BIERTON (WITH BROUGHTON)
Burton (xiii cent.); Beerton (xv cent.).
Bierton parish lies in the Vale of Aylesbury, to the
north-east of Aylesbury parish. It contains 2,476½
acres, (fn. 1) which are mainly laid down in permanent
grass, only about 396 acres being arable land. (fn. 2) The
population is mainly employed on grazing farms;
duck-breeding is also carried on to a very considerable
extent. The subsoil is Portland Beds and Kimmeridge Clay, the surface clay. (fn. 3) The land lies for the
most part between 200 ft. and 300 ft. above the
Ordnance datum, the highest point being only 214 ft. (fn. 4)
The parish is well watered; Thistle Brook forms the
northern boundary, and various streams rise near the
hamlet of Broughton, flowing northwards. There is
a most at Manor Farm. The Aylesbury branch of
the Grand Junction Canal also crosses the parish.
The village of Bierton lies about a mile and a half
from Aylesbury, on the main road to Leighton
Buzzard. A branch road turns off at the north end
of the village to Hulcott. The village spreads along
the road, and is composed of modern houses, with one
or two of an older date, which are not of any particular interest. The church lies at the south-west
end of the village, and is surrounded by a small
churchyard, with a detached portion, now used, to
the east. The hamlet of Burcott almost forms a part
of the village, and consists of a few cottages and farm
houses. Broughton, another hamlet, comprises a row
of small cottages. The Aylesbury branch of the London and North-Western Railway crosses the parish,
and the nearest station is at Aylesbury. The most
important house is Bierton House, the residence of
Mr. J. W. Grist. Various neolithic implements and
a British urn have been dug up at different times. (fn. 5)
The parishes of Bierton and Hulcott were inclosed
under the same Act of Parliament, and the award
is dated 15 July 1780. (fn. 6)

Bierton Church from the North
Manors
The manor of BIERTON was probably held as parcel of the manor of
Aylesbury, which was in the hands of the
king at the time of the Domesday Survey. (fn. 7) In 1258,
in a lawsuit as to lands in Bierton, the defendants did
not appear, pleading that the manor of Bierton was a
member of Aylesbury, which belonged to the ancient
demesne of the Crown, and that therefore they could
only be impleaded by a little writ of right-close. (fn. 8)
Aylesbury Manor was in the hands of the Mandevilles,
Earls of Essex, in the 12th century. (fn. 9) A new grant
was made by King John to his favourite Geoffrey
Fitz Piers of the manor with its appurtenances at an
increased rental. (fn. 10) Geoffrey was to hold it with the
same right and exemptions that Earl William de
Mandeville had had. This probably included the
manor of Bierton, since Fitz Piers' grandson and successor, (fn. 11) Lord Richard Fitz John, died seised before
1297 of the manor of Aylesbury with the hamlet of
Bierton. (fn. 12) Bierton was assigned to his widow Emma
to hold in dower, but his possessions were finally
divided among his four sisters or their heirs. (fn. 13) The
manor of Bierton was assigned to John the wife of
Theobald le Botiller, and it has ever since been held
by her descendants or their successors as appendant to
the manor of Aylesbury (q.v.). (fn. 14) The manors of
Aylesbury and Bierton are at the present day in the
hands of the trustees of the late Mr. John Parker.
