MELLING
Hornby; Farleton; Melling with Wrayton; Arkholme with Cawood; Wennington; Boeburndale; Wray With Botton;

MELLING TATHAM
Before the Conquest Melling was the seat of a compact lordship occupying the tongue of land between
the Lune and the Wenning. Later Hornby was
made the head of a fee or barony, with castle,
borough and monastery, and the history of the
parish becomes bound up with that of Hornby.
Gressingham was originally part of the parish, but
was transferred to Lancaster early in the 13th century. The number of ancient churches and chapels
around Melling suggests that this part of the Lune
valley was at one time relatively far more populous
and important than it is to-day. Thus Melling has
Arkholme and Tatham close by, with Gressingham,
Claughton and Hornby to the south-west, and Tunstall and Whittington to the north—seven or eight
churches within limits of six miles by two.
In 1349 and 1350 the district was disturbed by a
private war between Sir Thomas de Dacre and Sir
Robert de Nevill. The former went to Arkholme
with several companions and assaulted Nevill's servant, while Sir Robert assembled 'an immense multitude' of armed men at Hornby, 'to the number of
about 30,' and for half a year led them hither and
thither to waylay his adversary. (fn. 1)
The people of Melling in 1536–7 joined in the
Northern Rebellion. (fn. 2) At the Reformation some of
the leading families remained faithful to Roman
Catholicism, and in the Civil War to Charles I, but
there is little to show how the people in general
regarded these events. The Revolution and the
Jacobite risings of 1715 and 1745 passed over
quietly, though on the former occasion the Highland
forces passed through the parish on their way from
Kirkby Lonsdale to Lancaster, and demanded aid
from Hornby Castle. (fn. 3)
The area of the parish measures 23,436 acres, a
large part being the sparsely occupied fell country
south of the Wenning. The population in 1901
numbered 1,589.
The agricultural land is now mostly in grass, as the
following details will show (fn. 3a) :—
|
| Arable land | Permanent grass | Woods and plantations |
| ac. | ac. | ac. |
| Hornby | 2½ | 1,323 | 244 |
| Farleton | 23 | 908 | — |
| Melling with Wrayton | 42½ | 830 | 10½ |
| Arkholme | 263 | 2,513 | 76 |
| Wennington | 88 | 829½ | 113 |
| Roeburndale | 66 | 3,566 | 213½ |
| Wray with Botton | 122 | 3,114 | 286 |
| 607 | 13,083½ | 943 |
When the hundred had to raise £100 this parish
contributed as follows to the county lay of 1624:
Melling and Wrayton, 17s. 7½ d.; Hornby and
Roeburndale, 12s. 1¾ d.; Farleton, 6s. 10¾ d.; Arkholme with Cawood, 22s.; Wennington, 10s. 8¼d.;
Wray with Botton, 17s. 1¾d.; or £4 6s. 6d. in all. (fn. 4)
Church
The church of ST. WILFRID (fn. 5)
stands on the west slope of an elevated
plateau, the top of which forms an
ancient earthwork known as Castle Mount, (fn. 6) and
consists of a chancel 36 ft. by 20 ft., with short north
and south aisles and north vestry, nave 49 ft. by
18 ft. 8 in. with north and south aisles 10 ft. wide, south
porch, and west tower 12 ft. 6 in. square, all these
measurements being internal. There is no structural
division between the nave and the chancel, the nave
consisting of the first three bays of the arcade from
the west and the quire seats occupying the fourth,
beyond which the chancel is continued 21 ft. eastward
between external walls beyond the aisles.
The building is largely of 15th-century date, but
some fragments of an older structure are built into
the walls, and others have been found in more recent
times, indicating a church on the same site at a very
early period. A portion of a pre-Conquest sepulchral
slab found 6 ft. below the tower floor is preserved in
the vestry, together with a short portion of a cross
shaft with basket-work interlacing ornament, which
a few years ago was taken out of the churchyard
wall. (fn. 7) In 1858, on widening the splay of the west
window of the north aisle, a fragment of Norman
stonework with zigzag moulding, probably belonging
to a 12th-century doorway, (fn. 8) was found, and there are
fragments of 12th-century masonry in the walling
near the north-west entrance. There is also in the
vestry a fragment of a 13th-century stone crucifix
found at the same time and place as the fragment of
the Norman doorway, the lower part of the figure
below the waist alone remaining. (fn. 9)
The oldest part of the structure is the west window
of the south aisle, which is of 13th-century date,
being a single-pointed trefoiled light 5 ft. high and
1 ft. 7 in. wide, with external hood mould and plain
chamfered jambs. The corresponding window to the
north aisle, in the jamb of which the fragments just
mentioned were found, is also a single-pointed light,
but without foliation or hood mould, and is probably
of 15th-century date or later, built to match in
some measure the corresponding south window. The
13th-century window, however, may not be in its
original position, and nothing therefore can be said
as to the development of the plan. The whole structure seems to have been rebuilt some time towards the
end of the 15th century, when it assumed more or
less of its present aspect. The nave and aisles were
originally, however, under one wide spanned roof,
which is said to have been covered with thatch, and
so remained till 1763, when the church was new
roofed and a clearstory added to both nave and
chancel. A plaster ceiling was erected at the same
time, but was removed in 1856, when a vestry was
added at the east end of the north aisle and new
clearstory windows were inserted.
