THE HUNDRED OF CUTTLESTONE - EASTERN DIVISION
(continued)

Hundred of Cuttlestone
Note. The broken lines show the boundaries of civil parishes, other than ancient parishes, as they existed in 1956
BASWICH OR BERKSWICH
The ancient parish of Baswich, lying immediately
east-south-east of Stafford, contained Baswich with
Weeping Cross, Walton and Milford, the township
of Brocton and the joint township of Acton Trussell
and Bednall. Acton Trussell and Bednall were severed
from Baswich for civil purposes by the mid-17th
century. (fn. 1) Their history will be treated after that of
Baswich.
The boundaries of the ancient parish of Baswich,
after the separation of Acton Trussell and Bednall,
as defined in 1671 and 1796, (fn. 2) were on the west the
River Penk at Radford Bridge, on the north the
River Sow, and on the east the line of the Sherbrook
valley running southward across Cannock Chase to
an old waymark known as Cank Thorn (fn. 3) near the
war cemetery. At this point the three ancient
parishes of Rugeley, Penkridge, and Cannock converge with Baswich.
This area was divided by 1666 into two separate
constablewicks, (fn. 4) Walton and Brocton, the constables
being appointed in the court of the manor of Haywood as late as 1841. (fn. 5) The surviving accounts of the
overseers of the poor for the constablewick of Walton,
which included Baswich and Radford, date from
1699 (fn. 6) and those for the constablewick of Brocton
from 1759. (fn. 7) The constable's accounts for Walton date
from 1699 and those for Brocton from 1736. (fn. 8) Baswich
and Brocton have formed separate civil parishes since
1871. (fn. 9) The civil parish of Baswich was encroached
upon by the extension of Stafford Borough as far as
Stockton Lane in 1934, (fn. 10) so that its area in 1951 was
1,194 acres with a population of 1,096, while the area
of the civil parish of Brocton was then 2,318 acres and
its population 572. (fn. 11)
Two important trunk roads cross the parishes.
The road from Lichfield to Stafford enters at Satnall
Hills and runs due west to Stafford crossing the
River Penk at Radford Bridge. This road was of great
importance in the Middle Ages as is shown by the
fact that the liability for the maintenance of Radford
Bridge fell upon the hundred. (fn. 12) The bridge was rebuilt in 1771 and 1799, (fn. 13) and by 1830 responsibility
for its maintenance had been fixed on the county. (fn. 14)
It was again rebuilt c. 1825 and is of stone ashlar with
three rusticated elliptical arches, between which are
paired Tuscan columns supporting a modillion
cornice. According to Dugdale, the river marked the
western limit of the forest of Cannock until the 17th
century. In King John's time Hugh de Loges, the
royal forester of Cannock, held his fee by the
serjeanty of meeting the Earl of Chester at Radford
Bridge and conveying him across the forest. (fn. 15) This
Lichfield-Stafford road is joined at Weeping Cross,
where an island at the junction is preserved as a war
memorial, by the road from Birmingham running
via Cannock to Stafford, Newcastle under Lyme, and
the north. The Industrial Revolution has made this
road one of the most heavily burdened in the country.
From Weeping Cross a minor road leads north, past
the church and over the River Sow to the site of the
Augustinian priory of St. Thomas (in St. Mary's
parish, Stafford, Pirehill hundred), and on to Weston
upon Trent, Chartley, and Uttoxeter. St. Thomas
Bridge carrying this road over the Sow was a county
bridge by 1830. (fn. 16) It appears to be contemporary with
Radford Bridge and has a single elliptical arch and a
parapet terminating in small octagonal piers. (fn. 17) The
main line of the former L.M.S.R. crosses the northern tip of the parish of Baswich. Milford and Brocton
Station was opened for passenger traffic in 1877, and
for goods traffic in 1882; it was closed for passenger
traffic in 1950 but in 1956 was still used for goods. (fn. 18)
The Staffordshire and Worcestershire Canal,
which follows the line of the River Penk to the
confluence with the Sow where it turns eastwards
alongside the Sow to the terminus at Haywood, was
constructed under an Act of 1766 (fn. 19) and completed
in 1772. (fn. 20) There was formerly a wharf at Radford
Bridge, connected with Stafford by a tramway,
where, it was stated in 1851, considerable business in
coal, lime, &c., was carried on. (fn. 21) The canal is largely
disused but still navigable.
Baswich church stands in an isolated position at
the extreme northern tip of the parish, and there has
never been a village to which the name Baswich as a
geographical term can be applied, the old centres of
population in the parish being the villages of Walton
and Brocton. Several old houses remain in both
Walton and Brocton (see below) but in the former,
which was still expanding rapidly in 1956, most of
the building has taken place since 1920. In Pool
Lane, leading to Milford, there are several larger
houses of the 19th and 20th centuries, and further
building was in progress in 1956. Sawpit Lane is
entirely built up with 20th-century houses, many
of them semi-detached. There are three pairs of
council houses in Oldacre Lane dating from c. 1950,
and the police house in Sawpit Lane was built in
1949. (fn. 22) The school and the vicarage are at Walton.
At Weeping Cross, north of the church and at the
junction of the Lichfield to Stafford and the Cannock to Stafford roads, a wooden cross stood in
Edward VI's reign (fn. 23) and by 1747 an inn of that
name (fn. 24) on a site now occupied by Baswich House
(see below). Weeping Cross became a favourite
residential area in the 19th century and by
1834 there were 'several neat villas' on or near
the Lichfield road. (fn. 25) Ribbon development took
place here, mainly between the two world wars,
down Baswich Lane almost as far as the church,
down Stockton Lane in Radford Rise, and along the
Lichfield and Cannock roads as far as the borough
boundary. Since the Second World War large
compact blocks of detached and semi-detached
houses have been erected here, so that the greater
part of the present parishes of Baswich and Brocton
form a dormitory for Stafford.
