ROWINGTON
Acreage: 3,791.
Population: 1911, 868; 1921, 912; 1931, 880.
The village, with the church, vicarage, and Hall, lies
somewhat north of the centre of the parish, 6 miles
north-west of Warwick. From here roads run north to
Rowington Green and north-west to Turner's Green,
from which place a road runs south to Finwood and
then west, across the Stratford-on-Avon Canal to the
hamlet of Lowsonford. Here there is a chapel-of-ease,
built in 1877, past which a road runs east and then
south to High Cross and so to Holywell and Lye Green,
on the borders of Claverdon. East of this is Pinley
Green, where five roads meet; two (south and southwest) to Claverdon, one south-east to Pinley Priory,
one north-west to High Cross, and one north-east by
Shrewley to Birmingham. The Oxford and Birmingham branch of the Great Western Railway and the
Warwick-Birmingham Canal run through the parish
from south-east to north-west; and the Stratford-onAvon Canal also lies within the parish below Lowsonford, north of which the little stream flowing parallel
with the canal forms the western boundary of Rowington.
The country is undulating, reaching a height of
420 ft. in the north at Rowington Green and in the
extreme south at Lye Green. There is very little woodland and much of the land is pasture, though wheat,
barley, and beans are grown. 'The village has always
been an agricultural community with a sprinkling of
weavers.' (fn. 1) Rowington was never under the influence
of a resident lord, the manor being usually farmed out.
The person to whom it was thus let was usually bailiff
of the parish, an office of some importance before the
dissolution of Reading Abbey, but less so after the
reign of Elizabeth.
An Inclosure Award was made in 1824 when
Rowington Green, Turners Green, Bushwood Green,
and the northern portion of Pinley Green, consisting
of nearly 390 acres, were inclosed.
Scattered through the parish are some fifty houses
and farm-buildings which retain structural features of
the 17th century or earlier, and it is only possible to
deal with the more interesting of these.
Oldfield Farm, on the east side of the main road
from Hatton Station to the church, is an early-17thcentury house. The front is now brick-faced, but the
gables at the back are timber-framed. Its central
chimney-stack, with a complex shaft of attached octagonal shafts and V-shaped pilasters, has a wide fireplace and on the first floor a stone fire-place with
moulded jambs and four-centred arch in a square head.
Some of the ceilings are open-timbered. Behind (east
of) the house is a large square moat with high ground
in the middle; only the east side contains water.
'High Chimneys', opposite, is a great square building
of c. 1700 with walls of red and black bricks, divided,
except on the west side, into three bays by shallow
pilasters of rubbed brick and having a moulded eavescornice. The main entrance in the east front is of stone
and has a segmental arch: above it is a bull's-eye window.
Mouseley End (fn. 2) is a Tudor farm-house of L-shaped
plan, the arms extending to the south and east. The
east side of the south arm has a slightly later porch with
a jettied upper story carried on the ends of projecting
joists and straight-sided triangular brackets. Each face
has a gable-head with moulded barge-boards and spiral
pendants. The square-headed entrance has a moulded
frame. The lower story was of close-set studding, but
only a few studs remain; the upper story has bays of
herring-bone timbering; the east front has a modern
projecting window, and the side windows are blocked.
The inner entrance has a similar moulded frame and an
old battened door hung with strap-hinges with fleur-delis ends. The south main arm retains a little of its
original rectangular framing, chiefly in the upper story
with a curved brace, also in the gable-head of the south
end. The north end, also gabled, has a braced tiebeam and rectangular framing to both stories. The
other arm has been mainly rebuilt with brick but shows
on its north side two 9-ft. bays of original framing, the
lower story with close-set studding, the upper rectangular. A central chimney-stack to the main block has two
diagonal shafts of thin bricks and a wide fire-place
with an oak lintel. Another wide fire-place is in the
west side of the south room. The lower rooms have
open-timbered ceilings with chamfered main beams.
Green Farm, at Rowington Green, is an early17th-century house facing south and has two gabled
wings at the back which retain a little of the original
timber-framing, but the main block has mostly been
refaced with brick. The front entrance has an original
door with four moulded panels and ornamental straphinges. The central chimney-stack (9 ft. thick) has a
wide fire-place, and above the roof a great square shaft
with panelled faces. The lower ceilings, mostly opentimbered, have chamfered beams with moulded stops.
It has a stone cellar. A barn and other buildings are of
17th-century framing.
Shakespeare Hall (fn. 3) has developed round an early16th-century structure of close-set framing with a
middle hall of one story flanked by small two-storied
gabled wings projecting from the north front. The
western is a porch with a square-headed entrance and
with moulded bressummers at the first-floor level. In
the upper story is a projecting 17th-century window of
four lights with a transom. The inner entrance has a
segmental-arched lintel and has a 16th-century nailstudded door hung with ornamental strap-hinges and
having an ancient ring-handle ornamented with a pair
of serpents with intercoiled tails. The middle block
has a window of four lights and a transom, with projecting frames, in each of the two stories, the upper
forming a gabled dormer and dated 1682.
Late in the 16th century gabled cross-wings of
square framing were added east and west of the earlier
house, projecting at the back to form a half-H plan.
About the same period the central chimney-stack was
built between the original hall and porch-wing, and
the upper floor was inserted in the hall. The stack has
a wide fire-place on the ground floor, and on the first
floor is a moulded stone fire-place with a Tudor head.
The ceiling of the ground floor is open-timbered; the
partitions between the (former) hall and the two
original wings have been removed for an elaborately
carved staircase dated 1605, brought from the former
Morley Hall, Solihull. The later west wing also has a
wide fire-place (reduced) and an open-timbered ceiling
with chamfered beam. The later east wing has a
moulded arched stone fire-place and is lined with
late-16th-century panelling. In modern times the
house has been again enlarged by filling in between the
wings on the south front and by a further east wing.
