134
The extant mention of this Newton carries us back a good space behind the Norman Conquest. The Will of ?lfric, archbishop of Canterbury, who died in 1006, affords evidence that he was a landowner in Newton. It is not generally possible to identify a place by a name which became so common, but the coupling of it in Abp. ?lfric’s Will with the name of Fiddington, removes all uncertainty6. The passage in the Will (which is cast in the third person) runs thus: ‘And the land in the West Country at Fiddington and at Newton he bequeathed to his sisters and their children[46].’
In the forest laws, which grew up after the Conquest, we find that the custody7 of the royal forest of North Petherton was a serjeanty, which was attached to the Manor8 of Newton and caused it to be distinguished9 by the name of Newton Forester. When this Manor was granted by King John to William de Wrotham, it was declared that he held it by the service of being 135the king’s forester in the counties of Somerset, Dorset, Devon, and Cornwall. As he does not appear to have exercised his office beyond the county of Somerset, this territorial11 definition suggests that some vague prerogative12 had attached to Newton Manor at an earlier time.
In the third generation from the above grant this Manor passed with an heiress into the hands of William de Placetis. A generation later it was divided between three co-heiresses, Sabina, Evelina, and Emma. Then arose a question about the office of Forester, and it was found that it appertained to a particular messuage and meadow, and that these were included within the portion of Sabina, so she was declared Forester in fee of the forests of Exmoor, Neroche, Selwood, and Mendip, likewise custodian14 of the warren of Somerton; and these offices she discharged by deputy. In her time (26 Edw. I) occurred the Perambulation of the forests of the county, in pursuance of the Charter of the Forests which had been granted by Henry III. The forests were to be reduced to their ancient and lawful15 bounds, according to their limits at the accession of Henry I. The annual value of the lands136 then disafforested was more than a hundred times as great as that of the legal forest of North Petherton.
In the time of Edward III the Manor of Newton with its rights and appurtenances belonged to Roger, earl of Mortimer, in whose descendants and in the dukes of York it continued to the time of Edward IV, when it came to the Crown, and then the Manor was quoted as Newton Regis. During this period the powers of Forester were delegated, and some interesting names occur in the list of deputies:
14 Ric. II. Richard Brettle and Gefferey Chaucer, esqrs., by the appointment of the earl of March.
21 Ric. II. Gefferey Chaucer, by Alienor, countess of March.
4 Hen. V. Thomas Chaucer, by Edward, earl of March.
8 Hen. VI. William Wrothe and Thomas Attemore.
12 Hen. VI. William Wrothe.
29 Hen. VI. Sir William Bonville and Richard Luttrell, by the duke of York.
14 Edw. IV. Sir Giles D’Aubeny, for life.
23 Hen. VII. Robert Wrothe, for thirty years.
Soon after the expiration16 of which term Sir Thomas Wrothe, son and heir of the last-named Robert, purchased of Edward VI the fee137 of Petherton Park and the Manor of Newton Regis. The office of Forester had now fallen into decay and the ancient glory had departed, and the transfer of this property appears to have been governed by the ordinary considerations. In the time of Queen Elizabeth the descendants of Sir Thomas pulled down the park house, and carried the materials to a lodge17 called the Broad Lodge, which (said Collinson in 1791) ‘the late Sir Thomas Wrothe improved to a handsome dwelling18. The whole park[47] is now converted into farms.’ The improvements of Sir Thomas Wrothe, here mentioned, have a probable connexion with our subject.
Such is the remarkable19 history of the Manor which has been at different times known as Newton Forester, Newton Placey, Newton Regis, and Newton Wrothe; and this history ministers occasion for a surmise20 that the distinction which attended this Manor may have had its roots considerably21 further back, inasmuch as the extant records do not offer an adequate account of that 138peculiar prerogative which made it so famous and so dignified22.
