KENILWORTH
Acreage: 5,914. (fn. 1)
Population: 1911, 5,776; 1921, 6,751; 1931,
7,592.
The parish, which in early times was heavily wooded
and as late as the 17th century had extensive parks containing much timber, is now open, with considerable
blocks of woodland only in the north, at Stonymoor
Wood, and in the south-west, in Chase Wood. The
ground slopes from 430 ft. at its northern extremity to
250 ft. in the town and then rises again very gently to
about 300 ft. in the south. There are several small
streams, of which two form the western boundary of the
parish; and the Inchford Brook runs from south to
north near its western edge and then turns east to run,
as Finham Brook, through the town below the Castle,
where it was dammed in medieval times to form the
lake defences of the fortress, and the site of the Abbey.
Its valley separates that part of the town to the north
strung out along the High Street, leading to Coventry,
parallel with the course of the brook, and that to the
south along the road, at right angles to the stream, to
Castle End and the modern church of St. John at the
point where the road forks to Warwick and to Leamington. Close to this fork the Coventry and Leamington
branch of the old L.N.W. Railway enters the parish,
having a station about ¼ mile north of the church. It
is round the railway that most of the building in the
late 19th century took place; in recent years there has
been more development west of the road to Warwick
and near the road to Stoneleigh, Kenilworth being now
(1949) a residential town with a population of probably 10,000.
The High Street and parts adjacent to it were
situated in the Abbey Manor and there was a separate
community on the Warwick Road in the Castle Manor,
which accounts for what, even to-day, seem like two
separate places, divided by the present Abbey Fields.
Each manor had a Court Leet, (fn. 2) many of whose duties,
with others, are now carried out by the Urban District
Council of Kenilworth, which under the Local Govern
ment Act of 1894 replaced the Local Board instituted
in 1877.
Agriculture has been Kenilworth's main concern,
but in the first half of last century there were here (fn. 3) a
manufactory for horn combs, a chemical works for
making sal-ammoniac and Prussian blue, and a tannery, (fn. 4)
the last-named being the only survival. There is a brickworks, but the sandstone quarries (fn. 5) are things of the past.
A few small factories have sprung up of late years,
including those for making engineering parts and
machine tools.
The buildings of the mill are still standing. In the
eighties it was a steam flour-mill, and afterwards for a
while an oil-cake factory. There was a mill attached to
the castle in 1296. (fn. 6) This was on the Finham Brook
and its bays, or pond-head, apparently gave the name of
'the Bayes' (later 'Brays') to the southern outworks of
the castle defences. In 1361 the manor had two mills, (fn. 7)
the second being about ½ mile to the south on a tributary of the Finham Brook. The abbey (or rather
priory) had two mills which were valued at 6s. 8d. in
1291. (fn. 8) In 1612 Sir Robert Dudley, holding both
manors, had three mills. (fn. 9)
In a survey of Kenilworth made about 1540 the
town is said to be 'well buylded with many fayr housses
tyelled and well inhabyted'. (fn. 10) Of these few, if any,
seem to have survived, but on Castle Green, opposite
the castle, is a row of 17th-century timber-framed
cottages with tiled roofs, and others, perhaps earlier,
are to be found in the town, some with thatched roofs.
Old School House, situated in Barrowell Lane, is a
pleasant example of a small Georgian house of two
stories, built of red brick on a splayed plinth of red
sandstone ashlar. The roof is tiled with a cornice of
moulded bricks at eaves level. The lower windows
have flat-gauged brick arches with stone keystones.
There is a central doorway with a tablet above which
reads as follows: 'This house and school was built by
Mr. William Edwards, Churigeon of Kenilworth and
Mary his wife and endowed with twenty and two
pounds Pr. Ann. for ye benefit of a Free School for the
children of this Parish a.d. 1724.'
Fieldgate House, situated at the eastern end of the
High Street, is an unspoilt Georgian residence of mid18th-century date, three stories high, and built of red
brick with pilasters at each end, moulded cornice, tiled
roof, string courses of projecting brick at first and
second floor levels. There are five sash windows to each
of the two upper floors and two each side of a central
door in the lower story, all the windows having their
original sashes. The ground and first floor windows
have flat-gauged brick arches with stone keystones.
Dudley House on Abbey Hill is of similar design and
date, but with modern sashes and the four original
windows of the ground floor replaced with two of three
lights.
South of the High Street, behind the church of St.
Nicholas, lie the scanty remains of the Augustinian
monastery, (fn. 11) founded in 1122 as a priory but raised to
the rank of an abbey about 1450. (fn. 12) The only buildings
of which substantial portions remain above ground are
the 14th-century Gatehouse and, south of it, a contemporary building tentatively identified as the Guest
House. The Gatehouse, near the north-west corner of
the precinct, faces north. It is of local red sandstone
and consists of two vaulted compartments—the inner
now in ruins—opening to the north by a four-centred
arch. Between the two compartments is the gateway,
with a large segmental arch, flanked on the west by a
small doorway, with pointed arch, for foot passengers.
In the east wall of each compartment is an arched recess
for a stone seat 6 ft. wide; and in the west wall of the
inner is a pointed doorway into the porter's lodge, with
an ogee-headed light beside it. The lodge is divided
into two halves, the northern originally two-storied,
each story provided with a garderobe in a projection at
the north-west corner. There are traces of a wall
running south from the west side of the lodge, and of
another running east, in line with the north wall of the
nave of the church, from the north-east angle of the
Gatehouse. The Guest House is a building of two
stories, which formerly had an outside stair and a porch
over the south door. The upper story has two-light
ogee-headed windows. Of the monastic buildings only
a few shapeless blocks of rubble rise above ground level.
The survey of 1540 in two places suggested the use
of the abbey to provide stone for buildings in the castle,
and the place was evidently efficiently exploited as a
quarry. Excavation, however, has enabled a great part
of the ground-plan to be recovered. The 12th-century
church had a narrow aisleless nave, which, owing to the
existence of the cloister on the south and rising ground
on the north, was never enlarged. The transepts were
extended eastwards in the 13th century, and in the 14th
a presbytery was added east of the quire and the central
tower was rebuilt. This tower seems to have been
too slender to house the bells, for which purpose an
octagonal bell-tower was built just to the north of the
west end of the church later in that century. The 12th-century apsidal chapter-house south of the south transept was retained, but the dorter, in the same range, was
rebuilt and enlarged in the 15th century. The southern
range of the cloister, in which foundations of the subvault to the frater have been found, seems to date from
the 14th century, and the infirmary, lying to the east
of the cloister, was of 13th-century construction.