There was formerly a moat around the building. An
avenue of various trees leads up to the house from the
road north of it.
Between Quarry Farm and Shakspeare Hall are the
remains of the 'Bouncing Bess' windmill. It is circular
in plan, diminishing upwards, built of red brick, and
has a wood cap. The sails have disappeared.
Lapworth Manor House, once called Kingswood
Manor House, lies in the north-west corner of the
parish. Henry Ferrers, who purchased Kingswood
Manor in 1596, probably rebuilt the house, but the
moulded ceiling-beams in the north angle room of the
ground floor are of early- rather than late-16th-century
date: they divide the ceiling into twelve compartments
and have masons' joints where they intersect. Other
beams are chamfered. The house is built of square
framing, with a pair of gables in the front: the foundations and infilling are of brick. Between the two front
rooms is a great square chimney-stack with wide fireplaces of stone, and there is another such fire-place in
the east room.
Windmill Farm is a 19th-century brick building,
but has a late-16th-century timber-framed outbuilding.
The porch of the house has some reset late-17th-century
panelling (probably pews) from the church. In front of
it is a mound marking the site of the former 'Grinning
Jenny' windmill.
Ivy House, on the verge of Turner's Green, now
several tenements, is an interesting early-16th-century
building which appears to have been part of a larger
important house. The plan of the original part is
T-shaped, with a narrower extension at the east end
of the T. The stem of the T, extending southwards,
probably had another cross-wing to make the original
plan H-shaped. In 1689 (the date with the initials
A.T. (fn. 4) on a fire-place) a north wing was added in line
with the stem of the T. The oldest part is of close-set
studding to both stories, the lower mostly replaced
with brick. The west gable-head of the cross-wing
projects on timbered coving and has herring-bone
framing; a projecting window below it, also on
timbered coving, is mostly blocked up. The doorway
on the ground floor has late-17th-century fielded
panels. On the north side of the wing is a large projecting chimney-stack of stone with square brick shafts.
It has a wide fire-place of stone. Some original wide
flat ceiling joists are exposed inside, and a wide-chamfered beam with broach stops. A Tudor doorway
formerly opened into the main block. There is also an
open-timbered ceiling with wide joists in the east wing.
A staircase from the cellar, below the 1689 wing, has
some 16th-century silhouette balusters. The south end
of the stem is of modern red brick. The farm-house
south-west of Ivy House is of 18th-19th-century brick
but appears to have been a late-16th-century timber
building. It is of T-shaped plan and has at the junction
of the two parts a great chimney-stack with a wide fireplace of stone with a segmental arch, and a brick shaft
that has a number of V-shaped pilasters. A barn is
partly of 17th-century timber framing.
At Finwood, ½ mile farther south, are several ancient
buildings. Finwood Farm is a late-16th-century house
of L-shaped plan and of two stories and attics. The
walls are timber-framed but the only exposed timber
work is in the gabled east end, which has square framing
below and close-set studding above. A great central
chimney-stack has wide fire-places of stone, back to
back, with oak lintels and a brick shaft of diagonal
cross-shaped plan. A later (17th-century) chimneystack south of it has two diagonal square shafts. The
lower rooms have heavy chamfered ceiling-beams and
joists.
Finwood Hill, about 250 yards to the south, is an
L-shaped building of about 1550. The walls are (or
were) of timber-framing, but it is exposed only in the
north-east elevation. The north-west wing has wide
flat joists to the lower ceiling and one moulded beam
(perhaps reused) with masons' joints for two former
cross-beams. The upper story has a middle truss with
a cambered tie-beam on curved braces, and queenposts, and the roof has curved wind-braces to the
purlins. The south-east wing has been more altered,
and probably extended, in the 17th century, but retains a great chimney-stack with a large moulded stone
Tudor fire-place to the lower story and a smaller one
to the upper. Above the roof are two diagonal square
shafts of thin bricks. The middle lower room has an opentimbered ceiling with a heavy beam and small joists.
South of Lowsonford is Poundley Farm, which has
a wide fire-place with oak bressummer inscribed NR
MAY 4 1672 F S M. North Rookery, an L-shaped building with 16th- and 17th-century framing, has in its
brick gable a panel inscribed NR 1695; and South
Rookery, a house of similar type, bears the date 1680.
Middle Rookery retains most of its square timberframing of c. 1600 and has stop-chamfered ceilingbeams and a central chimney-stack.

Plan of Pinley Abbey.
Near High Cross, Brook Furlong Farm, Pitts Farm,
and Gate Farm are timber-framed houses of c. 1600
with open-timbered ceilings and wide fire-places. Pitts
Farm has an old nail-studded front door and another
fine door in an internal partition. All three have contemporary barns.
Holywell Farm and Holywell Manor Farm, opposite it, both show a mixture of close-set and square
framing, and Peacock Farm has square framing of the
early 17th century.
