BROADWELL
Broad well adjoins Stow-on-the-Wold on the
north-west. The ancient parish covered 1,817 a., (fn. 1)
compact in shape and bounded on the east by the
River Evenlode, which at this point formed the
county boundary also until 1935. (fn. 2) The western
boundary of the parish lay on the ridge running
north from Stow, following the ancient saltway from
Stow to Evesham for 350 yards and the Foss Way in
two places, and extended into Stow along High
Street to within a few yards of Stow market square
before turning east along the lane towards Well
Lane at Parson's Corner; the southern boundary
follows for part of its course the Caudwell (formerly
Queenmoor) brook. (fn. 3) These were the limits of
Broadwell in Saxon times, (fn. 4) and they survived until
1935 when 71 a. forming the south-west corner and
including Fosseway House were transferred from
Broadwell to Stow, (fn. 5) though remaining in Broadwell
for ecclesiastical purposes. (fn. 6)
The eastern half of the parish is flat, at about
400 ft., but on the west the land rises sharply to
over 750 ft. on the Foss Way. The soil on the higher
ground is stone-brash overlying the Upper and
Middle Lias Clays and outcrops of Inferior Oolite
and Chipping Norton Limestone, which were once
quarried to provide road-metal. On the lower ground
heavy clay overlies the Lower Lias and Boulder
Clays, with alluvial deposits along the River Evenlode and the lower reaches of its tributaries. (fn. 7) A
number of springs rises from the shallow stratum
of the Middle Lias, and three main streams, the
Caudwell brook, the Mill brook, and the Allis brook, (fn. 8)
run across the parish to drain into the Evenlode,
which follows a meandering course and floods
regularly in winter. (fn. 9)
The wooded appearance of the landscape is given
by the large elms in the hedgerows. In 1545 there
were 200 elms and ashes growing on the manor, (fn. 10)
and the lops of the willows in the village were a
source of profit; (fn. 11) elms and ashes were planted on
the green in the early 18th century. (fn. 12) In 1884 the
only considerable plantation was Crab Orchard on
the northern boundary, which in the 20th century
grew oak and hazel. At Broadwell Hill a covert and
the trees in the park were planted in the late 19th
century. (fn. 13) Over half of the farm-land of the parish is
under the plough; most of the arable is on the higher
ground, and there is little below the 450 ft. level. (fn. 14)
The village of Broadwell lies half a mile from the
Foss Way, roughly at the centre of the parish just
below the 500 ft. level, where the land flattens out at
the bottom of the hill leading up to Stow. It is just
below the Middle Lias stratum, and thus is well
supplied with spring water. Near the largest spring,
from which Broadwell is thought to derive its name, (fn. 15)
at the upper and north-west end of the village, are
the church, manor-house, and home farm, and a
little north of them is the site of a Roman villa. (fn. 16)
Below the church is the former village green, with
the stream from the spring running through it, and
beyond again is a village street composed of farmhouses, cottages, and barns, of the 17th century and
later.
It is uncertain whether the village once centred on
the green. Most of the larger houses lie near it, and
the smithy, (fn. 17) the pound, (fn. 18) and both inns (fn. 19) were on
the edge of its lower end. There is no evidence, however, that there were ever cottages round the upper
end near the church, and the cottages round the
lower end, though possibly replacing earlier ones,
were built in the 19th century. Fox's Row is said to
have been built by a Mr. Fox; (fn. 20) Pimlico Row, partly
demolished in 1959, was 'newly built' in 1858. (fn. 21) By
1793 the green had been divided, by tracks and by
farm buildings across it, into upper, middle, and
lower greens, and the common land was then allotted
to various landowners. (fn. 22) A piece of the former green
was added to the churchyard c. 1921, (fn. 23) and in 1952
the lower end was presented to the parish council
and laid out as a recreation ground. (fn. 24)
Between the First and Second World Wars
scattered houses were built on the outskirts of the
village, (fn. 25) and between 1950 and 1960 the rural
district council built an estate of nearly 30 houses
north of the village, by Kennel Lane. In the same
period about ten old cottages in the village were
pulled down to make room for new building. (fn. 26)
Electricity was supplied to the village under an Act
of 1928: (fn. 27) at the end of the Second World War only
a few houses used electricity, but by 1953 only two
houses had no supply. Water was provided by a pipe
from the spring by the church until 1953, when a
main water supply was brought to the village. (fn. 28)
The road skirting the south-east side of the green
leads south-west up the hill towards Stow, joining
the Foss Way (turnpiked in 1755) (fn. 29) half a mile from
the town, and north-east towards Evenlode. The
causeway leading to Evenlode was mentioned in
1587, (fn. 30) and the road crossed the river in 1621 by
New Bridge (fn. 31) (called Stock Bridge by 1793). (fn. 32) From
the east corner of the green a road ran up the northeast side, fording the Mill brook and passing
Rectory Farm, to the church, where it turned sharply
uphill towards the Foss Way. After inclosure in 1793
a road was set out round the west side of the green,
and another opened from the church north-west to
Donnington across the Foss Way. A third road ran
from the Evenlode road 200 yards east of the green
towards Oddington, and field tracks (mentioned in
1597) (fn. 33) ran off from the church and Rectory Farm in
a north-easterly direction. (fn. 34) The first of these tracks
was marked for its first half mile only by hedgerows
in 1960; the second, Kennel Lane, has become the
main access to the council-house estate.
The population of Broadwell may have fallen
slightly between the 11th century and the 16th.