Certain lands and rents in Bierton and Aylesbury
were assigned to Richard de Burgh, Earl of Ulster,
on the partition of Richard Fitz John's lands, (fn. 15) and
these were afterwards known as the manor of BIERTON alias BIERTON and HULCOTT. Richard
de Burgh received the reversion of 9½ virgates of land,
the suit and service of certain tenants in villeinage,
and rent to the amount of £10 0s. 9¾d., to fall to him
on the death of Emma the widow of Richard Fitz
John. He died before this reversion fell in, leaving
his son William as his heir. (fn. 16) The latter was a minor,
and the king in 1333 committed his lands and rents
in Bierton to Elizabeth de Burgh to hold during the
young earl's minority. (fn. 17) The latter died the next
year seised of rent in Bierton, which was held by his
widow in dower. (fn. 18) His only daughter and heiress
Elizabeth was one year old at his death. (fn. 19) She afterwards married Lionel, Duke of Clarence, the third
son of Edward III. (fn. 20) Their only daughter and heiress
Philippa married Edmund Mortimer, Earl of March
and Ulster, (fn. 21) who died seised of the manor of Whaddon (part of the possessions of Richard Fitz John),
'with its members of Bierton and Amersham.' (fn. 22) His
heir Roger was a minor at the time of his father's
death. Roger was killed in 1398, and his son Edmund died in 1424–5. (fn. 23) His possessions passed to
his nephew Richard Duke of York, (fn. 24) and from him
descended to Edward IV. The manor of Bierton
was granted by the king in 1461 to his mother
Cecily Duchess of York, for life, in recompense for her
jointure. (fn. 25) Richard III confirmed this grant, (fn. 26) and
in 1492 the reversion of the manor was granted to
her granddaughter Elizabeth of York for her jointure
on her marriage with Henry VII. (fn. 27) After her death
her sisters and co-heiresses, Katherine Courtenay,
Countess of Devon, and Anne Howard, claimed the
manor, but in 1511 (fn. 28) it was settled on Henry VIII
as the son and heir of Elizabeth. Katherine of Aragon
held lands and rents in Bierton, (fn. 29) and the manor was
granted in turn to Jane Seymour, Anne of Cleves,
and Katherine Howard. (fn. 30) After the execution of the
last-named queen the manor of Bierton remained in
the hands of the Crown until James I in 1603
granted it to Anne of Denmark as part of her dower. (fn. 31)
After the death of the queen the manor was granted
to Sir Henry Hobart and others (fn. 32) as trustees for
Prince Charles, afterwards Charles I. Soon after his
accession to the throne it was released to the mayor
and citizens of London as security for a loan of
money, (fn. 33) and was to be held at the accustomed rent.
In 1650 Thomas Greene bought this rent from the
trustees for the sale of the fee-farm rents, formerly
payable to the Crown. (fn. 34) Six years later he was said to
be a lunatic, but his heir was unknown, so that the rent
presumably again came into the hands of the Government. (fn. 35) After the Restoration, Sir Allan Appesley is
said by Lipscomb (fn. 36) to have conveyed the fee-farm
rent of £10 12s. 8¾d. issuing out of the manor of
Bierton to Thomas Morley, who reconveyed it to
Timothy Neale in 1675. (fn. 37) The same historian also
mentions a sale of the manor itself by Alexander Hawkins
to Timothy Neale, (fn. 38) and the Neales certainly held the
manor of Bierton some years later. John Neale was
seised in 1719, (fn. 39) together with the manor of Hulcott (q.v.), and from this time these manors have
been held together, and are now in the possession of
Mr. Leopold de Rothschild.
The family of Stonors held lands in Bierton which
were afterwards called the manor of STONORS alias
STONORS CROFT alias BIERTON-STONORS. In
1325 John de Stonor and his
son Richard held lands in
Aylesbury, Walton, Bierton,
Hulcott, and Caldecott. (fn. 40) In
an inquisition taken in 1336 (fn. 41)
it was found that John de
Stonor, after making certain
grants in mortmain, would
keep the manor of BiertonStonors, from which he could
perform his foreign services.
He held it by military service
of the Earl of Ormond. He
died in 1354, seised of lands
and tenements in the township of Bierton. (fn. 42) His son
and heir was John de Stonor, but in 1370 Edmund de
Stonor (fn. 43) granted an annual rent out of the manor to
the Bishop of Winchester. John de Stonor, son and heir
of Edmund, died (fn. 44) seised of rents in Bierton in 1389.
His brother and heir Ralph de Stonor granted the
manor of Bierton-Stonors to William Sutton of Camden (fn. 45) and others, but this was presumably only a
mortgage, (fn. 46) since the manor was afterwards recovered
by the Stonors. Gilbert the son and heir of Ralph
de Stonor was a minor at the time of his father's
death, (fn. 47) and he died while still in the king's wardship
in 1396. (fn. 48) The manor of Bierton-Stonors is not
mentioned among his lands in an inquisition taken
in 1416, (fn. 49) so that it was probably still in the hands
of mortgagees. His heir was his brother Thomas,
who came of age in that year, (fn. 50) and probably recovered
the manor. Another Thomas de Stonor, presumably
his heir, together with his wife Joan, sold it in
1469 (fn. 51) to Sir Ralph Verney and others. Sir Ralph,
who died in 1478, was seised of lands and tenements
in Bierton, but it is probable that he had settled the
manor on his second son, another Sir Ralph Verney. (fn. 52)
The latter died seised of the
manor and had settled it on
John Cheyne (fn. 53) and others to
hold, to the use of his wife
Eleanor for her life, and then
to the use of John Verney
his son and his issue. John
died before 1549, (fn. 54) leaving a
daughter Mary as his heir.