The remains of the Cistercian Priory of Pinley,
founded in the reign of Henry I, (fn. 5) consist only of portions of the church, which seems to have been rebuilt
late in the 15th century, and a house now called Pinley
Abbey. The house faces south and adjoined the northwest corner of the church. Its main block is a rectangle
containing three rooms, probably part of the priory
buildings of c. 1500. Three stone chimney-stacks, two
on the north and one on the east, are later 16th-century
additions. In the same century two gabled wings were
thrown out on the north side, the western being certainly later than the chimney-stack, which it overlaps;
also two porch wings, one on the south front and one
on the east. The space between the two north wings
has since been filled in with a low lean-to addition in
brick. The main walls of the house are of close-set
studding, now incomplete except in the west gabled
wall. This wall was carried north to form a closet flanking the west side of the projecting chimney-stack,
lighted by a tiny north window of two lights with a
moulded mullion, now blocked. None of the original
framing of the north wall is visible externally, but
inside, covered by the eastern wing, is a blocked
window outlined, showing that the wing is later. The
wing, 14½ ft. wide, coinciding with the eastern main
room (present kitchen) is gabled and was of similar
construction on stone foundations. The other wing,
9¼ ft. wide, behind the west main room, contains the
staircase; it partly covers the projecting chimney-stack
and therefore must be later. The two projecting
chimney-stacks, one to the middle hall and the other
to the west chamber, are of stone and have each two
diagonal square shafts of thin bricks. The hall fireplace is wide and has chamfered stone jambs and oak
lintel; the wide western fire-place has moulded stone
jambs and lintel. The porch-wing, 6½ ft. wide, on the
south front is of less close studding than the rest, on
stone foundations, and has a gabled upper story projecting on all three faces on the ends of joists: the entrances
are square-headed and open into the east end of the
hall. East of and flush with it is a built-out addition to
the kitchen of 18th- or 19th-century brick with a pent
roof. At the east end is a similar projecting chimney
stack, to the kitchen, with a piercing in the south wall
of its fire-place. The outer face of this chimney-stack
sets back 15 in. from the original face of the earlier
wall, of which 1 ft. is left, at right angles to the wall of
the church, and has a plinth of two chamfered courses
flush with the earlier face. Adjoining the north side
of the chimney is another porch-wing, 6 ft. 10 in. wide,
with a jettied upper story projecting 1 ft. on three
faces. The lower story is now of red brick except on
the north side, which is enclosed by a brick addition
containing a staircase: here is seen the original moulded
bressummer of the overhang, carried on joists which
have moulded ends. In the upper story of this wall is
a blocked window. All the windows in use have modern
frames.
The internal partitions are of close studding. In
each of the two partitions between the middle hall and
the end rooms is a small ancient peep-hole, and in the
eastern is an original doorway with chamfered posts
and four-centred head, now blocked. The upper partitions have braced tie-beams and queen-posts, and the
roof above the hall has four-centred arched windbraces. The ceilings are plastered. The main staircase
in the north-west wing is plain and probably of later
rearrangement. A closed-in and unused staircase from
the first floor to the roof space against the west wall of
the wing has a plain door hung with 16th-century
cocks'-head hinges.
The remains of the church adjoin the south-east
angle of the house and form an L-shaped plan. The
main body is about 64 ft. long by 19½ ft. wide. About
15 ft. at the east end, in line with a south chapel or
transept, is closed off by a later stone wall for a stable.
This probably represents only part of the former
chancel, as the existing east wall, 1 ft. 10 in. thick,
appears to be a later construction of reused masonry;
it contains a blocked doorway and window to the stable
of the 17th or 18th century. There is a 4-in. set-back
inside, about 3½ ft. above the floor. It is possible that the
bottom of the wall is original. The nave has lost its
south wall entirely and is mostly unroofed. It appears
to have been used as a cart-shed. In the middle of the
north wall was an 11-ft. cart-way now filled in, and a
10½-ft. length of rebuilt stone wall and doorway west
of it. The remainder of the wall, including that of the
stable, is ancient and of good ashlar, 2½ ft. thick; but
the 19-ft. length up to the stable breaks forward 5 in.
and may be earlier than the rest. Most of it has a
double-chamfered string-course outside, and above that
a chamfered set-back of 5 in. to the later face; on this
is the sill of a former three-light window. The lowest
stones of its splays remain inside, and 2 ft. below the
window-ledge is another string-course, chamfered on
its lower edge. In the stable the wall has a 12-ft. wide
recess, 10 in. deep, with an ashlar west splay down to
the floor. The filling wall is 20 in. thick and has a
modern doorway at the east end with a deep east splay
of brick. Whether this recess represents a former archway walled up, or a wide window recessed to the floor
is not certain, but there appear to be slight traces of
a blocked window higher up outside. The 5½ ft. at the
west end of the nave wall is of original masonry and has
both the string-course and set-back outside, and stringcourse inside. The last also returns on the west wall. A
wall ran from the nave wall 4 ft. west of the modern
doorway. Of this only 1 ft. length remains, the rest
having been destroyed when the east chimney-stack of
the house was built. The west wall, of ashlar, retains a
blocked late-15th-century doorway, 5½ ft. wide, with
moulded jambs and four-centred arch having a label
with head-stops of a king and queen. Above it inside
are the lowest courses of the splays of the former west
window. The east end of the nave is roofed for a shed.
The wall between it and the stable is a thick one of
reused large stones. On the top of it, set upside down,
is a 15th-century moulded and embattled beam, possibly
the rood-beam.
The south chapel is 15 ft. from east to west, coinciding with the width of the stable, and 9 ft. deep. An
18-in. wall divides it from the stable. This wall has a
doorway at the east end with good ashlar splays and an
oak lintel, and at the west end a reset early-16th-century
doorway with moulded jambs and four-centred arch
in a square head of two stones; the spandrels are carved
with rosettes and foliage. The south wall, of coursed
ashlar, 18 in. thick, has a modern doorway. The east
wall contains some reset stones with splayed or hollowchamfered edges, and inside is a small rectangular
recess, 15 in. by 10 in. by 9 in. deep, and right across
the wall about 1 ft. higher is a built-in joist. The west
wall of coursed ashlar has a doorway filled in with
ashlar. It meets the west wall of the stable with a
straight joint.
