CAMPTON CUM SHEFFORD and CHICKSANDS
Camelton or Campton (xi cent. to xx cent.),
Cambleton (xiv cent.), Shyfforth (xvi cent.).
The parish of Campton cum Shefford contains the
village of Campton and the market town of Shefford,
the outlying parts of which merge into the parishes of
Meppershall, Clifton, and Southill. The parish is
triangular in shape, the apex being at the north-east,
and containing the town of Shefford; two tributaries
of the River Ivel form the northern and eastern
boundaries respectively, that in the east separating
the parish from Meppershall and passing close by the
village of Campton. The northern branch of the river
runs through the grounds of Chicksands Priory, where
it widens out into a small lake, passing through two
plantations known as the Upper and Lower Alders.
The general fall of the ground is from west to east,
the highest point being above the 200 ft. line near
Highlands Farm on the west boundary, and the
lowest about one hundred and thirty feet in the
town of Shefford, which is built round the junction
of the Ampthill road with that from Bedford to
Hitchin.
The former becomes the High Street, and runs in
an easterly direction, passing under the Bedford and
Hitchin branch of the Midland Railway, and is of an
ample width, having on the south side the parish
church and a large Roman Catholic orphanage,
St. Francis's Home, established in 1869. Attached
to it is a church of St. Francis, built in 1884. The
Bedford road running south and south-east becomes
North Bridge Street, taking its name from the bridge
over the stream at the north end of the town, and
continues beyond its junction with the High Street
to the South Bridge over the second stream. The
buildings of the town are in no way remarkable, but
there are a number of good red-brick fronts, and
some interesting sixteenth-century timber work in
North Bridge Street. The railway station is to the
north of the High Street, with the old school close
by, and the houses run westward from this point as
far as the junction with the road to Campton village.
Further to the west, opposite the entrance gates of
Chicksands Priory, a second road runs due south to
Campton, joining the first in the middle of the village, the church standing on the north side, with the
Grange opposite to it. From this point roads run
south-west to Upper Gravenhurst, and south to
Meppershall, the latter crossing the stream, on which,
at the south end of the village, is Campton Mill.
To the north-west of the church is the rectory, an
old house with an eighteenth-century red-brick front.
Opposite to it, and standing back from the road is
Campton House, now after a period of neglect being
put into a state of repair. It is an interesting
gabled timber and plaster house of c. 1590, of two
stories, with a central hall and wings at either end.
The porch and bay of the hall have developed into
small two-story projections with gabled roofs, and
the entrance door is now in the middle of the hall,
apparently an eighteenth-century insertion. The hall
stands north and south, and at its lower or south end
the screens remain, a beautiful piece of contemporary
woodwork with open strap-work cresting. In the west
wall is a large four-centred stone fireplace with panelling over it, though this latter is for the most part old
work brought from a farm-house in the neighbourhood. The stairs go up from the north-west of the
hall, and are of eighteenth-century date, but the west
room on the ground floor in the north wing has some
very good original panelling with a vine trail frieze
and a fine chimney-piece, and stone arched fireplace.
The panelling on the north side of the room is of
plainer type and partly of deal. A glazed shotriddled panel on the east side commemorates the
escape in 1645 of Sir Charles Ventris, then owner of
the house, according to an inscription painted below
the panel. He was '(in the night time) by Oliver's
party, shot at, as he was walking in this room, but
happily missed him.' The front of the house is
rough-cast in panels with vandyked borders, apparently
eighteenth-century work, but the back has been refaced
with brick. In Fisher's view of the front (Collections
for Beds. pl. xix), the date an° 1591 is shown on the
rainwater heads.
According to the Ordnance Survey Campton has an
area of 969 acres, while 144½ acres comprise the township of Shefford. The Agricultural Returns for 1905
show that rather more than half the parish consists of
arable land and rather less of grass land and woods respectively. The soil is strong clay, but the subsoil is lower
greensand and gault; the chief crops are wheat, barley,
beans, peas, and garden produce of all kinds, for which
Shefford is noted. The population of Campton in
1901 was 437 and that of Shefford 874.
Chicksands Priory possessed in Clifton a meadow
called Midsummer Mead, which was given in 1544
to Thomas Harding, (fn. 1) and in 1553 to John earl of
Bedford; (fn. 2) the priory also possessed other lands in
Clifton; some in Blanchmore Furlong, which were
granted to Thomas Harding in 1544, (fn. 3) and were the
property of the queen in 1649, who also owned
Blomeale Mead. (fn. 4) Some lands in Burneham Mead
were granted to John Gostwick in 1530, (fn. 5) and other
lands in the same meadow, which used to belong to
Chicksands Priory, were given in 1553 to John earl
of Bedford; (fn. 6) in 1618 George Franklin died seised
of lands in Burneham Mead. (fn. 7) Richard earl of Kent
possessed lands in Southwater Mead, which were
granted in 1590 to Richard Wood, (fn. 8) and were in the
possession of Henrietta Maria in 1649. (fn. 9) Chicksands
Priory also owned a close, called Nones Stocking,
which was granted in 1553 to John Green and Ralph
Hall. (fn. 10)
Two saucer brooches have been found at Shefford
of West Saxon workmanship, in an ancient cemetery,
but vases and other remains show that the cemetery
was in use in the Romano-British period. (fn. 11)
Robert Bloomfield, the shoemaker poet, author of
'The Farmer's Boy,' lived for a few years at Shefford,
and died there on 19 August, 1823, in poverty
stricken circumstances, leaving a widow and four
children. He was buried at Campton.
