SNITTERFIELD
Acreage: 3,912.
Population: 1911, 682; 1921, 691; 1931, 741.
The old turnpike road from Stratford-on-Avon to
Warwick forms the boundary of Snitterfield parish on
the east as far as Marroway, (fn. 1) where the SnitterfieldWarwick road joins it. The boundary then runs
northwards along a brook and west to the road from
Norton Lindsey, down which it runs for some 500 yds.
to Luscombe, then turning west again to Snitterfield
Bushes, the largest block of woodland in the parish.
Through the Bushes it runs southward, crossing the
Bearley road, to Gospel Oak, near Pathlow. Here it
turns south-east to Clopton Gorse and then for ½ mile
up King's Lane, down which tradition says that
Charles II rode on his escape from Boscobel; thence
east to a tributary of the Avon, and so back to the
Stratford-Warwick road.
The country is undulating, most of the parish lying
at about 300 ft., the highest point being 386 ft. at
Gospel Oak, with a rather rapid fall from King's Lane
(340 ft.) to the south-east angle, on the Stratford road
(165 ft.). It is good farming land; and in addition to
the Bushes there are several coppices and small woods.
In 1766 some 1,610 acres were inclosed; there were at
that time a number of common fields, including Hither,
Middle, and Further Brook Fields (west of Luscombe),
Stonehill, Whornhill, Merce Field, Black Hill (on the
borders of Hampton Lucy), and Pale Lane Field,
adjoining the pale of the Park, as well as the commonable meadows called Broad, Edymuss, and Aston
Meadows. (fn. 2) The Award mentions quite a number of
'old inclosures', one being Brickiln Close, which shows
that brick-works, of which there are still traces, had
already been established.
The village is central, lying north of the SnitterfieldWarwick road, its houses, mostly quite modern, being
grouped to the west of the church.
Snitterfield House, south of the church, was built in
the late 17th and demolished early in the 19th century.
A drawing of it shows a square building with hipped
roof, each front being divided with ornamental pilasters, (fn. 3) some of the capitals of which are still to be seen
in the garden of Snitterfield Park. A building about
40 yds. long that seems to have been a garden pavilion
belonging to it, but is now divided into residential
tenements, dates from about 1680 and is built of red
brick with moulded stone plinths. The south front has
a middle and two end, slightly projecting, bays and a
series of tall windows with oak transoms and mullions,
the jambs, &c., wrought in fine brickwork and having
stone key-blocks. In the middle bay was a wide archway, now filled in, and the entrance hall had a ceiling
with a moulded circular rib, partly remaining; and this
and the other chambers had deep moulded plastered
cornices. A garden wall skirting the roadway, north
of the building, and several brick gate-posts with stone
ball-heads are of the same period.
The roadway, running south-west of the church and
deflected by this garden wall, has three or four old
buildings on its north-west side. One of L-shaped plan
retains original 17th-century timber-framing; another,
much altered and covered with rough-cast cement,
shows some framing in its gabled west end. The Manor
House, on the west side of the main street, shows a
little 16th-century close-set timbering in the front wall.
Another cottage about 150 yds. west of the church, east
of the Wolverton road, is of 17th-century framing and
has a tiled roof. A farm-house 3/8 mile farther north on the
same road also shows 17th-century framing in walls
and gable-heads of the west wing of its L-shaped plan.
Snitterfield Park (fn. 4) is mainly modern, but the western
half of the south garden front is of early-17th-century
timber-framing with a gable-head of geometrical
panels. A central chimney has four square shafts set
diagonally on a square base and of thin bricks. The
west wall has some close-set studding in the lower story.
The other framing is square-panelled.
The Wolds, (fn. 5) a former farm-house, about ¾ mile
south-west of the church, has a modernized exterior,
but inside has chamfered ceiling-beams of the late 16th
century and a wide fire-place with an oak bressummer.