The church is built throughout of uncoursed rubble
masonry, without plinth except to the tower, and has
externally little architectural detail. The roofs are
covered with stone slates, and have overhanging eaves,
except that of the chapel forming the east end of the
south aisle, which has a modern straight parapet and
coping. At the junction of the nave and chancel
roofs there is a flat stone coping, but the roofs are
of equal height and pitch, and there is a straight
joint in the walling below the coping with
quoins on the chancel side, apparently indicating
the erection of the nave clearstory to be subsequent
in date.
The east window of the chancel is a modern
pointed one of three lights with traceried head, and
there is a modern segmental-headed two-light window
on the south side. Owing to the slope of the ground
from east to west, the chancel floor at the east end is
raised by ten steps spaced in groups to a height
of 5 ft. 8 in. above that of the nave, with striking
effect viewed from the west end. The western half
of the chancel is open to the aisles by round arches,
13 ft. 6 in. wide, of two chamfered orders. The east
end of the north aisle is used as an organ chamber,
and that of the south is the ancient chapel of
St. Katherine, now known as the Morley chapel.
On the south side there is a diagonal opening, or
squint, through the wall to the chapel, but there are
no remains of mediaeval ritual arrangement in the
chancel. The whole of the interior walls of the
church, however, are now plastered. The chancel
roof is a continuation of that of the nave and consists of plain king-post principals constructed out of
the timbers of the former roof in 1763 and plastered
between. There are two clearstory windows to the
chancel on the north side, but only one on the
south, both of two trefoiled lights and square-headed,
similar to those in the nave.

Plan of Melling Church
The Morley chapel is 20 ft. long by 9 ft. 6 in.
wide and is raised 2 ft. 6 in. above the floor of the
nave. It is divided from the rest of the aisle by a
modern wood screen reproducing the design of an
older one, of which two fragments of tracery remain
and are incorporated with it. The chapel is now
fitted with modern seating and is open to the chancel
on the north side. It is lit at the east end by a modern
square-headed three-light traceried window and a
square-headed window of three trefoiled lights with
external hood mould on the south side, to the west
of which, within the screen, is a pointed priest's door
In the south wall is an aumbry, the door of which
has gone, but the east wall below the window is
covered with modern boarding. During the restoration of the chapel in 1851, when the seating was
erected, a raised step at the east end was found and
marks of the chantry altar. (fn. 10)
The nave arcade consists of three pointed arches
of two chamfered orders springing from octagonal
piers 8 ft. high, with moulded capitals and bases. All
the stonework has been rechiselled and otherwise
rewrought and the cap to the easternmost pier on
the south side is new. The arches vary in size, the
easternmost being 14 ft. 7 in. in width, and the two
western ones 12 ft. 9 in. and 13 ft. 3 in. respectively.
There are three clearstory windows on each side of
the nave, and the north aisle is lit by two squareheaded windows of two trefoiled lights and with external
hood moulds, and has a plain semicircular-headed
doorway opposite the first bay from the west. The
easternmost window of the north aisle, now lighting
the organ chamber, which is separated from the rest
of the aisle by a modern wood screen, is of three
trefoiled lights with square traceried head going up its
full height of the
wall below the
eaves, and may be
the only original
15th-century window remaining, the
rest being perhaps
insertions of a later
date. The two
windows of the
south aisle are
similar to those in
the north. The
porch has an open
pointed outer arch
and stone seats on
each side, with a
plain gabled stoneslated roof and
overhanging eaves.
The west tower,
which has a
moulded plinth, is
55 ft. in height to
the top of the embattled parapet, and has a projecting
vice in the north-east corner and diagonal buttresses
of five stages going up its full height. The west door
has a pointed arch of two hollow-chamfered orders
with hood mould, and above is a four-centred window
with three plain pointed lights and external hood
mould. The belfry windows are of three pointed
lights under a four-centred head with hood mould
and stone louvres, and there is a clock on the west
side. The north and south sides are plain. The
tower arch is of two chamfered orders dying into the
walls at the springing, the opening being filled in to
a height of 8 ft. by a solid modern oak screen. The
line of the former roof shows above the arch.
