HASELOR
Acreage: 2,308.
Population: 1911, 223; 1921, 215; 1931, 207.
The parish of Haselor lies between Alcester and
Stratford, bounded on the north-east by the River Alne.
The main village consists of a long street running downhill in a southerly direction, the upper part being known
as Upton and that below the manor-house as Lower
Haselor, a division which is of manorial origin. (fn. 1) The
hamlet of Walcot lies about half a mile to the northeast, beyond the knoll on which the church stands.
There are about sixteen buildings in the main village—roughly half the total number—with visible traces of
17th-century or earlier construction. Of these the
most important are the manor-house, the manor farm,
and Upton House.
The manor-house, now a farm, standing about halfway down the street on the east side, is a late-16thcentury building of T-shaped plan. The manor-place
of Upton Haselor was leased by Thomas Whittington,
lord of the manor, to Robert Mylls in 1542 for 51 years,
apparently a renewal of a lease held by William his
father. (fn. 2) In 1590, the house being then occupied by
Robert's widow, Thomas Throckmorton granted a
21 years' lease of it (beginning from 24 Oct. 1593) to
his younger brother George, of Moor Hall, who in the
same year made over his rights to George Kempson of
Alcester, butcher, (fn. 3) whose brother, Thomas Kempson of
Oversley Park, (fn. 4) eventually obtained possession in 1629, (fn. 5)
but by a deed of the previous year a portion of the house,
including the kitchen, the well yard, and half the great
court was assigned to George's widow as part of an
annuity. (fn. 6) In the same year (1629) Thomas Kempson
sold it, with an estate in Upton, Haselor, and Exhall,
for £1,265 to Sir John Coke and others who were
probably acting as agents for Lord Brooke. (fn. 7) In 1633
Robert, Lord Brooke, leased it to Richard Gibbs, (fn. 8)
whose son Richard was probably occupying it at the
time of the Hearth Tax Return (1662–74) (fn. 9) and in
1703 John Gibbs received a 21 years' lease of it from
Fulke, Lord Brooke. (fn. 10)
The main block of the house facing west shows
timber-framing in both stories, some of the lower having
close-set studding. The gabled north and south ends
are rebuilt with brick, but retain their angle story-posts,
and the south end has framing in the gable-head. The
back wing, the stem of the T, also shows framing, a
little of it close-set, on stone foundations. In the angle
of the north side with the main block is a staircase wing
with close-set studding to the upper story and a north
gable-head of diagonal lattice framing. The lower
story as well as much of the back wing has been replaced
with brick. On the side of the wing at the junction with
the main block is a fine stone chimney-stack carrying a
large cross-shaped shaft set diagonally, of thin bricks. It
has a fire-place 9 ft. wide towards the wing. The wing
has a stone-flagged floor to the ground floor (kitchen),
old wide oak floor-boards to the first floor, rough ceiling
beams, and the roof has queen-post trusses with side
purlins supported by curved wind-braces. The front
block has been more renovated but has stop-chamfered
beams. The stairs, partly winding, are of old oak boards.
A barn near the house also retains some of its original
16th- or 17th-century framing.
The Manor Farm at the foot of the street belonged to
the manor of Haselor and Walcot, and was granted by
Lord Brooke to Sir Fulke Greville of Ealing for 30 years
in 1623. (fn. 11) The initials I.S.H. which appear with the
date 1810 on the south gable of the east wing, are probably those of a member of the Hemming family who
were settled in Haselor at least from the 16th until
the 19th century. (fn. 12)
The house faces north and has a rather narrow central
block, gabled at front and back, and east and west
gabled cross-wings; only the east wing and the central
chimney-stack are ancient, dating from c. 1600. The
remainder has been rebuilt with brick, probably all in
1810. The north front of the east wing, about 15 ft.
wide, has a slightly projecting upper story. The angle
posts of the ground story have square pilasters cut on
their fronts, with sloping bases and plain capitals that
carry shaped brackets under the moulded bressummer.
The wall between the posts is rebuilt with brick. The
upper story has original blackened timber-framing on
square panels containing curved pieces which meet to
form circles and half-circles; a modern central bow
window replaces a square oriel with a bracket below it.
The gable-head has similar panels and projects slightly
on a heavy bressummer with faint traces of a running
pattern of scrolls and monsters in low relief. The roof
projects about 3ft. and has a modern barge-board, but
original moulded pendants. Against the east side of the
wing is a modern brick addition, inside which some of
the close-set studding of the lower story is visible. The
ground-floor room runs from front to back, with chamfered cross-beams: one of these has mortices of a former
partition. It has a wide fire-place on the west side at the
south end, but the chimney-stack above is modern.
