NEEDWOOD FOREST Now Forms One of the Most Beau- Tiful And

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

NEEDWOOD FOREST Now Forms One of the Most Beau- Tiful And OFFLOW HUNDRED. :367 NEEDWOOD FOREST now forms one of the most beau­ tiful and highly cultivated territories in the honour of Tutbury, and contains, exclusive of the public roads, 9437 A. 2R.. 31P. of land, in the four parishes of Hanbury, Tutbury, Tatenhill, and Y oxall, and subdivided into the four wARDS of Tutbury, Barton, Marchington, and Yoxnll, which together form a dis­ trict of an irregular oval figure, upwards of seven miles in length and three in breadth, extending northward from vVichnor to Marchington Woodlan<ls, and lying nearly at an equal distance between Burton-upon-Trent and Abbots Bromley, being about four miles from each of those towns. This extensive forest or chase, where the neighbouring nobility and gentry "eagerly pursued the cheerful sport of bunting," was a member of the Duchy of Lancaster, and after the accession of Henry IV. be­ came a possession of the crown, subject, however, to the de­ pasturage of the landholders and inhabitants of the surrounding townships; and in this state it remained till the enclosure act, passed in 1801, empowered the commissioners to disafforest it, and to divide the soil among the different claimants. Before this enclosure, which was not completed till 1811, Needwood was wholly in a state of nature, except four small patches of Lodge lands. Here the little warblers of the grove, unnum­ bered, chanted their wild and mellifluent notes; the woodcock, the snipe, the pheasant, and the partridge, abounded in profu­ sion; numerous deer ranged in the valleys; the bare burrowed in the thicket, the fox and badger in the declivity of the deep glen, and the rabbit on the sandy hill; but the sport of the huntsman and the fowler has undergone as much alteration as the scenery. The officers of the forest were a lieutenant and chief ranger, assisted by a deputy, four lieutenants, four keep­ ers, and an axe bearer. A court was held every year, by the King"s steward of the honour of Tutbury, when a jury of 24 persons, resident within the jurisdiction, presented and arnerced all persons guilty of "encroaching on the forest, or committing any offences in vert or venison." There were anciently eight paTks impaled within the ring of the forest, viz., Agardsley, Stockley, Barton, Heylyns, Sherholt, Castle Hay, Hanbury, and Rolleston. That of Castle Hay, distant about two miles from Tutbury Castle, was 3~ miles in compass; and that of Hanbury, 2! miles. The lodges of Brickley, Ealand, Yoxall, and Sherholt, were the only dwellings upon the forest before the enclosure, but it now contains a considerable number of scat­ tered villas and neat farm houses. The natural disposition of the forest presents a great and beautiful variety of aspect; gra­ dual eminences and easy vales, watered by murmuring rills, with here and there a bolder and more abrupt swell, form its ge­ nHal features. In the northern parts, the eminences are far more numerous and lofty than in the southern divisions. The forest here exhibits to the eye a series of deep glens, enclosed .
Recommended publications
  • The Early History of Man's Activities in the Quernmore Area
    I Contrebis 2000 The Early History of Man's Activities in the Quernmore Area. Phil Hudson Introduction This paper hopes to provide a chronological outline of the events which were important in creating the landscape changes in the Quernmore forest area. There was movement into the area by prehistoric man and some further incursions in the Anglo- Saxon and the Norse periods leading to Saxon estates and settled agricultural villages by the time of the Norman Conquest. These villages and estates were taken over by the Normans, and were held of the King, as recorded in Domesday. The Post-Nonnan conquest new lessees made some dramatic changes and later emparked, assarted and enclosed several areas of the forest. This resulted in small estates, farms and vaccaries being founded over the next four hundred years until these enclosed areas were sold off by the Crown putting them into private hands. Finally there was total enclosure of the remaining commons by the 1817 Award. The area around Lancaster and Quernmore appears to have been occupied by man for several thousand years, and there is evidence in the forest landscape of prehistoric and Romano-British occupation sites. These can be seen as relict features and have been mapped as part of my on-going study of the area. (see Maps 1 & 2). Some of this field evidence can be supported by archaeological excavation work, recorded sites and artif.act finds. For prehistoric occupation in the district random finds include: mesolithic flints,l polished stone itxe heads at Heysham;'worked flints at Galgate (SD 4827 5526), Catshaw and Haythomthwaite; stone axe and hammer heads found in Quernmore during the construction of the Thirlmere pipeline c1890;3 a Neolithic bowl, Mortlake type, found in Lancaster,o a Bronze Age boat burial,s at SD 5423 5735: similar date fragments of cinerary urn on Lancaster Moor,6 and several others discovered in Lancaster during building works c1840-1900.7 Several Romano-British sites have been mapped along with finds of rotary quems from the same period and associated artifacts.
