LUTON
With The Hamlets Of
East And West Hyde, Stopsley, Limbury Cum Biscott, And Leagrave
Lygetune (viii cent.); Lygeanburh (x cent.); Loitone
(xi cent.); Lectuna, Lutune (xii–xiii cents.); Leweton
(xvi cent.).
Bissopescote (xi cent.); Byscote (xiv cent.).
Lightgrave, Litgrave (xv–xvii cents.).
Luton is a large parish comprising, with its hamlets,
15,434 acres, of which 9,897 acres are arable, 3,427
permanent grass, and 692 woods and plantations. (fn. 1)
The soil is composed of chalk, loam, and gravel,
and the parish contains much good arable land.
In Stopsley the soil is strong clay, the subsoil strong
clay on a bed of chalk, and the crops are wheat,
barley, oats, and beans. In East and West Hyde the
soil is sandy loam, and the subsoil chalk and clay.
The slope of the ground is irregular; the highest
point, in the south-west of the parish, is 534 ft. above
the ordnance datum; the lowest, in the north,
360 ft.
The position of the present centre of the town and
of the parish church of St. Mary suggests that the
original settlement at Luton occupied a piece of low
ground close to the River Lea, perhaps at some
important ford.
Starting from this nucleus the town spread, at first
south, up the slopes on that side of the river, later in
a north-westerly direction, when the present factories
were built, and is now beginning to occupy the
northern slopes of the valley and the steep wooded
rise known as St. Anne's Hill, which overlooks the
town from that direction.
The main streets appear to have preserved to some
extent their original plan, and until recently contained numerous old houses and inns, now rebuilt or
entirely removed. The Cross Keys Inn was pulled
down in 1905, and the present George Inn retains
parts of an older house, much concealed by modern
reconstruction.
George Street, with the Corn Exchange at the
south end and the Town Hall at the north, forms a
short main street upon which numerous others converge. The majority of these streets are narrow and
in some cases steep, so that the traffic which enters
the town by wide and open roads in the outskirts
often becomes somewhat crowded in the main streets,
particularly on market days, when a portion of
George Street is used for the purpose of a marketplace.
The church of St. Mary, surrounded by a large
graveyard, is half-way between George Street and the
river. The original vicarage was probably close to
the church, but the present house is modern and lies
on the north side of the river.
To the north of the town are the parishes of Leagrave and Stopsley, formed respectively in 1866 and
1861 out of Luton. To the south is Hyde parish,
formed in 1843.
The neighbouring country is mostly higher than
the town, and is often well wooded, particularly in
Stockwood and Luton Hoo parks to the south and on
the slopes of St. Anne's Hill to the east.
To the north and north-east the chalk downs run
in long sweeping undulations towards Hitchin. The
town is provided with water from deep borings in
the chalk, the supply being stored in reservoirs on
high ground to the north and south of the town.
The Hatfield road enters the town from the south
by Park Road and Manchester Street; and to the
north the main roads run north-west to Dunstable,
and north to Bedford.
The Midland Railway Company has a station at
Luton on their main line from St. Pancras, and a
branch of the Great Northern Railway from Hatfield
to Dunstable also has a station here; whilst the
London and North-Western have running powers
over the Great Northern Company's line from Leighton Buzzard. The Great Northern Railway has a
station, Luton Hoo, in the parish of Hyde, facing
which is Chiltern Green Station on the Midland
Railway.
Palaeolithic implements and neolithic remains have
been discovered at Dallow, Round Green, Ramridge
End, Leagrave, and Wauluds Bank, Luton; and gold
British coins at Leagrave. (fn. 2)
Wauluds Bank, Drays Ditches near Limbury, and
Someries Castle near Luton, are examples of ancient
defensive earthworks, the last being manorial in
character. (fn. 3)
Among place-names found in documents relating
to this parish may be mentioned the following:—Catenho, Campsters hul, Haldwyk, in the thirteenth
century; le Haut Close, from the thirteenth to the
seventeenth, and Payshull or Popeshull from the thirteenth to the sixteenth; Hydemanfeld, Stapleford
field, and Wychhull in the fourteenth; Ryndelee or
Rondeleyes from the fourteenth to the seventeenth;
Goffes, Chapelhaut, in the fifteenth; Burymill mead,
from the fifteenth to the eighteenth; Allwyn's Close,
Aschebesland, Bassetts, Begersland, Courgend Close,
Derie Boughte, Fenylfield, Gallows, Hermytage lands,
Lepers, Mayndenfield, Newmans, Ramridgehill,
Sewell field, Theydon's Close, Welhavering, in the
sixteenth; Baylyfield, in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries; Gregory Shaws, Pursleys, and
Sears Close, from the sixteenth to the eighteenth;
Bassets, Broomfield, Copthall, Deadwoman furlong,
Priestsmeadow, Lawcroftes, in the seventeenth; Kitnow Close, Onyons, in the seventeenth century;
Nocehilles or Mixeshill, from the seventeenth century to the present day.
Luton is a town which has developed during the
nineteenth century. This may be well exemplified
by an examination of its population at various times.
Thus, in 1546 the population included 1,500 'houselyng people'; in 1801 the official returns give 3,095;
in 1831, 5,693; in 1851, 12,787; in 1871,
20,733; and in 1891, 32,401. (fn. 4) Previous to this
extraordinary nineteenth-century expansion Luton
appears to have been a quiet market town with a
comparatively uneventful history. No mention of it
has been found before the Survey, when it already
possessed a market whose tolls were valued at 100s. (fn. 5)
In 1246 Luton was the scene of a great assembly
of lords and knights, who met there to keep a
'martial just and triumphal tourney.' The celebration was stopped, however, by command of the king,
the real intention of the meeting having been to
organize resistance to the oppression of the pope, at
that time very grievous. (fn. 6)
In 1336 Luton suffered severe damage by fire, (fn. 7)
from which the town had not recovered in 1340,
when about two hundred messuages in the parish were
uninhabited and 6 carucates of land uncultivated on
account of the impoverishment of the parish by the
recent fire. (fn. 8)
Leland, writing in the early half of the sixteenth
century, mentions Luton as famous for its barley
market; whilst Camden, a generation or so later,
says: 'As for Leighton Buzzard on the one side of
Dunstable and Luton on the other, neither have I
read nor seen anything memorable in them, unless I
should say that at Luton I saw a fair church, but the
choir there roofless, and overgrown with weeds.' (fn. 9)
This looks as though Luton had sunk into a state
of decay not uncommon amongst agricultural towns
in the sixteenth century, but with the introduction
of the manufacture of straw plait in the beginning
of the seventeenth century the town entered on a
new era of prosperity. (fn. 10) Tradition assigns the introduction of this industry to Mary queen of Scots, who
brought straw-plaiters from Lorraine to Scotland, and
whose son James I, when he acquired the English
crown, transferred the little colony to Bedfordshire
and the neighbouring districts, where the conditions,
owing to the abundance of good straw, were specially
adapted for this manufacture. So well did it take
root and flourish that in 1689, in a petition presented
to the House of Lords against the passing of a Woollen
Manufacture Wearing Bill (afterwards rejected), it
was estimated that if a clause in the bill enjoining
the wearing of woollen caps were to take effect, over
one thousand families, including 14,000 persons, in
Luton, Dunstable, and neighbouring towns would be
thrown out of employment. (fn. 11)
Francis Blomfield, writing of Luton between
1724 and 1734, says: 'It hath a market house and
large Monday market for corn, with which this part
much abounds, there being but little pasture; firing
is very dear and scarce by reason of the small quantity
of wood, the county is chiefly champion, and the
long carriage of coal by land makes that also chargeable.' (fn. 12) In the beginning of the nineteenth century
a further development of the straw-plait trade took
place when Thomas Waller obtained a patent for the
manufacture of Tuscan grass plait, and since then a
vast amount of raw material of foreign growth has
been imported to be prepared, plaited, and formed
into the finished article in Luton.
From sixteenth-century court rolls it would appear
that the lord of Luton exercised a somewhat extended
jurisdiction over the town. Constables were elected
at the courts, not only for Luton, but also the hamlets
of Stopsley, Limbury, East and West Hyde, and Leagrave. (fn. 13) As late as 1830 the town was governed by a
high constable, two day constables, and one night
constable, elected at the yearly court leet of the lord
of Luton manor. In a court roll of 1542 the following entry occurs:—'A peyne put that every
householder shall gather or cause to be gathered stones
for the streets and high way in Luton one hole day in
peyne of 4d.… that all the rich men in Luton and
them that have carts shall carye one hole day the
seyde stones and lay them where there is most need in
peyne of 3s. 4d.' (fn. 14)
Luton had a market at the time of the Survey,
which was valued at 100s. (fn. 15) In 1203 this market,
hitherto held on a Sunday, was transferred to Monday, (fn. 16) but in a grant of 1338 to Hugh Mortimer,
a Thursday market is named, (fn. 17) which at the present
day is held on a Monday.
Leland mentions Luton market as famous for its
barley, and Blomfield, writing between 1724 and
1734, says it was noted for its corn. (fn. 18)
The introduction of the straw-plait industry into
Bedfordshire in the seventeenth century largely increased
the importance of Luton market, which at the present
day does a large trade in cattle, corn, and straw plait.
The rights of market tolls belong to Sir Julius
Wernher, lord of Luton manor, subject however to a
lease of the same to the corporation of Luton for
seventy-five years at £150 per annum rent from
25 March, 1866. (fn. 19) During the nineteenth century
a second market has been established on Saturdays,
mainly for the sale of provisions.
The right of a yearly fair on the feast of the Assumption (15 August) was early appurtenant to Luton
manor, and during Baldwin de Bethune's tenure of
the manor (1195–1212) was the subject of a controversy which was finally settled by Baldwin allowing
the claims of St. Albans to the profits of the fair
except for the sale of gold, horses, tanned skins, and
men, qui antiquitus vendebantur, the men of the abbot
to enjoy the same rights as in the time when the
manor was the king's. (fn. 20)
In 1338 Hugh Mortimer obtained the grant of
another fair in this manor on St. Luke's Day
(18 October), (fn. 21) and Sir Robert Napier in 1620 received a confirmation of these two fairs, the date of
the former being altered to St. Mark's Day (25 April). (fn. 22)
Two fairs are still held at these dates, as well as one at
Michaelmas, formerly held for hiring servants, but now
as a pleasure fair.
In 1876 Luton obtained a charter of incorporation
by name of the mayor, aldermen, and burgesses of
Luton, with the right to use armorial bearings and
devices, (fn. 23) and the town is now governed by a mayor,
six aldermen, and eighteen councillors. Luton is
divided into three wards, north, east, and west.
At the present day, besides the straw plait manufacture (for which material is now imported from
China, Italy, and Japan), there are in Luton iron and
brass foundries, boiler works, and a brewery. In 1896
the following hamlets were detached from Luton and
became separate civil parishes:—East and West Hyde
(now known as the parish of Hyde), Limbury-cumBiscott, Leagrave, and Stopsley. (fn. 24)
Luton contains a specially large number of
MANORS, which will be found treated according to
the following classification:—
1. Manors held in chief:—(1) Luton; (2) Woodcroft or Halyard; (3) Woodcroft; (4) Luton Hoo;
(5) Picks.
2. Manors held of Luton Manor:—(6) Brache;
(7) Dallow; (8) David Ashby; (9) East Hide or
The Hyde; (10) Farley; (11) Fennels Grove; (12)
Greathampstead; (13) Hayes or Hooburne; (14)
Haverings; (15) Limbury; (16) Limbury; (17)
West Hyde Aynel; (18) Whiperly or Stockwood.
3. Miscellaneous Manors:—(19) Bailiffs; (20)
Bennets; (21) Biscott; (22) Bramblehanger; (23)
East Hyde and West Hyde; (24) Lalleford; (25)
Langleys; (26) Lewsey; (27) Northwood; (28)
Plenties; (29) Someries; (30) Stopsley; (31) Woodcroft.
At the time of the Domesday Survey of 1087,
LUTON MANOR is found among the king's lands,
and had been a royal manor during the reign of
Edward the Confessor. (fn. 25) It was then a manor of
considerable importance, assessed at 30 hides, and included six mills and tolls of market worth 100s. (fn. 26)
Subsequently this manor passed away from the crown.
The earliest authenticated grant is that of Henry I to
Robert earl of Gloucester (c. 1100–47), his illegitimate son, who during the civil war of the reign of
King Stephen fought on the side of his half-sister, the
Empress Maud. (fn. 27) He died in 1147, when William
his son succeeded to the Luton estate, and he appears
to have enfeoffed Earl Gilbert, who proved a traitor
to King Stephen, and whose estates consequently
escheated to the crown, and were granted by the king
to Robert de Waudari, (fn. 28) one of his knights. William
was subsequently restored to his estates, (fn. 29) and died
without issue in 1182, and the manor having returned
to the crown was next granted to Baldwin de Bethune,
afterwards earl of Albemarle, who in 1190 held crown
land in Luton valued at £80 a year, (fn. 30) and in 1214,
on the marriage of his daughter with William
Marshal, earl of Pembroke, Luton passed to him as
part of her marriage portion. (fn. 31)
During the civil war between John and his barons
William Marshal took the side of the latter, and
Luton fell into the hands of King John, who granted
it to Fulk de Breauté, 'as he was permitted to do in
times of war.' Afterwards, when there was peace
between the king and his barons, Fulk, not wishing
to be against the peace, returned the manor to the earl,
who restored it to Fulk by a charter by which William,
son of William Marshal, quitclaimed to Fulk de
Breauté the whole manor of Luton to hold to himself
and his heirs. (fn. 32) This Fulk, who thus acquired Luton,
was the famous Norman adventurer who took a prominent part on the king's side in the barons' war.
He appears to have made himself very much disliked at Luton, as he did throughout England. In
1221 he built a castle here, which the prior of Dunstable complained was a source of danger to the priory
and the neighbourhood. (fn. 33) In the previous year he
had unjustly disseised William de Stanes of free tenements in Luton, (fn. 34) and in 1224 he similarly dispossessed thirty-two freemen in the manor of Luton and
appropriated their pasture for himself. (fn. 35) On another
occasion the abbot of St. Albans complained that the
outflow of a pool constructed by Fulk had injured
the abbot's crops whereupon Fulk replied that he
wished that the overflow had occurred when the grain
was garnered, so that the injury would have been
greater. (fn. 36) Fulk died in disgrace in 1226, and in 1229,
on the occasion of the marriage of William Marshal
with Eleanor, sister of Henry III, Luton manor was
regranted to him, (fn. 37) and thus in the words of the
Chronicler he 'recovered what he had formerly
foolishly given.' (fn. 38) William Marshal, earl of Pembroke, died in 1231, leaving no issue, but his widow,
who subsequently married Simon de Montfort, earl of
Leicester, survived until 1274, (fn. 39) when Luton fell to
the heirs of Isabel de Clare, wife of William de
Ferrers, earl of Derby, she being one of the co-heirs
of Anselm Marshal, earl of Pembroke. (fn. 40) She had six
daughters who became their mother's co-heirs, and
the consequent subdivision of the manor into sixths
leads to some complication in its history. The names
of these daughters were Isabel, wife of Reginald de
Mohun; Maud, married first to William de Kyme and
afterwards to William de Vyvonia; Sybil, wife of
Frank de Bohun; Joan, wife of John de Mohun;
Agatha, wife of Hugh Mortimer of Chelmarsh; and
Eleanor, married successively to William de Vaux,
Roger de Quincy, and Roger de Leyburne. (fn. 41) The
portions of three of these sisters, Isabel de Mohun,
Maud de Kyme, and Agatha, wife of Hugh Mortimer, after following a separate descent for some time,
subsequently became reunited in what was later known
as Luton manor. (fn. 42) Isabel de Mohun, the eldest
daughter, appears to have received as her share in addition to the hundred of Flitt, rents of free tenants in
Luton amounting to £5 19s., for these rents were
held by her son, William de Mohun, at his death in
1282. He left a son Reginald, who died without
issue previous to 1297, in which year his sister Mary,
wife of John de Meriet, received as her portion of her
father William's estate all his lands in Luton, valued
at £17 10s. 4d., (fn. 43) for which her husband rendered
feudal service in 1316. (fn. 44) Mary de Meriet left no
issue, and on her husband's death in 1327 this portion
of the manor reverted to the heirs of Isabel de Mohun,
who are given as John de Beauchamp of Somerset,
and Henry son of Roger (representing Maud de
Kyme), John de Bohun, John de Mohun, and Hugh
Mortimer. (fn. 45) In 1332 John de Bohun transferred
his share to Hugh Mortimer, (fn. 46) and in 1341 he received
a similar grant from John de Beauchamp. (fn. 47) The
shares of John de Mohun and Henry, son of Roger,
appear to have become absorbed in their other Luton
property, and no further separate descent of them has
been found.

