BUCKNELL

The settlement of Bucknell was first mentioned in the Doomsday Book, 1066 under the name of 'Buckehale' or 'Buckenhill. The boundaries of Shropshire and Herefordshire divided the village at this time.

The Nornan knight Roger de Montgomery II, better known as Earl Roger in the Domesday, but officially the seigneur of Montgomery, was the major recipient of Shropshire holdings. An old man of considerable wealth and power, he contributed 60 ships to the invasion fleet and was in command of a wing at the Battle of Hastings. Earl Roger was responsible to Duke William of Normandy as his chief architect in the defence of the middle marches of the border in his defence against the Welsh. He built many castles including Montgomery, Shrewsbury, Ludlow, Clun, Hopton and Oswestry. Over 90% of the lordships and manors of Shropshire were held in Chief at the Domesday by the powerful Earl Roger.

Earl Roger's under-tenants in this area were Ralph de Mortimer, who held Bucknell (amongst his 123 manors with his chief domain in England being at Wigmore Castle), and William de Picot, (also known as Picot de Say), with his chief domain at Clun Castle, part of a cluster of castles including Richards Castle and Bishops Castle, a line of defence against the Welsh intruders to the west and included Bedstone.

From the Domesday Book: 
Land of Ralph Mortimer.......in Leintwardine Hundred
[a district within a shire]
Bucknell.  Helgot holds from him. 2 hides
[unit of land measurement reckoned to be 120 acres]...land for 6 ploughs
It was and is largely waste
Woodland, 1 league
Alwyn held it

 


The motte at Olde Farm Bucknell

This earth mound at The Olde Farm in Bucknell is the remains of a Norman (1066-1154) motte castle situated on the banks of the River Redlake, close to a river crossing point and to the Parish Church. The small mound or motte is oval in plan and measures just 22 metres in diameter at its base. Traces of a surrounding ditch have been identified in places though the later farmhouse and farm buildings have largely destroyed this.

The motte is one of the many 11th - 12th century castle mounds in this area, which as a whole could be seen as a sort of security zone about 15 miles wide which lies mostly on the English side of the border, and necessary for the Normans to protect their recently acquired lands from the Welsh.

In 1554-55 an Act was passed transferring the whole of Bucknell into the county of Shropshire.

The Lords of the Manor at that time were the Sitwell family who resided at 'The Cottage' when in Bucknell.

The population of the village in 1811 was 226. At the latter end of the century this had risen to 546. Most of the male population were connected with agriculture and timber. The earliest of the existing buildings date back to the 17th century.

Stony Piece Sherriffs Plock Great Mind Brook Hollow Bates Steadman's Slang Princes Piece Cold Furlong Eighteen Ridges Worthings Scarry Worthings Meadow Lamb Pits Hollybush Piece Langley Field Crabtree Piece Daisy Acre Rails The Slang & Square Piece Woodnalls Meadow Knowl Field Piece at the Bottom of Town Little Field Far Little Field Upper Hills Middle Hills The Rough Broomy Piece Pool Piece Wignalls Little Hills Great Hills Broomy Bank Sheep Gobbets Turkey Hall Field Yewtree Piece Lord's Meadow Woodley Swales Bushy Furlong Broken Bank Tyning The Crabtree Turkey Hall Green Close Green Close Meadow Furlong Pound Close Close Passey's Slang Little Field Little Hove Lower Hove Hays Gate Pitch Meadow The Leys Plock Crooked Acre Hope Field Upper Hove Hove Hill Lower Hove Piece Hove Lane Piece Marsh Meadow Hays Slang Teme Field Clem Park Gagging Meadow Barrow Meadow The Slang & Square Piece The Rellicks Butts Head
Bucknell field layout - taken from from the Tithe Apportionment Map dated 1839
[Original Image courtesy of: Shropshire Archives Donor Ref: ' M64 (161/4925)' ]
hover your mouse pointer over a field in the above picture to reveal the field name


Bucknell 1884 - maps courtesy of Old Maps Co


Bucknell 2000 from the air - courtesy of Getmapping plc & Multimap.com

The houses were built in a haphazard fashion near the river, and so had easy access to water. The village depended on water from the river and wells until the 1920's when water was piped into the village from a spring above Chapel Lawn.