    [Show full text]
  • Matlock Bath. Walter M
    MATLOCK, MAT·LOCK BATH,AND BORDERS. Reduced from the Ordnance Survey. ~~ • ,---.. ! TIN Rn,11 \ • • • ............ ............. ...... ,,, •, . .. ...a:-.. , Btac/cbrook " . ..... ... Koor ~r:P ............ ~ / ..t:.4.:lt *-'=4 . e...:. .,.... , .._.JA. • "' ... ...... * ........... -.. it ........ ' ~... a./• .. ...........u ~----.. / . .. ... ... ..._ ... ~· . • .,,,p_--... o'·~:. ...... u, .., ........ ..-: <-. ,~ 4. ..... .. ........ ,. ia••=-•·=;-., ..~"=::: >.• •/.-.;; ·- ................ ,, :t. .t. 4 ''',). ~lliddle .lloor . ·. .,, . ~ e'a . .. ......... a. 0 fl) e 0 • r 0 r :II ............ *., ,---. ....~.,.'!' :. .......... ~ ........... dnope Q.arriu ............. • 905 Far leg • ..--·-- · __... ...____";MATLOC :I ............ ....... ,,. .. ..... ., .•. \ \ \ - ..... ,1,,.,, -~\ . i i I .·u, •." ·; ... ".·-.,-· .• if :~:'.~.. _B-::o w ·0·••;=;1•:. • -- 4 ~ .......,._ ~~ ~ ~,o.:<Q. :.: ~- .. '°~. .:""'{lie.,_ -~ "'o \\_'.icke,- • o :Tor 0 ~ • G, '-~- 4A. ., A. :-·•••• ,: • ,. ~-~u ,o;~.,; -.....::.-,,.,... ..!~.a.O•~. , 4 ~ A~-...~~:,: 0 '°".•, -A. 9,,-•..,s."' ❖... ~o .Q. ,.,_== 4"" • •" ····... _o • • - ,':r.o. :.=· 4.. :: 4 4(;~t~:·;if -~"'' 9 • -• ·: :.:- Q. =~ \!~.~-<>: t 9.'~ ·: Q, ~j;;• .; ~-'il!9t;~• .....-~ q .. 4.,: ...,. Reproduced from -the Ordnance Survey Map with the .sanction of'-tJ,e C,ontro!Jer of H.Ms. St:Jtionery Office. StanfortI:s Geog !-Eatall:..loruiPv 0t:==========='=====:::l:====;l::::::==========l:::====:::i===~ 10 20 30 40 50 60 70 80 ci'AJNS MATLOCK MANOR AND p ARI SH Historical ~ 'Descriptive WITH
    [Show full text]
  • Notes on the Lancaster Estates in the Thirteenth and Fourteenth Centuries
    NOTES ON THE LANCASTER ESTATES IN THE THIRTEENTH AND FOURTEENTH CENTURIES BY DOROTHEA OSCHINSKY, D.Phil., Ph.D. Read 24 April 1947 UR knowledge of mediaeval estate administration is O based mainly on sources which relate to ecclesiastical estates, because these are easier of access and, as a rule, more complete. The death of an abbot affected a monastic estate only in so far as his successor might be a better or a worse husbandman; the estate was never divided between heirs, was not diminished by the endowment of widows and daughters, and was not doubled by prudent marriages as were seignorial estates. Furthermore, the ecclesiastics had frequently been granted their lands in frankalmoin, and no rent or service was rendered in return. With few exceptions their manors lay near the centre of the estate; and, finally, the clerics had sufficient leisure to supervise their estates themselves and little difficulty in providing a staff trained to work the estates intensively and profitably. Therefore we realise that any conclusions which are based on ecclesiastical estates only must necessarily be one-sided, and that before we can draw a general picture of the estate administration in the Middle Ages, we have to work out the estate adminis­ tration on at least some of the more important seignorial estates. The Lancaster estates with their changing fate are well able to reveal the chief characteristics of a seignorial estate, its extent, management and administration. The vastness of the estates of the Earls of Lancaster, and the importance of the family in the political history of the country, accen­ tuated and multiplied the difficulties of the estate adminis­ tration.