His widow Dorothy entered
the manor on his death, and
a long lawsuit (fn. 55) was brought
against her by Mary, who
had married Lewis Reynolds.
The result is not given, but
in 1552 Dorothy Verney and Lewis Reynolds
sold the manor for £236 to Leonard Chamberlain, Robert Woodlest, and William Howse. (fn. 56) The
manor of Bierton-Stonors in shortly afterwards passed
into the possession of John Bosse, who died in 1558, (fn. 57)
seised of lands called Stonors in Bierton. In the inquisition taken after his death it is impossible to discover if his property was called a manor or not. His
son Richard was his heir, (fn. 58) and he held lands and
rent in Bierton in 1585. (fn. 59) Some years later Sir
Edmund Verney made a claim for the lands of his
ancestors in Bierton, and sued Samuel Bosse and
Francis Howse. (fn. 60) Samuel was the son of Richard
Bosse, (fn. 61) and he held the manor of Bierton-Stonors at
the time of this lawsuit in 1598. (fn. 62) The result is not
given, but the plaintiff lost his case, since Samuel
Bosse continued in possession. He died seised of a
capital messuage (fn. 63) in Bierton. John Bosse was his
son and heir, (fn. 64) but Bierton-Stonors was settled in
1614 (fn. 65) by Samuel on his second son Thomas on his
marriage with Grace Butterfield. Thomas Bosse held
it in 1637 and died seised in the same year. (fn. 66) His
heir does not appear, but the manor afterwards became
united with the manor of Waynford (q.v.), passing to
the family of Howse, possibly through the Temples. (fn. 67)
It had passed to one of the Howse family before
1670, (fn. 68) from which date the name of Waynford is
rarely used, their manor being called in that year the
manor of Bierton.

Stonors. Azure two bars dancetty or and a chief argent.

Verney. Azure a cross argent with five pierced molets gules thereon.
William Waynford held land in Bierton during
the reign of Henry VI, (fn. 69) which was afterwards
known as WAYNFORD'S Manor. On the accession
of Edward IV Waynford forfeited his lands, having
been an active partisan of the Lancastrian party
during the Wars of the Roses. In consequence his
lands were granted in 1462 to Thomas Seyntleger for
life, (fn. 70) but in 1467 Sir Ralph Verney (fn. 71) obtained a
grant of them for himself and the heirs of his body, to
hold by military service. The grant consisted of
three messuages and 150 acres of land and meadow.
Waynford's Manor appears to have passed like BiertonStonors to Ralph the younger son of the first Sir
Ralph Verney and then to his son and heir John. (fn. 72)
On the death of this John Verney (fn. 73) his widow
Dorothy held Waynford's Manor, but it is also said to
have been sold by Sir Ralph Verney, presumably the
father of John, to Robert Woodlyfe, (fn. 74) who immediately sold it to William Howse for no profit because
he found his title was defective. (fn. 75) There is, however,
considerable obscurity about the history of the Verney
lands in Bierton at this time, but William Howse
certainly seems to have obtained Waynford's Manor
before 1553. (fn. 76) In that year he obtained a quitclaim
from Edmund Verney, (fn. 77) the direct descendant of the
eldest son of the first Sir Ralph Verney, (fn. 78) who was
also the heir of the younger branch of which the last
representative was Mary Reynolds. The brother and
heir of this Edmund Verney, himself Edmund by
name, (fn. 79) attempted to recover Waynford's Manor at
the same time as Bierton-Stonors in 1598. (fn. 80) Francis
Howse, the son of William Howse, held it at that
time (fn. 81) and retained it against Sir Edmund's attacks.
Thomas Howse of Bierton was summoned to make
proof of his arms and gentry in 1634, (fn. 82) and was presumably a descendant of Francis. He was returned as a
papist and delinquent under
the Commonwealth, and his
estates in Bierton were sequestered. (fn. 83) He died before 1647,
when they were valued for
the Committee for Compounding at £60 a year. (fn. 84) In
1670 (fn. 85) John Howse and his
wife Martha held the manor.
In 1697 (fn. 86) their son and heir
was Finch Howse, and in
1756 John Temple Howse
and his wife Mary had succeeded to the manor. (fn. 87) In 1801 the manor of BiertonStonors with Waynford was bought by the Marquis
of Buckingham, (fn. 88) afterwards Duke of Buckingham
and Chandos. It was sold with the greater part
of his property in the middle of the 19th century,
but the name of the manor is now lost, and it
does not seem possible to identify the land which it
comprised.

