The little village of Hinton Waldrist sits on top of a ridge
that runs west-east through the prime agricultural land lying between
Faringdon and Oxford. It is a place I know well, as my wife was brought up
there and we were married in its trim medieval church. The parish that it forms part of stretches northwards to the river Thames and south across the main
Oxford to Swindon road towards the Berkshire Downs. Indeed, Hinton Waldrist was
in Berkshire until 1974, when boundary changes reallocated it to Oxfordshire. The
parish is thinly populated; successive census returns have never ventured above
400 souls. Although it contains some fine buildings, it is an unprepossessing
place, lacking the picturesque quality of the Cotswolds to the west. These
days, it has few amenities. Its school closed down many years ago and it has
lacked a shop and post office for the past two decades. It has never had a pub,
due to the disapproval of a nineteenth century lord of the manor.
Hinton Waldrist is just one of thousands of anonymous villages
and parishes that chequer the English countryside. However, its very anonymity
makes it a classic example of an English nucleated
village in a parish situated among champion
countryside. In this article, I will outline its history and explain how
it can serve as an exemplar of this aspect of rural England. I will take its
story up until 1760, when its farmlands were enclosed by Act of Parliament. A
subsequent article will explore Hinton Waldrist’s more recent history.
Woodland Countryside
and Champion Countryside
Landscape historians identify two broad types of countryside
in medieval England: woodland (or ancient) countryside and champion (or planned)
countryside. Woodland countryside was so called because it featured small
fields and numerous winding lanes with thick hedges that contained many
standard trees, enabling the harvesting of woodland products. It was
predominantly found in upland areas of north and west England and also in the
south-eastern counties of Kent, Essex and Suffolk. The small well-protected fields
were mainly for livestock farming and the pattern of human settlement was for
scattered, family-run farms and small hamlets – pastoral agriculture was not
labour-intensive. In champion countryside, by contrast, arable farming
predominated and the land was largely made up of large open fields with few
hedges, easy to plough and therefore suitable for growing grain. Arable farming
was more labour-intensive and “nucleated” villages were established in the
centre of parishes, as a dormitory settlement for that parish’s farmers and
agricultural workers. Champion countryside was mainly found in a band running
from lowland Yorkshire in the north-east to Dorset in the south-west, that band
embracing the upper-Thames area where Hinton Waldrist is sited. However, both champion and woodland countryside could be found anywhere in England
if the land conditions suited, and both arable and pastoral farming took place
everywhere – it was the balance of grain and livestock that differed.
The shaded area on this map shows the main area of Champion (or planned) countryside in England. Other areas were predominantly "woodland" countryside. Scotland's pattern of land use was different |
Today, woodland countryside can still be identified in many
places, largely unaltered for centuries. However, there is little or no
champion countryside left that medieval farmers would recognise. The open
fields were swept away in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries by
“enclosure”, which we will discuss later.
The Parish of Hinton
Waldrist
Hinton is a Saxon
name, meaning “township on a hill”. The suffix Waldrist (there have been many different spellings over the
centuries) was apparently added in the early 13th century, when the
parish was owned by the St. Valery family. The manor of Hinton was founded in Norman times and was coterminous with the ecclesiastical parish served by its
church. ‘Manor’ in this context refers to an area of land with a single owner
(the ‘lord of the manor’) and administered from a ‘manor house’. Today, the
civil parish of Hinton Waldrist, founded in the 19th century and
replacing administration by the manor court, follows the same boundaries.
This pattern of unified land ownership and civil and ecclesiastical
administration is typical of champion countryside, where the population was
relatively high. In woodland countryside, ‘townships’ (the name given to local administrative units) were relatively large and
may have included more than one manor, while ecclesiastical parishes were larger still, often
embracing several townships.
