Brian's audience beginning to gather outside Bridge Cottage. |
The survey was taken 400 years and one day ago today (28th of August, 2017). I haven't tried to take accurate notes of who owned what but have tried to capture a little of the half-familiar and half-strange picture of the Uckfield that the old manuscript conjured up.
I was struck by the familiarity of the old place names including:
- lands adjacent to Harlings
- Ridgewood
- Boothland
- Horsted Pond
- Luxford
- Hempstead Lane
- Ringles Cross.
I was intrigued by people's names. There were a couple of esquires mixed amongst the more humble men. A woman's name suddenly stood out in this man's word of property. I wondered what Widow Saunders was like. Was she considered an attractive catch? or a bit of a dragon? or both?
My breath caught a little when the word "Workhouse" was mentioned. The Act for the Relief of the Poor 1601 meant that each Parish had to have a workhouse. The old Uckfield of the 400 year-old manuscript suddenly sounded a lot less idyllic.
A little of the magic returned when I had a chance to look at the old writing in the copy.
Sample of the Manuscript. It mentions Richard Snatt. |
As I walked back home through Hempstead Meadow nature reserve and along Hempstead Lane, I thought about how much had changed. Even the magnificent, ancient trees of Lime Tree Avenue would not even have been planted when the survey was taken.
Refs:
The survey is kept in the Keep. ADA 137.
1617 Survey of the Manor of Framfield.