GREAT AND LITTLE ABINGTON
The two parishes of Great and Little Abington, (fn. 1)
7 miles south-east of Cambridge, are divided by the
river Granta. Although their history is recorded
here in a single article, they were distinct parishes
and remain so. Great Abington, to the south, covers
1,588 a., Little Abington, to the north, 1,309 a. (fn. 2) The
southern boundary of Great Abington is also the
county boundary; the northern boundary of Little
Abington runs along the ancient Wool Street. To
the west both parishes are bounded by a branch of
the Icknield Way. The boundary between them
follows the river, diverging near the centre along a
former channel south of the main surviving stream.
The intermediate area was formerly Little Abington's Midsummer Meadow. (fn. 3) A modern channel,
south of the parish boundary, may have been made
or straightened c. 1710 to form a canal in the grounds
of Abington Hall. (fn. 4) Further west a channel north of
the boundary was made in the 1650s to draw off water
for the Babraham water-meadows. (fn. 5)
The soil of both parishes lies mainly upon chalk,
overlaid upon the high ground near the county
boundary with boulder clay, and in the north part
of Little Abington with glacial gravels. Along the
river runs a broad strip of alluvium and gravel. The
ground there is predominantly level at about 100 ft.
Further south it swells gradually and then more
rapidly to a down of over 300 ft. The Brent Ditch (fn. 6)
runs from Pampisford diagonally across the southwestern corner of Great Abington. To the north the
ground rises to a plateau of over 200 ft. covering
much of the north part of Little Abington. Both
parishes have been predominantly agrarian. Their
open fields were inclosed under Acts of 1801.
Great Abington parish is comparatively well
wooded. In 1086 it had woodland for 20 pigs. (fn. 7) By
the southern boundary lay until after 1700 a demesne
wood of the earls of Oxford, perhaps once part of
a continuous belt of woodland along the ridge, and
called by 1200 Abington grove. (fn. 8) It was said to cover
28 a. in 1263 (fn. 9) and c. 53 a. about 1600. (fn. 10) It suffered
much in the Middle Ages from tenants seeking firewood and building materials there, (fn. 11) who claimed
a right to gather rods to thatch their tenements. (fn. 12)
Lessees of the demesne also often neglected to keep
it adequately fenced, or overcropped the timber. (fn. 13)
In 1716 the enclosure in which the wood lay contained 66 a., (fn. 14) but it was probably cleared soon after,
for c. 1726 it was spoken of as partly pasture. (fn. 15) By
1801 only 10½ a. of wood, called Bush Park, survived
at its north-western corner, the remainder, called
the Great Park, being under grass. (fn. 16) By the late 19th
century there was a smaller wood of 13 a. further
north, called South grove. The park around Abington Hall, c. 87 a. in 1929, was and remains well
stocked with trees. (fn. 17) Little Abington, although containing woodland for 20 pigs in 1086, (fn. 18) was later
less wooded; after inclosure small plantations,
amounting by 1929 to c. 35 a., were made. (fn. 19)
The population of Great Abington has generally
been larger than that of Little Abington, although
in 1086 there were 16 peasants and 4 bondmen in
Little Abington and only 14 peasants in Great
Abington. (fn. 20) In 1279, however, Great Abington included c. 48 tenants, Little Abington only c. 35. (fn. 21)
In 1327 the former contained 37 taxpayers, the
latter 27. (fn. 22) Later Little Abington's population was
for some time only half that of Great Abington,
where there were 96 adults in 1377 and 19 people
taxed in 1524. Great Abington had 32 families in
1563 and 205 inhabitants in 1686. In contrast Little
Abington contained 45 adults in 1377, 7 taxpayers
in 1524, and only 15 families in 1563. (fn. 23) By the late
17th century its population was about two-thirds of
Great Abington's. Thus in 1676 there were 53 adults
there, compared with 82 at Great Abington. (fn. 24) In
1728 Great Abington had 47 families with 222 members, Little Abington 32 with 168 members. (fn. 25) Great
Abington's population rose from 274 in 1811 to 382
by 1831, but thereafter fell almost continuously to
331 in 1851, 279 in 1881, and 219 in 1921. Little
Abington's increased from 168 in 1811 to 307 by
1851 and in 1871 at 339 exceeded Great Abington's,
but fell by 1881 to 264 and had declined to 188 in
1931. Following new building, numbers at Great
Abington more than doubled to 503 in 1951 and
690 in 1971, when those at Little Abington were
341. (fn. 26)
Until modern times most of the dwellings in the
two villages of Great and Little Abington lay along
a street that runs south from the main Cambridge–
Linton road north of the river. (fn. 27) A hump-backed
bridge, probably late-19th-century and bombed in
1940, (fn. 28) used to carry the street across the river. In
Great Abington many timber-framed and thatched
cottages survive along the street. In each village the
church stands west of the street, and in Little
Abington the original settlement turned along a lane
leading towards the church. (fn. 29) In 1666 Little Abington contained c. 20 houses, and there were 48 in
Great Abington in 1686. (fn. 30) Except for the Hall and
the inns at Bourn Bridge, where the Icknield Way
crosses the Granta, there were no dwellings far from
either village until farmsteads were built in the fields
after inclosure. About 1800, when the villages were
very overcrowded, many cottages being doubly and
trebly tenanted, (fn. 31) there were 34 houses in Little
Abington and 47 in Great Abington. The number of
inhabited houses in Great Abington remained constant between 1821 and 1921 at between 60 and 70.
At Little Abington it had risen from 47 in 1821 to
70 by 1871, but fell to 55 in 1931. (fn. 32) Thereafter
both villages expanded. In Great Abington from the
1930s the Land Settlement Association built c. 45
houses to a standard design along roads laid out
across the middle of the parish. (fn. 33) After 1950 several
housing estates, partly council built, partly speculative, were built around closes east of the high street,
raising the number of dwellings from 137 in 1951 to
203 in 1971. In Little Abington c. 45 more expensive
houses in large gardens were laid out along the Cambridge road and, in the 1960s, along Bournbridge
Road, north-east of the church. The village had
85 houses in 1951, 130 in 1971. (fn. 34) Many timberframed, thatched cottages at the heart of the village,
sold from the Hall estate in 1930, were bought in
1954 and renovated by the Cambridgeshire Cottage
Improvement Society. (fn. 35) Two were converted into
a studio pottery. (fn. 36)
The Three Tuns in Great Abington village, a
17th-century building, was open, possibly in 1687, (fn. 37)
certainly by 1756. (fn. 38) From 1922 until after 1937 it
was run by the People's Refreshment House Association, a temperance organization. (fn. 39) It was still open
in 1973, as was the Crown in Little Abington, where
the Bricklayers' Arms, open in 1861, was sold in
1912, (fn. 40) and the Princess (later Prince) of Wales,
open by 1896, was closed c. 1963. (fn. 41)
The principal link with the outside world was
once the Cambridge-Linton road, north of the river,
called until the 18th century the Portway. (fn. 42) In Little
Abington three fieldways ran north towards Woolstreet Way. (fn. 43) From Great Abington the Broadway
ran south from the village street towards the wood
and village common, and Sawston and Whittlesford
ways ran across the parish. (fn. 44) The road through the
villages towards Hildersham and Linton was turnpiked in 1765, (fn. 45) several tollgates being put up on the
outskirts, (fn. 46) and was disturnpiked in 1876. (fn. 47) A bypass running north-east of the villages (fn. 48) was opened
in 1969. (fn. 49) The main road along the western boundary, between Stump Cross and Newmarket, was
a turnpike from 1724 (fn. 50) until 1870. (fn. 51)
On that road at Bourn Bridge, which existed by
1279, (fn. 52) an inn had been established north of the
bridge by 1687, when it had 9 beds and stabling
for 22. (fn. 53) The King's Arms, as it was called after
1700, was kept from c. 1703 to 1720 by William Cole,
father of the antiquary William Cole, who was born
there in 1714. After 1720 the inn was rebuilt in
brick on a larger scale to serve as a posting house.
County balls and assemblies were held there, J.P.s
and turnpike trustees convened there, fox-hounds
and beagles met there. For some time after c. 1750
the inn was eclipsed by the White Hart, south of the
bridge, which had gradually been enlarged from a
toll cottage by its tenants Robert Lagden (d. 1777)
and his wife Emma (d. 1781), who although a Quaker
was noted for her gallantries. Smuggled tea hidden
there may have given her son Jeremiah Lagden, a
substantial Little Abington landowner, a local reputation as a highwayman. The White Hart was closed
after 1797. (fn. 54) The King's Arms was closed shortly
before 1850 because of the advent of the railway.
Only its stables, converted into five cottages, survived in 1973. (fn. 55) The Cambridge-Haverhill railway
line, opened in 1865 across Great Abington parish
a little south of the village, was closed in 1967. (fn. 56)
In 1299 the earl of Oxford claimed free warren in
Great Abington under a charter of 1251. (fn. 57) His game
included hares, rabbits, and partridges, which his
tenants and even the vicar regularly poached. (fn. 58) In
the late 17th century John Bennet, then lord, tried
to establish a decoy pond. (fn. 59) His successors, the
Westerns, had put up a new dovecot by 1720, and
reserved in their leases all sporting rights, sometimes
let, as in the 1770s to Lord Grosvenor. (fn. 60) In the
1920s the parishes were said to produce up to 2,000
partridges in a season, up to 1,000 pheasants, and
hares. (fn. 61)
The village feast was held in the 19th century on
29–30 May, enlivened by the visits of travelling gipsy
showmen. (fn. 62) Ancient harvest customs maintained in
the 1860s included adorning the last load of corn
reaped with branches and flowers and the traditional
horkeys or harvest suppers. (fn. 63) Cricket flourished at
Abington from that period, encouraged by the
squire, E. J. Mortlock, whose daughter, Mrs.
Mortlock, bought the customary cricket ground
north of the school for the village after 1930. (fn. 64) Great
Abington had a Working Men's Institute by 1896.
