Richard succeeded to the estate on the
death of his father, and on whose death in 1800 it
passed to his son Robert. (fn. 273) In 1814 Robert Capper
conveyed it to Stephen Moore, (fn. 274) but this conveyance
was probably made for the purposes of a settlement,
as Robert sold it two years later to John Falcon, (fn. 275)
who held it till his death in 1854, when it was sold
under the terms of his will to Henry Cobb, (fn. 276) on
whose death in 1873 it came to his widow, Mrs. Mary
Anne Cobb, who was residing there in 1899. Garston House is now the residence of Mr. Thomas
Farries.

Carter of Garston. Argent a cheveron sable between two roundels vert in the chief and a Catherine wheel vert in the foot.
The origin of the manor of LEGATTS (Legattys,
Legetts) is perhaps found in 83 acres of land held of
the manor of Bushey by John Legat in 1451–2. (fn. 277)
The first mention of it as a manor occurs in a suit of
the reign of Henry VII or VIII. It then belonged
to Dame Jane Kidwelly, widow of Sir Morgan Kidwelly, (fn. 277a) and was leased by her to Agnes Shawarden.
The suit arose on account of a distraint for rent due
for the manor. (fn. 278) In 1551–2 John Snow and
Katherine his wife conveyed a fourth part of a messuage called Legattys, in Watford, to Simon Hoddesdon, (fn. 279) who, with his wife Joan, sold it in 1553 to
Thomas Spurling. (fn. 280) The manor, or reputed manor,
afterwards passed to Sarah widow of Robert Hucks,
the owner of Penne's Place in Aldenham and of the
manor of Hartsbourne in Bushey, who in 1769 settled
it upon herself for life, with remainder to her son
Robert. (fn. 281) The manorial rights, if any ever existed,
have long been lost, and the estate, now known as
Legatt's Farm in Leavesden Green, passed in the same
way as Penne's Place to Lord Aldenham.
REDHEATH is an estate about four miles north-west of Watford, on the borders of the parish of Rickmansworth, consisting partly of freehold and partly of
copyhold land held of the manors of Croxley Hall
and Cassio. It was occupied by the Baldwins in the
early part of the sixteenth century, and remained with
owners of that name till 1709, (fn. 282) when Thomas son
of Henry Baldwin died without issue, and was succeeded by his nephew Charles, son of Charles Finch
and Mary sister of Thomas Baldwin. (fn. 283) Charles Finch
died without issue in 1718, and was succeeded by his
brother John, from whom the
estate descended in a direct
line to Henry Baldwin Finch,
the present owner. (fn. 284) The
Baldwin family appear to have
built a house here, but all of
that building has disappeared.
In 1712 Charles Finch added
a new front to the house,
and that date appears on it.
Further additions were made
in 1866 by Henry Charles
Finch. The front part is the
only old portion remaining.
The house is a three-storied
building of brick, the roof being surmounted by
a large square wooden clock turret, with an open
octagonal cupola on the top. The clock in the
tower bears the inscription GEORGE CLARKE, WHITE-CHAPPLE, 1743. There are moulded brick cornices
over the first-floor windows, and the entrance door,
which is in the centre of the front, has a fine
semicircular projecting wooden hood, supported on
richly-carved brackets. There is a very fine avenue
of beech trees, stretching from the back of the house
to Chandler's Cross.