Domesday enumerated 48 persons, including 13
servi; (fn. 35) in 1327 20 people were assessed for the
subsidy; (fn. 36) in 1381 71 people paid poll tax; (fn. 37) and in
1563 there were about 20 households. (fn. 38) The evidence
for population in the 17th century is contradictory;
for example, there were said to be about 24 families
in 1650, (fn. 39) while 42 householders were listed in the
hearth tax assessment of 1672. (fn. 40) During the 18th
century the population seems to have remained
roughly constant, (fn. 41) though there is evidence of some
new building. (fn. 42) In 1801 it was 239, and thereafter
rose steadily to a peak of 404 in 1871. After falling
to 294 in 1921 it rose slowly until 1951, (fn. 43) and thereafter more rapidly to over 400 in 1960. (fn. 44)
Except for the houses on the council estate, which
are of brown brick or prefabricated concrete, most of
the houses are of stone, with Cotswold stone roofs.
Millbrook and the Bank are substantial 17th-century
houses of rubble masonry in the traditional Cotswold
style. Millbrook appears to have been enlarged and
restored in 1720, (fn. 45) and additions to it were made by
Sir Guy Dawber in 1890. (fn. 46) Temple Farm and
Quinmoor House are rather smaller, but each has an
arched doorway. Broadwell Hill Farm, of c. 1700,
has mullioned and transomed windows with leaded
lights. Two 18th-century farm-houses, and the
18th- and 19th-century cottages, show little departure from the traditional style. (fn. 47) Broadwell Manor,
however, which was rebuilt in 1757 (fn. 48) on the site of
a T-shaped 17th-century house, (fn. 49) is of ashlar, with
a slate roof. The entrance front is of five bays; the
central portion breaks forward and is surmounted
by a pediment, the windows have moulded architraves and keystones, and there is a modillion
cornice below a parapet with ball finials. Part of the
17th-century house survives at the back. The 17thand 18th-century cottages, which may have been
built to replace earlier timber buildings, (fn. 50) stand
singly and in pairs, whereas some of the 19thcentury cottages are in rows of five and six. A
feature of the village is the number of large stone
barns, and several of the privately built modern
houses are of stone and in the traditional style. (fn. 51)
Two large Victorian mansions built away from the
village have many of the features but little of the
appearance of Cotswold houses. Broadwell Hill,
standing in a park above the village, was built by
Piers Thursby, evidently to his own design, in 1879. (fn. 52)
Fosseway House, built in the mid-19th century as
a hunting-lodge, was enlarged before 1884 and its
name subsequently changed from Fosse Cottage. (fn. 53)
It stands in the part of the parish that was transferred to Stow in 1935, and its grounds include an
earlier walled garden with a castellated summerhouse of c. 1800. In this part of the parish, which in
the 17th century contained a sheep-fold belonging
to Broadwell manor and used in connexion with
Stow market, (fn. 54) there are two 19th-century cottages
near Fosseway House and a 19th-century house with
farm buildings in the extreme south-east corner of
the ancient parish. Elsewhere there are few buildings
at a distance from the village. A group of three
cottages was built ¼ mile along Kennel Lane
c. 1800, (fn. 55) and there are two outlying farms, Cownham Farm (formerly Plum's Barn) (fn. 56) and Sydenham
Farm, which were built in the earlier 19th century, (fn. 57)
Sydenham Farm on the site of a 17th-century farmhouse. (fn. 58)
A new village hall, beside the green, was opened
in 1957, to replace a wooden hut, on the road towards Stow, that had been built by the inhabitants
after the First World War. (fn. 59) The new hall includes
a miniature rifle range, used by the Broadwell Rifle
Club. (fn. 60)
The only violent disturbance known to have
impinged on Broadwell occurred in 1646, when the
parliamentary army came up on the rear of royalist
forces between Donnington and Stow. (fn. 61) In the
early 19th century Broadwell was described as
an apt retirement for the hurried great, (fn. 62)
though in the following fifty years the peacefulness of the village was disturbed at intervals by the
eccentricities of Admiral Jodrell Leigh (d. 1863),
who lived at the manor-house. He accused the rector
and churchwardens of misappropriating the rates, (fn. 63)
had a long and unsuccessful struggle with the vestry
and the villagers for diversions of the roads, (fn. 64) and
quarrelled with the rector over changes in the
church. (fn. 65) One of his antagonists was the equally
eccentric Captain Polhill (d. 1868), a veteran of
Waterloo, who celebrated the victory annually in his
garden at Millbrook. (fn. 66) Broadwell notables of greater
national but less local renown are the admiral's
great-nephew, Egerton Leigh (d. 1876), writer on
dialect, who owned the manor-house but lived there
little if at all, John Edmund Reade (d. 1870),
poetaster and novelist, who was born in Broadwell
but seems to have had no other connexion with the
place, and one of the 17th-century rectors, John
Allibond (d. 1658). (fn. 67)
Manors and Other Estates.