North of the house and set, for no obvious reason,
at an angle of about 55° to it, is a cottage, of which the
timber-framing looks later than that of the house, but
it has a similar central chimney-stack of stone.
There are considerable remains of a most enclosing
a large area to the south, south-east, and east of the
buildings. It dies out to the north of the east part and
stops short at a farm road and ditch at the west end of
the south part.
Manors
ROWINGTON, which was held in the
time of Edward the Confessor by Baldwin,
had passed in 1086 to Hugh de Grantemaisnil, of whom it was held by one Roger. (fn. 6) Hugh's
daughter Adelize d'lvry (widow of Roger d'lvry (fn. 7) ) gave
the vill of Rowington to the abbey of Reading (fn. 8) in or
before 1133, in which year it was confirmed to the
monks by Henry 1. (fn. 9) Later confirmations of the gift
were made by Stephen, (fn. 10) Henry II, (fn. 11) Richard I, (fn. 12) and
other kings, and the manor remained in the hands of
the abbey until the Dissolution. Soon after the original
gift the abbey seem to have put the estate in the charge
of one of their number, as the monk Ingulf who was
then keeper of the vill' arranged with Hugh son of
Richard (of Hatton) for a perambulation of the bounds
between Rowington and Shrewley and, with the consent of Hugh's wife Margaret and his son William,
bought out his claims to part of the land and grove
(nemoris) of Rowington in 1150. (fn. 13) A further grant of
69 acres of land and 8 acres of meadow in this parish
was made in 1344 by Thomas de Ryvere and Richard
Godemon, for the support of a chantry in Reading
Abbey. (fn. 14)
At the suppression of Reading Abbey the Rowington
property, which had been valued at £14 10s. in 1291, (fn. 15)
was worth £73 10s. (fn. 16) The manorial rights were retained by the Crown and in 1541 were assigned to
Queen Katherine (Parr) for life. (fn. 17) She died in 1548
and in March 1553 the manor was granted to John
Dudley, Duke of Northumberland, (fn. 18) on whose attainder
it reverted to the Crown. Queen Elizabeth in 1564
granted it to Ambrose Dudley, Earl of Warwick, (fn. 19)
whose widow Anne held it (fn. 20) till her death in 1604,
when the lordship came again to the Crown. It formed
part of the jointure of Queen Henrietta Maria and,
although temporarily alienated during the Commonwealth, was recovered by her at the Restoration (fn. 21) and
held until her death in 1669. After this the manor was
leased to a number of persons in succession, but, subject
to these leases, remained the property of the Crown. (fn. 22)
In 1674 Sir Charles Vyner, bart., (fn. 23) was lord of the
manor and in 1689 Henry Parker. (fn. 24) In 1706 and 1730
it was held by John Sanders and in 1756 by William
Grove. Sarah, Lady Archer, follows in 1781 and after
her comes Wilson Aylesbury Roberts, jun. (1791), and
William Smith of Rowington Hall (1805). (fn. 25) William
Smith in 1806 purchased the manor from the Crown
and since that date it appears to have been owned by
Mary Smith his daughter (1821), Thomas Lea (1827),
William Welch Lea (1838), John Patrick (1848),
Edward Westwood (1859), George Bradley (1886),
and Frederick Knight of Whately Hall, Castle Bromwich (1889), (fn. 26) from whom it has descended to Mrs.
Knight Turner, the present lady of the manor.

Reading Abbey. Azure three scallops or.

The Crown. Azure three fleurs de lis or, for France, quartered with Gules three leopards or, for England.
Meanwhile, the site and lands of the manor, with
the rectory and tithes, had been the subject of a number
of leases. The first of these was made in Feb. 1540,
for a term of 21 years, to John Oldnall. (fn. 27) He was
Master of the Gild of St. Anne of Knowle and was
bailiff of Rowington in 1547 and until his death in
1558. (fn. 28) His lease had been renewed in 1557, (fn. 29) but
in Dec. 1562 a fresh lease of the premises was made
to William Skinner and Alice his wife (Oldnall's
daughter) and their son Anthony for their lives. (fn. 30) A
further lease for 30 years, to date from the expiration
of this, was acquired in 1597 by Thomas Audley, (fn. 31)
who at once sold his rights to Anthony Skinner.
Anthony in 1609 sold his rights under the two leases
to Thomas Betham, (fn. 32) who in 1614 acquired the site
of the manor and the other estates in fee simple from
the Crown. (fn. 33) He died 23 June 1627, his heir being
his son Walleston Betham; (fn. 34) Richard Betham and John
(his son) were dealing with the rectory and lands in
1711, (fn. 35) and Katherine daughter of John Betham alias
Fowler carried the estates in marriage to Sir Thomas
Belasyse, afterwards Earl Fauconberg, in 1726. (fn. 36) He
sold the rectory and Rowington Hall to William Ives,
whose daughter Anne married William Shakespeare, (fn. 37)
to whom Ives at his death in 1744 left the property in
trust for his other daughters. William Shakespeare sold
the property to Sir Simon le Blanc of London, in whose
family it remained till it was sold to William Smith in
1804. Rowington Hall appears to have been used as a
parsonage after Richard Betham removed to High
House, William Ives having also apparently lived at
the latter house. William Smith in 1806 sold the hall
and farm to Samuel Aston of Wroxall, who added the
stone front to the house. John son of Samuel Aston
added to the estate and in 1896 descendants of the
family were still living there.

Betham. Ermine a cheveron between three boars sable.

Boteler of Oversley. Gules a fesse gobony or and sable between six crosses formy argent.