J. J. Emerson, owner of the Hall estate, built in 1909
a village institute, (fn. 65) which was used by the local
Working Men's Club until its dissolution in 1925 (fn. 66)
and was bought for the villages in 1954. (fn. 67) By 1907
Abington had a Rifle Association which was still
flourishing in the 1930s. (fn. 68) The picturesque quality
of Great Abington's main street was recognized in
1972 by putting all electrical cables underground. (fn. 69)
Manors and Other Estates.
Before the
Conquest King Edward's thegn, Wulfwin son of
Alfwin, held 6 hides at Great Abington, whose reversion he had promised to Ramsey abbey. The Conqueror, however, granted all Wulfwin's lands to
Aubrey de Vere, who in 1086 held the whole township, (fn. 70) which descended to his heirs male, later earls
of Oxford, (fn. 71) as the manor of GREAT ABINGTON. Aubrey had also before 1086 seized ½ yardland previously held by Almar, a sokeman of King
Edward, but Picot the sheriff recovered it from him,
and held it on the king's behalf in 1086. (fn. 72) Half a
yardland was farmed from the Crown in 1166 by the
sheriff, (fn. 73) and from 1176 until after 1216 by Simon
the clerk. (fn. 74) By 1230 it had been incorporated in the
principal manor. (fn. 75)
The earls of Oxford retained that manor with few
interruptions until the late 16th century. (fn. 76) The whole
manor was frequently assigned to dowagers, who
often held it for long periods. Thus Alice, widow of
Earl Aubrey (d. 1214), had it until after 1244; (fn. 77)
Alice, widow of Earl Robert (d. 1296), until 1312; (fn. 78)
and Maud, widow of Earl Thomas (d. 1371), until
1413. (fn. 79) The dowagers are said to have used the
manor-house as a dower-house. (fn. 80) The reversion of
the manor, forfeited in 1388 by the condemnation
of Earl Robert, Richard II's favourite, was restored
to Robert's cousin and heir Richard in 1406. (fn. 81)
Richard's son John, a Lancastrian, was executed in
1462, and the manor was granted to Richard, duke
of Gloucester. (fn. 82) John's son John, a minor, was
restored in 1463, (fn. 83) but forfeited his lands in 1471,
whereupon Great Abington was again given to
Gloucester, (fn. 84) who as Richard III granted it in 1484
to Sir Robert Percy. (fn. 85) Earl John was restored by
Henry VII in 1485. (fn. 86) On his death in 1513 the
manor, always previously considered to be held in
chief, (fn. 87) was erroneously stated to be held of the
honor of Boulogne, (fn. 88) a mistake that persisted. (fn. 89)
John's nephew and heir John died in 1526, and from
then to 1559 his wife Anne held Great Abington in
dower. (fn. 90) The heir male Edward, earl of Oxford, who
came of age in 1571, had sold Great Abington manor
by 1578 to Robert Taylor of Babraham, (fn. 91) who in
1590 also purchased Little Abington, (fn. 92) the two
manors afterwards descending together.
Robert Taylor died probably in 1596. (fn. 93) In 1599
his successor Robert Taylor sold both manors to Sir
John Spencer (fn. 94) (d. 1610), the London financier
whose daughter and heir Elizabeth married William,
Lord Compton, created earl of Northampton in
1618. The earl died in 1630 (fn. 95) and his wife in 1632.
Their son Spencer, the royalist earl, was killed in
battle in 1643. His son Earl James, (fn. 96) fined as a
royalist in 1651, (fn. 97) in 1652 sold the Abington manors,
then occupied by his mother Mary, (fn. 98) to John
Bennet, (fn. 99) a cousin of the owners of Babraham. (fn. 100)
Bennet died in 1663, leaving Little Abington to his
young son John and Great Abington for life to his
wife Elizabeth, who released her interest to her son
in 1678. The younger John died in a debtors' prison
in 1712, leaving one son, John, who was dead without issue by 1720. His father had in 1690 mortgaged
most of the Abington estate to Thomas Western, (fn. 101)
a wealthy London ironmonger, who took possession
in 1697. At his death in 1707 Western left his interest
to his third son Maximilian, (fn. 102) who foreclosed in
1709 (fn. 103) and died in 1720. (fn. 104) After the estate had been
many years in Chancery (fn. 105) Maximilian's son Thomas
bought out the rights of Bennet's heirs-at-law in
those properties at Abington mortgaged to others. (fn. 106)
Thomas Western died in 1754, leaving both manors
to his eldest son Thomas (fn. 107) (d. 1781). (fn. 108) Thomas's son
and heir, the Revd. Charles Western, sold the estate,
apparently in 1784, to James Pierson, (fn. 109) a London
merchant, who resold it in 1800 to John Mortlock, (fn. 110)
the Cambridge banker and boroughmonger. (fn. 111)
Mortlock died in 1816, leaving the estate to his
second and fourth sons, Thomas and Frederick
Cheetham Mortlock. (fn. 112) Frederick resigned his interest c. 1820 and died in 1838. His son John
Frederick asserted that his uncles had cheated him
out of his inheritance, pursued them with lawsuits
and pamphlets, and was transported in 1843 for
shooting at his uncle E. D. Mortlock, vicar of Great
Abington. (fn. 113) Thomas Mortlock died in 1859, leaving
his property to his nephew Edmund John Mortlock (fn. 114)
(d. 1902), who sold the estate in 1901 to John James
Emerson (d. 1918). (fn. 115) Emerson later bought the lay
rectory and vicarage lands, so uniting almost the
whole of both parishes in a single ownership.
When his son James John Emerson sold the estate
in 1929 several of the farms were acquired by their
tenants, including H. W. Cowell, who bought most
of the Great Abington property, c. 1,240 a. In 1936
he sold 690 a. of it to the Land Settlement Association, the owner in 1973. About 490 a. in Little
Abington were bought in 1929 by James Binney of
Pampisford Hall. Abington Hall and the Hall farm,
with the lordship of the manor, were acquired by
Julius Bertram, (fn. 116) a London solicitor (d. 1944); (fn. 117) the
Hall and 24 a. were sold in 1946 to the British
Welding Research Association, the owner in 1973. (fn. 118)
Abington Hall stands a little west of Great Abington village and presumably on the site of the medieval
manor-house of the earls of Oxford, which c. 1350
included a hall and possibly a chapel. (fn. 119) In 1417 the
dowager countess Alice had a hall and two solars
demolished; (fn. 120) a house called the knight-chamber,
ruinous through its neglect by the earl's farmers,
was repaired c. 1432. (fn. 121) The Bennets had a substantial
house there, with 24 hearths in 1664 (fn. 122) and consisting c. 1716 of five bays. About 1712 Maximilian
Western did much rebuilding, put up the stables,
and began to lay out an ornamental canal. (fn. 123)
The house was incorporated, probably in the late
18th century, in a three-storey building of nine
bays, in red brick with stone dressings. It has a
north porch with Roman Doric columns, and a pedimented south front with an iron verandah at ground
level. Inside much late-18th-century decorative
work survived in 1951, including doorheads and
fireplaces. The hall had a screen with Tuscan
columns, the former dining room a similar screen.
The Westerns and their successors usually let the
house from c. 1770 to after 1900, (fn. 124) the tenants
including Sir Sampson Gideon, Bt., in the 1770s, (fn. 125)
the earl of Chatham up to 1820, and Lord Maryborough, the duke of Wellington's brother, c. 1822. (fn. 126)
The Emersons lived at the Hall, but it was empty in
1937. (fn. 127) The British Welding Research Association
converted the Hall into flats and offices and the
stables into workshops, and in the 1950s built two
laboratories there. (fn. 128)
The Mortlocks usually lived at Abington Lodge,
which stands just south of the bridge. It was built
or rebuilt by Capt. Roger Sizer (d. 1724), tenant of
the largest farm, and bought c. 1730 by Col. Vachell,
who enlarged it substantially. (fn. 129) The interior contains a large, earlier fireplace. The house stands in
landscaped grounds, once covering 22 a. From 1775
to 1780 Lord Grosvenor used it as a shooting-box. (fn. 130)
It was bought in 1812 from Frances, widow of
Thomas Holt (d. by 1800), by John Mortlock, (fn. 131)
whose grandson E. J. Mortlock lived there and left
it at his death in 1902 to his daughter Alice Mortlock (d. 1950). (fn. 132)
Five hides at Little Abington held by Eddeva the
fair before the Conquest had by 1086 been granted
with her other lands to Count Alan, lord of Richmond, (fn. 133) with which honor the overlordship subsequently descended. (fn. 134) Another hide, held of Eddeva
by a priest who could not withdraw himself without
leave, had been seized by 1086 by Aubrey de Vere,
although Count Alan maintained his claim. (fn. 135) By the
mid 12th century LITTLE ABINGTON manor
was held of the earls of Richmond by Alan son of
Emery, among whose heirs it was later disputed. (fn. 136)
About 1195 Simon le Bret, who had inherited land
from Alan at Ainderby (Yorks. N.R.), sued Hamon
and William, sons of another Alan and apparently
grandsons of Alan son of Emery, and John de Lanvaley, probably their cousin, in the Richmond
honorial court for 5 hides at Little Abington, of
which John held 1¼ hide. Hamon and William lost
their shares by default. (fn. 137) After they had released
their interests to John, he sued Simon in 1199 for
the 5 hides of the manor, which Simon later claimed
to hold in pledge. (fn. 138) In 1201 Simon agreed to release
the half of the manor which he then held as ½ knight's
fee to John's kinsman William de Lanvaley (fn. 139) (d.
