HILDERSHAM
The parish of Hildersham, (fn. 1) covering 1,511 a., (fn. 2)
lies 9 miles south-east of Cambridge, and extends
from the line of the ancient Wool Street in the north
to the Essex county boundary. The river Granta,
flowing from south-east to north-west across the
centre of the parish, divides it into two unequal
parts. That to the south narrows towards its southern
extremity. The river follows a winding course,
except that where it passes through the village it was
straightened c. 1889 after inclosure. (fn. 3) East of the
village a tongue of Linton parish penetrates between
two channels of the river to include the former
Hildersham mill. To the west minor branches of
the river meander through meadows, one formerly
called Sluice meadow. (fn. 4) Except for the strip of alluvium and gravel along the river, Hildersham lies
mostly upon chalk, overlaid on parts of the higher
ground to north and south by boulder clay and
glacial gravels. To the south the ground rises from
a level area below 200 ft. to over 325 ft. at the county
boundary. North of the river a shallow valley runs
north-east between slopes rising to over 250 ft. The
open fields of the parish, which has been devoted
mainly to arable farming, were not formally divided
until 1889, under the last inclosure award for the
county. Even thereafter, since the bulk of the land
was allotted to a single owner, few hedges were
planted.
In 1086 Hildersham contained woodland for
20 pigs. (fn. 5) Hildersham wood by the Essex boundary
was probably much reduced by assarting, as the
curved shapes of ancient closes lying north of it
suggest. (fn. 6) In 1279 it was said to cover 20 a., (fn. 7) in 1308
30 a. (fn. 8) In 1777 its estimated area was 21 a., (fn. 9) in 1849
and 1922 18½ a. (fn. 10) The extensive plantations in the
park around Hildersham Hall, amounting by 1849
to 18 a., were laid out only in the 1810s on former
old inclosures. (fn. 11) A wooded area just north of the
river, called the Alder Carr, which covered only 3 a.
in 1799, (fn. 12) had by c. 1850 been extended over former
water-meadows to cover c. 15 a. (fn. 13)
Hildersham was among the least populous parishes
in the Granta valley. In 1086 20 people were enumerated, (fn. 14) in 1327 there were 32 tax-payers, (fn. 15) and
in 1377 47 adults. (fn. 16) In 1429 there were said to be
only 6 resident householders. (fn. 17) In 1524 23 people
were assessed to the subsidy, (fn. 18) and in 1563 there
were only 17 households. (fn. 19) The population probably declined even further in the early 17th century, but had recovered by the 1660s. (fn. 20) In 1676
there were 72 adults, (fn. 21) and in 1728 32 families included 152 people. (fn. 22) The population began to grow
again in the 1770s, (fn. 23) and rose slowly from 170 in
1801 to 248 by 1851; despite a temporary reduction
in 1861, ascribed to emigration, it still stood at 245
in 1881. A gradual decline thereafter accelerated,
numbers falling from 201 to 146 between 1911 and
1916, and after recovering to 181 by 1931 the population grew only slowly from 148 in 1951 to 177 in
1971. (fn. 24)
The village lies along a street which joins the two
roads between Linton and the Abingtons that run
along the valley on opposite sides of the river. Hildersham church and one manor-house stand north
of the river, the other manor-house, later Hildersham Hall, south of the river. Before the 1880s the
river was crossed by a ford, and when the water was
high the two halves of the village were virtually cut
off from one another. (fn. 25) The first bridge was built
of iron in 1886 at the expense of the rector's sister,
Elizabeth Hemington. (fn. 26) North of the river the street
widened between the church and manor-house into
the town green, of c. 4 a. in 1777. (fn. 27) Another smaller
green lay close to the southern manor-house. On it
there stood by 1682 the village forge, (fn. 28) in use until
the 1930s and demolished in 1946. (fn. 29)
Apart from the manor-houses and rectory the
village contained in the 1660s two or three farmhouses with 7 hearths. The other 20 or so dwellings
were mostly cottages, only 4 having even 3 hearths. (fn. 30)
The 26 houses recorded in 1801 were mostly
divided, for they accommodated 45 families. (fn. 31) In
1807 there were said to be 4 farm-houses and c. 30
cottages. (fn. 32) The latter lay along the street in two
groups, close to each manor-house, and separated
by the area most liable to flooding. The farmsteads,
which stood back from the street, (fn. 33) included Burford's Farm, named after an 18th-century village
family, (fn. 34) which is an L-shaped, timber-framed,
brick-fronted house of the late 17th or early 18th
century. (fn. 35) The most ancient house surviving in
Hildersham is Withleigh, a long, two-storeyed,
timber-framed building of the 16th century, perhaps
originally a guildhall; it has an overhang, and an
early fireplace. (fn. 36) A few other timber-framed,
thatched cottages survive, but most of the older
buildings are Victorian cottages, of brick and flint
or plastered, with slate roofs. The number of houses
grew slowly from 29 in 1821 to 56 in 1871 and then
fell. (fn. 37) In 1883 the rector thought most of the cottages
damp and unwholesome because they lay too close
to the river. (fn. 38) New building, mainly council houses
opposite Hildersham Hall, enlarged the village from
42 to 55 houses between 1921 and 1931, but there
were still only 59 in 1961 (fn. 39) and no expansion was
planned; (fn. 40) there was some in-filling, mainly with
bungalows, in the 1960s.
Of the two roads along the valley that south of the
river was turnpiked in 1765 and disturnpiked in
1876. (fn. 41) About 1969 it was widened, and diverted at
its western end, when the Abington by-pass was
built. (fn. 42) Two fieldways, called in the 19th century
Pen road and Wood road, led south from the village,
and were crossed by Pampisford and Sawston ways.