PINLEY was probably originally part of Rowington,
but by the time of Henry I it had come into the hands
of Robert the Butler, with whose consent his tenant
Robert de Pillerton founded there a priory for Cistercian nuns. (fn. 38) The patronage of the priory therefore
descended in the family of Boteler of Oversley and as
late as 1496 was held jointly by Sir John Norbury and
Edward Belknappe, the representatives of that family. (fn. 39)
According to the evidence of old inhabitants (including
Margaret Wattnoll, aged 95) taken in 1599, (fn. 40) the site
of the priory with its surrounding demesnes (forming a
roughly rectangular block of about 200 acres) constituted a parish in itself, the residents in which attended
the priory church, where 'they did marrye burye and
Christen'. These demesnes were tithe-free, (fn. 41) but the
copyholds of the manor, part of which, known as
the Combseys, lay detached to the north-west of the
'parish', paid tithe to Rowington. Between the Combseys and the demesnes lay Pinley Green, of which the
portion within the manor was inclosed in 1630, (fn. 42) and
the remainder under the Rowington Inclosure Award
of 1824. Already in 1599 there was much difference
of opinion as to whether the whole of Pinley should be
included in Rowington, but from the dissolution of the
priory in 1536 the demesnes of Pinley apparently remained extra-parochial, (fn. 43) until in 1925 it was assigned
for ecclesiastical purposes to the parish of Claverdon.
The manor of Pinley remained with the priory until
its dissolution. The last prioress was Margaret Wigston, (fn. 44) and the steward of the manor about this time was
Roger Wigston, (fn. 45) whose son John in March 1537
obtained a lease from the Crown of the site of the manor,
demesne lands, &c., for 21 years. (fn. 46) This lease was
surrendered when William Wigston, elder brother of
the said John, purchased the manor and demesne lands
in 1544. (fn. 47) He shortly afterwards granted one-half of
'Prioress Field' to the inhabitants of Claverdon for an
augmentation of their common, (fn. 48) and in 1553 sold the
fields called the Combseys and Pinley Rudding to
Clement Throckmorton and Katherine his wife. (fn. 49) Sir
William Wigston died 27 Sept. 1577, (fn. 50) and his son
Roger was succeeded about 1610 by Susan, his youngest
daughter, wife of Nicholas Wentworth, upon whom he
had settled the manor. (fn. 51) Sir Peter Wentworth, son and
heir of Susan Wentworth, in 1615 (fn. 52) sold the manor,
&c. to Edward Cookes of Pinley, yeoman, and Susan
his wife. Edward Cookes settled the property upon his
son William upon the latter's marriage to Anne Faldoe
in 1637, (fn. 53) but probably retained a life interest therein,
for he was still lord of the manor in 1639. (fn. 54) He died
in 1656, and his son William in 1659. (fn. 55) In 1668
another William Cookes, probably son of the last,
mortgaged the property. (fn. 56) Henry Cookes, brother
and heir of William, eventually sold the property to
Aaron Rogers of Langley. (fn. 57) Aaron Rogers, who was
afterwards mayor of Warwick, (fn. 58) in 1674 settled (fn. 59) the
manor and part of the estate upon himself and his
intended wife Bridget Brittaine. Aaron Rogers was
succeeded in 1709 (fn. 60) by his son the Rev. John Rogers
of Fenny Compton, who in 1700 (fn. 61) had married Mary
Andrews of Bascote, co. Warws. He seems to have died
about 1728, when Thomas Prew of Radford Semele
and Bridget his wife, who was the only daughter of
Bridget, daughter of Aaron Rogers, by Edward Willes
of Leamington and therefore niece and heiress of the
Rev. John Rogers, made an agreement with Mary
Rogers, widow of the Rev. John Rogers. (fn. 62) Thomas
Prew and his wife were still joint lord and lady of the
manor in 1737, (fn. 63) but in 1753 Bridget Prew is described as a widow. She settled the manor on her eldest
daughter Bridget for life with remainder to Matthew
Wise of Leamington Priors, who was the son of Elizabeth, second daughter of Bridget Prew the elder, by
John Wise of the Priory, Warwick. In 1756 (fn. 64) Bridget
Prew the younger, who died unmarried, resettled her
life interest upon her nephew Matthew Wise upon his
marriage to Martha Dolphin of
Birmingham, and he held manorial courts in 1772 and 1777. (fn. 65)
Upon his death the Pinley
estates were allotted (fn. 66) to his
daughter Bridget, the wife of
Thomas Cattell, under a settlement. (fn. 67) Bridget Cattell left her
estates about 1837 to her nephews
and nieces equally, i.e. Charles,
John, Francis, Lucy, Charlotte,
and Penelope Wise. In 1856 (fn. 68)
Charlotte Wise purchased the
shares of the others and by her
will, dated 3 Jan. 1863, devised the manor to her
brother John Wise, who in 1866 (fn. 69) sold it to Sir Josiah
Mason. Sir Josiah Mason devised the manor of
Pinley and the property therein to the trustees of
a Charity in Birmingham named after him. These
trustees in 1878 (fn. 70) added to the area of the estate by
purchasing Spencers Meadow, containing over 8½
acres. In 1906 (fn. 71) the manor and estates, which then
included the remains of the Priory buildings and 135
acres of land, were sold by the Trustees of Sir Josiah
Mason's Charity to Edward Galton Wheler, who some
years later took the name of Edward Galton WhelerGalton.

Wise of Leamington. Sable three cheverons ermine between three serpents erect or.