Grenville, Duke of Buckingham and Chandos. Vert a cross argent with five roundels gules thereon.
Before the Norman Conquest, (fn. 89) Edward, a thegn
of King Edward the Confessor, held the greater part
of the township of BROUGHTON, and could sell his
manor there at will. It was then (T.R.E.) worth
£10 a year. At the time of the Domesday Survey
William de Warenne, Earl of Surrey, was lord of the
manor, which had depreciated in value by £2. (fn. 90)
Presumably it descended to his son and grandson in
turn, and then to Isabella, (fn. 91) the heiress of the
Warennes, since her husband, William, Count of
Boulogne, the second son of King Stephen, confirmed
a charter granting land in Broughton (fn. 92) to Missenden
Abbey. This grant resulted in the division of the
township into two parts, and the manor remaining
with the Count of Boulogne was known as the manor
of BROUGHTON PARVA alias HOLAND alias
LOVEL alias STAVELY. At the death of the
count his lands escheated to the Crown, (fn. 93) and the
manor was presumably not alienated until either
Henry III or Edward I granted it to Edmund, Earl
of Lancaster, the second son of Henry III. He
died seised of the manor of Broughton Parva in
1295, (fn. 94) and it descended to his son Thomas, Earl
of Lancaster, (fn. 95) who subinfeudated it, but from this
time it was held of the earldom or duchy of Lancaster. (fn. 96)

Thomas, Earl of Lancaster. England with a lable of France.

Holand. Azure powdered with fleurs-de-lis a lion argent.
The earl granted the manor about 1320 to Robert
de Holand (fn. 97) and his wife Maud, but when his lands
were seized, after his execution by Edward II, the
Holands were dispossessed of Broughton Parva. (fn. 98)
Maud de Holand and her son Robert petitioned
Edward III in 1328 to recover their lands, and were
successful in obtaining them. (fn. 99) Since the earldom of
Lancaster was in the king's hands at this time, he
held the manor during the minority (fn. 100) of the young
Robert de Holand. Maud seems, however, to have
recovered the manor, possibly after her son had come
of age, and she died seised in 1349. (fn. 101) It seems
probable that she had granted it for life or a term of
years to her younger son Thomas, afterwards Earl of
Kent. Thomas held it in 1346, (fn. 102) and after the death
of his mother obtained a renewal of the grant (fn. 103) of
the manor for life from his brother. On the death
of Thomas in 1361 (fn. 104) it reverted to Robert de
Holand, who died seised of it in 1373; (fn. 105) his son,
another Robert de Holand, had predeceased him,
leaving a daughter Matilda as his heir. She married
Sir John Lovel, (fn. 106) and the
manor of Broughton Parva
passed to them on the death
of her grandfather. (fn. 107) Sir
John Lovel, their son and
heir, succeeded his mother in
possession of the manor, and
also died seised in 1413. (fn. 108)
Another John Lovel, a minor,
was his son and heir, (fn. 109) but
probably a mistake was made
in the inquisition on his lands,
made after the death of
Sir John, as a William Lovel (fn. 110) succeeded to the
estates. The manor of Broughton Parva was, however, held by his mother Eleanor for life, (fn. 111) but he
granted the reversion to Henry Archbishop of Canterbury, Alice Lady Deyncourt, and others. (fn. 112) Afterwards, by a further grant, Sir William Lovel transferred it to William Tresham and his heirs, on condition that the latter would give up certain deeds that
were in his charge, between Sir William and Sir
John Radcliff. (fn. 113) The two survivors of the first grant,
John Potter and John Waget, also transferred their
right (fn. 114) in the manor to William Tresham to hold to
him and his heirs and assigns. On the death of Sir
William Lovel in 1454 (fn. 115) his son Sir John Lovel
was his heir, and in 1461 (fn. 116) he obtained a ratification
of the manor of Broughton Parva, of which he was
said to be seised in fee-tail, but no descendant of his
appears to have held any further right in the manor.