After the Dissolution the site of the abbey was
granted to Sir Andrew Flammock, who died seised of
it in 1549, (fn. 13) when it passed to his son William, who
held it until he died in 1560 (fn. 14) leaving as heir his
daughter Catherine, aged 2, who afterwards married
John Colburn of Moreton Morrell. This John was
frightened into selling it 'on easy terms' to the Earl of
Leicester, (fn. 15) and it then descended with the manor.
The parish church of St. John the Evangelist was
erected at the south end of the town in 1852, when a
new parish was created. It is a mixture of Gothic styles
and consists of a chancel, nave, south aisle, vestry, and
west tower, built of red sandstone rubble with ashlar
dressings. The tower, in two stages, terminates in an
octagonal spire with canopied steeple lights. The roofs
have a steep pitch covered with tiles.
Redfern Manor, situated about 1½ miles north-west
of the town on the main Birmingham road, is said to
have been assigned to the last Prior (? Abbot) of Kenilworth as a residence after the Dissolution. (fn. 16) It is a twostoried timber-framed house of early-16th-century date,
facing south. Externally it has been plastered, a wide
central gable with a small projection added to form an
entrance hall with modern staircase, and the eastern
end shortened and rebuilt in brick. It has a tiled roof
and towards the western end a chimney-stack with four
engaged diagonal chimney-shafts rebuilt on the original
base. The remaining chimneys are modern. At the
back are 18th-century additions, built of red brick.
The original house was a long rectangular building,
now divided by a central gable forming east and west
wings, the east wing being a little shorter than the west.
Internally it has been modernized, but a number of
interesting features remain. On the ground floor the
two rooms in the west wing are divided by a large
back-to-back fire-place; the west side still retains its
original stone chimney-piece, which has a flat moulded
head with rounded corners and moulded jambs finishing on a square stop; the east side chimney-piece has
been destroyed and a modern fire-place inserted in the
recess. Across the east room of this wing there is a large
moulded beam supported on moulded wall-posts with
curved brackets which continue the beam mouldings
and finish on a large splayed base. The room in the east
wing has a large wide fire-place but the original
chimney-piece has been replaced with an 18th-century
moulded shelf, with cupboards on either side of the
recess, which has a modern grate. Back to back with
this is a similar sized fire-place in the early-18th-century
addition. The beams in this addition are chamfered
with moulded stops. On the upper floor the fire-place
in the west wing retains in the east room its original
stone chimney-piece with a flat moulded head continuing down the jambs to a splayed stop. The beam,
wall-posts, and brackets in this room repeat those below.
Some of the timber-framing is visible on the upper
floor, including two corner posts at the western end.
To the east of the house are a range of 18th-century
farm buildings, and part of a timber-framed barn of
cruck construction, probably contemporary with the
house.
William Edwards in 1722 left money to endow a
Free School. (fn. 17) In 1830, besides the Free School, there
were a Charity School, a 'school of Industry', and five
private schools, of which four were for 'ladies'. (fn. 18) The
National School on Rosemary Hill bears an inscription
that it was erected by voluntary contributions in 1836.
It is now used for the County Library. An Independent
School is mentioned in 1850 as having been endowed
by Abraham Arlidge for the education and clothing
of thirty-six boys and thirty-six girls. (fn. 19) The building
stands behind the Congregational Chapel on Abbey
Hill. In the eighties of last century the Baptists had a
day school in connexion with Albion Chapel. The
Roman Catholic Schools were built about the same
time as the Catholic Church in 1841, near which they
stand.
Nonconformity was well represented here and in
1850 there were Wesleyan Methodists, Baptists,
Independents, and Unitarians. There were also the
Roman Catholics. (fn. 20) The Wesleyan Chapel in Warwick
Road was erected in 1844 (fn. 21) in the Grecian style, and
after the new Wesleyan Chapel was built in Priory
Road in 1903 it was used as St. John's Parish Room,
and is now the Christadelphian Lecture Hall. The
present Baptist Church, a brick building in Albion
Street, was in 1850 standing closed for want of funds. (fn. 22)
The Independents, who had long been established here,
had their chapel on Abbey Hill, and the present Abbey
Hill Congregational Church was built in 1873. The
Unitarian Chapel in the perpendicular style, on Rosemary Hill, is now used by an amateur dramatic society
and called the 'Priory Theatre'. The Roman Catholic
Chapel situated at the end of Fieldgate Lane was
designed by Pugin and erected in 1841 at the sole cost
of Mrs. Amherst. In 1883 the 'Iron Room near the
Washbrook' was occupied by the Brethren. This
building, which stands in The Close, is now used by
the Free Brethren.
Besides the park formed by Geoffrey de Clinton
there was the Chase, on the west of the parish, and the
'foreign wood' (fn. 23) known as Kingswood or the Frythe
on the east extending down to Thickthorn. (fn. 24) A certain
amount of assarting was going on in the 12th century,
and a charter of Henry de Clinton refers to land 'on
Dedecherleshull and all the moor from the bridge of
Wridefen beside the road to Coleshill as far as the assart
of Ernald Halfcherl of Wridefen'. (fn. 25) In 1250 the
constable of Kenilworth was ordered to clear both sides
of the road from Coventry to Warwick of the woods in
which robbers lurked. (fn. 26) In the survey of c. 1540
Kenilworth was said to lie in country 'very pleasant for
hunting all manner of game and of fallow deer in eight
parks lying together' near the castle. (fn. 27) Of these parks
two were in Rudfen, one being the Ducks Park
(40 acres) newly imparked by Abbot Ralph about
1488; (fn. 28) the other (30 acres), called in 1581 the Little
Park, near Rudfen House, (fn. 29) was in 1649 in the occupation of Robert Briscoe (fn. 30) and was still known as Briscoe's
Park in 1785. (fn. 31) When the king seized Robert Dudley's
estates in 1609 there were reckoned to be in Kenilworth 14,138 timber trees and 5,041 'firewood' trees,
with a further 8,807 timber trees and 7,580 others in
Rudfen, the total value being £14,625. (fn. 32) During the
Commonwealth the deer were destroyed and great
quantities of timber were cut, so that in 1660 Sir
Charles Berkeley petitioned for a lease of 800 acres of
disforested lands in Kenilworth. (fn. 33)
There were a number of commons, that of Rudfen
being at Burton Green, and the chief of those belonging
to the Abbey manor being Great and Little Adibarne,
on the east side of the parish. (fn. 34) Some 1,100 acres of
common land were inclosed in 1755. (fn. 35)
The Castle (fn. 36)
Kenilworth was originally part