Evesham
Abbey claimed that King Coenred gave it Broadwell
in 708. If the claim was just, the abbey later lost
Broadwell for a time, because c. 1034 the estate was
'redeemed' from Canute for the abbey by Ælfweard,
Bishop of London. (fn. 68) The abbey held BROADWELL manor, to which four burgages in Gloucester
and one in Winchcombe belonged, in 1086, (fn. 69) and
continued to hold it until the Dissolution. (fn. 70) The
manor included the neighbouring hamlet of
Donnington, in Stow-on-the-Wold, until 1552. (fn. 71) In
the early 13th century the abbey kitchen received
900 eggs, 12 cooking-pots, and 3d. rent a year from
the manor. (fn. 72) Abbot Roger Norreys built a 'noble
house' at Broadwell c. 1200, to which he retired in
1202, but when the house was burnt down about 20
years later it was replaced by a grange, which was
rebuilt or enlarged c. 1300. (fn. 73) The abbey was granted
free warren in Broadwell in 1251, (fn. 74) and in 1276
claimed the assize of bread and ale. (fn. 75) Broadwell was
held with the abbey's estate at Bourton-on-theWater by service of one knight's fee. (fn. 76) Almost the
whole of Broadwell parish, including one or more
freehold estates, was throughout the Middle Ages
within the abbey's manor, (fn. 77) which extended into
Stow, Donnington, and Maugersbury. (fn. 78)
The manor, the demesne of which was leased in
1528 to Richard Wanford, (fn. 79) was sold by the Crown
in 1545 to Richard Andrews, (fn. 80) who two years
earlier had been granted the abbey's tithes (apparently regarded as part of the manor) in the
adjoining hamlet of Donnington. (fn. 81) In 1552 Andrews
sold the manor to Sir Thomas Baskerville (fn. 82) (d. 1572),
whose daughter and heir Eleanor (fn. 83) married John
Talbot c. 1591, (fn. 84) and in 1595 the lease of the demesne was acquired for the Talbots. (fn. 85) The Talbots
do not appear to have lived in Broadwell: in 1608
and shortly before 1619 the manor was occupied by
Mary, wife of the late Sir Robert Lane. (fn. 86)
Part of the abbey's estate in Broadwell was not
sold with the manor in 1545: Bradenham meadow,
though it was again part of the manorial estate
by 1596, (fn. 87) was granted separately in 1545, (fn. 88) and
several meadows, including Sydenham, were leased
by the Crown in 1587. (fn. 89) The Talbots dismembered
the manor still further by selling at least four (and
probably all) of the copyhold estates as freeholds to
be held in chief, (fn. 90) and in 1619 the manor itself,
apparently comprising only the demesne, was
bought by Anthony Hodges and William Chadwell, (fn. 91)
who divided it between themselves in 1621. (fn. 92) The
result of these transactions was that the manor in
effect ceased to exist, although some manorial rights
persisted until 1793 (fn. 93) and various estates were
described as manors even later. (fn. 94) About 1700 it was
said both that it was uncertain who was lord of the
manor and that there was 'no lord of the manor, but
all freeholders'. (fn. 95)
The moiety of the manor or demesne bought by
William Chadwell (d. c. 1649), together, perhaps,
with copyhold estates of which his father, another
William (d. 1613), had bought the freehold in 1597
and 1602, (fn. 96) amounted to seven yardlands in 1669, (fn. 97)
and in 1671 the younger William's grandson
William (d. 1680) (fn. 98) lived in a house with 9 hearths. (fn. 99)
The Chadwells' moiety (or part of it), together with
other lands in the parish, passed later to Anthony
Compere, a surgeon of Stow, who with his son
Anthony was dealing with a capital messuage in
Broadwell in 1739. (fn. 100) The younger Anthony died
childless in 1764, and his coheirs (fn. 101) were in 1793
allotted just over a quarter of an acre for their joint
estate in a quarter of the manorial rights. The other
part of the Chadwells' moiety was then held by
Thomas Guy and John Fletcher. (fn. 102)
The moiety of Anthony Hodges, which included
the manor-house of which Hodges was in possession
in 1619, (fn. 103) descended in his family to Danvers Hodges
(d. 1721), who devised his estate to his three nieces,
Anne, Mary, and Martha. (fn. 104) Mary occupied the
Broadwell estate with her husband, Dr. Thomas
Chamberlayne, who rebuilt the manor-house. (fn. 105) All
three nieces were dead by 1759 and the property
passed to the son of Anne, wife of Henry Doughty,
and the son assumed the name of Henry Danvers
Doughty Hodges. (fn. 106) He died in 1777, (fn. 107) and was succeeded by his three sisters, of whom Mary Leigh,
widow (d. 1811), assumed the management of and
title to the Broadwell estate. It was leased in 1777 to
Mary's son and heir Egerton Leigh (d. 1833) and in
1802 to the Revd. Samuel Wilson Warneford. (fn. 108) Egerton Leigh devised it to his brother Capt. (later
Admiral) Jodrell Leigh, on whose death unmarried
in 1863 it passed to Egerton's eldest son, who was
also called Egerton Leigh (d. 1876). (fn. 109) It then passed
to successive sons, Edward Egerton Leigh (d. 1913) (fn. 110)
and Henry Egerton Leigh, who in 1960 lived at the
manor-house and owned a large part of the land in
the parish.
