Contents of the fikst volume



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If a copyholder have been in quiet possession of lands by the space of three years and upwards, no pre-

sentment lieth against him for wrongful withholding of the same lands, but the party grieved may bring his

action for the same.
If a copyholder be disturbed in his quiet possession of any lands, ways, or privileges which he enjoyeth

and hath quietly enjoyed for the space of three years past, the steward may grant his warrant to the greave

to keep him in quiet possession thereof till the next court, and afterwards as he shall see cause.
If any copyholder or other person shall resist the greave in the execution of any of the warrants above-

said or of any other warrant to him directed by the steward, the steward or his deputy may commit such

persons to the castle of Clitheroe, there to be and remain till their submission.
Copyhold lands are surrendered by the rod, and may be surrendered in open court in the hands of the

lord by the steward or his deputy, or out of court a surrender may be received by the steward or his deputy

or greave or by a copyholder of the same manor where the lands that are surrendered do lye.
A surrender may be received by a copyholder of the same manor where the surrendered lands do lye or

by the steward or his deputy or greave, otherwise the surrender is void.


A surrender may be kept in the hands of a customary tenant unpresentable till the court day, if all the

parties concerned therein do agree thereunto, but if the said customary tenant be required to present the

same surrender at the first or second court and he refuse or neglect so to do he is to be presented and

amerced.


If a surrender be not presented into the court at the third court day (or before) it afterwards becomes

void, except the customary tenant who received the same die or go out of the county before the third court

day, in such cases the surrender may after it shall be found be brought in the court and be presented by the

homage although the third court day be past, and such surrender is in force.


If a copyholder who receiveth a surrender do keep the same in his hands unpresented past the third

court day, or doth cancel or lose the same or wilfully denieth to present the same, and being presented by the

homage, in this case he forfeiteth his copyhold lands to the lord of tke manor.
A copyholder may by the custom surrender his copyhold lands to another for warranty and security of

294

HISTORY OF WHALLEY.

[BOOK III. CHAP. IV.


monies or any other condition, which being performed before the third court day, such conditional surrender

may be countermanded and cancelled without any danger to the customary tenant who received it.
Copyhold lands within the said honor cannot be entailed, and if any more than one use be expressed in

a surrender it is void; but a copyholder may surrender his lands to one, two, or more feoffees or trustees, and

the uses may be declared in an intent or schedule annexed to the same surrender, or by the last will and

testament of the surrenderor, or by any other his act to which the surrender hath relation, and the cesti que

use hath only an equitable estate in the same lands.
If a cesti que use in copyhold lands be capable or liable to do suit and service at court, may they receive

a surrender ? They may.


If a copyholder surrender his lands to another, and he dieth before his admittance, his next heir is to be

admitted thereunto after he be found and presented by the homage.


If a copyholder die seized of copyhold lauds, his heir at the next court is to be presented by the homage

and admitted thereunto, and to pay unto the lord of the manor a fine, and they do defend according to the

course of common law.
Tlio wife of a copyholder who dieth seized of copyhold lands is dowable of a fourth part thereof for her

life, and may bring her action for the same in the halmot court in the nature of a writ of dower.


The husband may surrender immediately to the use of the wife, or the' wife to the use of the husband.
If a copyholder surrender lands to another for life or years, he to whom the surrender is made may

assign over the same land by will or any other act without surrender during the same term.


If a surrender be presented into the court, and the person to whose use the surrender is made come not

to receive his admittance, after three solemn proclamations made at three several courts, he is to be amerced.


A copyholder may by the custom surrender his copyhold lands by an attorney.
A copyholder may demise his lands for one year, and no longer without a surrender; if he let it longer

without surrender, he is to be presented and amerced.


After three proclamations be made at one and the same court, he to whom the surrender is made is to be

admitted by the steward or his deputy, and if on the same proclamation any person come to forbid and enter

his claim to the same lands, the person to whose use the surrender is made is to find a pledge (to wit) a copy-

holder of the same manor, and hold the mean profits of the same lands in case he that forbids shall recover

the same.
If any person shall enter such forbid or claim, he is to bring his action for the same lands within three

courts, or otherwise the same forbid or claim shall be void.