The font and pulpit and the fittings generally,
with the exception of the seats in the aisles, which
are the 18th-century ones cut down, are all modern.
In the chancel is a stone with the matrices of four
small figure brasses and inscriptions. (fn. 11) There are no
ancient monuments. (fn. 12) At the east end of the north
aisle are four traceried oak panels which originally
formed part of a screen at the back of the vicar's
pew. In the Morley chapel is a panel with the
initials and date 'F. M. 1636'; a chest in the
vestry is inscribed 'K/T E 1688,' and there is a small
18th-century brass chandelier.
The churchyard is bounded on the north and west
by the high road, and on the south side is an
octagonal stone sundial shaft 4 ft. 6 in. high on two
square steps.
There is a ring of six bells by Abel Rudhall of
Gloucester, 1753. (fn. 13)
The plate consists of a chalice made at Newcastle
inscribed ' The Gift of Henry Marsden Esq. of
Wenington Hall administrator to his Mother 1759';
a chalice of 1767 inscribed ' Melling Parish 1767';
a breadholder on three feet, of the same date, inscribed
'Henry Marsden Sen' of Winington Hall,' and a
modern Gothic silver-gilt chalice and paten presented
by Canon Grenside in 1891. (fn. 14)
The register of baptisms begins in 1625, that of
burials in 1619, and the register of marriages in 1636.
The tithe maps are in the vicar's custody.
Advowson
The church was in 1094 given to
St. Martin's Abbey, Sées, by Count
Roger of Poitou, (fn. 15) but was afterwards resigned in exchange for Gressingham, a chapel
of ease, (fn. 16) which was transferred to the parish of
Lancaster. About 1220 the advowson was granted
to the Abbot and convent of Croxton, Leicestershire. (fn. 17)
In 1246 the right of presentation was disputed between
Margaret widow of Hubert de Burgh and the canons
of Croxton. The right of the canons was (fn. 18) acknowledged and in 1310 the church was appropriated to
them. (fn. 19) A vicarage was afterwards ordained, (fn. 20) but
the incumbents were canons of Croxton. After the
Suppression the advowson remained with the Crown
till 1866, when it was sold to the Rev. Reginald
Remington of Melling. (fn. 21) On his death in April 1909
his son the Rev. Henry Remington became patron.
The value of the benefice was in 1291 taxed at
£40, but this was reduced to £20 after the devastation
wrought by the Scots in 1322, (fn. 22) and in 1341 the
ninth of the sheaves, wool, &c, was recorded as £20. (fn. 23)
In 1527 the value of the rectory was estimated as
£36, that of the vicarage being £13 6s. 8d., (fn. 24) but in
1535, while the abbey received £35 from the rectory, (fn. 25)
the vicar's income was set down as only £7 1s. 9d. (fn. 26)
Afterwards the rectory was purchased from the Crown
by the lord of Hornby, (fn. 27) and in 1650 the tithes were
said to be worth £250 a year, while 'the entire
profits' of the vicarage were £30, to which £50
had been added by the Committee of Plundered
Ministers. (fn. 28) The certified income of the vicarage
was £28 5s. 2d. in 1717 (fn. 29) ; the net value is now
given as £l64. (fn. 30)
The names of a few of the early rectors have been
preserved. (fn. 31) The following have been vicars:—
|
| Instituted | Name | Patron | Cause of Vacancy |
| — | Br. John Leicester (fn. 32) | — | — |
| 23 Nov. 1429 | Br. Richard Boteler (fn. 33) | Croxton Abbey | d. J. Leicester |
| oc. 1488 | Br. Edmund Green (fn. 34) | — | — |
| c. 1500 | Br. Richard Docker (fn. 35) | — | — |
| oc.1548 | John Andrew (fn. 36) | — | — |
| 14 Dec. 1562 | Richard Harris (fn. 37) | The Crown | d. last incumbent |
| oc. 1581 | Thomas Burrow (fn. 38) | — | — |
| 25 Apr. 1625 | Richard Newton (fn. 39) | The Crown | d. last incumbent |
| 26 May 1626 |
| 20 Sept. 1633 | Robert Heblethwaite (fn. 40) | — | — |
| — 1648 | John Smith (fn. 41) | — | — |
| 15 May 1658 | Thomas White, M.A. (fn. 42) | The Protector | — |
| 27 Jan. 1661–2 | The Crown | — |
| 7 July 1663 | Anthony Cooper | " | — |
| 26 Oct. 1666 | John Carr | " | — |
| 25 July 1671 | John Carr (fn. 43) | " | — |
| 24 Dec. 1677 | Thomas Kay, M.A. (fn. 44) | " | — |
| 15 Oct. 1689 | Daniel Armistead, B.A. (fn. 45) | " | res. T. Key |
| 3 Aug. 1693 | Thomas Kirkharam, B.A. (fn. 46) | " | d. last incumbent |
| 3 Aug. 1695 | William Gregson, B.A. (fn. 47) | " | d. " " |
| 26 Jan. 1696–7 | Andrew Forbes (fn. 48) | " | d. " " |
| 13 Dec. 1742 | Thomas Fell | " | d. " " |
| 4 Apr. 1744 | James Towers, B.A. (fn. 49) | " | res. T. Fell |
| 11 June 1750 | John Tatham, B.A. (fn. 50) | " | d. last incumbent |
| 22 Aug. 1794 | John Tatham (fn. 51) | " | res. " " |
| 11 June 1851 | John Beethom, M.A. (fn. 52) | " | d. " " |
| 8 May 1855 | William Bent Grenside, M.A. (fn. 53) | " | d. " " |
Before the Reformation the church was served by
a canon of Croxton, who may have resided at Hornby,
where there was normally a staff of three canons.