    [Show full text]
  • The Livery Collar: Politics and Identity in Fifteenth-Century England
    The Livery Collar: Politics and Identity in Fifteenth-Century England MATTHEW WARD, SA (Hons), MA Thesis submitted to the University of Nottingham for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy AUGUST 2013 IMAGING SERVICES NORTH Boston Spa, Wetherby West Yorkshire, lS23 7BQ www.bl.uk ANY MAPS, PAGES, TABLES, FIGURES, GRAPHS OR PHOTOGRAPHS, MISSING FROM THIS DIGITAL COPY, HAVE BEEN EXCLUDED AT THE REQUEST OF THE UNIVERSITY Abstract This study examines the social, cultural and political significance and utility of the livery collar during the fifteenth century, in particular 1450 to 1500, the period associated with the Wars of the Roses in England. References to the item abound in government records, in contemporary chronicles and gentry correspondence, in illuminated manuscripts and, not least, on church monuments. From the fifteenth century the collar was regarded as a potent symbol of royal power and dignity, the artefact associating the recipient with the king. The thesis argues that the collar was a significant aspect of late-medieval visual and material culture, and played a significant function in the construction and articulation of political and other group identities during the period. The thesis seeks to draw out the nuances involved in this process. It explores the not infrequently juxtaposed motives which lay behind the king distributing livery collars, and the motives behind recipients choosing to depict them on their church monuments, and proposes that its interpretation as a symbol of political or dynastic conviction should be re-appraised. After addressing the principal functions and meanings bestowed on the collar, the thesis moves on to examine the item in its various political contexts.
    [Show full text]
  • Yoxall to Rangemore
    This leaflet can be used in conjunction with The National Forest Way OS Explorer 245 (The National Forest) The National Forest Way takes walkers on a 75-mile journey through a transforming Stage 11: landscape, from the National Memorial Arboretum in Staffordshire to Beacon Hill End Country Park in Leicestershire. Yoxall to On the way, you will discover the area’s evolution from a rural landscape, through industrialisation and its decline, to the Rangemore modern-day creation of a new forest, where 21st-century life is threaded through a mosaic Length: 7½ miles / 12 kilometres of green spaces and settlements. The trail leads through young and ancient Start woodlands, market towns and the industrial heritage of this changing landscape. Burton upon Trent About this stage Swadlincote Start: Yoxall (DE13 8NQ) Ashby End: Rangemore (DE13 9RW) de la Zouch Coalville This stage takes you through the heart of Needwood Forest, former hunting grounds from the 13th century. This well-wooded landscape is threaded by a network of wide straight roads, the original “rides” through the ancient forest. It is a sparsely populated area with a number of stately homes with large estates. The National Forest Way was created by a partnership of the National Forest Company, Derbyshire County Council, Leicestershire County Council and Staffordshire County The National Forest Company Council, with the generous Bath Yard, Moira, Swadlincote, support of Fisher German. Derbyshire DE12 6BA Telephone: 01283 551211 Enquiries: www.nationalforestway.co.uk/contact Website: www.nationalforest.org To find out more, visit: Photos: Christopher Beech, Martin Vaughan, www.nationalforestway.co.uk Lesley Hextall and Jacqui Rock Maps reproduced by permission of Ordnance Survey on behalf of HMSO.