Marshal. Party or and vert a lion gules.

Clare. Or three cheverons gules.
Maud de Kyme, second daughter of Isabel de
Clare, survived her mother until 1299, when she
died seised of the sixth part of Luton manor which
included a water-mill and free fishery, also a free
court and view of frankpledge, and a market. (fn. 48) She
left four daughters as her co-heirs, Joan de Vyvonia
wife of Reginald Fitz Piers, Cicely wife of John de
Beauchamp of Somerset, Sybil, wife of Guy de
Rochechouart, and Mabel de Archiaco, whose son
Aymer succeeded to his mother's share. (fn. 49) In 1300
Sybil de Rochechouart conveyed her fourth of her
mother's property to Cicely de Beauchamp, (fn. 50) and in
1308 Aymer de Archiaco enfeoffed Joan Fitz Piers
and Reginald her son of his mother's fourth. (fn. 51) Thus
of Maud de Kyme's sixth of Luton manor, onehalf now belonged to Joan Fitz Piers, the other to
Cicely Beauchamp. Joan Fitz Piers held in 1302
one-fourth of her mother's lands, valued at 17s. 10½d.,
and including one-fourth of a windmill, a market,
and view of frankpledge. (fn. 52) She died in 1314, (fn. 53) and
was followed by her son Reginald, who died in 1328, (fn. 54)
His grandson Reginald Fitz Herbert held this portion
of Luton manor till 1347, when he was succeeded by
a son, Edmund Fitz Herbert (fn. 55) whose son Edmund
Fitz Herbert in 1377 conveyed his estate in Luton,
worth at this time £8 per annum, to William de
Wenlock. (fn. 56) In 1389 William Wenlock made a settlement of this estate on William Wyvell of Wenlock, (fn. 57)
but no further mention of it has been found until the
following century, when, together with the larger portions
of the manor which had accumulated in the hands of the
Mortimers, it reappears still in
the family of the Wenlocks. (fn. 58)
In 1318 Cicely Beauchamp,
who had acquired the other
half of Maud de Kyme's property, effected an exchange
with Hugh Mortimer, by
which, in return for his property in Sturminster, she gave
him her share in Luton
manor. (fn. 59) Thus of the four
parts into which Maud de Kyme's share in Luton
manor had been divided, by the fourteenth century
one-half had gone to Hugh Mortimer, and one-half to
the Wenlocks to await subsequent amalgamation in
the fifteenth century.

Wenlock. Argent a cheveron between three blackamoors' heads razed sable.
Agatha Mortimer, a third of the co-heiresses of
Isabel de Clare, inherited in 1275 one-sixth of the
manor of Luton, which included the capital messuage of the manor. (fn. 60) She died in 1306 leaving a
son Henry Mortimer, (fn. 61) who in 1316 rendered
feudal service to the king in Luton, (fn. 62) and whose
son Hugh, in 1331, claimed a market, view of frankpledge, and free warren in Luton for himself and as
feoffee of Cicely de Beauchamp. (fn. 63) In 1344 Hugh
Mortimer made a settlement of the manor on his
son Henry and his heirs, with remainder to his other
sons, and failing them to his daughters Joan and
Margaret and their heirs. (fn. 64) Hugh Mortimer died
in 1372 leaving as his heir his grandson William, son
of Henry, (fn. 65) who, in an inquisition dated 1391 is
described as a fool and idiot, his lands in consequence
being in the king's hands. (fn. 66) His brother Hugh inherited his estates, and died in 1403 without issue, when
this moiety of Luton manor, in accordance with the
settlement made by Hugh Mortimer in 1344,
passed to John de Cressy, his second cousin, son of
Mabel granddaughter of the aforesaid Hugh. (fn. 67) John
Cressy died in 1407, leaving a son Thomas, aged six,
who only survived his father a few months, and left
as heir a brother John, aged at the time of the inquisition thirty-three weeks. (fn. 68) He continued to hold
the manor until 1467, in which year he alienated it
to John Lord Wenlock, (fn. 69) who fought on the Lancastrian side at the first battle of St. Albans in 1455.
He next, 'with contemptible tergiversation, 'joined
the Yorkist party in 1459, and was attainted. He
fought for them at Towton in 1461, but again changed
sides and was slain at Tewkesbury in 1471 fighting
under the Lancastrian banner. (fn. 70) His estates thus
escheated to the crown, and were granted to Thomas
Rotherham, at that time bishop of Lincoln, and subsequently archbishop of York. (fn. 71) This grant must have
occurred before 1475, for Thomas Rotherham's will,
which is found enrolled at that date, mentions
Luton manor amongst his real property. (fn. 72) Two years
later, probably in order to consolidate Thomas
Rotherham's title, Thomas Lawley of Wenlock, kinsman and heir of John Lord Wenlock, released to the
bishop all claim to the Luton manors, formerly held
by his cousin Lord Wenlock. (fn. 73) Thomas Rotherham
died in 1500, and in accordance with his will his
Luton property passed to Thomas, son of his brother
John, (fn. 74) who held the manor till his death in 1504,
when it passed to his son, another Thomas, aged about
five. (fn. 75) He died in 1565, when the property passed
to his son George, (fn. 76) who, at his death in 1600, left a
son Sir John Rotherham, knight, as heir, (fn. 77) who in
1610–11 conveyed his manor
into the hands of trustees preparatory to a sale to Sir Robert
Napier alias Sandy, which took
place in the same year. (fn. 78) Sir
Robert Napier died in possession of this property in 1637,
when it passed to Robert
Napier his son by his third
wife Margaret Robinson. (fn. 79) He
sat for Parliament, representing
Weymouth in 1628 and Peterborough in 1640. During
the troubles in the reign of
Charles I he sided with the crown, and in 1644
the Committee of Sequestrations for Bedford reported
that Sir Robert Napier 'being a member of the House
of Commons did in August last depart from London
and Westminster and neglected the service of the
House till December' and that his estates were
accordingly sequestered. He submitted and offered
to compound for his estates in 1646, but was not
finally discharged until 1647. (fn. 80) His death took place
in 1660, when he was succeeded by a grandson Sir
Robert Napier, who died unmarried and under age in
1675. (fn. 81) His heir male was his uncle John Napier,
who held the Luton estate till his death in 1711,
when his son Theophilus came into possession. (fn. 82)
The latter died in 1719 leaving no direct heir, and
Luton passed to his nephew John Napier, who dying
unmarried in 1748, devised his Luton estate by will to
his aunt Frances Napier, from whom it passed to her
nephew Francis Herne of Middlesex. (fn. 63) In 1763–4
Francis Herne sold it to the earl of Bute. (fn. 84) After
having resided at Luton nearly thirty years he died in
1792, and the property passed to his eldest son John,
created marquess of Bute in 1796. He died in 1814,
when the whole of this property was conveyed into
the hands of trustees for John, his grandson, then a
minor, (fn. 85) who, in 1844, sold the Luton estate, which
then consisted of some 4,000 acres, to Mr. Ward of
Clopton. (fn. 86) He never came into residence, and in
1848 it was purchased from him by John Shaw
Leigh, (fn. 87) who died in 1871, when he was succeeded
by John Gerard Leigh, on whose death in 1878 his
widow, afterwards Madame de Falbe, succeeded to the
estate for her life. She died in 1899, when the
Luton estate passed to her husband's nephew Gerard
Leigh, a minor. He died within a fortnight of his
entry into possession, leaving an infant son, whose
trustees sold it in 1903 to Sir
Julius Wernher, in whose possession it is at the present
day. (fn. 88)

Napier. Argent a saltire engrailed between four cinqfoils gules.
It now remains to account
for the sixths of the ancient
Luton manor, which Joan de
Mohun, Sybil de Bohun and
Eleanor de Leyburne acquired
in 1274 as three of the co-heirs
of Isabel de Clare. The portion of Joan de Mohun passed
to her son John de Mohun,
whose son John, then aged ten,
succeeded him in 1279. (fn. 89) In
1305 the latter was negotiating
a marriage between his son John and Christina,
daughter of John de Segrave, when her dower was
provided from rents in Luton manor, (fn. 90) and the son of
this marriage, John de Mohun, in 1375, enfeoffed
Sir Neel Loryng of Chalgrave, one of the first
founders of the Garter, with his share of Luton
manor. (fn. 91)

Wernher, Baronet. Gules the head of a grappling-iron argent set saltire-wise with two sixpointed molets or above a mount vert in the foot.
On the death of Sir Neel Loryng (March 1385–6),
William Loryng, a clerk, obtained a licence in 1387
to alienate this property to the prior and convent of
Dunstable to celebrate services daily for the soul of
Sir Neel and others. (fn. 92)
The priory appears to have retained this property,
for at the Dissolution Dunstable owned in Luton
rents amounting in all to £16 16s. 1d., (fn. 93) and in
1545 Henry Audely and John Maynard received a
grant of the lands in Luton which had belonged to
Dunstable Priory.
From the fact that these names frequently occur as
trustees about this time, and that the greater part of
these lands were already leased by Sir Thomas
Rotherham, lord of Luton manor, it seems likely that
this grant was preliminary to a final transfer to him,
and that this portion of Luton manor again became
absorbed in the whole. (fn. 94)
The one-sixth which fell to Sybil de Bohun,
later known as WOODCROFT alias HALYARD
MANOR, (fn. 95) was transferred almost immediately by
her son John de Bohun to Emery de Lucy, who in
1276 obtained a confirmation
of the grant of ten librates of
land in Luton held of the king
by the service of half a knight's
fee. (fn. 96) Emery de Lucy was succeeded some time previous to
1296 by Geoffrey de Lucy, (fn. 97)
who died in 1305 holding
'one-sixth of the manor of
Luton, namely the hamlet of
Woodcroft.' (fn. 98) He left a son
Geoffrcy, aged 17 at the time
of his father's death, who in
1332 obtained a charter of
free warren in his demesne lands of Woodcroft, (fn. 99) and
dying in 1346 was followed by a son Geoffrey, (fn. 100)
who held the manor till 1400, when Reginald his
son succeeded him. (fn. 101) Reginald de Lucy was followed
in 1437 by a son Walter who died in 1444 leaving
a son William. (fn. 102) On the death of the latter in
1461 (fn. 103) the manor passed for life to his widow
Margaret, who held it until 1467, (fn. 104) when it was
divided between his niece Elizabeth, daughter of his
sister Eleanor and wife of John earl of Worcester,
and his nephew William Vaux, son of Maud, another
sister, who was attainted on account of a speech made
against the king. (fn. 105) Woodcroft eventually passed to
William Vaux, who was slain at Tewkesbury in 1471,
and whose grandson, Sir Thomas Vaux, Lord Harrowden, transferred this manor to the earl of Essex, (fn. 106)
who in 1544 conveyed it into the hands of Robert
Dormer and other trustees. (fn. 107) This was probably
preliminary to an alienation for when the manor reappears a generation later it is as the property of
Ralph Alwey, on whose death in 1623 it passed with
his other property to his three daughters, Mary,
Anne and Dorothy. (fn. 108) It eventually became the
portion of Mary, wife of Edward Wingate, (fn. 109) who in
1653 conveyed it by fine to Robert Napier, (fn. 110) and
Woodcroft or Halyard, as it is henceforward called to
distinguish it from the other Woodcroft, from this
time onwards follows the same descent as Luton
manor (q.v.). It has never lost its separate identity,
however, and at the present day is distinguished by
name as one of the manors which collectively are
styled the manor of Luton with its members. (fn. 111)

Lucy. Gules crusilly argent and three lucies argent.
One-sixth only of Luton manor—that which Eleanor
de Leyburne inherited as co-heiress of her mother—now
remains to be accounted for. It became later known
as WOODCROFT MANOR, and appears to have
passed almost immediately from Eleanor de Leyburne
to Walter de Mandeville, who in 1288 held at Woodcroft in Luton 129 acres of arable land, 6 acres of
meadow, 18 acres of pasture, and £9 6s. 11½d. rents
held of the king in chief for one-sixth of two knights'
fees. (fn. 112)
His sister and heir was Sibil, wife of Henry de
Boderigan, who did not long retain it, for in 1310 it
was held by John le Poer, who then received licence
to grant Woodcroft manor to Robert de Kendale. (fn. 113)
The latter is returned as owing service for this manor
in 1316, (fn. 114) and died in 1330 leaving a son Edward
as his heir. (fn. 115) In 1372 Edward de Kendale conveyed the manor to William de Croisores and other
trustees, (fn. 116) and died the following year, leaving sons,
Edward and Thomas, who both died without issue in
1375, when their sister Beatrice, wife of Sir Robert
Turk, became their heir. (fn. 117) Beatrice pre-deceased
her husband, who held the manor till his death in
1400, when their daughter Joan, wife of John Waleys,
acquired Woodcroft. (fn. 118) Her eldest daughter Beatrice
married Reginald, son of John Cockayne, of Bury
Hatley, and in 1421, probably on the occasion of this
marriage, John and Joan Waleys conveyed this manor
to her and her heirs. (fn. 119) On the death of Reginald
Cockayne Beatrice married William Milreth, a citizen
and alderman of London, and on her death in 1448, (fn. 120)
Woodcroft manor passed to John Cockayne, her son
by her first marriage, who died in 1490. (fn. 121) His
widow Joan, however, held the manor till her death
in 1507, when Edmund Cockayne succeeded to the
estate. (fn. 122) From Edmund Cockayne Woodcroft manor
then appears to have passed to a younger branch of
the family, for in 1522 William Markham and
Frances his wife (who was daughter of William
Cockayne, son of Edmund) conveyed the manor by
fine to John Markham. He was still holding in
1584, (fn. 123) between which date and 1630 the manor
passed to Edward Wyngate, (fn. 124) who also held Halyard,
and it has since followed the same descent as that
manor (q.v.), and like it has preserved to the present
day its separate identity as a member of Luton
manor.
The manor of LUTON HOO is declared by some
writers upon historically worthless evidence to have
been held by the Hoo family prior to the Norman
Conquest. (fn. 125) It appears always to have been separate
from the royal manor of Luton, and to have been
held in chief. (fn. 126) It is not mentioned in Domesday,
and no documentary evidence has been found of the
Hoos holding in Luton prior to 1245, in which year
Thomas de Hoo conveyed land and a small rent to
his father Robert. (fn. 127) In 1292 Robert de Hoo,
probably a son of Thomas, received a charter of free
warren in his manor of Hoo, (fn. 128)
and in 1306 conveyed the
manor by fine to his son
Robert, (fn. 129) who in 1319 leased
his capital messuage of Hoo at
a rent of £10 to his mother,
Hadwisa de Goushill, and
about the same time acquired
the mill of Thatchford by purchase from Thomas de Keston. (fn. 130) In 1337 Thomas de
Hoo, Robert's son, obtained a
charter of free warren: (fn. 131) his
death took place some time before 1391, in which
year his widow Isabella obtained a confirmation
of this charter. (fn. 132) He left a son William, whose
widow Eleanor in 1415 conveyed the manor to her
son Sir Thomas de Hoo, probably on the attainment
of his majority. (fn. 133) He distinguished himself greatly
in the wars with France, and in 1447 was created
Baron of Hoo and of Hastings. He died in 1454–5
leaving a brother of the half blood, Thomas Hoo
(who died without issue in 1486) and four daughters
and co-heirs—Anne, wife of Geoffrey Boleyn, Eleanor,
wife of Sir Richard Carewe, Elizabeth, wife of Richard
Devenish, and Anne wife of Roger Copley, (fn. 134) who all
appear to have inherited an interest an interest in the manor,
and it was probably by a mutual arrangement that
the manor was sold to Richard Fermor about 1523. (fn. 135)
He appears subsequently to have forfeited his lands to
Henry VIII, 'because he gave help to a certain
James Thayne, a convict,' but on his humble petition
recovered Luton Hoo manor in 1551. (fn. 136) Jeremiah
Fermor, probably his son, was holding the manor in
1559, (fn. 137) between which date and 1594 it passed to
Sir John Brocket, (fn. 138) and was sold by his trustees to
Sir Robert Napier, (fn. 139) who, in 1611, acquired Luton
manor (q.v.) and Luton Hoo has henceforward
followed the same descent. Sir Robert Napier built
a residence here, and Luton Hoo has since been known
as the seat of the lords of Luton manor and its
members. In 1623 he received licence to inclose
300 acres to make a park with free warren, (fn. 140) and
this was enlarged to 1,200 acres by Lord Bute, after
his purchase in 1763, (fn. 141) who employed 'Capability
Brown' to lay out the park, and widen the River
Lea, which flows through it, into a considerable lake.
He also added largely to the house which has been
injured by fires in 1771 and again in 1844. (fn. 142)