The road leading north from Hildersham forked
into Newmarket way and Balsham way. (fn. 43) South of
the river the Cambridge-Haverhill line was opened
in 1865 and closed in 1967. (fn. 44)
The village feast expired in the 1890s, but the
horkeys or harvest-suppers and the May-day celebrations survived until c. 1914, and men were still
going round on Plough Monday, cracking whips
and collecting money, in the 1930s. (fn. 45) Until inclosure
the villagers had used Night common, where the
street crossed the river, for cricket and other sports
after the hay was cut. The inclosure award allotted
8 a. of the adjacent Midsummer meadow for a recreation ground. (fn. 46) The rector had set up a parish library
by 1897 (fn. 47) and a cottage was hired in 1906 as a reading-room. (fn. 48) A village hut was built in 1920. (fn. 49)
A conical Roman burial-mound, 190 ft. round,
and resembling those opposite Bartlow, survived in
Dovehouse close west of the church until 1852. It
had once been used as the site for the maypole. (fn. 50)
Manors and Other Estates.
The manor
of HILDERSHAM, held before the Conquest by
King Edward's thegn Wulfwin, had been granted
by 1086 to Aubrey de Vere, (fn. 51) whose descendants
probably held it in demesne until the mid 12th century. (fn. 52) Their overlordship was formally recorded
until the early 17th century. (fn. 53) By 1166 Hildersham
was held under Aubrey de Vere, earl of Oxford, by
Richard de Camville, (fn. 54) who divided the manor,
settling half upon his daughter Maud's marriage to
William de Ros. (fn. 55) The result was a distinction, which
lasted until the early 14th century, between the two
moieties or manors, later called Overhall (or Upperhall) and Netherhall manors, (fn. 56) which apparently
remained c. 1300 a single unit of jurisdiction. (fn. 57)
The NETHERHALL estate, which c. 1800 lay
south of the river, (fn. 58) was evidently that which passed
to Richard de Camville's son, whose successor c. 1279
had 20 a. of wood, presumably Hildersham wood. (fn. 59)
Richard de Camville died in 1176. (fn. 60) His son and
heir Gerard (fn. 61) was disputing the advowson of Hildersham with Maud de Ros in 1210, (fn. 62) and died c. 1214.
Gerard's son and heir Richard (fn. 63) died probably in
1217, leaving as heir his daughter Idony. Idony's
wardship was granted to William Longspee, earl
of Salisbury, who by 1226 had married her to his
son William (fn. 64) (d. 1250). (fn. 65) The moiety or manor,
over which the mesne lordship of the Longspees'
heirs was recorded up to 1285, (fn. 66) was subinfeudated,
probably by 1228, to a follower of the Longspees,
John le Daneys, (fn. 67) whose wife Philippa was said to
hold it c. 1236. (fn. 68) John died in 1241, leaving as heirs
two daughters under age, Joan (d. s.p. 1245) and
Ela, whose guardian Nicholas de Boleville had
married her to his son William by 1254 when she
and William were granted free warren at Hildersham. (fn. 69) Ela apparently died without surviving issue
for by 1269 the moiety or manor had come to Isabel, (fn. 70)
daughter of Robert Grimbald and John le Daneys's
sister Maud, (fn. 71) and formerly wife of Richard Pauncefoot (d. after 1262). (fn. 72) Isabel held the manor in 1274
and died after 1277. (fn. 73) By 1279 her son Grimbald
Pauncefoot held that moiety. (fn. 74) He was granted free
warren there in 1281 (fn. 75) and died in 1287. His son and
heir Grimbald (fn. 76) had by 1288 granted his part for
life to the judge Ralph Hengham (d. 1311). (fn. 77) In 1308
Grimbald's title was challenged by Brice le Daneys
of Tickencote (Rut.), as male heir of the Daneys
family. (fn. 78) Before his death in 1314 Grimbald had
apparently sold his Hildersham estate to William
le Busteler, who by 1316 had bought out the claims
of Grimbald's brother and heir Emery, named as
lord in that year. (fn. 79) William's ancestors, William le
Busteler (d. c. 1250) and Robert (killed c. 1266), had
held a small estate at Hildersham. (fn. 80) Busteler was
succeeded c. 1334 by his son Robert, (fn. 81) who had held
the other moiety of the manor since 1316 (fn. 82) and thus
reunited the two.
What was evidently the OVERHALL or
UPPERHALL estate, north of the river, (fn. 83) was held
from before 1185 to after 1210 by Maud de Ros, who
survived her husband, William de Ros (d. by 1185) (fn. 84)
of Horton (Kent), and her son William (d. probably
c. 1190). (fn. 85) She was eventually succeeded by her
grandson William de Ros, who was of age by 1210
and died in 1223. (fn. 86) His eldest son William held that
moiety c. 1236 (fn. 87) and had died without issue by 1243,
leaving a widow Godehold, who had brought her
dower land there to her second husband Hugh of
Windsor by 1250. William's heir, his brother
Richard, (fn. 88) was dead by January 1246, whereupon
his lands were divided between his sisters and heirs,
Maud, whom in that year Henry III married to
Geoffrey de Percy, a member of his household, and
Lora, who the same year married Gilbert Kirkby
(d. by 1258). (fn. 89) In 1249 Geoffrey and Maud granted
1 carucate at Hildersham, with the reversion of
Godehold's dower, to Roger de Ros, (fn. 90) Henry III's
tailor, who was granted free warren there in 1251 (fn. 91)
and died in 1257. (fn. 92) By 1262 his sisters and heirs
Thomasine and Emmeline had granted that estate
to Henry le Fleming, (fn. 93) who complained in 1268 that
Percy had disseised him of land at Hildersham
during the recent civil war. (fn. 94) Maud died, apparently
without issue, in 1273, (fn. 95) whereupon her interest
passed to the Kirkbys. In 1248 Gilbert Kirkby and
Lora had granted ¼ knight's fee at Hildersham to
Alan Kirkby, (fn. 96) to whom Geoffrey de Percy released
his share of the manor in 1270, (fn. 97) and who died soon
after. Possession of Alan's manor was thereupon
disputed between Isabel Pauncefoot and the earl of
Oxford, its overlord. (fn. 98) By 1274 the Kirkby manor
was held of Lora de Ros under the earl by Gilbert