Milford, now a hamlet in the south-east of the
parish on both sides of the Lichfield road, first
occurs in the late 18th century and grew up around
the Milford Hall estate, many of the cottages along
the main road being built by the Levett family
from the late 18th century onwards. (fn. 26)
Despite modern development Brocton and Baswich still preserve a certain rural setting, particularly Brocton where there are over 2,000 acres of
uninclosed uplands on Cannock Chase and of common at Milford, acquired in 1956 by the Staffordshire
County Council from the Earl of Lichfield. (fn. 27) In
the First World War there were extensive army
camps in Brocton, a military burial ground for both
British and German troops being consecrated there
in 1917 on land given by the Earl of Lichfield. (fn. 28)
During the Second World War the area of the Chase
known as Anson's Bank was used as a bombing
range. (fn. 29)
About 1890 Stafford Salt and Alkali Company
opened the Common Salt Works on Stafford Common, north of the town. About 1900 the works were
extended by a building at Baswich so that the canal
could be used, and a wharf was then constructed.
The brine was brought by pipeline down Greengate
Street, supplying the Brine Baths which were
opened at this date, and thence along the canal to
Baswich. Salt continued to be manufactured at
Baswich by the open-pan method until 1945 when
Messrs. Geo. Hamlett & Sons, Cheshire, the
Stafford Salt and Alkali Company, and Messrs.
Manger & Son (Crown Salt Works, Stafford Common) put up the capital for a new salt-works,
Vacuum Salt Ltd. This stands in Baswich Lane,
opposite the old salt-works, and uses vacuum pans.
A second pipeline from Stafford Common was laid
to supply these works. In 1950 the three companies
concerned merged as Amasal. (fn. 30)
Stafford Concrete Buildings Ltd. established
their factory in Baswich Lane opposite the new saltworks in 1950 and 1951. It manufactures the smaller
type of prefabricated building, using sand and
gravel from Brocton. (fn. 31) Brick-making was formerly
carried on in Brocton in 1851 (fn. 32) and there is now a
large disused brick-works just west of the Cannock
road. On the Chase the Bunter Pebble Beds are
worked for gravel.
In 1801 about 781 acres of arable land were under
cultivation in Baswich, roughly 197 acres sown with
wheat, 298 acres with barley, 165 acres with oats,
27 acres with potatoes, 2 acres with peas, 3 acres
with beans, 96 acres with turnips or rape, 3 acres
with rye. (fn. 33) Most of the agricultural land is now used
as pasture, especially near the Sow and Penk on
account of flooding. In 1297 or 1298 some 180 acres
of demesne lay in open fields, the largest block, 48
acres, being in 'campo de Halseyley' i.e. Haseley. (fn. 34)
In 1357 there were three open fields in Baswich. (fn. 35)
In the old hamlet now called Walton on the Hill
there are several houses dating from before the 19th
century. Parts of nos. 9 and 11 were formerly one
timber-framed house and the building retains
original beams, a large fireplace, and a four-centred
door head. No. 14 is a thatched house of three bays
with some of its timber-framing still exposed
externally. It has large back-to-back fireplaces
between the two west bays. Congreve House opposite, the home of Sir William Congreve, (fn. 36) is a Tshaped brick house dating from the late 17th
century. (fn. 37) Next to No. 14 is the former smithy.
Walton Lodge and the vicarage were built in the
early 19th century and both enlarged later. The
former infant school near the vicarage is now used
as a parish room; (fn. 38) there are older cottages adjoining it on the east side. The village hall is a wooden
building erected c. 1933 on land given by Mrs. G.
Haszard. (fn. 39) There is one old timber-framed cottage on
the west side of Stockton Lane.
A timber-framed house, of which only the stone
chimneys are still standing, formerly lay 200 yds.
south of the present Brocton Hall. This may well
have been the capital messuage held by Matthew
Cradock in 1584; (fn. 40) its features suggest that it dates
from the second half of the 16th century. It was later
known as Brocton Farm. Drawings made in 1847 and
1849, (fn. 41) before the house was demolished, show a
central block flanked by cross wings with overhanging gable-ends. There is a porch in the angle
of the north wing and a massive chimney at the
north end of the central block. The chimney, which
is still in existence, has a stone base and brick shafts.
On the ground floor are back-to-back fireplaces,
one, in a good state of preservation, having a fourcentred arch and a stone lintel enriched with late
16th-century ornament. The second standing chimney belonged to the kitchen and appears to have
been on the back wall of the north wing. It retains
a very long oak lintel and the remains of baking
ovens. Both chimneys carry fireplaces on the upper
story. In 1666 George Launder, then owner of the
manor, was assessed for nine hearths. (fn. 42)
Brocton Hall, now the clubhouse of the Brocton
Hall Golf Club, may incorporate an 18th-century
house but dates largely from c. 1815. It has a fine
circular entrance hall and a stone staircase with an
iron balustrade. There is a semicircular colonnade
to the bowed entrance front. The house formerly had
three stories above the basement, but the top floor
was damaged by fire in 1939 (fn. 43) and has been largely
removed. A pointed stone arch, not in situ, and two
large carved gargoyles form a garden feature to the
north of the house. Near the south-west corner of
the park is an octagonal brick dovecot, probably
dating from the late 18th or early 19th century. It
is decorated externally with recessed panels in the
form of pointed arches and quatrefoils.
Brocton Lodge, formerly Brocton Villa, (fn. 44) is a white
stucco house with a Tuscan colonnade between
flanking bays dating from the early 19th century. It
lies on the west side of the road to Milford and
originally formed part of the Brocton Hall estate.
The Cottage, Park Lane, is a small timberframed house on a cruciform plan with a large central
chimney. A projecting wing in the centre of the
front probably once formed its porch. This wing
has exposed framing of quadrant and chevron design
and is said formerly to have borne the date 1616. (fn. 45)
The base of the central chimney is of stone and has
back-to-back fireplaces serving the two bays of the
central portion. Beyond the chimney is a staircase
with flat wavy balusters. The kitchen wing at the
rear, which has a lower roof line, was once a singlestory structure. Moulded and curved posts at the
farther end, interrupted by a large stone kitchen
chimney, and a single curved windbrace suggest
that this wing may have been an earlier hall, altered
and shortened in 1616.
