AXFORD
Axford was the westernmost tithing of Ramsbury
parish, with downland on both sides of the
Kennet. Its north, south, and west boundaries
were those of the parish. Its east boundary with
Park Town tithing cannot now be precisely
plotted, but it passed a short distance east of
Axford, or Priory, Farm, and thence ran southsouth-west through Hens Wood and northnorth-west perhaps near the western edge of
Blake's Copse. (fn. 1) Within such boundaries, which
would have enclosed some 2,500 a., there were in
the Middle Ages almost certainly two tithings,
Axford to the west and Ashridge to the east. (fn. 2)
Axford village was presumably in Axford tithing
and on or near its present site. Ashridge tithing
presumably included the manor house and farmstead of Axford manor, Axford Farm, but since
the manor was never called Ashridge the tithing
may have taken its name from another hamlet,
possibly one on the high ground west of the valley
in which Burney or Upper Axford was so called
in the later 19th century. (fn. 3) The tithing included
land there (fn. 4) but the existence in the Middle Ages
of a hamlet there called Ashridge has not been
established. The tithings were merged in the
17th century. (fn. 5)
Axford was first mentioned in 1163. (fn. 6) In the
later Middle Ages and the 16th century it was
apparently a village of medium sized farmsteads, (fn. 7)
and it was of average wealth c. 1523. (fn. 8) Most of
its buildings are beside the Ramsbury-Marlborough road which, except at the east end of the
village, is on chalk, (fn. 9) but the oldest surviving,
Riverside House, the south range of the Red
Lion, and a pair of possibly timber-framed
cottages, all apparently 17th-century, are on the
gravel south of the road, a fact which suggests
that the focus of the village has moved north since
the 17th century. On the south side of the road
Church Farm was built near the west end of the
village c. 1830. It faces south and there are 19thcentury farm buildings south of it. At the east end
of the village is an 18th- or 19th-century thatched
cottage much enlarged. The Red Lion, extended
northwards in the 19th century, was an inn in
1867. (fn. 10) Also on the south side of the street are
several cottages, houses, and bungalows of the
19th and 20th centuries. On the north side of
the street there were a few buildings in the late
18th century and the early 19th: (fn. 11) apart from a
brick and thatched cottage possibly of the 18th
century at the west end, none survives. The
church, the school, and two nonconformist
chapels were built there in the later 19th century. Three estate cottages were built at the east
end c. 1900, 24 council houses in the earlier
20th century, and a few houses and bungalows
since then. Coombe Farm south-west of the
village was a farmstead in the early 17th century or earlier. (fn. 12) House Barn north-east of the
village was standing in 1773. (fn. 13) A house was
built before 1839 (fn. 14) and was enlarged in the 20th
century: in 1981 most of the farm buildings at
House Farm were 20th-century. Axford Street
was so called in 1727 when the road south of
the Kennet and parallel to it was called Mead
Lane. (fn. 15) The lane linking Axford Street and Mead
Lane near Church Farm crosses the Kennet
on an early 19th-century brick bridge of five
arches.
On the gravel near the Kennet between Axford
village and Ramsbury Manor there were in the
Middle Ages a manor house with a chapel and a
farmstead probably with a mill. (fn. 16) The single
inhabitant associated with Axford prebend in
1428 may have been the tenant of Axford Farm. (fn. 17)
In the 17th century there was a larger manor
house, possibly north-west of the farmstead, (fn. 18)
but settlement has never grown there and no
more than Axford Farm remains. A westward
diversion of the Axford-Ramsbury road west of
Ramsbury park between 1773 and 1828 isolated
it. In 1773 there was apparently no building at
Burney, where Burney Farm had been erected on
the east side of the Axford-Aldbourne road by
1828. (fn. 19) In the mid 20th century additional farm
buildings were erected on the west side of the
road. East of Burney Farm a farmstead called
Upper Axford, later New Buildings, was built
between 1839 and 1885. (fn. 20) Kearsdown Farm in
Sound Bottom was possibly built in the earlier
19th century: it was demolished in the mid 20th
century. (fn. 21) South of the river Coombe Farm was
the only house in the 20th century and possibly
much earlier.