Manors
At the time of the Domesday Survey
the overlordship of CAMPTON belonged
to Walter Giffard, (fn. 12) and, as in the case
of Millo (fn. 13) (q.v.), passed to Walter Marshal earl of
Pembroke, and in the thirteenth century was granted
to Henry son of Gerold, hitherto his undertenant,
who continued to hold it of the crown in chief. (fn. 14)
Ralph de Langetot held the manor as undertenant
at Domesday, but there is no evidence of its existence
between 1086 and 1228, at which latter date it was
in the possession of Henry son of Gerold, who gave
it to Warine son of Gerold. (fn. 15) The manor then passed
to the latter's descendant Warine de Lisle (Insula) of
Rougemont, (fn. 16) who died seised of it in 1296. (fn. 17) As
his son Robert was then only six years old, Edward I
in 1301 granted the custody of two parts of the manor,
then extended at £12 13s. 6d., to Robert de Ispannia,
yeoman of Edward Prince of Wales. (fn. 18) The other third
was held by Alice widow of Warine, as part of her dower,
and the whole manor was held for a knight's fee. (fn. 19) Robert came of age and was holding the manor in 1316, (fn. 20)
but alienated it in 1334 to his son John and his wife
Maud, without licence from the king, for which
omission John and Maud had to obtain pardon. (fn. 21)
Robert died in 1342–3, having become a monk shortly
before his death. (fn. 22) John, who was one of the first
founders of the order of the Garter, was summoned to
Parliament from 1350 to 1354, and died in 1356, the
manor then descending to his son Robert, (fn. 23) who sat in
Parliament in 1357 and 1360. Robert died in 1399,
having in 1368 given eighty-six knights' fees to the
king. (fn. 24) It is not known whether he left a son,
although the visitation of Somersetshire for 1623
states that Sir William de Lisle was the son of this
Robert.

De Lisle of Rougemont. Gules a lcopard argent with a golden crown.

Sir John De Lisle, K.G., Lord Lisle of Rougemont. Or a fesse between two cheverons sable.
This Sir William, who was holding the manor of
Campton in 1392, (fn. 25) was more probably the brother
of Robert, who apparently alienated the manor to him
before his death, (fn. 26) and he seems to have died without
issue, when the manor escheated to the crown, and was
probably granted to Reginald de Grey, who was holding in 1428, (fn. 27) and it descended to his great-grandson
George earl of Kent, who was lord of the manor in
1492. (fn. 28) In 1499 the latter settled the manor on his
son Richard Lord Grey and his wife Elizabeth, (fn. 29) who
were holding in 1504. (fn. 30) Between that date and
1508 the manor was alienated to Giles Lord Daubeny, who died seised of it in the latter year, (fn. 31) and
his son and heir Henry probably conveyed the manor
to Sir William Compton, who died seised of it in
1528, (fn. 32) when it passed to the king as the result
of a settlement made previously by Sir William
Compton in order to ensure the observance of his
will. (fn. 33)
Two years later it was leased to John Gostwick,
auditor of the king, and Edward Copley, for twentyone years at an annual rent of £4. (fn. 34)
In 1543 Campton was again in the king's hands, (fn. 35) and
was annexed to the honor of Ampthill. Thomas Viscount Fenton, steward of the manor, surrendered his
office in 1613, (fn. 36) and Edward Lord Bruce was appointed
in his stead. (fn. 37) The office continued in the family of
the earls of Elgin and Aylesbury, Robert Bruce holding in 1673; (fn. 38) it was sold by them to the duke of
Bedford in 1738, (fn. 39) and the lease of the stewardship
was renewed in 1771 and 1773, (fn. 40) the then duke of
Bedford still holding in 1839. The manorial rights
were afterwards resumed by the
crown, (fn. 41) who holds them at the
present day.
There was another manor in
CAMPTON belonging to the
priory of Chicksands which
probably originated in two
hides all but a quarter of a
virgate of land, held by Trustin
of the king at Domesday. (fn. 42)

Beauchamp. Quarterly or and gules a bend sable.
This land apparently came to
the Beauchamps, and, c. 1150,
Payn de Beauchamp and Rose
his wife confirmed to the priory
3 virgates of land which had been bestowed on it by
Adela wife of Walter de Mareis. (fn. 43) This grant was
also afterwards confirmed by William son of Simon de
Beauchamp. (fn. 44) By 1346 the land was held of the king
in chief as a knight's fee. (fn. 45) The overlordship remained vested in the crown until after the Dissolution, the last mention occurring in 1560. (fn. 46)
The priory's possessions in Campton increased considerably in value, for in 1291 its manor was worth
£18 14s. 7d., (fn. 47) and during the fourteenth century the
estate was augmented by various donations. (fn. 48) In
1445 the priory received in rents from the bailiff of
Campton £6 13s. 4d. at Easter and £13 6s. 8d. at
Michaelmas, (fn. 49) and in 1535 the value of the property
in Shefford was £12 10s. 6d., and of that in Campton £8 6s. 8d. (fn. 50)
After the Dissolution the value of the possessions in
Campton and Shefford was £15 16s. 2d. (fn. 51) The manor
was taken into the king's hand at the Dissolution and
was granted, together with the manor house, to Sir
Thomas Palmer by Edward VI in 1548. (fn. 52) Sir
Thomas Palmer was convicted of treason and executed
in 1553, (fn. 53) his possessions being
forfeited to the crown, and
Elizabeth in 1560 granted the
site of the manor to Joan the
widow of John Ventris and her
heirs. (fn. 54) The manor remained
in the possession of the Ventris
family for over two hundred
years. Sir Francis Ventris
Joan's grandson, who succeeded her, died seised of the
manor in 1627, having made
a settlement on his second son
Charles, on the occasion of
the latter's marriage with Mary
daughter of Sir Lewis Pemberton of Rushden. (fn. 55)
Francis the eldest son held the manor for the term of
his life, and on his death in 1631, Charles entered
into possession. (fn. 56) Charles fought for the king in
the Civil Wars, and was knighted by him in 1645.
Charles died before 1651, when his estates were
sequestered. (fn. 57)

Ventris. Azure a dolphin swimming between two waved bends argent.