of the royal manor of Stoneleigh
and was given by Henry I to
Geoffrey de Clinton, his chamberlain, who when he
founded the Priory of Kenilworth gave to the canons
all his land there except so much as he required to make
his castle and park. (fn. 36a) The position which he selected for
his castle was a slight rise, protected on the south and
west by small streams; by damming these streams just
east of their junction, he, or his son and successor Geoffrey, created the Mere, or Great Pool, ½ mile long
and, in places, 500 ft. wide, which defended the castle
on the south and west, and supplied the moat on the
other two sides. The early castle consisted of a great
keep, some 80 ft. (external measure) from east to
west by 60 ft. from north to south, with a projecting
square turret at each angle. (fn. 37) The walls are 20 ft. thick,
battering to 14 ft. 6 in. at a height of 10 ft., up to which
height the whole was filled in solid with earth. Entrance
to the first floor was through an outbuilding on the west
(remodelled by the Earl of Leicester in 1570). The
keep stood at the north-east angle of the bailey, or inner
court, against the walls of which were built the kitchen
and other domestic offices. Its military importance led
Henry II to take it over during the rebellion of his son
'the Young King Henry' in 1173–4, when provisions
and military forces, including at least 20 hired troopers
and 140 foot, were placed in the castle. (fn. 38) Some arrangement seems to have been made, perhaps in 1182, (fn. 39) by
which Henry de Clinton made over the castle to the
king in exchange for the manor of Lower Swanbourne
(Bucks.). (fn. 40) It was one of the castles repaired and set in
order at the beginning of the reign of Richard I, (fn. 41) but
it was under John that the old castle was surrounded
by an outer curtain wall with towers. King John spent
£2,000 on the work, but he seems to have visited the
castle on only five occasions, and then for not more than
three days at a time. (fn. 42) It was one of the four castles
which were to be put in the hands of the barons as
security for the observance of the Great Charter, but
the king seems to have kept control of it. (fn. 43) Henry III
rarely visited Kenilworth and the castle fell into disrepair, so that in 1241 the porch of the keep had fallen
down, the great chamber was roofless, part of the outer
wall was threatening to fall into the Mere, and repairs
were needed to the jail, two gates, the chapel, and the
other chapel in the keep. (fn. 44) In 1244 Henry appointed
his brother-in-law Simon de Montfort, Earl of
Leicester, warden of the castle, (fn. 45) and in 1253 he
granted the custody of the castle to Simon and the
Countess Eleanor for their lives. (fn. 46) It was probably at
this time that the earthwork now known as 'the Brays',
but more correctly 'the Bayes' (from its being built at
the end of the bays, or dam, of the pool), was constructed to guard the main southern entrance. After
the collapse of the baronial party and the death of Earl
Simon at Evesham in 1265, Kenilworth defied the
king's efforts to capture it until famine compelled the
garrison to surrender in December 1266, (fn. 47) the vanquished being allowed to compound for the recovery of
their estates under the Decree (Dictum) of Kenilworth.
The king at once granted the castle to his son Edmund, (fn. 48) whom he created Earl of Lancaster. Edmund
in 1279 held a famous concourse here, called 'the Round
Table', consisting of 100 knights, who engaged in
tilting and martial exploits under the presidency of
Roger Mortimer, and 100 ladies. (fn. 49) The jousting place
was, no doubt, the later 'Tilt Yard' on top of the dam
separating the Mere from the Lower Pool, and it was
probably in memory of this tourney that the gateway
tower leading on to the Yard was given the name of
Mortimer's Tower. (fn. 50) On Edmund's death in 1296 he
was succeeded by his son Thomas, Earl of Lancaster,
who in 1313 began to build a chapel within the castle, (fn. 51)
which he intended to convert into a great chantry or
collegiate church of St. Mary, to be served by thirteen
secular canons. (fn. 52) This seems to have been more or less
completed by 1318, (fn. 53) but the chantry was never
founded. The remains of the building may well be
those in the Outer Wards, near 'Leicester's Barn', now
ascribed to John of Gaunt. By this time Earl Thomas
was leading the opposition to Edward II, which culminated in his open rebellion in 1322, when the sheriff
was ordered to prevent anyone entering the castle,
which was held against the king. (fn. 54) Later in that year
the earl was attainted and beheaded, and the castle was
taken into the king's hands. Here Edward II kept
Christmas in 1323, and hither he was brought as a
prisoner by Henry, the earl's brother, on 22 November
1326, and here he was compelled to acquiesce in his
deposition, (fn. 55) being later removed to Berkeley Castle,
where he was murdered. The estates of his brother,
including Kenilworth, were restored to Earl Henry,
whose son Henry, later created Duke of Lancaster, in
1347 spent 250 marks on the great hall of the castle. (fn. 56)
He died seised thereof in 1361, (fn. 57) and the castle passed
by the marriage of his daughter Blanche to John of
Gaunt, fourth son of Edward III, who was created
Duke of Lancaster.
Under the wealthy and ostentatious John of Gaunt
the castle was first put into repair and then, from 1391
onwards, converted from a feudal stronghold into a
palace. To this period belongs the Great Hall, (fn. 57a)
occupying the whole of the west side of the inner court.
The Hall itself was on the first floor, with vaulted
cellars below, and had a timber roof of the exceptional
span of 45 ft. At the north end was the screens passage,
approached by a flight of stairs from the court, and
beyond it was the 'Strong Tower', which served as a
treasury; at the south was the so-called 'Saintlowe
Tower', (fn. 57b) containing the oriel of the Great Hall and
giving access to the state apartments which occupy the
south side of the court. On the death of John of Gaunt
his estates devolved to his son Henry, who seized the
throne as Henry IV, whereby the Duchy of Lancaster,
including Kenilworth, became attached to the Crown.
Beyond necessary repairs little was done to the castle,
but Henry V built a pleasure-house, known as 'the
Pleasaunce in the Marsh (en Mareys)', on the other
side of the Mere, about ½ mile west of the castle. The
latter was still a fortress of importance and at the outbreak of the Wars of the Roses, in 1456, Henry VI
sent some 30 cannon, and other stores, for its defence. (fn. 58)
Henry VIII dismantled the Pleasaunce and used its
material for buildings in the north-west angle of the
outer court, near the Swan Tower, (fn. 59) possibly the 'large
gret howse newly buylded of tymber and tyelled wherin
ys xij chaumbers above and belowe wyth chymneys and
large wyndowes', as described in a survey of c. 1540, (fn. 60)
which also mentions a range on the (east) side of the
inner court 'of tymber parte newly bylded'.