If any forbid or claim be granted in open court, it only debars him who granted the same and not any

after him.


Every copyholder on his admittance is to pay to the lord of the manor one year's ancient rent for the

same land and no more for a fine.


A copyholder (by the custom) may be tenant by the courtesy of England, in like manner as of a freehold

inheritance at the common law.


1. A tenant in copyhold for one, two, or three lives may (for prevention of occupancy) assign his term

without surrender ; but the assignee, or, for want thereof, the occupant must pay a fine to the lord, and so

must he that takes bankrupt lands. According to the statute of Eliz. 30, ch. 1.
2. If a copyholder in the court be called and returned to be sworn of the homage, and refuseth to be

sworn without shewing to the court any lawful and reasonable excuse, he forfeiteth his copyhold land until

he shall submit and pay a reasonable fine as the court shall amerce.
3. 'Tis said that if a copyholder purchase land it will descend first to the heirs of the father's side and

then to the heirs of the mother's side.


BOOK III. CHAP. IV.]


CUSTOMS OF THE HONOR OF CLITHEROE.


295

4. If a copyholder (to wit) tenant for life or years or tenant in fee simple or tail, commit waste volun-

tary or permissive, that this waste is a forfeiture of the copyhold tenements so wasted, during their respective

estates in the same, until such time as the same shall be put into sufficient repair, and such forfeiture will

bring a new fine to the lord upon the new admitted.


5. If a thief steal goods and by strict pursuit leaveth the goods within the manor, that the said goods

(as waifs) belong to the lord of the manor.


6. If a copyholder be outlawed for any criminal offence, as murder, felony, or the like, the same

maketh a forfeiture, but the lord is not to have benefit until presentment be made by the homage.


7. If any person come to untimely death without fault of any reasonable creature, the cause of his death

is a deodand, and belongs to the lord of the manor.


8. If a tenant (by copy) surrender generally into the hands of the lord, and it doth not appear who shall

have the land nor to whose use the surrender is made, then the lord shall be seized to his own use.


9. A tenant hath right to all wood, timber, and underwoods, slate mines, flags, and free power to get

the same for his own use, or to sell the same within the manor for repairing the housing within the same,

but not to sell the same to strangers or such as dwell out of the manor.
10. The heir of a copyholder is not liable to pay debts upon judgment, obligation, or any other debt ;

and that if the lord enter into statute or take a wife, and after the land falls into the lord's hand by surren-

der, forfeiture, or otherwise, his land whilst it is in his lord's hands is liable to the charge ; but if he grant it

again to the tenant according to the custom, the copyholder shall hold his estate discharged because he is in

by custom which is paramount the grant.
1 1 . An heir of copyhold land is heir before admittance and hath power to enter in the lands and take

the profits thereof, to punish trespassers and to defend his possession, but cannot bring a real plaint before his

admittance.
12. Where a father hath a son and a daughter by one venter and son by another, the possession of the

brother, upon death of his father (though his brother die before admittance) will make his sister heir, and

the land would escheat to the lord rather [than] the son by the second venter should take as heir to the first

brother or sister ; and before admittance the right heir may sell, the purchaser paying a double fine to the lord.


13. The tenant paying his rents and performing his services is no more tenant at will (by the decree or

late act made for confirmation thereof), is free from arbitrary impositions, and only liable to pay his rents, &c.

and observance of the customs aforesaid.
The last thirteen rules were laid down amongst many others in the manor court of survey at Slaid-

burn in the year 1662.


(This document has been communicated to the present edition of this work by Capt. Grimshaw, of

Grange, late of Burnley. It has been submitted by the Editors to Mr. Dixon Robinson, the present Chief

Steward of the Honor, who has had the kindness to peruse it, and to examine the archives under his care,

but he states that no such Customs are upon record. So far as the Editors are informed, the Customs of the

Honor of Clitheroe have not hitherto appeared in any book, but they were printed (differing in various par-

ticulars from the present copy) on loose sheets, at Bury, in 1793.)