The houses at the lower end of the village were very susceptible to flooding, and this hazard continued until the ford was walled up in the 1950's.

Bucknell had four pubs: The Sitwell Arms, The Plough (just opposite), The Railway Tavern and The Bridge End. The latter three are all now private houses.


The Sitwell Arms early 1900's


The Railway Tavern c1910


The Old School House Shop

The Old School House was built in the 17th century to provide education for those who could pay for it. The school remained until the present one was built in 1865. The Old School House then became a shop and bakery before becoming a private dwelling.

 

 
 

Smith's Shop c 1906 (L-R) Frank Smith, George Smith, Tom Passant (Baker) Sam Burgoyne (Roundsman) Charles Smith.

 

Bucknell also had a shop and bakery in the Square and its own corn mill which was situated at the west end of the village.
 

St Mary's Church c 1900 Primitive Methodist Chapel

There were three places of worship. St. Mary's Church, The Methodist Chapel in Dog Kennel Lane (now a private house) and Coxall Baptist Chapel.
 

   
 

Post office c 1910 when it was run by the Sherwood family. Miss Ruth Anthony stands in the doorway.

Post Office post 1919 following the alterations when it belonged to the Pickens family.  

Bucknell Post office opened in the mid 19th century. The original post office was just round the corner and still goes by the name of The Old Post Office.

The butcher shop is still on its original site.

The roads through the village were dirt roads, muddy in winter, and dusty in summer. Every autumn the roads were repaired with gravel from the river.

Despite more houses, the number of people living in Bucknell has dropped. In the 1981 census the population of the village was 494; in 1991 the population of the parish (probably including Bedstone) was 601 consisting of some 250 dwellings and in 2001 it was 642 in 294 dwellings.

This decline in the population is due to smaller families, the number of people coming into the village to spend their retirement and the drift away from work in timber and agriculture.


 

BEDSTONE


At the time of the Domesday Book it was known as 'Betieteune'.

Holding of Picot under Earl Roger........in Leintwardine Hundred
Bedstone. Fulk holds from him. 3 hides and 3 virgates
[a fraction of a hide notionally 30 acres] which pay tax.  Land for 8 ploughs.  In Lordship 1 plough, with 2 ploughmen.
Value 6s.
Woodland, 1 league
It was and is largely waste


Noted for it's two magnificent houses - Manor Farm, an H-shaped timber framed building built in 1775 and Bedstone Court designed by Thomas Harris and built around 1884 for Sir Henry Ripley, MP for Bradford.

Manor Farm and many of the cottages were part of the Ripley estate.  The original farmhouse was built about 1350.  It has a cruck hall with added box-framed cross-wings.  The central truss of the hall survives to this day. 

The Rilpleys moved to Bedstone from Yorkshire in 1870.  Bedstone Court, built for them was a calendar house having 365 windows.  This was one of the first houses in the area to have electricity.  There was an estate saw yard, and a wheelwright and a blacksmith in the village.
 

Town Field Quarry Piece Enclosure Upper Brinks The Brinks Higgins Furlong Ten Acres Five Acres Park Piece Dunstall Big Manor with Rough Crosses Upper Hollow Brook Upper Brook Hoar Leasow Finding The Pitts Little Oaks Marsh Field Far Close Netherlands Omber Pool Meadow The Moors Cow Pasture Duck Acre Pound Close Lower Brinks Little Finding Little Cow Pasture and Little Field Field Below Garden The Massells Knoll Upper Field
Bedstone field layout - taken from the Tithe Apportionment Map dated 1839
[Original Image courtesy of: Shropshire Archives Donor Ref: ' S48 (161/4878)']
hover your mouse pointer over a field in the above picture to reveal the field name


Bedstone 1888 - maps courtesy of Old Maps Co


Bedstone 2000 from the air - courtesy of Getmapping plc & Multimap.com


Bedstone Court c1910

Bedstone Court is now a college.

There was a chapel erected at the time of Edward the Confessor.  The present church, St Mary's is a small Norman church having a Saxon font.  The tower, more recently added to the structure is partly timbered.

There was once a school in the village, which opened in 1750 and was closed in 1947.  It is now a private house.

Revised: 18 August 2006