FORTHAMPTON
Forthampton lies on the west bank of the Severn,
opposite Tewkesbury. Its rural character and
appearance are relatively unaffected by modern
developments. Until 1931 the parish comprised
2,540 a., and was elongated though regular in shape,
stretching over 4 miles from east to west and little
more than 1½ mile across at any point. (fn. 1) The account
here printed concerns the area that formed the
parish up to 1931, in which year the western end,
1,086 a. in area, was transferred to Eldersfield
(Worcs.). (fn. 2) The area transferred was roughly coextensive with the hamlet or township of Swinley,
mentioned as a hamlet of Forthampton in 1286; (fn. 3)
in 1287 Forthampton and Swinley occurred as
separate townships. (fn. 4) In the 18th century Downend
was also said to be a hamlet, (fn. 5) but it appears never to
have been administratively distinct. The River
Severn is the eastern boundary of the parish; the
northern boundary for most of its length followed
the Tewkesbury-Ledbury road, and at the western
end the Longdon brook; the southern boundary in
large part followed lanes and footpaths. (fn. 6)
The parish lies mainly on the Keuper Marl, with
a broad alluvial bed along the flood-plain of the
Severn. (fn. 7) The land is gently undulating, and lies
between the 25 ft. and 175 ft. contours; it is drained
by the Paradise brook and a tributary, flowing
eastward into the Severn, and by a small stream
flowing westward into the Longdon brook. (fn. 8) Although
the land has long been mainly agricultural there are
large numbers of elm and oak trees, and clearance of
the natural woodland seems to have been comparatively late. Minor place-names, notably Swinley but
also such names as Cockshay and Elmhay, indicate
woodland and clearings in the woodland. (fn. 9) In the
11th century there was a large area of woodland,
with a hawk's eyrie, within the inclosure of the
king's wood, and the name Swinley was exemplified
by the presence of four swineherds as tenants,
paying a rent of 35 pigs. (fn. 10) Much of the woodland
may have been cleared in the 12th century: shortly
after acquiring Forthampton manor, Tewkesbury
Abbey received the king's licence to assart immediately Walsgrove and 'Broces' within its hays of
Swinley, (fn. 11) and in 1151 further assarts were foreseen. (fn. 12) Trees in large numbers remained a prominent
feature of the landscape: in the early 17th century
there were 12,000 fellable trees, (fn. 13) in 1665 the oaks
and elms were valued at £1,800, (fn. 14) and in 1672 there
were nearly 9,000 saplings and pollards in Forthampton manor and nearly 17,000 in Swinley. (fn. 15) A
later writer deplored the tenants' habit of polling the
trees so that they might afterwards take the lop, (fn. 16) and
another noted that the soil produced oak and elm in
great luxuriance. (fn. 17) Voulters Wood was planted, to
unite older plantations, some time before 1809, (fn. 18) and
windbreaks, avenues, coverts, and other small
plantations surviving in 1966 apparently derived
from the same period. Open fields in Forthampton
and in Swinley were inclosed during the 18th
century. (fn. 19)
The straggling village of Forthampton and small
scattered settlements provide habitation in roughly
equal proportions. The relatively late survival of
woodland is likely to account for the scattered pattern
of settlement, which is more marked in Swinley; in
Forthampton village itself, however, the houses are
so far spread out that some of them are isolated.
The village forms a wide arc, on rising ground well
above the flood-plain of the Severn, from Hill End
on the south to Sezincote on the east. Near the
crown of the arc is the greatest concentration of
houses, and the church, with the old stocks and
whipping post (fn. 20) by the churchyard gate, stands to
the east. It was presumably the village cross-roads
there that provided the surname borne by three of
the taxpayers of 1327. (fn. 21) Two of the houses are farmhouses. One, Corner House Farm, is a brick farmhouse of the early 19th century and has timberframed farm buildings with thatched roofs. The
other is Vine Farm, formerly Church or Upper
Farm, then Fine View or Vine View House, (fn. 22) which
has in the back wing indications of a cruck-framed
hall; part of the two-story front wing is of closestudded framing of c. 1600, with two massive stone
chimneys flanking a timber-framed gable, and the
jettied eastern gable-end has carved barge-boards.
Vine Farm was evidently the house assessed on 5
hearths in 1672. (fn. 23) Two of the smaller timber-framed
houses retain their thatched roofs.
West of the cross-roads, in the area called the
Bowling Alley in 1636 (fn. 24) and 1752, (fn. 25) are two timberframed cottages of the 17th century, and brick
cottages of the 18th, 19th, and 20th centuries.
North-east from the church the houses are scattered
and mostly small, including several timber-framed
and thatched buildings in the area of Harbour Elm,
called Harbours End in 1635 (fn. 26) and Harbour Green
in 1752. (fn. 27) Two larger houses in the area are Alcock's
Farm, named from a family that held land in
Forthampton in 1538 (fn. 28) and later, which is timberframed of the 16th and 17th centuries, and Forthampton Cottage, an 18th-century brick building
enlarged in the 19th century, where there was a
girls' boarding school in 1856. (fn. 29)
The road running south-west from the village
cross-roads has houses widely spaced along its southeast side; a mid-20th-century bungalow stands alone
on the north-west side. The Sanctuary, near the
cross-roads, is among the oldest of the village
houses and was once of considerable standing. In
1540, when it was called St. Robert's, it had a chapel
and a dovecot. (fn. 30) It comprises two ranges joined at
an oblique angle, both being of close-studded
framing. The northern range may represent the
former hall. The upper floor of the southern range
was apparently a solar of c. 1500, and retains a
central queen-post truss with a richly moulded tiebeam; the panelled, plastered ceiling, above a
crenellated wall-plate, retains carved wooden bosses,
including three with shields of which two have the
engrailed cross of Tewkesbury Abbey and one the
arms of Clare impaling Audley. The porch and
the northern gable-end of the solar range have
carved barge-boards. Hill Farm, the largest of the
group of five timber-framed houses of the 16th and
17th centuries at the south-west end of the village,
has a nearly symmetrical front with two projecting
gables. It was assessed on 5 hearths in 1662, (fn. 31) and
was described as a very fair house in 1665. (fn. 32) The
most southerly house, Forthampton House, (fn. 33) is a
large brick house of three stories, built apparently in
the 17th century and enlarged in the 18th century,
with a dentil cornice, a fanlight over the door, and a
contemporary staircase. Forthampton Court (fn. 34) stands
a mile south-east of the church, and midway between
them is Southfield House, formerly Lower House. (fn. 35)
Lower House existed by 1641, (fn. 36) but was rebuilt in
the early 18th century as a two-story brick house
with two projecting wings and hipped roofs above
a modillion cornice. The alignment of the walls
shows the plan of part of the earlier house. Near-by
is a square, four-gabled brick dovecot with a lantern.
Forthampton Farm, a 19th-century house towards
the north-east corner of the parish, stands on the
site of a farm recorded in 1752; near-by was a house
called the Pick's House (fn. 37) (later Pict's Cottage) (fn. 38) that
had gone by 1966, and in the same part of the parish
is the Round House, (fn. 39) comprising the base of
Alcock's windmill, (fn. 40) a building of the local shaly
stone, with a 19th-century brick cottage beside it.