Kirkby, (fn. 99) perhaps the justice of that name who
died in 1294. (fn. 100) By 1297 the manor had come to
Walter Kirkby, (fn. 101) whose daughter and heir Margaret
was said to hold half the vill in 1299. (fn. 102) She was probably dead by 1310, when Roger Kirkby (d. 1313),
son by John Kirkby of Margaret, daughter and
eventual heir of Lora de Ros, had succeeded to her
Kentish lands. (fn. 103) By 1316 the Ros moiety of Hildersham had passed to Robert le Busteler, (fn. 104) who c. 1334
succeeded his father William in the other moiety, as
mentioned above, and died in 1366. (fn. 105)
Four of Robert's five coheirs sold four-fifths of
his lands to Robert Parys (fn. 106) (d. c. 1377), (fn. 107) who was
succeeded in them by his younger son Robert. The
younger Robert died holding those four-fifths in
1408, leaving as heir Catherine, the infant daughter
of his eldest son Robert. (fn. 108) She was said to hold
Overhall manor in 1412, (fn. 109) but probably died soon
after (fn. 110) and was succeeded by her uncle Henry
(d. 1427), who also acquired the other fifth from his
uncle Nicholas's executors c. 1425. (fn. 111) From Henry
Parys Hildersham manor descended with the
Bustelers manors in Linton and Duxford in the
male line of the Paryses until the 1670s. (fn. 112) From 1523
to 1542 it was occupied as part of her jointure by
Margaret, widow of John Parys (d. 1517), (fn. 113) and in
1544 by Elizabeth, daughter-in-law of Sir Philip
Parys (d. 1558), and her second husband Sir William
Cavendish. (fn. 114) When Philip Parys died in 1672, Hildersham was not sold with his other lands, but under
his will passed for life to his mother Anne, widow of
John Parys (d. 1667), who had married secondly Sir
Joseph Colston (d. 1675). (fn. 115) She held Hildersham
until her death in 1706. (fn. 116) The heirs-at-law were then
the grandchildren of John Parys's five sisters. One
of them, Sir Francis Andrews, Bt. (d. 1759),
descended from two of the sisters, (fn. 117) bought out the
other coheirs in 1706. (fn. 118)
In 1747, his son William being insane, Sir Francis
settled Hildersham upon his daughter Bridget's
marriage to Philip Southcote (fn. 119) (d. 1758). (fn. 120) Bridget
died in 1783, having settled the manor upon her
kinsman Robert Edward Petre, Lord Petre (fn. 121)
(d. 1801). (fn. 122) In 1798 or 1799 Lord Petre sold Hildersham to the Cambridge banker John Mortlock, (fn. 123)
who resold it c. 1811 to Thomas Fassett, (fn. 124) upon
whose death it was again sold in 1820 (fn. 125) to Col. J. P.
Hamilton. He owned it until c. 1828, when it was
acquired by James Barker, vicar of Great Abington
1829–35. (fn. 126) In 1839 Barker sold it to Lt. Alexander
Cotton, R.N., who sold it in 1849. (fn. 127) It was bought
by 1850 by Edward Huddleston (d. 1852), whose
son and heir Ferdinand (fn. 128) by acquiring the Stutfield
estate (fn. 129) came to own virtually the whole parish,
which descended with his Sawston estate (fn. 130) until
1922 when it was sold (fn. 131) to James Binney. Hildersham descended with Binney's Pampisford estate, (fn. 132)
and in 1973 belonged to Mr. H. B. Binney. (fn. 133)
Hildersham Hall stands approximately on the site
of the former Netherhall farm-house, (fn. 134) which probably survives as a two-storeyed range behind the
main block of the Hall. The Hall, built c. 1807 to
designs by Edward Lapidge, is a stuccoed villa, five
bays by three, of two storeys with an attic. It has
a porch at the south-east corner, a portico facing
west towards a lake, and a central staircase-hall lit
by a glass lantern. (fn. 135) Thomas Fassett probably laid
out, on ground still divided c. 1810 into closes, (fn. 136) the
park of 72 a., which includes an artificial lake and
several plantations. Under the Huddlestons the Hall
was usually let, (fn. 137) and in 1879 the Hall and park were
sold to J. K. Thornton (d. c. 1904), whose widow
occupied them until 1922. (fn. 138) They were then sold
to Lady E. F. Miller, who lived there until c. 1930, (fn. 139)
and in 1931 to F. W. Rhodes (d. 1938), a nephew of
Cecil Rhodes. (fn. 140) About 1939 the Hall passed to the
Rhodes Trust, which still owned it in 1973, when
it was occupied by Miss G. M. Rhodes. (fn. 141)
The farm-house belonging to the Upperhall
estate, north of the river, which was sometimes called
Hildersham Hall in the 18th century (fn. 142) but later
Manor Farm, includes a timber-framed, L-shaped,
two-storey range, probably of c. 1600. Its north
wing has a gabled overhang. An eastwards extension
in brick probably dates from the early 18th century,
and a brick wing north of the last was added in the
early 19th. It was disused by 1973 and was sold soon
after. (fn. 143) The name of Dovehouse close across the
road (fn. 144) suggests the former manorial status of the
house.
By 1546 King's College owned an estate at Hildersham, held of the Paryses' manor, (fn. 145) which it had
probably acquired with its lands at Abington c. 1450.
In 1583 the college had c. 50 a. at Hildersham, c.
1840 53 a., (fn. 146) which were sold in 1859 to Robert
Goodwin, rector of Hildersham. (fn. 147) After his death
in 1899 his sisters and heirs Sarah (d. 1909) and
Frances (d. 1910) (fn. 148) vested the property in 1901 in
trustees for the benefit of the church, who sold it in
1918. (fn. 149)
By 1800 virtually all the copyhold land in the
parish had come into a single ownership. Its largest
component derived originally from the Hildersham
land acquired by Thomas Dalton (fn. 150) (d. 1602), who
left his estate to his third son George (fn. 151) (d. 1638). (fn. 152)
In 1649 George's sons Thomas and John sold it to
Thomas Puckering, (fn. 153) whose land was sold in 1672
after his death to William Eedes, rector of Horseheath (d. 1709). (fn. 154) Eedes's son Francis sold c. 85 a.
in 1709 to Thomas Rickard (fn. 155) (d. 1733), whose
brother and heir John (fn. 156) sold them in 1739 to the
unorthodox divine Conyers Middleton. When Dr.