The great chimney-stack over the middle of the house
has six detached shafts of thin bricks, each with a Vshaped pilaster on the exposed faces. The fire-places
below it are modern. The byre is in front of the house,
and west of it is a 17th-century timber-framed barn.
Upton House, opposite Haselor House, is a tall late-18th-century brick building of three stories behind
which, attached to it in parallel, is a low timber-framed
17th-century wing. It is gabled at the south end and
has a tiled roof. The north part of the wing is a little
higher and has a steeply-pitched gabled roof, evidently
formerly thatched. At right angles to it is an old
timber-framed barn of the same period.
There are six other cottages and small houses divided
into tenements, on the west side, and two on the east
side, all wholly or in part of 17th-century timber
framing.
North of the manor house are the much restored
village stocks.
At Walcot, which lies along a double bend of the
road to Aston Cantlow, there are also several timberframed houses.
On the south-west side of the road near the second
turning is Walcot Manor, a 17th-century house refaced
with late-18th-century brickwork. Some framing
appears on the gable ends and internally, and there are
timber-framed farm-buildings.
Next north on the same side is an early 17th-century
framed cottage and another, rather more altered, opposite. Another on the east side near the north bend is a
small farm-house of 17th-century framing and with a
chimney-stack of two diagonal shafts in thin bricks.
The outbuilding has a cider-mill and press, one of the
few in this district, and a low farm-building next south
retains much of its original mud walling, another rare
survival.
The church, on top of the hill between Haselor and
Walcot, commands a view of a semicircle of low
wooded hills, rising in places to about 360 ft., which
form approximately the western and southern limits of
the parish. Withycombe and Rough Hill Woods, on
the west, stretch southwards to Red Hill, where the
main Stratford-Alcester road comes down into the
valley. The woods of Widecombe, Middelgrove, and
Rouheia formed part of the endowment of the church in
the 12th century. (fn. 13) Withycombe afterwards belonged
to the college of St. Mary at Warwick and the timber
there was sold in 1449 for £50 6s. 8d. (fn. 14) In 1544
Withycombe, Westgrove, and Le Hermitage were
granted to William and Francis Sheldon. (fn. 15) The tithes
from Withycombe, Westgrove, Rollswood, and Masters
Wood were sold in 1626 by William Skynner of Shelfield Park to George Smith of Woodhouse. (fn. 16) Middelgrove, mentioned above, was probably the present
Red Hill Wood (which continues Withycombe south
of the main road) and was later called Masters Wood
because it had belonged to the master of the preceptory
at Temple Grafton. The master held land under
Middelgrove and extending from Barlechweye (in
Grafton) to Holoweye (probably Red Hill), paying
tithes for as much of it as was in cultivation to the
church of Haselor. (fn. 17)
West Grove, west of Red Hill Wood, may be the
'westgraf' mentioned in the early 8th century among
the boundaries of land in Shottery. (fn. 18) It was alternatively known in the 18th century as Hemings Wood. (fn. 19)
There are two other small woods on the south side of
the main road. The first crowns a low hill north of Rollswood Farm; it has been known for at least a century as
the Devil's Night Cap, (fn. 20) but may be probably identified with the Rollswood of 1626. About half a mile
farther west is a wooded, conical-shaped hill of unusual
regularity known as Alcock's Arbour, (fn. 21) about which
Dugdale quotes an 'Old Wives Story':
'Towards the foot', he says, 'is a hole, now almost filled
up, having been the entrance into a Cave, as the Inhabitants
report:' and 'one Alcock, a great Robber, used to lodge
therein, and having got much money by that course of life,
hid it in an iron bound chest, whereunto were three Keys:
which Chest, they say, is still there, but guarded by a Cock
that continually sits upon it: and that on a time, an Oxford
Schollar came thither, with a Key that opened two of the
Locks; but as he was attempting to open the third, the Cock
seized on him. To all whiche they adde that if one Bone
of the partie, who set the Cock there, could be brought, he
would yield up the Chest.' (fn. 22)
This story is still remembered in the neighbourhood
and there is another to the effect that horses were
chained to the chest in a vain attempt to drag it away.
There seems to be no sign of a 'cave', but the fact that
Roman coins have often been discovered here offers a
clue to the origin of the legend. (fn. 23)
West of Alcock's Arbour is the large expanse of
Oversley Wood, of which the eastern portion, known as
Shroud Hill Coppice, is in Haselor parish. Until about
sixty years ago it was even more extensive, including
the Arbour and stretching down to the main road on
either side of it, and covering some of the fields between
Shroud Hill and Rollswood Farm. (fn. 24) The southern
boundary of the parish at this point is the long ridge
called Grove Hill, which continues south-west above
Exhall and divides the valleys of the Alne and the Avon.