In the extreme north-east corner of the parish half
a dozen cottages, as in 1752, (fn. 41) comprise the settlement of Cork's Hill; none of them is older than the
18th century, and their location is likely to be
connected with the passage of the Severn at the
Upper Lode. (fn. 42)
In the western half of the parish settlement is
scattered, and many of the smaller houses were
presumably first built by squatters on the waste.
The names of four inhabited sites — Swinley Green,
Dunsmore Green, Long Green, and Neely Green —
suggest settlements on the waste. In 1634 3 or 4
cottages prejudicial to the lord of the manor's rights
were ordered to be demolished on the death of the
paupers who lived in them. (fn. 43) In 1751, 13 cottages in
Forthampton and 11 in Swinley were alleged to
have been built without the statutory 4 a. and without the lord's licence. (fn. 44) The isolated farm-houses
include Hooze Farm and Swinley Court, where there
were apparently houses in the Middle Ages, (fn. 45)
Downend Farm, and Mitre Farm. Mitre Farm was
built between 1751 and 1756 (fn. 46) on a new site at the
east end of Swinley Green; a little north of it,
however, stands a large cruck-frame barn of 5 bays,
formerly thatched, and with timber-framed walls
with curved braces, beside what may have been a
small moated site. Downend Farm, where the
buildings are of 19th-century brick, was the site of a
house in 1672. (fn. 47) In 1802 the farmer of Downend
also had Swinley Farm, used as a cottage, (fn. 48) which
may have been the house on one of two or more sites
¾ mile south of Downend, by a small stream. (fn. 49) The
house called Colchesters in 1752 was apparently
there, and immediately south-east was Swinley
Street, with 2 houses in 1752, (fn. 50) later called Swinley
Green. Along the north side of Swinley Green
were 7 houses in 1883, (fn. 51) including Woods Farm,
which had been held by the tenant of Mitre Farm
and occupied by a labourer in 1802. (fn. 52) By c. 1955,
however, none was inhabited, and in 1965 the
ground was cleared and levelled. (fn. 53)
In 1752 there were 3 houses at Dunsmore Green,
5 in two groups at Long Green, and one at Neely
Green. (fn. 54) At Neely Green in 1966 there was only a
house built in 1870, (fn. 55) with a pheasantry, but there
were more houses in 1883, (fn. 56) and on the south side
of the road further west small inclosures are suggestive of former cottages. At Dunsmore Green in
1966 there were similar small inclosures, along with
2 timber-framed 17th-century cottages, of which
one had a thatched roof and was in ruins, and an
18th-century brick cottage. Long Green straggles
along the main road that formed the northern
boundary of Forthampton parish, and after Forthampton village it was in 1966 the largest settlement.
A victualler lived there in 1752, (fn. 57) and from 1902
there was a Methodist chapel. (fn. 58) The 13 houses on
the south side of Long Green are all small; the
oldest are timber-framed cottages of the 17th
century, the newest were built in the mid-20th.
Although the 17th-century timber framing is
perhaps the most marked characteristic of the
smaller houses in the parish, 15 cottages built in
brick between 1858 and 1899 in the Gothic and
Tudor styles by the Yorkes of Forthampton Court
are also a prominent feature. In a similar style, but
in ashlar, are 4 almshouses immediately east of the
church built by the Yorkes in 1864. (fn. 59) Some of the
cottages may have replaced earlier houses, like
Poltork's Cottage (1858), on the site of which there
was a house in 1635. (fn. 60) Another feature of the parish
is the large number of stone gateposts, which are not
of the shaly local stone used in a few buildings of
the parish, notably the church and Forthampton
Court, but of limestone.
The main road crossing the parish from north to
south was a turnpike from 1752 to 1872; (fn. 61) the road
along the north boundary was turnpiked under the
Act of 1823 for building the Mythe Bridge, (fn. 62) and
disturnpiked in 1872. (fn. 63) The Horse Bridge, carrying
that road across the Longdon brook, appears to have
given rise to a surname used in 1220. (fn. 64) Later it was
called Pendock Bridge, (fn. 65) and was mentioned in a
will of 1545. (fn. 66) In 1872 it was supposed to be a
county bridge. (fn. 67) Near Horse Bridge, the Ross Spur
motorway, opened in 1960, (fn. 68) just crosses the corner
of the parish.
A road running across the parish and dividing at
Forthampton village cross-roads to lead to the two
ferries across the Severn at the Upper and Lower
Lodes declined in importance after the opening of
the Mythe Bridge in 1826. (fn. 69) The road left the main
road along the north of the parish ¼ mile east of
Horse Bridge where in 1712 the 'dial post at the sign
of the Hand and Pen' (fn. 70) indicated an alternative
route to the main road. From Dial Post, where there
was a house until the mid-20th century, (fn. 71) the road
ran south and east in a wide curve along Swinley
Green. By 1966 that part of the road was overgrown
and impassable for vehicles.
From the village cross-roads the Lower Lode
road led to the ferry belonging to Tewkesbury Abbey
and mentioned by implication in 1300 and 1368; (fn. 72)
the William of Lode who kept a ferry in 1519 (fn. 73) is to
be associated with the Lower Lode. John Butler paid
a high rent for a house there in 1538, (fn. 74) and there
was a stockboat there in 1545. (fn. 75) From 1653 the
ownership of the ferry was united again with that of
Forthampton Court, (fn. 76) and a new barge was provided
in 1654. (fn. 77) Although the ferry lost much of its
importance with the opening of the Mythe Bridge,
it survived until c. 1920 when the barge sank and
was not replaced. A ferry for foot traffic lingered on
for a few years after. (fn. 78) The house in 1538 may have
been an inn, and an alehouse at the Lower Lode
was licensed in 1755. (fn. 79) The public house held with
the ferry in 1802 (fn. 80) was the 18th-century brick house
that survived in 1966 as the Lower Lode Hotel.
The Upper Lode (fn. 81) road, up to the early 19th century,
left the Lower Lode road at the village cross-roads
and ran immediately north of Corner House Farm,
and was also linked with the Lower Lode by a lane
east of the churchyard. (fn. 82) About 1824 the linking lane
and the west end of the Upper Lode road were
replaced by a road round the north and west sides
of the churchyard. (fn. 83) Near Sezincote the Upper Lode
road crosses the Paradise brook by a bridge called
Snetterfields Bridge in 1545, (fn. 84) but between there
and Cork's Hill most of the road went out of use in
the 20th century.
The roads were said to have been very bad before
they were repaired c. 1770 at the expense of James
Yorke. (fn. 85) In addition to the changes in the roads
already mentioned there were minor closures and
alterations from the late 18th century onward. A
road leading south-east from the south-west end of
the village was closed in 1789, and another leading
south-west from there (fn. 86) went out of use later. Pole
Street, linking Harbour Elm to the main road on the
north boundary, had been closed by 1802. (fn. 87) In 1815
the road from the Lower Lode to Chaceley was
replaced by one further from the river, which also
replaced a field road from Southfield House to
Chaceley. (fn. 88) In 1829, after the opening of the Mythe
Bridge, a road leading north-west from Cork's Hill
was closed. (fn. 89) The road running in front of Forthampton Court was replaced, as a public road, in
1889 by a road skirting south-west. (fn. 90)
In 1327 the parish contained 25 taxpayers. (fn. 91) There
were c. 200 communicants in 1551, (fn. 92) and 42 households in 1563. (fn. 93) The estimate of 94 communicants
in 1603 (fn. 94) may be too low or may exclude Swinley.