The manor afterwards passed to his son John,
who died in 1706. His son Charles died in 1719,
leaving a son John who died a few months later.
Francis brother of John inherited the manor, but on
his dying without issue in 1743 it passed to his sister
Henrietta, who had married John Field of Cranfield. (fn. 58)
From John and Henrietta descended Sir Charles
Ventris Field, (fn. 59) who sold the manor between 1778 and
1803 to Sir George Osborn, bart. (fn. 60) The latter, or
his descendants, sold their rights to Mr. John Lewis
ffitche, who was lord of the manor in 1877. Mr.
ffitche dying in 1902, these rights are now vested in
his trustees.
The earls of Norfolk had an estate in Campton
held by the services of half a knight's fee in 1307,
when Roger le Bygod died seised of it. (fn. 61) In 1433 it
was held from the priory of Chicksands, (fn. 62) and in
1461 was held by Eleanor duchess of Norfolk, as
her dower, after the death of John duke of Norfolk,
by the services of a quarter of a knight's fee, (fn. 63) but after
this date no further trace of the property can be found.
The hamlet of SHEFFORD possessed a market
from a very early date; the first mention of it
occurred in 1225 (fn. 64) when the king, hearing that the
market at Shefford was harming that at Bedford,
commanded the sheriff to make inquiries and to
suppress it if he found the allegations to be true;
evidently the rumour was unfounded, for Henry son
of Gerold in 1229 was granted a market on Friday
at his manor of Campton 'in the place called
Shefford.' (fn. 65) It was on the strength of this charter
that Warine de Lisle claimed a market in the reign
of Edward I; (fn. 66) at the same time he justified his
claim to free warren by a charter granted to Warine
son of Gerold by Henry III, in 1253, and stated
that a view of frankpledge belonged to the manor.
The market continued attached to the manor, and in
1312 Robert de Lisle was granted a yearly fair to be
held at the Feast of St. Michael for seven days. (fn. 67)
Later on in the reign of Edward III, Robert was
called upon to prove his title to the market, fair, free
warren and view of frankpledge. (fn. 68) In 1614 the tolls
were granted to Laurence Sampson, (fn. 69) and Henrietta
Maria, in 1625, bestowed the tolls and profits of the
weekly market and yearly fair on James Sampson of
Henlow, probably a relative of Laurence, for twentyone years at an annual rent of £12. (fn. 70) It was stated
in 1649 that the tolls were worth £16. (fn. 71) In 1636
Humphrey Sampson, son of James, brought an action
against Thomas Stephens, Oliver Thody and others,
who persisted in destroying the stalls which he had
erected. (fn. 72) The tolls of the market and fairs were
granted to Timothy Wilson and Elizabeth his wife,
who held them in 1681, (fn. 73) and in 1713 the market and three annual fairs were granted to Robert
Bruce, earl of Elgin. (fn. 74) The market in the eighteenth
century became comparatively unimportant, (fn. 75) but in
the beginning of the nineteenth century it was revived,
and is still held on Friday. (fn. 76)
The royal manor of Campton-cum-Shefford had a
court-leet and court-baron; the court-leet was granted
to Laurence Sampson in 1614. (fn. 77) In a Parliamentary
Survey of 1649 it is stated that the court-baron was
usually kept at Shefford at the will of the lord and
that the court-leet was held at the usual times. The
freeholders had to pay as a relief, upon descent and
alienation, a year's quit-rent and only three heriots
were due from one tenant, who held by lease. They
were due on the death of the persons mentioned in the
lease, and consisted of the best beast or chattel upon
the land. (fn. 78)
In 1839 the court-leet was held annually, but in
1851 it was stated to be held once in two years.
There was a mill in Campton at the time of the
Domesday Survey on the land belonging to Walter
Giffard, worth 3s. 3d. (fn. 79) It continued to belong to
the manor, and Warine de Lisle in 1296 died seised
of a water-mill, (fn. 80) but the mill probably fell into disuse
as there is no later mention of it.
Churches
The church of ALL SAINTS,
CAMPTON, has a chancel 25 ft. by
16 ft. 7 in., with a north chapel and
south organ chamber, nave 50 ft. by 18 ft. 4 in., with
north aisle 12 ft. wide, south aisle 10 ft. 2 in. wide,
and south porch, and south-west tower occupying the
western bay of the south aisle.
Its development from the thirteenth century is
clear, but no evidence of earlier work remains. The
south arcade is of late thirteenth-century date, and
the nave at this time was of its present dimensions,
but had no north aisle. About 1320 the chancel
was enlarged on the south side, its new south wall
continuing the line of the south arcade of the nave,
but the old north wall was retained, thus throwing
the chancel out of centre with the nave. At the
same time the south aisle was remodelled, though
most of the work of this date has since been renewed.
The tower dates from the fifteenth century, the last
bay of the south arcade having been destroyed at its
building, an examination of the present west respond
of the arcade showing that it is part of a complete
pier now half absorbed in the north-east pier of the
tower.
The north aisle and chapel (the Osborn chapel)
date from 1649, and of late years (1898) the church
has been extensively repaired, the tower being rebuilt
with the old material and the north aisle provided
with an entirely new set of windows. In the rest
of the church the old tracery has been replaced by
modern copies, except in the case of the east window
of the Osborn chapel. The organ chamber dates
from this repair. The chancel has an east window
of four lights of modern tracery, and has on either
side a cinquefoiled fourteenth-century recess for an
image. The south window, likewise of fourteenthcentury style, is of two trefoiled lights with a segmental head. At the south-east angle is a fourteenthcentury piscina. The north wall has been almost
entirely removed, but at its west end is the jamb of
a transomed window of which the rest has been cut
away, the opening being now filled by an oak screen
with two tiers of balusters, the upper carrying semicircular arches, springing from Ionic capitals and
having moulded bases which rest on square dies ornamented with sunk carving. The whole is a very
attractive piece of mid-seventeenth-century design.