Church
The parish church of ST. LAWRENCE
is of more than average interest both for
its architectural detail and the abnormal
development of its plan. The earliest part of the present
structure was a nave of unusual proportions, 46 ft. long
by 29 ft. wide. The two plain traceried windows in the
south wall belonged to it, as well as the blocked lancet
in the west wall, and are probably of late-13th-century
date; but the north wall may be the relic of a still
earlier church. There is no evidence that this nave had
any arcades within it to form side-aisles, but there was
probably a small chancel, indicated approximately by
the present ante-chancel. The first change appears to
have been the addition of the central tower, built
within the east end of the nave, leaving shallow transeptal chapels to north and south. This was done
c. 1330 and was followed immediately by the addition
of the chancel, east of the former chancel. There is a
record of a chapel north of the chancel, but no traces
of its walls remain. In the early 15th century the two
arcades were inserted inside the nave, the south-west
respond partly blocking the 13th-century lancet in the
west wall, and the chancel arch was rebuilt and probably widened. The west doorway and window are also
of the same century and the north half of the west wall
was rebuilt at the same time.
In 1554 the north aisle-chapel was added; the earlier
north chapel seems to have been entirely destroyed, but
two windows reset in the north wall may have belonged
to it. The west wall of the aisle was built west of the
central tower, probably to allow direct access to the aisle
from the north aisle of the nave, the north walls of the
tower-transept and ante-chapel perhaps not being
removed until later. Besides the abolition of the north
walls mentioned, the archway which opened into the
former chapel has been widened and fitted with a beamlintel in place of the head. The south porch is of 1906
and various restorations have been carried out during
the present century.
![[Plan of Rowington church]](image-thumb.aspx?compid=57002&pubid=529&filename=fig85.gif)
[Plan of Rowington church]
The chancel (about 26 ft. by 16 ft.) has an east
window of four trefoiled lights and tracery in a segmental-pointed head with an external hood-mould and
a chamfered rear-arch of mid to late 14th century; the
tracery is peculiar and suggests a normal two-light
window of c. 1330 widened to four lights. On the
north side is a 13½-ft. opening with jambs of two
chamfered orders, the western modern; it is bridged
by modern beams. In the south wall are two windows,
the eastern of three trefoiled ogee-headed lights and
plain piercings under a square head with a similar
hood-mould; it is recessed inside below the sill for
sedilia. The western is of two lights of similar design
but much shorter and the east light is rebated for a
'low-side' shutter. Between the windows is a 16thcentury priests' doorway with chamfered jambs and
depressed four-centred arch in a square head formed
by the hood-mould: it has a flat lintel inside.
The chancel arch has jambs of two chamfered orders
with square bases and 15th-century moulded capitals;
the head is two-centred. It is probably a widening of
the earlier archway and has re-used small voussoirs in
the head, while the courses of the jambs are large.
The chancel walls are of local sandstone ashlar and
have plinths with moulded upper members and chamfered lower. At the east angles are old diagonal
buttresses and there is a south buttress. The gabled
east wall has an ancient coping and gable-cross. The
roof, probably early-16th-century, has an elliptical
barrel vault of curved braces below collar-beams: it is
divided into three bays by larger curved timbers, and
three purlins run the other way: all the timbers are
chamfered. The wall-plates are moulded and embattled. The roof is tiled.
The ante-chancel (about 5 ft. wider than the chancel
and 11 ft. east to west) or former chancel, has a twolight south window like those to the chancel; the jambs
are of two orders, the inner (with the mullion) moulded,
the outer chamfered; they change in the head to two
hollow-chamfers. The wall is of ashlar with a plinth
similar to the chancel and an original east buttress. The
north side opens to the north aisle under a plastered
beam. East of it, north of the chancel-arch, is the roodstair turret, with splayed faces (five sides of an irregular
octagon). In the south-west splay are the squareheaded doorways; above is an embattled cornice which
does not look ancient; and there is a small loop-light in
the north-west face. The roof, of the early 16th century, has a panelled four-centred barrel vault with
moulded ribs, having bosses at the intersections, two
with shields with modern paintings.
The central tower (about 13½ ft. square internally)
has an archway in each of its four sides with a twocentred head of three chamfered orders; the east and
west arches are of small voussoirs, the side arches have
some larger voussoirs, probably of later repair. The
responds are peculiar; they are of wavy plan, connected
at the angles with each other without any sharp arrises.
In the eastern arch the wave-mould finishes flush with
the outer face of the east wall; probably the western
arch was similarly treated before the later nave-arcades
encroached partly on the responds. The innermost
half-round curve in each reveal carries the inner order
of the head. In the side arches it forms an 8-in. projection or shaft on the face of each reveal, the outer orders
of the head dying on the same face. In the north archway the shafts have been cut away about 3 ft. below
the capitals. The capitals are moulded and follow the
contour of the responds; the bases are plain chamfers.
The abutments of the east and west arches form the
sides of a very shallow transept on the south. In the
south wall of this, which is part of the wall of the south
aisle, is a window of three pointed lights and intersecting tracery in a two-centred head, with a hood-mould
like the others. The wall is of large-coursed ashlar and
has a moulded plinth differing from that of the chancel.
The bay is flanked by ancient buttresses, on the eastern
side of which is scratched a sundial, and another buttress
projects eastward against the ante-chancel. On the
north side the wall of the transept and the abutment to
the east arch have been removed. The west abutment
contains a stair-vice for the tower, probably made in
the 15th century; the original doorway into it, in the
east face, is now blocked; the present entrance in the
north face was probably cut in 1554. The shallow
transepts have plastered lean-to roofs, but the earlier
roofs were at a higher level.
The nave (about 33¼ ft. by 14 ft.) has early-15thcentury north and south arcades of two bays; the middle
pillars are octagonal and the responds of two chamfered
orders; they have slightly differing moulded capitals
and hollow-chamfered bases. The arches are twocentred and of two chamfered orders with hood-moulds
towards the nave, meeting over the pillars on humanhead stops, all in white stone. On some of the voussoirs
are masons' marks, a plain cross.