Hoo. Quarterly sable and argent.
Luton Hoo Park, at the present day the residence
of Sir Julius Wernher, lies to the south of the town,
the Lea forming its eastern boundary, making a long
sheet of ornamental water. The house stands on the
brow of the slope, surrounded by picturesque welltimbered park land and plantations. The entrance
is by a colonnaded portico to the west, opening to a
large central hall, from which a lately inserted staircase at the north-east angle leads to the upper floors.
The dining-room is in the middle of the east front,
with library and drawing-rooms, etc., to the south,
and the chapel is at the north-east angle. The
collection of pictures for which the house was famous
was almost entirely dispersed at a late sale, and only
a few still remain in their old quarters. The
house itself is of little interest architecturally;
the fittings of the chapel, and the marble panelling
in the dining-room are costly modern additions, and
the present owner has spared no expense in fitting up
the house.
PICKS MANOR, held in chief, is first mentioned
as a manor in 1470. In that year Lord Wenlock
held a court for Luton, Langley and 'Pykes' bracketed
together. (fn. 143) He had obtained Luton from John
Cressy in 1467, as previously stated, whilst his ancestors had in 1377 acquired the portions of two of the
co-heirs of Maud de Kyme, so that it does not seem
unreasonable to suppose that Picks is a distinctive
name given to one of these portions, more especially
as it was held in chief. (fn. 144) From 1470 it continued
to follow the same descent as Luton manor (q.v.).
The last mention found of it before its reabsorption
in Luton occurs in 1638 when Sir Robert Napier
died seised of Picks Farm. (fn. 145)
There were several manors in this parish held of
Luton manor. The estate afterwards known as
BRACHE MANOR undoubtedly belonged at one
time to the royal manor of Luton, for whilst the latter was in the possession of William Marshal earl of
Pembroke (who held Luton between 1214 and 1231)
he granted a yearly rent of 20s. from his mill at Brache
to St. Paul's Cathedral for prayers for the soul of his
late wife Alice de Bethune. (fn. 146) By 1282 it had become the property of the Kendales, who held it of the
heirs of Joan de Mohun, (fn. 147) for in that year Jordan
de Kendale granted to Andrew de la Brache lands
in Brache for his life. (fn. 148) After the acquisition
of Woodcroft manor by Robert de Kendale in
1310 it followed the same descent as that manor (q.v.)
until the sixteenth century. It is called a manor in
1531 (fn. 149) when it was held by William Markham in
right of his wife Frances, daughter of William
Cockayne. (fn. 150) In 1576 a preliminary settlement of
Brache manor on George Rotherham was made by
Francis Markham, probably their son, (fn. 151) and another
settlement in 1585 on the same by John Markham, (fn. 152)
which appears to have taken effect, for George
Rotherham held the manor in 1595. (fn. 153) In 1602
John Rotherham transferred it with other manors to
Robert Napier, and it has since followed the same
descent as Luton manor (q.v.), of which it is a member at the present day. (fn. 154)
The origin of the manor of DALLOW or
DOLLOW is to be sought in the 5 hides belonging
to Luton Church, which in the time of Edward the
Confessor belonged to Morcar the priest, but by the
time of the Survey had passed to William the Chamberlain, (fn. 155) who also held lands in chief at Battlesden,
Potsgrove, and Totternhoe in Bedfordshire. Mr.
Cobbe in his history has contended that William
the Chamberlain was also a priest, but though
he may well have been in minor orders, he held
Luton Church with its lands by knight service, and
transmitted them to his heirs under the same
tenure. (fn. 156) In the reign of King Stephen William Chamberlain, probably a son of the Domesday tenant, held
these lands and Luton Church of Robert earl of
Gloucester, and the desire of the latter to put in a
kinsman of his own led to the final transference of
both the church and the manor which formed its
endowment to St. Albans. (fn. 157) The story is given at
some length in the 'Gesta Abbatum.' Robert, earl of
Gloucester, wishing to put in his kinsman Gilbert de
Cimmay, was greatly shocked at the idea of this
church being held by laymen. Alexander, bishop
of Lincoln, refused however to dispossess William
the Chamberlain without legal forms; but after three
days had been appointed for the hearing of the case,
and the defendant refused to appear, he was disseised,
and Gilbert de Cimmay was instituted. The fall of
Robert of Gloucester put the manor for a time into the
hands of Robert de Waudari, a kinsman of the abbot
of St. Albans, who was thus able to mediate between
him and Gilbert de Cimmay. A serious illness of
the latter, combined with the persuasions of the abbot,
moved him to resign the benefice into the hands of
the archdeacon Nicholas of Bedford; it was then conferred on the abbot's nephew. As soon as William, earl
of Gloucester was restored to his father's property the
abbot approached him and obtained from him a grant
of the church for 80 marks, and a discharge of knight
service for another 30 marks. This was confirmed by
King Stephen between 1151 and 1154, and also by
Henry II. (fn. 158)
The first reference which has been found to Dallow
manor as such occurs in 1258, when Godfrey of
Biscott and twelve others acknowledged that they had
neglected to attend the view of frankpledge held
annually at Dallow. (fn. 159) In 1291 the value of the
manor was £7 3s. 1d. (fn. 160) ; and in 1331 the abbot
claimed view of frankpledge in his manor and a
yearly fair in the town of Luton on the Feast of the
Assumption. (fn. 161) At the Dissolution the manor became crown
property, and was granted in
1544 to Sir Thomas Barnardiston, (fn. 162) who in 1586 transferred
it to Thomas Crawley. (fn. 163) In
1606 Richard, his son, by
alienating a portion of this
manor, divided it into two
parts, each of which became
known as Dallow manor, and
followed a separate descent
until the middle of the nineteenth century, when they
again became united in the
possession of the Crawley family. The first of these
fractions, that which included the manor-house and
grounds, was sold by Richard Crawley to Richard
Scudamore in 1606, (fn. 164) who in the same year transferred
it to Sir John Rotherham, (fn. 165) by whom it was conveyed
in 1615 to Sir Robert Napier, (fn. 166) and thus became part
of the Luton manor estate (q.v.). It was not sold with
that estate, however, in 1844, but part of it was purchased in 1859 from Lord Bute, and the remainder
in 1862 from J. Shaw Leigh, by T. Sambrooke
Crawley, whose son, Mr. Francis Crawley, holds it at
the present day. (fn. 167)

Crawley. Or a fesse gules between three storks with three crosslets or on the fesse.
The other fraction of Dallow manor was sold by
Richard Crawley in 1613 to Robert Faldo of North
Mimms, (fn. 168) who in 1620 sold the property for £1,600
to Henry Denham and Ralph Merefield. (fn. 169) The
latter released his claim in the manor in 1622 to
Henry Denham, who in the following year sold it to
Richard Peters, (fn. 170) who finally, in 1640, sold it for
£1,450 to Bernard Hale of King's Walden. (fn. 171)
Dallow manor continued to be
held by the Hales until 1859, (fn. 172)
when by sale to T. Sambrooke
Crawley it was reunited to the
other portion of the manor,
and a farm of this name exists
at the present day in possession
of Mr. Francis Crawley, his
son. (fn. 173)

Hale. Azure a cheveron or battled on both sides.
The first reference to what
later became known as DAVID
ASHBY MANOR occurs in an
inquisition taken in 1375 when
Edward de Kendale held those
lands and tenements which were of David de Ashby
in Luton, including 47s. 6d. rent of assize of free
tenants, partly held of John and William Loryng by
service of 27s. 2½d. per annum, and the residue of
Hugh Mortimer by service of 2s. 7d. (fn. 174) This
property followed the same descent as Brache and
Woodcroft (q.v.), (fn. 175) until, like the former manor, it
was alienated by John Markham to George Rotherham in 1585, (fn. 176) and so became included in Luton
manor (q.v.). This manor is mentioned by name as
part of the Luton estate in a Recovery Roll of 1815, (fn. 177)
but all trace of it is lost at the present day.
The property afterwards known as EastHide
MANOR or THE HYDE appears to have been held
by a family of Hyde in the twelfth century, but is
not mentioned as a manor until 1535. (fn. 178) It was
parcel of Luton manor, but the only reference that
has been found to the overlordship occurs in 1253,
when the heirs of Alan de Hyde were distrained by
the bailiff of Luton manor. (fn. 179) As early as 1197 Fulk
de la Hyde is mentioned in a fine as holding
the moiety of a mill here. Alan de Hyde,
who is the next owner of whom mention has been
found, was holding in 1232, when he acknowledged
the right of Alice, wife of Roger de Luton, to her
dower in his lands of Luton. (fn. 180) In 1240 he was
admitted to Dunstable Priory and gave, 'with his
body,' 1 virgate and rent of ½ a mark in Stopsley,
which were leased to Walter de Hyde, who appears to
have been his successor. (fn. 181) Roger de la Hyde was
holding in 1247, in which year he held two parts of
the moiety of a mill in Luton of Agnes de la Hyde. (fn. 182)
His name appears in 1252 and again in 1262, and
finally he released to his son Henry all his inheritance
in La Hyde for the rent of one clove of gilliflower. (fn. 183)
In 1305 Thomas de la Hyde was holding land in
Luton, (fn. 184) and then all trace of this property is lost
until 1534, when it reappears as a reputed manor in
the possession of Richard Fermor, who in that year
mortgaged it to Thomas Pope, together with Luton
Hoo (q.v.). (fn. 185) Its history is the same as that of
Luton Hoo manor until the death of Sir John
Brocket in 1599, (fn. 186) when it passed by settlement to
his brother Edward. His son John in 1647 conveyed
it to Thomas Mitchell, (fn. 187) by whose family it was
retained until 1717, when Richard Mitchell transferred it by fine to Samuel Hannot. (fn. 188) It was subsequently purchased by Philadelphia, widow of Sir
Thomas Cotton, (fn. 189) who some time after 1741 sold it
to Mr. Floyer, governor of Fort St. David, from whom
it was purchased by Dr. Bettesworth, chancellor of
the diocese of London, who died in 1779. (fn. 190) John
Bettesworth, probably his son, held this manor in
1782, (fn. 191) and in 1806 John Bettesworth Trevanion (fn. 192)
sold it to Robert Hibbert, the founder of the Hibbert
Trust to provide lectures and scholarships for the
spread of Christianity. (fn. 193) It was purchased in 1833
by Levi Ames, whose direct descendant, Lionel
Ames, of Ayot St. Lawrence, holds it at the present
day. (fn. 194)
The origin of FARLEY MANOR is found in
the land which Henry II granted in 1156 to the
Hospital of Holy Trinity, Santingfeld, Wissant, in
Picardy. This grant is specified in the charter as
'terram de Ferleya juxta Lectonam, usque ad terram
ecclesiae de Lectona.… Et totam terram de Wyperleya usque ad viam de Presteleya.' (fn. 195) This grant was
subsequently augmented in 1204 by 45 acres in
Luton from Baldwin de Bethune. (fn. 196) These lands were
afterwards colonized, and became a dependent hospital,
with a master and brethren, (fn. 197) known as Farley. In
1291 the master of Farley had in Farley and Luton
in lands, rents, mills, and woods £4 12s., and on his
non-appearance in 1331 to support his claim to view
of frankpledge in his manor of Farley, the manor
was taken into the king's hands. (fn. 198) On the dissolution of the alien priories in 1447 Farley was granted
to the provost and scholars of King's College, Cambridge, (fn. 199) who did not continue to hold it however,
for in 1522 Farley was again crown property. (fn. 200)
Lysons offers a supposition, based on no ascertainable
authority, and not corroborated by its subsequent
history, that King's College had conveyed Farley to
St. Albans in exchange for
other lands. (fn. 201) St. Albans certainly appears to have tried to
enforce some claim on Farley,
which lay adjacent to its own
manor of Dallow, for in 1505
George Rotherham (whose son
is found later as lessee of the
manor) wrote to Pierre Caurel,
master of the hospital of Santingfeld, warning him that the
abbot of St. Albans had entered upon his lands at Farley
and dispossessed the tenants.
The master in reply desired
Rotherham to sue the abbot,
as the place had belonged to Santingfeld from time
immemorial. (fn. 202)

King's College, Cambridge. Sable three lilies argent and a chief party azure with a fleur de lis or and gules with a leopard or.
George Rotherham, as appears in a manuscript
of 1554, had the manors on a 92 years' lease
from the crown, dating from 1522, but before it
expired his son George received a grant in fee of
Farley and Whiperley from
Queen Elizabeth in 1554. (fn. 203)
George Rotherham held these
manors at his death in 1594,
when his son George succeeded
him, (fn. 204) being followed on his
death in 1632 by his son
George. (fn. 205) In 1698 and also
in 1707 Thomas Rotherham,
probably a grandson of the lastnamed George, still held this
estate, (fn. 206) which by 1783 had
passed to John Sharpe Palmer. (fn. 207)
He transferred it to the marquess of Bute, who held
it in 1815. (fn. 208) Lord Bute sold it some time previous
to 1855 to Mr. Crawley, whose family holds it at the
present day. (fn. 209)