    [Show full text]
  • Report and Accounts Year Ended 31St March 2020
    Report and Accounts Year ended 31st March 2020 Preserving the past, investing for the future Bluebells in Dunsop Wood, Dunsop Bridge, Lancashire. annual report to 31st March 2020 Annual Report Report and accounts of the Duchy of Lancaster for the year ended 31 March 2020 Presented to Parliament pursuant to Section 2 of the Duchies of Lancaster and Cornwall (Accounts) Act 1838. annual report to 31st March 2020 Introduction Introduction History The Duchy of Lancaster is a private In 1265, King Henry III gifted to his estate in England and Wales second son Edmund (younger owned by Her Majesty The Queen brother of the future Edward I) as Duke of Lancaster. It has been the baronial lands of Simon de the personal estate of the reigning Montfort. A year later, he added Monarch since 1399 and is held the estate of Robert Ferrers, Earl separately from all other Crown of Derby and then the ‘honor, possessions. county, town and castle of Lancaster’, giving Edmund the new This ancient inheritance began title of Earl of Lancaster. over 750 years ago. Historically, its growth was achieved via In 1267, Edmund also received legacy, alliance and forfeiture. In from his father the manor of more modern times, growth and Newcastle-under-Lyme in diversification have been delivered Staffordshire, together with lands through active asset management. and estates in both Yorkshire and Lancashire. This substantial Today, the estate covers 18,228 inheritance was further enhanced Her Majesty The Queen, Duke of by Edmund’s mother, Eleanor of hectares of rural land divided into Lancaster.
    [Show full text]
  • Annual Report and Accounts 2014
    Report and accounts of the Duchy of Lancaster for the year ended 31 March 2014 The Duchy of Lancaster Annual Report 2014 The Duchy seeks to achieve a balance between long-term commitments to the environment, social responsibility, and commercial objectives. This approach helps to protect the interests of those individuals living in, working on and visiting the Duchy’s land and buildings while safeguarding the estate for future generations. I would like to welcome Nathan Thompson who joined the Duchy as Chief Executive Officer in 2013. Nathan has a wealth of experience in senior property roles and will certainly make a very valuable contribution. I would also like to thank both Council and all the Duchy staff for their continued loyalty, hard work and enthusiasm over the year. Shuttleworth Chairman Cover story Cover photograph: John O’Gaunt Gate, Lancaster Castle. The John O’Gaunt Gate was opened to the public in 2013 for the first time in centuries. Annual Report Report and accounts of the Duchy of Lancaster for the year ended 31 March 2014 Presented to Parliament pursuant to Section 2 of the Duchies of Lancaster and Cornwall (Accounts) Act 1838. 1 The Duchy of Lancaster Annual Report 2014 Goathland Moors Yorkshire 2 Introduction The Duchy of Lancaster is a private estate owned by Her The Estate Majesty The Queen, as Duke of Lancaster. The rural estate The rural estate comprises commercial, agricultural and consists of 18,454 hectares of land in England and Wales. residential property the majority of which are in Lancashire, Yorkshire, Cheshire, Staffordshire and Lincolnshire.