As was common in areas of champion countryside, prior to enclosure in the early 1760s, Hinton
Waldrist was a self-contained and essentially self-sufficient community. There
is evidence that its boundaries were planned in relation to its neighbouring
parishes to ensure that there was fair division of resources in each. The north-south boundary between Hinton and Longworth parishes has a jagged edge in places, indicating that fields were deliberately divided between the two. As we
have seen, the village itself is in the centre of the parish, on the top of the
ridge. Large, arable fields spread out from the centre down the slopes. Towards the edges of the parish were areas of common pasture land
where the parish’s livestock could be grazed and on the flat, flood-prone
ground next to the river Thames were fields of meadow, to make hay for winter
feed. Animals would also be grazed on the arable fields after the harvest and during
fallow years. The river itself, running along the northern boundary of the
parish, provided fish and also transport links. There were also areas of
woodland, to provide the community with timber and firewood.
Hinton Waldrist as it appeared just before the implementation of the 'Act of Enclosure' in the early 1760s. This is taken from John Rocque's map of Berkshire |
On the edge of the village was the manor house, set back in
its grounds and next to it the parish church, which dates from
around 1250. Houses and cottages of various sizes straggled along the east-west
road that connected Hinton with the neighbouring parishes of Longworth and
Pusey and along a lane that ran north from this road, past the church and manor
house, to the river, where there was a smaller hamlet named Duxford. There was
also once another residential area, known as Hinton Burgage, off the Duxford
road (this area is now a modern plantation). A dwelling (or 'messuage') would usually have a
small piece of land known as a ‘close’ attached to it, which its occupants
would use to keep pigs or poultry, to grow vegetables or maintain an orchard. Messuages had individual names; examples include, Slatters,
Taylors, Peckes and Pompis. Hinton would have had the necessary amenities for an
agricultural community, including a mill (the southward slope from the village to the A420 is known as Windmill Hill), a smithy and a saw
mill. The manor house also had fishponds, and a warren for keeping rabbits. In
short, Hinton had everything needed to sustain its population, both materially
and spiritually (but no pub!)
Hinton's Parish Church, dedicated to St Margaret of Antioch, is the oldest building in the parish, dating to around 1250 |
The lane to Duxford has a timeless feel |
Open Field Farming
Prior to enclosure of the land in the 1760s, Hinton, in
common with other champion countryside parishes, used the ‘open field’ system
of farming. In this system, rather than farms having their own discrete areas
of land, with hedged fields, farming was carried out in large, communal fields.
The arable fields were divided into long strips and individual farmers were
allocated strips in each field, distributed throughout the fields to ensure
that each farmer had a fair mixture of good and less productive land. The hay
meadows were similarly divided, while the pasture fields, (named ‘commons’)
were grazed by all who owned livestock.
The system was overseen by the lord of the manor, or his
land steward and by representatives of the parish community who met regularly
at manor courts. These included ‘courts baron’, where administrative matters were decided and ‘courts leet’,
which had a disciplinary function. It was a self-regulating, co-operative and
communal way of life. At the same time, there were certain things that
open-field farming was not:
- · It was not a collective, communist system. Some farmers had more land than others and produce was used or disposed of individually, rather than going into a single collective ‘pot’.
- · It was not exclusively a subsistence farming system. While some had just enough land for their own needs, others produced a surplus that they sold in the nearby market towns.
- · Not everyone possessed land and not everyone who did possess land worked it themselves. Farm holdings of different sizes implied more or less workers and farmers with large land holdings would employ a number of labourers. These may also have possessed strips of arable land for their own use and could graze animals on the commons.
Few owned their land outright. Most leased it in some way or
other from the lord of the manor. A common means of land possession in
pre-enclosure times was known as ‘copyhold’, where an individual possessed land
for their lifetime, or sometimes for the lifetimes of two generations of their
family, paying an annual rent to the lord of the manor. Poorer residents were
likely to be sub-tenants of copyholders. Wealthier copyholders were referred to as ‘yeomen’.
