MEPPERSHALL
Meperteshale, Maperdeshale, Mepertesale (xiii, xiv
cent.); Mepartyshall, Meppersal (xv cent.).
The parish of Meppershall has an area of 1,965½ acres,
of which 1,037 are arable land and 334¼ permanent
grass. (fn. 1) There are no woods or plantations. The
soil is composed of strong clay and gravel, while
the subsoil is of gravel and sand. The chief crops
are beans and peas. The ground rises regularly
from north to south; the lowest point, 131 ft., is
found at the extreme north boundary on the road
running from Bedford to Hitchin, where it passes
through the market town of Shefford; the highest
level, 282 ft., is reached about 300 yards from the
furthest point of the south boundary.
The village of Meppershall consists of scattered
houses stretching along a mile of road running northeast to Shefford, with branch roads from the village
to Stondon, Shillington, and Campton.
The church is at the south end of the village, and
next it is the gabled timber and plaster manor-house,
now occupied as three cottages. It is apparently an
early seventeenth-century building, and has on one of
the three projecting gables on its east front a thistle
in raised plaster work. Behind it lie the interesting
series of earthworks known as the Hills, of which a
plan is given elsewhere in this history. (fn. 1a)

Meppershall Church from South-east
At the north-east of the village is the rectory, the
house itself only dating from 1792, but occupying an
old site, and partly surrounded by a moat, with
several fishponds, only one of which now contains
water, on the west.
A spring in the garden, which doubtless once supplied the moat, is still in use; and to the south is a
large tithe-barn and farm-yard.
A drawing of the former rectory-house is preserved,
showing the moat perfect and a carefully laid-out
garden; while in one of the register books is a copy
of Latin elegiac verses, composed about 1706 by a
former rector, giving a vivid idea of the charms of
the house two centuries ago.
To the north-east of the village, about a mile distant, is Chapel Farm, on the site of St. Thomas's
Chapel Manor, formerly belonging to Chicksands
Priory; an ancient pigeon-house stood till lately on
the farm, but is now ruined; its old door, which
worked on a pivot in the head and sill of its doorway, was fastened by an elaborate system of bolts,
and is now at the rectory.
In the north of the parish is Woodhall Farm, the
site of the manor formerly belonging to Warden
Abbey; close by is Polehanger Farm, probably the
site of the manor which was in the possession of the
prior of St. John of Jerusalem.
The following place names are found: Wyfordhull,
Hawkesokes, Desworth, Moldhigges, Wonland, (fn. 2) Crackwell alias Crackneld Wood, Drowser furlong, Poulter's
Hill, Mowen Close. (fn. 3)
Manors
At the time of the Domesday Survey
MEPPERSHALL was assessed partly
under Bedfordshire and partly under
Hertfordshire: there were 3 hides in Bedfordshire
and 3 hides 1 virgate in Hertfordshire. (fn. 4) Lewin Cilt,
a thegn of King Edward, had held the manor in the
time of Edward the Confessor, and in 1086 it was in
the possession of Gilbert son of Salaman. (fn. 5) The next
reference to Meppershall occurs in the reign of Henry II,
when Robert son of William
de Meppershall presented the
advowson of the church of
Meppershall to the priory of
Lenton. (fn. 6) The manor continued for nearly three hundred years in the possession of
the Meppershalls, who derived
their family name from it,
passing from father to son
without a break in the line of
succession. John of Meppershall, who died seised of the
manor in 1230, held it of the king by the serjeanty
of the office of king's larderer, (fn. 7) and his descendants
continued to hold it of the king by grand serjeanty as
late as 1493; (fn. 8) in 1607 it was held of the king in
chief by knight service. (fn. 9)

Meppershall. Argent fretty sable with a chief gules and therein a lion passant or.
