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Rev. H. A. Douglas, M.A. (1937)
PREFACE
The author of this pamphlet
makes no claim to original research. For the facts mentioned
in this brief survey of the story of a Yorkshire village he is
chiefly indebted to the Rev. R. J. Hill who, about 50 years ago,
wrote a comprehensive history of Salton. He would also like to
acknowledge his gratitude to Miss Myra Curtis for her article
about Salton in the Victoria History of the North Riding of Yorkshire.
THE STORY OF SALTON AND BRAWBY.
It is the purpose of this pamphlet
to tell as shortly as possible the story of Salton and Brawby.
Most people in England have never heard the names of either of
these villages. Yet these two tiny places have been connected
with the history of our country in many intimate ways.
WHAT'S IN A NAME?
You can often learn a good deal
about a place from its name.
The name Brawby, for instance, tells us a great deal about the
origin of that village. For Brawby is derived from two Danish
words (1) Bragi (2) Bi.
The first of these words is the name of the Danish god of poetry.
It is also sometimes used as a family name. Bi means village.
Therefore Brawby is the village of Bragi. It was almost certainly
founded by a Danish chief called Bragi.
The name Salton means Willow
Town. Sal is derived from the Anglo-Saxon word Salh, which means
a willow. The French word for willow is saule. In Herefordshire
the country folk call a willow a sally. Through Salton runs the
little river Dove. At one time apparently the banks of the Dove
were lined with willows.
ULF A PRINCE.
What do we know about the very
early history of Salton?
Professor Hamilton Thompson thinks that a wooden church once
stood on the site of the beautiful Norman building with which
we are so familiar. Before the Norman Conquest the land at Salton
and Brawby belonged to Ulf, an Anglo-Danish chief. He owned a
great deal of land in the north of England, including the manors
of Ampleforth, Baruch, Coulton, Flaxton, Malton, Pockley, Stonegrave,
as well as the land at Salton and Brawby.
The story goes that one day Ulf
happened to over hear his sons discussing how they would divide
up his land after his death. Fired with indignation he jumped
on a horse and rode hot-haste to York. He took with him a beautiful
horn which had come from the Holy Land and was said to be already
a thousand years old. Arrived at York, he presented his lands
at Salton and Brawby, and also some other manors, to York Minster.
Probably, when he made the gift, he filled the horn with wine
and drank the contents "to God and to St. Peter". Ulf
left his horn at the Minster. It was regarded as a pledge of
the gift of land. Today in the chapter-house at York you can
still see the horn of Ulf. It is of ivory, made out of an elephant's
tusk, and curiously carved. It bears an inscription,
"Ulf, a prince in Western Deira, gave this horn with his
lands".
THE BUILDING OF THE CHURCH.
Salton Church is a gem. Mr Joseph
Morris, who has a scholarly knowledge of the churches in this
part of England, says that Salton Church is one of the most complete
little Norman churches in Yorkshire. On page 32 in his useful
book 'The North Riding of Yorkshire' Mr. Priestly writes 'Norman
and Transition work is common, occurring in at least 87 churches;
but no complete building exists in these styles like the churches
of Ibbley and Stewkley. Salton is perhaps the nearest example'.
The building of Salton church was started about 1100. Authorities
differ considerably in regard to the dates of the different parts.
One well known expert is of the opinion that the nave was built
about 1100, the chancel arch about 1135, the tower soon after
1200. The church is dedicated to St. John of Beverley.
'IT IS WASTE'
In Domesday Book these words
are applied to Brawby.
Brawby to-day is luxuriantly fertile. It can be proved that in
the time of Edward the Confessor Brawby was a prosperous place.
Why is it described as 'waste' in Domesday Book? And why, during
the comparatively few years between the death of Edward the Confessor
and the writing of Domesday Book, had the value of the land at
Salton decreased to such an appalling extent?
The explanation is simple. In the nature of William the Conqueror
there was a streak of savagery. While hunting in the Forest of
Dean he heard that there had been a rising in Yorkshire in favour
of Edward Atheling, the rightful heir to the throne, that the
help of the Danes had been obtained, and that the Norman garrison
in York had been put to the sword.
William, when he heard this ill news, swore 'By the splendour
of God, I will not leave a soul of them alive.' He was true to
his word.
With ruthless energy he devastated the northeast of England from
the Humber to the Tees. York was soon a heap of smouldering ashes.
Farm-houses flamed. Men, women, and children were slaughtered.
A few escaped to the forests and to the hills. Crops were destroyed
and 'the very implements of husbandry were so mercilessly destroyed
that the famine which followed is said to have swept off more
than a hundred thousand victims, and half a century later the
land still lay bare of culture and deserted of men for sixty
miles northward of York'. Thus is was that William made 'a waste'
of Brawby and of many other pleasant villages.