There were said to be c. 60 families in 1650, (fn. 95) and
174 adults in 1676. (fn. 96) Only 38 houses were assessed
for hearth-tax in 1662, (fn. 97) but the 45 houses listed in
1665, of which 16 were in Swinley, were not all the
houses that then existed in the parish. (fn. 98) A careful
list of inhabitants in 1752 returned 288 people living
in 59 families and 52 houses; 14 of the houses were
in Swinley. (fn. 99) The population numbered 449 in 1801,
reached a maximum of 468 in 1851, and had fallen
to 351 by 1901. Excluding Swinley, which in 1921
had a population of 84, there were 216 people in
Forthampton in 1961. (fn. 100)
The former village school, (fn. 101) used partly as a concert
hall in the 19th century, survived as a village hall in
1966, and a working men's club has a building west
of the church given by Mrs. J. R. Yorke c. 1900. (fn. 102)
The strongest influence on the social life of the
parish, from the mid-18th century, has been that
of the Yorke family of Forthampton Court. Building
and road-improvements by the Yorkes are mentioned above; their ownership of the land and
patronage of the church and school are discussed
later. The tree-lined Bishop's Walk and the avenue
near Mitre Farm are examples of their influence on
the landscape, and a characteristic action was the
sowing of potatoes, in 1789 and 1809, to provide
cheap food for the poor in times of high prices. (fn. 103)
Henry Vincent Yorke (b. 1905) is the novelist
'Henry Green'.
Manors and Other Estates.

Forthampton, c.1750
The reconstruction is based on maps and documents at Forthampton Court.
The 10
hides west of the Severn which Denebeorht, Bishop
of Worcester, gave to King Coenwulf in 814 may
have comprised Forthampton but are more likely
to have lain further north. (fn. 104) By 1066 the manor of
FORTHAMPTON had become part of the Tewkesbury estate belonging to Brictric. After the Conquest
it was granted to William FitzOsbern, Earl of
Hereford, and because of the forfeiture by William's
son Roger it was in the Crown's hands in 1086. (fn. 105)
The Crown appears to have granted Forthampton,
along with other lands that Brictric had held, to
Robert FitzHamon, for in 1107, in confirming his
gift of Forthampton to Tewkesbury Abbey, Henry
I stated that he had made the gift after FitzHamon's
death (fn. 106) in that year. (fn. 107) The abbey retained Forthampton, as part of the honor of Gloucester, (fn. 108) until the
Dissolution. (fn. 109) In 1210 Robert de Berga resigned
into the abbey's hands all the land which he had
held in Forthampton by the gift of two of the
abbots. (fn. 110) In 1236 Simon of Framilode sold to the
abbey the tenement which he held in the abbey's
manor of Forthampton. (fn. 111) Although the Abbot of
Tewkesbury claimed in 1286 that the whole of
Forthampton and Swinley was within his fee, (fn. 112) the
Prior of Great Malvern in 1280 had 20s. rent in
Forthampton. (fn. 113) In 1373 Tewkesbury Abbey acquired land there held of Great Malvern Priory, (fn. 114)
and in 1535 owed 20s. rent for land in Forthampton
to the priory. The Abbey also owed a small rent for
land in Swinley to the heir (fn. 115) of John Delamare (d.
1517), lord of the neighbouring Hardwick manor in
Eldersfield, where John was succeeded by his son
Robert (d. 1566). (fn. 116)
In 1540 the Crown assigned the house of Forthampton with the demesne and tithes to John
Wakeman, the last Abbot of Tewkesbury, (fn. 117) who,
as Bishop of Gloucester, is said to have died at
Forthampton in 1549. (fn. 118) In 1542 the Crown granted
Forthampton in fee to George Harper, and licensed
him the same year to alienate to Maurice Dennis, (fn. 119)
but neither man has been otherwise found recorded
as lord. The manor appears to have been held by the
Crown in 1569 when Margery Blunt received a new
lease of the manor on surrendering one made in
1538 to her late husband, Thomas, and William
Wakeman, (fn. 120) who in 1540 had accounted for the
farm of the manor. (fn. 121) Edward Blunt had the lease
renewed in 1590, (fn. 122) and was said to be impropriator
in 1603. (fn. 123)
The Crown granted the manor in 1607, (fn. 124) and the
tithes in 1610, to Robert Cecil, Earl of Salisbury, (fn. 125)
who was recorded as lord in 1608. (fn. 126) The earl died
in possession of the manor in 1612, (fn. 127) and in the same
year his son and heir William sold the manor to
Robert Mayell. In 1619 John Mayell mortgaged the
manor to Lionel Cranfield, later Earl of Middlesex
(d. 1645), to whom John's son Henry conveyed the
manor in 1625. (fn. 128) In 1630 the remainder of Edward
Blunt's leasehold term was conveyed to Edward
Cotton, who in 1633 sold it to Lionel Cranfield's
daughter Mary. (fn. 129) Cranfield's son and heir James
was in possession of Forthampton in 1648, (fn. 130) and
James's brother and heir, Lionel, conveyed the
estate in 1668 to Richard Sackville, Earl of Dorset, (fn. 131)
whose wife Frances was the daughter and eventual
heir of the elder Lionel Cranfield. (fn. 132) The Sackvilles'
son, Charles, Earl of Middlesex, sold land in
Forthampton and Swinley in 1677 to six people;
Charles Dowdeswell of Bushley, who had recently
been steward of the manor, bought the manorial
estate, and in 1678 made a settlement of Forthampton Court and 584 a. in Forthampton and Swinley. (fn. 133)
Charles Dowdeswell died in 1706, and his son
Charles in 1713. The younger Charles had an only
child, Anne, later the wife of Robert Wylde, and by
his will the manor went to his brother Richard. In
1732 an Act of Parliament enabled Richard to sell
part of the estate so that he could pay the sum due
under the will to Anne Wylde. Richard Dowdeswell
(d. 1748) made a mortgage to Samuel Clarke, (fn. 134) who
in 1747 leased Forthampton Court to Joseph
Dipper, (fn. 135) and brought an action arising from the
mortgage against Richard Dowdeswell. In 1749 the
Court of Chancery ordered that the offer of Thomas
Lloyd to buy the estate should be accepted and that
Lloyd should be given possession. (fn. 136) Lloyd was
acting on behalf of Isaac Maddox, Bishop of
Worcester, who was lord of the manor by 1751. On
the bishop's death in 1759 his daughter Mary (d.
1823) inherited the manor, and in 1762 she married
James Yorke, 5th son of Philip Yorke, Earl of
Hardwicke. (fn. 137) James Yorke later became successively
Bishop of St. David's, of Gloucester, and of Ely,
and died in 1808. (fn. 138)
The Yorke family thereafter retained the Forthampton Court estate, and from Joseph Yorke (d.
1830), the son of James and Mary, the estate passed
successively from father to son: Joseph Yorke (d.