John's son and heir Ranulf was a minor at his
father's death in 1230, and the king appointed
Nicholas de Neville guardian until he should be of
age. (fn. 10) Ranulf died in 1262, and was succeeded by
his son Nicholas, who was then twenty-two years
old. (fn. 11) Nicholas was stated in 1316 to be lord of
Meppershall, (fn. 12) and died three years later; (fn. 13) his son
Robert, who succeeded him, died in 1331, leaving a
widow Sarah and a son and heir John. (fn. 14) John was
followed by his grandson, John son of Nicholas, who
was only seven years old, in 1369. (fn. 15) The custody of
the heir and lands was granted at first to John de
Elton, falconer, (fn. 16) and in 1375 to John Basset. (fn. 17) In
1386 John conveyed the manor in the trusteeship to
John de Broughton and John Astwick, the former of
whom was the father of his wife Katherine. (fn. 18) John
and Katherine had one daughter John, to whom the
manor descended on the death of her mother in 1453,
her father having died previously. (fn. 19) Joan married
first John Butler, by whom she had a son John, and
took as second husband Henry Godfrey, by whom she
had a son Richard. She died in 1460, and was succeeded by her son John Butler, (fn. 20) who died in 1482,
leaving two daughters, Florence Ashfield, widow, and
Joan the wife of John Stanford. (fn. 21) A partition of
lands was made between the sisters, but Florence probably died without issue, as her share is found later as
the property of Joan. John Stanford was the second
husband of Joan, and by him she had a son John
and two daughters, Elizabeth wife of William Cornwallis and Mary wife of
George Harvey. By her first
husband, John Leventhorpe
junior, she had issue Thomas
Leventhorpe. She died in
1489, and John Stanford her
husband was seised of the
manor for his life as tenant by
courtesy. (fn. 22) On his death in
1493 the manor came to his
stepson Thomas Leventhorpe,
son and heir of Joan Stanford. (fn. 23)
Thomas died seised of the
manor in 1498, leaving a son
John three years old. (fn. 24) John conveyed the manor in
1557 to Richard West, (fn. 25) evidently as trustee, for in 1574
Richard West conveyed the manor to George Leventhorpe son of John. (fn. 26) George died in 1607, (fn. 27) his son
Thomas coming of age in February, 1609. (fn. 28) Thomas
died in 1620, and as his daughter and heir was only
four years old, (fn. 29) the estate was taken into the Court of
Wards and Liveries. She obtained livery of the manor
in 1633, when she was sixteen years old, (fn. 30) but from
this time onward the history of the manor becomes
obscure.

Leventhorpe. Argent a bend gobony gules and sable.
In 1651 the manor of Meppershall was conveyed
to Richard Emery by Richard Stringer, husband of
Ann Leventhorpe, Elizabeth Whitehead widow, and
Judith Bulthan widow, (fn. 31) uncle and aunts respectively
of Elizabeth daughter of Thomas Leventhorpe.
Elizabeth had probably died without issue, and the
manor had passed to her aunts as her nearest heirs.
Richard Emery left two daughters, Elizabeth and
Sarah, spinsters, (fn. 32) who inherited the manor and who
conveyed it by fine to Christopher Deane and
Thomas Suckling in 1688 as trustees. (fn. 33) The manor
passed on the death of Elizabeth and Sarah to their
aunt Frances Watson, widow, in 1697. (fn. 34) It is next
found in the possession of Henry and Elizabeth
Birrell and Thomas and Charlotte Fulwood, who
combined to sell the manor in 1744–5 to Bartlett
Mason; (fn. 35) Elizabeth and Charlotte were probably
the daughters of Frances Watson, widow. In 1805
Thomas Poynter was in possession; and apparently
the Poynter family had had the manor for about
thirty-three years, having purchased it from the
Fulwoods. (fn. 36) Thomas Poynter left two natural
children, daughters according to Lysons, who states
wrongly that the manor was purchased from the
Fleetwoods and not Fulwoods. (fn. 37) In 1854 the manor
was in the hands of the trustees of Mrs. Barbara Kane
and Mrs. Pen Woodburn, and is so vested at the
present day.
There was a manor in Meppershall, known as ST.