Near a spring called Caldwell in Grove Hill was the
Hermitage (see above) which Ralph Boteler gave some
time before 1158 to Alcester Abbey, confirmed to them
as the hermitage of Caldwell by Henry II, Edward III,
and Henry VI. (fn. 25)
The Stratford-Alcester main road, which is of
Roman origin, crosses the south of the parish from east
to west. At Alcock's Arbour the original road continues as a field-path in a straight line towards Oversley
Green and the modern road bears north-west to a point
formerly known as Trench Lane Gate, whence it takes
a right-angled turn south-west into Alcester, thus forming with the ancient road a complete triangle. (fn. 26) The
section from the Arbour to the Gate, known as Trench
Lane, is certainly of great antiquity. It may be identified with Le Trenche (1280) (fn. 27) and Staunchar's Lane
(1545), (fn. 28) and it is probably significant that it forms the
boundary of the parish. Beyond Trench Lane Gate
(the site of a toll-house) it continues as a bridle road to
the ford over the Arrow at Hoo Mill.
The main road was used in the Middle Ages as a
salt way. There was a salt pan worth 4s. and 2 loads of
salt attached to the manor in 1086, (fn. 29) and in 1396
William Wodeward held his tenement by the service of
buying salt at the Wiche for the guesthouse of
Warwick College, then lords of the manor. (fn. 30) At the
toll-house near Rollswood Farm is a cross road leading
north to the village and south to Grafton. The names
of the two fields in the eastern angle of the main road
and the Grafton road—Great and Little Salters Piece—suggest that the latter was a branch of the salt way
leading over into the Avon Valley and probably to
Hillborough (q.v.). (fn. 31) It seems to be the Salters Lane
mentioned in the Inclosure Award (1767).
From the toll-house near Rollswood Farm a road
runs north through the village to Great Alne, where it
crosses the river. Just beyond the village another road
crosses it at right angles, leading left to the Alcester
road at Trench Lane Gate and right to Walcot and
Aston Cantlow. Haselor and Walcot are also connected
by a path through the churchyard. A hollow way below
the east churchyard wall marks the ancient course of
this road and at the highest point, standing above it and
within the churchyard, is the base of a medieval standing
cross. This is octagonal, with moulded base steps, and
has the socket with a fragment of a 14-in. square shaft.
A certain unevenness in the ground near by suggests
that there were formerly buildings nearer the church
than at present. South of the main road a road goes off
from the foot of Red Hill to Binton, past Barley Leys
(i.e. Barlichway) Farm. The Inclosure Award mentions
various minor roads in this district, some of which were
used within living memory for the carriage of timber
from the woods. Most of these have degenerated into
field-paths or disappeared.
The soil is rich marl and the subsoil sandy. There is
a coal seam, which, however, is too deep to work, running across the parish and under the church. (fn. 32)
The parish was inclosed by an Act of 1766, (fn. 33) but
there is evidence of inclosure here as early as the 13th
century. About 1230 a controversy over tithes and
common rights between Stephen de Upton and Nicholas parson of Haselor, was settled by Stephen's allowing
the parson to pasture his animals in Mukehill, Barnce,
and Wichebec and in all other pastures of Upton outside the covert of the wood and such common inside as
belonged to his land of Upton: in return Stephen and
his sons might make what assarts they pleased so long as
they paid the tithes to the church. (fn. 34) In an exchange of
land between Robert lord of Haselor and the same
Nicholas in 1241 the latter was allowed to inclose his
portion with heaps and ditches and to better it in any
way. (fn. 35) The award of 1767 mentions certain 'old enclosures' including 'the Court Lands'; there were
five open fields in the manor of Haselor and Walcot—then known as Between Towns, Throughters, (fn. 36) Watergall, Micknell, and Oathill Fields—and four in Upper
Haselor—known as Broadway, Purnhill, Rowland, and
Rodnell Fields. According to a rental of 1545 the
usual size of the virgate in the chief manor was 18 acres
or a little over. (fn. 37) The tenants were allowed to common
12 beasts and cattle for every virgate and a half they
held, and to bring in 8 loads of hay. (fn. 38)
Manors
Before the Conquest HASELOR was
held by Ulviet and Alvric. In 1086 Nicholas the Crossbowman held it as 5 hides and
a virgate. (fn. 39) The greater part of the estates of Nicholas
lay in Devonshire, and several of his holdings there were
in 1286 held by Robert son of Pain. (fn. 40) The overlordship of Haselor perhaps passed with these estates, for
about 1330 Robert son of Pain seized the heiress of
Haselor, who was a minor. (fn. 41) This is, however, the only
reference which has been found to such an overlordship, and in 1235 and 1242 the manor was held as half
a fee of William de Hastings. (fn. 42) Again, in 1315, it was
said to be held of William Hastings of Thormarton for
service of a pair of white spurs, worth 2d., (fn. 43) but there is
no later reference to the Hastings overlordship.