Middleton died at Hildersham in 1750 he left over
230 a. to his widow Anne; Anne sold them in 1751
to Thomas Hanway and Hanway in 1753 to Thomas
Rumbold Hall. (fn. 157) Hall, who owned c. 313 a. by 1795,
besides leasing the King's College estate, (fn. 158) died in
1799. His son Thomas sold his estate, probably in
1800, to John Burgoyne, (fn. 159) who had inherited from
his father John (d. 1786) c. 90 a., bought in 1776
from William and Mary Fairchild, (fn. 160) and had himself
acquired in 1795 c. 95 a., formerly owned by the
Offord family, (fn. 161) and in 1798 the land of John, son
of William Burgoyne (d. 1793). (fn. 162) At his death in
1827 John Burgoyne owned c. 550 a., which he left
to his daughter Mary, who in 1829 married William
Stutfield, (fn. 163) a London wine-merchant. In 1865 Stutfield and his wife sold their property to Ferdinand
Huddleston. (fn. 164)
The substantial house attached to the Burgoyne
estate in a close just north of the river was probably
on the site of the seven-hearth house occupied in
1664 by Thomas Puckering. (fn. 165) It was rebuilt or enlarged by Conyers Middleton c. 1750, (fn. 166) and in the
mid 19th century, when it was called the Rookery,
comprised two blocks, with a five-bay Georgian
front to the garden. It was demolished in 1868. (fn. 167)
The site was later occupied by a large red-brick
house, built after 1900 by Sarah and Frances
Goodwin. (fn. 168)
Economic History.
In 1086 Hildersham
contained 11 plough-lands, of which the demesne,
assessed at 2½ out of 5 hides in the vill, probably
comprised half, and had 4 servi and 4 plough-teams
of its own to work them. Sixteen villani with 7 teams
between them occupied the other 2½ hides. The
yearly value had been raised from £8 to £10 since
Aubrey de Vere received the manor. (fn. 169) In 1279 Grimbald Pauncefoot's demesne included 240 a. of arable
and 10 a. of meadow and pasture. The tenants included some substantial freeholders, with undertenants of their own, such as Richard le Breton who
had 30 a., and Roger Doget (fn. 170) who left 76 a. held of
both moieties of the manor to his son Roger in 1295. (fn. 171)
Most of the parish was probably held in villeinage
by tenants, some of whom, probably half-yardlanders, owed week-work and had each to plough for
the lord 24 days a year and carry 15 a. of his corn. (fn. 172)
In the 16th century the standard copyhold tenement,
presumably derived from the half-yardland,
amounted to c. 18 a. (fn. 173) In later times, of c. 590 a. in
the parish not included in the demesne farms, the
glebe, and the King's College estate, only c. 65 a.
were freehold, the rest copyhold. (fn. 174) In the 16th century the custom was that copyholds descended to
the youngest son, (fn. 175) but by the mid 17th they were
regularly inherited by the eldest. (fn. 176)
By the 16th century there was considerable concentration of ownership among the villagers. Thus
the Snarston family, prominent in Hildersham from
the 1460s, (fn. 177) held over 60 a. c. 1540. (fn. 178) One copyholder had 110 a. in 1545, another 155 a. in 1590. (fn. 179)
Of 23 people taxed in 1524 only three were charged
on goods worth over £2, including Simon Beteyn, (fn. 180)
who with two relatives was thought to be worth £85
in 1522. (fn. 181) The prosperous Hamond family flourished
at Hildersham from the 1520s to the 1690s. (fn. 182) Henry
Hamond (d. 1660) left 98 a. there besides legacies
amounting to £200. He was also, as his ancestors
had been since the 1580s, lessee to King's College, (fn. 183)
which until after 1800 regularly let its Hildersham
estate to yeoman families there on beneficial leases
at rents in kind fixed since the 16th century. (fn. 184) About
1700 there were 14 copyhold tenants, not all living
in the parish, (fn. 185) and in 1786 ten. (fn. 186) In 1777 six of
them, occupying respectively 323 a., 89 a., 89 a.,
47 a., 40½ a., and 32 a., occupied virtually the whole
parish excluding the demesnes and glebe, the others
having only 17 a. between them. The manorial
estate in 1777 included c. 740 a. out of 1,500 a. (fn. 187) By
the late 19th century, having absorbed the Burgoyne
estate, it covered almost the whole parish. (fn. 188)
By the 16th century the demesne had been
divided into two large farms, probably corresponding to the land of the former moieties and lying
respectively north and south of the river. One of
them covered c. 300 a. about 1580. (fn. 189) From the 1660s
Francis Westhorp (fn. 190) (d. 1689) occupied one of them
at a rent below the full value because he also served
Lady Colston as bailiff and agent, and was succeeded
in turn by his son Francis and son-in-law. (fn. 191) About
1800 Overhall farm, north of the river, covered
c. 320 a., and Netherhall farm, to the south, c. 400 a.,
later reduced to c. 320 a. when the park was made. (fn. 192)
Much demesne land lay in ancient inclosures, which
on Netherhall farm included c. 1800 some 100 a.
north of the road from Linton to Great Abington
and c. 75 a. near Hildersham wood, perhaps derived
from medieval assarting. In the open fields the bulk
of the demesne arable was concentrated in large
blocks of 10 a. or more. Thus c. 270 a. of Overhall
farm covered a virtually continuous area along both
sides of the road from Linton to Little Abington. (fn. 193)
The copyholders' land remained until inclosure in
the narrow strips typical of open-field cultivation. (fn. 194)
About 1800 Hildersham, apart from over 250 a.
of old inclosures around the village, (fn. 195) was considered
as being divided by the river into a north field of
c. 660 a. and a south field of c. 340 a. (fn. 196) In earlier
periods the arable had been divided into smaller
blocks, still called fields in the 18th century, (fn. 197) and
themselves composed of furlongs or shots varying
in size from almost 40 a. to 2 or 3 a. (fn. 198) The only
permanent common pasture was the 12 a. of St.