THOMAS' CHAPEL MANOR, which belonged to
the priory of Chicksands, and in 1285 Edward I
granted to the priory free warren in their demesne
land of Meppershall. (fn. 38) In 1291, the value of this
holding in Meppershall amounted to £10 13s. 6d., (fn. 39)
and their possessions were afterwards increased by
various grants. (fn. 40) Early in the fourteenth century, the
prior borrowed a sum of money from John Puisaquila
of Genoa, a citizen and merchant of London, and
demised to him and one Bartholomew Reckey for
their lives, and to their heirs for twenty years after
their deaths, the manor called St. Thomas' Chapel in
Meppershall, together with Hawnes Grange for an
annual rent of £200. By a subsequent agreement
John and Bartholomew annulled the deeds of the demise of the manor on payment of £1,200, and having
received £300 as the first instalment, they released to
the prior their right and claim in the manors in
1325. (fn. 41) In 1330 the prior, called upon to show by
what right he claimed free warren and view of frankpledge over tenants in Meppershall, produced the
charter of Edward I, and on payment of 1 mark he
was confirmed in the same. (fn. 42)
When the lands of the monastery were taken into
the king's hands at the Dissolution, the priory of
Chicksands had possessions in Meppershall to the value
of £15 10s. (fn. 43) The manor was leased for a short time
to Henry Stringer, and in 1542 Henry VIII granted
it to Sir Henry Grey of Wrest and Anne his wife. (fn. 44)
The manor remained in the family of the Greys for
167 years. After the death of Sir Henry, it passed
to his son Henry, whose two elder sons died without
issue, and the youngest son, Charles, inherited the
manor. At the latter's death in 1623 his son Henry
succeeded him, but died without issue in 1639; the
manor then passed to Henry's sister and co-heir Susan,
who had married Sir Michael Grey Longueville.
Their eldest son Charles died in 1643 without issue
male and the manor was inherited by the younger son
Grey Longueville. (fn. 45) In 1678 Grey Longueville died,
and by his will, left the manor to his wife Lucy for
two years and then to his sons. (fn. 46) The elder son
Grey died without issue, and the manor descended to
the second son Henry, who left it at his death in
1705 to his wife Anne and their son Grey; (fn. 47) Anne
and Grey sold the manor in 1709 to Christ's Hospital, London, in whose possession it still is. (fn. 48)

Grey of Wrest. Barry argent and azure with three roundels gules in the chief.

Longueville. Gules a fesse dancetty ermine between six crosslets argent.

Christ's Hospital. Argent a cross gules with a sword gules upright in the quarter and a chief azure having therein a Tudor rose between two fleurs de lis or.
The manor of WOODHALL probably originated
in the grant of 100 acres of land and 22 acres of
wood in the parish of Meppershall to the abbot of
Warden by Gilbert de Meppershall, confirmed by his son
John in 1200. (fn. 49) In 1244 this land was taken into the
king's hand as land of his serjeanty alienated without
licence, and was held by the monks of Warden from
that time of the king in chief in free alms, (fn. 50) and
the abbot of Warden obtained a charter of confirmation from Henry III. (fn. 51) In 1252 Henry III granted
to the priory free warren in the woods belonging to the
grange of Woodhall; (fn. 52) this charter was confirmed by
Edward I, and in 1330 the abbot made good his
claim to free warren. (fn. 53) The value of the manor
amounted to £2 4s. 3d. in 1291, (fn. 54) and it continued
in the possession of the abbey of Warden to the
Dissolution, and in 1535 was worth £3 6s. 8d. (fn. 55) It
was then leased for a short time to Thomas Stringer,
sen., and Thomas Stringer, jun., and in 1542 was
granted to Sir Henry Grey of Wrest and his wife
Anne. (fn. 56) Since this date it has remained in the possession of the Greys earls of Kent, and has followed
the same descent as the manor of Wrest in Flitton,
(q.v.), (fn. 57) passing with the title to Anthony in 1639
instead of devolving on Susan Longueville. The
manorial rights are at present vested in Lord Lucas
and Dingwall, as representative of the de Grey family.
The manor of POLEHANGER in this parish
possibly originated in the grant of view of frankpledge,
together with other manorial rights in Meppershall,
to the prior of the hospital of St. John of Jerusalem
by Henry III in 1258 and confirmed by Edward I
in 1280. (fn. 58) This charter was also confirmed later by
Edward II and Edward III, (fn. 59) and in 1291 the value
of the prior's possessions in Stamford and Polehanger
was £1 5s. (fn. 60) The manor was subinfeudated by the prior,
and in 1335 was in the possession of Thomas, son of
John de Meryng and his wife Idonia, in right of the
latter, (fn. 61) but it must shortly afterwards have been alienated to the Meppershalls, for in 1361 land described
as 1 messuage, 18 acres was held by John de Meppershall of the prior of St. John of Jerusalem by the
service of 3s. a year, (fn. 62) and this property was held by
the descendants of John de Meppershall (lords of the
manor of Meppershall q.v.) of the prior of St. John
of Jerusalem. Other land in Meppershall was held
by the Butlers of the prior of St. John of Jerusalem, (fn. 63)
and by the marriage of Joan Meppershall and John
Butler, these properties were united and were described
in 1482 as the manor of Polehanger, held of the
prior of St. John of Jerusalem. (fn. 64) The manor then
followed a like descent to that of Meppershall (q.v.)