1889), John Reginald Yorke (d. 1912), Vincent
Wodehouse Yorke (d. 1957), and Gerald Joseph
Yorke (b. 1901). (fn. 139) In the early 17th century the
manorial estate appears to have comprised virtually
the whole parish. In 1652 the Earl of Middlesex sold
a freehold estate to Thomas Cox alias Hayward, (fn. 140)
and in 1674 the Earl of Dorset sold a house and 57
a. to Thomas Pinnock. (fn. 141) In 1677 there was a
more widespread dispersal of the manorial estate. (fn. 142)
In 1685, however, Charles Dowdeswell bought
Pinnock's estate, which Thomas Pinnock had sold
to Robert Pinnock in 1677, thus re-uniting it with
the manorial estate. (fn. 143) In 1771 James Yorke bought
Thomas Hayward's estate, and in 1778 and 1791
three others, (fn. 144) so that in 1802 over 2,000 a. of the
parish belonged to the Forthampton Court estate (fn. 145)
and in 1808 James Yorke was answerable for all but
3 per cent. of the land tax assessment for the
parish. (fn. 146) In 1966 Mr. G. J. Yorke owned nearly the
whole parish.
Forthampton Court, less than ½ mile from the
Severn, was a residence of the abbots of Tewkesbury,
and the house retains much of the fabric of a large
medieval manor-house. (fn. 147) The great hall, from which
later partitions and an intermediate floor were
removed in the 20th century, is of rubble masonry,
and has a roof of 5 bays with arch-braced collarbeams and double purlins with curved wind-braces.
One fine wooden angel-corbel survives. At the northeast end the hall is flanked by two-story blocks: to
the south-east is a building of coursed rubble, of
which the upper floor was apparently a chapel, with
stone windows with 15th-century tracery, and to the
north-west is a timber-framed building of the 15th
century that is likely to have contained a solar. On
the east a brick wing, with projecting carved stones
that were later cut off, diagonal buttresses, and a
moulded string-course, may have been added in the
early 16th century, and at that period or later a
south-east wing was built facing the hall across a
three-sided courtyard. In 1634 there was a dovecot
near the court, and the gardens were said to be 'now
handsome to walk in'. (fn. 148) The house, let to a Mr.
Osborne in 1639, (fn. 149) underwent repairs or enlargement in 1643. (fn. 150) In 1665 it was described as a fair
dwelling-house; (fn. 151) in 1662 it was still occupied by
Mr. Osborne and was assessed for tax on 14 fireplaces. (fn. 152) The house was altered in or soon after
1788, to give the courtyard a regular appearance
with the hall and south-east wing balancing each
other and the main entrance in the centre of the
third side, (fn. 153) and a two-story wing in brick was built
out from the north-west side of the hall. In 1891 (fn. 154)
the house was remodelled, to provide passages to the
main rooms: staircases were inserted, the southeast wing was altered, and part of the hall roof was
exposed. The architect was Philip Webb, and
William Morris provided some of the fittings. In
1913 the whole of the hall was opened and a large
oriel window built to light it; in 1938 the main
entrance was moved to the north-east side of the
house, and the south-east wing was remodelled. (fn. 155)
Near the south corner of the house stands a tall
table-tomb on three steps with the recumbent effigy
of a knight of the la Zouche family. (fn. 156) The tomb,
which until c. 1880 was in a meadow north-east of the
court, is supposed to have come from the demolished
Lady Chapel of Tewkesbury Abbey, (fn. 157) and if it did
it is presumably the tomb of William la Zouche,
Lord Zouche of Ashby (d. 1337). (fn. 158) The pictures in
the house include a painted panel of the 14th
century.
In 1454 SWINLEY manor was recorded as a
member of Forthampton manor, (fn. 159) but Swinley was
usually mentioned, for the next 300 years, not as a
manor but simply as a part of the manor (fn. 160) that was
sometimes called the manor of Forthampton and
Swinley. (fn. 161) Swinley was part of the Forthampton
manor estate when the site of Swinley manor was
recorded in 1538 (fn. 162) and, after the dispersal of the
Earl of Dorset's estate in 1677, when the manor or
farm of Swinley Court was recorded in 1678. (fn. 163) In
1752, however, Swinley was said to be a distinct
manor, (fn. 164) a view partly supported by the administrative arrangements of the parish at the time. (fn. 165)
Swinley Court stands on a formerly moated site,
and comprises a timber-framed wing built in the
17th century and a brick wing at right-angles to it
built in the 18th. It was described in 1665 as a
handsome farm-house; (fn. 166) some of its internal features
were removed in the 20th century. The timberframed barns were formerly thatched. (fn. 167)
In the late 12th century one Alexander held a
plough-land in Hooze, at the western end of the
parish. In 1220 Alexander's son, Philip the chaplain,
had possession, though Philip son of Simon laid
claim to the land on the ground that it had passed
from Alexander to his son and heir Simon. (fn. 168) The
same estate may have been the freehold which Mary
Throckmorton in 1538, and afterwards Thomas
Throckmorton (d. 1568), (fn. 169) held in Swinley as a
tenant of Forthampton manor. (fn. 170) Edward Neast had
a house called Elmhay and 60 a. of land called the
Hooze, which his grandson Edward Neast sold in
1616 to William Dean. In 1641 John Browning sold
the same estate to Thomas Barnes and his son
Anthony, to whom Thomas gave his interest in
1655. (fn. 171) Another Thomas Barnes owed suit for the
Hooze at Forthampton manor court in 1716, (fn. 172) and
the heirs of the late Mr. Barnes were recorded as
freeholders in Swinley in 1752. (fn. 173) In 1802 (fn. 174) and 1808
the 47 a. of the Hooze farm in Forthampton parish
was one of the two small estates there not belonging
to the owners of Forthampton Court. (fn. 175) It later
became part of the Forthampton Court estate, but
was sold in 1958 to the occupier, Mr. H. E. Lewis. (fn. 176)
Hooze Farm stands on a prominent tump, which
gives the place its name, (fn. 177) and was perhaps the
house with 3 hearths occupied by John Hatton in
1662. (fn. 178) It is a square-framed house, with at least
one numbered timber, of two stories and L-shaped
on plan. In the 18th or 19th century the south front
was bricked, and in the 20th century was rendered.
Two separate branches of the Hayward family
owned substantial estates in Forthampton in the 17th
and 18th centuries. Evidently both branches
descended from Thomas Hayward, recorded as a
customary tenant in 1538, (fn. 179) from John Hayward
(d. c. 1544), and from John's son William Cox alias
Hayward (fn. 180) (d. by 1580). (fn. 181) Thomas Cox alias
Hayward died in 1620, (fn. 182) and was apparently the
husband of Joan and father of Thomas who in 1635
together had the highest assessment for ship-money
after the lord of the manor. (fn. 183) Thomas Hayward,
distinguished from others of the same name as 'of
the Church', was recorded as a free tenant of the
manor in 1645, (fn. 184) 1653, and 1663. (fn. 185) His chief house
was evidently Church or Upper Farm, (fn. 186) later called
Vine House. (fn. 187) On his death in 1668 his freehold
estate passed to his eldest son William Cox alias
Hayward of Woolstrop (d. 1696) and then to
William's son William (d. 1709); (fn. 188) his copyhold
estate went to his second son Philip, (fn. 189) who in 1678
bought its freehold from the Earl of Dorset for his
son Thomas. The copyhold estate was centred on
Lower Farm, later called Howes. In 1701 and 1707
Thomas Cox alias Hayward bought from his cousin
William their grandfather's freehold estate in
Forthampton. He was succeeded in 1742 by his son,
the Revd. Thomas, whose heirs at his death c. 1757
were two of his sisters, Chrysagon, wife of Charles
Hayward, and Philippa Wilmot, and the Revd.