'


296

HISTORY OF WHALLEY.


[BOOK III. CHAP. IV.


PENDLE FOREST.


The Forest of Pendle was so called from the celebrated mountain of that name, over

the long declivity of which it extended. The name of this mountain is an instance of the

gradual operation of language upon the names of natural permanent objects. Having been

originally denominated Pen or the head, its first appellation becoming insignificant the

Saxons superadded hull, and Penhull was its orthography probably before the Conquest ;

but the latter syllable in turn lost its meaning by being melted down into Pendle; and the

modern " hill " was once more superadded, to design the nature of the object. The per-

pendicular elevation of this mountain, after many attempts and notwithstanding the

facility of obtaining a base line from the sea, has never been exactly ascertained; 1 but it is

an enormous mass of matter, extending in a long ridge from N.E. to S.W. and on the S.E.

side forming a noble boundary to the forest, which stretches in a long but interrupted

descent of nearly five miles to the Water of Pendle, a barren and dreary tract excepting

on the verge of the latter, which is warm and fertile. 2
A PAPER WRITTEN BY MR. CHARLES TOWNLEY, AND DIRECTED BY HIM TO RICHARD TOWNLEY, ESQ.

THE PHILOSOPHER. From Addenda to the Third Edition.


On August the 18th, 1669, between nine and ten o'clock in the morning, there issued out of the north-

west side of Pendle Hill a great quantity of water, the particulars of which eruption, as I received them

from a gentleman living hard by, are these : the water continued running for about two hours. It came

in that quantity and so suddenly that it made a breast of a yard high, not unlike (as the gentleman expressed

it) to the eager at Roan in Normandy or Ouse in Yorkshire. It grew unfordable in so short a space that

two going to church on horseback, the one having passed the place where it took its course, the other being

a little behind, could not pass this sudden torrent. It endangered breaking down a mill-dam, came into

several houses in Worston (a village at the foot of the hill), so that several things swam in them. It issued

out at five or six several places, one of which was considerably bigger than the rest, and brought with it

nothing else but stone, gravel, and earth. He moreover told that the greatest of these six places closed

up again, and that the water was black like unto moss pits ; and, lastly, that fifty or sixty years 3 ago there

happened an eruption much greater than this, so that it much endamaged the adjacent country, and made

two cloughs or dingles, which to this day are called Burst or (in our Lancashire dialect) Brast Cloughs.
Thus far this gentleman related what follows take from myself. Going since this to see what I could

of this accident, I found nothing that did contradict the abovesaid relation. What I observed more, con-


1 [According to the Ordnance survey the height is 1,831 feet above the level of the sea.]
* I know not whether it be worth while to relate, that the gloomy enthusiast George Fox professed to have

received his first illuminations on the top of Pendle. Vide Lesley's Snake in the Grass. ["As we travelled on (from

Bradford) we came near a very great and high hill, called Pendle Hill, and I was moved of the Lord to go to the top of

it; which I did with much ado, it was so very steep and high. When I was come to the top of this hill, I saw the sea

bordering upon Lancashire: and from the top of this hill the Lord let me see in what places he had a great people to

be gathered. As I went down I found a spring of water in the side of the hill, [probably Eobin Hood's well in Down-

ham Moor,] with which I refreshed myself; having eaten and drunk but little in several days before." (Fox, Journal.

London, 1694, vol. i. p. 72.) The spring here alluded to is called George Fox's Well to this day. Note in 7th

Edition, by Wilson Armistead, vol. i. p. 121.] a p ro bably the eruption mentioned by Camden.