The chancel arch is of two chamfered orders dying
out at the springing, and over it is a small arched
opening looking into the roof of the chancel.
In the Osborn chapel, now used as a vestry, are
several large monuments of the Osborn family. It
is lighted by a large east window of four uncusped
lights with rounded heads and a transom at half
height; below the southern light is a square-headed
doorway.
The north arcade of the nave is of four bays of
curious spiritless Gothic, but interesting from its date
(1649). The pillars are octagonal with moulded
capitals and bases, low-pitched four-centred arches
and plain responds with no shafts or capitals. No
features contemporary with this arcade are retained
in the aisle walls, modern Gothic windows having
been substituted for the wood-framed seventeenthcentury lights.
The south arcade, now of three bays but formerly
of four, has pillars of quatrefoiled plan with a plain
respond at the east, the alternate pillars having rolls
in the angles. The moulded capitals follow the plan
of the piers, and the arches are of two moulded
orders.
The windows of the south aisle have flowing
tracery copied from their early fourteenth-century
predecessors, the east window being of three lights,
and the others of two. At the east end of the aisle
is a fourteenth-century piscina and on the sill of the
east window a collection of carved details of thirteenth
and fourteenth-century date, some of which, together
with other like details in the walls of the north aisle,
may have come from Chicksands Priory.
The west tower is of three stages and externally
entirely modern. It opens to the south aisle by an
arch of two chamfered orders, with half-round responds and moulded capitals, and on the north it
opens to the nave by a plain chamfered arch, whose
centre is to the north of the axis of the tower.
The south porch is entirely modern, replacing one
of half timber, and has a holy-water stone to the east
of the doorway ornamented with roughly-executed
carvings which suggest rather the knife of the casual
loiterer than any intentional scheme of decoration.
The roofs are modern throughout and covered
with red tiles, but the chancel screen is a pretty
piece of fifteenth-century work with moulded posts
and rails and pierced tracery in the heads of the
upper lights and of the solid lower panels. The
pulpit is square and apparently made up of woodwork of much the same age as the screen, which
probably formed part of the parclose round one of
the nave altars. The names of some of the early
eighteenth-century bell-ringers are scratched on the
stones of the tower, the dates ranging between 1702
and 1707. The font near the north door is of white
marble and entirely modern.
At the south-east angle of the nave the brass of
Richard Carlyll, 1489, and Joan his wife, is fixed on
a stone slab let into the wall.
There are four bells, the treble by Richard Chandler,
1700, the second and third by William Culverden of
London, c. 1520, inscribed 'Sancte Paule ora pro
nobis,' and 'Sancte Andree ora pro nobis,' and the
tenor, by Hugh Watts of Leicester, inscribed 'Praise
the Lord, 1603.'
The plate given by Sir John Osborn in 1793
comprises a chalice, paten, a bread-holder and flagon,
all of Sheffield plate.
The first book of the registers begins in 1568 and
the second in 1659.
The church of ST. MICHAEL, SHEFFORD,
consists of a nave 53 ft. long by 18½ ft. wide, a south
aisle 63 ft. by 21 ft. divided from the nave by a line
of iron pillars, and a west tower 17 ft. wide by 7 ft.
2 in. deep.
With the exception of the west tower the church
has been entirely rebuilt in modern times.
The east windows of nave and aisle are of three
lights in thirteenth-century style; the north wall of
the nave has four similar windows of two lights and
the south wall of the aisle five similar windows and a
three-light west window. The tower is of three
stages, with a plastered brick parapet, of no great age,
and belfry windows of two cinquefoiled lights with a
quatrefoil over, which date, with the rest of the
tower, from the first half of the fifteenth century.
The west window is of three lights with modern
tracery, but its jambs are old and the rear arch has
engaged shafts with moulded semi-octagonal capitals
and bases. The east arch of the tower is four-centred,
of two moulded orders, its section showing a hollow
between a double ogee, and an ogee and a hollow
chamfer springing from semi-octagonal moulded
capitals. The jambs, after a fashion not uncommon
in the district, have small shafts between two chamfers
which terminate below the capitals without any corresponding member in the arch. The bases are
hidden by woodwork or cut away.
There is a modern north door to the tower, and a
newel stair in the south-west angle. The material
is small coursed rubble, and the whole tower has
been plastered externally.
The roofs of the church are modern and slated, the
line of a previous roof being visible on the tower wall
just above the present one.
There is one bell dated 1808.
The plate consists of a modern cup, paten and
flagon.
The registers previous to 1812 are included in
those of Campton, the church having been until
recently a chapel of ease to that living.
Advowson
The church of Campton was given
to Beaulieu Priory in Bedfordshire, a
cell to the abbey of St. Albans. (fn. 81)
Neither the date of the gift nor the name of the
benefactor is on record, but it is probable that Robert
D'Albini, who founded the priory in 1150, and
endowed it with 20 acres of land in his demesne of
Campton, also bestowed upon it the advowson. (fn. 82)
Beaulieu Priory was certainly presenting to the church
before 1220, (fn. 83) and in 1245 Richard, a deacon of
Campton, was presented by the prior. (fn. 84) The value
of the church in 1291 (fn. 85) was £4 6s. 8d., and the pension of the prior amounted to £2, but by 1341 the
value had diminished to £3 13s. 4d., (fn. 86) and this reduction was accounted for by the fact that 40 acres of
arable land and 30 acres of meadow in the gift of the
church, included in the assessment of 1291, were
exempt in this later one.