The farm-buildings include a timber-framed barn and
a pigeon-house, also of ancient timbering, gabled on all
four faces; both have been adapted for domestic use.
Wayfield House, a farm-house farther south-west on
the south side of the road, is an 18th-century or later
building, but has a 17th-century barn with part of the
original framing: a brick outbuilding adjoining is dated
HS 1765.
Comyns Farm about ¾ mile farther south-west,
setting back south of the road, is an 18th-century brick
house, but has an early-17th-century timber-framed
barn.
Richard Shakespeare, grandfather of the poet, settled
in Snitterfield in 1535 and died there about 1560, some
of his descendants remaining in the parish until the end
of the century. (fn. 6)
Anne, Countess of Coventry, whose husband the
2nd Earl died in 1710, settled here in 1726. She
obtained some fame as a writer of religious works and
when she died in 1763 at the age of 90 her funeral
sermon was preached by her friend Richard Jago, a
poet of some celebrity, who became curate of Snitterfield in 1737 and vicar in 1754, which office he held
until his death in 1781, when he was buried in the
church. (fn. 7)
Manors
SNITTERFIELD, assessed at 4 hides,
was held before the Conquest by Saxi, and
in 1086 by the Count of Meulan. (fn. 8) From
the count it passed to the Earls of Warwick, whose
overlordship is mentioned in 1316. (fn. 9) Earl Roger, who
in 1122 gave to the College of St. Mary at Warwick
1 hide of land with 2/3 of the tithes of the demesne in
Snitterfield, (fn. 10) seems to have enfeoffed Hugh fitzRichard, of Hatton, who with the consent of his son
William granted the manor to William Cumin. (fn. 11)
Hugh's granddaughter Margery married Osbert de
Clinton, and the mesne lordship was held by the
Clintons in 1316 (fn. 12) and as late as 1386. (fn. 13)
According to Dugdale William Cumin was succeeded
by his nephew Walter, (fn. 14) who was patron of the church
in 1174. (fn. 15) Snitterfield evidently
came to a William Cumin who died
about 1213, (fn. 16) as did his son in
1223 or 1224. (fn. 17) The elder
William left a widow Margery,
who had married William de
Hastings by 1216, when the
sheriff was ordered to give them
livery of the land in Snitterfield
which she held in dower of William Cumin her first husband. (fn. 18)
The younger William left a
widow Eve, and his heir was his
daughter Margery, (fn. 19) then under age and subsequently in
ward to William de Cantilupe. (fn. 20) Eve married John de
Mara and in 1225 they sued John d'Abitot (who had
married Margery, granddaughter of Hugh fitzRichard
and widow of Osbert de Clinton), (fn. 21) whom William de
Cantilupe had called to warrant, for ⅓ of 2/3 of the manor
of Snitterfield, as dower of Eve from her previous husband William Cumin. John d'Abitot replied that he
would give it to her when she handed over the heir of
William, whose wardship belonged to him. They replied
that the heir was in Scotland (fn. 22) and had never been in their
custody; and they recovered the dower. (fn. 23) Margery
Cumin married William de Cantilupe's younger son
John, (fn. 24) who held the fee of Snitterfield of Thomas de
Clinton in 1242. (fn. 25) He had a grant of a weekly market
on Wednesdays at Snitterfield and a fair on the eve, day,
and morrow of St. Kenelm in 1257. (fn. 26) Their son Sir John
de Cantilupe in 1318 settled the manor (excepting 5
messuages, 4 carucates, 2 virgates, 8 acres of land) on
himself and his wife Maud for life, with remainder to his
son John; (fn. 27) after the death of the younger John, his father
in 1324 entailed the manor (excepting 1 messuage, 104
acres of land, and the advowson of the church) on his
daughter Eleanor and her husband Thomas West. (fn. 28) The
lands reserved in the settlement of 1318 correspond to
lands acquired by John and Maud de Cantilupe in 1321
from Geoffrey de Alkenbury in Walda (The Wolds
Farm) and Hethe (Heath End); (fn. 29) those excepted in 1324
(omitting the advowson) were acquired by Sir Thomas
West in 1342 from Edmund fitz Waryn and Joan his
wife. (fn. 30) In 1386 Sir Thomas West made an exchange
of the manor to Sir William Beauchamp, Lord Bergavenny. (fn. 31) He died in 1411, having settled Snitterfield on his wife Joan with remainder to his nephew
Richard, Earl of Warwick. (fn. 32) On the death of Joan in
1435 the manor therefore became part of the estates
of the earldom, and so came into the hands of the
Crown in the time of Henry VII.

