On this day … 28 August 1545

A Robert Bradshaw was granted a lease on the revenues of the Preston rectory for a number of years by the dean and chapter of St Mary Newark, who were the owners at that date. From this simple grant, the Preston historian Henry Fishwick uncovered a whole parcel of ecclesiastical skullduggery involving the parish church.

The lease meant that Bradshaw, a layman, could collect all the tithes and other sources of revenue that would normally go to the rector. In return, the dean and chapter received a guaranteed income from their ownership of the rectory, without having to go to the trouble of collecting the tithes themselves. Bradshaw became their tax collector.

The revenues seem to have been collected peacefully until after his death in about 1554.

Trouble began in 1560 when Richard and Henry Cuerdall, along with an armed retinue of eight men, in โ€˜very riotous mannerโ€™ attempted to evict Sir Thomas Hesketh from a house and thirty acres of land in Preston. Sir Thomas claimed he was renting the property from Queen Elizabeth, but Richard Cuerdall maintained that the dean and chapter of St Mary Newark had conveyed the property to his grandfather in 1521. The result of the dispute is unknown.

Next came trouble for Robert Bradshawโ€™s executors when they were forcefully evicted from their holdings by a Thomas Grymesdiche, who had been given a lease for twenty-one years by Queen Elizabeth.

This tangled ownership of the rectory’s lands, properties and revenues, which included Broughton chapel, caused a good deal of trouble, not helped by the practice of the dean and chapter of sub-letting small parcels of the rectory holdings to different tenants.

One of the many disputes about the parish tithes that ended up in the courts included this one about the tithes collected at Broughton, as Fishwick recorded:

โ€˜Thomas Backhouse and others, [in about 1540], appear as lessees of Sir Alexander Osbaldeston for certain years of tithe corn in Broughton, and complain that “for time out of mind” the owners of the parsonage of Preston had enjoyed a right of way through the ground of Robert Syngleton of Broughton, to carry to and from the tithe barn there, with horses and carts, all manner of corn growing in the parish, and that the old custom of the county had been for the farmers “to cast out the tenth sheffe of all their corn and grayn tyll they had cast out in sheffes to the number of ten, and lay them in hattocks * as well for the savgard of the corn from bytyng and treddyng of bestes as for the savgarde of the same from wete;”

โ€˜โ€ฆ but on or about the 4th July, 1539, he (Thomas Backhouse) and divers of his tenants were coming with their “carts laden with tithe oats” towards the tithe barn through the said ground, when they were met by Robert Syngleton and ten others, who riotously with force and arms did loke and stake the gates” in the fields and would not suffer them to pass through, so they were obliged to go three or four miles “about,” and further, that when Robert Syngleton had cast out his tithe corn amounting to ten loads, he would not lay it in โ€œhattockes, but hurled out the tenth and let it lie,” so that it was “eton and lost,” to the loss of the plaintiff, and the “gretest yll ensample thet ever heth ben sene in thes partiesโ€.โ€™

* Oxford English Dictionary definition for hattock: โ€˜A group of sheaves of corn placed upright, the tops of which are protected from the rain by two sheaves laid over them with their heads slanting downwardsโ€™.

Broughton Church, Preston
Broughton Church, the tower was newly built in the sixteenth century when locals were falling out over rights of way. Sepia postcard by A.H. & S. Preston. Image provided by Derek Carwin, courtesy of Heather Crook: https://www.flickr.com/photos/rpsmithbarney/8472880660/

Source
Fishwickโ€™s History of Preston


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