Beaulieu Priory was annexed to the abbey of
St. Albans in 1428, (fn. 87) and the right of presentation
was then transferred to the abbey, together with the
pension of £2. The church remained in the gift of
the abbey until the Dissolution, when it was taken
into the hands of the king; it was worth £11 9s. 6d.
in 1535, (fn. 88) and was granted with the rectory to Thomas
Lord Seymour in 1547. (fn. 89) After his execution in
1548–9, Richard Snowe received a grant of it, and
died seised of the advowson in 1553, (fn. 90) when it passed
to his son Daniel, who was patron in 1566. (fn. 91) The
latter probably alienated it to Daniel Goldsmith, who
had the right of presentation in 1605, (fn. 92) and was
rector in 1644, (fn. 93) while George Noble was patron for
that turn. In 1685, Sir John Osborn, bart., owned
the advowson, (fn. 94) and since that date it has remained
in his family, being vested at the present day in
Sir Algernon Kerr Butler Osborn, bart. (fn. 95)
The church at Shefford was a chapel of ease to
Campton. In 1567 it was granted to Hugh Councell,
Robert Pisen, and their heirs, (fn. 96) but from 1685 the
presentation belonged to the Osborn family. In
1903, however, Shefford was created an ecclesiastical
parish, and the vicarage is in the gift of the archdeacon
of Bedford and the rectors of Campton and Clifton. (fn. 97)
There is a Roman Catholic Chapel in Shefford,
erected in 1884 at the cost of Mrs. Lyne-Stephens
of Thetford, attached to an orphanage called St.
Francis's Home, and a seminary of St. Thomas
Aquinas. There are also a Union chapel built in
1825, a Wesleyan chapel built in 1835, and
Salvation Army barracks.
Charities
Poor's Land.—The parish is in
possession of a small piece of land
in Clifton Fields, conveyed in 1730
by John Kelyng unto Sir Daniel Osborn and others
on trust to apply the rents and profits towards the
relief of poor and indigent persons in satisfaction of a
bequest of 2s. a year to the poor left by the will of
his father Antelminelly Kelyng. The land is let at
£3 a year, which under the title of the Gunpowder
Charity, is applied on 5 November with the other
charities for the benefit of the poor.
The Poor's Stock consists of £103 5s. consols (with
the official trustees), representing the benefactions of
Dr. Thomas Osborn and Daniel Goldsmith, the
trusts of which were by a deed dated 23 June, 1812,
declared to be for distribution of the income among
the poor inhabitants.
Thomas Kentish's Charity, Will, 1712.—The sum
of 10s. a year, formerly paid out of an estate known
as the Bury Farm in this parish (see St. Albans),
is now represented by £20 consols with the official
trustees. In 1904 the rent of £3 was distributed
in shares of 5s. each to twelve poor widows, and the
dividends on the stock, amounting to £31 1s. 4d., were
applied in gifts of money among seventeen aged people.
Township of Shefford: The Feoffment Estate—or
the Charity of Robert Lucas.—This estate was vested
in and under the direction of feoffees chosen from the
freeholders and principal inhabitants of Shefford, and
was originally settled by Robert Lucas, gent., in the
second year of Queen Elizabeth in trust 'for the yearly
repairing, maintaining, and keeping the bridges, causeways, and highways within the town of Shefford in
good and sufficient repair; the overplus to be employed
and given to the poor people dwelling and inhabiting
within the town of Shefford.'
The property has been considerably improved by
exchanges and alterations, and now consists of 12 acres
in Meppershall, 2 a. 2 r. 11 p. in Shefford, 3 a. 3 r. 35 p.
in Clifton, dwelling-houses and cottages at Shefford,
two public-houses, and 9 a. 1 r. 12 p. grass land and
cottage at Arlesey. The official trustees hold a sum
of £317 16s. 3d. India three per cents. arising from
sale of a house in North Bridge Street. The income
from all sources averages about £210 a year. The
administration of the trust is regulated by a scheme
of the Charity Commissioners, dated 28 June 1904,
under the provisions of which—after reserving an
annual sum of £15 for the general benefit of the poor
of the town of Shefford, and £5 a year for an exhibition for higher education to be awarded to children
resident in the said town of Shefford qualified as
therein mentioned—the net income is applicable in
the repairs of bridges and highways in the ancient
parish of Shefford, and in parts of other contiguous
parishes within a radius of a mile from the parish
church; also in the supply of water and light and
other works of public utility.
In 1855 William Rushton Gresham by will left
£1,000 to be invested and income applied for benefit of poor widows. The legacy was invested in
£1,052 15s. 3d. consols (with the official trustees),
and the dividends amounting to £25 16s. 4d. are
administered under the provisions of a scheme of the
High Court of Chancery of 15 February, 1859, as
varied by a scheme of the Charity Commissioners of
20 November, 1906.
In 1888 James Mead by will left £50 to be invested and income applied for the benefit of widows
and orphans of the chapel members of Union chapel.
The legacy is represented by £48 3s. 7d. India three
per cents. with the official trustees, and the dividends
of £1 8s. 8d. are duly applied.
CHICKSANDS.—Chichesane (?), Cudessane (xi
cent.); Chikesond (xiii cent.); Chickessaund (xiv.
cent.). Chicksands, formerly extra-parochial, is now
a parish of about 1,439 acres, which is ecclesiastically
annexed to the parish of Campton cum Shefford.
The soil is sand and the subsoil gravel, and there are
two old sand-pits and an old gravel-pit in the parish,
besides two disused clay-pits. The chief crops are
wheat, barley, and turnips. The ground rises in the
middle of the parish, the highest point being 281 ft.
on the western boundary; Chicksands Priory is on
the low ground close to the stream near the Campton
parish boundary, and there is a second stream in the
north of the parish, joining the first near Shefford.
There are 695 acres of arable land, and 458½ of permanent grass. (fn. 98) The boundary line between the two
parishes runs through the grounds of Chicksands Priory,
following the general direction of the stream to the
south of the buildings. On this stream, south-east
of the house, used formerly to stand a mill at a point
where there is now an artificial cascade. The population in 1901 consisted of sixty-two, and is composed
mainly of employees on the estate of Sir Algernon
Kerr Butler Osborn, bart.