1204). (fn. 140) The same year William, or his son and heir
William, entailed the other half, to be held of him
as ½ knight's fee, upon John, (fn. 141) who died without
issue after 1214. John's wife Christine probably
retained a life-interest (fn. 142) until c. 1229, when the
manor had reverted to Hawise, daughter and heir
of the younger William de Lanvaley (d. 1217), whom
her guardian the justiciar Hubert de Burgh had
married by 1227 to his son John. (fn. 143) By 1236 John de
Burgh had subinfeudated the manor to his follower
Hugh de Vaux. (fn. 144) John died in 1274 and his son and
heir John, (fn. 145) implied as overlord in 1279, (fn. 146) died in
1280, whereupon his lands were divided between
two daughters as coheirs. (fn. 147) None of their descendants, however, is recorded to have had any rights
over Little Abington. In 1248 Hugh de Vaux settled
the reversion of his estate on his nephew William de
Vaux (fn. 148) (d. by 1251). (fn. 149) William's heir was his brother
John, (fn. 150) described as mesne lord in 1279. (fn. 151) On John's
death in 1287 only the advowson of Little Abington
was included in the partition of his lands among his
daughters and coheirs. (fn. 152) In 1309 the manor was said
to be held of his elder daughter Parnel of Narford by
a nominal service. (fn. 153) Thereafter the rights of the
Vauxes, as of the Burgh coheirs, were forgotten,
and the manor was often stated to be held directly
of the honor of Richmond. (fn. 154)
Before 1276 John de Vaux had further subinfeudated Little Abington to Robert Tuddenham of
Ereswell (Suff.), who held it in demesne as 1 knight's
fee in 1279. (fn. 155) Robert died in 1309, leaving his lands
to his elder son Robert (fn. 156) (d. c. 1336), whose heir was
his brother Thomas's son Robert, then a minor. (fn. 157)
That Robert died in 1361 and was succeeded by his
son John. (fn. 158) Sir John Tuddenham died in 1392 and
his son and heir Robert (fn. 159) late in 1405. (fn. 160) Little
Abington was probably thereupon included in the
dower of Robert's wife Margaret, for her second
husband, Thomas Misterton (d. 1434), (fn. 161) was said
to be lord in 1428. (fn. 162) On Margaret's death the manor
passed to Robert's eldest surviving son Thomas. (fn. 163)
Sir Thomas Tuddenham, a prominent Lancastrian,
was beheaded for conspiracy in 1462. (fn. 164) His lands,
including Little Abington, were restored in 1465 to
his sister and heir Margaret, widow of Edmund
Bedingfield. (fn. 165) After her death in 1476 they descended
to her grandson Edmund Bedingfield, (fn. 166) who died
holding the manor in 1496. (fn. 167) Under his will the
manor passed on his widow Margaret's death in
1514 to his second son Robert, (fn. 168) who died as rector
of Oxburgh (Norf.) in 1539, (fn. 169) whereupon it went
to a third son, Sir Edmund Bedingfield (fn. 170) (d. 1554), (fn. 171)
who settled it on his fifth son Edmund. Edmund
died in 1565, leaving it to his wife Grace (fn. 172) who with
her second husband, James Taverner, sold twothirds in 1568 to George Fuller, (fn. 173) rector of Hildersham (d. 1591). (fn. 174) In 1582 Edmund's son Christopher
released the remaining third to Fuller. (fn. 175) In 1590
Fuller sold the manor to Robert Taylor, already
lord of Great Abington, who also acquired c. 140 a.
in Little Abington and elsewhere in 1591 from
Fuller's brother John and from Francis Robinson. (fn. 176)
His manors and other acquisitions afterwards
descended together. No evidence has been found
giving the site of Little Abington manor-house.
Two fees in Little Abington were separated from
the chief manor in the 13th century. One, perhaps
that held c. 1236 by Hervey Fitz Pain, (fn. 177) whom
Simon son of Simon le Bret had unsuccessfully sued
for a carucate there in 1214 and 1235, (fn. 178) was said in
1279 to be held of the heirs of Hugh of Windsor,
tenants under John de Burgh, by John Gerunde who
occupied 100 a. in demesne. (fn. 179) John was succeeded
between 1284 and 1302 by Richard Gerunde. (fn. 180)
Richard or a namesake and his wife Alice had 114 a.
settled on them in 1335, (fn. 181) which Richard held in
1346. He died after 1363. (fn. 182) The Gerunde fee may
eventually have come to the Bustelers and Paryses,
successively lords of Hildersham, (fn. 183) of whom land
at Little Abington, formerly of Richard Gerunde,
was held in 1512. (fn. 184) William le Busteler (d. by 1336)
had in 1309 been leasing Little Abington manor
from Robert Tuddenham, and was named as its lord
in 1316. (fn. 185) His son Robert owned land there, over
which he was granted free warren in 1336. (fn. 186) Land
at Great and Little Abington was included in the
estate which passed from the Busteler coheirs to
Robert Parys (fn. 187) and his descendants. In the early
16th century the Paryses owned a substantial estate
there called Westleys, (fn. 188) of which Sir Philip Parys
sold 160 a., probably the demesne, to John Chapman in 1554. (fn. 189) By 1600 Westleys, then c. 120 a.,
belonged to Edward Lucas of Thriplow (d. 1603),
who was succeeded by his wife. (fn. 190) In 1722 120 a.,
perhaps the same estate, belonged to Richard
Lucas. (fn. 191) The Paryses and their successors, however, retained after 1554 lordship over much freehold and copyhold land in Little Abington, usually
held to be attached to their manor at Hildersham,
which was therefore styled Hildersham with Little
Abington manor. (fn. 192) From 1801 to 1811 it was briefly
owned by John Mortlock, lord of the Abingtons. (fn. 193)
Another part of Little Abington continued, after
the lawsuit of c. 1200, to be held of Simon le Bret's
heirs. One William of Wissant then held of the chief
fee over 30 a. which his wife Helewise later, probably after 1227, gave in marriage with their daughter Maud to Robert Butler. Maud in her widowhood
granted the land to St. Radegund's nunnery, Cambridge, which held 60 a. in demesne in 1279. (fn. 194) The
nunnery retained the property until its suppression
in 1496, when its estates passed to the newly founded
Jesus College, (fn. 195) which held c. 80 a. at Little Abington in the 17th century and c. 63 a. in the 18th, (fn. 196)
for which 49 a. were allotted at inclosure in 1801. (fn. 197)
In 1813 the estate was exchanged for land at West
Wratting with J. C. Perne, impropriator of Little
Abington rectory, (fn. 198) with which the Jesus estate
thereafter passed.
In 1279 Waltham abbey (Essex) held of Robert
Tuddenham c. 90 a. in Little Abington, including
60 a. in demesne and half a mill. (fn. 199) The land had been
given by various tenants of the manor, including
Ralph son of Ernald who c. 1200 gave 30 a. that he
had held of William of Wissant. (fn. 200) The abbey apparently retained some land in the early 16th century,
which in the 18th was said to belong to Jeremiah
Lagden (fn. 201) (d. 1804). The 94 a. allotted for Lagden's
lands at inclosure (fn. 202) had by 1821 been combined with
Little Abington rectory estate. (fn. 203) Sawtry abbey
(Hunts.) in 1279 held c. 18 a. of Robert Tuddenham, (fn. 204) which had been sold by 1556 to George Gill. (fn. 205)
In 1279 Roger son of John and Richard of Bassingbourn held half a mill each and 85 a. and 53 a.
respectively in Great Abington, apparently following
the division of a larger estate, and in Little Abington,
as parceners, c. 155 a. (fn. 206) In 1324 240 a. in the Abingtons and Hildersham and half a mill were settled
on Roger of Abington with remainder to his son
Edmund (fn. 207) (d. before 1393). John Abington succeeded his father John in 1398 (fn. 208) and died in 1431,
when he held 80 a. in Great Abington. (fn. 209) In 1448 his
son John Abington sold that land to King's College,
Cambridge, (fn. 210) which c. 1640 owned c. 70 a. in Great
Abington and c. 67 a. in Little Abington. (fn. 211) At inclosure the college was allotted 56 a. in Great
Abington and 34 a. in Little Abington, (fn. 212) which it
sold to Thomas Mortlock in 1859. (fn. 213) Clare College
also had an estate in Little Abington, derived from
John Bolton's lands conveyed to feoffees for the
college in 1524. (fn. 214) The college was allotted c. 50 a.
at inclosure, (fn. 215) and in 1873 owned 55 a., then on
lease to E. J. Mortlock, who had bought the freehold
by 1900. (fn. 216)
Most of 1 hide at Little Abington, held in 1279 of
Robert Tuddenham by Robert Christian, (fn. 217) had by
1500 come to William son of John Mars, who held
two-thirds of it of the honor of Richmond, together
with other holdings called Leverers, amounting in
1540 to 170 a., and Willinghams, both held of John
Parys. Mars died in 1511 and his daughter and heir
Margaret (fn. 218) married Nicholas Smith (d. after 1538). (fn. 219)
Leverers belonged by 1602 to Sir John Spencer,
lord of the manor. (fn. 220) Willinghams, c. 80 a., was sold
in 1563 by Margaret Smith to Robert Chapman, (fn. 221)
who soon after sold it to Thomas Amy (d. 1583).
Amy's daughter and heir Joan (d. 1617) married
Robert Higham (d. 1609). Her son and heir James
Higham (fn. 222) (d. 1658) left his land to his daughter Amy
Smee whose son John Smee in 1688 sold part of it to
John Bennet the younger. (fn. 223) In 1730 certain trustees
sold 120 a. of Smee's estate, including Willinghams,
to Thomas Western. (fn. 224) By the mid 18th century only
one other large property still belonged to a locally
resident family, that of the Wards. John Ward, who
succeeded his father in 1760, left c. 90 a. on his
death in 1762 to his cousin Mary, wife of William
Fairchild; (fn. 225) she and her son Joseph were dead by
1804. Their lands, for which c. 125 a. were allotted
at inclosure, were conveyed in 1805 to Benjamin
Keene and in 1808 to William Sanxter. (fn. 226) By 1811
they had been annexed to the Mortlock estate. (fn. 227)
The impropriate rectories of Great and Little
Abington were sold in 1540 to Sir Philip Parys, (fn. 228)
after whose death in 1558 they passed in turn to his
grandson Robert (d.s.p. 1572) and his younger son
Ferdinand. (fn. 229) The latter sold them c. 1576 to Thomas
Dalton of Hildersham, already perhaps lessee of
Little Abington rectory. (fn. 230) On Dalton's death in
1602 Great Abington rectory passed to his youngest
son Thomas (fn. 231) (d. before 1619). His successor was
his eldest brother Michael's second son Thomas,
who died in 1639, leaving it to his son Michael, a
minor. (fn. 232) Michael was dead by 1656; his brother and
heir Richard Dalton (fn. 233) sold Great Abington rectory
in 1679 to John Bennet, lord of the manors, (fn. 234) with
which it descended thereafter. At inclosure c. 230 a.
were allotted for the rectorial tithes in Great Abington. (fn. 235)
Thomas Dalton (d. 1602) was succeeded in Little
Abington rectory by his eldest son Michael, (fn. 236) who,
having survived his eldest son Oliver (d. 1619),
settled it in 1639 on the marriage of Oliver's son
Michael to Susan Tyrell. (fn. 237) The younger Michael
was succeeded between 1647 and 1661 by his son
Tyrell Dalton (fn. 238) (d. 1682). (fn. 239) Tyrell's son Tyrell
(d. 1730) (fn. 240) sold the rectory with 50 a. in 1701 to John
Perne (fn. 241) (d. 1715). Perne's estate probably passed to
his son Chester Perne, who lived at Little Abington
and on his death in 1753 left his estates to the children of his brothers John (d. 1770) and Andrew
(d. 1772), both clergymen. (fn. 242) Andrew's son Andrew,
to whom 175 a. were allotted for rectorial tithes at
inclosure, was succeeded in 1807 (fn. 243) by his second
son, John Chester Perne (d. 1823). The next owner,
Andrew's widow Susan, said to hold the impropriation c. 1830, died in 1836. (fn. 244) By 1841 the Perne lands
belonged to F. P. Newcome. (fn. 245) In 1850 the rectory
estate, with the former Jesus College and Lagden
lands, was sold to Benjamin and Joseph Kent. (fn. 246) Benjamin owned the whole farm by his death in 1863.