HOW THE PRIORS OF HEXHAM BECAME
PREBENDARIES OF SALTON
We have seen how Ulf gave the
lands at Salton and Brawby to York Minister. Thursten, Archbishop
of York (1114 - 1140) had a great affection for Hexham Priory.
Soon after his enthronement he gave his manors at Salton and
Brawby, with lands at Edstone, Great and Little Barugh. East
Newton, and Givendale, to Hexham Priory. The Prior of Hexham
became Prebendary of Salton. As such he had a stall in the Minster
and a house of residence in York. In Salton a Hall was built
for the use of the Prior and the Austin Canons during their visits
to the village. The site of the Hall can still be traced in the
field which lies just beyond the Georgian house now occupied
by Mr. William Fletcher. From 1115 until 1536, when Edward Jay,
the last Prebendary of Salton, was 'tyed up without delay or
ceremony' by Henry VIII over the great gate at his Priory, the
village of Salton was ruled by the Priors of Hexham.
THE PECULIAR AND SPIRITUAL
COURT OF THE PREBENDARY OF SALTON
During a period of more than
400 years the people in Salton and Brawby, even when they committed
gross offences, could not be arrested or punished by the sheriff's
officers. When they committed crimes they were either tried by
the Prebendary in his own court at Salton or by the Dean at the
south door of York Minster.
Severe were the punishments inflicted on the sheriff's men when
they tried to punish the inhabitants of Salton and Brawby. Rashly
on a certain day in 1473 they put John Bolland of Salton in the
stocks for some misdemeanour which he had committed. No doubt
John richly deserved the punishment. But the two unfortunate
men who had dared to usurp a power belonging to the Prebendary
of Salton suffered the greater excommunication as the penalty
of their presumption.
Strangely enough, this 'peculiar' court continued even after
the death of Edward Jay, the last Prebendary of Salton. To the
1st. Lord Eure of Malton Henry VIII gave not only the lands at
Salton and Brawby but also authority to hold a court of justice
on his estate. The Lords of the Manor at Salton retained this
power for many years. The 'Peculiar' court of Salton was eventually
abolished by an Act of Council in 1846. This 'Peculiar' court
was of course distinct from the manorial court.
PRIVILEGES ENJOYED BY THOSE
WHO
LIVED WITHIN THE LIBERTY OF ST. PETER
The inhabitants of Salton and
Brawby, until the suppression of Hexham Priory, enjoyed several
other valuable privileges. They were exempt from military service,
although in time of war they were expected to provide a standard-bearer
to carry the banner of St. Peter. The standard-bearer seems to
have generally been a clergyman. They were not required to pay
any market fees or tolls.
As belonging to the liberty of St. Peter they had sanctuary rights
and persons guilty of certain offences against the law could
find in Salton and Brawby a refuge from their pursuers. It is
curious to notice that some of these privileges were accorded
to the people in Salton and Brawby long after the connection
with Hexham Priory had terminated. Exemption from all tolls and
market fees throughout the United Kingdom was successfully claimed
by Matthew Dodgson of Brawby as late as 1837. Local custom at
the beginning of the 19th century still gave to Brawby the rights
of a city of refuge. When once a poacher had crossed the River
Seven he could safely defy the constables.
HOW THE SCOTS CAME TO SALTON
One of the first things one notices,
on entering Salton Church, is that the stones on one side of
the nave are red and calcined up to a height of eight feet from
the floor. This indicates that there must have at one time been
a fire in the church and that the heat of the flames was very
intense. This fire took place in the 12th century at a time when
England was distracted by Civil War. David, King of Scotland,
was the uncle of the Empress Maud. In order to help her in the
war she was waging against Stephen, the Scottish king invaded
the north of England and laid it waste with fire and sword. In
Malton he placed a strong garrison. One day the Scottish warriors
paid an ill-omened visit to Salton. What apparently happened
was this. Fearing the advent of the wild Scots, the people in
the village locked themselves up in the church which had then
a thatched roof. The Scots arriving on the scene set fire to
the thatch.
Soon afterwards, at the Battle of the Standard, near Northallerton,
the English, inspired by the enthusiasm of Thurstan, Archbishop
of York, inflicted an ignominious defeat on the Scots. At that
battle one of the four banners attached to the standard was that
of St. John of Beverley, the patron saint of Salton. Nowadays
we keep a banner of St. John of Beverley in Salton Church, and
on certain great occasions its startling combination of yellow
and green and red floats from the top of the tower and startles
the rooks.
THE SECOND VISIT OF THE SCOTS
TO SALTON
On yet another occasion the Scots
paid a visit to Salton. From 1318 to 1322, during the reign of
Edward II, Scottish armies made havoc in the north of England.
