COPMANFORD alias COPPINGFORD
Copemaneforde (xi cent.); Coppeneford (xii
cent.); Copmanford (xiii–xix cent.); Copmanesford,
Coupmanneford (xiii cent.); Copmandesford (xiv
cent.); Copyngford (xvi cent.).
The parish comprises 828 acres of clay land, of
which about 64 acres are woodland and the remainder
about half arable and half pasture. The chief crops
are wheat, barley, oats and beans. From the Mile
Brook, (fn. 1) a tributary of the Alconbury Brook on the
west side of the parish, where the land is about 80 feet
above the Ordnance datum, the ground rises to about
170 feet in the village. The Ermine Street for a
short distance forms the eastern boundary of the
parish. It is interesting to note that in 1242 (fn. 2) John
de Neville, bailiff of the king's forests, was ordered
to cause a cutting (trenchia) to be made through
Sawtry Wood, Coppingford Wood, and Upton Wood
of sufficient width for the security of travellers, as
far as a road there extended. (fn. 3) It would seem probable
that the road referred to was the Ermine Street. The
other road in the neighbourhood is the Bullock Road,
which also for a short distance forms the parish
boundary, but this is unlikely to have been the subject
of the order.
About a mile west of the Ermine Street, on high
land, where a by-road from Upton called Coppingford Lane meets a by-road from Hamerton to Sawtry,
stands the little village of Coppingford. The moated
site of the manor house, probably built by the
Copmanford family, about 1200, is in Coppingford
Spinney, on the west side of the village. The church
of All Hallows, which was destroyed before 1707, is
supposed to have stood in a square paddock of half
an acre, inclosed with a hedge, at the north-west
angle outside the moat of the manor house. The
position favours the theory, but no evidences of
graves or foundations have been found, although a
few wrought stones, now in the garden of the Farm
House, are said to have been dug up here. This
Farm House is a little to the east of the manor house
site and is an early 17th-century timber-framed cottage
with thatched roof. There are modern additions on
the east side in which some old fittings have been
re-used. This cottage is supposed to be the hiding
place of Charles I on the night of 2 May 1646, when
he fled from Oxford to join the Scottish army. (fn. 4) It
is thought that he went first to John Ferrar at Little
Gidding, who led him to this cottage which he considered a safer lodging than the house of such wellknown royalists as the Ferrars. (fn. 5)
The Priory of Bushmead (Beds) held lands in the
parish, (fn. 6) and Joseph de Copmanford was prior there. (fn. 7)
The nearest railway stations are at Abbots Ripton
(5 miles) and Holme (6 miles).
Manor
The manors of COPPINGFORD and
Upton, held by Edgar in 1066, were
assessed at 4 hides each in 1086, when
the overlord was Hugh, (fn. 8) second Earl of Chester.
The two places formed two knights' fees in the early
13th century, and subsequently only one. (fn. 9) Earl
Hugh died in 1101, and his son Richard in 1120,
without lawful issue. Earl
Ranulph, Richard's cousin,
succeeded in 1121, and died
about 1129, when Ranulph
de Gernon, his son, became
Earl. Hugh de Kevelioc, his
son, was earl 1153–81, and
Ranulph de Blundeville, his
son, from 1181 to 1232. On
his death without issue, John
le Scot, son of his eldest
sister Maud and David Earl
of Huntingdon, succeeded. (fn. 10)

Chester. Azure three sheaves or.

Wake. Or two bars gules with three roundels gules in the chief.
John le Scot died in 1237
and the Coppingford overlordship was inherited by
Devorgilla, daughter of his sister Margaret Galloway,
who married firstly Nicholas de Stuteville and
secondly John de Balliol. (fn. 11)
Devorgilla was holding Coppingford of the honour of
Chester in 1279, (fn. 12) and her
property passed to her daughter Joan de Stuteville, wife of
Hugh Wake, who died in
1241. Joan was dead by 1276, (fn. 13)
and the overlordship remained
in the Wake family, but during the minority of Thomas,
son of John Wake, it was in
the hands of John de Britannia
in 1303. (fn. 14) Thomas died seised
in 1349, when his heir was his
sister Margaret, Countess of Kent. (fn. 15) Her son John,
Lord Wake, Earl of Kent, died in 1352; (fn. 16) and the
overlordship followed the descent of the Earldom of
Kent until the death of Edmund, Earl of Kent,
without issue in 1408, when it went to his eldest
surviving sister Joan, Duchess of York. (fn. 17) She died
in 1434, leaving several co-heirs, and was succeeded
by her great-nephew Richard, Earl of March and Duke
of York, son of Richard Plantagenet, Duke of York,
and Anne, daughter of her eldest sister, Eleanor,
Countess of March. (fn. 18) His sons ascended the throne
as Edward IV and Richard III, and thus the overlordship became merged in the Crown.
It is uncertain when the mesne lordship of the
Patrics under the Earls of Chester at Coppingford
and Upton began. According to Ormerod, (fn. 19) Robert
Fitz Hugh, who held Malpas (Ches.) of the
Earl of Chester in 1086, had two daughters, the
elder of whom, Lettice, married Richard Patric.