Manors
At the time of the Great Survey
(1086) there were two manors in
CHICKSANDS, one of which was held
by three sokemen of Azelina wife of Ralph Taillebois,
who claimed it as part of her dower. (fn. 99) Probably as
in the case of Henlow Warden (q.v.) Hugh de Beauchamp who held 2 hides in Chicksands, (fn. 100) made a
counterclaim, for the overlordship passed to the
Beauchamps and the two estates coalesced to form
one manor. This manor is probably the one comprised in the grant of land to the priory of Chicksands by Payn de Beauchamp and Rose his wife
towards the end of the twelfth century, (fn. 101) a grant
which was confirmed by Simon Beauchamp and again
by William his son. (fn. 102)
In 1285 the priory was granted free warren in its
demesne land of Chicksands. (fn. 103) In the reign of
Edward III the prior also claimed view of frankpledge over his tenants in Chicksands. This manor,
together with that of Campton, was assessed in 1291
at £18 14s. 7d., (fn. 104) and in 1317 the second manor,
later referred to, was given to the priory by John
Blundel. (fn. 105) After this date the manors appear to
have coalesced, and their descent becomes identical.
In 1346 and 1428 the prior held half a knight's fee. (fn. 106)
At the Dissolution in 1539 the manor was taken into
the king's hand, and in 1540 the house and site and the
demesne lands, worth altogether £38 3s. 4d., were leased
to Thomas Wyndham for twenty-one years. (fn. 107) In the
same year William Ardren and Richard Cooke were
granted free warren and certain closes within the manor,
which they had rented from the priory since 1538. (fn. 108)
Towards the end of the same year, Henry VIII
granted to Richard Snowe and Elizabeth his wife the
manor of Chicksands, and also the reversions of the leases
held by Wyndham, Ardren, and Cooke for the sum of
£810 11s. 8d. (fn. 109) In all documents dealing with this
property, the site of the dissolved priory and the
manor of Chicksands are mentioned separately,
although their history has been identical. Richard
Snowe died in 1553, (fn. 110) and was succeeded by his son
Daniel, who apparently conveyed the manor to Peter
Osborn, for in 1578, Edward Snowe, his brother and
heir, brought a suit against Osborn, claiming the
estate as next of kin, and demanding the production
of the will which Daniel left in the keeping of the
defendant before he went to Jerusalem. (fn. 111) The
manor was conveyed by fine in 1587 to Peter Osborn
and John his son by Edward Snowe and Emma his
wife; (fn. 112) and in 1592, on the death of Peter, it passed
to his son John, (fn. 113) who was knighted in 1618, and
who died in 1628. (fn. 114) The manor was then inherited by
Sir Peter Osborn, the son of Sir John. (fn. 115) The estate
suffered during the Civil Wars, for Sir Peter and his
second son Henry assisted the king against Parliament,
and were obliged to compound for delinquency, the
amount of the fine being £2,266 5s. 4d. (fn. 116) Henry
in 1657 petitioned the Protector against the levying
of the decimation tax on his estate at Chicksands, and
was exempted on the ground that he had been
obedient and peaceful. (fn. 117) Sir Peter Osborn died in
1653, and was succeeded by his son John, who was
created a baronet in 1662. On the latter's death in
1699, the manor passed to his
son John, who held it till 1720.
His son John having died in
1719, it passed to his grandson,
Danvers, who died in 1753,
and left the manor to George,
his son and heir. A recovery
was suffered in 1794 for the
purpose of barring all estates
male and remainders, (fn. 118) and
the manor has continued in
the possession of the Osborns
up to the present day, the
present lord of the manor
being Sir Algernon Kerr Butler Osborn, bart., a
great-great-grandson of Sir George Osborn mentioned
above. (fn. 119)

Plan Of Chicksands Priory

Osborn Of Chicksands, baronet. Argent a bend between two lions sable.
The buildings of Chicksands Priory stand on gently
sloping ground, a tributary of the Ivel flowing in an
easterly direction through the park, a little to the
south of the monastic site. To the north the ground
rises in open grass land, with woods on the higher
point, and from this direction the water supply of
the priory must have been drawn. The park is of
considerable extent, and is well timbered, the low
ground by the stream being a favourite haunt of wildfowl at all times of the year, and in the season woodcock are fairly plentiful in a wood through which the
stream runs.
Houses of the Gilbertine order, to which the
priory of Chicksands belonged, are few in number, and
their remains very scanty. Chicksands is therefore of
exceptional interest, as it preserves in a most unusual
state of completeness all four sides of one of the
cloisters of such a house. Of the church only part of
the south wall remains, and the second cloister, which
probably stood to the north of the church, is entirely
destroyed. Externally the building is of little interest, both Ware, in 1750, and James Wyatt at
the end of the century, having done their best to
reduce it to a characterless regularity, and having
destroyed nearly every ancient feature. A comparison of Buck's drawing of 1730 with the present
appearance throws much light on the methods employed; the projecting end of the west range was
cut away, the gables destroyed, and mechanical copies
of two types of the mediaeval windows were
monotonously reproduced at regular intervals in
both stories. The old roof, fortunately, was not
much tampered with, and its scale and pitch give a
dignity to the building which the eighteenth-century
detail cannot entirely destroy.