All who possessed arable land were obliged to farm it in the
same way, as determined by the community at the ‘courts baron’. It was usual
for the parish’s arable land to be divided into two, three or four large fields,
that were farmed in rotation on a three-year cycle, embracing wheat or barley
in year one, oats, peas or beans in year two and fallow in year three. Hinton’s
three arable fields were, rather prosaically, named Little Burrow field, Middle
Field and Field next to Longworth. As stated above, each farmer would have an
allocation of strips of land distributed within each field. As well as the
tenant farmers, there would be allocations of land for the lord of the manor
(known as demesne lands) and for the rector (glebe lands). Arable fields had a
distinctive corrugated appearance, as each was made up of ‘rigs’ and ‘furrows’,
wave-like undulations running the length of the field, produced by medieval
ploughs throwing the soil up on one side, the mounds of earth deepening as the
years passed. Rig and furrow also helped with drainage and assisted the
demarcation of individual land holdings. Both the open-field system and rig and
furrow developed in late Saxon times, contemporaneous with the division of the
land into manors and parishes, strongly suggesting a planned reorganisation of
agriculture at that time (hence ‘planned’ countryside as an alternative title
to ‘champion’ countryside).
Looking north towards the river Thames, we see the site of Hinton Common, which would have been the main area of summer grazing for the parish |
So by Norman times, Hinton was
established as a largely self-contained, self-sufficient and self-regulating
community, with its own manor house, church, open arable fields, commons,
meadows, etc. And so it continued, changing little, until the middle of the
eighteenth century.
The Manor of Hinton
The story of Hinton Manor has been entertainingly (if somewhat speculatively) told by a twentieth century owner of the manor house, Nicholas Davenport (a more succinct account can be found in the Victoria County History of Berkshire). The Manor was apparently formed following the Norman conquest of England and was granted, along with other extensive land holdings, to the St Valery family. The St Valerys were relations of William the Conqueror and were major landholders in Normandy and Brittany. The St Valerys built a motte and bailey castle on the site of the present manor house; the motte and part of the moat that surrounded the site still survive. The castle became the headquarters of the 'Honour of St Valery' and Davenport believed that the St Valerys lived there themselves during the twelfth century. The manor remained in the possession of the St Valery family for over two hundred years, until it was disposed of during the reign of Edward I and became part of the Crown possessions. Briefly in the late 14th century, a resident of Hinton Castle was Marie de Bohun, wife of Henry Bolinbroke, later King Henry IV and the mother of the future Henry V.At some point, possibly during the Wars of the Roses in the 15th century, the castle was abandoned. The manor lands remained Crown possessions until the 17th century. Davenport suggested that the present manor house was probably built by George Owen, who leased the manor from Edward VI in 1549. Owen had been physician to Henry VIII and had overseen Edward VI's birth in 1537. The manor house was altered and extended in the 18th and 19th centuries. Around 1618 the estate, along with the neighbouring estates of Longworth and West Challow was purchased from the Crown by Sir Henry Marten, a judge of the Admiralty court and a close ally of King James I. Following has death, his estates passed to his son, also Henry Marten (1602-1680).
Henry Marten, Lord of the Manor of Hinton and Regicide |
Henry Marten junior was a colourful character. A lawyer and politician as well as a landowner, he was Member of Parliament for Berkshire during the English Civil Wars. He made Longworth Manor his official residence, installing his wife there while he spent most of his time in London with his long-term mistress, Mary Ward. During the Civil Wars he supported the Parliamentarians and in 1649 was among the 'regicides' who signed the death warrant of King Charles I. Following the retoration of the monarchy in 1660, the regicides were required to surender to the Crown and Marten did so, a decision which probably saved him from execution. He was however imprisoned for life, dying at the age of 78 in Chepstow Castle.
In passing, the Civil Wars briefly touched Hinton Waldrist itself. In May 1645, Cromwell and his troops were pursuing King Charles through Oxfordshire and reputedly stayed a few days at Hinton manor house. Then in 1649 a group of mutineering Levellers militia were trying to cross the river Thames but found their way blocked by Parliamentarian soldiers. Locals showed them an alternative route across the ford at Duxford, whence they made their way to Burford. During the night they were surprised by Cromwell's troops, many were taken prisoner and the ringleaders were shot against the wall of Burford church.