His successor, Alfred Oslar Kent, died c. 1900,
whereupon it was sold to J. A. Wootten of Cambridge and resold in 1909 to J. J. Emerson, lord of
the manors. (fn. 247) When the manorial estate was broken
up in 1929, Lay Rectory farm, c. 370 a., was bought
by S. E. Franklin. (fn. 248)
Little Abington rectory house may have stood
just north of the bridge on the site of the Old House,
a timber-framed building probably of the 17th century, its front rendered in 18th-century style. It was
apparently occupied in the late 18th century by
Jeremiah Lagden, and was styled the rectory house
in 1850. (fn. 249) About 1951 it was bought by the marquess
of Cambridge, who lived there in 1973. (fn. 250)
Economic History.
The 6 hides at Great
Abington in 1086 included demesne land for 3
plough-teams, and there were 9 villani with land
for 5 plough-teams, and 5 bordars. The value of the
manor, apparently at farm, had been raised from £6
to £8 since 1066. Of the 5 hides at Little Abington
half was in demesne, with 3 plough-teams and 5 servi,
while 11 villani had 5 teams; the manor was worth
£10, as much as in 1066. (fn. 251)
At Great Abington the arable was probably being
extended up to the early 13th century when assarts
were recorded near Abington grove and Hildersham wood. (fn. 252) In 1279 of c. 1,080 a. of arable recorded, the demesne comprised c. 500 a. In 1263
it had been said to come to 241 a. 'on one side' and
455 a. 'on the other', but in 1296 included only 520 a.
Free tenants in 1279 held c. 250 a., of which 130 a.
were shared by Roger son of John and Richard
Bassingbourn, one man had 44 a. and two others
1 yardland each. Fourteen lesser freeholders had
only 36 a. between them, mostly in one-acre lots,
for which rents of 2s. an acre were usually charged.
About 300 a. were held in villeinage, including
16 half-yardlands of 16 a. Their holders were liable
to do 2 week-works throughout the year, and 5 a
week in harvest, besides 2 harvest-boons and averages. The 5 tenants of quarter-yardlands, each of
8 a., owed the same services, except that they and
the 5 cottars did only 1 week-work. Each half-yardlander had also to plough 7 a. a year for the lord. By
1279 week-works could be commuted at ½d. each, or
1½d. in harvest, and ploughing at 4d. an acre. The
reeve was excused his services during his year of
office. The lord could tallage his tenants at will. (fn. 253)
At Little Abington there was much more free
land. Robert Tuddenham's demesne included only
240 a. in 1279 (210 a. in 1309), and John Gerunde's
only 100 a., out of c. 1, 130 a. of arable. Neither
Gerunde nor St. Radegund's had any villeins, and
Tuddenham had only 4 half-yardlanders, with 60 a.
between them, and 1 cottar. Those tenants owed
2 week-works throughout the year and 3 by 1309,
except in harvest when they had to reap 10 a. each
and render a harvest-boon; they had also to plough
10 a. a year. The freeholders ranged from Robert
Christian, with 157 a. altogether, through 4 others
with over 120 a. between them, to 25 small tenants
sharing 180 a. A few freeholders had land in both
parishes. Most free tenants in Little Abington owed
scutage, sheriff's aid, and castle-ward pence to Richmond castle. (fn. 254)
Great Abington manor's yield of £30 in 1263 included £12 from rents. (fn. 255) The demesne was estimated
at 300 a. in 1331. (fn. 256) In 1371 it probably amounted
to 540 a., of which c. 360 a. were under cultivation
in any one year. (fn. 257) In 1350 94 a. out of 371 a. in the
sown fields were left unsown, and in 1366 78 a. of
362 a., on account of 'debility'. In the mid 14th century the lord received only a small cash profit from his
demesne farming, only £5 in 1349–50, compared
with £10 arising from rents and commutations.
Little corn was sold, what was not needed for seed
going in liveries to farm servants, who included
6 ploughmen, a carter, and a shepherd. The village
smith held his smithy by making the lord's ploughshares. Wheat, pigs, and poultry were delivered to
the lord's household when he was living near by.
Most profit probably came from the demesne flock:
in 1366 287 fleeces fetched £10. Timber was sold
from time to time: in 1350 16 a. of the wood were
sold for £28, perhaps to offset a decline in other
receipts caused by the Black Death, which had struck
the village severely. Five of 15 half-yardlands and
2 of 4 nine-acre 'warelands' had been thrown into
the lord's hands. Only 2 were soon re-let at rents.
Some holdings were still held on customary terms
in 1366, their works being used mainly for threshing
and thatching, and only a seventh of the works they
owed were commuted. Their harvest-boons were
exacted in full. Ten half-yardlands, however, and
all four smaller holdings were rendering no works,
being nominally in the lord's hands, and in practice
soon let for rents. (fn. 258) From the 1360s to the 1420s most
customary half-yardlands were usually let for terms
of 3–10 years; thereafter some prospective tenants
expected grants for terms of life. (fn. 259) The lord found
8 vacant tenements falling into ruin in 1418. (fn. 260) Some
neifs left the manor. A whole family fled c. 1393,
allegedly to escape maltreatment by the lord's
farmer, and in 1413 eleven neifs were known to be
absent. (fn. 261) From the 16th century copyholds were
regularly, as previously in practice, inherited by the
youngest son, or by daughters jointly; on transfer,
through death or otherwise, the lord received a fine
that was nominally arbitrary but usually of 1½ year's
rent. (fn. 262) The demesne had been put to farm by 1368
and remained at farm thereafter, (fn. 263) except between
1407 and 1411, when the bailiff cheated the lord,
sowing the lord's seed and using the lord's ploughs
on his own land. (fn. 264)
By the 14th century Great Abington was being
cultivated on a triennial rotation, (fn. 265) but it is unclear
how the various small furlongs and doles whose
names survive (fn. 266) were grouped together. About 1350
the demesne arable under cultivation was said to lie
in Hildersham field, Stocking, and Canonsdown, of
which the first and second were sown both with
winter crops (wheat, rye, and dredge) and with
barley, while spring corn (barley and oats) was sown
in the second and third. Similarly in 1366 barley
and dredge were sown in both winter and spring. (fn. 267)
About 1575 it was said that the ancient custom was
three sowings, for wheat and rye, for barley, and for
oats. (fn. 268) About 1600 the arable was apparently divided
into three large fields, West, Stumping Cross, and
Ditch fields, the last perhaps lying south of the Brent
Ditch. (fn. 269) In the late 16th century some men possessed
inclosed crofts within the common fields, and were
ordered not to sow them independently, but to
remove their fences and let beasts common there
when the field lay fallow. (fn. 270) The principal peasant
crop was usually barley: (fn. 271) c. 1620 one farmer had
sown 52 a. of barley and oats but only 12 a. of wheat
and rye. (fn. 272) From the early 16th century saffron was
also grown in the fields, and required protection
from commoning beasts. (fn. 273) Great Abington's
meadows along the river were liable to flooding. (fn. 274)
A permanent common, amounting c. 1600 to 60 a.,
lay next to Abington grove and was partly intercommonable with Hildersham. (fn. 275)
Great Abington usually supported many sheep.
In 1086 Aubrey de Vere had a flock of 120, and his
men were said to have driven away 380 sheep from
a half-yardland which he had usurped. (fn. 276) In 1347 the
village rendered 70 stone to a levy of wool, of which
44 stone came from 15 villagers charged with over
1 stone each, 15 stone from 38 others, and 11 stone
from the demesne, (fn. 277) on which c. 1350 there were
from 260 to 320 sheep. Sometimes sheep were
brought from the lord's other manors to feed at
Great Abington after harvest. (fn. 278) In 1575 the lord
was said to have a right to fold 500 sheep, (fn. 279) and in
1606 Sir John Spencer directed his lessee to keep
a sheep for every acre of his farm. (fn. 280) In the 15th century some villagers were keeping 100 or 120 sheep,
and c. 1433 a shepherd in charge of 600 trespassed
in the lord's wood. (fn. 281) Ancient rights of common and
foldage began to be reduced in the early 16th century: the King's College fold, claimed for 300 sheep,
was reduced in 1535 to 80 sheep, while Westleys was
restricted to 140 sheep-commons and the other
tenants to 200 altogether. The college's and Parys's
farmers were ordered not to take in strangers' sheep
while villagers were willing to make up numbers in
their folds from their own sheep. (fn. 282) Cattle were
stinted in 1560 at 6 for each plough kept, and in 1591
commoners were forbidden to take in outsiders'
cattle. (fn. 283) By 1679 copyholders were permitted to
keep only one sheep in the lord's fold for every 2 a.