They laid Ryedale waste, they burned Scarborough, Northallerton,
Knaresborough, Boroughbridge; at Myton on the Swale they massacred
an army of monks, canons, serving-men and farm labourers which
William Melton, Archbishop of York, had collected. It was at
some time during these four unquiet years that they came to Salton.
They must have done much damage in the village, for, in the reign
of Edward III, the Prebendary of Salton asked the king to reduce
the value of the assessment of his Yorkshire estate because it
had been much wasted by the Scots. This request was granted by
the king, and Archbishop Zouche, Lord Treasurer of England, granted
a certificate to the Prebendary of Salton reducing the valuation
of his estate at Salton from £41 to £21.
THE FIRST VICAR OF SALTON.
In the year 1304 the Archbishop
of York went into Northumberland to visit the Prior and Canons
of Hexham. the Archbishop insisted on the Priory appointing Vicars
for Salton and Edstone. It is more than likely that the spiritual
interests of the people in these two places had been neglected
by the Austin Canons.
In 1311 John Tweng was appointed first Vicar of Salton. An agreement,
which is still extant, was drawn up between John Tweng and Robert
of Whelpington, Prior of Hexham. The agreement shows that the
Prior expected a great deal from John Tweng, including a pension
to the church at Normanby, and was willing to give very little
to him in return for his services.
THE BLACK DEATH.
During this awful pestilence
a large proportion of the people in this country perished. While
it was raging on the continent, before it came to England, Zouche,
Archbishop of York, sent messages to the people in his diocese,
warning them of the peril which threatened them, and commanding
them to offer prayers in every church on Wednesdays and Fridays
that God might have mercy on his people and turn away his wrath
from them. Such prayers must have been offered in our church
by John Spendlove and his flock. The plague reached York in February
1349, and penetrated even to the remote and healthy villages,
where new cemeteries were hastily dedicated to receive the numerous
dead. The parish priests behaved with splendid courage. More
than half of the clergymen in Yorkshire died at their posts.
PILGRIMAGE OF GRACE.
Among the immediate results of
the suppression of the smaller monasteries were risings of the
rural population in Yorkshire and Lincolnshire. The rising in
Yorkshire began on the 9th of October and was directed by a lawyer
named Robert Aske. The rebels, with whom probably marched some
men from Salton and Brawby, took York and Pontefract, capturing
in this last town Lord Darcy and the Archbishop of York. An active
part in this rebellion was taken by Edward Jay, Prior of Hexham
and Prebendary of Salton. When the rebels met the royal forces,
they did not fight, but instead, insisting on their loyalty to
the king, arranged with the Duke of Norfolk to send an account
of their grievances to Henry and to wait for his answer. Before
the answer had been considered, Aske received a promise of a
free pardon for the rebels and was told that Parliament would
deal with his complaint. The rebels returned to their homes.
But some of them in their excitement committed acts of war. Henry
made this an excuse for breaking his promise about a free pardon.
Aske and other men who had taken a prominent part in the rebellion,
as well as a large number of their humbler followers, were put
to death. Yorkshire monasteries, whose abbots had taken part
in the rising, were suppressed. Edward Jay, Prior of Hexham,
and last Prebendary of Salton, was sent to Hexham where he was
hung over the chief gate of his monastery 'without delay or ceremony'.
WHAT HAPPENED TO THE LANDS
AT SALTON AND BRAWBY AFTER THE HANGING OF EDWARD JAY, LAST PREBENDARY
OF SALTON
(1) In the year 1545 Henry VIII
gave the lands at Salton, and Brawby, to the 1st Lord Eure of
Malton. (2) William, 4th Lord Eure, sold the land at Salton and
Brawby to Sir Thomas Bennett, who afterwards became Lord Mayor
of London (3) By the marriage of Frances, niece of Sir Thomas
Bennett, the land passed to James, 6th. Earl of Salisbury. (4)
In 1795 the lands at Salton and Brawby, Sinnington with Malton,
and lands at Great Baruch and Edstone, and also the patronage
of the livings at Salton and Edstone, were sold by the 1st Marquis
of Salisbury to Messers. Leatham, Elam and Dowther. This sale
took place at the Talbot Hotel, Malton, on October l9th., 1795.
Some of the property changed hands soon afterwards. (5) On August
3rd, 1836, at the Star Inn, Stonegate, York, part of the township
of Salton, together with the advowson of the living, was put
up by auction.
It was bought by John Woodall, Esq., of Scarborough. Mr. Woodall
was succeeded by his son and then by his grandson Mr. C. H. Dent.
The present Lord of the manor is S. S. Lockwood, Esq.
TROUBLOUS TIMES.
'Thomas Sootheran', runs an entry
in the parish register, 'our Vicar, read the Articles of Religion
the 22nd. day of October Anno Domini 1643, being Sunday, the
most of the parishioners being present, together with Richard
Johnson of Northolme'.