Henry Marten was a spendthrift who lived life to the full and had to sell his estates to offset his debts. Hinton and Longworth manors went to John Loder (1622-1701), originally a small landowner from Harwell who, following advantageous marriages, purchased the estate in 1658 and came to live in Hinton manor house in 1668. Following John Loder’s death, the estate passed to his son Charles (1666-1727), whose only son predeceased him. The estate was then inherited jointly by Charles’s four daughters and the manor house became the residence of his eldest daughter Mary and her husband, a cousin named the Rev. Seymour Loder (1693–1743), who was also rector of the parish. By the time their son John (1725-1805) was eighteen, both his parents were dead and the estate was managed by his aunts until he came of age and inherited it under the terms of his grandfather’s will. Before coming into his inheritance, John went to Balliol College, Oxford and took holy orders. As soon as he was ordained he followed his father in becoming rector of the parish as well as lord of the manor. Like his father he lived in the manor house, presumably renting out the fine rectory.
We do not know how devout the Reverend Loder was, but we do
know that he was committed to hunting, being a founder member and first master
of the Old Berkshire Hunt. And as we will see, in the 1760s he enthusiastically
added to the value of his estate by being an early adopter of land enclosure.
Life in Hinton
Waldrist in Pre-enclosure Times
Some documentary evidence has survived that gives us hints
as to life in Hinton in the centuries leading up to enclosure in the 1760s. Many of
these documents were painstakingly transcribed and typed up in the 1960s by
Jasmine Hawse in her “Hinton Waldrist through the Centuries”. The best sources
are probably the minutes of meetings of the Courts Baron and Courts Leet, which
were held at regular intervals for hundreds of years. The Court Baron was the main administrative body for a manor and met
regularly under the chairmanship of the lord of the manor or his land steward. Decisions
were made by a ‘jury’, made up of representatives of the village, usually the
more prominent farmers or tradesmen. The business of the meeting included
formally noting the surrendering or passing on of copyhold tenancies and
appointing village officers, such as the Hayward, responsible for ensuring the
upkeep of hedges, fences and other boundaries and the Leasmen and Grass
Stewards, who oversaw the common meadows and pasture fields. The court baron
also made decisions regarding the management of the common fields and dealt
with minor infringements of discipline among the village inhabitants.
Originally, courts baron were held every few weeks but by the mid-eighteenth
century they appear to have been reduced in Hinton to annual events. The Court Leet was held less frequently and
was essentially the lowest court of the royal criminal justice system, dealing
with minor crimes and misdemeanours. The penalties applied for infringements at
both courts baron and leet were invariably fines that went to the lord of the
manor - a sometimes lucrative means of income generation.
Reviewing examples of court baron records covering several
centuries, one is struck by how little things changed. Lords of the manor came
and went but the same issues were discussed year after year, century after
century, underlining the slow, constant way of life of the village. A routine
issue was ensuring that “mounds” were properly built and maintained. These were
the boundaries of the common fields, which had to be kept up by all those who
held land within the fields, each taking responsibility for a particular
section. Thus, in 1571:
Henry Newburye and Richard
Newburye, for their part, before the feast of St. Andrew, will well and
sufficiently build their mounds in the nether side of the Bridges Close, from
the Shephowse of Master Kennell to the lane at Humphrys Busshes, under penalty
of 3s 4d.
Another regular item of manor business was the setting of
“mere stones”, that marked the boundaries between each tenant’s allocation of
land within the common fields. So in 1651:
The whole homage is to mett to
sett meare stones behind Burgage on the twentieth third daie of Januarie at
tenne of the clocke in the morning for every default not appearing at 3s 4d.
Timber cutting was also closely regulated. In 1725 the court
directed that:
No tenant shall cut down and
timber whatsoever without leave of the Lord.
But at the same time:
The Lord cannot cut down any
timber from off the Copyhold premises without leave of the tenant except to
repair the Manor House, outhouses, barns and other buildings thereto adjoining.