Margaret's Green, so named by 1590, north-east
of the village, where a stream ran down a narrow
valley. It was grazed from May to St. Thomas's day
by certain cottagers, as well as by the lord and his
farmers. (fn. 199) The village meadows, such as Broadmeadow, which was intercommonable with Little
Abington c. 1730, and Midsummer meadow, lay
along the river. (fn. 200)
How the arable was divided for the customary
rotation of crops is unclear. In 1801 864 a., twothirds of the arable area including closes, were under
cultivation, suggesting a triennial rotation. (fn. 201) In 1798,
however, only half of the 400 a. on Netherhall farm
had been cropped. (fn. 202) Moreover, the manorial farms
each had land on only one side of the river, while
the glebe and the King's College estate lay entirely
on the north side. (fn. 203) In the 16th century a copyholder
might devise his lands north and south of the
river to different sons, (fn. 204) suggesting that even then
a separate rotation may have been observed on each
side. In the late 19th century it was said that according to tradition only one-sixth of the parish lay
fallow each year, after five crops had been taken
from it. (fn. 205)
The principal crop, as elsewhere in the neighbourhood, was barley. One man in 1527 left his wife 40 a.
of barley and only 1 a. each of wheat and rye. Saffron
was also grown at Hildersham from the early 16th
century. (fn. 206) In 1801 319 a. of barley were sown, and
150 a. of wheat, but other grains had become more
prominent, including oats at 138 a., and rye at
82½ a., and a variety of roots and grasses had been
introduced. (fn. 207) Such innovations were probably less
difficult on the demesne farms, where large closes
and arable blocks could more easily be severed from
the customary rotation. About 1690 a lessee of one
such farm laid down several parcels of arable with
sainfoin to convert them into pasture. (fn. 208) In 1796 the
tenant of Netherhall farm was required to lay down
land after every two crops with clover or grass for
two years. (fn. 209) His planting of coleseed and turnips (fn. 210)
probably accounted for most of the 100 a. of those
crops recorded in 1801. (fn. 211)
The turnips were intended partly to feed a flock
of c. 280 sheep and lambs. (fn. 212) In 1086 there had been
90 sheep at Hildersham, (fn. 213) which in 1347 provided
almost 26 stone for a levy of wool, including 10 stone
from Robert le Busteler's demesne. (fn. 214) In the 16th
century copyholders were keeping flocks of 20–40
sheep. (fn. 215) In the early 18th century the flocks of
Upperhall and Netherhall farms were allowed sheepwalk over the common fields only after the villagers'
cattle had fed over the stubble for 24 days on the
north side of the river and 9 days on the south. The
demesne flocks also fed over the meadows and St.
Margaret's Green, following the village herd, in the
winter. Tenants were still in 1724 forbidden to hire
their rights of common for cattle to outsiders or to
exercise them unless resident. (fn. 216) About 1795 there
were c. 540 Norfolk sheep in the parish, probably
mostly in the demesne farm flocks, one of which
included c. 260 grown sheep in 1816. (fn. 217) It was
asserted in 1812 that no right of sheepgate was
attached to copyholds, (fn. 218) although at inclosure some
allotments were made for copyhold rights of common. (fn. 219) The lord still claimed in the 19th century to
exercise right of sheep-walk over the one-sixth of
the fields lying fallow, so preventing other occupiers
from introducing more modern farming methods. (fn. 220)
About 1800 John Mortlock proposed the inclosure
of Hildersham under the same Act as Great Abington but was obstructed by the aged rector, Thomas
Salt, (fn. 221) who preferred to take his tithes in kind and
did not wish the poorer villagers to lose common of
pasture for their cows and pigs. (fn. 222) In 1812–13 the
lord and other landowners exchanged rights of
pasture over Broadmeadow, (fn. 223) and the disadvantages
of open-field cultivation were partly mitigated
because soon after 1800 almost the whole parish
was concentrated into a few large farms. On the
manorial estate Overhall farm was occupied from
c. 1750 to 1817 by the Mabbutt family; at Netherhall farm William Burgoyne, tenant from 1759, was
succeeded in 1793 by his son John (d. 1814), (fn. 224) whose
bankruptcy compelled him in 1798 to surrender his
lease to his kinsman and creditor John Burgoyne
(d. 1827), (fn. 225) who also farmed in person most of his
accumulated copyholds. From c. 1820 the manorial
land was again for a time divided in two. (fn. 226) Old or
Manor farm covered c. 350 a. north of the river. The
glebe and tithes were let with it from 1830. To the
south lay New farm of c. 343 a.: when Hildersham
Hall replaced the former Netherhall farm-house, a
new farmstead was built first at Cook's Pen, an old
sheep-pen south-east of the village, and then at Pen
Farm, established by 1849 in the centre of the south
field. Thomas Webb (d. 1876) leased the northern
farm from 1830 and Pen farm also from c. 1848. His
son and partner Thomas eventually succeeded him
as tenant after 1865 of virtually the whole parish. (fn. 227)
The use of labour was intensive. The elder Webb
was in 1851 employing 56 men, while William Stutfield, then farming c. 420 a., had 24. Only c. 35
labourers actually lived in the parish, (fn. 228) but men
walked over daily to work from more populous
villages such as Linton and Balsham. Both landlord
and tenant found importing labour more convenient
than building new cottages. (fn. 229) Webb was evidently
disliked by some villagers. Attempts were made to
burn down two of his farmsteads. He induced
a diviner to 'identify' the suspected culprit, whom
he forced to leave the village. (fn. 230)
The farm-labourers who then comprised most of
Hildersham's inhabitants (fn. 231) were poor. Average
wages barely rose from 9s. a week c. 1830 to 10s. or
11s. in the 1860s, (fn. 232) and few cottages had gardens.
The cottagers gained little from the survival of the
open fields, for by the early 1880s there were only
two cows outside the farmer's herd. In 1849 the
rector, Robert Goodwin, bought c. 6 a. near the
church as allotments, (fn. 233) replaced at inclosure in
the 1880s by 12 a. near the river. (fn. 234) In 1970 the land
had for some time been let in one lot to the tenant
of Manor farm. (fn. 235)
The death in 1881 of Thomas Webb the younger
and the expected division of his farm into two or
three holdings threatened to revive the disadvantages of open-field cultivation, (fn. 236) and a provisional inclosure order was obtained in 1883 (fn. 237) and
confirmed by an Act the same year. (fn. 238) The land was
divided in 1885, and the award executed in 1889.