Richard's son, William, died in 1184, (fn. 20) leaving a son
William, whose widow Emma in 1199 successfully
claimed dower in Coppingford from Robert, son
of William Patric, late her husband. Emma
married, as her second husband, Reginald de Blancminster or Whitchurch (de Albo Monasterio), (fn. 21) who
in 1221 had a gift of four oaks for the repair of houses
in Coppingford (fn. 22) which had
been burnt. In 1225 Reginald
and Emma were sued for the
manor of Coppingford, (fn. 23) and
in the same year Robert's
son, William Patric, confirmed
the grant of dower to Emma
in Buscot (Berks). (fn. 24) William
Patric died in 1242 and was
succeeded by Robert, his
brother. (fn. 25) Emma probably
died before 1244, when
Robert was returned as mesne
lord of half a fee, apparently
in Coppingford, held of the honour of Chester. (fn. 26) Robert
died before 1279, when Upton is said to be held of
his heirs. (fn. 27) He had a son William, who appears to
have died in his father's lifetime, leaving an only
daughter, Isabel. The first husband of Isabel was
Philip de Burnel, who died without issue in 1281.
Isabel married secondly Richard de Sutton, who was
returned as one of the lords of Coppingford and
Upton in 1316. (fn. 28) In 1293 Isabel confirmed the dower
held by her grandmother Isabel, widow of Robert
Patric, in Buscot. (fn. 29) Richard de Sutton and Isabel
had a son John who died before 1339. His son, John,
was summoned to Parliament as Lord Sutton de
Dudley in right of his mother, Margaret daughter of
Roger de Somery, in 1342. After this date we lose
sight of any connection of the Suttons with Coppingford and Upton, and the mesne lordship seems to have
died out.

Patric. Gules three molets or.
The undertenant of Coppingford in 1086 was
Humphrey [de Costentin], who held the manor,
assessed at 4 hides, of the Earl of Chester.
William de Costentin, the son probably of a later
Humphrey, held Coppingford in 1199 as a knight's fee.
This William seems to have had a son Humphrey
living in the time of Henry III, who was known as
Humphrey 'le Constable.' (fn. 30) It was his son William,
probably, who gave land in Tushingham (Ches.)
to his brother Simon. (fn. 31) It would seem that William
had two sons, Simon and William, and in 1225 Simon
son of William sued Reginald de Blancminster and
Emma his wife for the manor of Coppingford. (fn. 32)
He appears to have gained his case, as in 1235 he
presented to the church; (fn. 33) and in 1236–8 he held a
knight's fee in Coppingford of the Earl of Chester. (fn. 34)
Apparently he took the name of Copmanford and as
Simon de Copmanford he presented to the church in
1249 and 1252 (fn. 35) and was appointed in 1258 one of the
four knights of the county to inquire as to excesses. (fn. 36)
He was dead before 1274, when Coppingford had
passed to co-heirs, namely, Cecily, the wife of William
Engaine, and Isabel, the wife of Silvio or Silvester
L'Enveise (fn. 37) (le Waise, Vesey). William and Silvester
were holding lands and the advowson in 1279, and
Cecily, daughter of Silvester, held one and a half
virgates in demesne; there was also a third tenant,
Robert Beaumes of Sawtry (q.v.), who held one and a
half virgates with his wife in free marriage. (fn. 38)
In 1286 Richard, son of David de Oggerston and
Wenthliana his wife, brought an action against William
Engaine and Cecily, his wife, for a moiety of the
manor of Coppingford, except a messuage, etc., and
against William L'Enveise for the other moiety of
the manor. They claimed that Humphrey 'le
Constable,' great-grandfather of Wenthliana, was
seised of the manor in the time of Henry III and
from him the fee descended to his son and heir
William, and from William to his son and heir William,
father of Wenthliana. William Engaine and Cecily
and William L'Enveise showed that they held the
mill, which was an appurtenance of the manor, in
common, and so Richard and Wenthliana lost their
case. (fn. 39)
For over a century the manor passed in moieties.
Walter L'Enveise was lord of the L'Enveise moiety
in 1316, (fn. 40) and in 1324 Ralph de Bramerton, probably as
feoffee, conveyed half the manor to Walter L'Enveise
and Amice his wife. (fn. 41) In 1348 William L'Enveise released to his brother Edmund and Margaret, his
wife, for their lives, the manor of Coppingford which
had belonged to their father. (fn. 42)
John Plecy, said to be son and heir of John L'Enveise
of Stoke Pogis (Bucks), made a settlement of lands
in Coppingford in 1372. (fn. 43) Amice, niece (fn. 44) and heir of
Sir John Plecy, kt., married firstly James de Beele,
of Liege, merchant, and secondly Geoffrey Kyndersley, alias Huntynton, and with her first husband in
1380, and with her second husband in 1383, conveyed
half the manor and advowson to Sir John Cheyne, jun.,
kt., of Isenhampstead, Edmund Brudenell and others. (fn. 45)
This conveyance seems to have been to the use of
Sir John Cheyne, who acquired the interest of both
moieties of the manor and advowson. In 1397 he was
condemned as a Lollard to perpetual imprisonment.