A sub-manor called GIFFARDES or NETHERCOURT (fn. 111) was held as of Broadwell manor by
Thomas Lygon at his death in 1507. (fn. 112) Its origin is
untraced, but it may derive from one of the estates
held in fee of Evesham Abbey in the early Middle
Ages. (fn. 113) Thomas was succeeded by his son Richard
(d. 1512), and Richard by his son Sir Richard
(d. 1556), (fn. 114) who held it as ¼ knight's fee and owed
suit to Broadwell manor court. (fn. 115) Sir Richard's son
and heir William (d. 1567) was succeeded by his
son Richard (d. 1585), (fn. 116) whose son Sir William is
said to have sold the manor. (fn. 117) The manor was held
of Eleanor Talbot by William Kite of Broadwell in
1608, when he settled it on his daughter Elizabeth
and her husband William Loggins, (fn. 118) and it may have
been the land granted to Kite by Eleanor Talbot
in 1607. (fn. 119) In 1610 Kite's estate amounted to seven
yardlands. (fn. 120) Loggins in 1619 either sold or mortgaged
the land granted by Eleanor Talbot, (fn. 121) and by 1627
had sold c. 75 a. to Richard and William Barker. (fn. 122) A
moiety of Kite's farm, amounting to three and a half
yardlands and thus perhaps half of the manor, was
held by William Marshall along with other land at
his death in 1629; it was said to be held of William
Leigh (who owned the manors of Longborough and
Adlestrop) as of his 'manor of Broadwell'. (fn. 123) Thereafter Nethercourt manor became merged with other
estates and is not separately distinguishable. The
capital messuage of this manor may have been
Millbrook, the deeds of which refer to reputed
manorial rights. (fn. 124)
In 1086 Evesham Abbey's tenants in Broadwell
included a free man in addition to a priest, the
villani, and the bordars. (fn. 125) In the 12th century about
five hides were held by knight service, by four
different tenants, of whom Walter the knight,
son of Drew, held two hides and more. (fn. 126) An estate
there c. 1187 belonged to Walter son of Richard of
Broadwell. Another Walter, apparently his younger
son, (fn. 127) in 1221 sued Geoffrey of Broadwell for ½
mark of rent in Broadwell; the suit also concerned a
messuage in Winchcombe, which may have been the
same as the Domesday burgage in Winchcombe that
belonged to the Broadwell estate of Evesham Abbey,
and it involved Matthew the cook, who is perhaps
to be associated with the abbey's kitchen. In 1235
Geoffrey of Broadwell was sued, for ½ mark of rent
from ½ hide in Broadwell, by Walter de la Bruere,
presumably a connexion of the Roger de la Bruere
who was overlord of the Winchcombe property at
issue in 1221. (fn. 128) In 1284 Walter of Broadwell and his
son Walter made a settlement of a messuage and a
carucate in Broadwell, (fn. 129) and this is possibly the
estate which later became the sub-manor called
Nethercourt.
Small quantities of land in Broadwell were attached to estates centred outside the parish. In 1221
meadow in Broadwell was alleged to belong to an
estate in Oddington. (fn. 130) At about the same time
Richard of Broadwell, with the consent of his heir
Walter, granted some demesne land apparently in
Broadwell to a representative of the Templars of
Guiting, (fn. 131) who were also leasing meadow there
from the Abbot of Evesham. (fn. 132) Temple Guiting
manor still included land in Broadwell (fn. 133) in 1354,
when it was held by William de Clinton, Earl of
Huntingdon, at his death. (fn. 134) Some of this land may
have been included in grants to Evesham Abbey in
1363: (fn. 135) a close called Templars (perhaps the same as
the field, east of the village, called Templis in 1960)
and a yardland called Templars (which may have
given its name to the 17th-century house called
Temple Farm) were held by copyhold tenants of the
abbey in the early 16th century. (fn. 136) In 1535, however,
Corpus Christi College, Oxford, which held the
Templars' manor of Guiting, owned rents in Broadwell amounting to 3s. 1d. (fn. 137)
The dismembering of the manor at the beginning
of the 17th century resulted in the creation of a
number of comparatively small freehold estates,
most of which were several times subdivided and
merged with others, (fn. 138) and it has not been possible to
trace their several ownerships. The Barker family, (fn. 139)
which was settled in Broadwell by 1653 (fn. 140) and in
1671 had a substantial house there, (fn. 141) had an estate of
over 150 a., (fn. 142) part of which was bought in 1802 by
Lee Compere (fn. 143) and was broken up on William
Compere's death in 1824. (fn. 144) Part of it was bought by
Robert Beman, (fn. 145) whose estate of nearly 160 a. was
put up for sale in 1858, and part of that estate in
turn formed the nucleus of Capt. Piers Thursby's
Broadwell Hill estate. (fn. 146) The Broadwell Hill estate
was bought in 1929 by Lord Ashton of Hyde, who
in 1960 owned over 300 a. in the parish. (fn. 147)
Economic History.
The increase by a half in
the value of Evesham Abbey's estate in Broadwell
and Donnington between 1066 and 1086, coupled
with the fact that land assessed as 10 hides was
divided into 18 plough-lands, suggests that there
was an increase in the arable land at that period. (fn. 148)
The area of each plough-land was small, (fn. 149) perhaps
because of the heavy nature of the soil. (fn. 150) Allowing
four yardlands to each plough-land, the number of
yardlands rose from 76 in 1086 to 87 in the 12th
century, (fn. 151) and then fell to 74 in 1539, (fn. 152) when 16 were
in Donnington. (fn. 153) In 1791, when a little over onethird of the cultivated land had been inclosed piecemeal, the number of yardlands in Broadwell alone
was reckoned to be 45½. (fn. 154) Throughout the period the
yardland seems to have been about 20 a.; in 1791 it
varied between 16 and 25 a. (fn. 155) In the 12th century
there were a few cotlands not included in the division
of the land into yardlands, (fn. 156) but these are not known
to have been described as cotlands at a later date and
are presumably accounted for by small parcels
reckoned in acres in the 16th century. (fn. 157)
In addition to a freeman and a priest, the abbey's
tenants in 1086 were 25 villani and 8 bordars, (fn. 158)
presumably holding estates of about one yardland
each; in the 12th century the two customary tenants
whose land is separately recorded held one yardland
and half a yardland respectively. (fn. 159) The number of
customary tenants appears thereafter to have
decreased slightly, and the size of their holdings to
have grown: 20 people were assessed for tax in 1327,
all except one at between 6d. and 3s., (fn. 160) and in 1540
there were 25 customary tenants of the manor in
Broadwell, with holdings of between half a yardland and three yardlands. (fn. 161)
In the 12th century the customary tenants all
owed harvest work, and nearly all owed aid, toll,
pannage, ploughing and carting, and churchscot.