There were 62 men living in Axford tithing in
1773. (fn. 22) The population rose from 428 to 485
between 1821 and 1841. (fn. 23)
Manors and Other Estates.
The
land of Axford, although sometimes referred to
as if the lord of Ramsbury manor also held a
manor of Axford, (fn. 24) was all part of Ramsbury
manor. (fn. 25) More than half the land was a freehold,
perhaps formerly the demesne, of that manor and
itself came to be reputed Axford manor. (fn. 26) The
remainder, held customarily, passed as part of
Ramsbury manor from the bishops of Salisbury
to Edward Seymour, earl of Hertford (d. 1552),
to the earls of Pembroke, and to Henry Powle
who sold more than half of it between 1677 and
1681. (fn. 27) The portion then unsold remained part of
Ramsbury manor: the portion sold then was
bought back in parcels by the lords of Ramsbury
manor in the 18th, 19th, and 20th centuries. In
1981 nearly all of both portions belonged to
Lady (Marjorie) Burdett-Fisher and Maj.
F. R. D. Burdett-Fisher. (fn. 28)
Between 1677 and 1681 Powle sold 13 of 22½
copyhold yardlands and 80 a. of 90 a. held by
lease. (fn. 29) A holding of 2¾ yardlands, later called
COOMBE farm, was bought by Thomas and
Simon Appleford in 1678. Simon Appleford (d.
1727), possibly the joint purchaser, devised the
land to Thomas son of Stephen Appleford. (fn. 30)
Thomas (d. 1763) was succeeded by his son
Thomas who in 1784 sold Coombe farm to his
own son Thomas (d. 1790). (fn. 31) That Thomas
Appleford devised the farm to his wife Mary for
her widowhood with reversion successively to his
father, his sister Mary Kemm, and Robert
Vaisey, apparently a relative. In 1804 Mary
Appleford and Thomas Appleford conveyed the
farm to Vaisey (d. 1834). (fn. 32) Vaisey's relict Elizabeth Vaisey held the farm, 244 a., until her death
in 1854 when it passed to her son Robert
Vaisey. (fn. 33) In 1886 Sir Francis Burdett bought
part of the farm, perhaps c. 100 a., from Vaisey
and added it to his other land in Axford. (fn. 34) The
descent of the remainder is not clear until 1929
when it was bought from the executors of
Frederick James Leader (d. 1927) by Percival
and John White. It was later assigned to Percival
(d. 1977), whose relict Dorothy White owned
Coombe farm, 132 a., in 1981. (fn. 35) Coombe Farm
is an early 17th-century timber-framed house
encased in brick in the late 18th century. The
north side of the house was heightened in the
later 19th century. Inside the house 16th- and
17th-century panelling has been reset. Farm
buildings mostly of the 19th century are around a
yard north of the house.
A holding of 2½ yardlands called STONE
LANE was bought in 1678 by Thomas Crosby
who by will dated 1683 devised it to his daughters
Anne and Mary. (fn. 36) One of the daughters married
Jonathan Knackstone (d. 1728). (fn. 37) A moiety
passed to Knackstone's daughter Mary and her
husband Thomas Appleford (d. 1763) and to
Thomas's son Thomas, and it became part of
Coombe farm. Knackstone devised the other
moiety to his granddaughter Mary Appleford
who in 1756 married Robert Vaisey of Stitchcombe in Mildenhall. (fn. 38) The moiety was apparently united with Coombe farm by Robert Vaisey
(d. 1834). (fn. 39)
In 1677 Thomas Whityeatt (d. 1679) bought
more than 3 yardlands later called RIVERSIDE
farm. (fn. 40) He was succeeded by his son Thomas
(d.s.p. a minor in 1691) and by his daughter Mary
(d. 1731), who in 1693 married John Moore
(d. 1696). (fn. 41) The estate, which was added to, (fn. 42)
passed, possibly soon after John's death, to
John's brother George (d. 1729). It passed from
father to son in the Moore family to George (d.