At Brocton Green there is a small nucleus of
timber-framed houses dating from the 16th and early
17th centuries. Village Farm has a stone plinth and
a timber-framed west wing with the date 1646
scratched in modern plaster at the gable-end. On the
dividing wall between this wing and the brick-faced
main block is a large stone and brick chimney with
back-to-back fireplaces. Green Farm, a timberframed structure, is now roughcast externally. The
cottage on the corner of Oldacre Lane has exposed
framing to the front consisting of square panels with
straight braces. The eaves level has been raised. At
the east gable-end is the base of a stone chimney,
and the framing of the end truss is visible. Between
this cottage and Green Farm is a timber-framed
barn. On the corner of Chase Road is another partly
timber-framed cottage. Bank Farm is a brick house
dating from c. 1700.
Weeping Cross Inn at the junction of the StaffordLichfield and Stafford-Cannock roads was rebuilt
or converted into a private residence known as the
White House by John Stevenson Salt, probably soon
after 1813. (fn. 46) About 1850 it was demolished, and
Baswich House was built by Thomas Salt (d. 1871)
on or near the site. It is an irregularly planned mansion of red brick with oriel windows of wood and
many small gables, and is a good building of its
period. A single-story picture gallery and a billiard
room were added by Thomas's son Thomas (d.
1904). (fn. 47) The property was in use as a preparatory
school before the Second World War. In 1952 it was
acquired by the Staffordshire County Council for a
Police Motor Training Centre. (fn. 48) Barnfields is a
dignified red-brick house built by Samuel Twigg (fn. 49)
early in the 19th century. The large stone barn to
the south was already in existence and may be partly
of 16th-century origin. This barn has been added to
at various times and may incorporate stone from old
Baswich church (fn. 50) (demolished 1740). At its northern
end a game larder was added by John Twigg in
1841, (fn. 51) taking the form of a stone porch in the
Norman style. Here, as elsewhere in the district, the
garden contains dressed and carved stones, some of
medieval origin, said to have come from St. Mary's
Church, Stafford (restored in 1844–5). Weeping
Cross House was built by a member of the Twigg
family (fn. 52) in the middle of the 19th century. The
Shawms in Radford Rise is a good example of the
domestic architecture of its time. It was built in 1905
by H. J. Bostock, the architect being Henry T.
Sandy, (fn. 53) and has roughcast gables, stone mullioned
windows, a steep roof, and battered chimneys.
Milford Hall is an 18th-century house enlarged
in 1817 and later. The principal front, facing east,
originally had a central doorway and Ionic pilasters
supporting a pediment at eaves level. (fn. 54) Adjoining
the south side is an orangery with five tall windows.
The east front was altered in 1817 by Richard
Levett, the pilasters and pediment being removed
and the central block set forward. The entrance was
moved to the west side and the window arrangement
altered. (fn. 55) Further additions, including upper stories
to a service wing at the rear, date from later in the
19th century. East of the house there is an ornamental water supplied by the former mill stream.
Near its north end is a small brick bath house dating
from c. 1803. (fn. 56) In front of the building an oval stone
bathing pool, screened by high walls, was supplied
by pipes from the stream. The garden contains a
circular colonnaded summerhouse which is thought
to have been built by the Revd. Richard Levett in
the late 18th century. It may have been suggested
to him by the 'temples' in West Wycombe Park
(Bucks.). Ionic capitals, probably from the east front
of the house, are preserved in the garden, together
with medieval stone fragments believed to have come
from St. Mary's Church, Stafford.
The Old Dame Coffee House forms the east range
of a three-sided block of farm buildings opposite
Milford Hall dating from c. 1800. It was used as a
dame school until 1879, after which hot drinks were
served there to wagon drivers and tramps. (fn. 57) Milford
Lodge, the only other large house in the village,
dates from the early 19th century. In the extreme
north-east corner of the parish are twin lodges at one
of the entrances to Shugborough Park. These were
designed by Samuel Wyatt c. 1800 and are contemporary with the diversion of the Lichfield road. (fn. 58)
North-west of Milford station the Staffordshire
and Worcestershire Canal is carried over the River
Sow by a stone aqueduct of four segmental arches.
It was first erected on the south bank of the river,
the water course being diverted southwards as soon
as the building was complete. (fn. 59)
Holdford Bridge is a narrow humped bridge with
four segmental arches, probably dating from the
18th century. It is of stone ashlar, and its parapets
terminate in square piers.
Sir William Congreve (1772–1828), Comptroller
of the Royal Laboratory, Woolwich (1814–28), and
inventor of the Congreve rocket and brimstone
matches, lived at Congreve House, Walton. (fn. 60)
Manors
BASWICH or BERKSWICH both
before and after the Conquest was one of the manors
of the bishopric. In 1086 it was assessed at 5 hides,
and with Walton, which belonged to it, was then
valued at 15s., 5s. more than in King Edward's time. (fn. 61)
Also belonging to it were the vills of Brocton and
Bednall, then waste, (fn. 62) but by 1297 or 1298 they were
dependent upon the manor of Haywood. (fn. 63) The
manor of Baswich remained with the bishop until
1546. (fn. 64) It held its own courts until at least 1360, (fn. 65)
but by 1473 was being administered as part of the
bishop's manor of Haywood, (fn. 66) the courts of which
were held until at least 1869. (fn. 67) The bishop surrendered Baswich, with other manors, in 1546 to the
Crown in exchange for certain benefices. (fn. 68) The
lands, which had formed the bishop's demesne
manor of Baswich, were granted in the same year to
Sir William Paget (fn. 69) with whose descendant, the
Marquess of Anglesey, any surviving lordship remains. (fn. 70)
In 1893 the Marquess of Anglesey conveyed to
Lord Lichfield 1,784 acres of uninclosed land on
Cannock Chase lying in Baswich and Brocton
together with all manorial rights, except the coal
and mineral rights, over this land. (fn. 71) Consequently,
after the dispersal of the Chetwynd estates in
Brocton and elsewhere in 1921, Lord Lichfield is
frequently referred to as lord of the manor of
Brocton. (fn. 72) The land conveyed comprised Satnall
Hills, Milford Common, Spring Hill, Oat Hill,
Broc Hill, Brocton Coppice, Coppice Hill, Hollywood Slade; Sherbrook Banks, Dry Pits, Tar Hill,
Old Acre Valley, Sycamore Hill, Brocton Field,
Anson's Bank, and various pools. In 1956 Lord
Lichfield conveyed all this land to the Staffordshire
County Council. (fn. 73)
Land in Baswich was granted c. 1199 by Geoffrey
de Muscamp, Bishop of Coventry and Lichfield, to
Simon the cook who later granted all his land described as in Stockton to the nearby Priory of St.