Rotherham. Vert three harts tripping or.
The manor of FENNELS GROVE, which derives
its name from the Fitz Neel family, to whom it belonged in the thirteenth century, was held of Hugh
Mortimer of his moiety of Luton manor (q.v.) by
service of 6d. per annum (fn. 210) until 1370, when it fell
into the king's hands, and was subsequently held in
chief. The first mention that has been found of the
Fitz Neels holding in Luton occurs in 1283, when
Robert Fitz Neel granted lands there to Roger
Taylard. (fn. 211) In 1329 Roger de Gildesburgh acknowledged the right of Robert Fitz Neel, probably a son
of the above Robert, to a messuage, seven score acres of
land, 6 acres of meadow, 30 acres of wood, and the
moiety of a water-mill. (fn. 212) On the death of the latter
in 1332 his daughter Grace, wife of John de Nowers,
became his heir. (fn. 213) Her son John in 1370 conveyed
Fennels Grove to Edward III, (fn. 214) who in 1378 granted
to Henry Downham for life 'the house and place of
"Fyneslesgrove" in Luton.' (fn. 215) In 1399 Fennels Grove,
still crown property, was valued at 60s., (fn. 216) but in 1416
was granted with many other manors by Henry V to
his brother John, duke of Bedford, (fn. 217) on whose death
in 1435 the property returned to Henry VI as heirgeneral of his uncle. (fn. 218) In 1462 Edward IV made a
lease of the manor of Luton Fennels Grove—here
definitely so-called for the first time, (fn. 219) and it seems
to have been subsequently granted to John Lord
Wenlock, for it appears both in the earlier will of
Thomas Rotherham and the release of Thomas Lawley,
Lord Wenlock's heir-general, in 1477. (fn. 220) It thus
became absorbed in Luton manor (q.v.), and subsequent to 1611 no mention has been found of it as a
separate manor. (fn. 221)
GREATHAMPSTEAD, later known as FALCONER'S HALL, was another property held of
Luton manor. In 1803 the owner still paid a quitrent of £1 2s. 7½d. to Luton manor, (fn. 222) but if, as its
name implies, it at one time formed part of the Greathampstead Someries manor, payment was probably
made on account of a former dependence on the manor
of Woodcroft, at that time absorbed in Luton. Its
history—which has been almost entirely compiled
from papers in the possession of Mr. F. Crawley—begins in 1564, when, described as a messuage, farm,
and dove-house, it was sold by Richard Laurence to William Crawley, whose grandson Thomas Crawley sold it
in 1662 to John Miller, from whose grandson John it
had passed before 1705 to Richard Fielden, at which
date Hannah, widow of Richard Fielden, was acting
as his executrix. Richard Fielden, son of the above,
left it to his daughter Sara Jobson in 1725 'because
that his son Richard had intermarried with a woman
of mean parentage and doubtful reputation without
his consent, and that he had since paid considerable sums
of money for him as shown in his Book of Accompts.'
Finally in 1752 Greathampstead Farm was sold by
Stafford Jobson to John Crawley. (fn. 223) Lysons says that
'a reputed manor of that name is now a field belonging
to a farm called Falconer's Hall, which is the property
of John Crawley,' (fn. 224) to whose representative, Francis
Crawley, it still belongs, though the farm-house has
been pulled down of recent years. (fn. 225)
The manor of HAYES or HOOBURNE was held
of Luton manor, though no mention of the overlordship has been found before 1487, when it was held
of John Rotherham by a rent of 50s. for all services, (fn. 226)
and at a court held at Luton in 1554. the lord of
Hayes still paid service to that manor. (fn. 227) Very little
has been found concerning the early history of Hayes,
but from the twelfth century a family of de la Hayes
held property in Luton, from which this manor
possibly originated. In 1198 John de Sandon transferred 4 virgates of land in Luton to Reginald de
la Haye, (fn. 228) the next mention found is in 1275, when
Walter de la Haye and Matilda his wife recognized
the claim of Agnes de la Barre to her dower, consisting
of 2 marks' rent and one-third of a carucate of land. (fn. 229)
By 1296 Walter had been succeeded by Roger de la
Haye, probably a son, who in that year transferred a
messuage and land to Thomas de la Hyde. (fn. 230) The
family apparently still continued to hold land in
Luton, for in 1390 Nicholas de la Haye confirmed to
his mother, Agnes Thrale, lands in West Hide, Luton.
He was followed by John Hay, who is mentioned in
the 'Return of the Gentry of Bedfordshire in 1433.' (fn. 231)
He was steward of the archbishop of Canterbury, and
was buried in the north aisle of Luton church, with
an inscription to the effect that he had repaired the
church at his own expense. (fn. 232) After his death in
1454 there is a gap in the history of the manor until it
reappears in 1475 under the
title of Hooburne manor,
when John White acknowledged the right of John Catesby to it. (fn. 233) He died in 1487,
leaving a son Humphrey Catesby, (fn. 234) who by 1534 had been
succeeded by Anthony Catesby, (fn. 235) on whose death in 1554
his son Thomas succeeded to
the estate. (fn. 236) In 1586, and
again in 1589, Thomas Catesby conveyed Hayes manor to Edward Docwra and
other trustees, (fn. 237) and finally in 1598 the manor was sold
by George Catesby for £830 to Thomas Cheyne. (fn. 238)
Thomas Cheyne, dying in 1612, left Hayes manor by
will to his younger son George, who held it until 1645,
when he appears to have transferred it to Robert
Cheyne (probably his nephew), (fn. 239) and the latter in
1652 alienated it by fine to John Howland and others,
probably trustees. (fn. 240) Twenty years later it appears as
the property of Sir Samuel Starling. (fn. 241) From him it
passed to the Etricks, though it has not been found
possible to ascertain the exact date, and in 1716
Anthony and Elizabeth Etrick alienated it to Benjamin Morris, (fn. 242) whose family continued to hold it for
upwards of 150 years. Lysons, writing about 1802,
describes Hayes as 'a spurious manor, a small estate
within Stopsley, the property of Mr. Morris,' (fn. 243) whilst
Davis, writing a generation later, says that the manor
was still held by this family, which belonged to
Buntingford in Hertfordshire. (fn. 244) It was purchased from
Mr. Morris about forty years ago by the late Colonel
Sowerby, who owned Bennet's manor (q.v.), and is
now the property of Mr. Sowerby of Putteridge Park.

Catesby. Argent two leopards sable with golden crowns.
The first reference to HAVERINGS MANOR in
Stopsley occurs in 1430, when the manor was held
of John Cressy as of Luton manor. (fn. 245) After its
escheat to the crown in 1543 it is described in 1627
as held as a moiety of the crown and a moiety of Sir
Robert Napier lord of Luton. (fn. 246) The earliest holders
of this manor were the Haverings, of whom first
mention is found in 1258, when Richard de Havering
and Lucy his wife conceded lands in Luton to
Andrew de la Brache, (fn. 247) and in 1262 John de
Havering, probably Richard's son, acknowledged
his father's right to certain lands in Luton. (fn. 248) John,
who was still alive in 1305, left a son Richard,
who in 1348 received a charter of free warren
in his demesne of Stopsley. (fn. 249) By 1402 this manor
had passed to William Butler, who at that date
granted it to his son John Butler. On his death in
1430 (fn. 250) it passed to his son John, whose descendants
appear to have held for the next century, for when
the manor appears in 1525 it is as the property of
Thomas Butler, who at that date conveyed it to Sir
Henry Wyatt and others. (fn. 251) This may have been
preparatory to an alienation to Richard Fermor, who
held it in 1534, (fn. 252) on account of whose 'transgressions
and contempts against the king' it escheated to the
crown, and was granted in 1543 to Sir Thomas
Barnardiston. (fn. 253) He died in the same year, and his
son Thomas Barnardiston alienated the manor in
1568 to John Crawley, (fn. 254) who was succeeded by a
son Thomas in 1599, (fn. 255) and he was followed in
1627 by a son, Francis Crawley. (fn. 256) After 1684 no
separate mention has been found in documents of this
manor, which has become absorbed in the other
property which the Crawleys held in this parish, (fn. 257)
though Davis, writing in 1855, speaks of Haverings
as an ancient seat of the Crawleys. (fn. 258)
LIMBURY MANOR was also held of Luton
manor. (fn. 259) The first reference to this property is
found in the messuage, the carucate of land, and the
yearly rent which Richard de Lymbury held in
Luton in 1275. (fn. 260) This reappears in 1368, when
Philip de Lymbury died in 'Constantyn Noble (sic), in
parts beyond the sea,' leaving to his son Philip the
manor of Limbury, which included, besides the house
within the site of the manor and garden, 100 acres of
land, 2 acres of meadow, a water-mill worth nothing
for want of repair, and 53s. 4d. rent of assize of free
tenants. (fn. 261) Of this second Philip de Lymbury the
Gesta tells the following incident:—Abbot Thomas,
a man magnanimus et cordatus, had amongst his foes a
certain knight of the soke of Luton, Philip de Limbury, a follower of Henry, duke of Lancaster. One
Monday, which was Luton market-day, he ordered
John Moot, the cellarer of St. Albans Abbey, to be
put upon the pillory, which caused great scandal.
The duke of Lancaster interfered on behalf of the
abbey, and ordered Philip to make restitution, but
when he made offerings at the shrine of St. Albans
the martyr showed indignation and refused to accept
his gifts. The chronicler concludes by saying that
Lymbury and his followers died and were soon
forgotten. (fn. 262) His death must have taken place
before 1388, in which year his mother Joan, who
had married John de Clynton, died, leaving as heir
to Limbury her daughter Elizabeth, wife of Thomas
Tryvet, (fn. 263) who must have died the same year as
her mother, for in 1389 Thomas held the manor,
now worth 20s. per annum only, in right of his late
wife. (fn. 264) He left two daughters aged seven and five,
and here all trace of the manor ceases.
A second LIMBURY MANOR was also held of
Luton manor, to which overlordship it is declared to
belong in 1531. (fn. 265) This manor has followed the
same descent as Biscott (q.v.), though no mention has
been found of it previous to 1386, when it appears as
the property of Baldwin de Bereford. (fn. 266) It maintained
a separate identity however until the sixteenth century.
In 1546 George Acworth held a court for the manor
of Limbury-cum-Biscott, (fn. 267) and when the sale of these
two properties to John Dormer occurred in 1549 the
alienation of Lymbury is recorded in the Luton Manor
Court Rolls, and John Dormer and also William
Harper (to whom he sold it almost immediately) are
distrained for 2s. quit-rent. (fn. 268) No further separate
mention occurs of Lymbury, which henceforward becomes absorbed in the more important Biscott manor.
The manor of WEST HYDE AYNEL, situated in
East Hyde and West Hyde, acquired its distinctive
name from a family of Aynel who held it from the
thirteenth to the fifteenth century. It at one time
formed part of Luton manor, (fn. 269) on the subdivision
of which in 1274 the overlordship of West Hyde Aynel
appears to have passed to Joan de Mohun, and through
her to Dunstable Priory, whose prior in 1415 gave
seisin of the manor to trustees on the death of John
Aynel. (fn. 270)
This property first appears in 1257, when Adam
son of William Aynel granted land in Luton to
Richard son of Simon, which his brother Robert had
of the enfeoffment of Baldwin de Bethune (see Luton
manor). (fn. 271) Adam was succeeded by his son Roger
Aynel before 1287, in which year Robert de Hoo
acknowledged the latter's rights to rents in Luton. (fn. 272)
In 1351 John Aynel, son of William Aynel, and
probably a grandson of the last-named Roger, received
a grant from Ralph de Eccleshale of all his lands and
tenements in West Hyde, (fn. 273) and in 1358 his brother
Roger entered into possession of the lands and tenements of his father William. (fn. 274) The next mention
that has been found of this
property occurs in 1415, when,
called for the first time West
Hyde manor, it passed into
the hands of trustees on the
death of John Aynel. (fn. 275) The
manor next passed, though how
has not been ascertained, to
Henry Frowick, who was holding it in 1423. (fn. 276) His daughter
and heir, Elizabeth Frowick,
married John Coningsby of
North Mimms, (fn. 277) and the Coningsbys continued to hold the
manor during the following century, for it reappears
in 1530, and again in 1546, as the property of John
Coningsby, who transferred it by fine at the latter
date to William Day. (fn. 278)

Coningsby. Gules three sitting conies argent in a border engrailed sable.
His descendant, Benjamin Day, in 1612, conveyed
West Hyde Aynel to Edmund Neele and Henry
Halsey, preparatory to a sale to Robert Napier, (fn. 279) and
it thus became a member of the larger Luton manor
(q.v.), and has since followed the same descent.
Mention is found of it by name in a Recovery Roll
of 1815, but it has since disappeared, having probably
become absorbed in Luton Hoo Park. (fn. 280)
The history of WHIPERLEY MANOR, which
includes the modern estate of STOCKWOOD PARK,
is identical with that of Farley (q.v.) until 1640,
when Thomas Rotherham sold to Richard Norton a
detached part of the Whiperley estate, described as
'all that capital messuage or mansion-house known as
Stockwood alias Whiperly which the said Thomas
Rotherham doth now inhabit together with the appurtenances known as New, Woodfield, Ponds Close,
Stockwood Close, Woodyard Close, Slipp, and Highwood.' (fn. 281)
Luke Norton held the property until 1658, but
between that date and 1707 it had passed to Richard
Crawley, whose representative, Mr. Francis Crawley,
holds it at the present day. (fn. 282)
The house built by John Crawley about 1740 is
a rectangular brick building with stone dressings, of
two stories and an attic, with a balustraded parapet
and hipped roof. The principal entrance is on the
north-east, under a pillared portico, and the central
bays of the east and south fronts are set forward
slightly from the general wall-face. The house has a
central hall with a stair on the west side, and to the
west, or more accurately, north-west, lie the offices
and stables. The garden is on the south and west,
and running due northwards from a point in front of
the house is a fine avenue. The ground is high,
nearly the whole of the park being 500 ft. or more
above sea-level.
The parish of Luton also contained twelve other
manors, or so-called manors. BAILIFF'S MANOR,
which was probably never organized on a true
manorial basis, does not appear until the sixteenth
century, when it was held of Luton Hoo (q.v.) with
the exception of the gate-house, an orchard, and one
acre of land, which were said to be held of Brache
manor (q.v.). (fn. 283)
The known descent of this manor is as follows:—In 1542 Henry Bradshaw and Joan his wife transferred it to Thomas Field, who died in 1556–7, (fn. 284)
and whose son, James Field, died in possession of the
manor, leaving a son George, (fn. 285) and between this date
and 1638 it passed to Sir Robert Napier, and so became one of the members of Luton manor (q.v.). (fn. 286) It
is mentioned by name in a Recovery Roll of 1815,
but at the present day its identity is lost. (fn. 287)
No reference at all has been found to an overlordship in BENNET'S MANOR, and the estate itself
does not appear until 1504, when Thomas Rotherham died seised of it. (fn. 288) The Rotherhams retained
it until 1573, when it was transferred by George
Rotherham to John Franklin, (fn. 289) who was succeeded
by Richard Franklin, whose son, Sir John Franklin,
held the manor in 1622. (fn. 290)
After this date there is a gap
of 150 years, and the manor
reappears in 1797 in a conveyance from Edward Southouse to John Sowerby, (fn. 291) and
Mr. Sowerby of Putteridge
Park at the present day owns
property in Stopsley which represents this manor.

Sowerby. Barry sable and gules a cheveron between three lions argent with three rings gules in the cheveron.
The origin of BISCOTT
MANOR, later held of Dallow
manor (q.v.), may be sought
with some show of reason in
the land of 5 'manentes' or
tenants in Luton, (fn. 292) which it is recorded were granted
by Offa, king of Mercia, in 792 A.D. to St. Albans
Abbey, which he had founded in the previous year. (fn. 293)
Between 792 and the date of the Domesday Survey
Biscott was alienated from the abbey, for at the latter
date it is given among the king's lands, and was
assessed at 5 hides. It was held by Edwin, a man of
Asgar the staller, and was declared to have been separated by Ralph Taillebois from the hundred in which
it was formerly assessed, and added to Luton on
account of the additional payment. (fn. 294)
It remained crown property until 1115, when, on
the occasion of the dedication of the restored abbey
church of St. Albans, Henry I gave to Abbot Richard
the manor of Biscott. (fn. 295) The abbey, however, did
not long retain the manor, for during the abbacy of
John de Cella, and in the reign of John, i.e. between
1199–1214, a grant was made to Robert Fitz Walter
of 10 librates of land, chiefly in Biscott. (fn. 296)
After the alienation of Biscott manor by St. Albans
it continued to be held of them as of their manor
of Dallow in Luton; it is mentioned as so held in
1327 and again in 1531. (fn. 297) Subsequent to the dissolution of the abbey it continued to be held of
Dallow, the last mention of the overlordship occurring
in 1644. (fn. 298)
Robert Fitz Walter, to whom Biscott manor thus
passed, was one of the twenty-five barons appointed
to enforce the fulfilment of Magna Charta. He was
outlawed and temporarily deprived of his possessions
on two occasions— in 1212 and again in 1216. (fn. 299)
Whether, after these alienations, Biscott was ever
restored to him does not appear, and no record has
been found of the manor until 1289, when Hugh
de Philibert granted to William de Bereford £9 16s.
rent in Biscott, together with all services of those
holding in the manor. (fn. 300)
In 1327 William de Bereford, probably the original
grantee, died seised of £9 9s. 4d. rent in Biscott,
received from eleven free tenants, leaving a son
Edmund as heir. (fn. 301) The manor was held in 1386
by his son Baldwin de Bereford, (fn. 302) who in 1401 made
a settlement of the manor, in the event of his dying
without heirs, on the heirs of Joan, Agnes, and Alice,
sisters of his father Edmund. (fn. 303)
Biscott was held by Elizabeth, widow of Baldwin
de Bereford, during her lifetime, but by 1419 the
reversion had passed to Ralph
Bush (in right of his wife
Eleanor), who in that year
conveyed it by fine to William
Acworth. (fn. 304)
John Acworth was holding
the manor in 1500, (fn. 305) and was
followed by a son George, who,
dying in 1531, left as heir a
son, also George Acworth. (fn. 306)
He sold the manor in 1548–9
to John Dormer, citizen and
mercer of London, (fn. 307) who in
the following year transferred
it to William Harper, citizen
and merchant tailor of London, (fn. 308) by whom it was sold
in 1555 to John Alley. (fn. 309) His son Francis conveyed
Biscott manor to Edward Wingate in 1593 by way
of mortgage, (fn. 310) which was foreclosed in 1595, when
the manor became the property of Edward Wingate. (fn. 311)
At his death in 1598 it passed to his son George, (fn. 312)
and from him, in 1606, to his grandson John Wingate. (fn. 313) He died in 1644, and was followed by a
son Francis, (fn. 314) who was holding the manor as late as
1678. (fn. 315) In 1718 Arthur Wingate was holding the
manor, (fn. 316) and in 1724 he sold it to John Crawley
for £8,796 14s., (fn. 317) in whose
family it still remains, Mr. F.
Crawley being the present
owner.