they owned. The lord was still being requested to
provide a parish bull and boar in 1737. (fn. 284)
The fields of Little Abington were also divided
into relatively small blocks, some of which were called
fields. (fn. 285) By 1600 they were grouped into three, Mill,
Middle, and West fields. (fn. 286) The usual three-field
rotation was followed, barley, the principal crop,
being apparently sown in both the winter and spring
fields. By 1700 clover and sainfoin, and by 1748
vetches and lentils, had been added to the traditional
crops. (fn. 287) Saffron was probably grown on the Jesus
College estate from the late 15th century, (fn. 288) and the
vicar William Bolton (d. 1500) had saffron gardens
by the boundary with Babraham. (fn. 289) There was little
if any permanent common pasture. As at Great
Abington extensive rights of common were attached
to some ancient tenements: Willinghams with 80 a.
might pasture 80 sheep. (fn. 290) The village raised
71½ stone of wool for the levy of 1347, mostly from
villagers. (fn. 291)
In the early 16th century most of the land in
Great Abington outside the demesne was divided
among c. 17 copyholders, one or two of whom by
combining several half-yardlands occupied 50 a. or
more. (fn. 292) The largest free tenement, then owned by
King's College, was often leased to the lords of the
manor. (fn. 293) Few villagers were prosperous. Of 19 taxpayers in 1524 only John Martin, farmer of Westleys, was taxed at £5, the others being taxed at £2 or
less, and 16 at £1. (fn. 294) Among the more prominent
yeoman families were those of Bilduck, Beteyn, and
Amy, which flourished, the last in several branches,
in both parishes until the late 17th century. (fn. 295)
Robert Amy was lessee of Great Abington rectory
when he died in 1588. (fn. 296) About 1600, out of c. 370 a.
of copyhold, three Amys held c. 80 a., Robert Higham, successor by marriage to another Amy, held
53 a., Robert Beteyn held 73 a., and the remainder
was divided among 21 men, of whom 5 had over
20 a. each. Some 37 a. was held of the lord by tenants
at will or on lease. The demesne, besides 30 a. of
inclosed meadow, included 457 a. in the fields. (fn. 297) In
the early 17th century it included several middlesized farms, one of 123 a. near the wood, another of
c. 160 a. Sir John Spencer apparently kept the latter,
which included the land around the hall, in hand
for a time, converting a 40-a. close from tillage to
pasture. (fn. 298)
Little Abington, though less populous than its
neighbour, was perhaps more prosperous. Seven
people taxed there in 1524 had between them goods
worth £33, compared with £25 altogether at Great
Abington, (fn. 299) and under Charles II there were proportionately more dwellings with more than two hearths
at Little than at Great Abington. (fn. 300) By 1600, however,
Little Abington also was dominated by the demesne
land, then called Cardinals, which comprised c. 466
a., including 430 a. of arable, divided into two farms.
By then the lord also owned Leverers farm, c. 178 a.,
and thus controlled almost half the parish. Sir John
Spencer agreed c. 1600 to sell the land he owned
west of the Newmarket road to Sir Horatio Palavicino, (fn. 301) into whose Babraham estate it was thereafter
incorporated. From 1663 to c. 1765 the Bennets of
Babraham and their successors held the lease of the
Jesus College estate in Little Abington with other
land amounting to 140 a. (fn. 302) The number of substantial independent landholders in the parish declined
from about 10 in the early 16th century (fn. 303) to about
7 by the 17th (fn. 304) and only 3 in the mid 18th century,
as successive lords bought up more property. (fn. 305)
In 1653 the manorial estate included one substantial farm, perhaps in Little Abington, and six
smaller holdings. Some land in Great Abington may
have been in hand, for John Bennet the elder bought
farming equipment with the estate. (fn. 306) From the late
17th century the area in Great Abington under independent yeoman owners diminished as the manorial
estate was enlarged. John Bennet the younger began
from 1683 to buy copyholds amounting to c. 100 a.,
including land of the Smee, Amy, and Beteyn families. (fn. 307) He consolidated his demesne, presumably by
exchange and agreement, into large inclosed fields
covering most of the eastern half and southern end
of the parish. The western side and a few blocks
along the eastern edge were left divided in the traditional fashion into strips, shared among 13 owners.
The copyholders released their rights of common
over the newly inclosed fields in 1686, and the process had probably been completed by 1687. (fn. 308) In the
upshot, of a manorial estate amounting in 1716 to
636 a., c. 465 a. lay in the new inclosures and only 11 a.
in the uninclosed fields to the west. There were also
c. 70 a. of ancient closes around the Hall. (fn. 309) John
Bennet sowed sainfoin on c. 35 a. which he had kept
in hand. (fn. 310) He also installed engines c. 1690 to water
the grounds round the Hall and a 100–a. plot, but
his underground pipes broke. (fn. 311) His enterprises were
imprudently financed, (fn. 312) and he became bankrupt in
1697. The Great Abington estate included c. 1726
a great farm of 444 a. comprising most of the new
inclosures and farmed from New House farm, built
south-east of the Hall by 1716, another farm including c. 55 a. of pasture closes near the Hall and c. 35 a.
of arable run from the old farmstead east of the Hall,
and c. 60 a. of small holdings. The smaller farm,
called Hall farm, covered 200 a. by 1771. (fn. 313) Thomas
Western (d. 1754) went on buying out the copyholders, (fn. 314) and by 1800 the Hall estate included most
of the parish.
At Little Abington the land was still being farmed
in the customary open fields c. 1794, (fn. 315) and even at
Great Abington traditional methods probably continued on the uninclosed lands, over which rights
of common were being regulated in 1737 (fn. 316) In 1801
Great Abington produced 176 a. of wheat, 92 a. of
rye, 245 a. of barley, and 127 a. of oats; 20 a. of
turnips were also grown. (fn. 317) In that year, shortly after
John Mortlock had bought the manors, inclosure
Acts were procured for both parishes, unopposed
except by Mortlock's principal tenant. The Act for
Little Abington provided for most of the land west
of the turnpike to be allotted to the Adeane estate
in Babraham. (fn. 318) The land of each parish was probably divided the same year, and the Great Abington
award was executed in 1804, that for Little Abington
not until 1807. (fn. 319) At Great Abington, where the
earlier inclosures were included in the award, almost
the whole parish was allotted to John Mortlock who
emerged with 1,131 a. out of 1,532 a., besides his
ancient closes. The vicar received c. 79 a. and King's
College 56 a. along the eastern boundary. Seven
men who were allotted 13 a. between them for common rights had been bought out by Mortlock before
1818. (fn. 320) At Little Abington, where 1,166 a. were
allotted, Mortlock received 585 a. in the west part
of the parish, and Andrew Perne, the impropriator,
c. 224 a. in the east. The centre was divided between
the vicar with 71 a. and Jesus, King's, and Clare
colleges with c. 135 a. together. The Lagden estate
received c. 94 a. by the eastern edge, and the Fairchild devisees 126 a. Two other allottees had just
over 3 a. (fn. 321) During the next 110 years virtually the
whole of both parishes was gradually incorporated
into the Abington Hall estate.
By 1818 Great Abington, apart from the glebe,
had been divided into three large farms, an arrangement that survived until the 1930s. The Hall farm,
covering in 1929 229 a., included the land nearest
the village. South of the main east–west road lay
New House farm, comprising 657 a. in 1818, 634 a.
in 1929. The southern third of the parish, including
the 60 a. of former woodland called Great Park,
formed Abington Park farm, covering 543 a. in 1818,
539 a. in 1929. A new farm-house north of the Park
had been built by 1818. In Little Abington the Mortlock land south of the Cambridge road, probably
farmed until the 1830s with Hall farm, later became
Bancroft farm, of 119 a. in 1929. Its ancient timberframed farm-house was burnt down in a family feud
in the 1860s. North of the road was Grange farm,
475 a. in 1929, for which a new farmstead was built
out in the fields. Similarly the consolidated Lay
Rectory farm of c. 360 a. had a large farm-house
built just outside the village, and by 1871 an extra
farmstead in the fields, called New Barns. Between
1850 and 1900 it was farmed by its owners, the
Kents. The smaller glebe and college properties in
the middle of the parish were consolidated after
their absorption into the Hall estate as College Field
farm, covering in 1929 156 a. (fn. 322)
In both parishes most of the land was arable. In
1818 only 78 a. of 1,215 a. on the larger farms in
Great Abington were under permanent grass. New
House farm was then being cultivated on a four-year
rotation. (fn. 323) John Mortlock had earlier kept a considerable flock of Southdown sheep, fed partly on
hay and turnips, (fn. 324) and the two parishes together provided employment for up to 12 shepherds in the
mid 19th century. (fn. 325) Lay Rectory farm was described
as an excellent turnip farm in 1850. (fn. 326) In 1929 there
were still only 85 a. of permanent grass in Great
Abington and 120 a. in Little Abington. (fn. 327)
Most of the working population throughout the
19th century were farm labourers. In each parish in
1831 44 families were dependent on agriculture, and
only 7 on crafts and trade. (fn. 328) In 1851 69 men and boys
were employed on the farms at Great Abington; in
1871 41 men and 23 boys worked at Great, and 27
men and 16 boys at Little, Abington. (fn. 329) In 1873 it
was estimated that c. 250 out of 300 inhabitants at
Great Abington were of the labouring class. At
Little Abington c. 1877 the proportion was twothirds. (fn. 330) In the early 20th century 4 a. of the Hall
estate were let as allotments for them. (fn. 331) Fourteen
people in 1871 were attached to the households at
the Hall and Lodge as gardeners, grooms, and game-
keepers. (fn. 332) From 1843 to c. 1922 John Rickett and
his son J. J. Rickett kept a stonemason's and builder's
business. (fn. 333) Otherwise neither parish usually had
more than two or three craftsmen such as carpenters, blacksmiths, wheelwrights, shoemakers, and
tailors. (fn. 334) After 1900 even those few disappeared. (fn. 335) A
new element entered parish life when in 1936 the Land
Settlement Association bought New House farm
to divide it into 10-a. smallholdings for people from
areas such as South Wales and County Durham
for market-gardening and pig- and poultry-rearing.
By 1962 46 such holdings had been established.