Thomas. (fn. 74) About 1272 Avice, widow of Peter of
Brocton, gave to the same priory land known as
'Smithemore', part of her dower. (fn. 75) The lands of the
priory in Baswich and elsewhere were granted in
1539 to Bishop Roland Lee, (fn. 76) who in 1540 settled
them on his nephew Brian Fowler. (fn. 77) Brian Fowler
also held the demesne lands of the manor of Baswich,
the warren and a house situated at the Baswich end of
Radford Bridge on a 90 years lease beginning 1539. (fn. 78)
These Fowler lands although occasionally called the
manor of Baswich were subsequently usually referred
to as the manors of SOWE and BROCTON. (fn. 79) On
the death of Brian Fowler in 1587 they passed to his
son Walter. (fn. 80) He died in 1621 and was succeeded by
his son Edward, (fn. 81) who died in 1624 leaving as his
heir a son Walter aged three years. (fn. 82) Walter Fowler
was succeeded in 1681 by his son Walter (fn. 83) who died
without male issue in 1684. (fn. 84) The lands then passed
to his younger brother, William Fowler, who died
without male issue in 1716. (fn. 85) Under a settlement of
1712 the estate then passed to John Betham, husband of Mary, daughter of Magdalen, youngest
sister of William Fowler. (fn. 86) As John Betham Fowler (fn. 87)
he died in 1719, and from then the lands were held
in trust for his daughter Catherine, then aged nine,
until her marriage with Viscount Fauconberg in
1726. In 1728 the beneficial interest was disputed by
Robert Fitzgerald, his wife Rebecca, granddaughter
of Dorothy, eldest sister of William Fowler, and the
trustees. (fn. 88) The Fowler lands were finally partitioned
in 1734, Baswich falling with the manor or lordship
of Sowe and the capital messuage of St. Thomas to
Lord Fauconberg, but by 1744 the lands south of the
Sow in Baswich and Brocton had been acquired by
Sarah Dowager Duchess of Marlborough, who in
her will of that year disposed of them to her grandson John Spencer. (fn. 89) George Earl Spencer (fn. 90) transferred his interest in 1785 to George Anson of
Shugborough (Pirehill hundred), the area conveyed
being slightly more than 300 acres and the price
£7,500. (fn. 91)
In 1086 Brocton was a member of the manor of
Baswich. (fn. 92) By 1242 or 1243 Brocton formed with
Bednall ¼ knight's fee then held of the bishop by
John de Acton (fn. 93) of Acton Trussell. The overlordship
of the bishop in Brocton continued until at least
1523. (fn. 94) The mesne lordship of the Trussells of
Acton Trussell and their descendants in Brocton
continued until at least 1569. (fn. 95)
In 1221 John de Acton granted a virgate of land
and the capital messuage in Brocton to Avice and
Benigna, daughters of Nicholas of Brocton, of which
Bella their mother was to hold one-third, on condition that they relinquished their claim to another
virgate. (fn. 96) In 1227 half of this other virgate was
acquired by their brother John, (fn. 97) believed dead in
1221, (fn. 98) who had already successfully claimed the
previous virgate from his sisters after his return from
overseas. (fn. 99) This was probably the estate (fn. 100) granted by
Thomas, son of Peter lord of Brocton, to Roger de
Aston in 1295, (fn. 101) sometimes but doubtfully called the
manor of BROCTON. Roger de Aston, still living
in 1306 or 1307, (fn. 102) was succeeded by John de Aston
who was dead before 1353. (fn. 103) His son and heir, Roger
de Aston, died before 1364 or 1365 (fn. 104) leaving as his
heir a son Thomas, then under age and in ward to
William de Chetwynd and his wife Isabel, formerly
wife of Roger de Aston. (fn. 105) Thomas Aston had been
succeeded by Roger Aston, probably his son, before
1413. (fn. 106) Roger Aston died in 1447 or 1448 (fn. 107) and was
succeeded by Robert Aston who died in 1467. (fn. 108) His
heir, John Aston, died seised of lands and tenements
in Brocton in 1484 (fn. 109) and was succeeded by his son
John who died in 1523, when his tenements in
Brocton were assigned as dower to his widow Joan, (fn. 110)
daughter of Sir James Littleton, (fn. 111) who died in 1526. (fn. 112)
The Brocton lands then passed to her son Edward
Aston who died in 1569, leaving to his son and heir
Walter tenements and messuages in Brocton. (fn. 113) In
1584 Walter Aston settled on his son and heir
Edward what may have been this manor of Brocton. (fn. 114)
In 1544 or 1545 Thomas Cradock of Stafford
purchased from Stephen Ward 2 messuages and
60 acres of land, 10 acres of pasture and 6s. rent in
Brocton. (fn. 115) His son Matthew at his death in 1584
held a capital messuage in Brocton of the heirs'
of Thomas son of Peter of Brocton, (fn. 116) presumably
acquired therefore from the Aston family. This fell
to Francis, younger son of Matthew Cradock, and
on his death in 1594 to his son Edward. (fn. 117) By 1611
it had reverted to the senior branch of the Cradock
family, (fn. 118) being held at his death in that year by
George Cradock of Caverswall, eldest son of
Matthew, and then described as 'a capital messuage
in Brocton called Brocton Hall, 3 other messuages,
3 cottages, 1 dovecot, 130 acres of land in Brocton'
held of William Lord Paget in fee and common
socage. (fn. 119) In 1638 it was conveyed by this George
Cradock to Thomas Aston and John Saunders. (fn. 120) By
1679 the owners were George and Elizabeth Lander
who conveyed what was described as the manor to
William Milward, (fn. 121) a step in the process of sale to
Walter Chetwynd of Ingestre (Pirehill hundred). (fn. 122)
In 1692 Walter Chetwynd left the manor of Brocton
to Walter, son of Richard Chetwynd of Rugeley, (fn. 123)
with whose descendants, a junior line of the
Grendon and Rugeley branch of the Chetwynds, (fn. 124)
the land remained until the sales between 1920 and
1922. (fn. 125) In 1851 William Fawkener Chetwynd owned
700 acres in Brocton. (fn. 126) In 1920 the Brocton Hall
Estate consisted of 834 acres, the rental being
£1,831 4s. 6d.; 131 acres were attached to Brocton
Hall and 21 acres to Brocton Lodge, and there were
six farms, namely Bednall Farm (75 a.), Brocton
Gate Farm (68 a.), Road Farm (156 a.), Cottage
Farm (15 a.), Brocton Bank Farm (131 a.), and
Village Farm (129 a.). (fn. 127) The major part of the estate
was then sold by Mrs. Mary Chetwynd, the farms
mainly to the tenants. (fn. 128) Brocton Hall with its land
was sold a short while afterwards to the Brocton Hall
Golf Club, (fn. 129) the course being laid out in 1923 and
the Hall used as the club house. (fn. 130)
Lesser Estates
In 1474 or 1475 a so-called
manor of Haseley was in dispute between Robert
and Humphrey Barbour, sons of John Barbour of
Stafford who had died seised of it. (fn. 131) Robert Barbour
at his death on 25 February 1531 or 1532 was seised
of half a virgate of land and houses in Baswich called
Haseley held of the Bishop of Lichfield and valued
at 40s. (fn. 132) In 1732 Haseley manor or farm lying southsouth-east of Radford Bridge was owned by Richard
Drakeford. (fn. 133) An 18th-century brick barn still stands
near the site of Haseley manor-house, south-southeast of Radford Bridge and 150 yds. east of the canal.