The grazing of animals was another regular concern. In the
summer, stock would graze the common pasture, or the arable field that was that
year left fallow. In winter, they would graze on stubble following the grain
harvest. The number of animals that a tenant could keep was regulated by the
court baron, as was the seasonal movement of stock. In 1733, the court determined
that:
By the Custom of the said Manor
all the tenants within the same are for every yardland they possess by Copy [a
yardland comprised twenty acres of arable land] to have the pasturing of thirty
sheep, four Rother cattle and two horse beasts, and so according to that rate
more or less.
In 1651 it was ordered:
That no Beasts nor sheipe shall
be baited nor kept in the summer tilthe field from London Way quite down to Hay
Gate from the sixteenthe day of Januarie to the 25th daie of march
next coming, for every default 3s 0d.
Sometimes court orders appeared somewhat pedantic. In 1725
it was solemnly noted that:
Anyone may stock a cow upon a
horse common but not a horse on a cow common, any one stocking a horse upon a
cow common shall forfeit five shillings to the Lord of the Manour for every
horse so stockt.
Disciplinary matters tended to be mundane. Court leet
records from 1437 state that:
John Sonte (3d fine) made assault
on William Schand with one dagger…and that Nicholas Bridde made assault upon
John Sonte with one stick…and that the same Nicholas made assault upon John
Whyting with one gisarm [a kind of halberd] against the peace and so is in
amercement…and that Amy Whiting (2d) and Sibill Finch (2d) are shrews to the
injury of their husbands so they are in amercement.
Later records give a more settled picture. The majority of
individuals “presented” to the court for misdemeanours were fined for failing
to maintain their properties, or for neglecting to make “mounds” or set mere
stones. Grazing animals on the commons at the wrong time, or sewing crops on a pasture
field could also draw fines. And in 1715 the court leet ordered:
That Francis Crosse shall remove
his dunghill out of the highway by midsummer next and that he lay no more dung
in that place nor elsewhere which shall prove prejudiciall to the highways or
other wise to forfeit Twenty shilling.
The courts baron also formally noted when copyhold tenancies
were given up or passed on, usually following the death of the copyholder. One
example from 1737 gives a feeling for the extent of a tenant farm in Hinton at
that time:
The homage before named upon
their oaths present the death of Richard Castel, a Customary tenant of the
Manor who dyed seized of one Messuage, one Barn, one Cowhouse, one Court Yard,
one Orchard and Close adjoining to the said Messuage, And one parcel of meadow
called Fettiplaces with appurtenances in Duxford under the yearly rent of eight
shillings and four pence. And also of one yard land and three quarters, one
parcel of land called Two Staves, one other parcel of land called Two Watermen,
one acre of land called the Boot Acre, under the yearly rent of twenty six
shillings and two pence. Whereby a Herriott [a sum of money paid to the lord of
the manor on the death of a tenant] of twenty pence became due to the lords.
And that Lydia Castell his widow ought to enjoy the said Messuage and several
tenements during her Widowhood according to the custom of the said Manor.
The Agricultural
Revolution comes to Hinton Waldrist
In 1701, at Crowmarsh Gifford near Wallingford, just 20
miles from Hinton Waldrist, a gentleman farmer named Jethro Tull designed and
manufactured a mechanised seed drill, which (he claimed) greatly improved the
sewing of arable crops. Tull’s innovation was one manifestation of a range of
changes that have come to be known as the English Agricultural Revolution.
Their net result was a massive increase in both agricultural output and
productivity, contributing by the mid-19th century to a huge increase in
the population of the country and also a dramatic reduction in the proportion of the
population who worked on the land. This increase in the ability of the nation
to feed itself has been cited as a vital factor that paved the way for the 19th
century British industrial revolution.
Change happened over a period of time and had many facets.
Technological innovations such as Jethro Tull’s seed drill were probably less
important than changes in animal husbandry and the introduction of new crops.
The selective breeding of livestock increased both the size of animals and
their meat and milk yields. The introduction of fodder crops such as turnips
and clover into the crop rotation in the arable fields increased fertility by boosting nitrogen in
the soil and reduced the need to leave land fallow, thus increasing grain
production. At the same time, farming was reorganised, with changes in tenancy
arrangements that replaced long-term copyhold tenancies with shorter term lettings,
shifting the balance of power from tenants to landowners. Most controversially,
enclosure transformed the common open fields into smaller units possessed by individual
farmers. Historians still argue over the relative importance of the various
factors – and some dispute the concept of an agricultural revolution at all.