It allotted c. 55 a. for the rectorial glebe, 45 a. for
the rector's private estate, c. 25 a. for the town land
and other public purposes, and c. 9 a. to 5 people
for rights of common. All the rest of the land
involved, 945 a. including 93 a. for the right of
sheep-walk, went to the Huddleston estate. (fn. 239) By
1895 that estate had been divided into four farms.
One, Manor farm of c. 890 a. north of the village,
was for some time kept in hand. After 1922 part of
it was sometimes let separately as Green farm, for
which a new farmstead was built north-east of the
village. Another Huddleston farm north of the river
was often held with the rectory farm, for which a
homestead had been built out in the fields by 1912.
South of the river were Cook's Pen, of 133 a., and
beyond the railway line Pen farm of 373 a., sometimes, as from 1922, let together. (fn. 240)
In the 19th century there was little work available
in Hildersham except on the farms. In 1831 32 families were engaged in agriculture, only 7 in crafts or
trade. (fn. 241) The population in 1851 included a shoemaker and a coal-dealer. (fn. 242) The village retained its
own blacksmith's shop until c. 1940, and a carpenter's business, employing 3 men in 1871, developed into a small building firm, which constructed
the village bridge in 1886 and survived until c. 1925. (fn. 243)
By 1960 the village shops had all closed, and except
for those few employed on the farms the inhabitants
worked in Linton, Cambridge, or Haverhill. (fn. 244)
In 1254 the Crown granted William de Boleville
and his wife Ela a weekly market on Fridays with
an annual fair on 19–21 July, (fn. 245) but no evidence survives that either was actually established.
Aubrey de Vere owned a mill at Hildersham
yielding 10s. a year in 1086, (fn. 246) presumably that
attached c. 1190 and later to the Ros moiety of the
manor. (fn. 247) When the Parys estates were broken up
c. 1675 Hildersham mill was sold with the Linton
estate to Sir Thomas Sclater, (fn. 248) who had it rebuilt
c. 1680. (fn. 249) It remained with his successors until after
the 1770s, (fn. 250) but had been sold by 1800. (fn. 251) In the
early 19th century the mill belonged to the Reeve
family who occupied it until c. 1850; (fn. 252) it remained in
business under various owners until c. 1915. The
water-mill, which also used steam from the 1890s, (fn. 253)
stands on a cut some way east of Hildersham village,
and straddles the parish boundary with Linton. Its
buildings, converted by 1925 into a private house, (fn. 254)
comprised in 1973 a central mill-block, partly
timber-built, spanning the former mill-race, with
a brick house to the east, in Linton, and a tall greybrick block to the west. A windmill, in the same
ownership, built by 1837 in a field south of the
water-mill, (fn. 255) was rebuilt in brick in 1863 (fn. 256) and survived in 1973 without its sails. Its outbuildings, after
use for an agricultural engineer's business, were sold
in 1958 (fn. 257) and were used in 1973 for selling antiques.
Local Government.
In 1275 Isabel Pauncefoot and Gilbert Kirkby were said to have view of
frankpledge and the assize of bread and of ale at
Hildersham. (fn. 258) In 1299 Isabel's grandson Grimbald
claimed to hold the view jointly with the Kirkby
heir, presumably in a single court leet for the whole
vill. (fn. 259) The manor court was still occasionally styled
a court leet and baron in the 1650s, (fn. 260) when it was
presenting encroachments on the waste and electing
haywards. (fn. 261) It was still making regulations about
common rights 'for the peace and quiet of the
tenants' in the 1720s, (fn. 262) when purely formal leet
sittings were still held and constables and pinders
appointed. (fn. 263) In the 1790s and in 1836 it formally
appointed pinders, (fn. 264) and in 1812, under a new lord,
began again to declare rules on commoning and to
present copyholders for letting cottages decay. (fn. 265) A
draft court book survives for 1651–9, and there are
court rolls for 1672–1732 and court books for 1706–
1897. They are principally concerned with copyhold
transfers. (fn. 266)
In 1564 the churchwardens were said not to be
making proper collections for the poor. (fn. 267) From the
1680s to c. 1835, probably because substantial inhabitants were few, only one churchwarden was
usually elected, normally the principal farmer in the
parish, who held office continuously for many years. (fn. 268)
Poor relief was not expensive until the 1780s. In
1776 £14 was spent, a quarter of it on house-rent,
c. 1785 £55, and in 1803 £87. Fourteen people,
besides children, were then permanently supported. (fn. 269)
In 1814 18 were permanently relieved at a cost
totalling £232. (fn. 270) In 1829 two men were occasionally
employed on roadwork; coal and clothing were distributed to the poor, and the roundsman system may
have been in force. (fn. 271) In 1832 £93 of £133 expended
went to the aged, sick, and widows. (fn. 272) Hildersham
became part of the Linton poor-law union in 1835, (fn. 273)
was incorporated with the Linton R.D. into the
South Cambridgeshire R.D. in 1934, (fn. 274) and was
included in South Cambridgeshire in 1974.
Church.