I venture to suggest that the beginnings of this place, which has been so eminent23, and which is now known by the comparatively obscure name of North Newton, may have been connected with the retreat of the king to Athelney, that this may have been a spot of his own selection. It is reached from Athelney by simply following the rise of the ground, it is well placed for keeping an eye on the Parret, the side from which a surprize was most to be apprehended24, and it was the approach to the fine hunting-fields of Quantock and Exmoor. What more natural than that he should take a liking25 to the place and judge it convenient for a hunting-lodge? And I venture to throw out a surmise for consideration. May it not be that the prefix26 ‘New’ was set by the king himself, who gave the name of New Minster to his foundation at Winchester[48]?
139
The name of Newton properly belonged only to the Manor, but as the lordship of this Manor was long coupled with the custody of Petherton Park, and as the two were habitually27 associated in men’s minds, the latter came to be spoken of as ‘Newton Park,’ and this title is simply a colloquial28 variation and equivalent for Petherton Park. The correct name of Petherton Park is constantly used by Leland in the extract from his Itinerary29 which is given in the previous chapter. So that when the Alfred Jewel is said to have been found in Newton Park, this is only a popular way of saying that it was found in Petherton Park. The discovery occurred in the time of Sir Thomas Wrothe, who was also the enlarger of the mansion30, and it is a probable inference that it was found in the excavations31 which were required for this work[49].
The scene now shifts from Newton to the neighbouring parish of Stogursey or, as modern research has taught us to write it, 140Stoke Courcy. In this parish is Fairfield House, a handsome Elizabethan mansion in which the Alfred Jewel was preserved for a quarter of a century, from the time of its discovery in 1693, until it was given to the University of Oxford32 in 1718[50].
About the time of Henry II the lands of ‘Ferfelle’ were severed33 from those of Honibere, and erected34 into a separate estate.
By-and-by the name slid into a new form, conveying a new idea. The new name into which it merged35 is one that has been freely propagated both at home and in the colonies, with pleasing associations of soft and gently undulating landscape suggestive of homely36 scenery and a sheltered situation. Very different141 is the connotation of the name in its documentary form. In ‘Ferfelle’ we can see only some outlying ‘remoter fell,’ such as would be little visited save for uses of summer pasture. In Collinson’s picture of the mansion, which is here reproduced, while the foreground seems to justify37 the modern name, the hills and hanging woods at the back of the house seem to bear out the more primitive38 signification of an outlying mountain fell. And probably this was also the142 idea which originally gave name to the well-known mountain in Westmoreland over Grasmere.
FAIRFIELD HOUSE.
After a succession of owners of various names this new estate came (14 Edw. I) into the possession of William de Vernai, who had married the sole daughter and heiress of the previous proprietor39. For nearly three hundred years there was always a Vernai at Fairfield. In 12 Edw. IV the Vernai of that day (the fourth of the name of William) had a licence to build a wall and seven round towers about his mansion-house at Fairfield, and to enclose two hundred acres of ground for a park. ‘The tomb in the Vernais isle2 in the fine old Priory church of Stoke Courcy, with an image of an armed man lying thereon, belongs to this William Vernai’ (Collinson).
Fairfield had come into the family of Vernai by an heiress, and at length it passed in the same manner to the family of Palmer. Hugh de Vernai left one only daughter, and she was called Elizabeth, after the great queen, who was her godmother. On the death of her father her wardship40 was granted to Sir Thomas Palmer,143 of Parham, in the county of Sussex, Knt.; to whose only son, William, she was afterwards married. Soon after this marriage, Sir Thomas Palmer pulled down the old house, and began the present mansion, which was completed by his grandson (also Sir Thomas Palmer, Knt.), who inherited Fairfield in 1587. This proprietor was not a keeper at home. In 1595 he was with Sir Francis Drake and Sir John Hawkins in the expedition to Porto Rico, and afterwards commanded a ship at the taking of Cadiz, where he was knighted. He was one of the most considerable persons in the Court of Queen Elizabeth; but on the accession of King James he resolved to spend the remainder of his days beyond the seas, and accordingly, in the year 1605, he went with the earl of Nottingham into Spain, where, as he was providing a settlement for his family at Valladolid, he died of the small-pox, and was there buried.