William Tresham died seised in 1450, (fn. 117) and was succeeded by Thomas Tresham, his son and heir. The
latter sold the manor in 1466 (fn. 118) to William Stavely,
from whom the manor obtained its fourth name. In
1495 (fn. 119) Stavely made a settlement of it to the use of
himself and his wife Alice for life, and then to the
use of his son George Stavely. Alice died in 1500 (fn. 120)
seised of the manor, which passed to George Stavely,
who settled it on himself and his wife Isabel by
charter in 1523; (fn. 121) he held it till his death in 1525, (fn. 122)
when his son and heir John succeeded him. John
Stavely mortgaged Broughton Parva (fn. 123) to Thomas
Walker and Simon Lowe, two London merchants, but
in 1544 a sale of the manor was made by Stavely,
Walker, and Lowe (fn. 124) to Alice Baldwin, daughter of
Sir John Baldwin, for £340. In a copy of the will
of Sir John it appears, however, that he bought the
manor from John Stavely, but that he put his daughter Alice, (fn. 125) together with William Welshe and John
Gelly, in seisin. Sir John Baldwin's lands (fn. 126) were inherited by his two grandsons and co-heirs, Thomas
Pakington and John Burlace, (fn. 127) and at the division of
his lands between them Broughton Parva came to
Thomas Pakington. (fn. 128) His descendants held the manor
until 1801, (fn. 129) when Sir John Pakington sold it to
the Duke of Buckingham and Chandos. (fn. 130) On the
sale of the duke's lands it was bought by Mr.
Tindal, (fn. 131) at the same time as the manor of Bierton,
and is now in the hands of the trustees of the late
Mr. John Parker.

Lovel. Barry wavy or and gules.
In 1616–17 James I (fn. 132) granted the manor of
Broughton Parva to Richard Goodwin and Hugh
Dashfield, their heirs and assigns, for £110 and the
rent of 12 marks a year. They may, however, have
been fishing grantees, since they never had seisin of the
manor, which was held at that time by the Pakingtons, a rental of whose tenants exists for the year
1627. (fn. 133)
The Earl of Lancaster (fn. 134) granted the manor of
Broughton Parva to Robert de Holand and his wife
in fee-tail. Matilda held it (fn. 135) by the service of paying one rose a year to the Earl of Lancaster, but the
military service from half a knight's fee was also due
to the king, and was performed by her son Thomas
de Holand. (fn. 136)
Sir William Lovel and William Tresham, (fn. 137) however, are said to have held the manor of John Newport, and Tresham paid the rent of 1 lb. of cummin.
Alice the widow of William Stavely (fn. 138) held of the
king as of the duchy of Lancaster by fealty and the
rent of 13d. a year. By the time of Sir Thomas
Pakington, who died in 1571, (fn. 139) the tenure was unknown, and presumably all payment of rent to the
duchy had ceased during the many changes of ownership in the 15th century.
The Pakingtons held the view of frankpledge (fn. 140) in
Broughton Parva all the time that the manor was
in their possession. (fn. 141) In 1772 (fn. 142) a free fishery there
is also mentioned.
In the first half of the 12th century various alienations were made of lands in Broughton to the abbey
of Missenden, which afterwards formed the manor of
BROUGHTON MAGNA or ABBOT'S BROUGHTON. Hugh de Gurney granted his whole tenement to Missenden (fn. 143) with the consent of his wife
Milicent and his son Hugh. He held of Robert
Maunsel, who made an agreement with the canons as
to the service due from the tenement, and the Count
of Boulogne confirmed both grants. The manor of
Abbot's Broughton was held by the abbey until its
dissolution in 1538. (fn. 144) Three years later the king
granted it to Sir John Baldwin, (fn. 145) from whom it descended, like Broughton Parva, to Thomas Pakington,
and was held by his descendants during the 17th
century. In 1665–6 Sir John Pakington, bart., and
his wife Dorothy (fn. 146) granted a lease of the manor to
John Backwell for ninety-nine years, for the rent of
one grain of pepper, in return for £200. Various
assignments of this lease appear to have been made;
in 1670 (fn. 147) William Reeve and his wife Sarah, together with Edward Backwell, quitclaimed the manor
to Thomas Bowdler for £240, but in the next year (fn. 148)
they sold the manor and farm to Henry Johnson.
The latter also seems to have obtained the manor
from Sir John Pakington (fn. 149) and his son and heir,
another John Pakington. Its subsequent history is
obscure, but it seems to have afterwards come into
the possession of William Meade. (fn. 150) He sold it
in 1721–2 (fn. 151) to the trustees of Aylesbury Grammar
School, who bought the manor of Abbot's Broughton (fn. 152)
with part of the money given in 1714 by Mr. Henry
Philips for the re-endowment of the school. The
trustees held it in 1813, (fn. 153) and are the lords of the
manor at the present day.