and continued in the hands of the Leventhorpes, until by some means it came into the possession of
Richard Stringer and Anne his wife, uncle and aunt
of Elizabeth Leventhorpe, after the death of the latter's
father Thomas in 1621; Richard Stringer alienated
it by fine in 1627 to William Parsell; (fn. 65) the widow
and daughters of the latter alienated it by fine to
Robert Lovett in 1649. (fn. 66) No further mention of
the manor has been found until 1731, when it was
in the possession of John Compton or Crompton, who
conveyed it in the same year to George, Viscount
Torrington and the Hon. Pattee Byng. (fn. 67) Lysons,
writing in 1805, states that Polehanger manor was
then in the hands of Sir George Osborn, bart., (fn. 68)
from whom it has descended to Sir Algernon Kerr
Butler Osborn, bart., one of the chief landowners in
Meppershall parish. (fn. 69) In the nineteenth century the
manorial rights probably lapsed as there is no trace
of them to-day, but the manor-house is doubtless
represented by Polehanger Farm.
Other lands in Meppershall were held by the priory
of Merton (co. Surrey), which acquired 100 acres of
land by the grant of Robert son of William le Despenser. These lands were held of the king by
serjeanty, and the grant was confirmed by Henry II,
and later by Henry III in 1252. (fn. 70) In the reign of
Edward I the annual value of lands held of the prior
in Meppershall, Stokesholt, Astwick, and Dunton was
£5 6s. 2d., (fn. 71) and his holding in Meppershall amounted
to one carucate. (fn. 72) The prior failed to make good his
claim to view of frankpledge over tenants in the
eighth part of the parish of Meppershall in 1330,
when he asserted that the right was granted to him
by Richard I and confirmed by a charter of Henry III.
The jury shewed that in the reign of Henry Gilbert
de Meppershall held the manor of Meppershall, to
which there was then no view of frankpledge attached,
and the prior had usurped view of frankpledge from
the king. The liberties were therefore taken into the
king's hand. (fn. 73) The last reference to the lands in
Meppershall belonging to the priory of Merton occurs
in the reign of Henry VI, when William Stanford of
Meppershall received an acquittance from the prior
of Merton for 26s. 8d. yearly rent for land in
Meppershall. (fn. 74)

Meppershall Church.
Church
The church of OUR LADY consists of
a chancel, a central tower with north and
south transepts, and a nave with north and
south aisles, everything west of the central tower being
modern. The plan of the tower is curiously irregular,
the internal width at the west end being 15 ft. 8 in.,
as against 13 ft. 8 in. at the east. The tower and
transepts are the oldest part of the church, and belong
apparently to the first quarter of the twelfth century,
the early look of the work being accentuated by the
material in which they are built, a dark ironstone
which allows only of the simplest detail.
The transepts have a mean depth of 11 ft. 2 in. and
an average width of 13 ft. 6 in. in the north transept
and 12 ft. 6in. in the south, and are set out at right
angles to the slanting north and south walls of the tower,
thus emphasizing the irregularity of its plan. The old
nave, like the present, was wider than the chancel, and
this fact gives additional
probability to the other evidence that the church has
developed from an early
building with an aisleless
nave, whose width is still
retained in the present nave,
and a short rectangular
chancel, enlarged in the early
years of the twelfth century
by building a tower over the
chancel, and adding transepts and a new chancel to
the north, south and east.
The eastern angles of the
tower were set on those of
the older chancel, but its
western angles, instead of
taking a corresponding position at the west, were set on
the eastern angles of the old
nave, thus producing the
curious and irregular plan.
In the east walls of the transepts were plain semicircular arches, which spanned shallow rectangular
recesses for altars, and did not open to eastern apses,
as there are external buttresses, taking the thrust of
the chancel arch, in such a position as to preclude the
possible existence of such apses in the twelfth-century
work. The twelfth-century chancel was of the same
width as, but doubtless considerably shorter than, the
existing one, which is of the first half of the thirteenth
century. Its east wall is irregularly set out, as often
happens in such cases, when an addition to an existing
building is in question.
There is little evidence of a change of masonry in
the north and south walls, and it is very probable
that the chancel was completely rebuilt at this time,
none of the twelfth-century walling being preserved.
