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A History of Horsley Parish

Much of the following information has been sourced from the Institute of Historical Reasearch, who have kindly given us permission to take a few extracts from their website. You can find a comprehensive history of the Parish at this link: British History On-line

The name "Horsley" is believed to be derrived from the pre 7th century Old English phrase "horse-lega", which means the "place of the horses". This may refer to a field of horses, a horse racing track, or a training ground.

The Parish is situated on part of the Great Cotswold ridgeway, which was possibly used by the Romans, as a Roman route branched south-westwards from it at Chavenage Green. The green was the meetingplace of the hundred court and was where the Earl Godwin assembled an army against Edward the Confessor in 1051. London way was crossed there by the old road from Horsley to Tetbury by way of Hartley bridge and Tiltups End, and by the old Nailsworth-Tetbury road through Windsorash and Ledgemore Bottom.

 

The valley sides are known to have supported extensive beech woods, for which the manor employed a woodward in 1293. The lord's wood at Lutheredge, on the north-west boundary of the parish, was mentioned in 1530, but most of the woodland was apparently open to the commoning rights of the inhabitants until 1655 when the lord of the manor was permitted by the parishioners, in return for an annual rent, to inclose over 230 a. of woodland at Longridge, Winnowshedge, and Sealy wood. Another wood, called Shortwood, lying south of the hamlet later transferred to Nailsworth, was a custom wood, in which the inhabitants had both common and the right to take timber; it was put under the control of trustees for the inhabitants in 1655. It covered 105 a. in 1733, but was felled c. 1829.

The main Bath-Gloucester road, bisecting the parish from south to north, was built in 1780, although the stretch up to Tiltups End had existed as a turnpike from 1758. The Nailsworth-Dursley road through Horsley village was turnpiked between Nailsworth and Latterwood in Owlpen in 1800.

A church, presumably occupying the site of the parish church, was recorded at Horsley in 1105 and a priory was built to the south of the site. The priory, whose buildings were in a ruinous state in 1375, had closed by 1380; an old chapel and a gateway were still standing in the early 18th century. In addition to a settlement near the church and priory there was a settlement at Ledgemore Bottom in the east part of the parish, presumably served by the church recorded at Chavenage in the mid 13th century. Eleven inhabitants were assessed for tax at Ledgemore in 1327, but the village was deserted in 1381, probably as a result of the Black Death which is known to have caused many deaths in the parish.

The medieval manor-house was built at Chavenage, and a farm-house recorded in the mid 16th century, when it contained a hall and a parlour with lofts above, a kitchen, and a white house, was probably that known as Manor Farm north of the manorhouse. The farm-house dates from the 16th century and had a north wing added in the 17th. Lodge Farm, east of the manor-house, was built during the 18th century.

Horsley village developed from the cross-roads east of the church where a group of buildings, including the former Boot inn, recorded between 1779 and 1939, retain features dating from the late 17th or early 18th century. Tradition maintains that the cross-roads was the site of the market. North of the cross-roads stands Horsley Court, a house predominantly of the early 19th century but incorporating a staircase and part of the structure of an early-18th-century house. The large room occupying the north half of the main front was formerly of double height with an encircling gallery at first-floor level. A three-storey porch and a north-west service wing were added in the 19th century. During the later 19th century it was the chief house of an estate of c. 100 a. owned by Edward Wood Mason (d. 1883). Cottages were built east of the village on Hay Lane and the lane leading to Washpool from the 18th century.

The site of the priory was used for a house of correction, opened in 1791 and built according to the principles of Sir George Onesiphorous Paul. The prison was closed and sold in 1878 when the site contained a petty sessional court and committee rooms, cell blocks, chapel, infirmary, two dwellinghouses, and a lodge. Most of the buildings were demolished but a three-storeyed block was converted for use as a residence, and in 1972, called the Priory, was used as a local office by the highways department of Gloucestershire county council. A small council estate was built near by in the mid 20th century. In the late 18th and 19th centuries the village grew westwards along the main street to Nupend where a church house was recorded in 1671. Two farm-houses, one of which was used as cottages in 1972, and a cottage at the west end of Nupend date from the 17th century but most of the buildings are of the 18th or 19th century.

A habitation was recorded in 1327 at Barton End, named from a barton on the manor estate. Some small houses at Upper Barton End date from the late 17th or early 18th century as does a gabled house, used as a small hotel in 1972, situated at Tiltups End ½ mile south of Barton End. An inn, called Tiltups inn or the Black Horse, was recorded there from 1769 and was housed in a mid-19th-century building in 1972.


Box Cottage, Downend. Circa 1930
  Downend, a small settlement north of Horsley village, includes a pair of 17th-century gabled houses. The earlier, western house was formerly the White Hart inn, recorded from 1798. The situation of the houses, with a small 19th-century residence to the north, suggests that there may have once been a mill there on a tributary of the Horsley stream. North of Downend are Sugley Farm, a 17th-century farm-house greatly enlarged in the 19th century, and Tickmorend, where a house was recorded in 1660.

In 1755 four licensed premises were recorded in Horsley parish, including that part later transferred to Nailsworth. The same area had ten ale-houses in 1785 but the magistrates reduced their number to three the following year. In 1838, however, Horsley had ten public houses and 31 beer-houses, most of which were presumably in the area later transferred to Nailsworth.

In 1327 49 inhabitants were assessed for tax. The parish was apparently severely depopulated at the time of the Black Death but in 1381 62 persons were assessed for tax. In 1551 there were 217 communicants in the parish and 56 households were recorded in 1563. The number of communicants had increased to 400 by 1603 and there were said to be 200 families in 1650. In the early 18th century there were said to be c. 1,200 people living in 300 houses in the parish. The population increased from 2,971 in 1801 to a peak of 3,690 in 1831 but the decline of the cloth industry resulted in emigration, some of it officially sponsored, and in 1861 2,558 people were enumerated.

A parliamentary garrison was stationed at Horsley in 1643. Henry Sheppard, a prominent lawyer on the parliamentary side, was born in the parish. In the first decade of the 19th century a troop of volunteer infantry was raised at Horsley and presumably included men from the surrounding parishes.



 



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