Nicholas de Pole, justiciar in the time of Henry I,
appears to have been lord of the manor, for he and his
wife Maud and his two sons Robert and Ralph augmented that king's endowment of the church of Haselor,
their gift being confirmed by Simon, bishop of Worcester (1125–50). (fn. 44) Robert de Haselor was lord of the
manor in 1235 and 1241-2 (fn. 45) and on his death-bed,
sometime before 1246, gave a mill and 2 virgates of land
here to the Prioress of Cookhill (Worcs.). (fn. 46) Possibly
Lavyna de Haselor, who married William de Mutton
about 1228, was his heir. Some question arose as to the
legitimacy of a later Robert de Haselor and in 1288 the
Bishop of Worcester certified that William and Lavyna
had 60 years before publicly contracted matrimony at
the door of the church of Haselor, and that Robert was
born in matrimony. (fn. 47) Possibly Robert died about this
time, (fn. 48) and the succession gave rise to this question of
his legitimacy. Robert Lynet (or Lyvet), who was
pardoned in 1290 for trespass of venison, (fn. 49) died in
1315 holding the manor, leaving a son John aged 27. (fn. 50)
John settled the manor on himself and his wife Eleanor
and died about 1327, leaving as his heir a daughter
Katherine, a minor. A third of the manor was assigned
to Eleanor as dower, and she subsequently married
John de Cheltenham. The rest of the manor passed
to Katherine and her husband John son of Robert de
Trillowe, (fn. 51) and in 1329 John de Cheltenham and
Eleanor released their third to Katherine. (fn. 52) She was
dead before 1332 and left no issue. (fn. 53) Her heir was her
uncle Henry Lyvet, who was the chief tax-payer in
Haselor in 1332. (fn. 54) He sold the manor in the following
year to Master Robert de Stratford, (fn. 55) and three years
later John de Cheltenham and Eleanor conveyed their
interest to Master Robert, who was then Archdeacon of
Canterbury. (fn. 56) He sold the manor to William de
Meldon and Agnes his wife. (fn. 57) Henry Lyvet had
granted a pension of £40 in Haselor to John Peyto,
who released his right to Meldon. William Meldon
presented to the church in April, and Sir William,
probably the same, in October 1349. (fn. 58) An indenture
of sale was made by William Meldon 'de le boys' of
Haselor to Thomas Wodeward, and a release by Joan
wife of Thomas Hamond to Aumary de St. Amand of
the manor of Haselor, but both are undated. (fn. 59) Sir
Aumary was tenant of the manor in 1365, when John
Peyto released to him all his claim in it. (fn. 60) Sir Aumary
sold it about 1384 to Thomas, Earl of Warwick, and in
1387 his son and heir Aumary released all his right to
the earl, as did Sir Nicholas Lilling in 1395. (fn. 61)
The earl had obtained licence in 1384 to grant it to
the College of St. Mary at Warwick (fn. 62) and the grant
was made in 1395. (fn. 63) On the forfeiture of Thomas,
Earl of Warwick, Haselor Manor was seized by the
king, who granted it in September 1397 to his nephew
Thomas, Earl of Kent, (fn. 64) but in October following
another grant of it was made to Robert Gowssell, the
king's esquire. (fn. 65) These grants were probably made in
ignorance of the earl's gift to the college, for in November 1397 this was ratified by the king. (fn. 66) The manor
remained in the possession of the college until the Dissolution, when a rent of £19 17s. 6d was being received
from it. (fn. 67)
The manor was granted in 1550 to Sir Ralph Sadler, (fn. 68)
who sold it in 1553 for £900 (fn. 69) to Sir Fulke Greville,
and the manor remained in the Greville family at least
until 1804, when George Greville, 2nd Earl of Warwick, conveyed it to William Froggatt. (fn. 70)
Sir Robert Throckmorton was lord of the manor in
1850, (fn. 71) and was followed in 1862 by his son Sir
Nicholas William George Throckmorton, who sold
the estate during the latter part of the century, though
he is believed to have retained the manorial rights. But
by the time of his death in 1919 these had fallen into
abeyance. (fn. 72)
The manor of UPTON or UPTON HASELOR (fn. 73)
was held freely before the Conquest by three men of
Earl Leofric. In 1086 Roger held it of William Buenvasleth as 4½ hides. (fn. 74) Later the manor was held of the
Botilers of Wem and Oversley, who held under the
Earls of Warwick; (fn. 75) and in 1525 and 1547 it was held
of Sir William Gascoigne as of his manor of Oversley. (fn. 76)
About 1230 Sir Stephen de Upton, with the consent
of Amice his wife, granted land to the church of
Haselor. (fn. 77) From this time nothing is known of the
ownership of the manor until 1284, when Hugh
Aguillon died holding the manor of Upton. His
widow Ellen claimed dower in the manor. He left no
children, and his heirs were his sister Joan, then aged
80, and his nephews Hugh Trenchevent and William
de Whitenton or Whittington, and a certain John, son
of his sister Maud. The greater
part of the manor passed to
William Whittington, who settled
it upon himself and Joan his wife
in 1314 (fn. 78) and was still in possession two years later. (fn. 79) A similar
settlement was made in 1347 upon
another William and Joan Whittington. (fn. 80) About 1535 Thomas
Whittington of Pauntley, co. Glos.