Hildersham church had probably been
established by c. 1150 and belonged originally to the
Veres, since Hatfield Broadoak priory (Essex),
founded by the Veres c. 1135, received a portion of
tithes at Hildersham, worth 5 marks in 1291. (fn. 275) In
1210 the advowson of the rectory was in dispute
between Gerard de Camville and his sister Maud, (fn. 276)
each holding half the manor, and by 1279 was held
by Gerard's successors, from whom it passed to the
Bustelers. (fn. 277) In 1347 Grimbald Pauncefoot's widow
Clemence recovered her third turn to present in
right of dower against Robert le Busteler. (fn. 278) Busteler's successors, the Paryses, retained the advowson, (fn. 279) and after the Elizabethan settlement, as
papists, were importuned by bishops and such
staunch protestants as Sir Francis Walsingham to
accept recommendations for the living. (fn. 280) In 1638
Charles Parys sold the advowson to Isaac Appleton,
who in 1649 sold it to Henry Smith (d. 1702), rector
since 1642. (fn. 281)
Smith resigned the living in 1684 and presented
his son Henry, upon whose marriage in 1685 the
advowson was entailed. The younger Smith sold it
in 1714 to James Salt, and died in 1736, (fn. 282) whereupon
Salt had himself presented. He died in 1758 having
settled the advowson successively on his sons James
(d.s.p. 1797) and Thomas (d. 1806), who each in
turn presented himself to the living. (fn. 283) In 1801
Thomas Salt sold the advowson to James Goodwin,
who presented his son Charles in 1806 and died
the same year. (fn. 284) Charles, who died in 1847, left the
advowson to his second son Robert, (fn. 285) who held the
rectory upon his own presentation (fn. 286) until his death
in 1899. In 1901 his sisters and heirs Sarah and
Frances vested the advowson in trustees, including
the new rector, P. R. Phillips, for the benefit of the
church. When Phillips resigned in 1947 presentation was suspended and the cure was thereafter
served by neighbouring incumbents or retired
clergymen. (fn. 287)
The rectorial glebe consisted of c. 50 a. of arable
in 1279, (fn. 288) 62 a. in the 17th century, (fn. 289) and 67½ a.,
including closes, in 1777. (fn. 290) The 55 a. allotted for
glebe at inclosure in 1889 (fn. 291) was sold in 1919. (fn. 292) In
1951 the church retained 9 a. of glebe. (fn. 293) The tithes,
still being taken in kind in 1800, (fn. 294) were commuted
in 1840 for a tithe-rent-charge of £423 15s. (fn. 295) The
rectory house stood c. 1560 in a copyhold close
opposite the church, held by successive rectors until
its enfranchisement in 1848. (fn. 296) The house had seven
hearths in 1664 (fn. 297) and was said to be large and in
good repair in 1783. (fn. 298) A large brick house built in
Tudor style c. 1851 (fn. 299) had been sold by 1961. (fn. 300)
The benefice was taxed at £12 in 1217, and at
20 marks in 1291, (fn. 301) but only at £15 in 1535. (fn. 302) By
1650 it was worth £80 a year and in 1728 £100. (fn. 303)
The rector's gross income was £320 c. 1830, (fn. 304) and
£450 in 1877. (fn. 305)
About 1300 a rector gave the church 3 a. in free
alms. (fn. 306) By the mid 18th century the rent of 3 a. called
the town land, yielding 10s. a year in the 18th century and £3 5s. in the 19th, was by custom devoted
to church repairs and expenses. (fn. 307) From 1524 3s. 4d.
a year for church repairs was also received from John
Bolton's charity. (fn. 308) The endowment of the church by
Sarah and Frances Goodwin in 1901 is mentioned
above. (fn. 309)
In the early 14th century the patrons sometimes
chose their kinsmen or dependents as rectors. Ralph
Hengham presented his clerk John Hengham, rector
1311–21, and William le Busteler in 1321 presented
his younger son William, still rector in 1332. (fn. 310)
William's successor, William Gryselegh, c. 1338
until 1342, was frequently absent in the service of
the countess of Norfolk or the earl of Suffolk. (fn. 311) In
1379 the rector had two chaplains to assist him. (fn. 312) In
the late 15th and early 16th centuries Hildersham
had a guild of the Assumption. (fn. 313) Margaret, wife of
John Parys (d. 1517), whose dower included the
advowson, presented in 1518 William Burgoyne,
master of Peterhouse (d. 1523), and then his brother
Thomas, rector 1523–50, who held Hildersham in
plurality with Sandy (Beds.) from 1526. (fn. 314) Both
were probably non-resident, employing curates. (fn. 315)
John Reston, rector 1550–1, was master of Jesus
College, Cambridge. (fn. 316) His successor Dr. Thomas
Heskyns, also usually non-resident, had abandoned
the cure by 1561 to go overseas, where he became
a Catholic controversialist. (fn. 317) George Fuller, rector
1561–91, usually resided at Hildersham, and built
up an estate in the neighbourhood, (fn. 318) but regularly
employed curates, (fn. 319) the first recorded being apparently a convinced protestant. (fn. 320) Fuller's successor
John Smith held Hildersham with Fen Ditton until
his death in 1614. In 1593 his curate was said to be
failing to catechize the children. (fn. 321) Thomas Murriell,
rector 1614–29, held two livings and was archdeacon
of Norfolk. (fn. 322) Henry Smith, master of Magdalene
College, Cambridge, was succeeded at Hildersham
when he died in 1642 by his son Henry, (fn. 323) who held
the living throughout the Interregnum, being
described in 1650 as an orthodox and godly divine. (fn. 324)
Through his purchase of the advowson in 1649 the
rectory became a family living, held by three successive clerical dynasties until 1900. (fn. 325)
The third Henry Smith was resident in 1728,
when he was holding communion seven times a year
and two services every Sunday. He claimed up to
18 communicants. (fn. 326) James Salt was likewise resident
in 1775 and conducted services in person, (fn. 327) but his
brother Thomas, already vicar of Nazeing (Essex),
employed the Revd. Andrew Perne of Little Abington as curate. (fn. 328) In 1807 the newly presented Charles
Goodwin had few communicants (fn. 329) and only c. 20 in
1825, although he held services twice each Sunday
and communion four times a year. (fn. 330) He was normally resident, as was his son Robert, who also held
Great Abington from 1845, but both usually employed curates, including in 1877 the master of
Saffron Walden grammar school. Robert then
claimed that almost all the parishioners came to
church and up to 47 people attended the monthly
communion. (fn. 331) By 1897 he was also holding services
on weekdays in Lent and on many saints' days, and
by 1894 had instituted a surpliced choir. (fn. 332) There
were 49 communicants in 1905, (fn. 333) 43 in 1939, when
most of the congregation of 90 went to church every
other Sunday. (fn. 334)
The church of the HOLY TRINITY, so called
by 1521, (fn. 335) stands west of the street and north of the
river. It is built of field stones with ashlar dressings,
and consists of a chancel with a south chapel and
north sacristy, aisled nave of two bays with a south
porch, and west tower. The oldest portions, the
vaulted sacristy and the west tower, are of the early
13th century. The tower, unbuttressed and surmounted by a small spike, has simple lancets to the
two lower stages and double lancets under restored
plate tracery to the third, and inside is divided from
the nave by two low arches. The tall nave, rebuilt
in the late 13th century, but probably retaining its
earlier proportions, has one quatrefoil pier on each
side; the clerestory has cusped windows in square
frames, possibly restored. The aisle windows have
simple Decorated tracery, and may be contemporary
with the south chapel built by William le Busteler,
rector 1321–32, (fn. 336) perhaps as a chantry for his
parents. The chancel arch was rebuilt probably
c. 1400. (fn. 337) In the 15th century the chancel was given
new windows which still survived c. 1850, (fn. 338) and
a new door to the sacristy.