From c. 1950 the produce included tomatoes
and lettuces, and glass-houses covered 9 a. of the
estate by 1968. (fn. 336) The Welding Research Association
at Abington Hall employed a staff that increased
from 40 in 1946 to 125 in 1958. (fn. 337) From the 1950s the
village began to have a large proportion of middleclass residents, who mostly worked in Cambridge
and large neighbouring villages. (fn. 338)
By a charter of 1257 the earl of Oxford was granted
a weekly market at Great Abington on Fridays and
a three-day fair at the feast of St. Lawrence. (fn. 339)
Neither is recorded later.
Aubrey de Vere had a water-mill at Great Abington in 1086. (fn. 340) By 1279 it was apparently attached to
the free tenement divided between Richard Bassingbourn and Roger son of John. (fn. 341) Roger's half had
come by 1342 to Roger Abington, with whose lands
it was conveyed to King's College in 1448. (fn. 342) In 1318
the miller was accused of forbidding the earl's
customary tenants to grind their own grain, (fn. 343)
and a successor in 1405 was not keeping his dams in
repair. (fn. 344) The mill was not recorded after 1500. Little
Abington manor also included a mill in 1086. (fn. 345)
About 1200 John de Lanvaley and later his widow
Christine released a mill, with the customary yardland of Ralph Sexmere, to Waltham abbey, (fn. 346) of
which Walter Sexmere held it in 1279. (fn. 347) By 1395
Sexmere mill belonged to Robert Parys, who had
lately moved its floodgates to a new place, causing
flooding in Great Abington's meadows. (fn. 348) His widow
Catherine and brother Nicholas continued the
nuisance between 1409 and 1416. (fn. 349) Half a mill included in a conveyance of 1554 by Sir Philip Parys
to John Chapman (fn. 350) is not recorded later. The site
of neither mill has been traced. A windmill may
have stood on or near Windmill hill in Little Abington by 1600, (fn. 351) but there was no mill in either parish
by the 19th century. (fn. 352)
Local Government.
Under Edward I the
earl of Oxford had at Great Abington view of frankpledge, which he claimed in 1299 by prescription,
with the assize of bread and of ale and a gallows and
tumbrel. (fn. 353) By custom 4s. of the court issues were
paid twice yearly to the bailiff of the hundred. (fn. 354) In
1376 the goods found on a thief who escaped were
seized for the lord. (fn. 355) In the 14th and 15th centuries
a court leet was usually held annually at Trinity,
and one or more courts baron in spring or autumn.
After 1500 a single session for all purposes was held
once a year, and later at longer intervals. (fn. 356) In 1403
two men were fined for revealing the counsels of the
leet and opposing its decisions in open court. (fn. 357) By
ancient custom the reeve was to be elected by the
villeins out of court, (fn. 358) but the court regularly chose
two ale-tasters, (fn. 359) one or two constables or underconstables, (fn. 360) and haywards. (fn. 361) After 1530 it sometimes appointed two men to oversee the fields. (fn. 362)
The court undertook the usual leet jurisdiction
down to the early 17th century. As late as 1653
it was forbidding inhabitants to harbour strange
inmates, or to build cottages on the waste without
the assent of the township. (fn. 363) In 1681 eleven such
inmates were being sheltered and three non-commonable dwellings had been built. (fn. 364) It also enforced
regulations and customs concerning agriculture, (fn. 365)
a practice continued at intervals until 1737 or later
by verdicts of the jury; (fn. 366) after 1663 (fn. 367) the verdicts
ceased to be recorded on the rolls, which were thereafter solely a record of copyholds. Court rolls survive for 1318, 1321–2, and, with gaps, for 1354–1435,
1450–1, 1485–99, 1527–48, and 1558–1694, and
court books for 1711–1841. (fn. 368)
It was said in 1276 that the bailiff of the honor of
Richmond had made himself steward to Robert
Tuddenham and usurped view of frankpledge and
the assize of bread and of ale at Little Abington, also
withdrawing the Gerunde and St. Radegund fees
from the sheriff's tourn. (fn. 369) In 1334 the reeve and
four men from Little Abington did suit to the honor
court at Linton, at which the assize of ale was enforced for their township; (fn. 370) although Tuddenham
was said to have view of frankpledge in 1279, in
1309 his tenants were said not to render suit of
court. (fn. 371) Leet jurisdiction at Little Abington may
therefore have been absorbed by the Richmond
court. No evidence has been found after 1279 for the
existence of a separate court for Little Abington
manor. In the early 18th century the Great Abington
court occasionally appointed one constable for each
parish. (fn. 372) In the 18th and 19th centuries, perhaps
owing to the absence of a court for Little Abington,
the transfer of some copyholds there was made in
the court of Hildersham with Little Abington
manor; (fn. 373) that court was also appointing a constable
and a pinder for Little Abington in the 1720s. (fn. 374)
In the early 19th century Great Abington was
apparently administered by a small vestry, comprising a churchwarden, two overseers, and two or
three of the wealthier parishioners. (fn. 375) Expenditure
on the poor had increased from c. £60 in 1776 to £96
by 1783–5 and £166 in 1803 when 22 people were
on permanent relief. (fn. 376) Those regularly supported
from the rates still numbered between 22 and 28
from 1813 to 1815. The cost between 1813 (fn. 377) and
1834 was usually over £300, and sometimes exceeded
£350. (fn. 378) About 1830 the farmers were expected to
find work for the able poor in proportion to the size
of their farms, and large families had an allowance
from the rates. (fn. 379) In practice over two-thirds of the
money spent in the early 1830s apparently went to
widows and the aged. (fn. 380)
At Little Abington the amount spent on the poor
and the numbers relieved were smaller. The cost
rose from £6 in 1776 to £38 in 1783–5 and £80 by
1803 when 9 persons were permanently supported.
In 1814 13 persons were on permanent relief, and
the total cost was £156. (fn. 381) About 1830 large families
were assisted from the rates, and of the then normal
expenditure of c. £160 about half usually went to
the aged, mostly widows, and less than a quarter on
casual relief, given mostly to large families and the
sick. Men working for the parish seldom took over
£10 a year, and might be employed on the road or,
as in 1830–2, on repairing the parish houses. (fn. 382) Those
houses, three cottages occupied in 1836 by paupers
rent-free, were sold in 1837 to help meet the cost of
building Linton workhouse. (fn. 383)
Both parishes were from 1835 part of the Linton
poor-law union, (fn. 384) were incorporated with the Linton
R.D. in 1934 into the South Cambridgeshire R.D., (fn. 385)
and were included in South Cambridgeshire in 1974.
Churches.
The church of Little Abington includes fabric which may be of c. 1100; demesne
tithes there were granted c. 1130, and the advowson
was recorded c. 1200. Great Abington had its own
church by 1217: (fn. 386) the advowson was attached until
the early 14th century to the manor of the earls of
Oxford, (fn. 387) who sometimes presented relatives, such
as Earl Robert's son Gilbert de Vere, rector while
still a minor c. 1289. (fn. 388) Before 1217 the earls had
granted two-thirds of their demesne tithes to Hatfield Broadoak priory (Essex), to which the rector
was ordered to pay 17s. 4d. a year. Earl Hugh
(d. 1263) granted the priory a site for a barn to store
its tithes, (fn. 389) which were worth 5 marks in 1254 and
1291. (fn. 390) In 1329 the earl was licensed to grant the
rectory itself to the priory for appropriation, (fn. 391) which
had been accomplished by 1344. A vicarage was
ordained, of which the advowson remained with
Hatfield priory until its dissolution in 1536. (fn. 392) In
1538 two yeomen presented under a grant for that
turn made by the priory. (fn. 393) In 1540 the advowson
was granted to Philip Parys with the impropriate
rectory, (fn. 394) with which it descended in the Parys and
Dalton families until bought by John Bennet in 1679,
after which it passed with the manors until 1929. (fn. 395)
At Little Abington the advowson was attached to
the manor by c. 1200, when Simon le Bret granted
half the advowson to Waltham abbey (Essex). Simon,
however, failed in warranting the grant in 1204, when
William de Lanvaley the younger, to whom he had
meanwhile released the manor, recovered the advowson. (fn. 396) William's successor John de Burgh granted
it in 1239 to Hugh de Vaux, (fn. 397) whose heir John de
Vaux did not subinfeudate it with the manor to
Robert Tuddenham, but retained it until his death
in 1287, whereupon it was included in the purparty
of his elder daughter Parnel, wife of William of
Narford (fn. 398) (d. 1302). (fn. 399) In 1316 Parnel granted the
advowson, said erroneously to be held of Robert
Tuddenham, to Pentney priory (Norf.). The priory
had appropriated the rectory by 1341, (fn. 400) and retained it
until its dissolution in 1537, (fn. 401) but the advowson of the
vicarage was reserved to the bishop of Ely, who continued to collate to it until the 16th century. (fn. 402) Being
in the bishop's patronage the vicarage was exempted
from the archdeacon of Ely's jurisdiction until the
18th century. (fn. 403) The Crown occasionally presented
during vacancies of the see. (fn. 404) In 1540 the grant of
Little Abington rectory to Philip Parys purported
to include the advowson of the vicarage, (fn. 405) so Parys's
successor Michael Dalton claimed to present upon
a vacancy in 1604. Bishop Heton conceded his claim
in 1608, but the bishop's nominee retained the
living, (fn. 406) and the bishops continued to collate vicars
until the mid 18th century. (fn. 407) By the 1730s, when for
70 years it had been the practice for both benefices
to be held by the same man, the bishop had agreed
with the Westerns, as patrons of Great Abington,
that since the two livings were separately too poor
to attract clergymen, the two patrons should nominate to both alternately. In 1736 the bishop collated
to Little Abington independently, but within two
months his nominee resigned in favour of the man
presented to Great Abington by Thomas Western.