(sixth in descent from this William) (fn. 81) in a suit against Elizabeth Walsingham, widow, stated
that his ancestors for 200 years and more had held a
messuage and a yardland and a wood called Upton
Woods, and a dovecote in Upton, which Elizabeth
now claimed, and as she was assisted by the Sheriff of
Warwick and John Greville, in whose household her
son John Walsingham lived, Thomas was unable to get
justice. Elizabeth stated that her father, John Ippwell,
and his ancestors for 200 years and more had held the
premises, and that when he died she was only 2 years
old, and John Whittington had taken advantage of this
to take possession of the land. (fn. 82) Possibly Elizabeth's
claim was derived from one of the co-heirs of Hugh
Aguillon, but nothing has been found to connect John
Ippwell or any others of that family with Haselor.
Thomas evidently made good his claim to the manor,
and on his death, in 1547, (fn. 83) it was divided between his
six daughters: Anne wife of Bevis or Brice Berkeley,
Jane wife of Roger Bodenham, Margaret wife of
Thomas Throckmorton of Crowsland, Alice wife of
John Nanfan, Elizabeth wife of Sir Giles Poole, and
Blanche wife of John St. Aubin. (fn. 84) Alice Nanfan died
without issue about 1579, when Henry Poole son of
Sir Giles and Elizabeth, and Edward Berkeley and his
wife Elizabeth, who was a daughter of Anne Berkeley,
conveyed two-fifths of the manor to Thomas Throckmorton. (fn. 85) Thomas acquired another fifth of the manor
about the same time, and sold four-fifths in 1579 to
Thomas Throckmorton of Coughton. (fn. 86)

Whittington. Gules a fesse checky or and azure.
The share of the manor which belonged to Jane
Bodenham was, after her death in 1558, held by Roger
her husband until his death in 1579. (fn. 87) It passed to
their son Thomas Bodenham, who died without issue
in 1583, (fn. 88) and then to his brother Roger Bodenham of
Rotherwas, Herefordshire, who sold it in 1589 to
Thomas Throckmorton and Margaret his wife. (fn. 89)
Thomas was succeeded by his grandson Sir Robert
Throckmorton, who held Upton Manor in 1629, (fn. 90)
after which it descended with the manor of Haselor.
Another estate in Haselor called a manor seems to
have originated in 2 messuages and 2 virgates of land in
Upton which William Clopton leased to Thomas
Crewe and Juliana his wife for
life about 1418. (fn. 91) Isabel, a granddaughter of William Clopton,
married Sir John Lingen, (fn. 92) and
this estate, then called the manor
of Haselor, was in the king's
hands on account of the minority
of John Lingen's daughter Joan
or Jane. (fn. 93) She married William
Shelley and died in 1610, when
her cousin Edward Lingen succeeded. (fn. 94) He was declared a
lunatic in 1623, (fn. 95) and died in
1636 when the manor, called
Upton in 1623 and Haselor in 1636, passed to
Henry, (fn. 96) his son by Blanche daughter of Sir Roger
Bodenham. (fn. 97) Sir Henry was a prominent Royalist and
was impoverished by his loyalty; (fn. 98) it is probable that
he sold this property to the Throckmortons.

Lingen. Barry or and azure a bend gules with three roses argent thereon.