Milford Hall formed part of the estate of Ellen and
Lucy Byrd, daughters and coheirs of John Byrd, in
1771 on the marriage of Lucy to the Revd. Richard
Levett, Vicar of West Wycombe (Bucks.), in which
county the Byrds also had estates. (fn. 134) In 1810 there
were 43 acres attached to Milford Hall. By private
act the entail was cut, and the Byrd lands in Shropshire, Cheshire, and Buckinghamshire were subsequently sold, (fn. 135) the proceeds being invested in land
in Baswich and in extending Milford Hall. (fn. 136) By c.
1830 the Levetts had acquired land in Brocton,
mostly lying immediately south of the present
Brocton Hall, and including the site of the old
Brocton Hall. (fn. 137) This was exchanged with Sir George
Chetwynd (d. 1869) for the Barley Mow Inn, Milford,
in 1849. Between 1900 and 1929 Capt. W. S. B.
Levett extended the estate to nearly 1,000 acres. He
was succeeded by his daughter Mrs. Gerald Haszard,
in 1956 still the owner of the estate, which was then
about 600 acres and comprised Stockton, Walton,
and the Home Farms. (fn. 138)
Mills
In 1279 18d. was accounted for by the
bailiff of Baswich for the carrying of the mill stones
to the mill. (fn. 139) In 1472 there was a water-mill and a
fulling mill at Baswich. (fn. 140) In 1732, although the mill
had disappeared, its site was identified as on the
River Penkabout half a mile west of Radford Bridge. (fn. 141)
There is considerable evidence that there was formerly a mill in what are now the grounds of Milford
Hall. About 1845 a field south of the park was known
as 'Mill Dam Field', (fn. 142) and traces of a water-wheel
have been found at the upper end of the lake. (fn. 143) A
small red-brick building 100 yds. south-west of
Brocton Hall stands above the stream and is said to
have been a mill. A field west of the park was known
at one time as Mill Croft. (fn. 144)
Churches
There was a priest on the bishop's
manor of Baswich in 1086. (fn. 145) By 1255 at the latest the
benefice had been appropriated to the prebend of
Baswich in Lichfield Cathedral and was then subject
to the peculiar jurisdiction of the prebendary. (fn. 146)
Dependent chapels of Baswich were founded in
Acton Trussell and Bednall during the Middle Ages, (fn. 147)
a chantry chapel existed in Brocton by 1549, and
mission churches were established from Baswich at
Walton and Brocton in 1842 and 1890 respectively
(see below).
The income of the prebend from the rectorial
tithes and incidents of Baswich in 1291 was £20. (fn. 148)
At some time between 1529 and 1532 the right to
the great tithes of Baswich, which had been leased
by Richard Egerton, Prebendary of Baswich, to
Edmond Warde, was being disputed by the Prior
of St. Thomas, apparently unsuccessfully. (fn. 149) In 1535
the income of the prebend of Whittington and
Baswich from tithes and other spiritual emoluments
was £13 6s. 8d. (fn. 150)
A vicarage had been ordained by the time of
Bishop Roger de Meuland (1258–95), and in 1341
the Bishop of Coventry and Lichfield successfully
claimed the right of presentation. (fn. 151) In 1407 the
advowson was granted to the Prior and Convent of
St. Thomas, a pension of 20d. being reserved. (fn. 152) In
1539, after the dissolution of St. Thomas's Priory,
the canons' rights in the church of Baswich with its
dependent chapels were granted to Bishop Roland
Lee. (fn. 153) On his death in 1542 they passed to Brian
Fowler his nephew. (fn. 154) The advowson of what was by
the 18th century called a perpetual curacy (fn. 155) and only
again in 1867 a vicarage (fn. 156) remained with the Fowler
family of Brocton (fn. 157) and their descendants (fn. 158) until
1912, (fn. 159) when the Revd. (later the Very Revd.)
W. R. Inge and J. H. H. V. Lane, then the alternate
patrons, transferred the advowson to the bishop. (fn. 160)
In 1535 the income of the vicarage was £5 6s. 8d. (fn. 161)
Mrs. C. B. Inge of Oxford, by will proved 1931, left
£800 for the augmentation of the income of the
minister of Baswich with Walton. (fn. 162) By 1933 the
incumbent received £67 10s. a year from this
source. (fn. 163)
Miss S. J. Smith, by will proved 1938, left £100
to the Vicar and Churchwardens of Baswich for
keeping the graveyard in good order; this has been
invested in stock. (fn. 164) Sermons are still preached by
the Vicar of Baswich under the terms of the Twigg
Charity at Christmas and Easter for which he
receives 10s. (fn. 165)
A chapel at Brocton, mentioned as 'one wherein
service was sometimes kept and sometimes not', was
standing in 1549, (fn. 166) but the site is unknown. Chantry
lands consisting of 2 messuages and a garden,
belonging to the late chapel of Brocton, were granted
in the same year to Roger Ackroyd, Geoffrey Harrison, and Thomas Burnet. (fn. 167)
A mission church was erected in Brocton in
1890, (fn. 168) and in 1951 was dedicated to All Saints. (fn. 169)
The church of HOLY TRINITY, Baswich, which
is of 12th-century origin, was largely rebuilt in
1740. (fn. 170) It consists of a chancel with a porch on its
north side, a nave slightly wider than the chancel,
and a west tower. It retains good Georgian features
internally, including two double-tier family pews
which occupy most of the chancel and a three-decker
pulpit.