The north aisle (6 ft. wide) has only one piercing,
the north doorway, of two chamfered orders with a
two-centred head. Outside, east of the doorway are
remains of a stoup, and west of the doorway a shallow
buttress of ashlar, projecting only 2 in. from the wallface. The rest of the wall is cemented, apparently on
rubble, and has a chamfered plinth and exposed footings. The south aisle (about 4½ ft. wide) has a window
at the east end of the south wall, of three lights like
that of the transept; it is recessed to the floor inside.
The south doorway resembles the northern except that
the outer order of the head is wave-moulded.
The west wall has one great gable-head including
both nave and aisles. The wall is of ashlar and has a
moulded plinth, lower in the south half than in the
north. The latter is of 15th-century rebuilding and has
a diagonal buttress, with moulded offsets, at the northwest angle. The south half has a pair of square buttresses
at the angle and is evidently much earlier, as it shows
the outline of a blocked lancet window; this is partly
covered inside by the west respond of the south arcade
but shows the south splay of ashlar and half the reararch. The west doorway to the nave has moulded
jambs and flattened four-centred arch, enriched with
square floral paterae, and having a hood-mould. The
west window is of five trefoiled ogee-headed lights and
vertical tracery in a four-centred head with an external
hood-mould; the jambs are moulded and the mullions
hollow-chamfered. Both are of rather late 15th-century
insertion. At the head of the gable is a shallow niche
with a foliage finial and a bracket for an image; below
it is a defaced shield.
The nave roof has a plastered barrel-vaulted ceiling
with chamfered cross-ribs of oak and three longitudinal
ribs. The central boss is carved with four human faces
(gilded); the other intersections have modern shields.
The roof is continued down over the aisles, which have
plastered soffits, except for some whitened principal
rafters and a purlin, visible in the north aisle.
The central tower (about 13½ ft. square) is of two
stages above the main roofs and is built of ashlar. The
parapet is embattled and four of the merlons have
shields carved on their faces; these bore Emblems of
the Passion but only that on the west face is now
carved, with the black-letter inscription inri. The
lower stage has a square-headed window in the south
wall and about a yard below it is a weather-course just
above the present roof of the transept. There is a
similar window in the east wall and the roof of the
ante-chapel encroaches on it. The north side has no
window, but about a yard below the string-course that
marks the stages is another weather-course and three
plain stone corbels, indicating probably the position of
a former lean-to roof of the north transept, considerably
higher than the present 16th-century roof. At the east
end of this wall is a buttress of brick and stone
having a projecting segment of the stair-vice with a
stone capping. West of the south window is an 18thcentury sundial. The bell-chamber is lighted in each
wall by a window of two pointed lights and plain
spandrel in a two-centred head. In front of the western
is a skeleton clock-dial.
The north aisle of 1554 is about 16 ft. wide at the
east end and 60½ ft. long. The east and west windows
and the middle north window are of the same date and
each of three plain square-headed lights with labels.
The other two north windows, the eastern of three and
western of two lights, are older windows reset and
resemble the south chancel windows. The walls are
of grey-white local sandstone ashlar in large courses
with moulded plinths, but the top course and plain
parapets are of red sandstone. The west wall has a very
low-pitched gable of red Kenilworth stone with a white
stone panel with slight traces of a former inscription,
probably the date. At the two angles are original
diagonal buttresses and the north wall has two intermediate buttresses. The roof, nearly flat, is divided
into seven bays by cross-beams and longitudinally into
four by purlins; these and the common rafters are
chamfered. An oak post against the tower stair-vice
helps to support the roof.
The south porch is modern. In the north doorway
is an ancient plain oak door hung with ornamental straphinges and having an old iron latch and ring-handle or
scutcheon. The pair of doors in the west doorway are
also possibly old and are secured by a draw-bar inside.
The font is of the 12th century and is of flower-pot
shape with a moulded top-edge; it has no lead lining.
A stone pulpit of the 15th century stands against the
south-east pier of the tower; the tub has three sides of
a hexagon, each with two trefoiled ogee-headed panels
and with moulded cornice or book-rest. At the angles
are panelled buttresses. It stands on a hexagonal shaft
with a moulded capital and plain base.
The communion-table in the chancel incorporates
remains of late-16th-century carved bulbous legs and
a top-rail carved with scroll ornament. The communion-rails were brought from Studley in 1906.
They have turned balusters and were made by Edward
Elvins, carpenter, in 1682. (fn. 72)
An oak screen of the 15th century separates the
chancel from the north aisle. It has eleven lights, of
which two form the doorway, fitted with a low gate.
The lights have cinque-foiled ogee heads and tracery,
moulded rails, and closed panels below.
In the chancel is a 17th-century chair with a carved
back, shaped elbows, and turned legs. Also two highbacked cane chairs, one probably of the late 17th
century, the other 18th century.
In the south transept is a chest, 5 ft. 1 in. by 1 ft. 6 in.
by 1 ft. 4 in. high, of oak boards bound by iron bands
at the sides, and with a 2 in. lid hung with three straphinges having staples attached for three locks. The
edges of the boards are engrailed. It is probably of the
16th century. (fn. 73) Another, 2 ft. 11 in. by 1 ft. 4 in.
by 1 ft. 5 in. high, has three strap-hinges with fleur-delis ends, and straps for three staples and locks: the edge
of the lid is moulded. (fn. 74) On the front is inscribed I B
(John Betham); 17th century. Another in the north
aisle, 3 ft. 3 in. by 1 ft. 10 in. by 2 ft. 5 in., is of the
17th century and has a panelled and incised front,
fluted top rail and panelled lid; it has one lock. Also
in the aisle is a chest-cupboard, 4 ft. 2 in. by 1 ft. 11 in.
by 2 ft. 6 in. on turned feet and with scroll carving on
the top rail; the panelled front has a small door in the
middle; probably 17th century. A Bible box is of the
same period; also a poor-box carved in the top of a
solid post and fitted with an iron lid.