He was succeeded by another John Cheyne of Isenhampstead Chenies (Bucks, q.v.), (fn. 46) who before
1415 must have conveyed the whole manor of Coppingford, formerly called Constantins, including
one moiety called 'Lengaynesmanoir,' and the other
'Veyciesmanoir,' with the advowson, to John
Stukeley, who in that year conveyed it to John Shadworth and others, evidently trustees. (fn. 47) Before 1465
Richard Sapcote had acquired the advowson (fn. 48) and
probably the manor; possibly he obtained it before
1442, when he was dealing with the adjoining manor
of Upton (q.v.). The manor remained with the
Sapcotes of Elton (q.v.) until the end of the 16th
century. (fn. 49)

Sapcote. Sable three dovecotes argent.
In 1600/1 Robert Sapcote died and left Coppingford
to his daughter Bridget, widow of Edmund Molineux. (fn. 50)
Bridget Molineux conveyed the manor of Coppingford to Henry Sapcote, husband of her sister Eleanor,
and others in 1605, (fn. 51) and she,
John, Rutland and Edmund
Molineux made a settlement
in 1611. (fn. 52) In 1623 Henry
Sapcote conveyed the advowsons of Upton and Coppingford to Sir Sidney Montagu,
kt., (fn. 53) and in 1652 Samuel
Johnson, D.D., conveyed the
manor of Coppingford to
Edward, Lord Montagu. (fn. 54)
The manor and advowson
descended through the Earls and Dukes of Montagu
to Edward Hussey-Montagu, created Lord Beaulieu
1762, and Earl of Beaulieu 1784, (fn. 55) who married Isabella, Dowager Duchess of Manchester, daughter and
co-heir of John, second Duke of Montagu. His wife
and two children predeceased him, and at his death
in 1802 they passed to Elizabeth, Duchess of
Buccleuch (d. 1827), the daughter of his wife's only
sister. (fn. 56) From her it descended to the present Earl
of Dalkeith, son and heir apparent of the Duke
of Buccleuch, (fn. 57) but the lands have been sold
and Mr. James Swales is now the principal landowner.
The Engaine moiety of the manor and advowson
followed the descent of Little Gidding (q.v.). William
Engaine, who married firstly Cecily de Copmanford,
and secondly Amice, by whom he had two sons,
died shortly after 1298, and he was succeeded by his
son Ralph Engaine, parson of Coppingford, who
settled Little Gidding and probably his other property
on William, presumably his brother, with remainder
to William, son of William and Agnes, and contingent
remainder to Warner, son of William Engaine, the
elder, subject to the dower of Amice, widow of
the elder William. Apparently William, son of William
and Agnes, died young, as in 1361 the manor and
advowson of Coppingford which Richard de Eye
held for life were settled on Amy, probably the
granddaughter of William and Agnes, and on Gilbert
Haysand, her second husband. (fn. 58) Amy, or Amice
as she is called later, married as her third husband
Robert Stokes, who presented to the church in 1378,
and on whom and Amice the moiety of the manor and
advowson were settled in 1389. (fn. 59) Amice died in
1390, as in that year the manor and advowson of
Coppingford and the manor of Little Gidding were
settled on John Stukeley and John Lord. (fn. 60) About this
time the two moieties became united in the ownership
of John Stukeley and followed the descent already
given.
Courts leet and baron, free fishery and free warren,
are mentioned in the 18th century. (fn. 61)
Church
The church is mentioned in the
Domesday Survey (1086), and seems to
have been standing as late as 1526,
when it was served by a curate under the Rector of
Copmanford with Upton, (fn. 62) but by 1707 it had been
pulled down, (fn. 63) and no record remains as to its form.
The dedication appears to have been All Saints, (fn. 64)
although one record gives it as St. Mary. (fn. 65)
A tradition in Alconbury Weston states that the
masonry piers which carry the wooden footbridge
over the brook, at the west end of that village, were
built of the stones of Copmanford Church, but there
is nothing visible to confirm this statement.
Advowson
There were a church and priest
here in 1086, (fn. 66) and in 1225 the
patronage belonged to the Costentin
family. (fn. 67) It has since descended with the manor
(q.v.) until 1918, when it was conveyed to the Bishop
of Ely. During the time that the manor and advowson
were held in moieties the presentation seems to have
been made by arrangement between the holders of
the moieties. From 1465, when William Sherard was
instituted Rector of Coppingford and Upton, all succeeding rectors have been so instituted. (fn. 68) In 1583
the church was called the 'church or chapel,' (fn. 69) but Coppingford is still regarded as a living attached to Upton.
The lands of Bushmead Priory were held by the
service of celebrating Mass for the souls of the lords
of Coppingford, (fn. 70) and in 1279 the carpenter held
2 acres for which he paid 10d. for a light in the church. (fn. 71)
There are no charities for this parish.