WALCOT was apparently included with the chief
manor of Haselor, (fn. 99) but was separately sold in 1807
as the 'Manor or reputed Manor' of Walcot, with a
capital messuage known as Walcot Hall by the 2nd Earl
of Warwick to Thomas Salt of Cheadle, Staffs., for
£8,500. (fn. 100) It was advertised for sale by Salt's executors
in 1835. (fn. 101)
Five rentals survive for the chief manor of Haselor,
dated 1396, (fn. 102) c. 1461, (fn. 103) 1545, (fn. 104) 1612, (fn. 105) and (?) 1659 (fn. 106) In
1396 there were 22 messuages and 2 cottages, and in 1545
10 messuages and 4 cottages; an apparent fall in population that suggests inclosure. (fn. 107) The rentals 1396–1545
contain a rent of 12d., 2 capons, and 6 discs of wood
paid by the Abbot of Evesham for a burgage in Evesham
attached to the manor. This tenement may be traced
back to the Conquest, since a burgess who, with two
Frenchmen, paid 7½d. is mentioned in Domesday. (fn. 108) By
1396 commutation of villein services into money rents
was complete for there is no mention of sale of works or
of any customary payments. Some of the meadow was
held individually at a rent paid in money or in kind. (fn. 109)
A reference to villeinage on the manor occurs in 1445,
when the manumission of Richard Colet and his son
was cancelled because they had shown themselves
quarrelsome towards their neighbours and ungrateful
to the lords. (fn. 110)
By the 17th century Haselor was predominantly a
village of substantial yeomen and freeholders, a characteristic which is perhaps reflected in the number of
large, timber-framed farm-houses that still remain.
Some of these families show a remarkable continuity;
in the Hearth Tax Returns of 1663, for instance,
where only one person has as many as four hearths,
21 of the 56 inhabitants belong to the three families of
Gibbs, Heming, and Field; and these and several other
families (e.g. Mills and Parsons) can be traced over a
period of two or more centuries. In the manor of
Upton Haselor the establishment of this yeoman class
can be traced during the reigns of the first two Stuarts:
of eleven leases granted by the Throckmortons 1601–34 six were for 2,000 years or for ever, several tenements having previously been held only for lives. (fn. 111)
![[Plan of Haselor church]](image-thumb.aspx?compid=56992&pubid=529&filename=fig58.gif)
[Plan of Haselor church]
Hoo Mill stands by the Alne, a little above the ford
leading to Kinwarton. There was a mill worth 6s. 8d.
in the chief manor of Haselor in 1086 (fn. 112) and early in the
12th century Nicholas de la Pole granted 'lawegrist'
and the tithes of the mill to the church. (fn. 113) A water-mill
is also included in the manor in 1315. (fn. 114) The present
name of the mill first occurs in 1609 (fn. 115) and in 1626 the
tithes of Hoo Mill were included in the sale of tithe by
William Skynner to George Smith, already referred
to. (fn. 116) Certain old inclosures belonging to the mill, and
apparently consisting of the neighbouring meadows,
are referred to in the Award of 1767. (fn. 117) Hoo Mill was
taken in 1844 as a needle mill by the firm of Holyoake
of Redditch, who removed here from Oversley Mill.
A water-mill in the manor of Upton is mentioned in
1284 (fn. 118) and 1394, (fn. 119) and a mill is included in the lease
of the Manor Place in 1542. (fn. 120) The four-fifths of the
manor bought by Thomas Throckmorton in 1579 and
the remaining fifth which he purchased ten years later
were both said to include a mill. (fn. 121)
The grant of 'lawegrist' to the church by Nicholas de
la Pole included also the right to fish on fast-days in
ripa nostra, except with draw-nets. In 1545 John
Palmer was holding 'le Were' with a fishery at Staunchars Lane End at the yearly rent of 12d. (fn. 122) The right of
fishing in 'the river belonging to the parish of Haselor'
is included in a conveyance of land from Fulke, Lord
Brooke, to Bernard Whalley of Billesley in 1689. (fn. 123) A
fishery in the Arrow, worth 9s. a year, was held with
the site of the chief manor of Haselor in 1545 (fn. 124) and
there was also a fishery in the fifth part of the manor of
Upton conveyed in 1589. (fn. 125)
Church
The parish church of ST. MARY AND
CHURCH ALL SAINTS is apparently of 12thcentury origin and had a west tower: a
south aisle with the arcade of three bays was added later
in the century. Early in the 13th century the chancel
was rebuilt, with a north chapel and an arcade of two
bays. There also seems to have been a north vestry
east of the chapel. Before the middle of the 14th
century, a south transeptal chapel of one bay was added
to the chancel and the south aisle was widened to range
with it. The north chapel-aisle was subsequently destroyed and the arcade was walled up, perhaps in the
18th century. Whether or not the nave had a north
aisle is not evident from the fabric, as the north wall
appears to have been entirely rebuilt when a small
chamber was added specially to receive the vault-grave
of a vicar who died in 1869. The bell-chamber of the
tower was added in 1622. The church was restored in
1883 and again in 1892.
The plan is irregular, the chancel and nave each
being a foot wider at their west ends than their east
ends. The south aisle wall is parallel with the arcade
wall in the west half, but is deflected outwards in the
east half till it is nearly a foot wider at its east end (the
14th-century chapel).