Cumin. Azure strewn with stars or three sheaves of cummin or.
At the time of the exchange a rent of £10 from the
manor seems to have been reserved, Sir Thomas West
and Sir Reynold his brother dying seised of such rents in
1416 and 1450 respectively, (fn. 33) as did Sir Thomas West,
Lord de la Warre, in 1555; (fn. 34) and William and Thomas,
Lords de la Warre, were dealing with the rent in
1572 (fn. 35) and 1596. (fn. 36) In 1545 Henry VIII granted the
manor to Richard Moryson. (fn. 37) In September of the
next year Moryson conveyed the manor to John Hales
for regrant to himself for one month and then to Lucy
Harper for life, with contingent remainders to her
various children. (fn. 38) One of these children, Mary, was
presumably the 'Mary daughter of George Harper
of Kent' who married Bartholomew Hales, younger
brother of John Hales, (fn. 39) as Bartholomew and Mary
Hales made a settlement of the manor in 1568, (fn. 40) and
he died seised thereof in 1599. (fn. 41) His son Sir Bartholomew Hales died in 1626 seised not only of the manor of
Snitterfield but also of 'a messuage called the manor of
Luscombe in Snitterfield', and of lands called Comyns
Field, Pardies Hill, and Hollow Meadow, 'reputed to
be the manor of Comyns'. (fn. 42) No other reference to
Comyns as a manor is known, but the manor of LUSCOMBE had been bought by Sir Bartholomew from
Richard Woodwarde and Frances, and John Woodwarde and Alice in 1602, (fn. 43) and from this date is
included in all conveyances of Snitterfield. Sir Bartholomew settled Snitterfield on his wife Catherine for life,
with remainder to a cousin Stephen Hales. Stephen's
son Charles held it in 1639, and his son Stephen, a
minor, in 1640. (fn. 44) He was knighted in 1661, married
Elizabeth daughter of Sir James Hales, and died in
1668 without issue. (fn. 45) His widow at once sold the
manor to Edmund Page, (fn. 46) who was apparently acting
for Thomas Coventry, (fn. 47) who later became Earl of
Coventry and died in 1699. It descended in this
family until 1816, when George, Earl of Coventry,
sold it to Robert Phillips, (fn. 48) after which time the
manor follows the descent of Wolverton (q.v.), the
present lords being the trustees of Lady Trevelyan.

Hales. Gules three arrows or feathered argent.

Coventry. Earl of Coventry. Sable a fesse ermine between three crescents or.
The estate of GRESWOLD is once called a manor.
According to a story told in 1302, (fn. 49) John de Grusselwolde married first Isolda, by whom he had a son John,
and secondly Joan, by whom he had a son Roger.
John the elder son entered on 'the manor of Gruswold'
as heir to his father and assigned ⅓ to Joan. Afterwards
he sold to John de Cantilupe, chief lord of the manor,
the other 2/3 and the reversion of Joan's ⅓. Sir John
de Cantilupe made over Greswold to his daughter
Katherine for life, and subsequently gave it, in 1319, to
his brother Walter, (fn. 50) who shortly afterwards obtained
other land there from Thomas de Dene and Avice his
wife, (fn. 51) but no more is heard of any manorial rights there.