Thereafter the bishop apparently no longer exercised the patronage, (fn. 408) and was last recorded as
patron c. 1792; (fn. 409) Little Abington vicarage was
served by the vicars or sequestrators who held Great
Abington. In 1802 the Crown presented to Little
Abington, for reasons unknown, the man who had
already held Great Abington for 10 years. (fn. 410) Andrew
Perne, the impropriator, was said to be patron of
Little Abington in 1800, and his widow in 1836, (fn. 411)
probably in error. Thomas Mortlock was styled
patron in 1851 (fn. 412) and E. J. Mortlock from 1877. The
patronage of both livings passed with the manors to
the Emersons, (fn. 413) and was sold in 1930 to the Martyrs'
Memorial Trust to which it still belonged in 1973. (fn. 414)
In 1947 the two benefices were formally united, the
ecclesiastical parishes remaining distinct. (fn. 415)
About 1130 Count Stephen, lord of Richmond,
granted demesne tithes at Little Abington to St.
Mary's Abbey, York, (fn. 416) to whose dependent priory
at Rumburgh (Suff.) they were being paid by 1291,
when they were worth 4 marks. (fn. 417) In 1326 Alan,
abbot of St. Mary's, leased them to Pentney priory,
which retained them until 1463 when after 10 years'
non-payment the abbey took possession again. (fn. 418)
Rumburgh's properties were annexed in 1528 to
Wolsey's proposed college at Ipswich and were sold
by the Crown in 1531. (fn. 419)
In the early 13th century the two rectories, after
deducting monastic portions, were of almost equal
value, Great Abington being taxed at 10 marks in
1217 and 1254, Little Abington at 9 marks. In 1276,
however, they were worth respectively 30 and 13
marks, but in 1291 16 and 12 marks. (fn. 420)
The glebe of Great Abington rectory, 30 a. in
1279, (fn. 421) was included in the appropriation to Hatfield priory. The vicar had only 1¼ rood near his
vicarage. Besides the small tithes, levied c. 1700
according to an ancient modus, he received from the
rectory a cash pension of £2 a year and 6 qr. of corn,
and from 10 copyhold messuages 245 eggs and
14 bu. of barley. (fn. 422) At inclosure in 1801 the vicar was
allotted c. 78 a. for his glebe and tithes. (fn. 423) The pension, charged in 1929 on Abington Hall, was redeemed c. 1958. (fn. 424)
Of Little Abington's rectorial glebe, 40 a. in
1279, (fn. 425) 12½ a. were assigned to the vicar, (fn. 426) who had
also the small tithes, levied by a modus by 1700, and
tithes of hay. A pension due to him from the rectory,
33s. 4d. c. 1700, (fn. 427) had been increased by 1877 to £5
a year, which in 1929 was charged on Lay Rectory
farm. (fn. 428) At inclosure the vicar was allotted c. 71 a.
for his glebe and tithes. (fn. 429) The glebe of both vicarages
was sold in 1907 to J. J. Emerson. (fn. 430) Following
appropriation the two vicarages were almost equally
poor, Great Abington being worth £7 16s. 2d. in
1535, Little Abington £7 6s. 4d. (fn. 431) In 1650 Great
Abington yielded only £18 a year, while the vicar
of Little Abington, having received in 1649 a substantial augmentation, was supposed to have £30
a year. (fn. 432) About 1728 their respective incomes were
£22 and £20. (fn. 433) Following an augmentation by lot
of £200 from Queen Anne's Bounty in 1778 (fn. 434) the
value of Great Abington had risen to c. £80 by 1830
and £160 gross in 1877. That of Little Abington
stood at £87 in the early 19th century, and in 1877
included c. £105 from the glebe. (fn. 435)
Great Abington vicarage house, ruinous in 1615,
was burnt down probably in the 1660s and not
rebuilt. (fn. 436) Its site has not been traced. Resident vicars
later lived in Little Abington vicarage house, (fn. 437) which
stood a little east of the church, close to the river. (fn. 438)
It was reconstructed c. 1810 by the then vicar, and
c. 1830 Queen Anne's Bounty lent £327 for similar
rebuilding. (fn. 439) When during the 19th century Great
Abington again had vicars of its own, they sometimes
lived at Ivy Lodge, (fn. 440) a Georgian house on the Hildersham road. Little Abington vicarage was sold in
1961, (fn. 441) and a new house built at the north end of its
grounds.
In 1521 Great Abington contained a guild of St.
Anne, (fn. 442) and in 1524 possibly also a guild of All
Saints. (fn. 443) In 1561 the earl of Oxford granted the
guildhall or church house to John Amy as copyhold. (fn. 444) It may have been the long timber-framed
building by the path to the church. Land in the two
parishes left for lights and obits was sold by the
Crown in 1548, 1568, and 1571. (fn. 445) Under John
Bolton's will proved 1509 each church received
3s. a year for repairs and 4d. for the curate, and there
was a provision for masses. When Bolton's lands
were settled on Clare College in 1524 it was agreed
that a fellow of Clare should preach in Little Abington church on the first Sunday in Lent. (fn. 446) The sermons probably continued in the early 18th century; (fn. 447)
the churchwardens of each parish still received
3s. 4d. for repairs in the 20th century. (fn. 448)
Little Abington saw a rapid turnover of seven vicars
through exchanges between 1389 and 1402. (fn. 449) John
Drury, vicar from 1435, was bound over in 1448 not
to molest the duke of Somerset's tenants, and was
deprived in 1465. (fn. 450) Early-16th-century vicars of
each parish were usually resident, (fn. 451) and some, such
as Henry Amy, at Little Abington c. 1532–c. 1552,
and Robert Thurger, at Great Abington c. 1538–c.
1552, (fn. 452) were probably from local families. (fn. 453) After
1560 the two livings were sometimes held jointly.
Thomas Chamber was vicar of Great and curate of
Little Abington in 1564 when he was alleged not to
catechize or read the homilies. (fn. 454) Thomas Goodman,
vicar of Little Abington by 1567, was then curate
and sequestrator of Great Abington to which he was
presented in 1573. (fn. 455) He used to serve both churches
on the same day. The parishioners complained in
1578 that he attended more diligently to his husbandry than to his pastoral duties, in 1590 that he did
not preach regularly, and in 1594 that he was found
in the alehouse while they awaited him in church. (fn. 456)
After his death in 1604 (fn. 457) the livings were again
separated. Roger Wincoll retained Little Abington
from 1635 until his death in 1655 despite his poverty,
company-keeping, and (by 1650) imbecility. (fn. 458)
Henry Taverner at Great Abington also retained his
living in 1650, although he frequented alehouses and
opposed parliament. (fn. 459) Before 1660, however, he had
had two successors, one probably a Presbyterian. (fn. 460)
From 1661 to 1828 the two cures were again held
jointly, Great Abington being probably sometimes
held by sequestration. John Boughton, vicar 1666–
93, combined them with a fellowship at St. John's.
His successor, Thomas Colbatch (1693–1732), an
Oxford man, (fn. 461) was conscientious but eccentric. (fn. 462) In
1728 he was holding two Sunday services alternately
at each church, with communion at the three principal feasts, a practice continued until the 1830s. (fn. 463)
William Benning, vicar 1753–92, (fn. 464) lived in Essex in
1775 and employed a curate who held services twice
on Sundays, probably alternately at each church, (fn. 465)
as was done in 1825 when the same congregation
was said to have long attended both. (fn. 466) In the late
18th century it was proposed to demolish Great
Abington church because of its damp situation and
unite the two parishes. (fn. 467) George Barlow, vicar 1792–
1828, was resident in 1825 but employed a curate,
being himself curate at Saffron Walden. There were
then c. 40 communicants. (fn. 468) After his death the
livings were separated.
The next vicar of Great Abington also held Newmarket St. Mary and Woodditton. (fn. 469) In 1835 Thomas
Mortlock presented his own brother, Edmund Davy
Mortlock, a fellow of Christ's College, where he
lived, staying when in Great Abington at Thomas's
cottage in the village. He introduced a second Sunday service, preached every Sunday, and had in 1836
c. 70 communicants. His contemporary at Little
Abington, Charles Townley (1828–70), also held two
Sunday services, and claimed 45 communicants and
in 1851 an afternoon congregation of 140. E. D.
Mortlock resigned in 1845. (fn. 470) Of his successors,
Robert Goodwin (1845–88) also held Hildersham,
and J. A. H. Law (1890–3) Babraham, (fn. 471) and they
usually lived at their other benefices. The successive
vicars of Little Abington lived in their own parish. (fn. 472)
Goodwin, who employed two curates and held two
Sunday services at Great Abington, claimed in 1873
that 250 out of his 300 parishioners came to church,
and an average of 18 out of 50 communicants
attended monthly communions. E. L. Pearson, who
held similar services at Little Abington, had in 1877
a congregation of up to 150, including 57 communicants. (fn. 473) A. W. Smyth, who held both livings from
1893, (fn. 474) began to celebrate communion every Sunday
and introduced special services for Lent and saints'
days. In 1897 there were 82 communicants. (fn. 475) The
two vicarages were afterwards always held by the
same man. (fn. 476) From the 1920s the vicar complained
of very poor attendance at church. (fn. 477) In 1973 the two
churches were still used alternately, on Sunday
mornings and evenings, by a congregation drawn
from both villages. (fn. 478)
The church of ST. MARY, so called in 1518, (fn. 479) at
Great Abington comprises a chancel, nave with south
aisle and porch, and west tower. It is built of field
stones with ashlar dressings. The fabric of the nave
and chancel is early-13th-century at latest. Several
lancets remain, including some small ones in the
north wall of the chancel set in deep round-headed
embrasures, perhaps of an earlier period. The twostorey west tower, surmounted by a short leaded
spire, is also 13th-century, having no buttresses. Its
west window consists of three lancets under a continuous moulding. Its arch is probably of the early
14th century, when also the south aisle with its
four-bay arcade of quatrefoil piers was added. In
the 15th century new windows were inserted in the
nave and south aisle, and a three-light east window
replaced three lancets in the chancel. A little
medieval glass survived until 1816. (fn. 480) The south
porch is 14th-century, and the south door probably
medieval, but the doorway mouldings have been
renewed. A similar north doorway was blocked and
a modern window inserted there. The nave was still
thatched in 1783, and the chancel as late as 1816. (fn. 481)
There is no chancel arch, and a continuous waggonroof, panelled and probably put up after 1605, extends as in 1742 over nave and chancel. (fn. 482) The font
is early, with a plain round top on an octagonal base.