1748), Jonathan (d. 1818), George (d. 1820), and
George Pearce (d. 1884). By 1839 it had been
reduced to 59 a. (fn. 43) It was sold after the death of
G. P. Moore. In 1901 it was bought by Ellen Jane
Pegler and from her in 1920 by William Berryman, who in 1927 sold it to Sir Francis Burdett. (fn. 44)
The land belonged to the Burdett-Fishers in
1981. (fn. 45) Riverside House is an early 17th-century
timber-framed farmhouse which had a threeroom plan. A west wing incorporating a parlour
and a staircase, with woodwork of high quality,
was added c. 1700.
The freehold which became AXFORD manor
may have belonged to Ralph de Brewer in 1198. (fn. 46)
In 1200 he claimed to hold land in Dorset
through a grant by Jocelin de Bohun, bishop of
Salisbury 1142–84, to Richard son of Hildebrand, a claim disputed by the prebendary of
Axford, and his right to his Axford estate may
have arisen from a similar grant of the bishop's
demesne land in Axford. (fn. 47) In 1217 Ralph forfeited that estate for rebellion and Henry III
granted it to Roger de Clifford. (fn. 48) In 1250 it belonged to Robert of London and the name of his
successor, Hildebrand of London, (fn. 49) suggests that
it had descended to him from Jocelin's presumed
grantee. The manor, rated as 2 knights' fees, was
held by Hildebrand in 1275. (fn. 50) Hildebrand's son
Robert of London, a minor at his father's death,
entered on it in 1288. (fn. 51) His successor Hildebrand
of London held it in 1315. Hildebrand, who had
sons Robert and Richard and a daughter Maud,
then settled the manor on himself and his wife for
their lives and in succession on those three
siblings in tail. (fn. 52) Robert of London succeeded his
father between 1347 and 1366. (fn. 53) Richard seems
to have died without issue. (fn. 54) In 1367 Robert
settled the manor on himself and his wife Elizabeth for their lives with remainder to John
of Ramsbury and his wife Mabel, presumably
relatives of Maud who married Robert of Ramsbury. (fn. 55) In 1383, however, Robert of London
(d.s.p.) conveyed the manor to trustees who in
1391 settled it on his relict Elizabeth, daughter of
John Lovel, Lord Lovel (presumably him who d.
1347), with remainder to John, Lord Lovel (d.
1408), presumably her brother, and his wife
Maud in tail. (fn. 56) Elizabeth died before 1403 and
the Lovels entered on the manor, (fn. 57) successfully
resisting a challenge by Mabel of Ramsbury: (fn. 58)
Maud held the manor after her husband's
death. (fn. 59) In 1414 Maud (d. 1423) and her son
John, Lord Lovel, sold the manor to trustees,
apparently of Sir William Esturmy (d. 1427). (fn. 60)
Although in 1385 Thomas Calstone of Littlecote
had quitclaimed the manor to Robert of London's trustees, (fn. 61) in the 1420s the rights of
Esturmy, his trustees, and their grantee John
Esturmy were disputed by Calstone's son-in-law
William Darell of Littlecote, claiming his wife
Elizabeth Calstone's right as the great-granddaughter of Maud of London. (fn. 62) Arbitration was
arranged but the outcome is obscure. (fn. 63)
Axford manor was acquired by the Darells,
presumably by arbitration but possibly by judgement or purchase, and Elizabeth held it at her
death in 1464. (fn. 64) It descended like Littlecote
manor to her great-great-grandson Sir Edward
Darell (d. 1549), (fn. 65) who before 1548 conveyed it
to his wife's grandfather Sir William Essex as
security for payment of a legacy to her father
Thomas Essex (knighted in 1549). (fn. 66) Sir William
(d. 1548) devised the manor to his grandson
Edward Essex. (fn. 67) The death of Sir Edward
Darell, having devised much land to a mistress
and leaving his son William a minor, (fn. 68) and of Sir
William Essex at about the same time increased
the opportunity for further dispute over title to