The bovarii, to whom six yardlands belonged, owed
rents in kind; the miller, who in other respects
ranked with the free tenants, owed three harvestworks, aid, toll, and pannage. All except the free
tenants and the bovarii owed money-rents, and each
yardland owed seasonal dues. (fn. 162) By 1291 the abbey
was receiving 10s. a year for release of works. (fn. 163) By
the early 16th century some heriots were paid in
cash. (fn. 164)
By the time that the manorial demesne in Broadwell was divided in 1621 (fn. 165) all the copyhold estates
had apparently been converted into freeholds. Apart
from the former manorial estates, three freeholds
are recorded, one of 3 yardlands and two of 2 yardlands, that were formerly copyholds, (fn. 166) and Broadwell seems to have been occupied by a number of
yeoman farmers owning not markedly dissimilar
amounts of land, and all reasonably prosperous.
Fourteen of the 42 houses in the village in 1671 had
three or more hearths, (fn. 167) and c. 1700 all the farmers
were said to be freeholders. (fn. 168) In the early 18th
century there were 15 or more freeholders, (fn. 169) and at
that period each seems to have farmed his own land.
Later in the century the owners of the larger estates,
with few exceptions, ceased to farm in Broadwell: (fn. 170)
in 1791 the owners and the occupiers were mostly
different groups of people. (fn. 171)
Little is recorded of the methods of farming before
the 19th century. A division of the arable into two
fields, the East field and the West, in the 13th
century (fn. 172) is not mentioned later, and ridges or
selions, usually of ½ or ⅓ a., were identified in the
17th century and later by the furlongs in which
they lay or which they adjoined. (fn. 173) The comparatively large amount of pasture and the scarcity of
references to sheep in the 17th and 18th centuries
may indicate that much of the land was used for
dairying. (fn. 174) Most of the meadow lay in the eastern
part of the parish beside the Evenlode, (fn. 175) but some of
this land was left waste; it was badly drained and
sour, (fn. 176) and used only for cutting peat and furze.
Round the village there have long been several
orchards, (fn. 177) and in 1627 there were tobacco plantations in Broadwell. (fn. 178)
In 1597 an agreement was made for the exchange
of lands to enable the inclosure of part of the
demesne. (fn. 179) A further inclosure of a small part of the
rectory estate evidently followed an agreement of
1649 (fn. 180) and in the next 150 years there were other
piecemeal inclosures (particularly after 1777), perhaps facilitated by land transactions between the
freeholders: in 1777 the inclosures amounted to
274 a. and in 1791 there were 472 a. of old inclosures
compared with 858 a. of commonable land. (fn. 181) Some
of the old inclosures were reallotted by the inclosure
award of 1793, which affected 1,203 a. The largest
allotment was that made to the rector for tithes, and
apart from those for the surveyors, the poor, the
church, and the constable 12 other allotments were
made, four of over 100 a. and three of between 50 a.
and 100 a. (fn. 182)
The immediate result of inclosure was to increase
the amount of land under crops; the fattening of
sheep and beef-cattle increased greatly, while the
production of butter and cheese fell by half. (fn. 183) In
1801 762 a. were sown, with barley, wheat, beans,
peas, and oats accounting for 710 a. (fn. 184) The number
and size of farms does not seem to have been greatly
affected, (fn. 185) although in the early 19th century Robert
Beman built up a large farm and replaced Joseph
Rose as the most prominent farmer in the parish. (fn. 186)
In 1849 Beman occupied 620 a., and there were five
farms of 100–200 a. and three of 60–100 a. There
were then 1,030 a. arable and 604 a. pasture. (fn. 187)
While the freeholds tended to become concentrated
in fewer hands the number of substantial farms did
not diminish: there were 10 in 1870, 8 in 1919, 11 in
1939, (fn. 188) and 9 in 1960. The farming is mixed, and the
main changes during the 20th century have been in
the conversion of pasture to arable during the two
World Wars. (fn. 189) Broad well is at the centre of the
Heythrop country, and although one of the mid19th-century estates was primarily a hunting
establishment, (fn. 190) in the 20th century sporting considerations alone have not brought wealthy residents
into the village, as into some villages nearby. (fn. 191)
There is not much evidence of trades or crafts in
the village. A mason was living there in 1591; (fn. 192) in
1608 the only craftsmen recorded were two tailors. (fn. 193)
In 1811 and 1831 there were seven families supported by trade or handicraft, living in Broadwell (fn. 194)
but not necessarily working there. A brick and tile
kiln was working on Broadwell hill in 1858, but had
disappeared by 1874. (fn. 195) Blacksmiths are recorded in
Broadwell from 1650 (fn. 196) to 1935, wheelwrights from
c. 1705 to c. 1950, a mason (who also kept a shop
and the post-office), a slater and plasterer, and a
corn-dealer in 1870, and a haulier in 1906. For more
domestic needs, there was a baker in 1774 (as in
1960) a shoemaker in 1889, and a shop in 1849.
There were two small shops in 1870, as in 1960.
There were two inns in 1849, the Rock tavern
(which existed in 1793 and may have been the same
as the 'Wheatsheaf' of 1900) and the 'Fox'. The
'Wheatsheaf' closed between 1906 and 1919, and in
1960 the only inn was the 'Fox'. Less expected
callings followed in the village were those of musicteacher (1906), dog-breeder (1939), and alpine
nursery gardener (1960). (fn. 197) Since the end of the 19th
century agriculture has employed a decreasing proportion of the inhabitants. By 1953 two-fifths of the
employed population worked outside Broadwell, (fn. 198)
and in 1960 buses collected people from the village
for work as far afield as Witney (Oxon.), Stratfordon-Avon, and Oxford. (fn. 199)
Mill and Fishery.