Acworth. Ermine a chief indented gules with three crowns or therein.
BRAMBLEHANGER
MANOR was held of the prior
of St. John of Jerusalem certainly from the thirteenth century onwards, for in 1247 Alan
de Brambelhanger held a free
tenement of the prior by the
service of 22s. 1d. yearly. (fn. 318)
The prior claimed view of
frankpledge in Bramblehanger
as appurtenant to his manor of Clifton in 1287. The
last mention found of the overlordship occurs in 1515,
when John Sylam held it by rent of 59s. (fn. 319) The first
under-tenant of this manor of whom mention has
been found is Alan de Brambelhanger, holding in 1247;
he was still in possession in
1269, when the property consisted of one messuage and 4
virgates of land. (fn. 320) By 1309
Bramblehanger had passed to
Peter Fitz Warin, who in that
year conveyed it by fine to his
son William. (fn. 321) In 1324 the
manor of Bramblehanger—here definitely so called—became forfeited to the crown on
account of the delinquencies of
William Fitz Warin, and was granted to the king's niece
Eleanor, wife of Hugh le Despenser. (fn. 322) Fitz Warin
appears to have obtained a free pardon and restoration
of his property, for Bramblehanger was still in his
family in 1348, when Hugh Fitz Warin conveyed it
by fine to John de Northewell. (fn. 323) The descent of this
manor is lost till 1425, when it is found as the property of Joan, wife of John le Waleys, who also
owned Woodcroft manor. (fn. 324) She left a daughter
Joyce, married to Robert Lee, who in 1434 held a
messuage called 'Braumangrebury' in Luton, (fn. 325) and
in 1446 alienated the manor to Thomas Boleyn and
other feoffees. (fn. 326) This may have been preliminary to
an alienation, for in 1513 John Sylam died in possession of the manor, leaving four daughters as coheirs, Elizabeth Mattock, Agnes Croswayte, Joan
Snow, and Mary Lock. (fn. 327) It passed eventually to the
last-named, subsequently married to Robert Cheyne,
who in 1546 conveyed the manor into the hands of
trustees on the occasion of the marriage of his son
Thomas with Elizabeth Rotherham. (fn. 328) Thomas
Cheyne succeeded to the manor in 1554, (fn. 329) and held
it until 1614, when it passed to his son Robert, who
died in 1632. (fn. 330) Thomas, son of the latter, conveyed
the manor in 1676 to John Crosse, whose family
continued to hold it for upwards of two hundred
years. (fn. 331) Thomas Crosse held Bramblehanger in
1807, (fn. 332) and Hammond Crosse in 1855. (fn. 333) In 1890
the estate, consisting of two farms known as Great
and Little Bramingham, was purchased by trustees of
the will of the late Sir Edward Page Turner, and is
at present in the possession of Mr. F. A. Page
Turner. (fn. 334)

Wingate. Sable a bend ermine cotised or between six martlets or.

Fitz Warin. Quarterly fessewise indented argent and gules.
In 1504 Thomas Rotherham died seised of two
estates in Luton called EAST HYDE and WEST
HYDE MANORS. (fn. 335) His son Thomas held the
same property at his death in 1565, (fn. 336) and as no further
mention has been found, the presumption is that
they became absorbed in the larger estate which the
Rotherhams owned in Luton.
The property which later became known as LALLEFORD MANOR first appears in 1425 as the
possession of Joan Waleys, and is then described as
lands and tenements called Lalleford, of whom held it
was not known, (fn. 337) and in 1447 as 40s. rent called
Lalleford fee. (fn. 338) It followed the same descent as
Brache manor, and subsequent to its transfer to Sir
Robert Napier in 1602 is described as a manor. (fn. 339) It
is mentioned by name in a Recovery Roll of 1815 as
part of the Luton estate, but has since become absorbed in the larger manor, and no trace of it exists
at the present day. (fn. 340)
The history of LANGLEYS MANOR is exactly
identical with that of Picks (q.v.) until the beginning
of the seventeenth century. It is mentioned in 1600
with that manor as the property of George Rotherham, (fn. 341) but does not appear in the conveyance of
Picks and other manors by Sir John Rotherham to
Sir Robert Napier. Davis, in his history of Luton,
says this property was sold by John Rotherham in
1721 to Lady Elizabeth Napier for £2,000, which
would imply that the Rotherhams continued to hold
it long after they had parted with their other Luton
property. (fn. 342)
The manor of LEWSEY belonged to the prioress
of Markyate during the thirteenth century. The
record of the original grant has not been found, but
it seems probable that it was bestowed on Markyate
by St. Albans, which owned extensive lands in
Luton, and whose Abbot Geoffrey was instrumental
in founding the priory in 1145. (fn. 343) At the time of
the Taxatio of 1291 Markyate owned lands and rent
worth £3 0s. 1½d. in 'Levesey,' (fn. 344) which by 1535 had
increased to £4. (fn. 345) It remained crown property until
1545, when it was granted to George Acworth, (fn. 346)
who owned Biscott manor (q.v.), and till 1718 followed the same descent as that manor, like it passing
to the Wingate family. In pursuance of a settlement
made by John Wingate in 1643 the reversion of
Lewsey manor passed to his second son George, who
must have been considerably under age at the time of
his father's death, (fn. 347) whose two daughters (Elizabeth
married to John Pomfret in 1692 and Mary married
to George Snagge in 1700) acquired joint possession
of the manor in 1679. (fn. 348) George Snagge retained
his wife's moiety in the manor until 1741 when he
transferred it to John Miller. (fn. 349) John Pomfrete and
his wife held their half of the manor certainly as late
as 1747, (fn. 350) but in 1771 Henry Wagstaffe and John
Peck alienated it to John Miller, son of the above
John, who thus acquired the whole of the manor, (fn. 351)
and from him it was acquired in 1782 by the trustees of the duke of Bedford. (fn. 352)
It remained as part of the ducal estates until the
middle of the nineteenth century, when it was purchased by Mr. Anstey, whose son at present owns this
property. (fn. 353)
A property called NORWOOD MANOR was held
by Thomas Rotherham in 1504, (fn. 354) and by his son
Thomas in 1565. (fn. 355) In 1573 Thomas Catesby alienated Stopsley manor, together with Norwood, to Sir
George Norton, (fn. 356) but no further reference has been
found to the property.
It seems probable that in PLENTIES MANOR is
to be found the most ancient seat of the Crawleys.
The first mention that occurs of it is in 1519, when
the will of John Crawley of Luton contains the
following bequest:—'To my wife Joan, my house that
I dwell in called Plentisse till Richard my son come
of age of 23 years.' (fn. 357) Richard eventually entered on
his inheritance as is proved by a will made in 1551,
in which he left to his son William Crawley and his
heirs 'the dwelling-house called Plenties with 7 acres
of land,' (fn. 358) and he in 1568 sold the manor to Robert
Wolley, a draper of St. Albans, for £300. (fn. 359) Richard,
son of Robert Wolley, held Plenties manor between
1635 and 1656, in which year he conveyed it to
Henry Knight alias Brothers. (fn. 360) By 1688 it had passed
to Guy Hillersdon, (fn. 361) and with its conveyance by him
in 1708 into the hands of trustees all further trace of
this property disappears. (fn. 362)
The estate afterwards known as the manor of
GREATH AMPSTEAD SOMERIES was held of the
manor of Woodcroft (q.v.), and first appears in 1309
as the property of Agnes wife of Roger de Somery of
Dudley Castle, when it is described simply as a tenement. (fn. 363)
Agnes was succeeded at this
date by her son John, who
dying in 1321 left two sisters
as co-heiresses, Joan de Botetourt and Margaret wife of
John de Sutton of Dudley. (fn. 364)
Greathampstead Someries
passed to Margaret, for in 1380
trustees conveyed this property
to Sir John de Sutton, her
great-grandson, who came of
age at this date. (fn. 365) No further reference has been
found to this estate until 1464, when, called for the first
time the manor of Greathampstead Someries, it was
transferred by John Aylesbury of Edeston to John,
Lord Wenlock. (fn. 366) From this date until 1611 it followed the same descent as Luton manor (q.v.).

Somery. Quarterly or and azure a bend gules.
When Sir John Rotherham alienated the latter
manor at that date he retained Greathampstead
Someries, which he sold to his son-in-law Sir Francis
Crawley in 1629, (fn. 367) whose family retained it, according
to Nichols, until 1724, when it was purchased from
them by Sir John Napier, and thus became attached
to Luton manor. (fn. 368)
When the latter was sold in 1763 Someries was
called a capital messuage or farm, (fn. 369) and a farm of this
name exists at the present day, but the manor is
completely absorbed in Luton. (fn. 370)
Someries Castle
Ruins of Someries Castle, so called
from the family who held the manor in
the fourteenth century, still exist. In
1309 this property already included a
capital messuage which points possibly to an earlier
structure than that erected by Lord Wenlock. (fn. 371)
Leland thus describes the castle:—'A faire place
with in the Paroche of Luton caullyd Somerys, the
which house was sumptuously begon by the lord
Wennelok but not finischid. The Gate House of
Brike is very large and faire. Part of the residew of
the new Foundations be yet scene and part of the Olde
Place standeth yet. It is set on a Hille not far from
St. Anne's Hill.' (fn. 372)
At the present day the ruins consist of a gatehouse with a chapel and vestibule to the east, probably
forming about two-thirds of the north front of the fifteenth-century building. They are built of narrow red
bricks of excellent quality, ranging five courses to the
foot, and here and there dark vitrified bricks are used in
the facing, generally as it seems at random, but over
the inner arch of the gateway a lozenge of such bricks
occurs. The entrance gateway is 8 ft. wide, with a
four-centred stone head and jambs, and above it the
wall face is set forward on a pretty cinquefoiled arcade
of moulded brickwork. The entrance is flanked by
half-octagonal turrets, that on the west side containing
the entrance to a lobby, from which a small round
window commands the approach to the gate. The
gateway passage is 20 ft. long, and was covered with a
brick vault; from it doors opened at the south-west
to a room with a fireplace, and a window overlooking
the inner court, probably the porter's lodge, and at
the south-east to another room of like size and
character. A stair which went up over the lobby
seems to have occupied the north-east angle of the
lodge, having a door into the gateway passage, and
the remaining space in the west turret was used as a
garderobe. The inner arch of the gateway is fourcentred, of plain brickwork, and opened to a courtyard 46 ft. wide from east to west, having a wide
circular staircase at its north-west angle. It is clear
that there was a flat-roofed pentice or gallery over the
doorway, running right across the north side of the
court, and the doorways on the first floor from the
circular staircase, and from the room over the porter's
lodge, led on to it. These doorways have four-centred
heads of moulded brick with square labels, and that
at the foot of the stair is of the same character,
but wider and with better detail. The stair
itself has a central newel and radiating steps of
brick carried on a brick vault, with a hand rail contrived
in the wall and running spirally upward, following
the rise of the stair. (fn. 373) To the west of this staircase the
buildings are entirely destroyed, but
the bonding of the
west wall of the
court remains to
show its line.

Someries Castle, Luton Hoo: Entrance Gateway
To the east of the
gateway is the chapel,
with a two-centred
doorway at its southwest angle, opening
from a former range
of buildings on the
east side of the court.
The chapel is 34 ft.
by 18 ft., and at its
east end its walls
stand to their full
height, with an external brick cornice,
and inside at the plate level a row of shield-shaped
brick corbels. The east window was of four lights
with brick tracery, now fallen, and at the southeast was a like window of three lights. On either
side of the east window are trefoiled image niches
of brick, high in the wall, and at the south-east
is a piscina with a stone drain, which has had two
trefoiled arches in the head of its recess. On the
north side are two blocked windows, the eastern of
the two having its sill at a much higher level than
the other, while the heads of both are at the same
height. In the south wall, about half way down the
chapel, is a squint commanding the site of the altar
from a room on the south, now destroyed, the line
of its east wall being marked by its bonding near the
south window of the chapel. In the west jamb of
the entrance doorway are traces of the start of a thin
brick wall running across the chapel, and separating
it from the vestibule at the west. Just within the
doorway on the west is a recess for holy water, and
beyond it the jamb of a blocked opening which is
exactly equidistant from the centre line of the gateway
with the west face of the staircase at the north-west
of the court. Whether this is more than a coincidence
is a matter for doubt, but there are signs of alteration
here on both sides of this range, whether in the
course of building or afterwards. A square-headed
window lighting the vestibule now takes the place of
the former opening, whatever it may have been.
The changes of masonry in the north wall of the
vestibule are chiefly noticeable from the outside. The
lower six feet of the chapel wall are of different brick
from the rest, and there is a joint in the masonry a little
distance to the east of the east turret of the gatehouse,
the work on the turret side being the older, and the
plinth one course lower than on the rest of the chapel.
The evidence points to the fact that the chapel was
built after the gateway, and some change of plan may
have been made in the interval, which must in any
case have been a short one. Over the vestibule was
a gallery or upper floor, doubtless reached by a wooden
stair.
The lines of a rectangular earthwork to the west
and south of the buildings may perhaps mark the site
of an older building. There was evidently a second
court here, with out-buildings, and there are traces
here and there of an inclosing ditch. On the east are
several cottages and farm-house buildings, the materials
of which have in large measure been taken from the
ruins, and fully account for their present fragmentary
condition.