John Dudley, Duke of Northumberland, obtained a
grant of Kenilworth in 1553, but on his attainder in the
autumn of that year it reverted to the Crown. In 1563
Queen Elizabeth included it in a lavish grant of estates
to her favourite Robert Dudley, the Duke's son, (fn. 61) whom
she created Earl of Leicester in the following year. By
1570 Leicester had begun extensive alterations and
additions to bring the castle into accord with the fashion
of the time. Even in the Keep large mullioned and
transomed windows were introduced, and the western
fore-building was entirely remodelled, leading out to
pleasure gardens. 'Mortimer's Tower' was also much
altered and ceased to be the main entrance, a new Gatehouse being built at the north-east corner of the outer
court. The chief addition was the block, of which the
shell still stands, known as 'Leicester's Buildings', south
of, and in line with, the timber-framed range built by
Henry VIII. John of Gaunt's state apartments were
renovated, and on the west side of his Hall a great
platform of earth was thrown up to give a view over
the Mere, probably for the benefit of Queen Elizabeth
on the occasion of her famous visit in July 1575, when
she was entertained with a lavish prodigality of feasting
and pageantry. (fn. 62)
Leicester's Gatehouse was converted in 1650 into a
residence by Colonel Hawksworth, who blocked the
entrance passage with bay windows and made other
alterations, including additions on the east side, largely
with materials from Leicester's Buildings, including the
porch and probably some of the doorways and chimneypieces. It is built of red sandstone ashlar, rectangular in
plan with octagonal turrets at each angle and a continuous moulded plinth. The main block is three
stories high, with a semi-basement, and the turrets one
story higher. The main block has a battlemented
parapet with a moulded string at its base continued
round the turrets. The turrets have plain parapets on
a moulded string-course. The windows are all squareheaded with ovolo-moulded features. Blocking the
original entrance archways are canted bay windows and
above, slightly projecting, four-light windows to the
first and second floors. The turrets have two-light
windows on two faces. The north and south fronts are
practically identical. In the centre of the west wall is a
square porch having straight joints to the main wall.
It has a semicircular-headed door flanked by niches,
with a frieze bearing the initials R. L. and surmounted
by a battlemented parapet, probably brought from
Leicester's Buildings. The east wall is obscured by the
later additions, but traces of three-light windows are
visible above the tiled roof on the north and south sides.
In the south-west turret is a staircase giving access to
all floors, the doorways having four-centred arches with
square heads over. On the ground floor in the northeast turret there is a mutilated original fire-place with
a moulded four-centred arch. The south room on the
ground floor has a very elaborate alabaster chimneypiece with a flat head, frieze with a motto, and twin
pilasters on either side decorated with tracery and the
initials R. L., also said to have been taken from
Leicester's Buildings. In the basement, formed when
the gateways were blocked, the bases of the jambs of
the original arches, with stopped chamfers, are visible,
and a base for the jamb of an intermediate arch. The
internal arrangements of the gatehouse have been
almost entirely obliterated by the original conversion
into a residence and by subsequent owners' and tenants'
alterations. It is in the private occupation of Lt.-Col.
the Hon. Cyril Davenport Siddeley, D.L.
Against the east wall of the outer court, between the
round 'Lunn's Tower' and the square 'Water Tower',
is the so-called 'Leicester's Barn', originally stables, and
possibly later than Leicester's time. It is a long building,
facing west, with a central gabled porch, the lower half
red sandstone ashlar with a wide-splayed plinth, and its
upper half timber-framed with ornamental reversedogee strutting and red brick infilling. The north wing
has two square-headed two-light original windows, of
two splayed orders, and a semicircular-headed doorway
in the centre. The remaining door and windows are
late insertions. The porch, about 12 ft. square, has
angle buttresses and a semicircular-headed doorway of
one splay, now blocked with modern brickwork, and a
window. The south wing has been much altered and
repaired; all the windows and the wide entrance are
modern. Internally it measures 156 ft. by 21 ft.; it
has been divided by modern partitions, and has a
modern wood floor. The open timber roof, which is
covered with tiles, has trusses consisting of a tie-beam
and two collars, the tie-beam strutted with long struts
from the sole-plate of the timber-framing. On the east
side the roof is carried on open timber-framing resting
on the inner edge of the wall-walk of the curtain wall.
Modern brick piers and arches have been added to give
additional support, and a modern brick fire-place
inserted in the south wall.
When the castle reverted to the Crown in 1603 (fn. 63) a
survey was made which mentions 'the Roomes of great
State within the same, and such as are able to receave
his Maty. the Queen and Prince at one tyme, and with
such stately Sellars all carried upon pillars and Architecture of free stone carved and wrought as the like are
not within this Kingdome'. (fn. 64) As a fortress it was less
satisfactory, and at the opening of the Civil War King
Charles withdrew his garrison and the place was occupied by the parliamentarians. (fn. 65) In July 1649 orders
were given to render the castle untenable, but not to
damage the living quarters. (fn. 66) Accordingly the north
wall of 'Caesar's Tower' (the Keep) was blown up and
the outer walls breached in various places, and the Mere
drained. Colonel Hawkesworth, to whom the site had
been granted, established himself in Leicester's Gate
house. How far he was responsible for the ruin of the
earlier living quarters, or how far neglect and later
owners (fn. 67) are to blame, cannot be said. Leicester's
Buildings were occupied by a colony of weavers from
Coventry in the 18th century, (fn. 68) but by the beginning of
the 19th century this part was unroofed and the castle
was in its present state, except that it was untended.
The final act in its history was its purchase in 1937 by
Sir John Davenport Siddeley (created Baron Kenilworth in June 1937), who handed over the guardianship of the ruins to H.M. Office of Works, with a
generous contribution towards the cost of their upkeep.

Plan of Kenilworth Castle
(Based, by permission, on a survey made for the Ministry of Works)
Manors
Before and after the Conquest KENILWORTH was a member of the royal manor
of Stoneleigh. (fn. 69) It was assessed at 3 virgates and there was woodland half a league long by
4 furlongs broad. In 1086 it was held of the king by
Richard the Forester. It was given by Henry I, c. 1120,
to Geoffrey de Clinton, his Chamberlain and Treasurer,
who gave the northern portion for the endowment of
his newly founded priory and retained the southern for
his castle, park, (fn. 70) and (according to the confirmation
charter of King Stephen) 'borough (burgum)' (fn. 71) The
CASTLE MANOR descended with the castle itself,
whose history is given above. Edmund of Lancaster in
December 1266 had a grant of free warren and chase
here, (fn. 72) and in 1268 was granted a weekly market on
Tuesdays and a fair on the eve, feast, and morrow of
Michaelmas. (fn. 73)
The estate of the priory in Kenilworth in 1291
included 2 virgates of demesne, valued at only 12s.,
assized rents of £4, two mills worth 6s. 8d., and stock
to the value of £1. (fn. 74) At the time of its dissolution the
site and demesnes of the abbey were valued at £7 6s. 8d.,
rents brought in some £43, and perquisites of courts
£2 16s. 2d. (fn. 75) The site included 'the great orchard'
(10 acres), the infirmary garden with an orchard and
pond, the vineyard, and other land. (fn. 76) In 1564 the
ABBEY MANOR was granted by Queen Elizabeth to
the Earl of Leicester, (fn. 77) who already held the castle,
with which it has since descended. (fn. 78)
WRIDEFEN or RUDFEN, now corrupted to Redfern, was the district in the north-west quarter of the
parish, approximately bounded on the south by Redfern
Lane and on the east by Red Lane. The younger
Geoffrey de Clinton gave to Kenilworth Priory land
late of William Palmer in Wridefen, (fn. 79) and his son
Henry gave other land and woods 'from the spring
whence the stream called Nunesiche flows as far as the
cross which Robert French (franciscus) has set up as a
division between his wood and mine'. (fn. 80) By 1291 the
priory had 4 virgates here worth £4, and stock valued
at £2. (fn. 81) It was constituted a separate manor, which at
the time of the Dissolution was farmed at £10. (fn. 82) In
June 1545 the manor, including a number of coppices
amounting to 215 acres of woodland, was granted to
Thomas Marrow; (fn. 83) but in 1557 he reconveyed it to the
Crown. (fn. 84) A lease for 21 years was made to John
Throckmorton in 1558, (fn. 85) but in 1565 Queen Elizabeth granted the manor to the Earl of Leicester (fn. 86) and it
followed the descent of the other two manors. In 1653,
during the interregnum, William Combey was in
possession of the manor, (fn. 87) but at the Restoration it
returned to its former owners.