Margery widow of John de Cantilupe gave land in
Snitterfield and Bearley to Bordesley Abbey, (fn. 52) which
was probably afterwards part of the monks' estate of
Bearley (q.v.).
In about 1135 Hugh son of Roger Abbadon bought
from Hugh fitzRichard one 'vavassor' with all his land
in 'Esnitevile' and gave it to the Abbey of St. Peter
of Préaux (Lisieux dioc.), (fn. 53) but nothing more is known
of this gift.
Church
The large parish church of ST. JAMES
THE GREAT consists of a chancel, nave,
north and south aisles, and a west tower.
There are also modern vestries north of the chancel
and south of the tower. The sequence of the earlier
development of the building is a little uncertain owing
to the proximity of the various periods, added to the
marked differences in detail, and some confusion
caused by later alterations. Probably the south arcade
dates from the latter half of the 13th century and the
north from the early 14th century, but the similarity
of the windows in both aisles suggests that after the
north aisle was built the south aisle was widened
to 9 ft. to match the other. The chancel, built of
rubble, is of severer detail and may have followed
soon after the 14th-century north aisle; (fn. 54) it is of great
length compared with the nave and has large windows.
The west tower was evidently erected in several
successive stages: the lowest 10 ft. in the early 14th
century, continued up another 8 or 9 ft. about 1340
with ashlar walling, the west window having moulded
jambs rather like those of the south doorway, and
completed c. 1400 in ashlar of larger stones.
The clearstory was added early in the 16th century:
there seems to have been some trouble from weakness
in the arcades, especially the northern, which shows
inequalities in the arches resulting probably from partial
reconstructions, and most of its capitals have been rather
crudely remoulded. No important changes occurred
before the 19th century, but there was some deterioration, as a description of 1858 (fn. 55) mentions that the
chancel was heavily buttressed on the north side and
its windows had lost their tracery. The closing of the
side doorways and insertion of the west doorway were
done before that time. Scars and repairs in the arcades
are evidence of the damage caused to the masonry by the
erection of galleries in 1841. Probably the vestry south
of the tower was then added. Since then the church
has been well restored, the chancel windows provided
with tracery, and the north vestry and organ chamber
added.
The chancel (about 45 ft. by 20 ft.) has an east
window of five trefoiled lights and modern intersecting
tracery in a two-centred head with a hood-mould. The
chamfered rear-arch also has a hood-mould with modern
foliage stops. In the north wall is a similar window of
three lights also with modern tracery. At the west end
is a modern archway to the organ chamber and between
the two a pointed doorway to the vestry; this has a
chamfered order which is ancient, the reveals to the
vestry being modern; probably the doorway is original
but re-set inside out. In the south wall are two windows
like that in the north wall; east of the second is an
original priests' doorway with chamfered jambs and
hollow-chamfered pointed head. In this wall is a
double piscina, all of modern stonework. The fillingin below the eastern window is of ashlar (the rest of the
wall being of rubble) and may indicate a former sediliarecess.
The walls are of lias rubble, the east wall cemented,
and have chamfered plinths and a moulded string-course
below the windows. At the angles are square buttresses
of ashlar, also intermediate in the south wall; the plinth
and string-course pass round the buttresses. The west
end of the south wall is of ashlar and seems to have been
a buttress rebutting the south arcade; from the way the
stones of the south-west window are fitted to the ashlar
courses it is evident that the ashlar is the earlier. On
the face of the south buttress is a scratched mass-dial.
The roof is of the 18th century or later and of trussed
rafter type covered with tiles.
The chancel arch is a very plain one of two chamfered orders continued in the two-centred head, interrupted only by a kind of bonding course at the springing
level that is only of one chamfered order. The north
half of the arch is distorted.
![[Plan of Snitterfield church]](image-thumb.aspx?compid=57005&pubid=529&filename=fig97.gif)
[Plan of Snitterfield church]
The nave (about 53¾ ft. by 20¼ ft.) has a north
arcade of four bays with octagonal pillars and semioctagonal responds. The east respond has no base.