the manor. It was later claimed that Thomas
Essex had refused Sir Edward Darell's proffer of
the legacy. In 1561, under duress it was claimed,
Edward Essex sold the manor to his tenant Hugh
Stukeley (d. c. 1588), against whom William
Darell later began proceedings for its recovery. (fn. 69)
Possibly to help him win the battle at law, which
was long and fought partly while he was in the
Fleet prison in 1579, (fn. 70) Darell seems to have
offered to sell the manor on its recovery to Henry,
earl of Pembroke, then owner of the copyhold
lands of Axford in Ramsbury manor. (fn. 71) Darell did
recover Axford manor, 'craftily' it was said. (fn. 72) He
may have entered on it before 1583 when he was
in dispute with Pembroke over the felling of its
trees but when actions at law were incomplete. (fn. 73)
In 1588, when Stukeley still hoped to recover it,
Darell sold it in reversion to Sir Francis Walsingham on terms similar to those of his sale of
Littlecote manor to Sir Thomas Bromley. (fn. 74) After
Darell's death in 1589 Walsingham entered on
the manor. He died in 1590 leaving as heir his
daughter Frances who in that year married
Robert Devereux, earl of Essex. (fn. 75) In 1601 the
rights to the manor of Walsingham's relict
Ursula and his daughter Frances and the claim of
Hugh Stukeley's son Thomas were bought by
Gabriel Pile (knighted in 1607). (fn. 76)
Axford manor passed at Pile's death in 1626 to
his son Francis (created a baronet in 1628, d.
1635), and afterwards to Sir Francis's sons Sir
Francis (d. c. 1649) and Sir Seymour (will proved
1681). (fn. 77) It descended from Sir Seymour to his
son Sir Francis and Sir Francis's son Sir Seymour. (fn. 78) In 1707 a Bill to permit the sale of
the manor was rejected by the House of Commons, and in 1708 a similar Bill, said to be
necessary to save Sir Seymour and his family
from starvation, was rejected by the Lords. (fn. 79)
Sir Seymour died in 1711 leaving a son Sir
Seymour no older than three. A Chancery decree
of 1714 or 1715 permitted a sale, and in 1719 Sir
Seymour's relict Jane, wife of Abel Griffith,
and brother Gabriel sold 279 a. of woodland
to Francis Hawes, a director of the South Sea
Company. (fn. 80) After the company collapsed the land
was confiscated by parliamentary trustees who in
1724 sold it to Richard Jones, lord of Ramsbury
manor. (fn. 81) In 1744 Sir Seymour Pile sold the
remainder of Axford manor to Jones's brother
William. (fn. 82) The whole of it descended with the
Axford part of Ramsbury manor, so that in 1981
nearly all the land of Axford belonged to the
Burdett-Fishers. (fn. 83)
Hildebrand of London (fl. 1275) seems to have
lived at Axford, (fn. 84) and his successors may have
until the late 14th century. John Esturmy was
said to be 'of Axford' in 1428. (fn. 85) In the 17th
century a large house was apparently built for the
Piles, presumably for Sir Gabriel Pile soon after
1601. It may have stood north-west of the
Londons' house, where a field still exhibits signs
of disturbance. The house, called Axford House
in 1701, (fn. 86) was in 1707 said to be too large for the
estate and to need repair. (fn. 87) Its demolition was
commissioned after the sale of 1744. (fn. 88) Thereafter
farmers lived in the Londons' house, Axford
Farm, as they may have done since the earlier
15th century. (fn. 89) The site of Axford Farm, where
Lady Burdett-Fisher lived in 1981, may have
been moated. The main range of the house is of
rubble with ashlar dressings. It has at its east
end a 14th-century chapel, now divided by an
inserted floor, and near its west end an elaborately
moulded late medieval roof truss which was
possibly at the centre of an open hall. A north
wing was added in 1660, (fn. 90) and the inside of the
main range has frequently been altered.