Plan of Someries Castle
The manor of STOPSLEY was in the possession
of the Hoo family during the thirteenth and fourteenth centuries, and followed the same descent as
Luton Hoo (q.v.). Robert de Hoo held land in
Stopsley in 1245, (fn. 374) and in 1291 one of the same
name obtained free warren in his demesne lands
there. (fn. 375) He settled this estate on his son Robert, (fn. 376)
whose son Thomas in 1338 received a confirmation
of free warren in Stopsley. (fn. 377) Shortly afterwards the
association of this family with Stopsley manor appears
to have ceased, and all trace of it is lost until 1416,
when Edward Brassington or Stopsley, heir of Alexander Stopsley, granted the manor to John Gedney
and others. (fn. 378) In 1573 a manor of this name was in
the possession of Thomas Catesby, who sold it between that date and 1593 to Edward Docwra, (fn. 379) and
Thomas Docwra obtained confirmation of free warren
there in 1617. (fn. 380) This manor appears to have passed
to the Crawleys, for in 1772 John Crawley owned
Stopsley manor, together with other manors in the
same parish, (fn. 381) amongst which
it probably became absorbed,
for no further mention has
been found of it.
A third, WOODCROFT
MANOR, is found in this
parish during the sixteenth
century. It appears always to
have followed the same descent
as Bramblehanger (q.v.), and
the first reference to it is in an
inquisition of 1515, when John
Sylam, in addition to that
manor, held a messuage and
lands in Luton. (fn. 382) In a fine of
1546 Robert Cheyney conveyed Bramblehanger and Woodcroft manors to
trustees, (fn. 383) and though the inquisition taken on his
possessions in 1554 merely calls this property Woodcroft Farm and lands, (fn. 384) it is invariably from this time
onward called a manor, the last mention of it before its
final absorption in Bramblehanger occurring in 1807. (fn. 385)
It seems likely that the property is represented at the
present day by the farm called Little Bramingham,
which forms part of the Bramblehanger estate. (fn. 386)

Docwra. Sable a cheveron engrailed argent between three roundels argent each having a pale gules upon it.
To Luton manor is attached the right of holding
a view of frankpledge, court leet and court baron. (fn. 387)
The marquess of Bute has in his possession a transcript of Court Rolls of Luton manor, written in an
early seventeenth-century hand, and covering a period
from 1471 to 1559. Three volumes of Court Rolls,
dating back to the beginning of the eighteenth century, still exist, but older volumes are supposed to
have been burned at the great fire at Luton Hoo in
1771. The annual view of frankpledge, court leet,
and court baron of the manor is still held with all
customary formality at the Luton Corn Exchange on
Thursday in Whit-week. The courts are always well
attended, and a fair amount of business transacted;
the tenants are all customary freeholders, as the customary tenements have been enfranchised. The
town crier is appointed annually at the court leet of
the manor; it is a lucrative appointment, as the crier
is also bill poster and warden of the pound, which
belongs to, and is maintained by, the lord of the
manor. (fn. 388)
There is evidence that the lord of the manor of
Limbury cum Biscott held courts baron between
1519 and 1635, but no courts are held at the present
day, nor have been for long past. (fn. 389)
The lord of Dallow manor formerly possessed the
right of view of frankpledge, and courts baron. (fn. 390)
Six mills, valued at 100s., are mentioned in Luton
in Domesday. (fn. 391) Mills are subsequently found attached
to the following properties in the parish:—Matilda de
Kyme owned a water-mill in 1299 as part of her share
in Luton manor, (fn. 392) which in 1372, valued at 6s. 8d.,
had passed to Hugh Mortimer. (fn. 393) This may be
the mill known as the Brache, from which William
Marshal, who held Luton manor between 1214 and
1231, granted a pension to the dean and chapter of
St. Paul's for prayers for the soul of his wife. (fn. 394) A
water-mill of this name still existed in 1855, but has
since disappeared. (fn. 395)
To Luton Hoo belonged a mill known as Stapleford Mill, of which the first mention is found in
1287. (fn. 396) East Hyde had a water-mill as early as
1247, which was still attached to the manor in
1599. (fn. 397) The mill mentioned in Biscott in Domesday
as worth 10s. afterwards became attached to Dallow
manor. (fn. 398)
David Ashby manor included a windmill 'worth
nothing' in 1448, (fn. 399) and between 1332 and 1435
Fennels Grove held a moiety of a water-mill. (fn. 400) In
1330 a water-mill was attached to Woodcroft manor,
which included a fish-pond worth 12s. (fn. 401) In extents
of the Luton estate taken in 1677 and 1694, five
water grist-mills are mentioned (fn. 402) ; in 1712 six
water grist-mills, and in 1815 three water cornmills. (fn. 403)
Davis, in his History of Luton, written about 1855,
mentions as formerly existing in this parish four post
windmills—of which two had been blown down by
hurricanes in c. 1765 and 1845, one burnt down
in 1783, and one destroyed by lightning in 1841—and two smock mills burnt down in 1795 and 1812.
At the time he wrote there existed two windmills,
and four water-mills, three of which belonged to
John Shaw Leigh, owner of the Luton estate. (fn. 404) At
the present day the only mill belonging to the Luton
estate is the Hyde Mill. (fn. 405)
The following manors in this parish acquired at
various dates charters of free warren. Luton manor
received a charter in 1330. (fn. 406) Luton Hoo was
granted a charter in 1292, which received confirmation in 1337, 1520, and finally in 1623, on the
occasion of the inclosure of the park. (fn. 407) Stopsley
acquired this privilege in 1292, Woodcroft in 1317,
Dallow some time previous to 1331, Woodcroft
alias Halyard in 1332, and Haverings manor in
1348. (fn. 408)
The right of free fishing belonged to Luton and
Dallow manors. (fn. 409)

Plan Of Luton Church
Church
The church of ST. MARY, one of
the largest and finest parish churches in
England, stands in a large churchyard,
bounded on the north and east by Church Street and
St. Mary's Street.
The building is cruciform, with a chancel 49 ft. by
25 ft.; north vestry of two stories, 18 ft. square; north
or Wenlock Chapel, 25 ft. east to west by 33 ft.;
north transept, 24 ft. by 32 ft.; south transept of
similar dimensions, with the Hoo Chapel to the east,
14 ft. wide; nave, including the crossing, 98 ft. by
25 ft., with north and south aisles 13 ft. wide, north
and south porches with parvises above, and a western
tower about 18 ft. square. All these measurements
are internal.
In spite of much enlargement and rebuilding,
enough is left to show that a cruciform church existed
here in the twelfth century, and the arches still existing in the west walls of the transepts prove that the
nave had north and south aisles by the end of the
century, if not earlier.
About the year 1230 the chancel seems to have
been extended eastward to its present limits, and it is
possible that the transepts may have been enlarged at
the same time, but the evidence is not conclusive.
In the fourteenth century a general enlargement of
the church was undertaken, beginning with the addition of the present western tower, which was to take
the place of the old central tower. The arcades and
aisles on both sides followed, the new work being
built from the west eastwards to the crossing. The
arches at the crossing were then built in place of
those carrying the central tower, the opening to the
west of the crossing being probably closed in by a
temporary wall. It is noticeable that the western
jambs of the transept arches are not fully developed
like those of the eastern, but are set as far westward
as possible, as though to avoid the destruction of some
existing work, doubtless the side arches of the central
tower, which would not be removed till the new work
was ready to take their place. There was probably
some short pause between the work on the west tower
and the nave arcades, as the western responds on both
sides have a different section from that of the arcade
piers; they are of three engaged shafts, and had the
arcades followed immediately the piers would probably
have been of four engaged shafts to match the responds, instead of having a plain octagonal form. It
is curious to note that when the south arcade met the
eastern work it was found that, owing to some slight
discrepancy in the setting out of the bays, there was
not room for a semioctagonal respond; to narrow the
archway would have entailed new centering, and rather
than do this the difficulty was overcome by making
the respond of less projection.
In the fourteenth century also the transepts were
enlarged and chapels equal in depth to the transepts
added on the east; the chapel on the north side was
probably of the same depth as that on the south (now
called the Hoo Chapel), but the arcade is of earlier
and better detail. The lower story of the vestry, to
the north of the chancel, with its stone vault, was the
work of this century, as were also the porches to the
nave.
Shortly before 1461 (fn. 410) Lord Wenlock pulled down
the cast and north walls of the chapel east of the
north transept and extended it to the west wall of
the vestry, at the same time piercing the wall into the
chancel and inserting the two beautiful arches (or,
rather, double arch) there; the rood stair was either
built at the same time or altered to make more
room for this opening, as was also the doorway into
the vestry from the east. Alterations amounting
almost to a rebuilding were carried out in the chancel
by the abbey of St. Albans, as rector, and nearly all
the windows in the church were replaced by larger
ones at different times during this century. At the
same period the four western bays of the north
arcade were rebuilt, probably for structural reasons,
and the clearstory added. There appears to have
still been a wall across the western arch of the
crossing, as the corbel heads supporting the jacks of
the trusses do not look north or south as the others,
but are given a quarter turn to the west. The
corbels to the roofs of the chancel and the crossing
are of much coarser detail than those of the nave,
and are doubtless of the early sixteenth century; it
is probable that the space between the nave and
crossing was entirely cleared at this time. The upper
story to the vestry and the stair turret to it are also
of this date; a fifteenth-century window on the
north of the chancel was blocked up by their addition. The small chantry just west of the sedilia in
the chancel was built by Richard Barnard, vicar,
1477–92.
The church was completely restored by the late
G. E. Street, R.A., between the years 1865 and
1885. The east wall of the chancel was rebuilt, a
triplet of lancets in thirteenth-century style replacing the fifteenth-century window which then
existed. They purport to be a 'restoration' of the
original thirteenth-century lancets, whose sills were
found in the wall when it was taken down. Most of
the outside face of the walls and window tracery has
been renewed, and new doorways have been made in
the south wall of the Hoo Chapel and in the west
wall of the tower.
The tower is now (April, 1907) undergoing a
complete external repair, the buttresses, which are
very much perished, having to be entirely refaced.
The three lancets in the east wall of the chancel
have round jamb-shafts both outside and inside, the
latter being of marble; the arches are two-centred
and plain. Externally the three lancets are inclosed
by a large shallow arched recess.
The piscina and sedilia in the south wall have
cinquefoiled ogee heads with rich crocketed canopies
and carved cornice, and are divided by square shafts
set diagonally with moulded bases and capitals and
surmounted by crocketed finials. In the canopy are
eight shields, whose colours suggest that they have
been repainted. The first and the eighth shield have
the arms commonly attributed to Abbot John of Wheathampstead, Gules a cheveron between three groups of
three wheatears or; the second and seventh shields
are Argent two cheverons between three roses gules;
the third has three crowns, no doubt intended for the
shield of St. Oswin, Gules three crowns or, although
the field is painted blue; the fourth has the golden
saltire on blue of St. Alban; the fifth is easily recognized as the four lions of St. Amphibal, although
the painting of this shield is quite different from that
of the arms attributed to the saint—Quarterly gules
and or with four lions countercoloured—as they
appear on the east side of the central tower in St.
Albans Abbey Church; the sixth shield is that of
St. Edward the Confessor, Azure a cross paty between
five martlets or. Above these shields is the motto
Valles babundabunt, which tradition assigns to Abbot
Wheathampstead.