Thomas Beale, son of a third sister, Mary, and her
husband Thomas. (fn. 190) In 1771 Chrysagon and her son
Charles, Philippa's executors, and the Revd. Thomas
Beale sold their estate of 139 a. comprising Church
farm and Lower farm to trustees for the Yorke
family. (fn. 191)
The other branch of the Hayward family appears
to stem from Thomas Hayward of the Lower House
(d. 1641). (fn. 192) In 1679 Hopewell Cox alias Hayward
bought from the Earl of Dorset the estate which his
father, also called Hopewell, had held by copy and
which included the Lower House. (fn. 193) The younger
Hopewell died in 1722, to be succeeded by his son
of the same name, (fn. 194) who added to his lands an estate
called the Elm which he bought in 1742 from the
executors of Thomas Hatton; the Earl of Dorset had
sold the estate to John Hatton, Thomas's father, in
1679. On the death of Hopewell Hayward in 1766
his lands were divided between his sons William
and Hopewell, (fn. 195) who two years later agreed to an
exchange by which William conveyed to Hopewell
the house where Hopewell lived, called the Elm,
and Hopewell conveyed to William the Lower House,
where William lived, (fn. 196) and where their father had
lived in 1752. (fn. 197) In 1791 James Yorke bought
William's estate; (fn. 198) the house was afterwards called
Southfield and was used for many years as a
parsonage. (fn. 199) Hopewell sold the Elm, later Forthampton Cottage, to James Yorke in 1791. (fn. 200) By 1789 he had
moved to Forthampton House, (fn. 201) which the Earl of
Dorset had conveyed to Robert Newman in 1679, (fn. 202)
and which Hopewell acquired under the will of his
kinsman, Richard Newman, dated 1766. (fn. 203) Hopewell
died soon after 1791, and his estate passed to a
Miss Hayward, later the wife of the Revd. Thomas
Nash. (fn. 204)
In 1086 Lire Abbey (Eure) had the tithes of
Forthampton manor, with a man and one yardland. (fn. 205) Although that holding was not included in a
12th-century confirmation of the endowments by
William FitzOsbern (fn. 206) it is reasonable to assume that
he, as lord of Forthampton and founder of Lire,
was the grantor. The tithes were the subject of a
series of compositions between the abbeys of Lire
and Tewkesbury: in 1151 Tewkesbury conceded
them to Lire saving an interest for the priest of
Forthampton, (fn. 207) and later Lire agreed that Tewkesbury should have all the tithes and pay Lire a
pension of 2½ marks; (fn. 208) a further composition made
in 1223, by which Tewkesbury had the tithes and
some land for 20s. a year, was confirmed by the
Bishop of Worcester in 1284. (fn. 209) From the Dissolution
all the tithes were owned by the lords of Forthampton manor. In 1730 a lapsed modus for the small
tithes was recalled. (fn. 210) The ownership of nearly all
the land by the tithe-owner had the effect of making
the land tithe-free. In 1634 some leaseholders did
not pay tithe and never had. (fn. 211) Of the estate owned
by the heirs of Thomas Hayward in the late 18th
century, Church farm, which was anciently freehold,
was tithable and Lower farm, formerly copyhold,
was tithe-free. (fn. 212) In 1802 the only tithes owed were
those arising from the Hooze farm, (fn. 213) and in 1845 all
the tithes were merged with the freehold estates on
which they were payable. (fn. 214)
Economic History.
Of the 9 ploughs on the
manor in 1086 2 or 3 belonged to the demesne. (fn. 215)
Tewkesbury Abbey, having acquired the manor, may
have enlarged the demesne of an estate lying so
conveniently close to home; in 1291 the abbey had
9 plough-lands in Forthampton and Bushley. (fn. 216) In
1386 the Forthampton estate supplied the abbey
kitchen with grain, calves, pigs, poultry, cheese, and
eggs. (fn. 217) The rearing of pigs may be a reminder of the
woodland character of much of the parish, and
recalls the 4 swineherd tenants paying a rent of 35
pigs in the 11th century. (fn. 218) In 1535 part of the
demesne was let at farm, but the part kept in hand
by the abbot yielded crops and fleeces worth nearly
half as much as the rent from all the other land of
the manor. (fn. 219)
Only three freehold estates held of the manor were
recorded in 1538, one in Forthampton and two, one
being the Throckmortons', in Swinley. There were
48 other tenants: excluding the churchwardens, who
paid 2d. rent for the farm of the churchyard, and
two tenants who paid small rents for land apparently
outside the parish, there were in Forthampton 29
tenants holding what was presumably customary
land, of whom 7 also paid relatively small amounts
for the farm of demesne land, and one tenant paying
£5 13s. 4d. for the farm of demesne land; in Swinley
there were 14 customary tenants and the farmer (at
£4 18s. 8d.) of the site of the manor. (fn. 220)
The customary or copyhold estates might be
granted in reversion, (fn. 221) and were held for terms of
up to three lives; no grant might be made which
would bring the total of lives, in being or reversion,
to more than three. The widow's right to freebench (fn. 222)
lapsed on her marrying again. (fn. 223) The customary
tenant's right to use timber from his holding and to
exchange lands with other copyholders, together
with the right of his executors to occupy his holding
for a stated period — the 'dead's year' —, were
defined in 1620. (fn. 224)
In 1645 there were 3 free tenants, and many
tenants held some of their land by indenture. (fn. 225) In
1665 the greater part of the manorial estate, 1,070
a., was still held by customary tenants, who remained
the most numerous group. The customary holdings
all owed heriots, some of them two or three heriots,
and the rent of some included hens or capons. The
land held on lease from the manor, usually for a
term of lives determinable at 99 years and owing a
heriot, amounted to more than 630 a., including
158 a. of demesne let to one tenant. Demesne land
in hand amounted to 179 a., and 57 a. were let to
tenants at will. Apart from 2 free tenants there were
in all 58 tenants: 12 in Forthampton and 10 in
Swinley held only customary land, 9 in Forthampton
and 3 in Swinley held only by lease, 9 held at will in
Forthampton, and 15 held by more than one kind
of tenure, in all but two instances in Forthampton. (fn. 226)
The dispersal of the manorial estate c. 1677 appears
to have effected the enfranchisement of some copyholds, (fn. 227) but a few copyholds continued to be
mentioned in the court rolls up to 1751. (fn. 228) In 1752
the manor court listed 5 free tenants in Forthampton
and 2 in Swinley, 5 tenants from year to year in
Forthampton, 22 leaseholders in Forthampton and
10 in Swinley; there were also 15 'residents' in
Forthampton and 5 in Swinley, who seem to have
been owners or occupiers who were thought to be
not subject to the manor court. (fn. 229)
In the early 17th century the cereals grown were
wheat, barley, and peas, of which barley was grown
in the greatest quantity. The demesne hay was a
profitable crop, though slightly less so than timber
and coppice wood. (fn. 230) The lord of the manor also
had a hopyard, (fn. 231) and in 1639 received an account for
the purchase of 57,000 plants of 'mather' (either
madder or maythe, i.e. camomile) and their cultivation over the previous 5 years. (fn. 232)
In 1751 and 1752 there were evidently separate
groups of open fields for Forthampton and Swinley,
which were then undergoing gradual and piecemeal
inclosure. (fn. 233) No early reference to open fields in the
parish has been found, but the number of ploughs
in the 11th century suggests that the arable land
comprised something more than small, scattered
assarts of former woodland. In 1545 (fn. 234) two open
fields were named as the main arable land of the
parish: South field, lying immediately south-east of
Forthampton village, and Road field, which was later
a smaller field to the south-west. (fn. 235) It may be that the
land was then cultivated on a two-course rotation,
but by 1620 the arable land lay fallow every third
year. (fn. 236) By 1672 the open arable land of Forthampton
lay mainly in four fields, South field, Road field,
Cold Elm field, and Berrow and Dunsmore field. (fn. 237)
The multiplication of fields may have accompanied
the beginnings of gradual inclosure, or at least the
consolidation of strips, which the copyholders' right
of exchanging lands, mentioned above, perhaps
made easier. In 1732 Upper or Church farm contained 60 a. of inclosed land and 33 a. of land dispersed in the fields; the ridges in the fields were
unusually small, ranging from 1/10 to ¼ a., but they
lay in consolidated parcels. (fn. 238) In 1747 45 a. of
inclosed land and 75 a. of land dispersed in the fields
were leased with Forthampton Court; the land in
the fields lay mainly in South field, Road field,
Cold Elm field, and Berrow field, but open-field
land was also mentioned in 7 other places, (fn. 239) where
uninclosed land may have been separated from the
main fields by inclosures, such as those of commonable lands presented in the manor court in 1751.