Redheath, Watford

Finch of Redheath. Argent a cheveron between three griffons passant sable.
The tenement called HARWARD or HERWARD
was acquired by Abbot Thomas Ramridge about
1506–7 from John Danyell, the land having previously been held by John Day. (fn. 285) It remained in
the possession of the monastery till the Dissolution, (fn. 286)
at which time it was in lease to Roger Wedon for
eight years. (fn. 287) In
1556 it was held
by Richard Wilson under a lease
for thirty-one
years, of which
ten had then expired. (fn. 288) It was
granted by Queen
Elizabeth in
1577–8 to William Edlyn for
three lives, (fn. 289) and
at his death, in
1595, it came to
his son William. (fn. 290)
The tenement was
still in the hands
of the king in
1608, and was
leased to a tenant
whose name is not
given. (fn. 291) In the following year it was granted
with Watford manor to Thomas Marbury and
Richard Cartwright, (fn. 292) and its subsequent descent has
been identical with that of Watford manor (fn. 293) (q.v.).
The LEA or LE LEY was at the time of the Dissolution part of the possession of the monastery of
St. Albans. (fn. 294) In 1541 the tenement was held by
William Ewer in right of his wife Elizabeth daughter
of Thomas Hill, who had apparently inherited it after
the death of Edward Hill, probably a brother. The
tenement had formerly belonged to Thomas Chamberleyn and Cecilia his wife, afterwards to William
Robyn, and then to William Smith. (fn. 295) A certain
Richard Hill was holding land in Watford in 1513. (fn. 296)
The estate descended from father to son in the family
of Ewer (fn. 297) till 1715, when it had probably become
merged in the Meriden estate (q.v.), and was sold by
Henry son of Thomas Ewer to John Rogers. (fn. 298)
The Lea was in 1899 the residence of Mr. Ernest
Houghton Browne, from whom it passed shortly
afterwards to Mr. S. Thornely Mott. It is now a
farm-house in Leavesden.
The manor of GROVE was held as of the manor
of Cassiobury. (fn. 299) In 1294–5 John de Brittewell and
Sarah his wife conveyed land and a third part of a mill
in La Grava to Albreda de Brittewell and her two
sisters Alice and Ellen. (fn. 300) Thomas de Harpesfield
and Joan his wife were in 1324–5 holding land in
the demesne of St. Albans at La Grava in the vill of
Cassio, and the abbot released them from a rent due
for it. (fn. 301) There is a monumental inscription in Watford
church to John Heydon of the Grove, who died in
1400. (fn. 302) John Rayner and Joan his wife conveyed
the manor in 1481–2 to John Fortescue, John Sturgeon, John Forster, and Henry Heydon, to the
use of John Fortescue. (fn. 303) Owing to proceedings in
Chancery the estate passed to John Melksham or
Melsam, who died seised of it in 1487, leaving John
his son and heir, (fn. 304) who in 1503, with his wife
Elizabeth, granted it to Reginald Pegge subject to a
rent of £10. (fn. 305) From Reginald the manor passed to
his son William, who, with Margaret his wife, and
Geoffrey Oxley and his wife, late wife of Reginald
Pegge, conveyed the manor in 1518 to William
and John Heydon, (fn. 306) who were probably descendants of the John Heydon who held the manor at
the end of the fourteenth century. William Heydon died seised of it in 1545, leaving Henry his son
and heir, (fn. 307) who died in 1559, (fn. 308) and was succeeded by
his son Francis, who sold the manor in 1602 to
Clement Scudamore. (fn. 309) Clement sold it in 1631, with
two water-mills under one roof, called the Grove Mills,
to Sir William Ashton, (fn. 310) from whom it passed to his
second son Robert. On the death of Robert's son
William without issue in 1703 the manor passed to
Sir William Buck, grandson of William son of Sir
William, the purchaser of the estate. (fn. 311) He died in
1717, and the Grove came to his son Charles, (fn. 312) who
in 1728 sold it to the trustees of Fulk Greville, then
a minor. (fn. 313) He in 1743 sold it to Arthur Mohun
St. Leger, third Lord Doneraile, (fn. 314) who conveyed it in
1748 to Charles Unwin, probably for the purposes of a
settlement, (fn. 315) for on the death
of Lord Doneraile in 1750,
without issue, it passed under
his will to his cousin Elizabeth St. Leger, afterwards the
wife of Major Ralph Burton. (fn. 316) On her marriage the
estate was vested in trustees,
who sold it in 1753 to the
Hon. Thomas Villiers, second
son of William, earl of Jersey. (fn. 317) In recognition of his
diplomatic services he was created Baron Hyde of
Hindon, co. Wilts., in 1756, and earl of Clarendon
in 1776, and from him the manor of Grove has
descended with the title to Sir Edward Hyde Villiers,
the present earl. (fn. 318)

Buck. Lozengy bendwise or and azure with a quarter ermine.
George William Frederick, fourth earl of Clarendon, was a statesman of great ability. When little
more than a boy he entered
the diplomatic service, and became attaché to the British
Embassy at St. Petersburg.
He was sent in 1833 as Envoy
Extraordinary to Madrid, a
post rendered at that time
very difficult on account of
the civil war. The conclusion, in 1834, of the treaty
between England, Spain,
France, and Portugal, called
the Quadruple Alliance, was
largely the result of his efforts.
He succeeded to the earldom in 1838, and entered the ministry in the
following year as Lord Privy Seal, but he soon came
into collision with Palmerston on his Syrian policy.
He was made Lord Lieutenant of Ireland in 1847,
and during his term of office had to cope with famine,
the Young Ireland agitation, the Smith O'Brien
rising, and the Orange disturbances. His life was
constantly in danger, but he carried Ireland through
a period of conspiracy and rebellion with little or no
bloodshed. He died in 1870, and was buried at
Watford. (fn. 319) The Grove is a fine red-brick house of
eighteenth-century date, of three stories, the top
story being of later date than the rest, and contains a
valuable collection of paintings, chiefly portraits.