The octagonal 13th-century font rests on five
columns and has trefoiled canopies on each face.
Screens between the chancel and the south chapel
and nave survived in 1742 (fn. 339) but were swept away at
the Victorian restoration, when the roof also was
entirely renewed. (fn. 340) Despite William Dowsing's
efforts in 1644 (fn. 341) much medieval glass survived in
1742, and a few fragments that remained c. 1880
were then reset. (fn. 342) Among notable monuments in the
church are the effigies, carved in oak, of a crosslegged knight and a lady, perhaps commemorating
William le Busteler (d. c. 1334) and his wife. (fn. 343) The
chancel contains brasses with effigies ascribed to
Robert Parys (d. c. 1377) and his wife Eleanor, to
Henry Parys (d. 1427) and his wife Margery, and
to Henry Parys (d. 1466). (fn. 344) A tomb-slab carved with
a cross lies under an ogee-headed recess in the north
wall of the chancel, where Robert Parys's brass
once lay.
In 1601 the church windows were found to be
much broken and the chancel not whitewashed, (fn. 345)
and in 1638 the aisles were blocked by two large
pews. (fn. 346) Both chapel and aisles were out of repair in
1665, (fn. 347) and in 1742 the chapel was unfloored. (fn. 348) In
1803 the churchwardens sold the lead off the roof
and pulled down the south chapel. (fn. 349) Between 1853
and 1890 the church was heavily restored by the
rector Robert Goodwin, latterly with C. A. Buckler
as architect. (fn. 350) The chancel and north aisle were
remodelled by 1855 and the south chapel rebuilt
soon after. The chancel arch was refashioned, the
walls were thoroughly scraped, and at Goodwin's
insistence the Perpendicular tracery in the chancel
windows was then replaced with reticulated tracery.
The tower was raised 13 ft. and the roof replaced
and slated in 1878. The chancel was entirely covered
c. 1890 with paintings (fn. 351) which were restored in
1973. (fn. 352) Stained glass, including an east window by
Clayton and Bell, (fn. 353) greatly darkened the church, and
an alabaster reredos was installed in memory of
James Raymond, tenant at the Hall in 1851 and
1871. (fn. 354) When work was completed in 1890 (fn. 355) the
interior appeared, as in 1973, almost entirely Victorian.
In 1542 Margaret Parys bequeathed to the church
an organ standing in it. (fn. 356) In the early 19th century
music was supplied from a singing gallery at the
west end erected since 1742. After its demolition
c. 1870 several players never set foot in the church
again. A new organ, given by Robert Goodwin, was
installed in 1900. (fn. 357) In 1552 the church had three
bells. (fn. 358) Three new bells were cast in 1581, two of
which were sold in 1803. The third and lightest was
used in 1880 by John Taylor & Co. of Loughborough
in making three new bells, (fn. 359) which survived in 1973.
A silver cup and paten by Thomas Buttell were
acquired in 1569. (fn. 360) The parish registers are complete from 1559. (fn. 361)
Nonconformity.
In 1582 Thomas Dalton
and his wife were said to have failed to come to
church for a year. (fn. 362) Although the manor was owned
until 1800 by papists there is no evidence of Catholic
recusancy in Hildersham, nor of protestant dissent
before 1783, when two families were said to attend
a meeting at Linton. (fn. 363) In 1825 the number of
dissenters was said to be increasing. (fn. 364) A house was
registered for dissenting worship in 1828, and a
building in 1837, the latter by Thomas Hopkins, (fn. 365)
Independent minister at Linton. (fn. 366) Perhaps the same
building was the out-station of the Linton chapel,
lately adapted for worship, where the Linton
minister, G. J. Hall, held Saturday evening services
in 1851 with an average attendance of 100. (fn. 367) It had
closed by 1877, and in 1897 all the inhabitants were
said to be nominally church people. (fn. 368)
Education.
In 1524 money was left for four
boys to go to school, (fn. 369) and Hildersham had unlicensed school masters in 1579 and 1601. (fn. 370) In 1818
the parish clerk kept a school for 30 boys and his
wife taught girls to read and sew, while an evening
school was held for young men. (fn. 371) In 1833 there was
only one day-school with 10 pupils, for whom their
parents paid. (fn. 372) By 1851 a day-school and Sunday
school had been set up in a building south-east of
the church. (fn. 373) The parochial school was supported
in 1864 by contributions from parishioners and in
1879 by the rector and school-pence. It was rebuilt
in 1879–80 (fn. 374) for up to 111 children. Attendance
between 1893 and 1914 fluctuated around 40. (fn. 375)
The school had separate mixed and infants departments in 1914. (fn. 376) By 1919 attendance had declined
to c. 20. (fn. 377) Many children went to Abington school,
and in 1928, when it had only 7 pupils, Hildersham
school was closed. (fn. 378)
Charities for the Poor.
From 1524 Hildersham received 6s. 8d. a year under the will,
proved 1509, of John Bolton of Little Abington,
half for its church, half for its poor. The money was
still being paid in 1965. Since 1929 it had been a
rent-charge on Abington Hall whose owner redeemed
it for £10 in 1966. (fn. 379) In 1573 the parish bought with
its town stock the 4-a. Bodney's close north of the
church, the income to be distributed twice a year
to the poor. In 1590 one of the feoffees, Thomas
Dalton (d. 1602), acquired the close subject to a
rent-charge of £1, (fn. 380) which was still received in 1965.
By the 18th century the churchwardens were distributing the two charities together, usually at Christmas, in doles of 6d. to 1s. 6d. In 1766 there were
22 recipients including 8 widows, in 1834 14. (fn. 381) In
the early 20th century the income was saved for
several years and then distributed in coal. (fn. 382) The
cottagers' right to common over St. Margaret's
Green, reputed a charity in 1837, (fn. 383) was replaced at
inclosure in 1889 by allotments. (fn. 384)