On the north wall of the 16th-century aisle is a
scrap of early-17th-century panelling, parts of pews
reset, (fn. 75) six panels in width and three tiers in height.
In the top tier are three shields of arms of the family
of Knight and their alliances, the western carved and
the other two with painted charges. This wall and the
west wall of the aisle, also the nave-aisles, have a high
dado with fielded panels of the 18th century, made up
from former pews. A high reading-desk, 6 ft. 7 in.
long, of the 17th century, stands in the north nave-aisle;
it has standards with simply shaped heads.
There are a few fragments of 14th- or 15th-century
glass in the south-west window of the chancel, pieces
of ruby, white with brown line ornament, mostly
foliage and some black-letter. The east window of the
north chapel also has some ancient glass but it is boarded
up inside, behind the organ.
Reset on the floor by the pulpit are some medieval
4½-in. tiles (33 or more), inlaid with plain interlacing
parts of circles.
There are five bells, (fn. 76) restored in 1887. One was recast
then; the other four are from the Leicester foundry of Newcombe & Watts, dated 1609, 1620, and two of 1633.
The communion plate (fn. 77) includes a cup and cover
paten of 1676 and an early 18th-century salver paten.
The registers date from 1638. There is also a churchwardens' account book for the building of the north
aisle in 1554.
Advowson
The church of Rowington was
given with the manor to Reading
Abbey, to which it was appropriated
at an early date. In 1291 the rectory was worth
£13 6s. 8d. and the vicarage £5 6s. 8d., (fn. 78) but by
1535 the value of the vicarage had risen to £7. 11s. 7d. (fn. 79)
The advowson was granted with the manor to the Duke
of Northumberland in 1553 and to Ambrose Dudley,
Earl of Warwick, in 1564. On the death of the Countess Anne in 1604 it reverted to the Crown, with whom
it remained until 1866, when it was granted to the
Bishop of Worcester. Since 1918 it has been in the
hands of the Bishop of Coventry. (fn. 80)
In 1348 the nuns of Pinley, who had built a windmill within the tithable of Reading, agreed to pay a
yearly render of corn, proportionate to the amount of
their multure, to Reading Abbey. (fn. 81)
The rectory and tithes were, as already stated,
leased with the demesnes of the manor.
Charities
The Combined Charities: John Hill
by will dated 23 Sept. 1502 gave to the
churchwardens 51s. 4d. yearly out of
his lands in Rowington and elsewhere to be applied to
the distribution of alms to the poor, the performance
of certain obits and dirges, the repair of the Church
House, and the repair of the highways.
John Oldnall by will and codicil dated 13 May
and 13 June 1556 gave certain lands in Rowington and
elsewhere to provide certain small payments for the
benefit of the poor, for the repair of the highways, and
for the parish clerk.
Thomas Hunt by deed poll dated 24 April 1579
granted to trustees an annuity of 6s. 8d. from land in
Rowington, to be distributed by the churchwardens
amongst the poor. The annuity is now charged on land
known as Sugar's Close in Old Stratford.
Edward Gardiner by will dated 13 Oct. 1647 gave
to the churchwardens and overseers a rent-charge of 5s.
for poor widows of the parish. The charge is now paid
out of land known as Yarningale Common.
Richard Hodgkins by will dated 30 July 1638 gave
£30 which was laid out (in 1665) in land in Bushbury,
one-half of the rents of which were for the repair of
the parish church and Church House and the other
half for the poor of the parish.
John Bird and Catherine his wife gave £50, with
which a tenement and land in Rowington was bought
in 1669, the rent being devoted to the poor of the
parish.
John Milbourne by will dated 12 March 1678–9
gave a close of land in Shrewley for the benefit of the
poor of Rowington.
Christian Cely gave (at some date in the 15th century) a piece of land called Harveys to Rowington and
Budbrooke.
John Hancox gave 20s. out of Poundley Meadow to
the poor. The charge is still paid out of the said meadow.
Thomas Reeve gave £50 to the poor of Rowington.
Unknown Donors' Charities. A parcel of land called
Moreland, Tineing's Acre, lands called St. Mary
Leighton, and land known as Smalley Meadow were
given for the use of the poor.
Richard Thorneal gave 5s. issuing out of land called
The Pipers at Shrewley to the poor. The charge was
redeemed in 1902 for £10 Consols.
Elizabeth Wollascot gave £50 for the benefit of the
poor of the parish.
Humphrey Shakespeare gave 20s. out of land in
Lapworth to the poor of the parish. The charge was
redeemed in 1904 for £40 Consols.
The above-mentioned charities are regulated by a
Scheme of the Charity Commissioners dated 16 Feb.
1906 under the title of the Combined Charities. The
Scheme appoints trustees to administer the charities
and directs that one-quarter of the net income shall constitute the endowment of the Church Branch and onehalf of the net income the endowment of the Poor's
Branch, the residue being the endowment of the Educational Foundation. The Scheme directs the income
of the Church Branch to be applied in the maintenance
of the fabric and of the services of the church, and the
income of the Poor's Branch to be applied for the poor
generally in accordance with a further Scheme of the
said Commissioners dated 14 May 1917. The income
of the charities amounts to about £550 per annum.