Sandleford

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Civil parish
Post townNEWBURY
Sandleford
Sandleford is located in Berkshire
Sandleford
Sandleford
Location within Berkshire
OS grid referenceSU474643
Civil parish
Unitary authority
Ceremonial county
Region
CountryEngland
Sovereign stateUnited Kingdom
Post townNEWBURY
Postcode districtRG20
Dialling code01635
PoliceThames Valley
FireRoyal Berkshire
AmbulanceSouth Central
UK Parliament
List of places
UK
England
Berkshire
51°22′41″N 1°18′58″W / 51.378°N 1.316°W / 51.378; -1.316
UK Ordnance Survey map, detail of Sandleford, 1939.

Sandleford is a hamlet in the civil parish of Greenham, in the West Berkshire of Berkshire, England. It adjoins the southern outskirts of the town of Newbury. Sandleford Priory was anciently a monastery, dissolved in 1478. The former monastery was largely rebuilt in the 18th century as a country house also called Sandleford Priory, incorporating the remains of some of the old monastery buildings. A civil parish called Sandford existed until 1934, when it was absorbed into the parish of Greenham.

Landscape

The former civil parish of Sandleford contained about 520 acres, covering the parkland of the priory and adjoining farmland and woods generally lying to its west.[1]

Population

A census taken in 1801 showed Sandleford to have three houses, three families and 18 people.[2] At the same time Newbury comprised 931 houses, 34 empty houses, 971 families and 4275 people. John Marius Wilson in his Imperial Gazetteer of England and Wales, 1870–72, gave Sandleford as having Real property £775; of which £10 are in fisheries, and a population of 49 in nine houses, but in 1881 the population of Sandleford had shrunk to 34.[3]

History

Civil War

Plan of First Battle of Newbury, September 1643 (1877).

The Victorian historian Walter Money believed that, at the start of the First Battle of Newbury in September 1643, Prince Rupert of the Rhine lined up his cavalry at the western end of Sandleford estate, straddling the boundary with Wash Common and looking towards Enborne,[4] although this is now disputed. After the battle, the line of march pursued by Robert Devereux, 3rd Earl of Essex back to Reading, was from the Wash, by Sandleford, over Greenham Common and via Theale.[5]

Landowners

At time of the Domesday survey in 1086 Sandleford seems to have been a part of or belonged with Ulvitrone, aka Newbury, to Arnulf or Ernulf de Hesdin (1038-killed Antioch, 1097/98), son of Gerard IV of Hesdin by his wife Nesta ferch Gruffydd, a daughter of Gruffydd ap Llywelyn by Ealdgyth, daughter of Earl Ælfgar. Newbury was assessed to have had pannage for 50 hogs, much of this woodland will have been the wood called Brademore (Broadmoor) at Sandleford.

Richard Pinfold, one of 30 of the freeholders of Newbury in 1655,[6] and sometime holder of the lease of the coppice named High Wood;[7] John Kendrick, Warren farm which abuts the estate to the west was purchased for £250, out of the £4000 which Kendrick left Newbury in 1624. In addition the Kendrick charity had two closes on the west side of Newtown lane leased from the Dean & Canons, for 10l 10s per annum.[8] Levi Smith (died 1703), Mayor of Newbury 1674 and 1693. Owned land in Greenham and along the Enborne at Peckmore in Greenham that abutted Sandleford and was later part of its demesne.[9]

Administrative history

Whilst the monastery of Sandleford Priory existed, the chapel at the priory served some of the functions of a parish church for the locals. After the priory was dissolved in 1478 the former chapel ceased to serve that role, and Sandleford's status became ambiguous and subject to dispute. Matters came to a head in 1615, when the rector of Newbury pursued a court case arguing that Sandleford was liable to pay tithes and other parish taxes as part of the parish of Newbury, and also that an old pension of £8 per year which had been paid to Sandleford's landowners to maintain a priest to serve the locals should also pass to Newbury. The court ruled that Sandleford was not part of Newbury but a separate parish, albeit one without a church or priest. It was therefore not liable to pay tithes or other parish taxes to Newbury. However, the court did direct that the £8 per year pension should be paid to Newbury in return for the right to seats in Newbury church for Sandleford's residents.[10][11]

Having been described as a parish with no church or priest in the 1615 court case, Sandleford was subsequently generally described as an extra-parochial area.[12] In 1759 the rector of Newbury, Thomas Penrose, in answer to some set questions about Newbury including one on 'seats of gentry', wrote that Newbury had No seat of gentry; if you except Sandleford, which is an estate held of the church of Windsor, and which is often considered as extra-parochial, but which pays a composition in lieu of tithes to the rector of Newbury. It is situated to the south of Newbury. The present lessee is Edward Montagu, Esq.; Member of Parliament for the town of Huntingdon.[13]

Such extra-parochial areas were made civil parishes in 1858.[14] The civil parish was abolished in 1934, when most of its area was absorbed into the neighbouring parish of Greenham, subject to a minor adjustment to the boundary with Newbury.[15] At the 1931 census (the last before the abolition of the parish), Sandleford had a population of 30.[16]

Notable buildings

Literature

References

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