Yew Tree (Utree) field, mentioned at the same court,
appears to have been an alternative name for Berrow
field, or perhaps for Berrow field and Cold Elm field
together. (fn. 240) Some of the remaining open land of the
Forthampton fields was inclosed soon after the
enlargement of the Forthampton Court estate in
1771. (fn. 241) In 1775 uninclosed land in the Forthampton
fields lay in 11 different places, including the common
meadow and Three Meers, and amounted to 245 a. (fn. 242)
Inclosure by Act of Parliament was being considered
in 1790, (fn. 243) but an exchange of lands between James
Yorke and Hopewell Hayward in 1791 (fn. 244) apparently
made it unnecessary. Some ridge and furrow
remained visible in pasture in 1966, for example
south-west of Forthampton Court and towards the
south boundary of the parish on the south-east side
of the main road.
In Swinley two open fields were recorded in
1674, (fn. 245) North field, which lay west of Downend,
and Nash field, to the east of Downend. In 1751 the
Forthampton manor court presented that the lord
of the manor had not yet 'turned up to the common'
a common field called New Loons in Swinley, but
two days later retracted the demand for common
there. (fn. 246) New Loons lay immediately west of Cold
Elm: it may have been arable recently converted
from woodland or pasture. Between 1754 and 1758
North field and Nash field, together with Down
field south of Horse Bridge and Hurst field north of
Swinley Green, were inclosed. (fn. 247) By 1802 all the
land in Forthampton and Swinley was inclosed. (fn. 248)
In 1801 only 550 a., of which over half was wheat,
were returned as sown, (fn. 249) but in 1802 a survey
recorded 1,044 a. of arable, compared with 721 a. of
pasture. In Swinley there was about twice as much
arable as pasture, while in Forthampton the proportions were nearly equal. There were also 256 a. of
meadow, 23 a. of woodland, and extensive orchards. (fn. 250)
A tenancy agreement of 1836 for Mitre farm (281½
a.) prescribed heavy financial penalties for breaking
grass-land, failing to rotate the crops, or omitting
either to fallow or to sow to grass and feed off every
fourth year. (fn. 251) The arable acreage fell in the late 19th
century, and in 1901 was 664 a. compared with 1,418
a. of permanent grass-land. (fn. 252) The amount of arable
land had been reduced still further by 1933. (fn. 253) In
1966, however, about half the land was arable; the
land was used mainly for cereals, sheep, and dairying.
There were 10 farms in the parish in 1802. The 6
in Forthampton ranged from 68 a. to 379 a., and 3
were over 150 a. In Swinley, excluding Hooze farm,
there were 3, of 275–331 a.; two of them had
formerly been more than one farm. (fn. 254) In 1831 there
were 11 farmers, all of whom employed labour, (fn. 255)
and there were still 11 or 12 farmers in the early 20th
century. (fn. 256) There were 11 farms, of which four were
in Swinley, in 1966.
No record has been found of a water-mill in the
parish. Tewkesbury Abbey had two windmills there
in 1291. (fn. 257) The mill mentioned in 1636 (fn. 258) may have
been the windmill worked by John Alcock in 1649 (fn. 259)
and 1672, (fn. 260) which survived in 1859 as Alcock's Mill
¼ mile ESE. of Alcock's Farm, (fn. 261) and the base of which
was later called the Round House. Another mill had
once stood on the hill south-west of Forthampton
village, the Mill Hill of 1752. (fn. 262) A tenant paid rent for
a windmill in Swinley in 1538, (fn. 263) and there was more
than one miller there in 1545. (fn. 264) Before 1677 there
had apparently been a windmill on the tump just
east of Swinley Court. (fn. 265)
Of other occupations there were in 1752 a smith,
3 carpenters, a mason, a thatcher, 2 fishermen, 2
tailors, and a shoemaker. (fn. 266) Shoemakers were
recorded in 1601 (fn. 267) and 1679. (fn. 268) smiths in 1608 (fn. 269) and
1717, (fn. 270) and a carpenter in 1635. (fn. 271) In the early 19th
century trade and industry employed about a quarter
of the number employed in agriculture. (fn. 272) The parish
included a shoemaker until 1863, a carpenter until
c. 1885, a wheelwright and 2 shopkeepers until c. 1930,
and a blacksmith until 1939; (fn. 273) in 1883 and 1921 there
were 2 smithies, (fn. 274) and in 1966 there was a blacksmith's shop at Mitre Elm. A brickworks at the
Lower Lode opened before 1854 and closed before
1900. (fn. 275) In the same period shirt-making was a
minor cottage industry, as had been gloving a little
earlier. (fn. 276)
Local Government.