The earliest parts of the church are the jambs of
the chancel arch and the footings of the external
east wall both of which date from the 12th century.
Late-12th- or early-13th-century masonry is also
visible above the chancel arch on its east side. The
north jamb of the arch has a circular shaft and
curious superimposed capitals, one of which is
probably reset. The lower capital is circular, the
upper is of a crude Corinthian type with a cable
moulding below it. The square abacus is chamfered
along its lower edge. The south jamb has been cut
back and has no distinctive features.

Plan of Holy Trinity Church
The church appears to have been extensively
altered in the 14th century, the east and west walls
of the nave, both with angle buttresses, and the
pointed chancel arch being of this period. The lower
stages of the tower, also with angle buttresses, are of
14th- or 15th-century masonry. The blocked west
doorway, the window above it, and the string-course
are of Perpendicular type.
In 1733 Quarter Sessions authorized an application for a brief for rebuilding. (fn. 171) The precedent
certificate described the walls as bulging at the
foundations, the roof rotted and in danger of falling
in, and the steeple, being too high and too heavy for
its foundations, as held with iron cramps. In 1739
an agreement was made with Richard Trubshaw
and Richard Jackson, builders, to undertake the
work of pulling down and rebuilding the church and
steeple. (fn. 172) Their account for £336 was settled in
1742. (fn. 173) It may be assumed that Richard Trubshaw
(1689–1745), master builder and quarry owner of
Haywood, (fn. 174) was responsible for the design. The east
and west walls of the nave and the base of the tower
were left standing; the other walls were demolished
to ground level and rebuilt in brick above a few
courses of stone laid on the old foundations. The
south nave wall has three round-headed windows
with brick aprons and plain stone archivolts with
key-blocks. There is a stone band at impost level
and a moulded cornice. The square-headed south
doorway, above which is a circular window, has
rusticated jambs and voussoirs. In the north wall
are four round-headed openings with blind panels
below and semicircular lights above. The chancel
has rusticated quoins and single round-headed
windows in the east and south walls. The east gable
of the nave is truncated, and the roof line is evidently
lower than that of the medieval church. (fn. 175) The belfry
stage of the tower was rebuilt in stone, each face
having a round-headed window. It terminates in a
straight parapet which formerly carried urns at the
four corners. (fn. 176) A branching external stair gives
access to the ringing-chamber and to the west
gallery of the nave. The base of the tower, used as a
vestry, is entered from the church by an 18th-century
doorway. In 1771 the roof was retiled at a cost of
£18, and the vestry was repaired and whitewashed. (fn. 177)
Many of the interior fittings, including the threedecker pulpit, (fn. 178) the altar rails, the original west
gallery, and the small font against the west wall of
the nave date from the 18th-century rebuilding. The
lower stage of the pew on the south side of the
chancel, formerly belonging to the Chetwynds of
Brocton Hall, is probably of the same period. In 1812
a faculty was granted to Richard Levett of Milford
Hall for erecting a two-tiered pew on the north side
of the chancel for the accommodation of his family
and servants. (fn. 179) The 16th-century altar tomb of
Brian Fowler was cut away to give room for its
staircase. The upper stage of the Chetwynd pew
opposite, which is fitted with a fireplace, is similar
in style and is of the same date. (fn. 180) Also early in the
19th century an eastward extension was made to the
west gallery. (fn. 181) In 1894 a new lychgate in the churchyard was given by Mrs. Spooner, mother-in-law of
the Revd. F. G. Inge, in memory of her husband. (fn. 182)
A new altar was presented and alterations made to
the chancel in 1899; the north door was raised and
a wooden porch outside it rebuilt in brick at the
expense of Capt. Levett. (fn. 183) In 1900 the nave was
repewed, the chancel arch scraped and heating installed. (fn. 184) The chancel ceiling was removed in 1935
and the roof timbers exposed. (fn. 185) Electric lighting was
installed in 1953, and a portable oak font was
introduced in 1956. (fn. 186) The Royal Arms of George III
hang on the north nave wall. Nearby is a marble
tablet inscribed with details of the Twigg and
Harding charities. Stained glass in the east window
was inserted in 1935 in memory of William S. B.
Levett (d. 1929). A south window contains stained
glass given in 1950 by Eleanora and H. J. Bostock.
The oldest memorial is an altar tomb against the
north chancel wall dated 1587 and inscribed to
Brian, son of Roger Fowler, and his wife Joan. The
angle pilasters have Renaissance ornament and the
top bears a cross moline. The sides and front of the
tomb have rows of shields bearing the arms of various
families impaled with Fowler. (fn. 187) Nearby is a wall
tablet erected in 1700 by William Fowler commemorating members of his family and Mr. Daniel
Fitter, 'his virtuous friend'; also one in memory of
William Fowler (d. 1716/17), his wife Catherine, and
others. Above the Levett pew is a tablet to William
Swynnerton Byrd Levett (d. 1929) and a cartouche
on which his initials and those of his wife are
entwined. Above the Chetwynd pew are several
uniform tablets to members of the family including
Walter Chetwynd (d. 1750), William Chetwynd (d.
1778), George Chetwynd (d. 1824), and William
Fawkener Chetwynd (d. 1873). Elsewhere in the
church are tablets in memory of Joseph Ellerton,
(d. 1856) and Francis George Inge (d. 1923), vicars.