William Palmer, his son and heir, was a man of learning, and chose to live in London, and he was, in the time of Charles I, fined a thousand pounds by the Star Chamber41 for disobedience to the king’s proclamation, which required all144 persons of estate to reside and keep hospitality at their country houses.
His brother Peregrine, who succeeded him, went as a volunteer to the Palatinate wars, and was afterwards an officer in the Swedish army. As soon as the royal standard was set up he repaired to Nottingham, and faithfully served King Charles in the commissions of major, lieutenant-colonel, and colonel of horse, being present at the battles of Edgehill, Marston Moor13, Cropredy Bridge, and Naseby. He died in 1684, having married Anne, the daughter of Nathaniel Stevens, in the county of Gloucester, Esq., and he was succeeded in the estate by his eldest42 surviving son, Nathaniel, who is reported in the Philosophical43 Transactions as the possessor of the Alfred Jewel in the year 1698[51]. He served in several parliaments for the boroughs44 of Minehead and Bridgwater, and for the county of Somerset. The first recorded possessor of the Alfred Jewel died in 1717. He was succeeded by his son Thomas, who resided at Fairfield, where he lived a studious life, investigating the antiquities45 of his country. His 145manuscript is preserved at Fairfield, and it was a valuable source of information to Collinson, the historian of Somerset. It is from this source we learn that the Jewel was ‘dug up,’ an expression which seems to justify the inference that it was not accidentally lost, but purposely buried[52]. It was he who, in 1718, gave the Alfred Jewel to the University of Oxford.
He married a daughter of Sir Thomas Wrothe of Petherton Park, who died in 1721, leaving two daughters co-heiresses. The elder of these was married to Sir Hugh Acland, of Columb-John in the county of Devon, Bart., and the younger to Mr. Thomas Palmer, who died without issue. He was succeeded by his brother Peregrine, who represented the University of Oxford in several parliaments, and died in 1762, the last survivor46 of his name and family. He left his estate to Arthur Acland, Esq., his next of kin10, from whom it has descended47 to Sir Alexander Acland Hood1, Baronet, the present owner of the Fairfield estate.
[46] And ee land be westan at Fittingtúne and at Niwantúne he becw?e his sweostrum and heora bearnum. Kemble, Codex Diplomaticus, p. 719; Thorpe, Diplomatarium, p. 549; Earle, Land Charters, p. 223.
[47] ‘In this park was found the curious amulet48 of king Alfred, mentioned in vol. i, p. 87.’ Collinson, History of Somerset, vol. iii, p. 62.
[48] In Kemble’s Codex Diplomaticus, No. 320, there is a late and meagre abstract of a grant of land by king Alfred ‘in loco qui dicitur Noreniwtune.’ Kemble puts this place in Wiltshire, but why may it not be the North Newton by Athelney? The orthography49 of the name would be not that of the original grant, but of the abridger’s time. Appendix F.
[49] I am indebted for this suggestion to Sir Alexander Acland Hood.
[50] To be quite exact, its lodging50 for the first five years is matter of inference from the fact that in 1698 it is described as being at Fairfield, without any indication of a change of ownership. One transfer however there must have been. The place of discovery made it the property of Sir Thomas Wrothe; and as Nathaniel Palmer was his mother’s brother, it is easy to understand the gift of the nephew to his uncle, who may have been a man of antiquarian tastes. We can also understand the desire of Nathaniel Palmer that this precious relic51 should go to Oxford, as he, with many others of his family, had been educated at the University, of which Alfred was the reputed founder52. Appendix G.
[51] Appendix A.
[52] Appendix G.
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1 hood | |
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48 amulet | |
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49 orthography | |
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