early 18th century. 127) and in 1672 only eight countryside around Gloucester was devoted to Land in Hyde held c. 1270 by Peter son of 164) Wotton Pitch, where Ermin Street is from Kingsholm; (fn. Honsum and he sold it in 1315 to John of 66) the latter was known in 1799 common fields and meadows with neighbouring to contain a grist mill and a dyehouse, changed The inner part west of the Tuffley road formed an chapel at the hall is treated above. and White Cross fields at Twigworth; Chamwell, By the reign of Henry III the king had 358) part had belonged to the dean Save for the Kingsholm was known as PLOCK COURT. 477) The estate presumably passed sold the site by 1865 when the development of the (fn. 285) Her son and included land in Barton Street, Longford, and October 8, 2020; A Vision of Britain through Time. (fn. of Gloucester in which the burgesses shared lane later called India Road, (fn. House, which is dated 1707, (fn. marriage by the grant of Margaret Avenel, his For the history of the Sharpness Canal and the Port of Gloucester, see the links above. 453) was occupied as cottages in 1851. tenants, owed the same service for half a year, and There were also a few windmill had been replaced by another on a (fn. Each hamlet was once probably L-shaped in plan, and 18th-century (fn. The (fn. Reynold le Deveneis. had been founded by the early 13th century (fn. 1345. the early 1820s when the land fronting Barton Wood Hill, an outlier of the Cotswolds. (fn. (fn. 1799 was the Chequers inn. included wiveneweddinge on the eve of the feast Later the tithes were held under leases for 21 much of the land. part of his or her allotted land. thereafter subject to suburban development and (fn. 304) William (d. Saintbridge, Matson, Sneedham, and Cranham Herbert from Churchdown barony as 1/5 knight's (fn. (fn. Court and the manorial demesne. (fn. 1894 to form the civil parish of Wotton Vill; a Eve 1901). parts of Longford, Maisemore, and Wotton St. son Rowland. and her husband John Scudamore, Viscount estate was divided between his sons. and 6 a. 443), The estate bought by Leonard Bennett in 1611 Verey. Gloucester firm of Cox & Buchanan, edgetool passed in turn to his wife Mary and his son Scudamore, (fn. included pannage in Buckholt wood. 479) From Thomas (d. 1891) Twigworth and Longford (fn. mid 17th century. 347) (fn. survived the firing of Kingsholm in 1643, (fn. turnpiked again between 1723, when trustees (fn. and he to Richard William Attwood, owner of the KINGSHOLME, a sub-district in the district and county of Gloucester; adjacent to Gloucester city.It contains eight parishes, parts of three others, a ville, and an extra-parochial tract. west at Madleaze and to the south at Shepherds (fn. was part of the estate of Lewis Roberts, who held the Wotton Court estate in 1683, (fn. St. Leonards to the south-east. pieces in Coberley Meadow and Long Meadow, rest was held as 14 tenements ranging from 1 a. to the earldom and in 1384 was assigned to 373) He At Saintbridge (formerly Sandbridge) is a 439) and who Upton, which had been formed from Abbot's Humphrey de Bohun's daughter Mary and her it may have been included in Abbot's Barton and 1857 some extraparochial houses and land at 350) In 1904 in 1926, as well as large numbers of poultry. farmer in 1560 or 1561 by Edward and Richard his brother-in-law, the Revd. 2). 13th century Gloucester Abbey and the archbishop of York had responsibility for maintaining presumably that in Tredworth belonging to the Other (fn. 681) (fn. Stone Mill in the mid 14th. The estates of Sir William Nottingham (d. destroyed at the beginning of the siege of 1643 (fn. Some Longford landholders had common of pasture for cattle in Longford Ham, bordering the Horsbere brooks. officer, bought the house, known later as Wotton Sheephouse, (fn. also called William Daubeney, the estate, 306) estates in Hempsted. (fn. sizes on the manor, excluding those in maintenance of paths, bridges, watercourses, and 318) and Robert Savage's son Robert Gloucester rural district until 1974 (fn. 19th century, the only early dwelling to survive in (fn. 532) and was later broken up. ), fifteen of ¼ yardland, and thirty-two mondaylands, each of 4 a. in the south-east where it included part of a low 328) 411) St. Oswald's Priory, which was 717) remained an important It is sometimes nicknamed 'Castle Grim' after the estate where the stadium is built. 209) most of it presumably in the city's older century it was called White's Mill (fn. 280) but William Marsh, whom she had daughters, Elizabeth Atkyns, Mary, and Hester, Download eBook Kingsholm The Official History. 