The manor of Abbot's Broughton was held by the
abbey of Missenden in frankalmoign, apparently in
chief of the king. (fn. 154) Sir John Baldwin, however, held
it as one-tenth of a knight's fee, and paid a yearly rent
of 40s. 9d. (fn. 155)
The abbot and canons of Missenden obtained a
grant (fn. 156) of free warren in their demesne lands in
Broughton in 1301–2, which was confirmed by
Henry VI. (fn. 157) The abbot also held a view of frankpledge in 1254, (fn. 158) and paid 12s. for hidage from
Broughton and Hulcott, which then formed one
township.
A mill is mentioned at Broughton in Domesday
Book, (fn. 159) being then worth 10s a year, and a watermill is mentioned in an extent of the manor of
Broughton Parva in 1296. (fn. 160) The abbey of Missenden held a mill in Broughton, (fn. 161) which was granted to
it before 1330. In 1721–2 a mill is mentioned (fn. 162) in
connexion with the manor of Abbot's Broughton.
In the time of Edward the Confessor one hide and
three virgates of land in BORTONE was held by two
sokemen, (fn. 163) one a man of Alwin Varus and the other
of Earl Leofwine. This has been identified with
Bierton in the Domesday Survey, (fn. 164) but from its postConquest history it seems more probable that the land
lay in Broughton. In 1086 it was held by the
Bishop of Bayeux, who had subinfeudated it to a
tenant named Roger. (fn. 165) As overlord and tenant the
bishop and Roger also held Weston Turville and Bedgrave, (fn. 166) and it seems most probable that this land
followed the descent of the manor of Weston Turville. (fn. 167) Part of the land belonging to the manor of
Weston Butlers, afterwards united to the manor of
Weston Turville, (fn. 168) lay in Broughton, and part of
Broughton, like Weston Turville, belonged to the
duchy of Lancaster. (fn. 169)
Church
The church of ST. JAMES is a cruciform structure, the internal measurements of which are as follows: Chancel,
14 ft. 6 in. by 21 ft. 9 in.; central tower about 13 ft.
9 in. square; north transept, 17 ft. by 16 ft. 3 in.;
south transept, 16 ft. 8 in. square; nave, 17 ft. 6 in.
by 52 ft. 5 in.; and north and south aisles, 7 ft. 3 in.
wide, with a north porch.
The church appears to have been built complete
about the middle of the 14th century, since which
time practically nothing has been done to alter the
plan. At a late date, perhaps in 1636, the
original high-pitched roof over the nave and aisles
was removed and a low-pitched roof put in its
place, the aisle walls being heightened and an upper
tier of windows inserted in them—probably to light
galleries. It is probable that the roofs of the
transepts were also treated in this way at the same
time, but the whole church was reroofed about the
middle of the 19th century. The windows have also
been altered at various dates from the 15th century
to the present day. But despite these various alterations and additions the church remains a notable
example of c. 1330–40, the nave arcades and the
arches of the tower being particularly handsome in
proportion and well thought-out in detail, while the
tracery of such of the original windows as remain is of
the best character.

Plan of Bierton Church
The east window is of three cinquefoiled lights with
15th-century tracery, and is a modern insertion, the
head and defaced moulded jambs and rear arch of the
original and wider 14th-century window still being
visible. On either side of this are image niches also
of 14th-century date with cinquefoiled heads. In the
north wall of the chancel is a fairly large niche with
moulded jambs and a moulded trefoiled head, possibly
part of an Easter sepulchre, and of the same date as
the chancel. The only window in this wall is also
original. It is of two trefoiled lights with tracery in
the form of trefoils with a quatrefoil over. The rear
arch and the jambs of the internal splay are moulded
with a broad wave mould, and there are internal and
external labels with drips in the form of heads. At
the east end of the south wall is a piscina with shafted
jambs and moulded two-centred head, all considerably
restored; and in this wall is also a duplicate of the
north window already described. The roof of the
chancel is a modern one of steep pitch.
The central tower is carried on four large clustered
piers and arches of three simply moulded orders, the
western arch having a label towards the nave.
The tower stair is in the north-east angle of the
south transept, entered from the transept, and the
belfry windows are plain pointed openings filled with
luffer boards. The tower finishes with a low roof and
a plain parapet which projects on corbels carved with
ball-flowers. The steeple is said to have fallen in a
report of the church made in 1636, and its present
upper stage is probably a rebuilding of that date.
The north transept contains one much-restored
15th-century north window of three cinquefoiled
lights, under a four-centred head. There are no east
or west windows; the arch to the north aisle is of
two plain chamfered orders the outer of which is continuous, the inner having half-octagonal moulded
capitals like those of the nave arcades.