Although it was said in 1341 that tithes in
Ramsbury parish were paid to none but the
prebendary of Ramsbury and the vicar of Ramsbury, (fn. 91) in the later 15th century the prebend of
Axford was apparently endowed with tithes
arising from land in Axford. (fn. 92) The prebend was
valued at 32s. in 1226, £5 in 1291, and £4 or £6 in
1535. (fn. 93) In the late 15th century it was leased to
the Darells. (fn. 94) AXFORD PREBEND, whatever
its endowment, was acquired with Ramsbury
prebend by Edward, earl of Hertford, in 1545
and, since it was held by the Crown in 1567,
seems to have been given to the Crown with
Ramsbury prebend in 1547. (fn. 95) In 1571 Hugh
Stukeley claimed, perhaps unrealistically, all
tithes from Axford as part of Axford manor: (fn. 96) on
the other hand, in the early 17th century all tithes
of Axford were claimed as parts of Ramsbury
prebend and of the vicarage. (fn. 97) The evidence
suggests that the tithes arising from the land of
Axford manor belonged to Axford prebend while
the tithes of Ramsbury manor's land in Axford
belonged to Ramsbury vicarage and Ramsbury
prebend. At his death in 1626 Sir Gabriel Pile
owned Axford prebend and from then, if not
earlier, the land of Axford manor and its tithes
were merged. (fn. 98)
Economic History.
Axford was divided
lengthwise between to the west the lands of
Ramsbury manor in Axford and, more extensive,
to the east the lands of Axford manor: (fn. 99) until the
later 18th century the two parts were nowhere
merged for agriculture. Apart from woodland
nearly all the Ramsbury manor land was held
customarily. (fn. 100) The virtual lack of Ramsbury
manor demesne land, the great size of Axford
manor and its proximity to Ramsbury Manor,
and the clarity of the division suggest that Axford
manor originated in an early grant of a large
demesne farm by a bishop of Salisbury, possibly
Jocelin de Bohun, bishop 1142–84. (fn. 101) The lands
of both manors south of the Kennet were within
Savernake forest until 1228. (fn. 102)
The division of Axford between Axford manor
and Ramsbury manor may already have been
clear in the 1290s when Bishop Longespee
allowed Robert of London to have a chase
between their lands north of the road through
Sound Bottom. Robert's surrender in exchange
of his rights in a common pasture and waste (fn. 103)
perhaps completed the division. The land of
Axford manor was a strip, possibly as much as
1,500 a., extending from Whiteshard Bottom to
Hens Wood. Its eastern boundary with the
agricultural land in the north part of Park Town
tithing is obscure; further south Axford manor
marched with the old park north of the Kennet
and with the new park south of the Kennet
through Hens Wood. (fn. 104) Its western boundary
with the land of Ramsbury manor began where
the parish boundary makes a bend east of Mere
Farm in Mildenhall, ran SSE. to the east end of
Axford village, and south of the Kennet ran
SSW. towards Puthall Farm in Little Bedwyn. (fn. 105)
A large part of Hens Wood was apparently in
Axford: the lord of Ramsbury manor had over
5,000 trees in the Axford portion in the later 16th
century, and Axford manor included 279 a. of
woodland, mostly presumably there, in 1701. (fn. 106)
Axford manor was assessed as 4 carucates in
1331. (fn. 107) In 1403, and presumably much earlier, it
consisted of demesne and customary land. The
demesne was in hand. It included sheephouses
and folds said to be at Axford and Ashridge, a
several pasture, woodland, and a rabbit warren.
The customary tenants had a common pasture. (fn. 108)
In the mid 16th century free fishing in the
Kennet and free warren were claimed for the
manor. (fn. 109) The demesne was apparently in hand in
1589 when wheat was sold for £31 and £5 2s. 2d.
was paid in wages in 6 months. A reference of
1590 is the last to a copyhold of Axford manor. (fn. 110)
In 1707 the woodland was in hand. All the
agricultural land, possibly over 1,000 a., was then
held by lease as a single farm. (fn. 111) After it was
reunited with Ramsbury manor in 1744 (fn. 112) Axford
farm was leased to William Cox, who was ejected
in 1755 for arrears of rent and for leaving the land
uncultivated. (fn. 113)
The customary tenants of Ramsbury manor in
Axford held the strip of land, possibly 750 a., at
the west end of the parish. They cultivated it in
common until it was inclosed by private agreement in 1727. The arable land was in two fields.