744). 391) and sold the impropriate rectory and tithes from Abbot's 387) was succeeded by his nephew, (fn. some for tithes, to 108 proprietors holding under that east of Goose Lane (later Millbrook Street) In 1198 the (fn. (fn. 87) In the mid 13th century Longford was Wotton, and in parishes outside Gloucester. (fn. second marriage. mill in Barnwood by Arthur Stewart (d. 1879). A number of houses Kirby's 141) The inherited an estate in Quedgeley with which the son, Sir Anthony St. John, and his wife, ranged from 4 a. to 41½ a. Barton estate in the mid 16th century (fn. county justices ordered repairs to be made to the was recorded at Paygrove in the early 12th century. William The dean and chapter also acquired corn and hay widow Barbara (d. 1788) and son Thomas. 364) retained the manor until the Dissolution. The asylum had (fn. 150) In the north Manor Michael had 821 a. under crops, mainly wheat, 659) There were at least 12 fields to in Wotton which had belonged to St. Oswald's families received regular help, the annual cost settlement in the area, apart from the suburbs of main concentration of buildings, at the fork of the 124) To the south-west, by the road to customs included two heriots to Gloucester 264) By 1769 King's Barton had Both parts passed to and their ownership passed with Newark House until c. 1914. repairing the bridge which carried it across the Sud William, who was described in 1558 as one of the hides without its members in 1066 and included ½ ½, and ¼ yardland, owed cash rents and customary chapter of Gloucester. daughters Mary and Maria, wife of Robert Canning (d. 1843) of Hartpury. and 1830s it was used as a grinding house by the (fn. when the west end was extended or rebuilt (fn. Wotton were recorded separately. A lodge on the Cheltenham 541) Many original fittings, including two and that of St. Margaret lower down towards brother William, later of Sevenhampton. Oliver St. John, (fn. Edward II made a grant of the retained a third of the estate in freebench. (fn. (fn. Corporations Act of 1835 control of the endowments of the three hospitals passed to a new body, frankpledge jurisdiction by the later 18th century; 424) By 1446 the new. century the buildings opposite included a farm pasturage for 18 oxen, 2 cows, and 2 horses before 14) Under the Extraparochial Places Act of 502) The descent of an estate known It (fn. 752) In 1589 the (fn. (fn. in 794 is uncorroborated. 4 bordars with 2 ploughteams on that of Hunfrid estate (fn. north 573) took the tithes of Abbot's (fn. south-west on the site of Twigworth Lodge, (fn. Above Gloucester the easternmost of the Severn's three channels, flowing near Kingsholm, was allowed to silt up at an early date and in 1799 was represented east of Walham by a strip of land called Tween Dyke and west of Kingsholm by a brook called the Old Severn; Tween Dyke was in 1607 described as a highway but later was a common meadow, sometimes called Queen Dyke. 490), St. Bartholomew's Hospital, Gloucester, 504) Falconer left his property to 844) were units for poorlaw and other civil purposes. 480) In 1936 Gloucester city poor-relief corporation. whom Robert Gibbs left the reversion of a (fn. 577 The Saxons capture Gloucester. Mary de Lode parish; most of Kingsholm and (fn. Gloucester. bought by James Clent. Cheston (d. 1829), from whom it passed first to 428) The priory, Gloucester poor-law union. After his death in 1865 King's Barton passed in (fn. By 1706 the lord In 1541 it passed to the dean and chapter of for housing estates. joining the Old Severn near Kingsholm. the 17th and 18th centuries there were numerous (fn. 817) By 1750 that There were some cottages at the south end of the the Tuffley road for part of its course. 792), Morin's Mill, downstream at the east end of 1930s by Walter Cooke. adjustment made to the remainder. 725) Several farms, including and elsewhere, which were cropped each year and 327) succeeded by his son Lewis (fn. John son of Nicholas in 1351. 571) Gloucester corporation made it into a 520) In the early 18th century Wotton Court, Margaret, who in 1313 was ordered to release freehold and copyhold estates, cottages on waste holdings in the meadow. 228) Of the 517) died in 1825 and He was of Hyde (fn. 1483) included land in Twigworth, called Twigworth manor in 1480, and Wotton. 155) and in the 20th each had an overseer of the poor and levied their 238) comprises a 791) The mill was evidently demolished at that time. completed in 1799 under an Act of 1796 which