[Shields in Luton church]
To the west of the sedilia is the small chantry
chapel of Richard Barnard, vicar in 1477–92; its
floor is some 21 in. below that of the chancel, which
has been raised in modern times. Its north face is
divided into three bays with hanging four-centred
arches springing from angle shafts and pendants; the
eastern pendant is octagonal in plan, and its top
member is battlemented; the western one is broken
off and now lies on the top of the chantry. The
spandrels of the arches are carved with the rebus of
Barnard, a bear and a hand holding a box of ointment (nard). The chantry is entered from the west
by a small four-centred doorway, and in the south
wall is a piscina with a small recess over it, the latter
possibly for a lamp; to the west of these is a
small window to light the altar, of two lights with
cinquefoiled four-centred arches under a square head;
the roof is vaulted in stone, the ribs springing on the
wall side from corbels carved as winged angels.
To the west of the chantry is a small south doorway with a four-centred arch and two hollow-chamfered orders; it probably dates from the fifteenth
century, but has been renovated in modern times.
There are two windows in the south wall of the
chancel; the eastern one, over the sedilia, of four
trefoiled lights with simple trefoiled fifteenth-century
tracery in a two-centred arch; the other, over the
chantry, is of four cinquefoiled lights with tracery of
fifteenth-century style, under a four-centred head;
it has been partly renewed.
The arch opening from the chancel to the Hoo
Chapel has plain splayed jambs and a moulded twocentred arch dying on to the splay without a break;
it is apparently of fifteenth-century date.
In the north wall of the chancel is a fifteenth-century window of three cinquefoiled lights with tracery,
now blocked by the upper story of the vestry, and
filled in on the chancel side with mosaic.
Below and to the west of this is an early fourteenthcentury tomb recess, with a well moulded ogee arch
with crockets and a finial; its position suggests that
it may have been used for the Easter sepulchre. It
seems to have been brought to its present place from
a site farther to the west, as it partly blocks a later
four-centred doorway to the west of it, which formerly
gave access to the vestry. This alteration doubtless
took place when the Wenlock Chapel was built, and a
new approach from chancel to vestry was provided
by a doorway at the south-east angle of the chapel,
leading to the south-west doorway of the vestry,
which up to this time had been external. The
double archway to the Wenlock Chapel is a lofty
opening with panelled responds, at the angles of which
are pairs of slender engaged shafts with moulded
bases, bands, and capitals; the main arch is fourcentred and has a panelled soffit, like the jambs, with
moulded ribs springing from the angle shafts. The
opening is divided by a central pier of the same
detail as the responds, with solid panelling ending in
cresting a little above the springing of the arches,
while from the pier spring arched ribs, dividing the
inclosing arch into two sub-arches, the central
spandrel being filled with pierced tracery. Above
the main arch runs a horizontal cornice, with panelled
spandrels beneath it framing the arch, in which are
shields with a cheveron between three crosslets; these
also occur in the soffit of the main arch at the
springing.
The central ornament of the cornice is a helm
with mantling and torse, the shield which it surmounted having lately fallen from its place, and on
either side encircled by garters are the arms of Wenlock. In the smaller carved bosses on the cornice the
moors' heads are repeated.
The stairs to the rood-loft pass through the thickness of the wall to the west of the archway, the lowest
step being some distance above the floor of the chapel;
the upper doorway is close up against the chancel
arch.
The chancel roof is modern and of low pitch, but
the stone corbels which carry it ate old and take the
form of rather coarse heads surmounted by moulded
abaci.
The vestry to the north of the chancel has a ribbed
stone vault of fourteenth-century date springing from
engaged wall shafts with moulded bell capitals, and
from a larger central shaft with a moulded capital of
less depth than the others, looking as though it had
been reduced from the original size at some later
date; there is no shaft in the south-west corner of
the vestry, the vaulting springing from a corbel above
the rear arch of the doorway, carved with a human
face and appearing to be of later date. The three
windows to the vestry (two in the east wall and one
in the north) are modern restorations; each is
of two trefoiled lights with a quatrefoil over, and
there is a modern doorway in the north wall. The
doorway to the stair-turret in the north-east corner
has a four-centred arch and belongs to the date when
the upper story was added. This upper story is
lighted by three windows similar to and above those
of the lower chamber, but only the north-east window
is old. The fifteenth-century window formerly
lighting the chancel, but blocked up when the story
was added, is to be seen on the south side of the
chamber.
The door from the vestry into the Wenlock Chapel,
the original external door of the vestry, has a single
chamfered two-centred arch with a rear arch on either
side. It is probable that the outer chamfered reveal
of the doorway was once flush with the western face
of the wall, and that when the doorway from the
chapel to the chancel was built the reveal was moved
inwards and the higher rear arch turned to the west
of it to make room for the later doorway. (fn. 411) The
three windows of the Wenlock Chapel, two on the
north and one on the east, are of four cinquefoiled
lights with tracery under segmental pointed arches;
the external stonework of the windows has been
completely renewed but the interior seems to be the
original fifteenth-century work.
The two arches of the arcade between the Wenlock
Chapel and the north transept, the chancel arch, and
the arches opening from the crossing to both transepts
are all work of one date, about 1320, and are similar
in detail, with high moulded bases and bell capitals
and arches of two orders with small chamfers. The
responds consist of three, and the pier of four large
engaged round shafts separated by small hollow
chamfered angles. The height of the bases of the
arcade to the chapel shows that the floor of this
chapel was from the first, as now, 1 ft. 6 in. above
the general level of the nave and transepts, and flush
with the chancel floor. The small squint in the east
jamb of the Wenlock arch would be useless if the
floor were lower.
The arcade of two bays between the south transept
and the Hoo Chapel to the east of it is of much
simpler detail than the corresponding one on the
north side and is perhaps a little later in date. The
pier is octagonal, and the responds semi-octagonal
with a filleted bowtell in the angle between them
and the wall. It is to be noted that the face of the
wall above is flush with the nosing of the abaci instead
of being within it, a detail which suggests that the
arches are cut through an older wall. The arches
are two-centred, of two slightly chamfered orders with
a roll and bead divided by a hollow between the
chamfers. The three windows of the Hoo Chapel
(two eastern and one southern) are each of three
wide lights with cinquefoiled heads and fifteenthcentury tracery under pointed segmental arches;
they have been partly renewed. The doorway in
the south wall is new, its head cutting into the
window-sill above; to the east of it is a modern recess
in the head of which is built part of the cusped head
of a recess of late fourteenth-century date, found in
the wall when the doorway was made. In the east
wall of the chapel between the two windows is a
piscina with a circular bowl, in a recess with two
hollow-chamfered orders and a cinquefoiled head; it
is of fourteenth-century date.
The windows in the gables of the transepts are similar to each other, both being of five cinquefoiled lights,
the foils sub-cusped to make nine foils in all, and with
fifteenth-century tracery over.
The west window of the north transept preserves
its old stonework of three cinquefoiled lights with
tracery under a pointed segmental arch. The
mouldings are of a different section from those of any
of the other fifteenth-century windows, and of a
somewhat earlier character. The west window of
the south transept is of four lights and somewhat
similar to the last; the outside is entirely new, but
the inside jambs are old and of a section not found
elsewhere in the church. The roofs of the chapels
and transepts are modern, but there may be some old
timbers in the latter.
The two arches from the transepts to the aisles of
the nave are the earliest architectural details in
position in the church; both are of the thirteenth
century, the southern one being the earlier; its jambs
are of two orders, the outer square and the inner with
a small chamfer stopped out square below the abacus;
the stops differ in the two jambs, the north side being
merely a curve outwards whilst the south jamb has
a kind of incipient capital. The narrow abacus is
square above and hollow chamfered below with a
V-shaped groove above the chamfer, and the archsection is like that of the jambs.
The arch on the north side has three detached
round shafts in each jamb, with moulded bases and
beautiful foliated bell capitals; the arch is two-centred of two chamfered orders.
In the west wall of the south transept above the
arch to the aisle are the remains of a string course
running southwards about as far as the outer face of
the aisle wall; it then continues at a lower level
until interrupted by the window; the upper string
evidently marks the limits of the thirteenth-century
transept.
There is now no arch between the crossing and
the nave, the piers being flat and shallow with
chamfered edges, setting back slightly at the level of
the capitals of the arcade; the offsets may mark the
springing of a former arch.
The nave arcades are of six bays, with two-centred
arches of two chamfered orders; the piers on the
south side and the eastern pier on the north are octagonal, and both eastern responds are semi-octagonal,
that on the south being somewhat flatter than the
other. The western responds on both sides are of
three round engaged shafts, all have moulded bases
and bell capitals. In the eastern respond of the
south arcade is a niche now filled with a mosaic
representation of St. Paul.
The four western arches on the north side with
their three piers are fifteenth-century work, the piers
being composed of four half-octagons with moulded
bases following the plan of the piers, but with capitals
to the inner orders only, the outer orders being continued round the arches without a break; the arches
of two chamfered orders are higher than the earlier
ones and the moulded labels are turned up at the
points of the arches to mitre with the moulded string
course at the base of the clearstory. The clearstory
is of the same date as these later arches and has five
square-headed windows a side, each of two cinquefoiled lights.
The roofs of the nave and crossing are at one level;
they have been restored, but probably contain many
of the old timbers. The tie-beams are moulded and
are filled in above with tracery. The purlins are
also moulded. The jacks of the trusses rest upon
stone corbels carved into grotesque heads, some human
and some of beasts; those at the east and west ends
of the nave look out from the walls diagonally. The
heads over the transept arches are large and coarse,
like those in the chancel.
Of the aisle windows only those in the west walls
are original, that in the north aisle being of two trefoiled lights with a quatrefoil over. It has been forced
northwards by the thrust of the tower arch. The
north jamb is splayed, but the south is square, being
the face of the north-east buttress of the tower. The
west window of the south aisle has two lights with
sharply-pointed cinquefoiled heads and a quatrefoiled
spandrel over; the tracery has been renewed.
The westernmost window in the south wall is
modern, of two cinquefoiled lights with tracery over,
and all the other aisle windows are fifteenth-century
insertions of three lights with cinquefoiled heads and
tracery under segmental arches with labels. The
four in the north wall have old jambs and tracery,
and new sills and labels. The three in the south
have been completely renewed on the outside.
The entrance doorways to the aisles are both of
fourteenth-century date. That in the north wall has
two continuous chamfered orders and a scrolled label,
the outer order having broach stops at the base;
while the south doorway has two continuous sunk
chamfered orders. The south door itself, which is
of oak with traceried panels, appears to be of the
same date as the stonework.
Below the easternmost window in the south aisle
is a piscina with the original fourteenth-century
jambs and bowl; the jambs are carved with ballflowers in a hollow chamfer between two small rolls,
but the head is now a square lintel formed by the
fifteenth-century window-ledge. Close to the south
door is a holy-water stone, partly blocked up, with
an ogee head, and to the west are the upper and
lower doorways to the parvise over the south porch;
both are of fourteenth-century date. The porch and
parvise have been completely restored outside, and the
outer doorway and windows are new. There is a
single ogee-headed light on either side of the porch,
and a square-headed window of three trefoiled lights
in the south wall of the parvise. The stair to the
latter goes up in a round turret in the western angle
between the porch and the aisle.
To the east of the north doorway of the nave is
a holy-water stone with a two-centred head of square
section. It is earlier in appearance than the aisle
wall, and may be a thirteenth-century one re-used.
There is no stair turret to the parvise over the north
porch, but a square-headed door looks into the aisle
at the parvise level. The outer arch of the porch
is of three continuous chamfered orders, with a
label stopping on carved human head corbels much
defaced. The label is new, but the rest appears to be
fourteenth-century work. The parvise window over
the doorway is old, of two trefoiled lights under
a square head.
The roofs of the aisles are modern, and are supported on cross arches, of two chamfered orders, from
the piers to the side walls.
The eastern arch of the tower is fine and lofty,
with three large engaged round shafts in the responds,
separated by small hollow chamfers, moulded bases,
and carved foliate capitals. The arch is of three
moulded orders, with double ogees, wave moulds,
and filleted bowtells, separated by deeply-recessed
hollows, and with a scroll-mould label stopping on
carved human head corbels. Over the arch the line
of the former steep-gabled roof, before the addition
of the clearstory, is plainly to be seen.
The doorway to the turret in the bottom of the
tower has a two-centred arch and jambs of two
chamfered orders, and is original.
The west doorway is a modern one in fourteenthcentury style, and has jambs and a two-centred arch
with three continuous orders of double ogees with
three quarter hollows between them.
The four-light window over retains its fourteenthcentury jambs and arch, but the tracery and label
have been renewed. Besides the monial of a hollow
chamfer and ogee mould, there are three orders with
three quarter hollows between, the inner one being a
wave mould and the other two double ogees.
The tower is of three stages, and some 90 ft. in
height, with an embattled parapet and octagonal
angle turrets, also embattled, rising above the parapet.
There is a low pyramidal roof with a vane post and
vane, and at the base of the parapet is a moulded
cornice with gargoyles at the angles. The tower
stair is in a turret at the south-east. The belfry
windows, which look rather later in style than the
lower part of the tower, have each two cinquefoiled
lights with cusped piercing above, under a two-centered
arch. The jamb moulds are much weathered, but
appear to consist of a large hollow and an ogee mould.
In the second story is a clock face on the west side,
and on the other three sides a small single trefoiled
light with a wave-moulded outer order.
At the angles of the tower are pairs of buttresses
of seven stages, in the second and sixth of which are
canopied niches for statues, but these with the buttresses are so decayed as to be almost shapeless; they
are now undergoing a thorough refacing.
The walling is faced with chequered work of flints
and Totternhoe stone. This chequering also appears
on the walls of the aisles, porches, and transepts, a
great deal of it being quite modern. The walling on
the south side of the chancel is of roughly-squared
rubble, once wholly plastered, and the modern east
wall of the chancel is of dressed ashlar.
Most of the buttresses of the church have been
restored or rebuilt, but the two at the south-west
angle of the south aisle look like original fourteenthcentury work. There are buttresses to the clearstory
walls between the windows.
The parapets of the church have for the most part
been renewed in brick or stone, nothing but the
string courses of the old work, at the bases of the
parapets, having been here and there preserved.
A good many pieces of architectural detail have
been collected at various times and stored up in the
church, and many of them are arranged on a shelf
against the south wall of the tower; the earliest
appear to date from the latter part of the twelfth century, and are of very good style. Many more fragments of the older buildings on this site are doubtless
used up in the walling, a piece of twelfth-century
zigzag being visible in the south transept.
Parts of the wooden screen between the Wenlock
Chapel and the north transept are of fifteenth-century
date, notably the carved work along the top of the
cornice containing winged beasts, &c., the vine-trail
along the middle and lower rails, and the linen panels
on the west face. This was brought in a dilapidated
condition from the chapel at Luton Hoo and presented
by the first marquess of Bute. It was first repaired
and set up in the Hoo Chapel, but when the remains of the old rood screen were discovered, it was
put in its present position and the rood screen repaired, repainted and placed there in its stead; only
some of the lower panels are ancient.
The oak quire seats and fittings are modern, but
in the boys' desk is incorporated the old reading desk,
which still retains the iron staple and a piece of the
chain to which the Bible was fastened.
In the east window of the Wenlock Chapel has
been preserved some fifteenth-century glass, including
four figures, one apparently of our Lady and the
other three of angels; a good number of the diamond
quarries are also old, and have the letter M and in
one case a T; the word HOLA also occurs several
times. The rest of the window and the next to the
north have been filled with modern copies of this glass.
The internal fittings are for the most part modern,
the reredos, of alabaster and mosaic, being by Street,
who also designed the pulpit of alabaster and marble.
The beautiful octagonal fourteenth-century baptistery at the west end of the nave is one of the chief
attractions of the church. It is 7 ft. 3 in. wide inside, with an arcaded dwarf wall on each face, except
the east, from which side it is entered, and traceried
openings above which are surmounted by sharplypointed gablets with large foliate finials and crockets.
At the angles are slender buttresses on which stand
tall crocketed pinnacles rising nearly to the same
height as the gablets. In the openings and the internal angles are slender engaged shafts, from the
latter of which springs a beautiful ribbed vault rising
to a central opening.
The font has an octagonal bowl with panelled
sides and engaged shafts at the angles, standing on
an octagonal stem, which is surrounded by smaller
shafts, and is apparently of the same date, c. 1330,
as the baptistery.
There are many monuments of interest in the
church, and only the most important can be mentioned here. In the eastern bay of the Wenlock
arch is an altar tomb on which is the brass figure of a
lady unknown, (fn. 412) but conjectured to be Lady
Rotherham, who died in the latter part of the
fifteenth century; over the figure is a fine canopy,
but there is no inscription. The sides of the tomb
have cusped lozenge-shaped panels containing plain
lozenges or shields. Until modern times this tomb
stood in the middle of the Wenlock Chapel. In the
western bay of the arch is a second altar tomb with
the recumbent effigy of a priest, William Wenlock,
master of Farley Hospital, who gave directions in his
will, 1391, that he should be buried in St. Mary's
Church. The sides of the tomb are panelled with
cusped tracery, the three middle panels being quatrefoils containing shields with arms of a cheveron