    [Show full text]
  • Notice-Of-Poll-Needwood-Forest-21.Pdf
    East Staffordshire Borough Council ELECTION OF COUNTY COUNCILLOR FOR THE NEEDWOOD FOREST COUNTY DIVISION NOTICE OF POLL NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN THAT:- 1. A Poll for the Election of a COUNTY COUNCILLOR for the above-named County Division will be held on Thursday 6 May 2021, between the hours of 7:00am and 10:00pm. 2. The number of COUNTY COUNCILLORS to be elected for the County Division is 1. 3. The names, in alphabetical order and other particulars of the candidates remaining validly nominated and the names of the persons signing the nomination papers are as follows:- SURNAME OTHER NAMES IN HOME ADDRESS DESCRIPTION PERSONS WHO SIGNED THE FULL NOMINATION PAPERS Colin Reisner, Susanna V.J. BROOKS ALASDAIR MARK Address in Lichfield Liberal Democrats Reisner 165 All Saints Road Burton upon Arshad Ahsan Afsar, Akhmed HUCKERBY MICHAEL The Labour Party Trent Staffordshire DE14 3PL Ahsan Afsar Clermont Cottage Morrey Lane Conservative and JESSEL JULIA FRANCES Robert H Keys, Michael C Ackroyd Hadley End Yoxall DE13 8PF Unionist Party Philippa A. Saddington, Eleanor RICKARD KELLY JENNA Address in East Staffordshire Green Party Frances Saddington PRINTED AND PUBLISHED BY THE DEPUTY COUNTY RETURNING OFFICER ESBC PO BOX 8045 BURTON UPON TRENT DE14 9JG 4. The situation and allotment of Polling Places and Polling Stations and the descriptions of the persons entitled to vote thereat are as follows:- POLLING POLLING STATION DESCRIPTIONS OF PERSONS DISTRICT ENTITLED TO VOTE THEREAT AM Village Hall, Branston Clays Lane Branston Burton upon Trent Staffordshire
    [Show full text]
  • The Abortive Inclosure of Needwood Forest in the 1650S
    1 THE ABORTIVE INCLOSURE OF NEEDWOOD FOREST IN THE 1650s NIGEL J. TRINGHAM As part of Parliament’s dismemberment of the English monarchy an Act was passed in July 1649 to authorise the sale of Crown lands, including those of held in the right of the duchy of Lancaster.1 In Staffordshire the lands included Needwood forest, which formed part of the duchy’s honor of Tutbury in the east of the county. Forests were at first excluded from general sales, and it was not until1654 that an order was made to inclose it and parcel the land out for sale: the process met with strong local resistance and had still not been completed at the Restoration. Vested inalienably in the Crown under an Act of 1696, the forest survived until 1801 when it was at last disafforested and inclosed.2 The present writer has already provided some of the background documentation — parliamentary surveys of the forest and its constituent parks made in 1649 and 1650,3 and a petition against inclosure presented to Oliver Cromwell in 16554 — and the purpose of this article is to discuss the abortive inclosure, concentrating on the reasons behind the resistance and the strategies applied by the opponents. Covering some 9,400 a. (3,804 ha.) in the angle formed by the rivers Trent and Dove and occupying a plateau of high ground in parts over 400 ft. high, Needwood forest had belonged to the Ferrers family as lords of Tutbury in the post-Conquest period and came to the earls (later dukes) of Lancaster after Earl Robert de Ferrers was deprived of his title and estate in 1266.
    [Show full text]
  • Staffordshire. Needwood Forest, 261
    DIRECTORY.] STAFFORDSHIRE. NEEDWOOD FOREST, 261 way, g north-west-by-west from Eccleshall, and 4 nl'>rth-east Durham University and J.P. for Staffs. The charities from Market Drayton, in Shropshire : it compri,es the amount to about £6o yearly. There i11 a Wesleyan chapel townships of MUCKLESTONE, ASTON, KNIGHTO~, 0AKLEY, near Aston. Oakley Hall, the seat of Lieut.-Colonel Sir and WINNINGTON, in Staffordshire, and the townships of George Chetwode hart. is a handsome mansion irt a park of Woore, Bearstone, Donington and Gravenhanger, in Shrop­ about 300 acres, on the bank of the Tern river, which here shire, and is in the North Western division of the county, divides the county from Shropshire. The Earl of Crewe, North Pirehill hundred and petty sessional division, Market who is lord of the manor, Sir G1lorge Cbetwode hart. the Drayton union and county court district, rural deanery of Hon. Mrs. Meynell-Ingram, and Hugb Kerr-Col,·ille esq. of Eccleshall, archdeaconry of Stoke-on-Trent and diocese of Bellaport Hall, Market Drayton, are the principal land­ Lichfield. The church of St. Mary, supposed to have been owners. The Ven. Archdeacon Thomas Bucknell Lloyd, of originally erected in the 13th century, and rebuilt, with the Edgmond Rectory, Newport, SiJ.lop, is the principal land­ exception of the tower, about 1790, in the debased Roman­ owner at Ast.on. The soil is various, some light, other esque style of that period, was again rebuilt in 1883 from heavy; subsoil, gravel, clay and marl. The chief crops are designs by Messrs. Lynam and Rickman, architects, of O:J.ts, barley and turnip~.