However, it is clear that changes did occur and that agricultural efficiency
increased greatly from the late 17th to the mid-19th
centuries.
By the mid-18th century, such changes were
evident in Hinton Waldrist. They were prompted by the lord of the manor, the
Reverend John Loder. From the 1750s, court baron records show that turnips were
being grown as part of the crop rotation in the arable fields. There is also
evidence that copyhold tenancies were being phased out; as tenants died they
were not replaced by new copyholders. Then in 1759, Rev. Loder wrote to his
tenants to notify them of his intention to:
Improve my estate at Hinton by
obtaining an Act of Parliament if I can for inclosing the same and flatter
myself that my behaviour hath been such that you will not obstruct any
advantage to me where you may have proportional benefit.
Hinton Manor and Parliamentary
Enclosure
Enclosure was about reorganising the agricultural land
within the manor by replacing the open fields and common pasture and meadows
with smaller, privately owned fields. The land was to be divided up, with each current landholder being allocated new fields near to their farm
houses for their sole use, the new holdings being equivalent in size to their
former acreage in the common fields. The new system was supposed to be more
efficient and productive, as it gave larger landholders arable land in
discrete blocks, rather than scattered throughout the common fields and their
own pasture and meadow, as opposed to sharing it with the rest of the village.
Also, landowners could farm their land as they wished, rather than having to
bow to the collective decisions of the court baron.
Historians still argue as to whether enclosure of open field
systems led by itself to greater productivity. Recent studies suggest that openfield systems could be as productive as enclosure and had the benefit of beingmore flexible and adaptable to changes in conditions. At the same time,
enclosure clearly benefited landowners, who could increase rents, and
disadvantaged the poorest tenants who had too little land to warrant being
allocated enclosed fields for their own use. Many of the latter left the land to
seek work in the growing industrial towns, or became day labourers, selling
themselves at hiring fairs to work for their more fortunate neighbours.
If tenants in a manor would not agree to enclosure, the
landowner sought an Act of Parliament to compulsorily enclose the land. As
Parliament was dominated by the landowning class, Acts were invariably agreed.
Around 21% of land in England was enclosed by Act of Parliament between 1700
and 1850, with Hinton’s enclosure coming early in a wave of enclosures of
arable land that took place in the 1760s. Hinton’s tenants formally wrote to
Rev. Loder to set out their objections to his proposals, their main concerns
being the uncertainty that they would not be disadvantaged by the new
arrangements and the expense they would incur in setting up the hedges and
other boundaries around their land allocations. However, their objections were
ignored and in 1760 the Act for the enclosure of Hinton manor was passed by
Parliament and the village and its way of life changed for ever.
Sources Used
New Landscapes: Enclosure in Berkshire Berkshire Record Office
Davenport N (1978) The Honour of St Valery: The Story of an English Manor House. London: Scolar Press
Hawse, J.S. (1968) Hinton Waldrist through the Centuries. Unpublished typescript.
Allan R (2001) Community and Market in England: Open Fields and Enclosures Revisited
Muir R (2000) The New Reading the Landscape. Exeter: Exeter University Press
Rackham O (2003) The Illustrated History of the Countryside. London: Weidenfeld and Nicholson.
Sources Used
New Landscapes: Enclosure in Berkshire Berkshire Record Office
Davenport N (1978) The Honour of St Valery: The Story of an English Manor House. London: Scolar Press
Hawse, J.S. (1968) Hinton Waldrist through the Centuries. Unpublished typescript.
Allan R (2001) Community and Market in England: Open Fields and Enclosures Revisited
Muir R (2000) The New Reading the Landscape. Exeter: Exeter University Press
Rackham O (2003) The Illustrated History of the Countryside. London: Weidenfeld and Nicholson.