The chapels of Arkholme and Hornby had also to
be served. As late as the year 1548 the Visitation
List contains the names of the vicar and five others, (fn. 54)
two having been canons of Hornby at the surrender
ten years before. The 1554 list gives five names,
only two being the same as in 1548; while in 1562
the vicar was sick, Thomas Harris appeared, but did
not subscribe, and George Holme, after showing
himself contumacious, was brought to subscribe. (fn. 55)
The subsequent story is obscure, the incumbents
being of no note and the Visitation Records scanty.
In 1623 it was presented that at the parish church
Mr. Ellison, probably the curate in charge, ministered
the communion to some who stood, and that at
Arkholme there was no surplice. The clerical subsidy
lists give no sign that there were curates for the
chapelries, though there was one in 1610 to serve
both, but in 1650, stipends having been provided
out of Royalist sequestrations, Arkholme and Hornby
had each its curate. The old state would return
at the Restoration, but in 1717 it was stated that
the curate preached every Sunday at Arkholme and
read prayers there every holy day, while he preached
every third Sunday at Hornby. (fn. 56)
There was no endowed chantry, but 'St. Katherine's choir' is mentioned in the will of Francis
Morley of Wennington, dated 1540. (fn. 57)
Charities
Official inquiries were made into
the charities of the parish in 1826
and 1899. The following details are
taken from the later report. About £180 a year is
derived from various benefactions, the greater part
being appropriated to educational purposes, (fn. 58) and
£6 17s. 6d. to the organist of the parish church.
There are no almshouses or medical charities, but to
the poor over £35 a year is given in money and £4
in kind.
Agnes Tatham of Lancaster in 1867 bequeathed
£200 for Christmas gifts to the poor of the parish;
the interest, £7 13s., is given by the vicar to poor
women of the townships of Melling and Wennington
in sums of 5s. to 42s. Rebecca Bland in 1759
bequeathed money to produce 10s. a year for poor
housekeepers in Melling town, to be distributed on
21 December, but this is now added to her educational endowment. Reginald Remington of Crow
Trees in 1853 bequeathed £100 to provide a weekly
distribution of bread at the morning and evening
services at the parish church for poor persons of
Melling and Wennington; the dividend is £2 16s. 4d.,
and any surplus is distributed in bread at Christmas.
Jane Turner in 1734 gave a piece of land called
Howgill Cragg in West Field in Kellet for the poor
of Arkholme quarter. The land was sold in 1866,
and the purchase money yields £14 10s. a year, distributed with Wraton's charity—a rent-charge of 20s.
a year left in 1728 by Thomas Wraton. The latter
benefactor also left a rent-charge of 26s. to provide a
weekly distribution of bread to six widows or widowers
of Arkholme. The poor's money is given in doles
of 5s. to 20s., and the owner of Storrs sends three
twopenny loaves to Arkholme Church every Sunday,
and they are given to a widow.
For poor housekeepers of Hornby Elizabeth
Thornton in 1742 left £50 for investment. Other
charitable funds were added and land purchased, nearly
all of which was sold in 1871. The purchase money
produces £11 15s. 4d., and an acre of wood unsold
yields 5s.; the whole income is distributed on
Christmas Eve by the vicar, churchwardens and overseers of the township.
Several small funds have been lost. (fn. 59)