A mill at Broadwell was
mentioned as part of Evesham Abbey's estate in a
12th-century survey which suggests that the miller,
who held land in addition to the mill, occupied a
position intermediate between the free and customary tenants of the manor. (fn. 200) In the early 13th century a fishpond was made at Broadwell, and a
new mill built over it. (fn. 201) In 1539 the water-mill was
held with suit of the tenants' multure as copyhold,
together with one yardland. (fn. 202) The freehold passed
with the manor (fn. 203) until 1602, when it was sold to
William Chadwell (fn. 204) (d. 1613), who settled it on his
younger son, Thomas, in 1609. (fn. 205) There is no certain
reference to a working mill at a later date, (fn. 206) and how
long it continued to function is not known. In 1704 a
house was described as formerly a water corn-mill. (fn. 207)
By 1868 there were no buildings on the site of the
mill, (fn. 208) on the Mill brook 300 yards downstream
from the ford, where earthworks survived in 1960 (fn. 209)
and pieces of masonry have been dug out of the
ground, (fn. 210) and beside which lay Mill ham. (fn. 211)
The 16th- and 17th-century references to the mill
do not mention any fishery or fishpond. A fishery
formed part of Nethercourt manor (fn. 212) and was apparently in the pool above the mill; in 1796 a fishpond was in the grounds of the house belonging to
William Lenthall, (fn. 213) which may have been the house
200 yards south-west of Broadwell Manor known in
1960 as Lenthall's Cottage.
Local Government.
Evesham Abbey's reeve
or bailiff for Broadwell, mentioned in 1318, (fn. 214) was
apparently holding a court for the manor every three
weeks in 1351. (fn. 215) In 1535 he received an annual
salary of 20s. (fn. 216) Evesham Abbey held the assize of
bread and ale in Broadwell. (fn. 217) Most of the tenants
came within the abbey's leet jurisdiction that
centred on Stow, (fn. 218) but the preceptory of Temple
Guiting claimed view of frankpledge and waif of its
tenants in Broadwell. (fn. 219) There are records of the
manor court for 1428, (fn. 220) 1528–39, (fn. 221) 1552, 1556, and
1559. (fn. 222) It is unlikely that any manor courts were
held after the end of the 16th century, (fn. 223) and the
vestry may have assumed functions previously performed by the manor court (fn. 224) at a comparatively
early date.
No vestry records have survived from before the
19th century. The churchwardens' accounts from
1812 onwards do not record the activities of the
other officers. The vestry minutes from 1836 onwards may indicate the practice of an earlier period.
In the middle years of the century one of the
two churchwardens (there had been two in 1498) (fn. 225)
was chosen by the rector, and there were two
surveyors of the highways (as in 1773), (fn. 226) two overseers of the poor (with an assistant at £4 a year
from 1850), and two constables (a constable and a
tithingman in 1836). Not until 1852 did the rector or
his curate normally take the chair at vestry meetings,
which were held at irregular intervals three or
four times a year and attended by about ten ratepayers.
In relieving the poor in the late 18th and early
19th centuries Broadwell was either less hard pressed
or less generous than its neighbours. A new assessment for the poor's rate was made in 1777, (fn. 227) but in
1802–3 Broadwell had a far lower rate than any other
parish (save Donnington) in the upper division of
the hundred, (fn. 228) and the total expenditure on the
poor remained proportionate in the twenties and
early thirties. (fn. 229) The parish owned six cottages which
were used to house poor parishioners; in 1837,
after the inclusion of Broadwell in the Stow-onthe-Wold Poor Law Union, the cottages, then occupied by seven tenants, (fn. 230) were sold to one of the
farmers of the parish. (fn. 231) The constable had a small
amount of land, for which he was allotted half an
acre at inclosure in 1793, when the parish surveyors
were also allotted 4½ a. to provide them with stone
for repairing the roads. (fn. 232)
The roads in the parish seem to have been
burdensome to maintain, perhaps because they
included a stretch of the Foss Way. In the late 18th
century repairs were made largely by team-labour. (fn. 233)
In 1843 a separate rate was made for the roads, and
from 1850 a contract was made for repairs; (fn. 234) in 1863
Broadwell was included in the Stow-on-the-Wold
highway district. (fn. 235) Under the Local Government
Act of 1872 it became part of the Stow-on-the-Wold
Rural Sanitary District, and was transferred to the
newly formed North Cotswold Rural District in
1935. (fn. 236) A parish council had been formed by 1895. (fn. 237)
Church.