Dudley, Earl of Leicester. Or a lion vert with a forked tail.
Leicester died in 1588, leaving
his estates for life to his brother
Ambrose, Earl of Warwick, who
only survived him by a year, with
reversion to Sir Robert Dudley,
Leicester's son by Lady Douglasse Sheffield. (fn. 88) Sir Robert
claimed that his parents had been
married and that he was legitimate (fn. 89) and entitled to the estates
and also to the earldoms of
Leicester and Warwick, as heir
of his father and uncle. This claim was opposed by
Leicester's widow, Lettice (formerly Countess of
Essex, whom he had married during the life of Lady
Douglasse), and the Court of Star Chamber decided
against Sir Robert. Sir Robert, who had married Alice
daughter of Sir Thomas Leigh of Stoneleigh, disgusted
at his failure to prove his legitimacy, went abroad. On
his failing to obey a summons from the Privy Council
to return to this country, the castle and all its lands were
seized for the use of the king in 1603. (fn. 90) The survey
then made states that the circuits of the castle, manors,
parks, and chase lying round together contain at least
19 or 20 miles in a pleasant country, 'the like both for
strength state and pleasure not being within the realm
of England'. The castle within the walls is given as
7 acres and the pool 111 acres. The values are: in
land £16,431 9s.; woods £11,722 2s.; the castle
£10, 401 4s. (fn. 91) In 1611 Prince Henry, eldest son of the
king, agreed to pay Sir Robert £14,500 for the title to
the estates; but only £3,000 of it was paid over, and
this was embezzled by the agent to whom it was
entrusted. (fn. 92) Under a special Act of Parliament Sir
Robert's wife Alice conveyed the castle to Prince
Charles, afterwards Charles I, for £4,000, (fn. 93) who in
1623–4 granted a lease of it to Robert, Baron Carey
(afterwards Earl of Monmouth), with remainder to
Henry, Lord Carey, and Thomas Carey, his sons, for
their lives. (fn. 94) Robert died in 1641
and it passed to his son Henry,
2nd Earl of Monmouth. (fn. 95) In
1650 Parliament ordered the
castle to be made untenable and
assigned the estates in 1651 to
certain of Cromwell's officers and
troops by way of satisfaction for
good service and arrears of pay;
but as the life-interest was still
vested in Henry, Earl of Monmouth, this was purchased by
Major Joseph Hawkesworth,
one of the officers (then governor of Warwick Castle),
for £2,000. In consideration of this sum he received
the castle and land on which it stood, with the tiltyard
and orchard. The remainder of the estates was divided
among certain of the officers after raising sufficient
money to pay the troops. The park was destroyed, the
lake drained, and the land divided up among them. (fn. 96) In
1655 Anne Holborne, widow, and Richard Leveson,
K.G., and Katherine, his wife, the daughters of Sir
Robert Dudley, were dealing with the castle and manor, (fn. 97)
presumably remitting any existing claims.

Carey, Earl of Monmouth. Argent on a bend sable three roses argent.
At the Restoration the Crown renewed the lease to
the daughters of Henry, late Earl of Monmouth, Elizabeth, Mary, and Martha Carey, (fn. 98) but in 1665 the
Crown granted the castle and manors to Laurence
Hyde, (fn. 99) later created Earl of Rochester, son of the
1st Earl of Clarendon, the statesman and historian. At
his death the estate went to his son Henry, 4th Earl of
Clarendon and Earl of Rochester, (fn. 1) who died in 1753
leaving no heir, when all his honours became extinct. It
then went to the Hon. Thomas Villiers, (fn. 2) later 1st Earl
of Clarendon of the second creation, who had married
Charlotte, granddaughter of the last-named lord, and
in 1785 it passed to Thomas, 2nd Earl of Clarendon, (fn. 3)
and descended with the earldom to George Herbert
Hyde, the 6th and present Earl. It was purchased in
1937 by Sir John Davenport Siddeley, C.B.E., 1st Baron
Kenilworth, the present lord.

Hyde, Earl of Clarendon. Azure a cheveron between three lozenges or.

Villiers, Earl of Clarendon. Argent a cross gules with five scallops or thereon.
Church
The church of ST. NICHOLAS is
situated on the north side of the ruins of
St. Mary's Abbey and overlooking a valley
which divides the town into two parts. The church
consists of chancel, nave, north and south aisles, south
chapel, south transept, north porch, vestry, and west
tower. It dates from the middle of the 14th century;
the south arcade was added about the end of the 14th
century; the south chapel, vestry, and south transept
are modern. The church is built of red sandstone
ashlar of uniform colour; all the roofs are covered with
small green slates. On the north side there is a good
example of a lead rain-water-head, dated WB 1701,
from the gutter of the nave roof.
The nave has a clearstory with six two-light and one
single-light windows on each side, the single lights being
at the western end. When the south aisle was formed
the design and detail of the north side were followed.
They are cinquefoil lights with square heads dating
from early in the 15th century, surmounted by a plain
parapet which rises from a coved string-course. The
north aisle is lighted by three square-headed windows
of three trefoiled lights with tracery composed of small
circles. There are four buttresses, opposite the arcade
pillars; they are small, in two stages with wide splayed
bases, and terminate as stops to the coved eaves-course.
The western end is occupied by a north porch with an
angle buttress of the same design as in the aisle. The
entrance doorway has a four-centred arch of three sunk
splayed orders continued down the jambs to splayed
stops. It has a moulded label with return ends.