North field, 280 a. between the Kennet and the
road through Sound Bottom, included 8 a.
between Axford Street and the river. South field
contained 194 a. south of Mead Lane. North of
North field Hillworth was a pasture for ewes and
cattle in the 16th century but was later ploughed,
and as the Heath, c. 63 a., became part of North
field. South of South field, adjoining Hens Wood
and Puthall farm, was a down, c. 74 a., apparently
for cattle. Between the fields a marsh and several
islands in the Kennet, c. 32 a., were commonable. (fn. 114) The meadows there may have been
watered in the mid 16th century. (fn. 115) North of
Sound Bottom and apparently adjoining Sound
Copse in Mildenhall was the site of Kearsdown
Farm, a croft called Caresden, within which
there was a rabbit warren: it had been inclosed
by the late 13th century. It was held customarily
and in 1462, when the rabbit warren was held
separately, was more than 50 a. (fn. 116) The rabbit
warren was last mentioned in the earlier 16th
century. (fn. 117) The copyhold was 'roofless' c. 1600:
part of the land was wooded until converted
then to arable. (fn. 118) Thereafter Caresden was added
to the other c. 40 a. of inclosures appended to
copyholds. (fn. 119)
The Axford tenants of Ramsbury manor held
22 yardlands and in the Middle Ages owed many
customary services. (fn. 120) By 1396 services from half
the holdings had been commuted, and it is
unlikely that many of the remainder were performed since the lord of the manor then had little
agricultural land nearby. (fn. 121) In 1462 rents totalled
£8 1s. 10d. There were twelve tenants and several
of the holdings were large: three holdings
exceeded 75 a. (fn. 122) In the mid 16th century the
yardlands were nominally 24 a. with the right to
feed 60 sheep and several other animals. (fn. 123) Pigs
were stinted at five to a yardland in 1633. (fn. 124) In
contrast with those holding in Ramsbury Town,
Whittonditch, and Eastridge tithings the Axford
copyholders, except one or two, held no land
elsewhere in the parish. (fn. 125) They were apparently
a small yeoman group of comparatively equal
resources many of whom, especially in the 17th
and 18th centuries, shared the name Appleford. (fn. 126)
In 1567 seven held between 50 a. and 100 a., four
between 25 a. and 50 a., all with pasture rights. (fn. 127)
After the period 1677–81 the 13 yardlands sold
by the lord of Ramsbury manor were mingled
with those still held by copy and lease in farms
which by 1727 had become fewer and larger. Of
c. 643 a. inclosed then c. 185 a. were copyhold and
leasehold, c. 458 a. freehold. There were holdings
of c. 205 a. and c. 154 a. possibly worked from,
respectively, the buildings near the river at the
east end of Axford Street which became Riverside Farm and others near the west end of the
street which became Church Farm. Coombe
farm, c. 120 a., had buildings south-west of the
village, but the other three holdings, each of
fewer than 60 a., presumably had buildings in the
street. (fn. 128)
In the later 18th century the Joneses, lords of
Ramsbury and Axford manors, divided Axford
farm into Burney or Upper Axford or New farm,
with buildings beside the Axford-Aldbourne
road, and Axford farm, and leased some land
with Stock Close farm in Aldbourne. (fn. 129) Of the
previously commonable land they took in hand
the copyholds and leaseholds and bought some of
the freeholds. (fn. 130) In 1839 Coombe, which had
grown by inheritance to 244 a., Riverside, 59 a.,
and a holding of 60 a. were the only farms not
owned and leased by their successor. Burney, 657
a., Axford, 519 a. including 117 a. of wood and
buildings at Axford Farm and House Farm, and
Church, 490 a. including a brick kiln near Hens
Wood and 121 a. of wood, were then the principal
farms in Axford: 97 a. of arable at Whiteshard