between three crosslets. The top edge is moulded
and battlemented with a row of quatrefoil panels
containing alternately roses and shields; below this
runs a marginal inscription in English as follows: 'In
Wenlok brad I, in this town lordschipes had I, Her
am I now fady, Cristes moder helpe me lady, under
thes stones for a tym schal I reste my bones, deye mot
I ned ones, Myghtful God grãt me thy wones amen.'
On the north side of the tomb is a Latin inscription,
the first words being defaced: .… etatus sic
tumulatus: de Wenlok natus in ordine presbiteratus:
alter huius ville: dominus laicus fuit ille: hic licet
indignus anime deus esto benignus,' and on the
effigy a label with the words: 'Salve regina mater
misericordie ihu fili dei miserere mei'; at the end of
the label is a shield with the Wenlock arms. The
tomb stands some two feet clear of the eastern jamb
of the bay, but touches the west jamb; from this it
would appear that it was not intended originally to
be put into this position, but was brought here from
elsewhere. The place was doubtless at first reserved
for the builder of the chapel, but for some reason he
was not buried here.
In the north wall of the Wenlock Chapel are two
tombs partly in recesses; the eastern one the late Mr.
Cobbe attributes to Sir John Rotherham, 'the first of
the name who possessed Someries, who died in
1492–93.' The front of the tomb had three
traceried panels of diamond form inclosing shields. On
either side of the recess are round attached shafts
with a small bead on the inner side; the recess is
roofed by a flat three-centred arch with a panelled
soffit, and at the back are the matrices of two kneeling
figures with scrolls issuing from their mouths. The
western tomb is supposed by the same writer to be
that of George Rotherham, younger son of the
first Sir Thomas, who died in 1579 and desired to
be buried in Luton Church where his first wife was
buried. The style of the tomb is, however, of an
earlier date than that suggested. The front has
cusped traceried panels inclosing the spaces for small
shields, now lost; the shafts attached to the sides of
the recess are octagonal with concave sides and
moulded capitals and bases, and the arch is a flat
three-centred one with a panelled soffit; in the back
are the matrices of a man and two women kneeling,
with scrolls by their heads, and the emblem of the
Trinity, and two shields above.
In the floor of the chapel is a slab with the brass,
of early fifteenth-century date, of a man, and the indent of that of his wife on his right and of his son on
his left, the last being in the dress of a priest. The
inscription below reads: 'Hic jacent Hugo Atte
Spetyll et Alicia uxor ejus cũ d'no Joh'ne filio suo
primogenito, quorum animabus p'picietur deus
Amen.' This was formerly in the chancel. There
is also the matrix of two half figures united, without
inscription or date, and others, of fifteenth-century
date, of an armed man with a lion at his feet and his
lady beside him, which are perhaps those of Sir
Thomas Wenlock, 1416, who distinguished himself
at the battle of Agincourt, and his wife. On the
north wall between the windows is a small brass to
Roland Stap, 'late cetezin and clothworker of
London,' 1558, and Dorothy his wife, 1565.
In the north transept is a slab with a small brass
figure of a woman with a pointed head dress, a close
gown clasped by a girdle and fur cuffs; there is also
the matrix of a man's figure, and between them that
of their two children, while below is the space for the
inscription which is also missing. A rubbing in the
collection of the Society of Antiquaries shows it to be
that of John Barbar, 1415, and his wife Agnes and
their children. The date on the brass is probably a
mistake for 1515. It was formerly in the nave. There
are also the slabs, removed from the Wenlock Chapel,
of Thomas Crawley, 1629, Sir Francis Crawley,
judge of Common Pleas, 1649, and Francis Crawley,
baron of the Exchequer, 1682, with other members
of the family of later date. There is also the brass of
John Acworth represented in armour between his
two wives, his head resting on his helmet; below the
figures is the inscription: 'Pray for the soules of
John Acworth, Squyer and Alys and Amy his wyfes,
whiche John decessed the XVII day of Marche the
yer of or Lord M°VcXIII on whose soules J'hu have
m'cy,' and below the inscription are figures of eight
sons and nine daughters. In the corners are shields,
three of them bearing quarterly 1 and 4 on a chief
indented three crowns; 2 and 3 three roses; the
fourth bears a dragon; around the edge is the remains
of a brass inscription '.… thow be, Timor mortis
shulde trowble the, For when thow leest wenyst
veniet te mors superare and so .… grave grevys:
ergo mortis memoraris .…' At the corners
were the symbols of the Evangelists, but only one
now remains. Near this slab is one to Daniel Knight
with the following inscription:—
Here lyeth the body of Daniel Knight
Who all my lifetime lived in spite.
Base flatterers sought me to undoe
And made me sign what was not true.
Reader take care whene'er you venture
To trust a canting false dissenter.
Who died June 11th, in the 61st
Year of his age, 1756.
In the south transept is a slab with the brass of a
priest wearing an almuce and albe, and a doctor's
cap, c. 1500. The inscription below the figure is now
missing but was in place in 1889 and read: 'Hic
jacet Edwardus Sheffeld utriusq' juris doctor, Canonicus eccl'ie Cathedralis leichfelden' et Vicarius istius
eccl'ie, ac Rector eccl'ie p'och'is de Camborne in Com.
Cornub, et yatt in Com.' Glocestr' qui obiit …
die, mes' .… Anno D'ni Mcvc .… cuj' a'ie
p'picietur Deus.' From his mouth issues a label with
the words 'Miserere mei Deus.'
At the corners of the slab are small shields bearing
the arms quarterly 1, a cheveron between three
sheaves, 2 and 3 fretty, 4 a cheveron, between two
tau crosses fitchy in the chief, and a sheaf in the
foot. The slab has been removed here from the
chancel in modern times. North of this is the brass,
also removed from the chancel, of a man in armour
and two ladies with the inscription: 'Off yo' charite
pray for the sowllis of John Sylam, Elizabeth and
Jone his wyvis, the whych John decesyd the X day of
Juin in the yere of owre lord MCCCCC and XIII
on whos sowllis Jh'u have m'cy. Ame.' There are
also other slabs of modern date removed from the
chancel and set here.
In the Hoo chapel is a small brass with an inscription in Latin to Penelope Countess of Pridgewater, and wife of Sir Robert Napier, of Luton Hoo,
1658.
In the eastern part of the south aisle wall between
the first and second windows is a fourteenth-century
tomb recess with a pointed segmental arch of two
hollow-chamfered orders. Its original occupant is
unknown, and it now contains an ancient coffin
slab found in the churchyard some years ago; the
slab is broken in two, and part of its lower end is
missing; it is slightly coped and has a roll edge and
a foliate cross in relief; it is evidently of early thirteenth-century date. With it is a piece of an ancient
white stone coffin, with a hollow for the head.
At the west end of the same wall is another fourteenth-century recess with a low pointed arch with
feather cusps, partly broken. In it lies the effigy of
a priest in mass vestments, probably of late fifteenthcentury date; Mr. Cobbe (fn. 413) suggests that it is that of
Richard Barnard, removed from his chapel in the
chancel.
In the nave is a slab with small brass figures of a
man and woman under a shield bearing the Merchant
Taylors' arms—a royal tent between two Parliament
robes, in chief an agnus dei—and the inscription
below, partly destroyed, as follows: 'Of yor charite
pray for ye soule of Anne Waren, dowgr [later] unto
Thomas Waren gentylman and sũtyme wyfe [unto]
Robert Colshill marchawnt taylor of London the
[whiche] Anne decessed the XIIII day of Maye in the
yere [of our] lord god M Vc XXIIII on whose soule
Jhu hav [e mercy Amen].'
Other brasses of which rubbings exist in the collection of the Society of Antiquaries are those of John
Lamar and Elinor his wife, 1512, John Hay and two
wives, 1455, John Penthelyn, priest, 1449, and Robert
Sw … and two wives, 15 …
There are eight bells, the first seven of which are
by Pack and Chapman, of London, 1775, and the
eighth by Joseph Eayre, of St. Neots, 1761. The
priest's bell bears the stamp and initials of Robert
Oldfield, of Nottingham.
The plate includes a fine cup of 1610, inscribed
'Given this cupe to the church of Lutoone by Thomas
Attwood of Castel Street for a Cummunyan cupe,
1610.' An engraved band runs round the bowl, with
knots in three places. There is a modern copy of
this cup, a large straight-sided flagon of 1669, a modern
copy of the flagon, a standing paten of 1815, and a
large almsdish, 18 in. across, of the same date. The
border is worked with a lozenge pattern inclosing
raised floral patterns, and the centre is engine-turned.
The registers date from 1603, the first book containing baptisms from that date to 1726, marriages to
1715, and burials to 1708. The second book contains baptisms and burials from 1731 to 1733, and
marriages 1731 to 1756. The third book has
burials 1772–79, and baptisms 1778–86, and the
fourth burials 1787–98, and baptisms to 1797.
Advowson
Luton Church is mentioned in
Domesday when it was held by
William the king's chamberlain,
having been held by Morcar the priest during
the Confessor's reign. (fn. 414) The history of its transference to St. Albans Abbey has been given under
Dallow manor (q.v.) and a charter of confirmation
was given to the abbey in 1199. (fn. 415) In consequence
of dissensions between the bishop of Lincoln and the
abbot a deed of composition was executed in 1219
whereby a perpetual vicarage was established in
Luton. (fn. 416) In 1291 the value of the church was
£66 13s. 4d. (fn. 417) St. Albans continued to present to
Luton until the Dissolution, when the advowson
became crown property and was granted in 1623 to
Sir Robert Napier, lord of Luton manor, (fn. 418) and
followed the same descent as that manor until 1845,
when it passed by purchase from the marquess of
Bute to Mr. Sykes (fn. 419) who in 1857 sold it to
Dr. Peile. In 1862 it was purchased by Mr. O'Neill,
who presented himself, and at his death in 1896 the
perpetual advowson was finally purchased by the
Peache trustees who exercise the right at the present
day. (fn. 420) The rectorial tithes of Luton were worth
£92 in 1544 and were payable in Luton, Chaul End,
New Mile End, Leagrave, Limbury, Biscott, Bramblehanger, Woodcroft and Stopsley. (fn. 421)
The tithes of Stopsley were granted in 1555 to
Sir Thomas Pope who bestowed them on Trinity
College, Oxford; in 1642 these tithes were rented at
£200, in 1844 at £820. (fn. 422) In 1575 Edward
Wingate purchased the tithes of Chaul End, New
Mile End, West Hyde, East Hyde, Leagrave,
Bramblehanger, Woodcroft, Limbury and Biscott.
The tithes of the two latter his family retained
until the sale of the manors to Mr. Crawley in
1724. (fn. 423)
In 1623 the tithes of Chiltern Green went to Sir
Robert Napier, (fn. 424) and in 1638 when his son's
property was sequestered, the tithes are spoken of,
not as those of Chiltern Green, but as of East and
West Hyde, in the former of which hamlets Chiltern
Green was situated. Eventually, the remainder of the
rectorial tithes were broken up into fragments, and
either became merged in the rent of the land, or
are found in the award of 1844 as belonging to 'the
rightful owners and impropriators of the rectorial
tithes.' (fn. 425)
Luton now includes the following ecclesiastical
parishes with their churches:— Christ Church, formed
in 1861, the church in the gift of the bishop of Ely;
St. Matthew's Hightown, formed in 1877, the church
in the gift of the Church Patronage Society;
St. Saviour's parish formed from Christ Church in
1892, the church in the gift of the bishop of Ely;
St. Paul's parish formed in 1895 from St. Mary's
Luton, the church in the gift of the Peache trustees.
Luton also contains one Roman Catholic church,
three Baptist chapels, seven Wesleyan chapels, five
Primitive Methodist, a Friends' Meeting house, two
Congregational chapels, and a Salvation Army barracks.
In Park Street Baptist Chapel a chair, said to be that
of John Bunyan, is preserved.
The church of the Holy Trinity, Hyde, was built
by public subscription in 1840–1. It is of brick, in
twelfth-century style, consisting of chancel, nave, porch
and a small western tower. The register dates from
1841. The living is a vicarage in the gift of
Mr. Lionel Ames of Ayot St. Lawrence.
The church of St. Thomas, Stopsley, consecrated in
1862, is of red brick in thirteenth-century style, consisting of chancel, nave, and turret containing one bell.
The register dates from 1863. The living is a vicarage
in the gift of the bishop of Ely. The Wesleyans have
a chapel at Stopsley, and the Baptists a mission chapel
in connexion with Park Street, Luton.
The church of Holy Trinity, Biscott, built in 1867,
has chancel, nave, north transept, north porch, organ
chamber on south, and western bell-cote containing two
bells. The living is a vicarage in the gift of Mr. Francis
Crawley, who holds Biscott manor. The Baptists
have in Limbury a small mission chapel in connexion
with Park Street, Luton, and in Leagrave are Primitive Methodist and Wesleyan chapels.
In 1467 Thomas bishop of Lincoln, John Rotherham, John Acworth and others obtained a licence
to found a fraternity or gild of the Holy Trinity
within the parish church of Luton, consisting of a
master, two wardens, and brethren and sisters, and
also a chantry of two chaplains to celebrate divine
service for the souls of King Edward and his consort
Elizabeth, and the said brethren and sisters. (fn. 426) At
the time of its dissolution in 1547 the brotherhood
was worth £21 4s. 11d., (fn. 427) and in 1549 the lands
which belonged to it were granted to Ralph Burgh
and Robert Beverly. (fn. 428)
Charities
The schools. See above, article on
'Schools.'
In 1673 Cornelius Bigland, by
will, gave £6 a year for educational purposes, now
paid out of cottages in Adelaide Terrace, and two
shops in George Street belonging to Mr. R. G.
Sibley.
In 1695 Roger Gillingham, by will, gave £10 a
year payable out of his manor of Shillington, now
belonging to Mrs. Eyre, for a schoolmaster.
In 1736 Thomas Long, by will, left £1,000 income
in part for a schoolmaster and in part for apprenticing.
The legacy is now represented by £949 9s. 4d. consols with the official trustees, producing an annual
income of £23 14s. 8d.
By a scheme of the Board of Education of
23 December, 1905, these charities constitute a fund
for Exhibitions of £5 a year, tenable at a secondary
school or technical institutions, and for Bursaries
of £5 a year for pupil teachers in public elementary
schools, or of £10 a year tenable at training colleges.
In 1731 John Richards, by will, devised a messuage
in Luton for education, and for providing a twopenny
loaf every Sunday morning for six poor widows.
The trust property now consists of a shop and premises
on Market Hill, let at £75 a year for ninety-nine
years from Christmas, 1897, and £358 10s. 3d. consols with the official trustees, arising from the accumulation of income.
By a scheme of the Charity Commissioners of
19 April, 1882, two-thirds of the net income of
about £50 a year is applicable in the promotion of
instruction of boys in religious knowledge by grants
to the Church of England schools, also for scholarships.
See the Distribution Charities below for application of
the remaining third.
Thomas Attwood's Charity.—Deed 1610, rentcharge of £1 on Kitnowe Close, and rent-charge of £1
on Ivy Cottage, Langley Street.
William Crawley's Charity.—Will 1682, threefifths of rent of homestead and land in Round Green.
The net income of these charities, amounting to about
£17 a year, is distributed in coal.
Elizabeth Rotherham's.—Will 1715, rent-charge of
£2 12s., charged upon land in Harthill, twelve penny
loaves to be distributed every Sunday to twelve poor
women attending divine service.
Sir Robert Napier's.—Will 1637, an annuity of
£5 4s. charged on Brache Farm, for twenty-six poor
people in bread, 2s. every Sunday after divine service.
Sir Theophilus Napier, bart.—Will 1715, an
annuity of £5 from land at Luton Hoo, in bread
every Sunday morning.
George King's.—Deed 1642, formerly £2 12s. a
year out of land in Blackwater Field, to be laid out
by 12d. a week in bread to twelve poor people every
Sunday; redeemed in 1901 by transfer to the official
trustees of £104 2½ per cent. annuities. These
charities are duly distributed in bread.
In 1660 Elizabeth Winch by will devised 7 acres in
Burge Field (subsequently known as Bell Close), the
rents to be distributed on St. Thomas's Day amongst
the poor of the town. In 1902 the land was sold for
£4,250, which—less £102 15s. for expenses—was
invested in £4,453 7s. 11d. consols with the official
trustees. The income amounting to £111 6s. 8d. is
applied for the benefit of the poor under the provisions of a scheme of 12 November, 1886. In
1903 609 persons received gifts of coal.
Charity of John Richards.—See Education Charities
above.
Under the provisions of the scheme of 1882 onethird of the net income, amounting to about £25 a
year, is applied, as to £2 12s. a year, in distribution of
bread to six poor widows, and the remainder in subscriptions to hospitals, provident clubs, and contributions towards the outfit of persons under the age of
twenty-one years.
In 1624 Thomas Crawley and Edward Crawley,
by deed, gave a messuage standing next the tithe barns,
and 5 acres in the common fields of Luton, in trust
for sustaining and amending the parish church and
steeple for ever. The trust property now consists of
a shop and beerhouse adjoining in Park Square, shop
in Park Square, and seven cottages in Park Square let
to weekly tenants, homestead and meadow land at
Round Green containing 2 acres 2 roods, and
£1,246 5s. 7d. consols, with the official trustees, arising
from investment of the proceeds of sales. The income,
amounting to about £210 a year, is applied, as required, in the repairs of the church and steeple. There
was at Easter, 1906, a balance in hand of about £350.
Almshouses founded by Robert Hibbert by deed
dated 2 January, 1819 (enrolled in Chancery).
The endowment fund consists of £5,000 on mortgage
of freehold estate in the parishes of Chalgrave, Tilsworth, and Stanbridge at £4 per cent.; £1,200 India
3 per cent.; and £1,385 14s. 11d. consols with
the official trustees, of which £979 13s. 1d. consols
was transferred in 1888 from a portion of the endowment fund of the Luton Benefit Society (Widows'
Fund), producing an annual income of £234, which is
applied in the support of the twenty-four widows
occupying the almshouses.
The almshouses in Chobham Street were built in
pursuance of a scheme of the Master of the Rolls of
17 February, 1863, out of funds belonging to the
Luton Charities, in respect of which proceedings had
been instituted in the court. The almshouses are
endowed with a messuage, baker's shop, and premises at
Trowley Bottom, Flamstead, Hertfordshire, let at
£15 10s. a year; £250 consols transferred under an
order of the Master of the Rolls as a repair and insurance fund; and £97 4s. 1d. like stock transferred
in 1888 from a portion of the endowment fund of the
Luton Benefit Society (Widows' Fund), established in
1818, the dividends to be applied for the benefit of
widows occupying two of the almshouses not receiving
parochial relief. The sums of stock are held by the
official trustees.
The Bute Hospital.—A cottage hospital in High
Town Road was founded in 1872, which in 1882
was removed to a new building in Dunstable Road
and called the Bute Hospital. The endowment funds
consist of £700 India 2½ per cent. stock, £530 consols,
and £376 17s. 4d. Liverpool Corporation 2½ per cent.
stock held by the official trustees, producing an annual
income of £40. The trust funds arise in part from
accumulations of income and from a donation of £100
by Arthur Smart, esq. and a legacy of £200 by will
(1898) of the Rev. Thomas Lye.
Union Chapel in Castle Street.—Martha Barber,
by will, proved 12 July, 1893, bequeathed £167 6s. 9d.
India 3 per cent. stock (with the official trustees), the
dividends amounting to £5 0s. 4d. to be applied
equally between the Union Chapel Auxiliary Fund of
the Baptist Missionary Society, and the Sunday School
in connexion with this same chapel.
The Friends' Monthly Meeting at Luton and Leighton.—The official trustees hold a sum of £1,885 10s. 1d.
consols, the dividends of which, amounting to
£47 2s. 8d., are applied for the relief of poor Friends
and for education and apprenticeship expenses in
connexion with this monthly meeting in accordance
with the trusts of a deed of 30 March, 1864. The
stock arises from the investment of proceeds of sale in
1875 of four cottages and 7 a. 1 r. 2 p. at Dudswell,
Hertfordshire, and from sale in 1878 of a small piece
of land at Hendon, Middlesex.