Centrally over the door is a quatrefoil light in a square
splayed opening. On the west side is a similar doorway,
blocked with masonry, and above this is a traceried
window of two trefoil lights with a pointed arch. There
are two loop-lights to the turret stair, the lower one
blocked with masonry.
The tower, with angle buttresses, rises in three stages,
the second stage diminished by an offset and the third
also, and from this point receding with deep corner
splays from a square to an octagon surmounted by an
octagonal spire, reduced before tapering upwards by a
slightly curved splay. On each corner at its base is the
figure of an angel holding a shield. The spire, which
terminates in a vane representing a cock, is divided into
three by two bands of billets. The ground-floor stage
forms a west porch and the doorway, which is a later
insertion, is an elaborate one of the late 12th century
and probably came from the adjacent St. Mary's Abbey.
It has a semicircular arch of three moulded orders with
a label decorated with nail ornament. The outer order
has a zigzag moulding, the inner a bead with birds'
beaks, and the lower is fluted. This lower order is continued down the jambs and the upper two are supported
on detached round shafts with scalloped capitals; no
bases are visible above ground. The whole is set within
a square framework of cable moulding and a band of
diaper work, the spandrels being filled in with large
circular paterae. Above is a modern two-light traceried
window, with a pointed arch, which lights the porch.
Above the first offset there are small trefoil lights with
pointed arches on the north, south, and west sides, and
below them are the clock faces. On the cardinal sides
of the belfry there are two-light trefoil tracery windows
with hood-mouldings having returned ends. Near the
base of the spire small rectangular lights have been cut
through the masonry. Above the first band of billets
are canopied spire lights with trefoil heads on the
cardinal faces. On the east wall are the lines of a very
steeply pitched roof reaching to the apex of the belfry
window.
The south aisle has four buttresses similar to the
north side and an angle buttress at the south-west
corner. The south wall is lighted by four modern twolight trefoil-traceried windows, and farther east by a
large five-light traceried window contemporary with the
arcade. At the eastern end is a narrow blocked opening
with splayed head and jambs 2 ft. high by 6 in. wide,
3 ft. above ground level, and at the western end is a
very narrow blocked vertical two-light opening with
splayed head, jambs, and transom; each light is
1 ft. 7 in. high by 2½ in. wide. In the west wall there
are three blocked openings at different levels with
splayed heads, jambs, and sills, probably to light a
vestry with a room above.

Plan of Kenilworth Church
The modern south transept of red sandstone carries
on the coved eaves-course and plinth of the south aisle,
with angle buttresses, and has a slated roof of a somewhat steeper pitch than the aisle roof. It is lighted by
a two-light traceried window with a pointed arch on
the west, and by a three-light window with a hoodmoulding in the south gable wall.
The south chapel, built at the same time, is similar
in detail. It has two buttresses and an angle buttress,
and is entered by a door in the centre with a pointed
arch of two orders, the mouldings continuing to a
splayed stop. In the east wall there is a three-light
window with a pointed arch and hood-moulding. The
east wall of the chancel, with two buttresses, is modern
(1864) and the three-light window was inserted in
1867. The north wall has coved eaves-course and
parapet similar to the nave, but at a lower level. There
are three equally spaced two-light trefoil-traceried
windows with hood-mouldings continued as a stringcourse, dating from the 16th century.
In the east wall of the north aisle there is a threelight window of poor workmanship, probably of the
early 19th century. A modern vestry projecting from
the east end of the north aisle is built of red sandstone
with a slated roof and has its entrance in the west wall.
It is lighted by three-light trefoil windows on the north
and east sides.
The interior of the church is not imposing; the walls
are plastered and much of the work is modern and of
poor design. The chancel (38 ft. by 23 ft.) was
drastically altered in 1864, when the flat ceiling was
removed, the chancel lengthened, a pitched roof erected,
south chapel, north and south transepts added, and a
new chancel arch inserted. It has a floor of glazed tiles
laid in 1879, with one step from the nave, two to the
altar rails, and one to the altar. On the south side is the
modern arcade of three moulded, pointed arches constructed of alternate courses of red and yellow sandstone,
the arches being supported on octagonal pillars with
foliated capitals and moulded bases. Built into the east
bay about 1920 and facing the chancel are sedilia,
which had been ejected from the church, probably in
1864. They are of late-14th-century work of rather
crude design with three seats on one level, having ogee
trefoil heads which die into a sunk splay. The sides and
divisions are splayed, making the seats narrower at the
back, and the divisions have slightly chamfered arrises.
A modern elaborately moulded capping has been added.
To the east of the sedilia there is a modern piscina with
a cinquefoil ogee head, and crocketed label terminating
in a poppy head and resting on bosses of male and female
heads. The modern chancel arch has two splayed
orders, with its floriated capitals cut away for the insertion of a carved oak screen in 1913. In the north-west
corner there is a wide splay with evidence of a blocked
doorway which probably gave access to a rood-loft.
Just south of the chancel arch is a rectangular opening
1 ft. high by 8 in. wide, and 3 ft. above the floor, with
splayed reveals on the chancel side and with chamfered
head, jambs, and sill to the nave. The windows have
splayed reveals and the internal arches follow the
external. The altar table is a modern one constructed
of oak, as are the altar rails. The modern roof consists
of curved trusses supported on traceried brackets resting
on moulded stone corbels and matchboarded on the
backs of the rafters.
The nave (71 ft. 6 in. by 26 ft. 2 in.) has an arcade
on the north side of four bays with pointed arches of
two splayed orders supported on pillars with splays
following the arches, with simple moulded capitals and
bases of the mid 14th century. The eastern bay differs
from the remainder, the arch being supported on
inserted foliated capitals on modern short engaged trefoil shafts terminating on corbels, probably part of the
alteration to form the north transept of 1864–5. This
bay is now occupied by an organ and a passage to the
vestry on the site of the 1864–5 north transept, of which
little trace remains. The clearstory windows have flat
heads, with slightly splayed reveals, the lintels chamfered on the lower edge. The aisle windows have square
reveals and project beyond the wall-face, forming a
splayed moulding supported on moulded corbels, the
splay being carried up to mitre with a cornice having
a corresponding splay at wall-plate level. The western
end has a four-centred arch doorway from the north
porch. In the north-west corner there is a splayed projection formed by the circular staircase to the tower.
The tower arch is pointed, with three splayed orders
which continue down the jambs and have no stops.
The south arcade has five bays with arches of the same
detail as the north, but supported on octagonal pillars
with moulded capitals and bases typical of the beginning
of the 15th century. The arch of the eastern bay, which
leads into the modern south transept, is supported on
modern corbels. None of the blocked openings mentioned on the exterior are visible under the wall plaster.