The other bases are original, varying in height from
18 to 21 in.; they are of two round moulds and have
square sub-bases with moulded stops to the octagons
above. The capital of the west respond, 9 in. high, is
of good normal contour of the early 14th century. That
of the easternmost pillar, of an entirely different contour, may be of the same period re-tooled, but the
others are of crude peculiar forms that may have replaced the original early-14th-century capitals some
time in the 16th or 17th century.
The arches are of two chamfered orders: they do not
spring directly from the pillars, but die on to octagonal
super-pillars (tas de charge); they are two-centred, but
are more or less distorted; and there is little doubt that
the arcade was largely rebuilt at some later medieval
period; the voussoirs vary in size from the original
small stones to later large ones. Assuming the clearstory
wall to be in a straight line, there is a curvature in the
arcade-wall to the north so that the clearstory wall
overhangs it over the third and fourth arch. The walling in the haunches is of small rubble with a patch of
larger stones above the west respond.
The south arcade, also of four bays, is of late-13thcentury date. Each pillar is a circular group of eight
round shafts and hollows; some of the shafts are filleted.
The responds are half-pillars; the bases, of octofoil plan,
are of two rounds and a hollow and stand on chamfered square sub-bases; in the middle base the square
angles are carved with ivy-leaf spurs. The capitals of
the pillars are unusually large (17 in. high); they are of
circular plan with a scroll-moulded abacus, a small
mould below it, and a large bell springing from the
hollows, the shafts being carried up straight into it.
The half-round capitals of the responds are of a more
normal size (10 in.). The arches are two-centred and
of two hollow-chamfered orders, the outer small, with
medium to large voussoirs. The masonry between and
above the arches is of ashlar of different periods: the
western half is of small courses, but in the eastern half
the courses are larger and of two dates. This may be
the result of partial rebuilding to straighten the wall
before the clearstory was added. The clearstory is built
of ashlar in large courses and is lighted on each side by
four early-16th-century windows of two trefoiled fourcentred lights under three-centred main heads, partly
restored. Above are plain parapets with moulded
string-courses.
The roof is of almost flat pitch and is divided into
four bays by main horizontal beams that are supported
under the ends by battering wall-posts and curved
braces, on modern wood corbels: the wall-posts are
packed behind by modern posts. All the main timbers
are chamfered. The roof is probably of the early
16th century; as the trusses are shorter than the space
between the walls it is said that the roof was brought
from elsewhere, probably from Fulbrook Castle. It is
covered with slates. On the east and west walls of the
nave are the lines of the earlier high-pitched gabled
roof antedating the clearstory.
The north aisle (8¾ ft. wide) has three north windows of the early 14th century: the first and third are
each of two pointed lights and plain spandrel in a twocentred head with an external hood-mould and moulded
rear-arch. The mullions and jambs are moulded, the
latter rather elaborately in three orders with filleted
rolls, &c. The middle window is a modern adaptation
of the original north door-head raised to a higher level:
below the modern sill are the straight joints of the
original doorway. There is no west window. The
walls are of rubble of rather thin stones. Two north
buttresses are modern, the north-west diagonal buttress
is of old ashlar. The north wall has an original moulded
stone eaves-course.
The south aisle (9 ft. wide) has an east window very
similar to those in the north aisle. The eastern of the
three south windows is similar, but the sill has been
heightened. The second is the old south doorway lifted
higher and fitted with a modern mullion, &c.; and below
are the straight joints of the former door-opening. The
third window resembles the east window, with slightly
different mouldings. In the west wall is a lancet
window with wide splays and hollow-chamfered segmental-pointed rear-arch. Its exterior, covered by the
modern vestry, is hidden by plaster.