BOOK III. CHAP. IV.] PENDLE FOKEST. 297


cerning this and other eruptions is that, passing under the N.E. end, commonly called the Butt end of

Pendle, I saw several breaches in the side thereof, at several distances from the top. From these stones

mixed with earth had been tumbled down, and lay in such a confused order as if they had been brought

thither by such a like eruption as this last ; and, inquiring of a country fellow who was our guide, he con-

firmed the conjecture, and told us these breakings out of water were very frequent, so that he wondered

we took so much pains to go and see this late one. I went to look amongst the rubbish of stone and earth

of one of these breaches to see if I could find anything like ore, but could find nothing. Having passed the

end of the hill and coming'to the other side, we after a short time discovered the aforementioned six breaches, of

which two seemed to be very near the top. I went only to the biggest of the breaches, in which I observed

these particulars : the water had taken away the soil, which was about two feet deep, and bared the rock

between twenty and thirty yards in breadth, and downward a considerable deal more. It appeared evidently

that the water came from between the swarth and the rock, for at the top of the breach we saw several

holes whereat the water had issued forth ; others were closed up with the fall of the earth. Wheresoever the

water had taken away two feet deep of the earth the rock appeared among the rubbish. I found nothing

that could be supposed to come out of the bowels of the hill, but only such stones as might be loose on the

rock amongst the earth that covered it. This is what I observed in the breach, which for bigness was most

remarkable, and presume I should have found nothing worth notice in the lesser ones. Though the noise of

this eruption was so great that I thought it worth my pains to inquire further into it, yet in all these parti-

culars I find nothing worthy of wonder, or what may not easily be accounted for. The colour of the water,

its coming down to the place where it breaks forth between the rock and earth, with that other particular of

its bringing nothing along but stones and earth, are evident signs that it hath not its origin from the very

bowels of the mountain, but that it is only rain-water collected first in the moss-pits, of which the top of the

hill (being a great and considerable plain) is full, shrunk down into some receptacle fit to contain it, until at

last, by its weight or some other cause, it finds a passage to the side of the hill, and then away between the

rock and swarth until it break the latter and violently rush out. The great eruption mentioned to have

happened so many years ago perhaps is that taken notice of by Camden in his Britannia, p. 613. " Verum

hie mons damni quid subjecto agro jampridem intulit, aquarum vim eructans, et ccrtissimo pluvise indicio,

quoties ejus vertex nebula vestitur, maxime insignis est."


I know not whether it may not be worth notice that, going to the top of the hill and observing a

considerable part thereof, especially towards the skirts where turfs had been gotten, I found that the rock

reached within a yard or two of the highest part. Considering this with what I observed of the mentioned

breach and several other places, I think it is very probable that the whole mountain, great as it is, is one

continued rock, and it may be a question whether all other hills be so or no ; but this I leave to further

inquiry.


The whole extent of it cannot be estimated at less than 25 miles or 16,000 statute

acres, which as early as the great Inquisition in 1311 were divided into eleven vaccaries,

each of which paid 10*. In the commission of Henry VII. already referred to these

vaccaries were denominated as follow :


West Close and Hunterholme XL vis. vmcZ.
Heigham Boothe LXVIS. vmd.
Newelawnde xxvis. \md.
Bareley Boothe LXXIXS. ivd.
Heigham Close olim Nether-heigham xxvis. vine/.
Overgouldeshey and Nethergouldeshey ... ivZ. xvis.
VOL. I. 2 Q

298

HISTORY OF WHALLEY.

[BOOK III. CHAP. IV.


Feelie Close .


Old Lawnde
Whitley Carre
Over Barrowforde and Nether Barrowforde .

Over Rougley and Nether Rougley, alias Rougley Boothes

Haweboothe and Whitley in Haboothe ....

Redhalowes


xxvis. vind.


xxvis. vmd.
xxs.
Ffl. ills. ivd.

ivl. vis. vine?.


LVS.

xms. ivd.


Of these Filly Close is the flower of the forest, 1 and B/eedley-hallows crosses the Pendle

"Water, and extends nearly to Burnley.
Besides these, I find also the vaccary of Admergill, granted 20th Rich. II. (1395-6) to

William son of John de Radcliffe. (Townley MSS.)