The west bay is used as a baptistry. The font is circular,
of light sandstone, and is dated 1614. The basin has a
moulded rim with a running scallop at the top and
bottom of the frieze, which has four small rosettes at
intervals and the date. Around the tapering stem are
eight small attached shafts resting on a plain circular
drum moulded at the base. It has a modern carved oak
cover. The nave and both aisles are paved with stone
slabs, some of them inscribed.
The base of the tower forms a west porch (12 ft. by
12 ft.). Painted on the north and south walls is a list of
charities. The ceiling is formed by the underside of a
modern pitch pine floor to the ringing chamber, the
beams and joists are stop-chamfered. Between the
ringing chamber and the belfry a modern floor has been
inserted to house the clock works; the clock is dated
1865.
The nave roof is a modern one of the king-post type
with moulded tie-beams, tracery brackets resting on
moulded stone corbels, and matchboarded between the
trusses. Both the aisle roofs are of the same period,
matchboarded between moulded purlins.
The north porch (9 ft. by 9 ft.) originally had an
upper floor, which has been removed, leaving the doorway to the turret stair high up in the wall and now
reached by a flight of wooden steps. The door to the
north aisle has a four-centred arch with a rather deep
moulded splay continuing down the jambs and is without stops. The doorway to the turret stair has a fourcentred arch without mouldings, but is rebated for a
door, now missing. The turret stair has been blocked
at the level of the belfry, and below this point a passage
has been roughly hacked through the thickness of the
tower and turret walls to give access to the ringing
chamber. The belfry is now reached by a ladder from
the ringing chamber. The blocked opening on the west
side is not visible on the inside.
The south transept (14 ft. 6 in. by 13 ft. 4 in.) has
no features, the walls are plastered and the floor is of
stone slabs. It has a roof similar to that of the south
chapel.
The south chapel has one step from the transept and
one to the altar. The walls are plastered and the floor
is of wood block. The open roof is of pitch pine with
curved braces and a circular collar-beam, slightly
moulded.
The pulpit is of carved oak, dated 1911, and is placed
on the north side of the chancel arch. The lectern is
also of carved oak of about the same date and is placed
on the south side of the chancel arch.
In the chancel is a large elm chest bound with plain
iron bands and straps, probably of the early 17th century, and fitted with three drawers on each side, added
in the 18th century, all locked with a single clasp. All
the original locks are missing.
Against the step to the chancel is placed a large boatshaped lead casting, 4 ft. 4 in. long by 1 ft. 3 in. wide,
dug up in the churchyard in 1888. (fn. 3a)
All the seating is modern varnished pitch pine put
in in 1864–5, and the stained glass is all of 19th-century
work. There are a number of mural tablets and
memorials of little artistic merit, and none earlier than
the 18th century.
In the churchwardens' accounts is a faculty from the
Bishop of Lichfield for the erection of a gallery in the
north aisle which was built in 1751, and another
faculty for a gallery in the south aisle erected in 1760
(a late-18th-century print shows a row of dormer
windows in the aisle roof, no doubt to light the gallery).
Both these galleries were removed about 1850. In 1766
an agreement was made for reroofing the church, and
in 1767 £335 4s. was paid in cash and timber for the
new roof. In 1693 an agreement was made with
Charles Hewitt, a goldsmith of Coventry, for a new
clock for the sum of £5 and the old clock. In 1700
repairs were made to the dial in the churchyard, and
there still stands opposite the west door a stone column
on two steps, with the matrix of a sundial on its cap.
The communion plate is of exceptional interest: it
includes a silver-gilt cup of 1568, its cover having a ring
handle, engraved with the bear and ragged staff, the
badge of the Earl of Leicester. There is another large
plain cup, of 1626, given by Elizabeth, Countess of
Monmouth; but the chief feature is the remarkable set
of silver-gilt plate given by Alice, Duchess Dudley.
This, made in 1638, comprises a chalice of medieval
form, a paten, a flagon engraved and embossed with
floral patterns, and a ciborium in the form of a tazza
with cover. (fn. 4)
There are six bells, (fn. 5) five recast by J. Taylor & Co. of
Loughborough in 1875; the other is the sole survivor
of five cast at Coventry by Brian Eldridge in 1656. The
great bell described by Dugdale (fn. 6) as brought from the
Abbey and bearing the name of Prior Thomas Kidderminster [1403–39] was recast in 1734 by either
Abraham Rudhall or Thomas Eayre, and again in
1875.
The registers begin in 1630.
Advowson
Kenilworth was originally part of
Stoneleigh and as the latter church was
from an early date appropriated to
Kenilworth Priory no difficulties would have arisen
when the canons built a church here. It is probable
that for a century or more after the establishment of the
priory the inhabitants of the neighbourhood used the
nave of the monastic church, and that a separate parish
church was not built until the middle of the 13th century. A casual reference to a 'rector' of Kenilworth in
1285 (fn. 7) is rather puzzling; but in 1291 the church is
definitely returned as appropriated to the priory and
worth £5 6s. 8d. (fn. 8) In 1535 the rectory was farmed for
£7 6s. 8d. and the canons were paying £6 13s. 4d.
yearly to the vicar. (fn. 9) After the Dissolution the rectory
was included in the various leases and grants of the
manor, but the advowson of the vicarage was retained
by the Crown and the Lord Chancellor is still the patron.
Charities
A benefaction table in the church of
this parish records that the following
gave sums of money, the interest on
which was to be distributed in bread: Thomas Councell
(£10); Francis Power (£10); Thomas Johnson (£10);
Thomas Cook (£5); Joseph Tyrer (£6); Thomas
Sutton (£6); William Brooks (£5).
Thomas, Earl of Clarendon, by will dated 5 May
1810 gave £100 to the rector or vicar and churchwardens of Kenilworth, the interest to be applied for
the use of the poor of the parish.
George Denton by will dated 10 May 1644 gave a
messuage in Kenilworth in trust, the rents and profits
thereof to be applied towards the relief of the poor. He
desired that the three tenants of the messuage should
each enjoy their several parts and rooms during their
lives at the yearly rent of 6s. 8d. each, they keeping their
several parts in good repair.
Mary Dolphin by will dated 8 June 1834 gave £200,
the interest to be given to aged parishioners at Christmas in warm clothing, coal, money, or meat.
Alice, Duchess Dudley. For particulars of this
charity see under parish of Ashow. The share of the
charity applicable for this parish is two-seventeenths of
the income amounting to £75 6s. 6d. annually to be
applied for the general benefit of the poor of the parish.
Ann Fox. A memorandum in an old churchwardens'
book of this parish, dated 16 February 1724–5, states
that Ann Fox by her will charged certain land at Kenilworth with the annual sum of 20s. towards putting a
parish boy apprentice, according to the discretion of the
minister and churchwardens.