The chancel (about 30½ ft. by 14 to 15 ft.) has a
modern east window of three lights and tracery. In the
north wall is a blocked doorway and a blocked arcade
of two bays, with square responds and an 18-in. circular
middle pillar. The east respond has a capital carved
with a series of conjoined leaves, and with a grooved
abacus and round neck mould. The capital of the pillar
is of somewhat similar design, but as it overhangs the
pillar the neck mould is more elaborately moulded
with two rounds and a soffit hollow. The carving suggests a very early 13th-century date for the arcade. The
arches are two-centred and of two chamfered orders
with small voussoirs. The closing wall is of rubble,
flush with the main wall outside, and about half its
thickness; in the west bay is a window of two trefoiled
lights (18th century?).
In the south wall are two windows; the eastern is of
two trefoiled ogee-headed lights and a quatrefoil in a
two-centred head with an external hood-mould: it is
of the 14th century, in Campden stone. The second
window is a trefoiled lancet, probably of the 13th century but restored externally; it has a triangular reararch. Next west is a 14th-century arch into the east
end of the south aisle: it has half-round shafts to the
square responds, with moulded capitals; the east
respond, except the shaft, and the two-centred arch of
two chamfered orders are modern restorations. There
is no chancel arch. The chancel walls are irregular lias
rubble, roughly coursed, and squared in the east wall:
the east window appears once to have had a lower sill:
the gable-head and buttresses are modern.
The roof is high-pitched and probably of the 15th
century: it has collars to the coupled rafters, supported
by curved braces, and there are curved firring-pieces at
the junction of the rafters and ashlar posts above the
wall plates, making the whole a pointed arch. Above
the collar beams is a central longitudinal beam. At the
west end is an old tie-beam, on which is a moulding,
probably not original: it is supported by modern curved
braces and above it modern posts and arches form a
kind of screen between chancel and nave.
The nave (about 42½ ft. by 15½ to 16½ ft.) has two
modern north windows of two lights and a quatrefoil.
Between them is an archway to the small transept-vault
already mentioned.
The north wall sets back inside 7 in. from the wall
of the chancel and is of similar masonry to the transept:
a modern buttress covers the junction outside.
The south arcade, apparently late-12th-century,
continues the line of the south wall and arch of the
chancel and is of three bays. It has square piers of
random-tooled ashlar, with chamfered angles, plain
square bases, and chamfered imposts; the arches are
two-centred and of two chamfered orders and are
covered with cement.
The south aisle (about 13 ft. wide at the east end and
11½ ft. at the west) has an unpierced gabled east wall.
In the south wall are three 14th-century windows, each
of two trefoiled ogee-headed lights: the easternmost,
opposite the 14th-century arch, has a quatrefoil in the
two-centred head, in the second the piercing has only
the bottom part foiled. The westernmost has old
jambs, but the head is modern. All have external hoodmoulds, plastered internal splays, and pointed reararches. The south doorway, between the second and
third, is plain, with chamfered jambs and pointed head:
the hood-mould differs in section from those of the
windows and is probably of the 13th century. A sundial is scratched on one of the stones of the east jamb.
In the west wall is a modern lancet window. The walls
are of rubble partly squared. The two diagonal buttresses are old; that between the two eastern windows
has been restored.
The gabled roof of the nave has braced collar-beams
and a central purlin, but has curved firring at the bottom like that in the chancel roof. In the middle is a
16th-century moulded tie-beam. The aisle roof is
also arched and has four tie-beams, three rough and the
easternmost moulded. All the roofs are tiled.
The south porch of stone is modern.
The west tower (about 9½ ft. square) is of one unbroken stage up to the bell-chamber, where there is a
deep set-back or weather-course. The plinth is restored.
The walling, up to a height of from 12 to 16 ft., is of
squared rubble in courses and probably of the 12th
century; above that is a mixture of material and, again
higher, grey lias rubble with oolite dressings, probably
of the 17th century. The bell chamber is of a squared
cream stone in courses. On the south side of it are two
inscribed stones, below the parapet string-course:
Richard Skhvkar
Henrye Lane
Herrye Hemminge
Chvrchwarden
William Vavghan
Iohn Tompkins
1622 Workemen.
The diagonal buttresses to the west angles are of two
stages and largely of oolite stone. The parapet has a
heavy plain string-course and modern battlements of
ashlar.
The archway from the nave has plastered jambs,
flush with the tower walls, and what seem to be the
plastered springers of a 12th-century arch; above these
springers is a two-centred stone arch, of a widely chamfered inner order (grey-washed) and small, plastered,
outer order, probably, like the window, of the 14th
century.