In the earlier 19th century vicars of Baswich were
living at Weeping Cross. (fn. 188) When St. Thomas's
Church was built at Walton in 1842 a house was
already in existence on the adjoining site. (fn. 189) It was
enlarged and converted into a vicarage soon afterwards. (fn. 190)
In 1553 there was a silver chalice with paten, two
candlesticks, and a latten cross at Baswich church. (fn. 191)
The plate included in 1956 a flagon, a two-handled
cup, a paten and a salver, all Sheffield plate, purchased by the inhabitants of Baswich in 1798; a silver
almsdish, 1809, the gift of Richard Byrd Levett in
1843; a silver chalice, undated, and a silver paten,
both marked I.J.K.; a silver chalice with three
garnets in knop, 1916, given in memory of Algernon
Harold Baillie; a silver paten, 1917–18, given in
memory of Aubrey Norman and Basil Norman,
grandsons of William Grindley of Weeping Cross; a
silver flagon and lid, a silver chalice, undated; (fn. 192) a
silver chalice and paten given in memory of Norman
Jones, 1956. (fn. 193)
In 1553 there were three bells and one little bell. (fn. 194)
There are now three bells: (i) cast by John of
Stafford, early 14th century, inscribed 'In Onore
Sancte Trenete'; (ii) early 14th century, inscribed
'Missi decelis [sic] vos salvet vox Gabrielis'; (iii)
1591, Henry Oldfield of Nottingham. (fn. 195)
The registers date from 1601. Those for 1601–
1812 are printed. (fn. 196)
The church of ST. THOMAS, Walton, was
built in 1842 as a chapel-of-ease to Baswich. The
architect was Thomas Trubshaw (fn. 197) (1802–42), and
the Early English style of the building is said to have
been suggested by Thomas Salt of Weeping Cross. (fn. 198)
It is a small cruciform church built of purple brick
with stone dressings. The base of the tower, in the
west angle of the north transept, serves as a porch.
Access to the west gallery of the nave is obtained by
a projecting turret at the south-west corner of the
church. The tower formerly had a stone spire, but
this was struck by lightning and destroyed in 1845. (fn. 199)
It was replaced by the existing tall lead-covered
spire.
Internally there is an open hammer-beam roof to
the chancel and a king-post roof to the nave. The
font is of stone and the pulpit of stone and coloured
marble. The pierced alabaster chancel screen was
presented in 1888, (fn. 200) and the carved oak reredos was
erected in 1889 in memory of Col. Richard Byrd
Levett. (fn. 201) In 1919 the north transept was converted
into a war memorial chapel, (fn. 202) the architect being
Cecil Hare. (fn. 203) A stained-glass window, said to be by
Pugin, in memory of the Revd. Richard and Louisa
Frances Levett was moved to the chapel from the
south side of the church. (fn. 204) Other windows commemorate R. B. Levett (d. 1888), Mary Hitchings
(d. 1922), Herbert T. and Edith Mary Allsopp
(inserted 1937), and Major H. Pye (d. 1944).
Electric light was installed in 1934. (fn. 205) The oak altar
rails were presented in 1945 in memory of the
Revd. Gerard Hitchings, late incumbent. (fn. 206) In 1956
a new organ was installed in the west gallery, the
former instrument having been removed from a
small organ chamber at the side of the chancel. (fn. 207)
On the south nave wall is a marble tablet in
memory of the Revd. Richard Levett (d. 1843) and
Louisa Frances, his wife (d. 1864). There are also
tablets to Lt. Richard B. Wilton (d. 1917) and
Lt. M. A. McFerran (d. 1918). An altar tomb bearing
a recumbent effigy in alabaster in memory of Lt.
Richard Byrd Levett (d. 1917) is placed at the
entrance to the north transept. (fn. 208) Above it is a bronze
Madonna and Child by Albert Roze. The carved
oak canopy, designed by Cecil Hare, was added
when the transept became a memorial chapel in
1919. (fn. 209) Other tablets in the church commemorate
William Morgan of Walton Lodge (d. 1924),
Herbert T. Allsopp and his wife Edith Mary (d. 1920
and 1935), and Louisa Mary and Evelyn Honora
Levett (d. 1939 and 1946).
The plate consists of a silver chalice and paten
given in memory of Marjorie Gibson, 1916. (fn. 210) There
is one bell, 1842, Thomas Mears. (fn. 211)
There are no remains of the ancient chapel at
Brocton, but field names occurring c. 1845 north of
the lane to Walton may indicate its approximate
position. (fn. 212) The present church of All Saints is a
plain rectangular brick building erected as a mission
room in 1891 at a cost of £200. (fn. 213) It was dedicated to
ALL SAINTS by the Bishop of Lichfield in 1951
and enlarged by the addition of a south bay in 1955.
The crucifix above the altar dates from 1951, and the
oak pews, of local workmanship, date from between
1950 and 1956. (fn. 214)
The plate consists of a silver chalice and paten
given in memory of Mrs. Mary Chetwynd, 1951,
and a modern brass alms dish. (fn. 215) In 1553 there was
one bell and ornaments worth 16d. in the chapel at
Brocton. (fn. 216) There is one modern bell in the present
chapel.
Nonconformity
In 1690 the house of James
Twigg of 'Baswidge' was certified as a nonconformist
place of worship under the Toleration Act. (fn. 217) In 1812
the house of a Mr. Browne at Walton on the Hill (fn. 218)
and in 1826 the house of Thomas Saint were registered as meeting-houses for nonconformists. (fn. 219)
Primary Schools
Dorothy Bridgeman (d.