There was a priest in Broadwell in
1086, (fn. 238) and it was from Broadwell that Adlestrop
church, which was a chapel of ease until 1937, was
presumably founded. (fn. 239) Although the advowson of
Broadwell belonged to Evesham Abbey (fn. 240) the church
was never appropriated and remained a rectory
until 1937. In that year the benefices (but not the
parishes) of Broadwell and Stow-on-the-Wold were
united; (fn. 241) in 1960 Broadwell rectory was severed
from Stow-on-the-Wold and united with Evenlode,
and Donnington, formerly part of Stow-on-theWold, became part of Broadwell parish. (fn. 242)
On the first vacancy of the living after the
Dissolution, in 1571, Walter Baskerville presented
by virtue of the assignment of a grant by Evesham
Abbey. (fn. 243) In 1598 Eleanor, widow of Sir Thomas
Baskerville, presented, (fn. 244) and in 1627 her son-in-law
and daughter, John and Eleanor Talbot, (fn. 245) sold the
advowson of Broadwell with Adlestrop chapel to
William Leigh, (fn. 246) lord of Adlestrop. The advowson
then descended with Adlestrop manor (fn. 247) until 1937,
when the former patron of Stow-on-the-Wold
became patron of the united benefice of Stow and
Broadwell. (fn. 248) In 1960 the patron of the united
benefice of Broadwell and Evenlode was the Church
Society Trust. (fn. 249)
The rectory was comparatively rich, its clear
annual value being £6 in 1291 (fn. 250) and over £18 in
1535. (fn. 251) In 1650 it was worth gross about £200 a
year, (fn. 252) and this figure rose to about £700 in 1814 (fn. 253)
before falling in the late 19th century. (fn. 254) In the
Middle Ages the rectory was endowed with less than
half the tithes, and the larger share belonged to
Evesham Abbey. In 1291 the value of the abbey's
tithes from Broadwell and Adlestrop was the same
as the rector's net income. (fn. 255) In 1450 it was agreed
that the rector should receive all the tithes and pay
the abbey in place of its share a pension of £5 a
year, in addition to a pension of £1 a year that was
being paid out of the rectory in 1206. (fn. 256) In the 17th
and 18th centuries tithes were frequently the cause
of disputes, which were complicated by the fragmentation of the allegedly tithe-free demesne lands,
and for most of the period they were either farmed
or commuted for a fixed payment on each yardland. (fn. 257)
The glebe in the 16th century amounted to 4 yardlands in Broadwell, containing nearly 100 a., and
2 yardlands (containing nearly 30 a. c. 1774) in
Adlestrop, with a house and common of pasture in
each. In the late 17th century and later, when the
rectors lived at Adlestrop, the glebe house and land
in Broadwell appear normally to have been let. (fn. 258)
On the inclosure of Adlestrop in 1775 the rector
received about 125 a. for both glebe and tithe, (fn. 259) and,
on the inclosure of Broadwell in 1793, 68 a. for
glebe and 272 a. and money-rents totalling £28 for
tithe. (fn. 260) The glebe in Broadwell continued to be let
after inclosure, (fn. 261) but in Adlestrop the rector was
still farming his glebe in the early 20th century. (fn. 262)
In 1937 the whole rectorial estate in both parishes
was sold and a new house for a curate (which in
1960 became the rectory house) was built in Broadwell, on the south-east edge of the village. (fn. 263)
Apart from the normal dues, the rector had to pay
out of his estate the combined pension of £6 and
the salary for the chaplain at Adlestrop. After the
Dissolution the pension evidently passed with the
advowson, being sold with it in 1627, (fn. 264) and it was
still paid to the lord of Adlestrop manor in 1775. (fn. 265)
The chaplain's salary in 1535 was £5 6s. 8d. (fn. 266) The
salary of the curate for Adlestrop in the 17th
century is not known. In the 18th century and early
19th Broadwell and Adlestrop each had a curate,
the curate at Broadwell receiving £32 a year in
1738 (fn. 267) and £105 with residence in 1864. (fn. 268)
There are indications that the medieval rectors
regarded the living rather as a source of income than
as a pastoral cure and were often non-resident:
most rectors held the living only a short time, (fn. 269) and
in 1300 the bishop considered ordaining a vicarage
for Broadwell. (fn. 270) Thomas Banbrook, rector from
before 1532 (fn. 271) to 1571, employed curates in the
parish, and c. 1563 the bishop 'granted a preacher to
declare and teach the word of God' at Broadwell. (fn. 272)
Banbrook's successor, described variously as a good
Latinist and divine, (fn. 273) and as neither a graduate nor a
preacher though a conformist with only one benefice, (fn. 274) had two curates in 1572, (fn. 275) presumably one
each for Broadwell and Adlestrop, and he was succeeded in 1598 by a former curate, John Tidmarsh, (fn. 276)
who was apparently connected with the yeoman
family of that name in Broadwell. (fn. 277) John Allibond,
a scholar of some note, was rector from 1636 until
his death at Broadwell in 1658. (fn. 278) His successor
built or rebuilt the glebe house at Adlestrop, (fn. 279) and
from then Broadwell was served by a succession of
curates, who lived in the parish from 1841 but not
always before, (fn. 280) until the last of them became
rector in 1960. (fn. 281)
In 1750 there were said to be 'full services' at
Broadwell church, (fn. 282) and in 1790 there were two
services each Sunday and Holy Communion four
times a year, with 10–20 communicants. (fn. 283) In 1851
the combined attendance of morning and evening
service, excluding the 50 Sunday school children,
was c. 150, (fn. 284) the whole population being nearly
400. (fn. 285) In the next few years a wider use of music and
ritual in the form of service roused the opposition of
at least two prominent (and eccentric) inhabitants. (fn. 286)
The church of ST. PAUL is built of stone with
a Cotswold stone roof. Although considerably restored in the 19th century its ground-plan, except
for the vestry on the south side of the chancel, is the
same as that of the medieval building, and comprises chancel, nave, south aisle, south porch, and
west tower.
Apart from one of three pieces of stone standing
in the porch, carved with what appears to be Saxon
decoration, (fn. 287) the oldest part of the fabric is Norman.
In the chancel the 12th-century fabric survives up
to the level of the stringcourse, and there is a restored round-headed narrow window in the north
wall. When the church was restored in the 1860's
Romanesque pilasters (fn. 288) were removed and roundheaded windows of two lights in the south, north,
and east walls (fn. 289) were replaced by windows in the
Decorated style. In the south wall is a reset trefoilheaded 13th-century piscina. On the north and east
walls there are shallow buttresses. The nave was
also 12th-century in origin. Until the 1860's the
north wall had three round-headed windows of two
lights and a doorway with a small tympanum (fn. 290) that
has been reset over the doorway to the stair-vice of
the tower. The rebuilt north wall has four windows
in the Decorated style, and the roof of the nave may
have been made higher. (fn. 291) Before rebuilding there
was a small dormer window, close to the tower,
facing north. (fn. 292) The chancel arch and south arcade
of four bays were built in the early 13th century,
plain in style and with mouldings of two orders,
presumably at the time the south aisle was added.