In the south wall of the chancel is a double piscina.
Stairs in the north wall of the nave, under a small
window high up, probably led to the rood-screen
which was still in place in 1742. The pulpit had
formerly a sounding board of 1634. (fn. 483) Against the
north wall of the chancel stands the monument of
Sir William Halton (d. 1639), with his armoured
figure recumbent on its side; as lessee of the manor,
he probably lived at Abington Hall. (fn. 484) In 1644
William Dowsing destroyed 2 crosses and 40 superstitious pictures. (fn. 485) The south side of the church
needed repair in 1665, and the whole was in bad
condition in 1685. (fn. 486) It was found to be very dirty
in 1783, the windows in decay and partly stopped
with plaster. (fn. 487) In 1816 the east end of the aisle was
used as a manorial pew, and a singing gallery stood
by the tower. (fn. 488) The church had 250 sittings, 169 of
them free, in 1873, when the children sat in the
chancel. (fn. 489) The tower was repaired by 1897, and
the whole church was restored between 1895 and
1900, (fn. 490) when the interior walls were left stripped of
their plaster, and the fittings entirely renewed. A
brightly painted organ in the chancel was brought
from Pampisford church, probably between 1891
and 1897. (fn. 491) The churchyard was closed in 1885
because it was liable to flooding. (fn. 492)
The church had one chalice c. 1278, and two in
1552 with a silver cross. (fn. 493) Sir William Halton left
it a communion cup worth £10, (fn. 494) presumably the
silver cup and paten dated 1638 which the church
still possessed in 1973, with an almsdish of 1727 and
a plated flagon of 1876. (fn. 495) There were two bells in
1552 and three in 1742. (fn. 496) Of the five bells in 1783
three were broken. (fn. 497) In 1816 there were two bells,
one of 1663 by Miles Gray, and recast in 1817 by
Thomas Mears, the other recast in 1789. (fn. 498) Both survived in 1973. The registers are virtually complete
from 1664; a register beginning in 1538 had been
lost by 1783. (fn. 499)
The church of ST. MARY, so called in 1520, (fn. 500) at
Little Abington, consists of a chancel, nave with
north chapel and south porch, and west tower. It is
built of field stones with ashlar dressings and was
formerly much patched with brick. (fn. 501) The fabric of
the nave may be of c. 1100. Its surviving doorways
have round arches and heavy stonework. The blocked
north doorway has rough chip-carving on its abacus.
The chancel was rebuilt in the 13th century, of
which period are its arch and the lancets in the north
wall. The three stepped lancets, originally in the
east wall, reinstated at the restoration of 1885, had
been replaced by a three-light Perpendicular window, which retained until after 1742 some fragments
of glass with donors' figures, dated 1526. (fn. 502) The
three-storey tower is probably 14th-century, having
a renewed Decorated west window and substantial
buttresses. The belfry windows are cusped. In the
south wall of the tower is a medieval tomb-recess.
Bequests for leading the steeple were made in 1508
and 1520. (fn. 503) The tower arch and the western windows
of the nave are probably also 14th-century. The
eastern windows in the south wall of the nave are
rectangular and were probably inserted in the late
15th century. The date of the small north chapel,
which stands beyond an arch, is uncertain, for its
windows were redesigned in the 19th century. (fn. 504) The
south porch, though medieval, was much repaired
in brick. (fn. 505) The chancel contains an early piscina
with dog-tooth carving. The font, also early, has a
massive square basin set on five columns.
The church was said to be badly covered c. 1300, (fn. 506)
but was probably tiled by 1619. (fn. 507) The timbers of the
roof were replaced in the 19th century, except for
a few of the principal beams. A block of late medieval
seating, surviving in the nave, was copied for the
Victorian seating. Of the rood-screen, for which
William Bolton (d. 1500) left £2 and which survived
in 1742, (fn. 508) only fragments remain, made up in a
modern framework on a thick stone base. The threedecker pulpit, with a sounding board dated 1675,
was removed, along with the high pews, in 1873. (fn. 509)
The chancel contains a wall-monument, with miniature obelisks and caryatids, to Oliver Dalton (d.
1619) and tablets to members of the Perne and
Fasset families.
The chancel was in great decay in the 1560s,
through the fault of the tenant of the rectory, (fn. 510) and
needed plastering and whitewashing in 1665 and
1685. (fn. 511) In 1816 the tower arch was still blocked
with plaster and a singing gallery. (fn. 512) The church had
226 sittings, 140 free, in 1877. (fn. 513) It was thoroughly
restored in 1885 at the expense of A. H. D. Hutton,
then vicar, with J. P. St. Aubyn as architect, (fn. 514) but
box-pews on the south side of the chancel were not
removed until 1916. An organ, replacing a barrelorgan, was given in 1897 and fills the north chapel. (fn. 515)
The church had a silver-gilt chalice c. 1278, and two,
with a silver cross, in 1552. (fn. 516) In 1973 it had a paten
of 1728 and a cup and paten of 1828. (fn. 517) There were
three bells in 1552 and 1742, (fn. 518) but only one, dated
1620 and possibly by Brian Eldridge, survived in
1973. (fn. 519) The surviving registers begin in 1687, and
are virtually complete. (fn. 520)
Nonconformity.
In 1675 six people were
presented for not coming to church at Great Abington, (fn. 521) and there were six dissenters there in 1676,
but none at Little Abington. (fn. 522) A Quaker member
of the Amy family was imprisoned in 1678 for
refusing to pay tithe on wild pigeons. (fn. 523) In 1728
Great Abington was said to have five dissenting
families, and Little Abington six dissenters; (fn. 524) in
1783 Little Abington alone had a dissenting family. (fn. 525)
Although a house there was registered for dissenting
worship in 1798, (fn. 526) the parish still included only two
dissenting families, both of long standing, in 1825,
when at Great Abington the only recorded dissenter
was one labourer. (fn. 527) In 1826, however, two men
registered their houses for such worship, as did a
preacher from Linton in 1833. (fn. 528) Neither parish had
any permanent nonconformist congregation until
after the 1870s, (fn. 529) when the Congregationalists from
Sawston began mission work at Little Abington, (fn. 530)
having a preaching station there from c. 1888. (fn. 531) The
vicar believed their main audience to be drawn from
immigrant labourers. (fn. 532) Although the meeting-house
had 60 sittings in 1899 there were only seven full
members in 1905 and 10 in 1916. Numbers varied
thereafter between five and eight. (fn. 533) The chapel was
still in use in 1973, being affiliated to the United
Reformed Church.
Education.
Although there was said to be a
schoolmaster at Little Abington c. 1607, (fn. 534) neither
village had a regular school in the 18th century. (fn. 535)
Shortly before 1818 a school on Dr. Bell's system,
with up to 55 pupils, was set up for both parishes.
Being supported mainly by the wealthy tenants of
the Hall, it collapsed when the Hall became vacant
in the 1820s. (fn. 536) From then until 1870 the Abingtons
were served mainly by dame schools and Sunday
schools. Day and Sunday schools, supported by the
new vicars, began in 1829 at Little Abington and in
1832 or 1833 at Great Abington, but appear to have
been short-lived. In 1833 two other schools had
c. 40 pupils, partly paid for by their parents. A new
tenant of the Hall probably supported a school for
30 girls. Two Sunday-school teachers also taught
adults to read on winter evenings. (fn. 537) About 1846 two
dame schools had together 40 paying pupils, mostly
girls. (fn. 538) The vicar of Little Abington usually paid for
at least the eldest child in each family to be made
literate. (fn. 539) In 1877, after the establishment of a board
school, the vicar still maintained an evening school
for adults at Little Abington. (fn. 540)
In 1873, at the suggestion of the squire, E. J.
Mortlock, a school board was formed for the two
parishes, with the support of the two vicars. Mortlock provided the site in Great Abington at a
nominal rent, and paid for building the school,
which was opened in 1874. (fn. 541) In 1897 the vicar was
teaching in the school before normal lessons began. (fn. 542)
Average attendance was 68 in 1876, 83 in 1896, (fn. 543)
71 in 1919, and 79 in 1936. (fn. 544) The building belonged
to the lord of the manor until 1930 when the county
council bought it. (fn. 545) In 1908 J. J. Emerson built a
new house for the master, elaborately thatched and
timbered, south of the school. (fn. 546) By 1905 the school
had a separate infants department. (fn. 547) In 1937 the
older children were transferred to Linton village
college, and Abington school, partly rebuilt, was
reorganized in junior mixed and infants departments. (fn. 548) It was again enlarged in 1962, (fn. 549) and was
still open in 1973.
Charities for the Poor.
John Bolton, by
will proved 1509, left a contingent reversion of all
his lands to pay 3s. 4d. a year each to the churches
of Great and Little Abington and Hildersham, the
residue going to pay the taxes falling on the poor
folk of the three parishes, and any surplus being for
masses and preaching. (fn. 550) In 1524 the land was settled
on Clare College, subject to its finding a fellow in
orders to preach and say mass in accordance with
the will and paying 6s. 8d. to each parish, of which
3s. was for church repairs, 4d. for the curate, and
3s. 4d. for the poor, sums which the college was
paying in 1546. (fn. 551) Little Abington was still receiving
3s. 4d. for its poor in 1786; Great Abington's share
had then been unpaid for many years, (fn. 552) but payment
was resumed in 1788. In 1837, of the 6s. 8d. received
by each parish, half was given at Little Abington to
the aged and widows, and at Great Abington half
had until lately been distributed among the poor. (fn. 553)
In 1863 also the money went to the poor. (fn. 554) In 1929
the payment was charged upon the Hall, (fn. 555) whose
owners redeemed it in 1966 for £10 paid to 'John a
Bolton's' charity in each parish. (fn. 556)
John Jefferies by will dated 1674 charged his land
in Little Abington with rendering yearly a comb of
barley or its price, to be divided among the poor
there. Payment had ceased long before 1786. (fn. 557) Alice
Margaret Foakes, formerly resident at the Old
House, Little Abington, (fn. 558) by will proved 1927, left
£100 for the poor of both parishes. A Scheme of
1936 governed the use of the income. Little had
been spent before 1944. (fn. 559)