Admergill is undoubtedly called qu. Ald-Mere-Gill, the Gill or Gully which formed

the old boundary of the parish towards Barnoldswick. Here were lately found 117 pennies

of Edward I. and John Baliol, King of Scotland.
On 26 Feb. 2 Edw. IV. 1462 William Lcyloncl received a grant of herbage and pasture of Newland

with the forest of Penhull, late in the tenure of Thomas Haryngton, esq. at a yearly rent of 106s. 8d. ; of

Higham Close, late in the tenure of John Dyneley, at 4 13s. 4td. ; of Higham (both late in the tenure of

Mr. Cawchope and Miles Parker) at 10 marks ; of West Close (late in the tenure of John Croukshawe) at

113s. 4(7. (Duchy of Lane. xxv. X. la.)
On 12th May following the same person had a grant " a festo Sancti Michaelis ultimo preterite usque

proximum advcntum Consilii nostri in partibus illis," of the herbage and pasture of Overbarrowe Forde

and Nethcrbarrowe Forde, of Overroghlegh and Netherroghlegh, of Barleboth, and of Oldeland with Little

Blakwode, in the Forest of Pendle, and several pastures and vaccaries in the Forests of Trawden, Rossen-

dale, and Accrington at the rent of 114 7s. a-year. (Ibid.)
5 Edw. IV. 14 July, 1464. A lease for twelve years to William Nutter, Christofer Baudewyn, and

Peter Jakeson of two pastures called Overroughlegh and Netlierroughlegh, sufficiente pastura et pascua pro

feris dicti domini Regis reservata. (Ibid.) ,
5 Edw. IV. 21 Nov. 1464. Lease for twelve years to Richard Halstede and Ric. Foldes of the fourth

part of the herbage of Rydelehalghs within the forest of Penhulle ; rent 50s. Id. ll Et iidcm firmarii salva-

bunt et dimittent tantam et talem pasturam pro feris domini Regis qualis et quanta in dicta quarta parte

perantea solebat salvari et dimitti. Et feras dicti domini Regis in foresta predicta non interficient neque

destruent aliquo modo." (Ibid.)
6 Edw. IV. 10 July, 1465. Lease for seven years to William Leylond of the herbage and pasture of

Neuland for 106s. Sd. a-year, of Higham Close for 4 13s. id., of Highamboth for 10 marks, of West Close

for 113s. 47 Edw. IV. 22 June, 1466.^ A similar lease of the same pastures at the same rents was granted to

William Leylond and also the herbage and pasture of Nethergoldeshagh and of Overgoldeshagh, *' cum lez

Cragges," at 8 6s. 8d. and Redeleghagh 9 6s. 8d.
1 Edw. IV. 22 June, 1466. A lease for ten years to William Leylond of the herbage and pasture of

Overbarrowforde and Netherbarrowforde, of Overroghlegh and Netherroghlegh, of Barleboth, of Whithaw-

both and Hawboth, and of Oldeland cum parva Blakwode in the forest of Penhull, together with other

pastures and vaccaries in Trawden, Rossendale, and Accrington forests, for 108 7s. and 100s. more de

incremento.

1 [So named after the fillies there kept: see the account of the royal haras, or equitium, under Ightenhill hereafter.]


BOOK III. CHAP. IV.]


PENDLE FOREST.


299

8 Edw. IV. 20 May, J467. Lease for twenty years to John Sotehill of a pasture called Felyclose, rent

fourteen marks sterling.


11 Edw. IV. 26 Feb. 1471. Lease for twenty years to Hugh Gartside of the herbage and pasture of

Westclose at the yearly rent of 5 13s. 4d., of Hegham Bothe at 6 13s. 4

4 13s. 4d, of Le Newe Launde at 5 6s. 8d., and of Fellyclose 9 6s. 8d. (Duchy of Lancaster,

xxr. X. 2 a.)


1 Eich. III. 20 Mar. 1484. Lease to Hugh Garthside and his son Nicholas for seven years from

Michaelmas last past of Overrughley and Netherrughley at 8 a-year rent. Herbage and pasture of Higham

Bothe at 6 IBs. 4d., ditto of Higham Close at 4 13s. 4d., ditto of West Close at 5 6s. 8d., and the

vaccary of Bareley Both at 5. .(Duchy of Lane. Reg. t Rich. III. f. 87.)


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