In 1286 the Abbot of
Tewkesbury claimed view of frankpledge, waif, and
infangtheof in Forthampton, (fn. 277) and in 1535 the abbey
held two views of frankpledge there. (fn. 278) Rolls of the
view of frankpledge and court baron survive for
1545–6, (fn. 279) 1632, and for many courts from 1649 to
1752. (fn. 280) In addition there are statements of the
customs of the manor in 1620, 1751, and 1752, and
the record of a court leet with the bounds of the
manor in 1830. (fn. 281) In the 16th century the court
appointed separate tithingmen for Forthampton and
Swinley, (fn. 282) and the arrangement may have been echoed
in the appointments of a tithingman and a constable
in the 17th century. (fn. 283) In 1751 Forthampton and
Swinley had a hayward each, and the surveyors of
highways, who were under the orders of the court
in 1751, (fn. 284) included a surveyor specifically for Swinley
in 1732–4. (fn. 285) The manor court may have ceased to sit
soon after 1752, for from 1758 the constable was
chosen in the parish vestry. (fn. 286) The demise of the
manor court was perhaps encouraged by the change
of ownership of c. 1750 (fn. 287) or by the inclosure of the
open fields of Swinley. (fn. 288)
Lists of the parish officers survive from 1683: the
offices belonged in rotation to particular houses. (fn. 289)
In 1765 the officers declared an intention to exert
themselves in favour of the poor, and to make a new
assessment. (fn. 290) Terms for the admission of Forthampton poor to the Winchcombe workhouse in 1770 (fn. 291)
suggest that Forthampton was finding no easy way
to relieve its poor, but already by 1751 the Church
House, immediately east of the church, appears to
have been serving as a sort of parish poorhouse, and
one of its inmates was said to be in the infirmary
there. (fn. 292) In 1793 the parish replaced the Church
House with a house nearby made available by the
lord of the manor, and contracted with a carpenter
to run the house as a parish workhouse. The workhouse master was to provide for all the parish poor,
and to receive £80 a year in addition to what he
could make from the workhouse. In 1793 the workhouse contained one man, 5 women, and 8 children. (fn. 293)
The arrangement does not appear to have lasted
beyond 1795, and from then the overseers reverted
to the practices used since 1786 or earlier: regular
doles, occasional relief, the sale of coal at low prices.
In 1800 the poor children on the parish were apprenticed, and in 1801 corn was bought for sale to
the poor at half price. In 1815 the usual expenditure
on medical attention was increased when the whole
parish was inoculated at a cost of £15, towards which
Mrs. Yorke gave £5. (fn. 294) The workhouse continued in
use, certainly until 1803 when it comprised a cottage
for the workhouse master and another cottage
containing a kitchen and 4 apartments, for 2 men and
2 women; in the women's rooms were spinningwheels for flax and wool. (fn. 295) The workhouse was
apparently used only to provide accommodation, for
in 1803 it was officially reported that no poor were
relieved in a workhouse and that the £9 spent on
materials was for work outside a workhouse (fn. 296) The
money was spent on flax for cottagers to spin. (fn. 297)
There appears to have been a change, though of
what kind is not clear, in the use of the former workhouse in 1810, (fn. 298) and it may be significant that the cost
of poor relief, which had remained unusually low up
to 1803, had risen steeply by 1813. (fn. 299) The parish
owned two other cottages, one of which it retained
until the 20th century. (fn. 300)
The parish became part of the Tewkesbury Poor
Law Union in 1835; (fn. 301) it was transferred from the
Tewkesbury to the Gloucester Rural District in
1935. (fn. 302) A parish council met regularly in 1966.
Church.
Although the tithes of Forthampton
were recorded in 1086, (fn. 303) it appears unlikely that there
was a church there then. In the early 12th century a
chantry or chapel was established at Forthampton,
presumably by Tewkesbury Abbey, and endowed
with a third of the demesne tithes although the whole
tithes belonged to the Norman abbey of Lire. In
1151 it was agreed that tithes arising from assarts
made by peasants should go to the priest of Forthampton, whereas those from demesne assarts should
go to Lire Abbey. (fn. 304) It is unlikely that the priest of
Forthampton continued to receive a share of the
tithes directly, for in 1341 Forthampton church or
chapel was linked with Tewkesbury Abbey in the
same way as the dependent chapels of ease, (fn. 305) and in
1535 the parishioners of Forthampton paid a pension
to the sacrist of Tewkesbury. (fn. 306) Priests recorded in
1369 (fn. 307) and 1467 (fn. 308) were apparently parish priests.
Despite the dependence on the abbey, Forthampton had what was called not a chapel but a church in
1327, (fn. 309) had a burial ground by 1544, (fn. 310) and was
served in 1540 by a priest called the curate of the
parish church. The abbey's lessees of the manor
were charged with paying the curate, (fn. 311) though in
1540 John Wakeman was said to pay the stipend. (fn. 312)
In 1569 the Crown's lessee was charged with paying
a yearly stipend of £5 6s. 8d. (fn. 313) Although the stipend
was said to be £8 in 1603, (fn. 314) it was officially £5 8s. 4d.
in 1610 (fn. 315) and £5 6s. 8d. in 1650. (fn. 316) In fact owners of
Forthampton Court or their lessees paid £10 a year
up to 1634, (fn. 317) and £20 a year before 1650. (fn. 318) In 1730
Richard Dowdeswell was paying the curate £13 a
year; the living was then said to be a donative, (fn. 319)
though it was otherwise called a perpetual curacy.
From 1870 the incumbents were called vicars. (fn. 320) In
1923 the benefice was united with the vicarage of
Chaceley, the two parishes remaining distinct. (fn. 321)
In 1743 Richard Dowdeswell was patron of
Forthampton, (fn. 322) and presumably his predecessors
charged with paying the curate had exercised the
right of nomination. In 1750 Samuel Clarke, the
mortgagee of the Forthampton Court estate, (fn. 323) was
named as patron; thereafter the owners of Forthampton Court, as tithe-owners, were patrons, (fn. 324) and
from 1923 presented alternately to the united benefice
of Forthampton with Chaceley. (fn. 325)
Between 1771 and 1813 the living was augmented
five times, with capital sums totalling £2,800. The
first two augmentations were by lot from Queen
Anne's Bounty, the other three were to meet benefactions (fn. 326) by the Yorke family. With the capital
sums were bought estates in Berrow (c. 1796),
Oddington (1807), and Badgeworth (1813); the
estate in Oddington was exchanged in 1809 with the
Rector of Sezincote for one in Forthampton. (fn. 327) From
£13 a year the value of the living rose to £144 in
1851 (fn. 328) and to £220 net in 1902. (fn. 329) Before the augmentations the incumbents had no land or house in
the parish; (fn. 330) in 1811, on the grounds that the
parsonage house was a mere cottage, the incumbent
was licensed to live in another house in the parish. (fn. 331)
Since 1792 the incumbents had been living at the
house later called Southfield, (fn. 332) whereas the parsonage was the small single-story house by the Paradise
brook, (fn. 333) timber-framed with a thatched roof, called
Sezincote (fn. 334) because until 1809 it belonged to
Sezincote rectory. Later there was said to be no
glebe house. (fn. 335) Southfield was the regular house of
the incumbents (fn. 336) up to 1923, when Chaceley vicarage became the parsonage house of the united
benefice. (fn. 337)
In the mid-16th century the curates of Forthampton retained the poor living for understandably short
periods: between 1548 and 1551 the names of four
curates are recorded. (fn. 338) In 1563 the curate William
Kinget did duty also at Chaceley. (fn. 339) Alexander
Hatton, who evidently belonged to a family numerous in the parish, was curate in 1576 and 1584. (fn. 340)
Humphrey Fox, a supporter of Scottish doctrine,
was suspended from the curacy c. 1630. (fn. 341) His
parishioners asked in 1633 for the removal of his
successor, Mr. Dutton, and the appointment of
Benjamin Baxter, (fn. 342) the author and preacher, who
also had Presbyterian leanings. Baxter was minister
of Forthampton in 1640 and 1648. (fn. 343) In 1652 there
had been no minister for several years, in one opinion
because of the 'faction and curiosity' among the
parishioners. A minister was then thought to have
been found, the parishioners having agreed to add
£30 to the stipend, (fn. 344) but in 1661 the parish had no
minister. (fn. 345) A later minister, Mr. Terry, persistently
refused to attend the bishop's visitation, was
deprived of the key to the church on the bishop's
order, and left the parish. To support his successor,
Mr. Hall, the tenants asked for financial aid from
the Earl of Dorset in 1676. (fn. 346)
At least two of the 18th-century incumbents held
other benefices in the neighbourhood. (fn. 347) From 1811 (fn. 348)
or earlier until 1923 the incumbents usually lived in
the parish, (fn. 349) though Robert Bathurst Plumptre,
perpetual curate 1819–55, was licensed to be absent
on grounds of health for his last 15 years, and
provided an assistant curate. (fn. 350) H. J. T. SangerDavies, who became vicar in 1918, remained until
1950. (fn. 351)
The church of ST. MARY THE VIRGIN (fn. 352) is a
building of blue Lias rubble with roofs of tiles and
Cotswold stone slates, and comprises a short chancel,
a long narrow nave, a north aisle and organ chamber,
a south porch, and a flat-topped west tower.