    [Show full text]
  • Needwood and South Derbyshire Claylands
    Character Area Needwood and South 68 Derbyshire Claylands Key Characteristics fields in arable and pasture use as well as straight roads between regular blocks of coniferous and deciduous ● Rolling, glacial till plateau rising to prominent woodland give an ordered, chequerboard appearance. This wooded heights above the central valley. reflects the dominance of large estates, notably the Duchy of Lancaster. However, many of the deciduous woodlands ● Wide, shallow central valley. are ancient and some of the conifer plantations are on ● Gently rolling landscape in the north, dissected by ancient woodland sites. numerous small valleys. ● Frequent plantations and ancient woodland in former forest of Needwood. ● Varied hedgerow patterns: strongly rectilinear in Needwood Forest, irregular in the west, sub- rectangular elsewhere. ● Predominantly pasture with good hedges but some areas of more open arable with low hedges. ● Red brick and half timber villages with sandstone churches. OB COUSINS/COUNTRYSIDE AGENCY OB COUSINS/COUNTRYSIDE R ● Historic parks and country houses. Open, rectilinear fields, with low hedges, in arable and pasture use give the feeling of a neat, well-tended landscape, interspersed with attractive red brick villages.The area is sparsely populated despite Landscape Character its proximity to major centres and it has a rural feel. Needwood and the South Derbyshire Claylands make up an The land rises to a prominent wooded scarp above the area bounded by the river Trent and the rising ground of Dove, with a hilly but less wooded and dramatic landscape Cannock Chase and Cank Wood to the south west and by above the Trent. Attractive red brick villages with the wide Trent Valley Washlands with their dense sandstone churches and occasional half timbered buildings settlement to the south east.
    [Show full text]
  • Rangemore to Yoxall 10 7 1 Leave the Car Park and Turn Right 8 Along Tatenhill Lane
    This leaflet can be used in conjunction with The National Forest Way OS Explorer 245 (The National Forest) The National Forest Way takes walkers on a 75-mile journey through a transforming Stage 11: landscape, from the National Memorial Arboretum in Staffordshire to Beacon Hill Start Country Park in Leicestershire. Rangemore On the way, you will discover the area’s evolution from a rural landscape, through industrialisation and its decline, to the to Yoxall modern-day creation of a new forest, where 21st-century life is threaded through a mosaic Length: 7½ miles / 12 kilometres of green spaces and settlements. The trail leads through young and ancient End woodlands, market towns and the industrial heritage of this changing landscape. Burton upon Trent About this stage Swadlincote Start: Rangemore (DE13 9RW) Ashby End: Yoxall (DE13 8NQ) de la Zouch Coalville This stage takes you through the heart of Needwood Forest, former hunting grounds from the 13th century. This well-wooded landscape is threaded by a network of wide straight roads, the original “rides” through the ancient forest. It is a sparsely populated area with a number of stately homes with large estates. The National Forest Way was created by a partnership of the National Forest Company, Derbyshire County Council, Leicestershire County Council and Staffordshire County The National Forest Company Council, with the generous Bath Yard, Moira, Swadlincote, support of Fisher German. Derbyshire DE12 6BA Telephone: 01283 551211 Enquiries: www.nationalforestway.co.uk/contact Website: www.nationalforest.org To find out more, visit: Photos: Christopher Beech, Martin Vaughan, www.nationalforestway.co.uk Lesley Hextall and Jacqui Rock Maps reproduced by permission of Ordnance Survey on behalf of HMSO.
    [Show full text]