The south transept has a south window like that in
the north transept, with traces in its jambs and head
of the original 14th-century light. In this transept
are two doors, one to the tower stair and the other
external. The former has a trefoiled head and a
crocketed label of late 14th-century date, and seems
to have been added after the church was completed,
the label cutting into the respond of the tower arch.
The external door is in the south wall and has a plain
four-centred head. It has been cut through the back
of a single sedile, evidently part of the original fittings,
with an ogee cinquefoiled head, a crocketed and
finialed hood-mould and small side buttresses ornamented with traceried panelling. The underside of
the head is carved to imitate rib-vaulting. There is
also a moulded 14th-century image bracket on the
east wall with two mail-clad heads supporting it.
The nave arcades are of four bays, the piers being
composed of four half-round shafts with moulded
fillets between, and having circular moulded bases and
capitals similar to, but not identical with, those of the
tower piers. The arches are two-centred, and of two
orders, both of which, towards the nave, are moulded
with a deep hollow between two small square fillets,
and two wave-moulds, while towards the aisles the
mouldings are simplified to a wave-mould on each
order. The arches have also labels towards the nave
similar to that over the western tower arch, with
grotesque heads as drips at the east end, and grotesque
heads are inserted in the crowns of the western pair
of arches. The west door, also original, has a twocentred head, both head and jambs being continuously
moulded with an elaborate section of wave-moulds,
hollows and fillets worked on a splayed face. There
is also an external label. The west window of the
nave is a 15th-century insertion with a deep hollow
moulded external reveal, a four-centred head and
label and four cinquefoiled lights with tracery above.
The roof of the nave is modern, of low pitch, and
continued over the aisles, but the trace of the original
steep-pitched roof of the nave is clearly visible on the
west wall of the tower, and from this it is evident
that the north and south walls of the nave retain
their original height, while a change in the masonry
of the north aisle, visible where the external roughcast has fallen away, suggests that the aisles were
originally roofed at about half their present height,
the old nave roof running over them without a break.
The north aisle contains two original three-light
windows, both with wave-moulded rear arches, and
internal and external labels. The western of these
two windows has, however, lost its original net tracery,
and now has clumsy mullions and transoms of late date.
The north door between these windows is similar
in detail to the west door, but has been much defaced. Above the door and windows are three twolight clearstory windows, insertions of late 15th-century style with cinquefoiled lights under a flat head,
but probably dating from the 17th century.
The south aisle has two two-light windows, the
western one being similar to the corresponding window on the north, both as to the original opening and
the inserted tracery, while the second window is a
replica of the north and south windows of the chancel.
The original south door between these windows is
blocked, while the clearstory over them has three
two-light windows of 17th-century date, with rounded
uncusped heads, plainer than those in the north aisle,
as not being visible from the road. The north porch
is a comparatively recent addition of timber, lath, and
plaster. On the south wall of the chancel is a wall
monument to Samuel Bosse 'of Byrton,' the founder
of a local charity, and his wife Cecily, nine sons, and
four daughters. The circular font is rather plain, with
a cable moulding round the top, and of late 12thcentury date.
There are six bells by Briant of Hertford, the
tenor of 1809, and the rest of 1816, and there is also
a small sanctus bell cast by Richard Chandler in 1678.
The church plate consists of a chalice of 1693, a
standing paten of 1718, a flagon of 1729, bequeathed
by the Rev. John Sambee, vicar of Bierton, who died
in 1728, and an interesting small mediaeval paten
without marks of any kind bearing the vernicle within
a sunk quatrefoil. It has originally been parcel gilt,
but the gold is almost entirely worn away.
The first book of the registers contains baptisms
and burials from 1560, and marriages from 1563, the
latter two classes of entry continuing to 1723, and
the burials to 1688, from which time they are continued in a separate book, containing notices of the
affidavits of burial in woollen, to 1809. A third
book contains baptisms and marriages from 1723 to
1757 and 1753 respectively, while a fourth book
contains baptisms from 1758 to 1809, and a fifth
baptisms and burials from 1810 to 1813, and there
is a printed book of marriages by banns from 1754 to
1812.
Advowson
The chapel of Bierton originally
belonged to the prebend of Aylesbury. In 1266 Richard, Bishop of
Lincoln, (fn. 170) with the consent of Master William de
Shirewode, rector of the prebendal church, granted
the chapel to the Dean and Chapter of Lincoln. The
reason of the grant is to be found in the poverty of
the cathedral chapter, while the prebend was said to
abound in temporalities. This grant was confirmed
in 1315 (fn. 171) by Edward II.