The nave arcade rests on cylindrical piers with
moulded capitals and bases. Immediately south of
the chancel arch is a large opening or squint, either
restored or modern. The 13th-century south doorway to the aisle has a hoodmould and a small
scratch-dial beside it, (fn. 293) and to the west is a narrow
lancet. The 14th-century east window of the aisle is
of two trefoil-headed lights with tracery, and at the
east end of the south wall is a similar but larger and
square-headed low side window. Windows of two
and four round-headed lights were made in the west
wall and the south wall (east of the doorway) in the
17th century, perhaps at the same time as the porch
was added, with its round-headed archway with
hoodmould. The east end of the aisle was formerly
a proprietary chapel belonging to the manor, and in
the reveal of the low side window is set a restored
piscina. The ownership of the chapel descended
with the Hodges moiety of the manor, (fn. 294) and the
aisle east of the door remained cut off from the rest
of the church by a low wall until 1866. (fn. 295) The embattled 15th-century tower, centred on the axis of
the nave, is of three stages, with buttresses at the
western angles. The lowest stage has a restored 15thcentury west window of two lights with tracery and
hoodmould, the middle stage has a lancet on the
south face, and the top stage has a two-light louvred
window with hoodmould on each face. The stairvice at the north-east corner is rectangular on plan,
and is lit by small rectangular openings.
The church was pewed shortly before 1725, (fn. 296) and
repewed in the 1860's. (fn. 297) An organ was installed in
1884. The font is of the early 15th century. The
monuments include an alabaster group of effigies of
Herbert Weston (d. 1635) and his wife and child,
removed from the north wall of the chancel to the
aisle; (fn. 298) a mural slab to Robert Hunks (d. 1588) (fn. 299) on
which the inscription has been recut; floor and
mural slabs to members of the Barker and Hodges
familes; (fn. 300) and a mural slab to H. P. Cholmondeley,
rector 1852–1905, who was responsible for the
restoration of the churches at both Broadwell and
Adlestrop. (fn. 301) In the churchyard below the east end of
the chancel is a group often 'woolpack' altar-tombs
of the early 17th century, nearly all bearing the arms
(a fess dancetty) of the Chadwell family. Apart
from the sanctus bell of 1672, probably all five bells
were first cast in the mid-18th century; three, including two blank bells, were recast in 1884 and
1908, and one remains blank. (fn. 302) In 1680 the church
possessed a flagon, plate, and ring of pewter,
and a silver communion chalice. (fn. 303) None of this
remains: there is a chalice and paten-cover of 1717,
and the rest of the plate is of the later 19th century. (fn. 304) The parish registers run from 1539, with
gaps for 1642–59, 1673–96, and (for marriages)
1753–4. (fn. 305)
The church was formerly endowed for repairs
with three cottages and land, all let in 1683 for
11s. 6d. (fn. 306) The cottages may have been some of the six
later used for the poor. (fn. 307) The land was exchanged at
inclosure in 1793 for a little over half an acre, (fn. 308) from
which in 1952 15s. a year was added to the church
funds. (fn. 309)
Nonconformity.
In 1676 there were said to
be seven Protestant dissenters and one papist in
Broadwell, (fn. 310) and in 1735 two Presbyterians and a
Quaker. (fn. 311) A Baptist meeting was licensed in 1742, (fn. 312)
and it is possible that the house registered as a
Protestant meeting in 1840 (fn. 313) was for Baptists, but no
Baptist meeting was recorded in 1851. (fn. 314) Methodists
had a licensed meeting by 1826, (fn. 315) and registered a
house as a meeting in 1831. (fn. 316) In 1851 this meeting,
served by the minister of Chipping Norton, had an
attendance of c. 40. (fn. 317) In 1901 a Baptist chapel was
built, (fn. 318) a small stone building at the east end of the
village. The congregation, which numbered about
ten in 1960, was then served from Stow-on-theWold once a month. (fn. 319)
Schools.
A Sunday school in Broadwell was
recorded in 1790. (fn. 320) By 1818 there was a girls' day
school and a boys' Sunday school, each with about
30 pupils. (fn. 321) The day school, taught in a cottage
known as the College opposite the eastern end of the
green, (fn. 322) was supported by voluntary contributions,
and in 1833 had 13 boys and 20 girls. At the same
date there were Sunday schools for 22 boys and 25
girls (fn. 323) which were endowed with £4 a year under the
will of Thomas Leigh, rector 1763–1813. (fn. 324) A new
schoolroom was built in 1851 in Kennel Lane. By
1869 it was a National school with a certificated
mistress teaching 23 boys and 31 girls, of whom 16
were less than 6 years old, in a single school-room.
Fees of 1d. 6d. were charged depending on the
father's occupation, and there was a teacher's house
adjoining the school. (fn. 325) The school was rebuilt in
1870, and enlarged to take 113 children in 1894.
Attendance rose from 75 in 1889 to 90 in 1906. (fn. 326)
In the 1950's the school assumed 'controlled'
status, and the children over 11 began to go to
school elsewhere. The staff was reduced from three
to two, and the number of children attending the
school in 1960 (including children from Donnington)
was under 50. (fn. 327)
Charities.
At inclosure in 1793 just over 8 a. by
Crab Orchard to the north of the village were
allotted to the poor of the parish to replace their
right to cut furze for fuel. (fn. 328) From 1793 to 1820 the
land was let in one piece for £24 10s. a year, a rent
that was sometimes paid by the tenant in coal. In
1832 the churchwardens made regulations for the
cultivation of the land as 41 allotments, to be let at a
total of £23 10s. (fn. 329) The allotments have been run by
the parish council since 1895; in 1922 they produced £14 15s., (fn. 330) and in 1960, when they were
almost all let as one piece, £30, distributed in coal to
old people of the village. (fn. 331) Frederick Payne, by will
proved 1874, gave £200 for coal for the poor; the
income from stock provided £4 17s. for this purpose
in 1934. (fn. 332)