The front entrance is now in the middle of the
eastern range, and opens to a hall which takes up the
whole of the ground floor, the main staircase
being opposite to the entrance. To the right are
the kitchens and offices, in a comparatively modern
wing, built on the site of the church, and to the
left is a passage to the dining-room and library
beyond, both in the southern wing. The ground
floor of the western wing is partly a chapel, partly
a lumber-room, and is the best preserved part of
the monastic buildings. All the early work appears
to be nearly contemporary, c. 1230, and the
general disposition of the building was as follows:—The north side of the quadrangle was formed by the
church, with the north walk of the cloister set against
its south wall. On the other three sides the ground
story was divided into two spans by a row of pillars
or a solid wall, the latter arrangement obtaining on
the south and east, where the inner divisions formed
the cloister walks; these were lighted by wide fourlight windows with tracery under low four-centred
heads, three on each side, being insertions of fifteenthcentury date. There is nothing to show what the
previous arrangement was. The eastern range was
widened by Wyatt at the expense of the cloister; the
new work, which contains the principal staircase, projecting 18 ft. 6 in., from the old line; and at the same
time the central walls in the south and east ranges were
taken down. The staircase window, which is a copy
of the cloister windows, is filled with broken fragments
of old glass, collected at a time when little was
thought of such matters, from churches in the neighbourhood, while other pieces came from Notley
Abbey. On the west the fourth walk of the clo ster
was either open to the sky, or covered with a wooden
pentice set against the east side of the western range.
The only part of the ground story of the quadrangle which now retains much trace of its original
arrangement is the western range, which is vaulted for
its whole length in two spans, with octagonal central
shafts and half-octagonal corbels in the walls. The
vault is of seven bays, the northern of which formed
the outer parlour, or passage from the cloister to
the courtyard west of the buildings; of the remaining bays, two are now a lumber-room, two the
chapel, and two at the south end a library. This
end of the range formerly projected southward beyond
the line of the southern range, but the projection
was cut away by the eighteenth-century architects,
and the last bay of the vault is incomplete. The
east wall of the range ran through to the southern
end, but it has been pulled down at this part, and a
third span of vaulting added, in imitation of the older
work. The first-floor rooms are fine and lofty, but
with the exception of that at the south-west angle of
the block, where a fifteenth-century oriel window
remains in the east wall, filled with pieces of old
stained glass, (fn. 120) they have no ancient features. With
the roofs, however, it is a different matter. In
both east and south ranges there is clear evidence that
the middle part of the upper floor was occupied by a
fine room with an open timber roof, while the rooms
on either side had flat ceilings, and were evidently of
less importance. In the southern range this was
doubtless the frater, while in the eastern the principal
room would naturally be the dorter. The western
range would contain the quarters of the lay brothers or
sisters, and perhaps the guest-hall over. The ground
stories of the east and south ranges, being divided longitudinally by walls, could not have contained rooms of
importance, and the chapter-house doubtless projected
to the east of the former. Its site is now covered by a
carriage drive, and it is worthy of note that part of the
Purbeck marble effigy of a woman, with a shield at
her feet, of thirteenth-century style, was found in
this position a few years since. It may even be part
of the tomb of the foundress, Rohesia de Beauchamp,
though of course of later date than that of her death.
A drain has been discovered leading towards the
stream from the south-west angle of the buildings,
and the rere dorter must have stood in this position.
The kitchen must have stood near the south-west
angle, but the eighteenth-century builders have
destroyed any traces which may have remained. The
south wall of the church still exists to some height,
but the only feature of interest is the south-west
doorway of the nave, of good thirteenth-century
work, like the rest of the building, with pairs of shafts
in the jambs, and an arch of two moulded orders.
It seems clear that no work which can be contemporary with the foundation of the priory is now left
standing, unless part of the south wall of the church may
be of that date, and nothing definite can be said of the
rest of the monastic buildings. Gilbertine houses,
being for a community of men and women, required
a double set of buildings, and the only Gilbertine
site which has as yet been adequately explored, that
of Watton Priory, Yorkshire, has yielded a very good
example of this arrangement. (fn. 121) Watton, according
to the statutes of the order, was the largest house in
the country, its full complement being 70 canons
and 140 nuns, while Chicksands came third with
55 canons and 120 nuns. The principal cloister at
Watton, the nuns' cloister, was 113 ft. by 98 ft.,
and attached to the north side of the church; while
the canons, whose buildings were at some distance
from the church to the north-east, had a cloister
about 100 ft. square. At Chicksands the only remaining cloister is about 76 ft. square, and it is impossible to say to which division of the house it
belonged. If the ratio of size to numbers at
Watton may be used as a basis, it should have been
that of the canons, but in the absence of more definite
knowledge, it is advisable to leave the question open.
Tradition speaks of another cloister on the north
side of the church, and burials have been discovered
during the making of a garden north-east of the site
of the church.

Seventeenth-Century Plan of Chicksands Priory: Scale about 24 ft. to 1 in.
The church and one cloister were probably destroyed
soon after the Suppression, and the remaining cloister
converted into a dwelling-house. Its arrangements at
a somewhat later date (seventeenth century), are fortunately preserved as far as the ground floor is concerned,
in an outline plan in the possession of the present
owner of Chicksands and here reproduced to the same
scale as that showing the present arrangement.
The eastern range, retaining its central wall, was
occupied as cellars, with the main entrance to the
cloister, 'the coming in,' at the north end, and a
second entrance at the south. Both these entrances
are shown on Buck's drawing of 1730, and may be
of mediaeval date, belonging respectively to the inner
parlour and the passage to the cemetery or infirmary.
The room at the south-east angle is called the chapel,
and the first floor of the range contained the hall.
In the southern range, which also retained its central wall, the main staircase occupied the west end,
and the chapel the east, the space between being cut
up into chambers, whose use is not otherwise specified.
On the first floor was the dining-room, probably the
old frater, just as the 'hall' in the eastern range
represented the dorter.
At the south end of the western range were the
'lyme house' and the garden house, and at the north
end the outer parlour had become the passage to the
garden, the next two bays of the subvault being
devoted to what was perhaps their original use, a store
house. The later additions to the house date chiefly
from the early part of the nineteenth century, and
are of no great importance. The most notable is a
large octagonal room, north of the quadrangle, purporting to be copied from the chapter-house at Peterborough—a statement which has no foundation in
fact—and containing a splendid state bed with its
hangings and embroideries, formerly known as the
'Warming pan Bed,' in reference to the story of the
supposititious son of James II. It seems to have come
into the Osborn family through a marriage with the
widow of the Lord Molyneux, who was an officer of
the bedchamber to James II.