The walls are of coursed ashlar and have chamfered
plinths and hollow-chamfered eaves-course. At the
south-east angle is a pair of square buttresses, another
intermediate east of the (former) south doorway, and
one at the west end: the last retains the original tabling
or capping of two courses, but on the others they are
cemented. Equidistant west of the south doorway was
another buttress, now indicated only by a break in the
masonry. The aisles have lean-to roofs of uncertain
date covered with lead.
At the east end of the south wall is a former locker or
reliquary 2 ft. deep and 2½ ft. wide recessed behind to
the east, the rebated doorway being 1 ft. 7½ in. wide.
The west tower (about 15 ft. square internally) is
divided externally by a string-course into two stages,
the lower including the clock-chamber. It has a plinth
6¼ ft. high of four chamfered stages. At the north-west
angle is a pair of square buttresses of ashlar. The southwestern stair-turret is of unusual treatment; it projects
from the angle as three sides of a large irregular hexagon
and is splayed across the angle inside, with a pointed
doorway: near the top of the lower main stage it is
tabled back. The lofty archway from the nave is of
three continuous chamfered orders towards the nave,
and of two orders, in the pointed head only, towards the
tower. The west doorway has a four-centred arch and
is said to be a modern insertion, presumably made when
the side doorways were blocked. The west window is
of three lights and late-14th-century tracery in a twocentred head. It has a transom, below which the jambs
are of early-14th-century mouldings, but above the
transom they change to plain chamfered orders.
These details and the masonry of the walls indicate
that the lower stage of the tower is of at least three
periods. Up to about 3 or 4 ft. above the plinth the
walls are of rubble, probably, with the plinth, of early14th-century date. Above that up to the level of the
tops of the square buttresses and the moulded windowjambs they are of coursed rough ashlar in fairly small
stones of slightly later date. Above that level up to the
parapet the masonry is of more even ashlar in larger
stones, probably of c. 1400. At the same level also the
north-west angle is provided with a diagonal buttress
in place of the lower square buttresses and there are also
diagonal buttresses to the other angles. The projecting
stair-turret has the same changes of masonry, but is
carried up a little higher. In the earlier ashlar it has
two trefoiled loop-lights; in the later a shorter and
wider ogee-headed loop-light. About 6 ft. below the
clock-chamber floor it decreases in internal width and
changes to the more normal stair-vice contained within
the bounds of the square angle up to the bell-chamber.
The clock-chamber has a tiny south light with an ogee
head, below the string-course. The bell-chamber has
an embattled parapet with a moulded string-course
having gargoyles at the angles, now perished. The
diagonal buttresses reach nearly to the string-course and
carry angle pinnacles, restored above the parapet. In
each wall is a pair of windows, each of two trefoiled
lights and late-14th-century form of quatrefoil in a
two-centred head with hood-mould and carved defaced
stops. The roof, of low pyramidal form, has massive
cross-beams, &c. The lower ceiling is of modern pitchpine.
The font is of the early 14th century; it is octagonal;
the bowl has upper and lower mouldings and a hollow
below in which are projecting carved heads at the
angles; these are of men of various callings: one has a
bishop's mitre, another is a knight, others have caps,
probably academic and legal, and another a close-fitting
hood. The stem and chamfered base are plain.
The communion table to the altar of the south aisle
has thin turned legs, &c., of c. 1700. The communion
rails in the chancel are of c. 1630 and have turned
balusters: the gate-posts have flat ornament and
moulded upstanding heads: the top rails are carved
with incised running foliage. The pulpit of c. 1730
has five sides of a hexagonal tub, with oval panels having
raised key-blocks to the four arcs and jewelled spandrels;
above these are open frieze-panels.