The west window is of two trefoiled ogee-headed
lights and a quatrefoil in a two-centred head, all of
oolite stone and probably of the 14th century. The
second story has no lights, but on the west face is
a skeleton clock-dial.
The bell-chamber has a plain, roughly round-headed
window in each wall with rough internal splays and
wood lintels inside.
The roof, nearly flat and covered with lead, has a
heavy beam and wide square rafters. The ceiling of
the ground stage is made up of boarding from 18thcentury pews.
The font is of tapering, round, flower-pot shape with
a moulded top edge partly covered by the lead from the
bowl, and has a moulded base and chamfered step: it is
probably of the late 12th century.
On either side of the chancel is some oak panelling
that appears to have been made up from mid-17th-century pews.
In the churchyard, south of the aisle, is a tapering
coffin lid of the 13th century, 5ft. 10 in. long, carved
with a raised cross with a long stem and fleur-de-lis
arms to the head. A stone slab 7 ft. by 3 ft., now at the
entrance to the south porch, is possibly an altar stone,
but has no distinctive marks on it.
There are two bells, one by Newcome of Leicester
1610 and the other of 1902. The framing is old and has
pits for three bells.
The communion plate is modern.
The register of baptisms begins in 1594 and of marriages and burials in 1589.
Advowson
The church was founded by Henry I
who endowed it with a rectory house,
2 virgates of land in the fields of Haselor and Walcot, and a plot and croft adjoining. (fn. 126)
Nicholas de Pole and his wife and sons gave pasture for
8 oxen in Spertes and 4 cows in Wethe, and 11 acres of
wood; also 'churchschet' of oats and poultry, rights of
fishing and multure, and tithes of the mill. These last,
with tithes of the lord's meadow, were exchanged later
for 11 acres of assart in Widecombe, 3 acres at Rouhaie,
and the meadow of Wrangesham. (fn. 127) Simon, Bishop of
Worcester, confirmed this to the rector. (fn. 128)
The advowson belonged to the lords of the manor
and in 1297 Robert Lynet presented Nicholas Lynet,
but as he was not in Holy Orders, he was not instituted
until 1298. (fn. 129) The church passed with the manor to the
Dean and Chapter of Warwick, and was appropriated to
the canons, the vicarage being ordained in 1394, when
the vicar was assigned a tenement and croft and 10
marks. (fn. 130) After the Dissolution the advowson remained
in the Crown, and the Lord Chancellor is the present
patron. The church was valued at £10 in 1291, (fn. 131) and
at £6 13s. 4d. in 1535. (fn. 132) In 1939 the living was united
with that of Alcester.
The rectory of Haselor was farmed at the Dissolution
by the canons of Warwick for £21. (fn. 133) It was granted by
Edward VI in 1551 to Sir George Throckmorton, but
the woods of Wethecombe, Westgrove with the
Hermitage and their tithe were reserved. In 1574 his
son Sir Robert obtained a fresh grant; (fn. 134) but eventually
Thomas Throckmorton granted away his rights, which
came, after a complicated series of fines, to Anthony
Skynner of Shelfield Park in 1610. (fn. 135) By 1767 the
rectorial tithe was held by 11 persons and was mostly
chargeable on land in the chief manor. (fn. 136)
Mention is made of a chapel at Upton when Theobald, Archbishop of Canterbury (1139–61), requested
Simon, Bishop of Worcester (1125–50), to inquire into
a complaint by William rector of Haselor that a layman
had attempted to alienate the chapel from the mother
church of Haselor. (fn. 137) The chapel is also mentioned in
the agreement already cited between Stephen de Upton
and his sons and Nicholas parson of Haselor. (fn. 138)
Charities
The Widow's Plat. By an Order of the
Charity Commissioners dated 26 Jan.
1917 a charge of 10s., formerly paid out
of land at Haselor called the Widow's Plat, was redeemed in consideration of a sum of £20 Consols producing a yearly income of 10s. which is distributed to
poor widows. The charity is administered by two
trustees appointed by the parish meeting.
Ann Heming by will proved 29 Aug. 1925 bequeathed one-third of the net proceeds of her estate to
the vicar and churchwardens upon trust to distribute
the interest among poor persons residing in the parish.
The legacy produces an income of £16 15s. 2d.
Charity for Church Purposes. This charity formerly
consisted of two yearly sums of 15s. and 6s. 8d. issuing
out of Manor Farm, Haselor, and paid to the churchwardens. By an Order of the Charity Commissioners
dated 4 July 1916 the charges were redeemed in consideration of a sum of £43 6s. 8d. Consols, producing
£1 1s. 8d. annually, which is applied towards church
expenses.