The present chapel is fitted with high wooden pews,
painted white, and is entered from the quadrangle by
a door at the north-east. Over the altar is a fine
piece of early sixteenth-century Flemish tapestry.
The series of pictures, portraits and otherwise, in
the house, is an interesting one, the most notable
being a very fine portrait of Edward VI, attributed
to Holbein; there are also portraits of Cromwell,
Sir William Temple and Dorothy Osborn, George
Montagu, earl of Halifax, Sir Kenelm Digby, and
many members of the Osborn family. One of the
rooms in the south wing has a fine eighteenthcentury Oriental wall paper.
In a wood on the high ground north-west of the
house are the remains of a 'chapel,' obviously one of
the sham ruins, in this case largely composed of really
old fragments, which the taste of the eighteenth-century Gothicist delighted to construct. To complete
the illusion, several genuine mediaeval gravestones
have been set near to it, two of them on imitation
altar tombs. One of these is a very fine and interesting slab with the effigy of an abbot in mass vestments, with the marginal inscription: 'Hic jacet
Frater T(homas de C)otgrave abas de Pippewel' cui'
aī ppiciet' Deus.' (fn. 121a)
Pipewell was a Cistercian abbey in Northamptonshire, and there is nothing to show how the slab came
to Chicksands.
The other manor in CHICKSANDS mentioned in
Domesday was held by Germund of Ralph Langetot an
undertenant of Walter Giffard. (fn. 122) The overlordship
passed from the Giffards to the Pembrokes as in the
case of Dunton (q.v.). No documentary evidence for
the existence of the manor during the next two centuries
has been found, but in 1302 Margery Dagnel held
the manor for half a knight's fee, (fn. 123) and in 1316 Peter
Dagnel was joint lord of Meppershall, Chicksands, and
Stondon with Nicholas Meppershall. (fn. 124) In 1317 this
manor was given to Chicksands Priory by John Blundel
at the instigation of Aymer de Valence, earl of
Pembroke; (fn. 125) and having become amalgamated with
the manor then held by the priory, it has had
from this date a descent analogous to the one already
traced.
The abbey of Warden held half a hide of land in
Chicksands which had been conveyed by fine to Payn,
abbot of Warden, by Robert son of Olympeas in
1197. (fn. 126) This grant was confirmed by Richard I in
1198, and by Edward I in 1286. (fn. 127) No further trace,
however, of this holding can be found.
Other lands in Chicksands were held by Marina de
Beseville, who, with her tenants, held half a knight's
fee in Chicksands in 1302. (fn. 128) Matilda, the widow of
John Botetourt, alienated lands in Chicksands to
William le Latymer and Elizabeth his wife in
1328, (fn. 129) and in 1388 John de Neville of Raby and
Elizabeth his wife had a fee in Chicksands. (fn. 130)
The dukes of Norfolk also possessed a small estate in
Chicksands, and John de Mowbray, duke of Norfolk,
died in 1433 seised of the quarter of a fee in Chicksands; (fn. 131) his son John died in 1461, and in 1470
Eleanor his widow was assigned the quarter fee in
Chicksands as part of her dower. (fn. 132)
On the estate belonging to Chicksands Priory was
a farm called the Dayre House, which was leased out,
and at the Dissolution the amount of the rent was
£1. (fn. 133) When Thomas Wyndham in 1540 obtained
a lease of the house and site of Chicksands Priory,
there was included in the lease the rent of the Dayre
House, which amounted annually to 100 quarters of
malt, 20 quarters of corn, 20 quarters of wheat, and
20 of pease, which the farmer used to pay to Chicksands Priory. (fn. 134) This rent was granted to Richard
Snowe at the expiration of the lease, (fn. 135) and it passed
to the Osborns with the manor. (fn. 136) Sir John Osborn
died seised of the house called the Dayre House in
1628, (fn. 137) and there is no further mention of the farm
or rent.
There is a mill mentioned in Domesday on the
land which Walter held of Azelina, wife of Ralph
Taillebois, it was worth 10s. (fn. 138) This mill came into the
possession of Chicksands Priory, which owned it in
1535; (fn. 139) it was then mentioned as a water-mill, and was
worth, together with a rabbit warren, £4. In 1540
the rent of the mill had risen to £5 6s. 8d., (fn. 140) and
Thomas Wyndham was granted the use of it; the
miller was to grind all Wyndham's corn, when he
wanted it, and to ask no fee as he had done before
from the priory. (fn. 141) Richard Snowe obtained a grant
of the reversion of the mill in the same year, (fn. 142) and
died seised of it in 1553. (fn. 143) The mill was conveyed
by Edward Snowe to Peter Osborn in 1587, (fn. 144) and
was held by the latter's grandson in 1640; (fn. 145) it is last
mentioned in 1711, when it was in the possession of
John Osborn. (fn. 146)
The church of Chicksands, which formed part of
the original endowment of the priory, was founded
at the same date, c. 1150, (fn. 147) by Payn Beauchamp and
Rohesia his wife, and at the beginning of the next century the gift was confirmed by William son of Simon
de Beauchamp. (fn. 148) Chicksands was extra-parochial,
and the church was attached to the priory and
attended by the canons and nuns solely. In 1253
and 1255 the priory obtained grants of protection
for their conventual church from the pope. (fn. 149) It
was one of the poorest endowments in the county,
and was worth only £2 13s. 4d. in 1291. (fn. 150) It
continued annexed to the priory until the Reformation, when it was granted together with the
bell-tower and cemetery to Richard and Elizabeth
Snowe. (fn. 151) Richard's son Edward conveyed the
church to Peter Osborn in 1587, who died seised
of it in 1592. (fn. 152) There is no further mention of
the church or chapel, which probably fell into disuse
soon after.
Parish of Chicksands.—There are apparently no
endowed charities in this parish.