1697), widow of Sir Orlando Bridgeman of Weston
under Lizard (d. 1671) and formerly wife of George
Cradock of Caverswall and Brocton Hall, (fn. 220) by will
dated 10 January 1694 (or 1695), left two-tenths of
£200 towards the schooling of poor children of
Brocton. (fn. 221) It was possibly not until 1726, as in the
case of her similar bequest to Castle Church, (fn. 222) that
the money was made available. (fn. 223) Land in Baswich
parish known as School Leasow and two doles in the
'town hills' believed to have been bought for this
charity and let before 1778 for £2 10s., paid for the
schooling of six children; after the raising of the
rent in 1778 to £3 a seventh child was taught, and
from about 1800 to at least 1823, when the rent was
£6 6s., nine poor children were sent to a mistress in
Brocton who taught the boys to read and the girls to
read and sew. (fn. 224) The attendance at this private school
on the day of inspection in 1871 was five boys and
seven girls. (fn. 225)
All these charity lands have been sold, some part
to the Staffordshire and Worcestershire Canal Co.,
by whom a rent-charge of 14s. 8d. was still paid in
1905; some to the Trent Valley Railway Co.; and
the rest under Orders of the Charity Commissioners
of 1894 and 1895 and of the Board of Education of
1903. (fn. 226) The proceeds of sale and accumulated income, by 1905 invested in £369 4s. 2d. stock, produced an income of £18 4s. 4d. which was 'applied
towards the remuneration of a school dame.' (fn. 227)
There is no longer a school in Brocton, but the
charity, which is administered by a scheme under
the Charitable Trusts Acts, may be applied partly
for the benefit of children resident in Brocton parish
and attending a public elementary school, either in
providing facilities for conveyance to school or in
providing spectacles or surgical appliances or other
aids to health; partly in helping such children towards higher education, by payment of fees and
travelling or maintenance allowances, or alternatively
in otherwise promoting the education of the boys and
girls of the poorer classes in Brocton. (fn. 228) The annual
income in 1954 was £41 16s. 4d. interest on stock
and 8s. 1d. from Docks and Inland Waterways. (fn. 229)
Another dame school was founded at Milford by
Richard Levett of Milford Hall and his wife Louisa,
niece of Lord Bagot, who were married in 1804. (fn. 230)
Elizabeth Dean, schoolmistress, was a resident of
Milford by 1834. (fn. 231) The Levett family continued to
finance the school, providing even the girls' dresses
which, within the memory of those living in 1949,
were grey and white gingham with goffered white
linen tippets for summer and red and black plaid
for winter, with scarlet cloaks and hoods. (fn. 232) The
children were taught reading, writing, and arithmetic,
the youngest prepared wool for the older girls to
spin, and both boys and girls knitted their own
stockings. This little dame school closed down in
1879 on the death of Mrs. Betty Dean. (fn. 233)
A National school for boys and girls of Baswich
parish was built at Walton on the Hill in 1838, with
a house for the master and mistress. (fn. 234) It received an
annual parliamentary grant from 1855. (fn. 235) From at
least 1865 the standard of work seems to have been
very low, and a reduction of the government grant
was threatened in 1872. (fn. 236) Attendance between 1863
and 1894 was irregular, (fn. 237) being about 50 in 1871. (fn. 238)
After the appointment of William and Annie
Longson as master and mistress in 1893, the school
began to improve. (fn. 239) By 1894, when average attendance was 105, (fn. 240) it had probably already absorbed
the infant school. This, founded in Walton c. 1860
in a building adapted from several cottages and
supported entirely by Miss Salt of Weeping Cross,
had places for 40 children and an average attendance
in 1884 of 20. (fn. 241) The National school building was
enlarged in 1894 and again in 1907. (fn. 242) It had an
average attendance of 93 boys and girls and 52
infants in 1910. (fn. 243) There were 129 in the school in
1931, when it was limited to junior children and
infants, the seniors being transferred to Stafford
borough. (fn. 244) It became a controlled school in 1949 (fn. 245)
and is now Baswich Church of England Voluntary
Primary (Controlled) School (Junior Mixed and
Infants). (fn. 246) The average attendance in 1955 was 150
children. (fn. 247)
The interest on a sum of £35, being the surplus
of 'The Revd. Joseph Ellerton Memorial Fund',
was assigned in 1891 for the provision of rewards,
at Christmas, for 'the best conducted children at
Berkswich National School.' (fn. 248) In 1918 the principal
was used to buy £37 0s. 1d. stock, and in 1954 the
income, £1 5s. 10d., was still spent on school prizes. (fn. 249)
Charities for the Poor
Dorothy Bridgeman (d. 1697) (fn. 250) left to the poor of Brocton township
land there which was yielding 10s. in 1786 (fn. 251) and
20s. in 1823. The income in 1823 was distributed on
St. Thomas's Day (21 Dec.) in sums of 2s. 6d. or
3s. among the poorest parishioners in the township. (fn. 252)
This charity was subsequently lost.
Thomas Twist of Walton, by will of 1683, left
£10, the interest to be spent on cloth for the poor
of the liberty of Walton, i.e. all the parish except
Brocton township. (fn. 253) In 1786 the interest was 8s. (fn. 254) and
from at least 1816 10s. which was laid out in flannel
given away at a vestry meeting in October. (fn. 255) The
annual income, 7s. 4d., was being paid to the poor in
cash in 1954. (fn. 256)
George Baddeley of Weeping Cross, by will dated
1717, gave a rent of 6s. charged on land at Weeping
Cross to be distributed in bread to the poor of Walton
liberty on Palm Sunday and on the first Sunday of
each of the following two months. (fn. 257) Payment had
ceased some years before 1823, and attempts then
made to recover the charity seem to have been unsuccessful. (fn. 258)
Roger Twigg of Walton, by will of 1726, left £40,
the interest to provide 'bread-corn' for the poor
of Walton constablewick on 25 March and at Midsummer, Michaelmas, and Christmas. (fn. 259) On Roger's
death in 1733 (fn. 260) the £40 passed to his brother Samuel,
who, by will of October, charged two closes with a
rent of 32s., being interest at 4 per cent on £40. Samuel
added a rent of 40s. of which 8s. was to be added to
the four distributions laid down in his brother's will,
10s. was to be paid to the minister at Baswich for
sermons on St. Thomas's Day and Good Friday, 10s.
was to be distributed in 'household bread' on these
two days at the church and the remaining 12s. was to
be given away in 'penny bread' on the first Sunday
of every month. (fn. 261) By 1823 £2 was distributed in
bread-corn to twelve of the poorest in the constablewick of Walton, most of them widows, 10s. in sixpenny loaves on Good Friday and St. Thomas's Day,
and 12s. in twelve-penny loaves on the first Sunday
of the month, and 10s. was paid to the vicar for the
two sermons. (fn. 262) In 1954 10s. of this £3 12s. was still
paid to the vicar for sermons at Easter and Christmas,
and the rest went to the poor. (fn. 263)
Esther Harding of Weeping Cross, by will of
1830, left £50, the interest to be used to purchase
warm clothing for the poor of the parish. (fn. 264) In 1918
the principal was invested in £52 16s. 2d. stock, and
in 1954 the income of £1 16s. 10d. was still paid to
the poor. (fn. 265)