Bottom, 10 a. of meadow near Ramsbury Manor,
and 35 a. of Blake's Copse were separately leased,
possibly still as part of Stock Close farm. Of
c. 2,200 a. in Axford two thirds were arable. (fn. 131) In
1880 Church farm was 417 a. and Stock Close
farm included 142 a. in Axford. From 1885 to
1929 Axford, 709 a., and Burney, still 657 a.,
were leased with Park farm in Ramsbury, 807 a.,
to Henry Wilson and his sons. (fn. 132) In the mid 20th
century Burney, including New Buildings, and
Axford, including House Farm and Kearsdown
Farm, remained large and compact farms. (fn. 133) In
the later 20th century they and Church farm were
in hand: in 1981 c. 2,000 a. of agricultural land in
Axford and more in Aldbourne were used from
House Farm and Stock Close Farm for sheepand-corn husbandry. (fn. 134) Coombe was then a
separate farm. (fn. 135)
Ramsbury manor included a mill at Axford
in 1330, (fn. 136) but the only mill known to have
been there later was that of Axford manor at
Axford Farm, referred to in the mid 16th century and in the later 16th century when it was
leased. (fn. 137) It was mentioned in 1601, (fn. 138) but not
afterwards until 1839 when there was apparently
a mill on the site. (fn. 139) An undershot wheel survives
there.
For permission to inclose given by him as lord
of Ramsbury manor in 1727 those holding land in
the west part of Axford gave up the right to fish in
the Kennet to Richard Jones, who acquired the
remainder of the fishing in Axford with Axford
manor in 1744. (fn. 140)
Local Government.
Records of the
courts held in 1403 for Axford manor include
presentments by the homage, the bailiff, and
inspectors of carcasses. The courts protected the
lord's rights over his bondmen, customary
tenants, and pastures by ordering the return of a
bondman from Salthrop in Wroughton, binding a tenant to rebuild a house burned down
because of his negligence, listing payments for
pannage and agistment, and in other ways. (fn. 141)
Courts held for the manor in the later 16th
century possibly dealt only with copyholds since
then and later common husbandry in Axford was
regulated in Ramsbury manor court. (fn. 142) The
Axford tithingman attended and was appointed
at Ramsbury law hundred. (fn. 143)
Church.
A church at Axford, presumably a
chapel of ease, was recorded in 1288 as having
been used for baptism in 1267. (fn. 144) There is no later
reference to it. In the 14th century a chapel was
built at Axford Farm, presumably for private
use, and in the early 15th century the lord of
Axford manor paid yearly for right of burial at
Ramsbury. (fn. 145)
A chapel of ease dedicated to ST. MICHAEL
and served from Ramsbury was built at Axford in
1856. (fn. 146) In 1864 it was nearly always full for the
weekly services: communion was held on the
Sundays after Christmas and Easter and on
Trinity Sunday. There was no right of marriage
in it until 1940. (fn. 147) The chapel, designed by
William White, (fn. 148) is a plain rectangular building
of banded brick and flint with a slate roof. It has
19th-century plate (fn. 149) and no bell.
Nonconformity.
A house in Axford was
registered in 1818 for worship by dissenters. (fn. 150) In
1851 an Independent congregation of 35 was
served from Ramsbury on Census Sunday and by
1885 a Congregational chapel had been built
north of the street near the east end of the
village. (fn. 151) It had been closed and demolished by
1899. (fn. 152) A Methodist chapel west of the church
was opened in 1888. It had apparently been
closed by 1972. (fn. 153)
Education.
Children living in Axford
presumably attended Ramsbury or Mildenhall
schools until 1874 when the Ramsbury school
board built a school and schoolhouse in the east
part of Axford village. (fn. 154) Average attendance at
the school was 59 in 1906–7. It had fallen steadily
to 28 by 1927 and in 1931 the school was closed. (fn. 155)