The plan of the church has not been materially
altered since the thirteenth century, except of course
that the nave has been rebuilt in modern times; the
later mediaeval changes are noted in the detailed
description which follows.
It is impossible to say what the early nave was like,
as all old work in the nave was completely destroyed
at the recent restorations, when the embattled parapets of the tower and transepts were rebuilt, apparently
with new material, and various other restorations
carried out.
There are three lancets, the centre one being the
taller, in the east wall of the chancel, all of which
are modern copies of the original thirteenth-century
windows, but contain a few old stones. They have
moulded rear arches and shafted jambs with moulded
circular bases and capitals. There were five similar
lancets in the north and south walls of the chancel, of
which only the eastern pair are now perfect, but traces
of the others are to be seen in both walls.
Immediately to the west of the eastern pair are two
wide and shallow fifteenth-century recesses with fourcentred heads and moulded jambs, and on the eastern
side of that in the north wall is a small contemporary
lamp niche with a flue in its head. East of the recess
in the south wall is a fifteenth-century piscina of which
the drain and shelf have been lost, the grooves for the
latter remaining. On the outer face of the walls there
are two blocked square-headed windows retaining their
iron stanchions and saddlebars, which correspond in
position to the recesses within but are at a higher level,
so that their sills are nearly at the same height as the
heads of the recesses. Their original intention is
difficult to understand. On the south side of the
chancel, about midway, is a fifteenth-century doorway,
and at the west are three-light fifteenth-century windows on both sides. The chancel has shallow clasping
buttresses at the eastern angles and similar shallow
buttresses in the middle of each side wall, the whole
of the exterior having been a good deal repaired at
various dates.
The tower stands on plain semicircular arches of a
single order, only the west face of the western arch
having any moulded detail The voussoirs are
of ironstone, as already noted, and at the springing
of the nave and transept arches are heavy chamfered
strings of limestone, those in the south transept being
modern, while that at the east springing of the north
transept arch is cut away, as are those of the east arch
of the tower.
Above the roofs the tower rises in two stages
with an embattled parapet, the belfry windows being
of two-lights of fifteenth-century detail, while the
second stage is lighted by single narrow twelfthcentury loops.
The arch from the tower to the north transept has
been rebuilt with modern thirteenth-century detail.
This transept, which now contains the organ and vestry,
is lighted by a fifteenth-century window of four cinquefoiled lights, and retains in its east wall the original
arched recess already mentioned, now partly filledin, a fifteenth-century recess with a four-centred head
and panelled back and sides being inserted in the
blocking. This is part of a general scheme of refitting
which took place in the fifteenth century, and included
the fitting up of new altars in both transepts, a scheme
of rearrangement for the chancel, as already noted,
and the rebuilding or addition of a top story to the
central tower.
There are traces of colour on the stonework of the
recess, and the workmanship and design are of excellent quality. South of this recess is a piscina of the
same date, with a moulded cinquefoiled head and
moulded jambs.
The south transept has a very similar arrangement
in its east wall, but here the twelfth-century arch
has been entirely removed, except for a few stones at
its northern springing, as the wall has been completely rebuilt and thickened, a stair leading to the
tower, and entered from the south-east angle of the
transept, having been contrived in the thickness of the
wall. The under sides of two of its stone steps project into the head of the altar recess, and it is lighted
by two narrow slits on the east. In the east respond
of the tower arch opening to the transept a tall cinquefoiled image niche has been inserted at the same
date, having an embattled square-headed label, and to the
south of the altar recess is a cinquefoiled piscina. Above
the piscina is a bracket with two blank shields on the
underside, also intended to carry an image, but it is
said to have been moved from its original position. In
the south wall of the transept is a large fifteenth-century window of four lights.
The nave and aisles are entirely modern, with
arcades of three bays with two-centred moulded arches
and round piers with moulded caps and bases. There
are two modern single-light windows in the west
wall of the nave of similar detail to those in
the east wall of the chancel. Fisher, in his Collections for Bedfordshire, 1817, gives a drawing of a
twelfth-century doorway in the nave. There is no
clearstory.
The font, at the west end of the aisle, is of fifteenthcentury date, and only unusual in being twelve-sided
in form.
The tower contains five bells: the treble by John
Dier, 1591; the second by Taylor of Loughborough,
1882; the third by J. Briant of Hertford, 1816,
the fourth by Joseph Eayre of St. Neots, 1766;
and the tenor by William Emerton of Wootton,
1774.