In the quire stalls are incorporated two carved standards and panelled desk-fronts of c. 1500, perhaps
brought from elsewhere. The standards differ a little:
the northern is faced with an elaborate window-tracery
design and has a shouldered head and a vine leaf and
grape poppy-head. On the front (south) vertical edge
is a carved post (showing Italian Renaissance influence)
on which stands a small figure of an ecclesiastic holding
a rounded object in his hands: in the crook of the right
arm is a long staff with a foliated head. Over it is a
canopy with a demi-rose soffit. On the back edge, just
below the shoulder, is a half-angel with a shield. On
the inner face are the initials IN (in Tudor-Roman
style) in a knot suspended from an open hand above,
and on either side is a small female figure with a foliage
tail. The southern has similar tracery and a shield with
the crowned arms and supporters of Henry VII. The
figure on the front post is that of a bishop. At the back
is the half-angel with a shield, and on the inner face the
letters IN as a monogram in Lombardic letters, and
foliage. The poppy-head is carved with roses and
foliage. The remainder of the two blocks of seats is
modern, but east of them are a shorter seat and desk
on either side. The desk-fronts each incorporate four
bays of panelling: each bay has subcusped trefoiled
heads with crockets and finial and foiled tracery above.
The muntins have posts carrying small figures mostly
winged, some draped and some apparently nude, and
holding objects intended perhaps for musical instruments.
A framed board in the quire vestry recording charities
up to 1682 is probably of that date. In the tower are
two painted hatchments of the Earl of Coventry's
arms; 18th century. There are six bells, one of 1758 by
Abel Rudhall, the others of 1874 and 1887.
The communion plate includes a large cup and cover
of 1735, and a large flagon and salver of 1751 given by
the Dowager Lady Coventry.
The registers begin in 1561.
Advowson
In 1086 there was a priest, implying a church, at Snitterfield. (fn. 56) Pope
Honorius II (1125–30) confirmed to
Kenilworth Priory the church of Snitterfield, given by
Siward de Arden, (fn. 57) but the gift seems to have been ineffective and there is no later evidence of any connexion
with the priory. Hugh fitzRichard gave the church to
the Priory of St. Sepulchre, Warwick, but in 1174 an
agreement was reached by which the rector should pay
1 mark yearly to the canons and Walter Cumin and his
successors should have the right of presentation. (fn. 58) The
advowson remained with the manor until 1324, when
Walter de Cantilupe conveyed it, with 8 acres of land,
to Walter de Stapleton, Bishop of Exeter, (fn. 59) who next
year gave it to St. Sepulchre's in exchange for the advowson of St. Clement Danes. (fn. 60) The church was appropri
ated to the priory in 1325, being then valued at
£17 13s. 9d.; (fn. 61) and a vicarage was ordained in 1330. (fn. 62)
The vicarage was worth £8 clear in 1535. (fn. 63) Apparently in return for the appropriation the advowson was
transferred to the Bishop of Worcester, and it has
remained in the hands of the bishops since that time. (fn. 64)
In 1535 the rectory of Snitterfield was farmed by
the canons of St. Sepulchre's at £7, from which a payment of 3s. 4d. was made to the vicar. (fn. 65) After the dissolution of the priory it was granted in June 1553 to
Kenelm, Clement, and John Throckmorton. (fn. 66) By 1599
one moiety of the rectory had come to Richard Woodwarde and Frances his wife, who sold it to Bartholomew
Hales; (fn. 67) he in 1619 conveyed it to Richard Baker. (fn. 68) The other moiety was evidently divided, as in 1574
Adrian Gylbert conveyed ¼ of the rectory to Edward
Sheldon. (fn. 69) Ambrose Sheldon sold this quarter in 1621
to Richard Catesby, (fn. 70) who in 1640 settled it on
Eleanor wife of his son Richard for life with remainder
to her son William. (fn. 71) The later descent of these fractions is obscure.
Charity
Sir Stephen Hales by will in 1668 gave
£100 to the use of the poor. The legacy
was invested in the purchase of a meadow
containing 2 acres or thereabouts in Alveston. The
land is now let on a yearly tenancy at a rent of £4 10s.,
which is distributed to the poor by two trustees appointed by the parish council.