Eighteenth-century restorations were said to have
obliterated the old features, (fn. 353) but the south doorway
retains from the 12th century its semi-circular head
which on the outside has a roll moulding with a
monster's head at the apex and one of its two animal
head-stops. The marble altar-slab, held up on four
chamfered stone shafts, is thought to be 13th
century; (fn. 354) the priest's door in the south wall of the
chancel, blocked on the inside, and the simple
piscina-head may have been provided at the same
period. There is no chancel arch, and the roofs of
nave and chancel are continuous; on the outside a
slight break in the south wall shows that the chancel
wall is a few inches thicker than the nave wall. In the
14th century the three-stage tower was built, with
an arch of two chamfered orders to the nave, a west
window and belfry windows of reticulated tracery,
and diagonal buttresses. Eighteenth-century restoration apparently replaced all the windows outside the tower. (fn. 355) The nave, tower, and porch were
restored in 1761, the north side and east end in 1789,
when the church was repewed and a gallery added. (fn. 356)
In 1848 the north aisle was added, (fn. 357) opening from
the nave through an arcade of 5 bays. In 1869 the
organ gallery was added, and the restoration of the
chancel completed. (fn. 358) The south porch was added
about the same time. Further restoration work was
done in 1893. (fn. 359) The Church Acre, the rent from
which was sometimes applied to repairing the
church, (fn. 360) is discussed below. (fn. 361)
A new alabaster font was given as a monument
to Mrs. Plumptre (d. 1849), the wife of the incumbent; what was thought to be the earlier font
was placed in a garden in Tewkesbury. (fn. 362) Other
monuments include several to members of the
Dowdeswell and Yorke families, and those to John
Rastell (d. 1631), Thomas Cox alias Hayward (d.
1620), and Thomas Hayward of the Lower House (d.
1641) are the earliest in the church. (fn. 363) A picture of the
supper at Emmaus, made by producing scorchmarks on a wooden panel, is thought to be Flemish. (fn. 364)
The royal arms in the base of the tower, on a metal
sheet, are of the period 1714–1801. Before 1848 the
church had a barrel-organ; a new organ was
installed in 1869. (fn. 365) There were 6 bells in 1856; the
number was soon after reduced to 5, (fn. 366) but was
restored again to 6 in 1887; the two oldest are of
1764. (fn. 367) The communion plate is of the late 19th
century. (fn. 368) The registers begin in 1678, and are
complete. (fn. 369) In the churchyard a yew-tree of great
age was blown down in 1839. (fn. 370)
Nonconformity.
Margery Blunt, named as a
recusant in 1577, (fn. 371) was presented for seldom going
to church in 1584. (fn. 372) In 1582 Richard Cotton of
Forthampton stood bail for his brother John, in the
Tower for religious nonconformity. (fn. 373) Two early
17th-century incumbents of Presbyterian leanings
are mentioned above; the influence of one of them,
Humphrey Fox, may be indicated partly by the fact
that the forename of one of his sons, Hopewell, (fn. 374)
was borne by successive generations of one branch
of the Hayward family until the late 18th century. (fn. 375)
In 1676 there were said to be 9 Protestant dissenters, (fn. 376) but in the mid-18th century none were
recorded. (fn. 377)
A Wesleyan Methodist chapel, on the Tewkesbury circuit, was built at Long Green in 1902; (fn. 378) it is
a small building of corrugated iron, and was still in
use in 1966.
Schools.
In 1603 the schoolmaster of Forthampton was presented for not taking his school to hear
divine service. (fn. 379) In 1818 there were said to be 30
children attending a Sunday school, and between
40 and 50 attending two or three charity schools
wholly supported by Mrs. Yorke. (fn. 380) In 1833 Joseph
Yorke supported a day and Sunday school with c. 60
children. (fn. 381) He built a new school, which was in
union with the National Society, in 1837; he retained
ownership of the building, and said in 1849 that the
school was wholly under his control. (fn. 382) By 1846 there
were over 100 children, some of them drawn from
other parishes, and part of the expenses were met
from subscriptions and school pence. (fn. 383) Attendance
had fallen to 40 by 1889, (fn. 384) and was the same in
1918. (fn. 385) The school, a tall, single-story building of
brick, was closed in 1931, (fn. 386) and in 1966 the children
went to school in Tewkesbury.
Charities.
In the 16th century or earlier
Thomas Palmer gave the rent of 1 a. of land, later
called the Church Acre, to provide candles for the
church. In 1617 John Rastell, as surviving trustee,
made a settlement of the land, (fn. 387) with the result that
he has been credited as the donor. (fn. 388) The rent was
used for the poor in the 17th century (fn. 389) but for
church repairs in 1828. By will dated 1737 Elizabeth
Hayward gave £5 to buy land for distributing bread,
but instead her brother and executor, Thomas
Hayward, in 1740 charged Swift's Acre, which he
owned, next to the Church Acre, with a rent of
5s. (fn. 390) The rent of the Church Acre and the rentcharge, 30s. together, were shared in the mid-20th
century between church purposes and a distribution
to the poor. From 1960, by voluntary agreements,
the rent paid was raised to £3 and all of it was
distributed in doles of cash. (fn. 391) Elizabeth Newman,
by will dated 1784, gave a sum for the poor that
yielded £5 a year in the late 18th century, (fn. 392) but no
later record of the charity has been found. Anne
Platt, by will proved 1892, gave £100 stock for a
distribution of bread, (fn. 393) and up to 1964 the income
of £2 11s. was spent on bread. (fn. 394)