Villiers, Earl of Clarendon. Argent a cross gules with five scallops or thereon.
CARPENDERS PARK. This estate took its name
from the family of Carpenter, who were in possession
of it during the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries,
and to whom there are various inscriptions in the
church. (fn. 320) It was formerly included in the manors of
More and Wiggenhall, and, after the Carpenders
ceased to possess it, seems to have been divided into a
number of small holdings. During the reign of
George II the house and about 150 acres of land
adjoining were in the possession of Hatch Moody of
St. Margarets, county Middlesex. By his will dated
1747 he left the estate to his son Samuel, with an
entail on his heirs male and contingent remainder to
his daughters Ann and Letitia. (fn. 321) Samuel rebuilt the
house at Carpenders, and died in 1823, having survived his two sisters and his only child Anna Maria.
By his will he left the estate to his nephew the Rev.
Matthew Skinner, of Wood Norton, county Norfolk, in
tail male with remainder to his sister Mary Anne
Longmore of Chelmsford, and to her son William
Longmore. (fn. 322) William Longmore died before the
testator, and Matthew died in 1825, when Mary
Anne Longmore came into possession. She, with her
sons and grandsons, conveyed it in 1846 to Jonah
Smith Wells of Islington, and he in 1862 sold it to
Robert Russell Carew, (fn. 323) from whom it has come to
Mrs. Carew, the present owner.
The manor of NEWHALL, in Watford and Sarratt, belonged to the abbey of St. Albans, and was
leased in 1528 to Thomas Johnson for forty-one years. (fn. 324)
The site of the manor was granted in 1543 to
Richard Andrews and Nicholas Temple, (fn. 325) who conveyed it in the same year to Thomas Palmer. (fn. 326)
Thomas sold it in 1546 to Thomas Johnson, (fn. 327) who
died seised of it in 1577, leaving Francis his son
and heir, (fn. 328) to whom livery was made in the following
year. (fn. 329) He and his son Francis sold the manor in
1608 to Richard Day of Westwood, in Abbots Langley, (fn. 330) who in 1613 gave it to his son Benjamin. (fn. 331)
The estate was probably sold by Ralph Day about
1750, and was bequeathed by Judith Nicholls of
Hertford, widow, in 1767, to her son-in-law Lewis
Weston, with remainder to Judith, his wife, her
daughter. Judith Weston by her will proved in 1815
gave it to her daughter Sarah, wife of William Dillwyn, who died intestate in 1815, and was succeeded
by her brother Lewis Weston. He sold the manor in
1826 to Ralph Day, son of Ralph Day, mentioned
above. (fn. 332) Newhall has now lost its manorial rights,
and is incorporated in the Micklefield Green estate
(q.v.). (fn. 333) Its site probably exists at New Hall Farm,
in this parish.

The Grove, Watford
The manor of EASTBURY, which lies to the east
of the parish, was part of the possession of the abbey
of St. Albans in the thirteenth century. It had been
assigned by Abbot Roger for the maintenance of an
anniversary, but on his death was seized by the
escheator, and was not recovered by the convent
without some trouble. (fn. 334) The manor-house was rebuilt at the end of the fourteenth century. (fn. 335) It
seems to have been alienated, perhaps by Abbot
Thomas to William Flete, for he, on his death bed in
1428, bequeathed it to the convent of St. Albans. (fn. 336)
In 1456 it was granted by the abbot to Sir Ralph
Boteler, lord of Sudeley, in exchange for tenements
in London, (fn. 337) and shortly after that time its manorial
rights probably became merged in those of the
manor of More, in Rickmansworth, with which it
descended. Eastbury is now an estate lying partly in
this parish and partly in that of Rickmansworth.
When the ecclesiastical parish of Oxhey was formed in
1879 Eastbury was excepted from it, as it had already
been made over to the vicarage of Northwood in
Middlesex. It was at that time occupied by David
Carnegie. (fn. 338) Sir John Vaughan, an eminent judge,
died at Eastbury Lodge in 1839. (fn. 339)
CALLOWLAND or GAMELL is an estate to the
north of the town of Watford. In 1380–1 licence
was given to John Turk, Robert Rygge, and others to
alienate nine shops, land, meadow, and rent in Watford, Little Bushey, Langley, and St. Albans to the
master and scholars of Merton Hall, Oxford, in part
satisfaction of £40 of land, tenements, and rent which
they had licence to acquire. (fn. 340) Charles I in 1633–4
confirmed all grants made to the college, and among
their possessions is mentioned the manor called Callowland or Gamell, in the parish of Watford, and land in
the meadows called Merton Hall Croft and Chamberburg Croft. (fn. 341)
It consisted in 1881 of a farm and about 120 acres
of land near the railway station, belonging to the
Warden and Fellows of Merton College, and negotiations
were then in progress for its
sale to the earl of Essex. (fn. 342)
It has now been sold in
building plots, and is becoming covered with small houses
and shops.

Merton College, Oxford. Or three cheverons party and countercoloured azure and gules.
There is some indication
that there was a manor of
the RECTORY of Watford
before the Dissolution, as
among the revenues of the
abbey of St. Albans are numbered perquisites of court of
the rectory of Watford, (fn. 343) but no further reference
to it has been found.