When Thomas Sootheran began his duties as Vicar the Civil War
was raging between the King and Parliament. Most of the nobility
and gentry were on the side of the King, and some of the people
at Salton may have been amongst those who were killed at the
battle of Marston Moor.
In 1645 the Westminster Assembly, which was composed chiefly
of Presbyterians, drew up a directory of public worship which
made it an offence to kneel at Holy Communion, to keep Christmas
as a day of rejoicing, to use a religious service at the burial
of the dead. The use of the Prayer Book was strictly forbidden.
Thomas Sootheran is said to have been ejected from the benefice
of Salton because he refused to give up the use of the Prayer
Book. Like many other faithful priests he seems to have fared
hardly in those strange days.
BURIALS IN WOOLLEN
In 1666 an Act of Parliament
was passed by which people were compelled to bury the dead in
woollen. The purpose of the Act was to help the farmers and to
encourage the manufacture of woollen goods. The new measure was
very unpopular. From the very early times people had been accustomed
to bury their dead in linen, and a great many people persisted
in continuing the old practice.
To put a stop to disobedience the Government imposed a fine of
£5 on the offender, whenever the act was broken.. Half
of the £5 was given to the poor and half to the informer.
An entry (in one of the Church registers) states that, on at
least one occasion, this law was brought into operation against
a Salton resident. The entry reads thus: 'Elizabeth Dowker, the
wife of Robert Dowker, was interred July 15th., 1692, and her
corpse was wrapped in linen, for which the penalty of £5
was imposed, according to the Act of Parliament, and one half
was given to the informer and the other to the church wardens,
to be distributed to the poor of the parish.'
The Act of Parliament which compelled people to bury the dead
in woollen was finally repealed in 1814.
A CLERICAL FAMILY.
In the year 1685 Christopher
Dowker became Vicar of Salton.
The patron of the living was then John Bennett. Christopher Dowker
was inducted by Philip Bainbridge, Vicar of Edstone, acting as
the Archdeacon's deputy. For 48 years Christopher was the incumbent
of Salton. In 1743 Christopher Dowker died. He was succeeded
by his son Philip Dowker. After a reign of 45 years, Philip was
followed by his son Christopher who held the living for 37 years.
This Vicar was succeeded by his nephew Christopher who remained
in office till 1836. It is not often that a benefice is held
by the members of one family for 141 years.
A POOR MAN'S SON AT BRAWBY.
The records of Archbishop Hutton
contain a number of questions which were answered in the year
1743 by the Rev. Philip Dowker, Vicar of Salton. Some of the
answers are very interesting. Two of them are worth quoting.
Question III. Is there any public
or charity school, endowed, or otherwise maintained in your parish?
Answer. We have an endowment
of three pounds a year, left to a schoolmaster, but no school
has been built, and as there are but few children in Salton,
the money is given to a poor man's son at Brawby, in the parish
of Salton, who teaches children there, which are sometimes more,
sometimes less. He teaches them the church catechism, but, as
he is a cripple, he cannot come to church, for Brawby is two
miles distant from Salton.
Question IX. How often and at
what times do you catechise in your church?
Answer. I catechise in the Church
at Salton two months in the summer season. The parishioners send
their children and servants to be instructed in the catechism.
BONNIE PRINCE CHARLIE AT SPARROW
HALL
There is a tradition that Prince
Charles Edward spent a night in hiding at Sparrow Hall which
was then occupied by a Roman Catholic family called Ellerby.
A CHIVALROUS PARISH CLERK
At the beginning of his reign,
George IV was very unpopular because of his treatment of his
wife Caroline of Brunswick. He refused to recognise her as queen
and a bill for a divorce was introduced into the House of Lords.
The name of the queen was ordered to be omitted from the Prayer
for the Royal Family.
The parish clerk at Salton made a manly, if irreverent, protest
in favour of the unfortunate queen. At the end of the prayer
for the Royal Family he shouted out, 'God save Queen Caroline
and confound all her lying enemies.' In consequence of this impulsive
action, he was dismissed from office. We are not told how this
was done. In those days the dismissal of a parish clerk was no
easy matter.
RESTORATION OF SALTON CHURCH
During the latter part of the
ministry of the excellent Mr. Abbey, Salton Church was restored.
The architect was Mr. J. Wood of Pickering, working from the
designs and under the superintendence of Mr. C. Hodgson Fowler
F.S.A., of Durham. Among the many other alterations made at this
time, was the replacement of the semi circular window at the
East end by one of perpendicular character. Messers. Clayton
& Bell supplied the glass fro this window. Towards the cost
of restoration the Woodall family contributed nearly £2000.
A considerable sum of money was also given by Mr. Thomas Candler
of Ayton, Scarborough. The Church was reopened on July 26th,
1881, by the Archbishop of York.
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