The church plate consists of two cups and a standing paten of 1673, the latter given by Mrs. Elizabeth
Salmon, and a modern plated paten.
The first book of the registers has all entries from
1713 to 1771, the second baptisms and burials from
1772 to 1812, while the third book is the printed
marriage register, 1754–1812. There is also preserved
with the registers of the church a set of rules for a
school founded here in 1696.
The roofs are all modern except in the transepts,
where there is some old work, much repaired, of
the fifteenth century.
On the south wall of the chancel is the crude
coloured monument of Timothy Archer, who died
1672, and two brass plates commemorating former
rectors, Thomas Rawlins, 1506, and Thomas Salmon,
1706. On the east wall of the south transept is a
portion of the brass of John Meptyshall, 1440, and
Katherine his wife, and in the west wall another brass
to John Butler, esq., 1441, and Katherine his wife.
Advowson
The church of Meppershall was
given to the priory of Lenton by
Robert son of William de Meppershall, and the gift was confirmed by Henry II. (fn. 75)
This charter was moreover confirmed by John in
1199, (fn. 76) and also by the pope in 1205, (fn. 77) but nevertheless, John son of Gilbert, son of Robert in 1224,
contested the claim of the prior to the advowson of
the church. (fn. 78) The church, however, continued to
belong to the priory of Lenton, and was again confirmed to the monks by Henry III in 1255; (fn. 79) it was
worth £10 13s. 4d. in 1291, (fn. 80) and the priory received a pension of ½ mark from the church, which
had been confirmed by Walter archbishop of Canterbury in 1319, and was confirmed by Richard II in 1382. (fn. 81)
In 1535 the church was worth
£22, and was still in the hands
of the priory of Lenton. (fn. 82) No
further trace of the advowson
is found till 1631, when it
was in the gift of John earl of
Peterborough, (fn. 83) and he died
seised of it in 1644. (fn. 84) The
advowson continued in the
family of the Mordaunts until
1686, (fn. 85) when by some means
it passed into the possession of
the Downes, who held the advowson in 1706 and 1712. (fn. 86) In 1765 it is found in
the possession of St. John's College, Cambridge, (fn. 87) in
the master and fellows of which it is vested at the
present day.

St. John's College, Cambridge. France quartered with England in a border gobony argent and azure.
There was a chapel in Meppershall, attached to the
Grange which belonged to Chicksands Priory; the
earliest mention of this chapel of St. Thomas the
Martyr occurs in 1291, when all those penitents who
should make a pilgrimage there were remitted one
year and forty days' penance; (fn. 88) but it belonged to
the century before, as is shown by the still existing nave. This is the only documentary evidence of
the existence of the chapel, although the manor to
which it was appendant derived its name from it; the
ruins of the chapel, however, still stand to the south of
the farm buildings, which represent the site of the old
manor and are in a fair state of preservation, the
chapel now being used as a barn. There is an aisleless nave of c. 1175, the chancel of this date having
been replaced about 1500 by that now existing,
which was built round the twelfth-century work, and
is of the same width as the nave. It has a two-light
east window, and another in the south wall, with a
low side window at the south-west and a small north
doorway. The east wall of the nave has been entirely
removed at the building of the chancel, so that there
is no structural division between the two. The nave
has a beautiful little two-light north window with
flowing tracery, c. 1320, and a second of the same
kind in the south wall, and at the north-west a fine
and well-preserved original doorway, with a round
arch of two enriched orders, and foliate capitals the
shafts of which have been removed. The entrance to
the chapel is now by a tall brick-arched opening in
the west wall, of modern date, and all doors and
windows are blocked up. The nave roof is plain and
rough, while the chancel preserves its sixteenth-century
timbers, with curved braces to the principals. Both
roofs are covered with red tiles, that of the chancel
being slightly higher than that of the nave.
Charities
Charity of Elizabeth Emery for education, founded by deed of 17 March,
1691–2, in performance of will of
Sarah Emery.
This parish is entitled to one moiety of the income
of land in Wilshampstead, the other moiety being
applicable in Ampthill. See above, 'Schools.'
In 1861 James Mead, by deed of trust, settled a
sum of £99 12s. 6d. consols for providing poor
orphan children with clothing.
The stock is held by the official trustees, and
the dividends, amounting to £2 14s. 8d., are duly
applied.