Edward Simpson by will dated 5 May 1848 gave
certain residuary personal estate to his executors to
convert into money and to invest the same and, subject
to certain life interests, to transfer one moiety to the
vicar and churchwardens of Kenilworth to pay the
interest towards the education and partial clothing of
children of poor inhabitants of the parish, being
members of the Established Church, provided that if the
annual interest should exceed £30 the surplus up to
£10 should be annually expended in fuel, clothing, or
money among such poor and aged inhabitants being
members of the Established Church.
By an Order dated 4 May 1906 the Charity Commissioners determined that the sum of £1,200 Consols,
part of the sum of £1,461 14s. 9d. Consols constituting
the endowment of the charity, ought to be applied to
solely educational purposes.
Mary Turner's Charity: 6s. 8d. is received each year
for the benefit of the poor of this parish. For particulars
of the charity see parish of Baginton.
Stephen Waite by will dated 15 September 1727
gave £100 to the minister and churchwardens of Kenilworth to be laid out in the purchase of land, the rent
and profits to be applied in putting out a poor boy to be
apprenticed to some trade. The land, which was purchased in 1729, has since been sold and the proceeds
invested.
The above-mentioned charities are regulated by a
Scheme of the Charity Commissioners dated 19 June
1914 under the title of the United Charities. The
scheme appoints a body of trustees to administer the
charities and directs that the income of the charity of
Alice, Duchess Dudley, shall be applied in accordance
with the provisions of the scheme dated 13 June 1879,
the income of the charities of Ann Fox and Stephen
Waite shall be applied towards apprenticing deserving
and necessitous children, and that the income of the
remaining charities shall be applied for the general
benefit of the poor. The annual income of the charities
amounts to £140 (approximately).
Church Lands. It is recorded in the printed Report
of the former Commissioners for Inquiring Concerning
Charities, dated in 1827, that there are several parcels
of land in the parish, the rents of which are applicable
to the repairs of the church, but the origin of which is
unknown. The charity is regulated by a scheme of the
Charity Commissioners, dated 19 June 1914, appointing the vicar and churchwardens of St. Nicholas to be
trustees and the income of the charity to be applied
towards the repair and insurance against fire of the
fabric of the church. The annual income of the charity
amounts to £87.
Ann Floyd. By an Indenture dated 1 August 1855
yearly rents issuing out of land in Birmingham amounting to £20 19s. 6¾d. were settled upon trust to provide
the following yearly payments, viz.:
|
| Fund for expenses | £1 9 6 |
| Fund for repair of School and School
House at Burton Green so long as in the
said School divine service shall weekly
be performed | £4 0 0 |
| Residue to provide a stipend for the
Minister officiating there or otherwise
for the spiritual benefit of the inhabitants of Burton Green. | |
Alfred William Hordern by will proved on 15 September 1938 gave £100 to the vicar and churchwardens of
St. Nicholas, the interest, amounting to £3, to be applied
for the upkeep of the churchyard.
William Daniel Shard by will dated 27 January 1934
gave £100 to the Parochial Church Council of St.
Nicholas Church, Kenilworth, the interest to be applied
for the upkeep of the churchyard. The annual income
amounts to £3 8s. 8d.
Arthur William Street by will dated 29 June 1934
made a similar bequest of £200. The annual income
amounts to £6 17s. 4d.
Elizabeth Hannah Street by will dated 23 June 1937
gave £100 to the Parochial Church Council, the income
(£3) to be applied for the general purposes of the
church.
Emily Henrietta Wilson by will dated 4 November
1924 gave £100 to the vicar and churchwardens of St.
Nicholas, the income to be applied for the upkeep of
the churchyard and the fabric of the parish church.
She gave a further sum of £1,000 to them, the income
to be applied in augmentation of the stipend of the
vicar.
Harry Quick by will dated 23 January 1924 gave
£100 to the vicar and churchwardens, the income to be
paid in augmentation of the Assistant Clergy Fund of
the parish. The annual income amounts to £3 6s. 4d.
Ethie Gilbert Dennison by a codicil to her will dated
29 May 1914 devised a cottage at Kenilworth upon
trust to be let, rent free or at as low a rent as possible,
to poor ladies or women. She also bequeathed £200,
the interest to be applied towards the maintenance
of the cottage. Trustees of the charity were appointed
by an Order of the Charity Commissioners dated
13 January 1942.
William Edwards by will dated 29 January 1722
devised certain property in the county of Warwick for
the establishment, among other purposes, of a fund for
the distribution of clothing and Bibles to the poor of
Kenilworth and Hatton. The charity was formerly
regulated by a scheme of the High Court of Chancery
dated 28 July 1818 under the title of The Coat and
Gown Charity of William Edwards, but is now regulated by a scheme of the Charity Commissioners dated
15 June 1909. This appoints a body of local trustees
to administer the share of the charity applicable for this
parish (£60) and directs the trustees to pay yearly £6
to the vicar and churchwardens for the purchase of
Bibles, Prayer Books, or Testaments for poor persons
resident in the parish, and the balance of the income to
be applied for eleemosynary purposes.
Harriett Anne Amherst by will dated 10 November
1883 gave £3,000 to the Roman Catholic Bishop or
other person for the time being exercising episcopal
jurisdiction over the Roman Catholics at Kenilworth,
the interest to be applied for the benefit of the Roman
Catholic Mission of St. Austin's at Fieldgate. The
annual income of the charity amounts to £157.
Abraham Arlidge's Charity is regulated by a scheme
made under the Endowed Schools Acts on 19 July
1883, as altered by schemes of the Charity Commissioners dated 25 November 1884, 4 August 1891,
and 1 February 1901. The part of the endowment of
the charity applicable for purposes not educational consists of £8 yearly payable to the Minister or Pastor for
the time being of the Abbey Hill Congregational Chapel,
and of a yearly sum of not more than £100 for the
benefit of poor members of the congregation.
Kenilworth Convalescent Home. By an indenture
dated 20 March 1886 Jane Woodcock conveyed to
trustees a messuage in High Street then used, and to
continue to be used, as a Convalescent Home. By a
further indenture dated 3 June 1886 in consideration
of £200 (which had been raised by subscription) two
messuages also in High Street were conveyed to the
said trustees.
Harriett Faulconer Hamilton by will dated 13 March
1894 gave £150 to be invested, the income to be applied
by the vicar and churchwardens of the district church
of St. John the Evangelist in Kenilworth towards the
repair and maintenance of the memorial window of her
mother, and the window to be erected in memory of
herself. Any surplus income to be applied towards the
maintenance of the fabric of the church. The annual
income of the charity amounts to £4 8s. 4d.
The Hon. and Rev. Charles Samuel Twisleton by
will dated 4 February 1888 bequeathed £1,000 Consols, the interest to be paid to the vicar for the time
being of St. John's, Kenilworth.