Besides the chapel of Bierton, the chapels of Buckland, (fn. 172) Stoke Mandeville, and Quarrendon were at
the same time detached from the parent church of
Aylesbury and granted to the Dean and Chapter. The
grantees obtained the ordination of a vicarage for the
four chapels during the episcopate of Bishop Sutton (fn. 173)
(1290–9). Bierton, however, seems always to have
been the principal church, the other three being appendant chapels. In 1535 (fn. 174) the benefice was called
'Bierton with members,' and consisted of the church
at Bierton with the chapels of Broughton, of the value
of £20 a year, Buckland 100s., Stoke Mandeville with
Stoke Halling £10, Quarrendon £6 13s. 4d. There
were also tenements in Bierton worth 20s., and a cottage worth 4s. belonging to the benefice.
In 1636, (fn. 175) the church of Bierton was in a ruinous
condition, the steeple having fallen down. The repairs
were estimated to cost 200 marks, to the raising of
which the inhabitants of the hamlet of Quarrendon
should have contributed, since they did 'their Christian duties' at the church of Bierton. The Dean and
Chapter of Lincoln (fn. 176) have been patrons of the living
ever since the first grant in 1266. The presentations
of the vicar were made in the early part of the 19th
century to the 'vicarage of Bierton, with Buckland
and Stoke Mandeville,' (fn. 177) but they were separated in
1858, (fn. 178) and Bierton now forms a separate benefice, in
the gift of the Dean and Chapter.
There are two references to a chapel at Broughton,
but there are no traces of its existence at the present
day. Originally it was one of the two chapels appendant to the church of Weston Turville, and is men
tioned in a privilege of Pope Alexander III. (fn. 179) The
monastery seems to have claimed the church of Weston
Turville and both the chapels of Lee and Broughton
at this time, but probably they never obtained any of
them except the chapel of Lee. (fn. 180) The chapel of
Broughton is again mentioned in 1535, amongst the
chapels appendant to the church of Bierton, belonging
to the Dean and Chapter of Lincoln. (fn. 181) It was then
worth £20 a year. (fn. 182) It was however, not mentioned
in the grant of the church of Bierton, nor in the
ordination of the vicarage, so that it seems doubtful
whether it was ever separated from its mother church
of Weston Turville.
There is a Baptist chapel, built in 1831, and a
Wesleyan chapel, built in 1877, both at Bierton.
Charities
Charity of William Hill, founded
by will, 1723, is endowed with
63 a. 3 r. 32 p. at Burcott in this
parish, let at £160 a year, to be applied, as to £16,
in providing eight coats, distribution of money to
poor not receiving relief and attending sacrament in
Wendover, Bierton, Buckland, Marsworth, Oving,
and Thornborough, the residue for education, apprenticing, or other charitable purposes in Wendover
and Bierton. In 1907 £8 was expended in coats to
the six parishes, £8 in sacrament money, annuity of
£6 to the vicars of Bierton and Wendover, £40 to
the Bierton Schools, £40 to the Wendover Schools,
and £5 in apprenticing.
The Feoffees Charity, mentioned in the Parliamentary returns of 1786 as founded by a donor unknown, is endowed with 15 acres, let in allotments,
producing £36 a year, a house let at £4 a year, and
a rent-charge of £1 9s. issuing out of Dove House
Close, now belonging to Mr. Thomas Bell.
By an order of the Charity Commissioners of 21
April 1899, made under the Local Government Act,
1894, the income was apportioned between the church
and the poor. In 1907, out of the net income, £10
was paid to the churchwardens, and £17 10s. was
distributed in 46 doles at 7s. 6d. each, and one at 5s.
Charity of Samuel Bosse.—Under this title a further
annuity of £2 is paid out of Dove House Close, which
is distributed in sixpences.
A Mr. Allen, at a date unknown, gave a sum of
£100 consols, the dividends to be distributed in best
bread on Christmas and Easter Day for ever. The
stock is held by the official trustees.
In 1862 Archdeacon T. Hill by deed gave £6 a
year for the distribution of Bibles and New Testaments
and for education of poor children in this parish and
in Wendover.
The charity of William Reeve, comprised in an
indenture, bearing date 12 October 18 Charles II, is
regulated by scheme of the Charity Commissioners of
21 August 1891. The trust estate consists of two
cottages and gardens let at £8 10s. a year, and
1 a. 3 r. 32 p. of land in Broughton, let at £8 a year,
and £65 3s. 4d. consols, with the official trustees,
producing yearly £1 12s. 4d. arising from accumulations of income. In 1907 the sum of £14 was
expended in doles.